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A46526 Compunction or pricking of heart with the time, meanes, nature, necessity, and order of it, and of conversion; with motives, directions, signes, and means of cure of the wounded in heart, with other consequent or concomitant duties, especially self-deniall, all of them gathered from the text, Acts 2.37. and fitted, preached, and applied to his hearers at Dantzick in Pruse-land, in ann. 1641. and partly 1642. Being the sum of 80. sermons. With a post-script concerning these times, and the sutableness of this text and argument to the same, and to the calling of the Jews. By R.J. doctor of divinity. R. J. 1648 (1648) Wing J27; ESTC R213600 381,196 433

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they heard this Where is first the Act of hearing VVhere 1 The Act of hearing which implyeth preaching Rom. 10.14 15. Secondly The Object what they heard First Hearing implyeth teaching and preaching as here Peter preacheth and they hear and how shall men hear without a Preacher saith Paul and how shall they preach except they be sent first of God So that we have here to note Note 1. The power and efficacy of Gods VVord First the power and efficacie of the Word of God preached Secondly the profit and good fruit of hearing it aright Peter speaking onely in the outward eare they that heard are pricked in the heart and by further hearing are fully converted 1. The word of God is a powerfull word because soundly taught and wisely applyed as here we see where not onely for number three thousand but for quality scoffers mockers yea persecuters were converted by it so the like afterwards and in some measure to the end of the world No word of man no not in the mouth of the most eloquent Oratour can worke such effect as this doth In changing the effections and verting soules Acts 26.18 this hath a power on the soule not onely to move the affections but to change them to renew them to convert them and turn the soule to God from death to life from darknesse to light by opening of the eyes yea from the power even of hell Psalm 19.7 of the very Devill himselfe of Satan unto God The law of God converts soules and changeth stones into bread yea flesh base metall into pure gold beyond all Chymicall transmutation turning beasts into men yea beasts into men in which regard the Church differs from the Arke of Noah a type of it in other things for there the beasts that entred into the Arke received no chainge nor alteration but if they went in uncleane wilde and savage they also came out uncleane wilde and savage but in the Church of God where Gods word is powerfully taught it is not so with every one we come in unclean but go out clean we come in wilde we go out tame we come in wolves lions vultures we goe out lambs deere and doves we come in beasts and go out men yea new men regenerate as one well noteth Here it might be shewed how that by the power of one text only some hath been converted Iun. in vita as Junius reclaimed from Atheisme by casting his eye on Job 1.1 Saint Austin See Dr. Featlyes sermons on this text by taking up the Bible and reading the first place he lighted on which was Rom. 13.13.14 not in gluttony and drunkennesse not in chambering and wontonnesse c. was fully converted from his wantonnesse yea his friend Alypius desiring to peruse that place and reading the next words Rom. 14.1 Him that is weake in the faith receive you besought Saint Austin to strengthen him in the faith and he became a Convert also And I beleeve if every one would tell their experiences in this kind and how the word either at first or since in their anguish distresse temptations hath strengthened comforted and upheld them we should ●eed no other proof of this truth But whence hath the word this power Not from it selfe 2 VVhence hath it this efficacy from God and his spirit Psal 149.6 7 8 9. but from the Author which is God who when and where he pleaseth maketh it powerfull and effectuall by his spirit accompanying the same It is a two edged sword and cuts both wayes as God shall please to weild and use it either to wound or prick savingly like the Surgeons lancing-knife or to wound to death like the sword of an Enemy but we speake especially of the former work of it whereby it shewes it self quick and powerfull Heb. 4.12 whose instrument it is sharper then a two edged sword piercing even to the deviding asunder of soul and spirit and of the joints and marrow being a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart And so it is called the power of God to salvanion to every one that beleeveth Rom. 1.16 that is Gods powerfull instrument by which he worketh faith in men and converts their souls Now as the instrument hath no power of or from it self but onely a fitnesse thus or so to be used and workes in and by the power of the chief workman working in the power of him the principall Agent as the steele with which the Load-stone is capped so it is here The sword cuts not without a hand to weild it and then it cuts according to the power strength and will lesse or more of him that useth it so the word or words of the Preachers being quantity have no efficacy of themselves or considered as a sound or beating and dividing of the ayre but as it is an instrument of God appointed and sanctified to produce such great effects so that the power is from Gods Ordinance and not from the word of the Preachers who by the sounding of rams hornes made the walls of Jericho fall down ●nd by vertue of ●is ordinance as did the rammes horns of old Moses rod in dividing the sea which sounding was rather a signe at which then any cause by which the walls fell even as Moses his rod by which he smote the Sea had not that power in it selfe but by vertue of Gods appointment Moses smote with it because God had so commanded but God did the worke And though the Word preached work after another manner yet the worke done by it whether it be conversion comfort pricking melting bruising c. is from the effectuall power of God and of his Spirit who doth the deed 1 Cor. 3.6 so that Paul may plant Apollos may water but it is God that gives the increase and so the Word is compared to a sword and hammer which bruiseth Jer. 23.29 Isa 55.10 Acts 2.1 3. to a nayle which pierceth and to fire which melts and mollifieth to a mighty winde and thunder which shakes the heart of the stoutest Thus here Gods Spirit being like water both for abundance and strength poured out in the signes of a rushing mighty wind and of fire makes the word of Peter and others thus powerful the power of which spirit shewed it selfe not onely in the tongues of the Preachers but in the hearts of the hearers so afterwards the Apostles being armed with the promise of this power Mat. 28.18 19 20. are sent out to all Nations to convert them which thing they also did but who a few men of no account of no learning some of them of no authority or state whom Kings of the earth whom with these chains comming out from their mouth as is fabled of Hercules Celticus they did binde and bring into subjection under Christ Bodin de rep lib. 4. cap. 7. So wise Philosophers and the learned the proud and refractory but by what meas and
without pain ere ever it consent to marry to Christ Now can there be a divorce wrought between loving couples otherwise most loth thereunto without sorrow ask Phaltiel who being married to Michal when David her first husband sent for her 2 Sam. 3.16 went with her along weeping behind her 3 From the nature of Conversion which is such a change as a man cannot but be sensible of it first or last 3 This brings us to consider of the nature of conversion which implyeth as much as I intend which being a change from darknesse to light from bondage to liberty in a word from one contrary to another how should a man discern of his contrary new estate without feeling in some measure the horrour of his former condition under darknesse and bondage at least he can have no comfort in his Conversion unlesse he find and feel a difference between the one estate and the other which cannot be felt without some shaking and affrightment as he apprehends the greatnesse of the benefit of his deliverance by Christ so is he touched with a proportionable fence of his danger either imminent or passed as we have heard of some who having at first in their sleep drink or otherwise ignorance passed some very great danger as over some narrow or broken and crackt bridge pit or the like being brought after to see their danger they have quaked trembled been amazed if they have not wholly expired and given up the Ghost Thus such as perhaps at the very first are not so sensible of their dangerous condition or yet of their change as others are Christ being truly in them yet afterwards when they come to better consideration and deeper apprehension of their wayes and former dangers they find a proportionable measure of inward trouble terrour yea and grief for such their hainous offences whereof they were not so sensible before and so they have their portion of terrour first or last in lesse or greater measure Lastly whom doth Christ call to Repentance 4 From Christs calling of such Matth. 9.13 Even of such onely as are sinners and laden and 11.29 Lost enemies 2 Cor. 5 Isa 27.5 in bondage Rom 8.15 2 Tim. 1. he came to call sinners to repentance such as in their own sense are sinners and if Christ call none but such to repentance who can have repentance but such yea but such as are heavy laden with sin and sense of Gods wrath for sin for these and such onely he calleth also to come unto him And as he came to call such so to save the lost sheep but who are these but such as feel themselves to be lost Christ calls and sends his Ministers to call us to be reconciled to him and to make peace with him but who will ever thus do that doth not first find and feel himself under his displeasure and can a man find that and not be troubled he calls us to liberty and must we not then first be under the spirit of bondage that unto fear In a word how can any either hunger after Christ or prize him aright as a Saviour and Redeemer till they through fence of misery and of their hopelesse helplesse worthlesse and desperate condition see their need of him or who will ever fly to him till by the Law as by a Schoolmaster discovering their fearfull condition to them they be whipped and scourged and so forced to go out of themselves to him This Law then must go before and as the needle by pricking doth pierce the cloth and make way for the threed to follow and sow so it must prepare the way for faith to follow by which we are knit to Christ otherwise we would prove but loose Christians and break off when we list as we know many Libertins to do who tell us much of comfort and joy they find in and by Christ and his Spirit but neither they nor any other can tell us of any sorrow wounding or pricking going before I shall ever suspect that joy yea that Conversion which issues not in some measure out of true sorrow pricking compunction and contrition for sinne It s but a dream of joy and a false conception and birth This point yet further cleared and it shewed that though all be wounded yet not all alike Here then for the further clearing of this point of doctrine we must know that all who are truly converted do not suffer trouble and terrour of conscience in the same measure or yet manner neither doth God deal with all alike some are pricked onely as with a Pinne others as with a spear yet all pricked There are three degrees as in divers Resemblances and all of them saving by Gods mercy 1 A pricking as in my text wherein were some grudgings of conscience and such a hurt as was presently healed again and they filled with the holy Ghost 2 A wounding or a wounded spirit and who can bear that such as was sometime in Job and David from whom God seemed to withdraw himself by forsaking them c. and in such as wrestle long with God yea and with diffidence in themselves even many yeares before they can out wrestle their sorrows which at length they do And 3 there is a killing whereof Saint Paul speaks Rom. 7.9.10.11 Sinne revived and I died and the commandement which was ordained unto life I found to be unto death for sinne taking occasion by the commandement deceived me and by it slew me and yet lo Paul alive to God so All are shut up under the spirit of bondage as in a prison Gal. 3.23 before faith come we are kept under the Law shut up unto faith some as Jeremy let down to a dungeon Jer. 38.6 some as Paul put into an inner prison and his feet fast not in the mire in which Jeremy did sink but in the stocks some onely as Joseph who though a prisoner yet found favour and had more liberty Gen. 39 20.21.22 And so all being locked up under infidelity some are more easily set at liberty and their hearts sooner opened being like new and fresh locks easily opened whereas others are like old rusty locks which the key hardly and with much ado opens if at all so that they must not be broken by force and violence such is the difference of mens hearts some kept clear from rusting by restraining grace good education and example others are old rusty and cankered in sin whose doores must be broken open by strong hand and consciences awakened by terrours All hearts are hard naturally as we have heard but some as stones some as mettal which must not onely be broken but molten and as among stones some are softer then others and soon crushed some are harder as the flint without seams and sutures so is it with hearts some sooner humbled and made to relent then others some are more hardy bold crabbed and crooked then others an angry word or look will work more upon
which is also on our behalf most needfull for as we are miserable and stand in need of mercy so also helplesse yea wholly impotent unable unfit yea unwilling as of our selves to convert or come to Christ Our need of Gods power in our conversion 1 Cor. 1.23 we must be drawn if we come at all our hard hearts must be changed prepared made willing that so Christ who to the Jews is a stumbling block and to the Gentiles foolishness may be made unto us which are called both Jews and Greeks the power of God and the wisdom of God There is a yoak on our necks which God onely can take off Hos 11.4 by drawing us with cords of a man even bands of love God must prepare us for faith and grace by removing all blocks which lie in our way and that prejudice which wee generally have of Christ and take from us the stony heart We are dead in sin and trespasses and no less power is required then that which raised Christ himself from death Joh. 6.44 Ephes 1.19 20. Rom. 8.11 We are under darkness yea under the power of Satan and to turn us from darkness to light Acts 26.18 and from the power of Satan to God requires the power of God Nay when we are turned 1 Pet. 1.3 4 5. we stand in need of the same power of God to keep us through faith unto salvation Conversion not wrought all at once Now this work of Gods power is manifested also by degrees and in a certain order whereby he brings those he loves from nothing to something from infidelity to faith 1 By driving them out of themselves and by self-denyall 2 By bringing them to true contrition and other further grace 3 And so by these and other preparatory works but by some preparatory works to through conversion and to true faith which faith and grace of conversion is not wrought all at once in one instant at least it appears not in any all at once nor is it wrought alike soon or late in all but as the Baptist was to prepare the way to Christ as to the onely City of Refuge by filling every valley and bringing low every mountain and hill so Gods messengers make way for his coming in the spirit savingly and powerfully by preparing the soul for Christ that is by pricking and wounding the conscience by casting down all high thoughts in men by humbling them first and then by raising them up by hope c. This work of power then would be traced from its highest originall also The order and steps of conversion which is double Know we then that the order and degrees by which the grace of conversion and of faith as it depends on power is wrought may be considered two ways 1. There is an order in regard of the persons and means working it 2. In regard of the work it self SECT 2. The persons and means used in Conversion 1. In regard of the persons and means working it It is originally from God 1 THis grace as all other grace is originally in from God and so comes to be wrought in us in a certain order by himself yet not always without means but in and by the use of his own Ordinances and by the Ministery of such persons as he pleaseth to imploy in the dispensation of his ordinances The summe is this 1 The Father 1. God the Father is first in order who is said to draw such as by him in love are given unto Christ to save John 6 37-44 Jerem. 31.3 Faith being therefore called the faith of the operation of God who raised Christ from the dead Vse Therefore not from us Coloss 2.12 It not being of our selves Ephes 2.8 or originally from us as if we first beleeving moved God to elect us We are his workmanship Ephes 2.20 2. Next is God the Son 2 Son Hebr. 12.2 Vse Christ saveth by power as well as merit who works Faith and Conversion also For whatsoever the Father doth the Son doth likewise Joh. 5.19 Christ is a Saviour not onely by his merit but by his power himself not we applying effectually what he hath merited else he were but an half Saviour 3 Holy Spirit 3. Now the Father and Christ shew their power by the holy Ghost or Spirit of them both which we know was in visible signes on this day of Pentecost given by the power of which these many here were converted and faith given to them it is therefore called the Spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.15 and by it faith is given of God Vse Therefore it is a free work John 3.8 1 Cor. 12.9 Whence it is that all that hear the word of Faith do not beleeve the Spirit is a free worker herein like the winde blowing where it listeth And the whole work of conversion must from these authors and workers of it needs be acknowledged to be a work of such power as far transcends the power of nature Vse of all This work is 1. Divine and not of man John 1.13 and of mans supposed free-will as if a man from the birth or otherwise wanted a naturall and bodily hand or eye who could give it him but the God of nature So who can give faith which is the hand and eye of the soul but God onely And all these three Persons had their work in the conversion of these Jews Luke 24.49 Acts 1.4 5-8 It is therefore a sure work 2 Sure as depending on 1 the Fathers Love 2 Sons merit 3 Power of the holy Ghost Now the Spirit or the Father and Son by the Spirit all whose power is one works this grace of Conversion and applyeth grace and faith to the soul either more immediately or mediately by the word and Ministery of it The Spirit works conversion either Immediately as in elect infants dying 1. Immediately as in elect Infants dying in their infancy where though the chief work shewed on them be a work of mercy and of free imputation yet their natures are sanctified and changed by the infusion of an habituall principle of grace wrought by the Spirit without which they could not enter into heaven But of this formerly The like we say of such elect ones as are born deaf and dumb or By means by the word 2. The Spirit ordinarily works not but by means and begets faith and grace by the ministery and preaching of the word as here Act. 2.37 Rom. 10.17 Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God i.e. by the command ordination and appointment of God Isa 59.21 which therefore carryeth along with it his power and blessing so that though conversion may seem in Scripture or other wise to be ascribed to divers other things as 1. to the Sacraments Conversion is not wrought but by the word that of Baptism especially called the washing of the new birth 2 to voices from heaven 3. to
themselves they flee to the Apostles and consult with them what they should do to procure a pardon of their bloody sins and how to flee from and escape wrath and in a word how to save their poor souls saying What shall we do And the meaning is no other then that of the Jaylour who in like case and distresse of soul trembling and falling down before Paul and Silas said Sirs What must I do to be saved Acts 16.29 30. 1 Who consult 1 Now in that they all being many ask saying What shall we do 1 For number they were many A blessed conspiracy It notes 1. A blessed conspiracy in these young Converts in that they compasse their teachers round about and thus flock unto them for advice and counsell as others also did about John Luk. 3.10 12 14. and as you all now that are attentive hearers make semblance of Thus to do especially in trouble of conscience is no unlawfull meeting no Conventicle no matter of accusation No Conventicle nor combination in evill as such like meetings in rehearsing calling to minde and examining the conscience after hearing of the word whether with their Teachers or other experienced Christians have been made by such as either can endure no such meetings as wherein they themselves are not the speakers or none but such as their own are in Taverns Ale-houses Gaming-places and the like whereby they may be justified by other mens like practice which now being so unlike exasperates the malice of the unsound and profane who yet many of them will also gather about their Teachers and Instructours nor such as whereby the wicked gather about their Ministers either in hypocrisie but then it is in hypocrisie with purpose and desire to catch and get matter of accusation against them and so the Scribes and Pharisees flocked to Christ At least with no purpose or desire to obey or follow the wholesom instructions of the word but rather to scoffe and jeer as God of old told Ezekiel saying The children of thy people still are talking against thee by the wals and in the doors of the houses and speak one to another every one to his brother saying Come I pray you Ezek. 33.30 31 32 33. and hear what is the word that cometh forth from the Lord. And they come unto thee and sit before thee as my people and they hear thy words but they will not do them and so on And as those other dissembling hypocrites in Jer. 42.1 2 c. 19 20 21. who great and small flocked and came neer to Jeremiah requiring by him of the Lord that which they meant not not obeying the voyce of the Lord nor doing any thing for which either they sent him unto the Lord or for which the Lord sent him unto them even as many now adayes seek advice in matter of their unlawfull marrying or otherwise and yet never mean to follow it if it prove contrary to them and their former resolutions Yea if this were all it were not so bad as when they hearing such things from the faithfull Ministers of Christ as please them not or in rage and fury gather about them in fury and in rage as the Jews dealt with Stephen Acts 7.54 -57 58. run upon them with one accord and either stone them or otherwise by open insurrection rebellion and massacring put them and all that hold of the truth with them to death See also Acts 16.19 -22. CHAP. XXXIII That there is the same means of cure in like case for all distressed in conscience 2 For inward motive and end they are directed to the same means by the same Spirit 2. IN that they being so many do all with one accord seek to the same means it notes that There is the same work of the Word and spirit of Compunction in all who are truely touched in heart for sin As it humbles all in sight of sin and misery so it heals by sending all to the same remedy Note There is the same work of the word and Spirit and the same means of cure generally for all even to the word and the faithfull Ministers of it not to other means such as have been named there being the same remedy though as the case may require somewhat divesly to be applyed according to the rules and method of spirituall physick for all Converts and wounded consciences So that the same spirit working in all hath like effects for the generall in all 2 Cor. 4.13 Vse In like case to inquire and make use of other mens experiences Would any then being wounded by the word know how to finde comfort and saving direction let him inquire how others in like case have found it and let him do accordingly All finde it as these all here did finde it They being all of them both touched and directed by the same Spirit sought and found direction and ease from the ministry of the word onely and not from any other men or means which they were well assured would afford them no help The word onely being faithfully dispensed will fit all sorts and callings of men it will answer and resolve all their doubts and cases Luke 3.9 10 11. In such case then it will behove us to look into this and the like examples in Scripture and to inquire of such as having been in our case how they found comfort what directions they followed Other mens experience will be of great profit to us if we wisely make use of it The reason is because as Gods promise is the same to all who are alike prepared and qualified to receive it so his dealing is alike with all he not being partiall This made David propound his experience to others and say The humble shall hear thereof and be glad I sought the Lord and he heard me and delivered me from all my fears They also looked unto him and were lightned and their faces were not ashamed saying This poor man cryed Who literally David mystycally Christ but spiritually every humbled sinner and the Lord heard him and saved him out of all his troubles Whence the generall is inferred The Angel of the Lord encampeth about all them that fear him and delivereth them Psal 34.2 3 4 5 6 7. CHAP. XXXIV The chief care of Christians should be how they may save their souls 2 About what they consult A Second thing to be hence observed is about what they consult Now in that they all consult concerning so weighty a businesse as is the saving of their souls we may learn from hence that Note Our chief care should be to save our souls The chief care of all and each of us ought to be concerning our souls and how we may save the same These here had never a serious thought of this main businesse till now that by the word savingly taught and applyed unto them they were convinced of their sin and thereupon apprehended Gods wrath
Where 1 How they came to be pricked Chap. 6. 2 That all true Converts must first be pricked in heart Where The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or that it is so and there the 1 Explication Chap. 7. Sect. 1. 2 Illustration Sect. 2 3 4. 2. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Demonstrations or Reasons why God will have it so Chap. 8. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the manner order and degrees of Conversion 1. As it depends on love in God chap. 9. 2. As it depends on the power of God and that in regard 1. Of the meanes and persons working it Chap. 10. Sect. 1. 2. 2. Of the work it self where the works 1. Of the Law § 3. 2. Of the Gospel Sect. 4. 4. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Uses and Application The Vses and Application Where USES of four sorts 1. Generall of Triall and as preparative to the rest Chap. 11. 2. Such as respect those who as yet have not been pricked 1. Of Instruction Chap. 12. 2. Of Terror Chap. 12. 3. Of Exhortation where 1. Motives Chap. 13. 2. Meanes to be used 1. Le ts removed 1. Such as hinder the words to pierce Chap. 14. Sect. 1. 2. Such as keep the soul from being sensible of pricking Sect. 2 3 4. 2. The Means to be used are 1. Gods Word C. 15. § 1. 1. Heard 2. Recalled 3. Applied 2. Consideration of sin sect 2 1. Originall 2. Actuall 3. Gods judgements 1. On our selves § 3. 1 Past 2 present 3 tocome 2 On others c. § 4. 4. Gods high Majesty well thought on Sect. 5. 5. Earnest prayer Sect. 6. 3. Such as respect those that have been pricked in heart who are 1. Instructed 1. Not to return to sins sorrowed for chap. 16. § 1 2. 2. To go forward with this work of Humiliation sect 2. 2. Exhorted § 3. where 1. Reasons why we are not to rest in every slight sorrow Sect. 4 5. 2. A Case resolved shewing when a man is humbled enough where 1. Directions to such as seem not humbled enough Chap. 17. Sect. 1. 2. Signes of true sorrow 1. From the grounds of sorrow 1. Negatively § 2. 2 Affirmatively c. 18. § 1 2 3 4 2. From the Concomitants and Effects of it cap. 19. in seven Sections 3. Comforted cap. 20. 4. Such as concern all who are 1. Instructed how to carry themselves towards mourners Chap. 21. 2. Such reproved as censure and reproach them Chap. 21. 3. All of all sorts exhorted to get mournful hearts Chap. 22. 3. What they said And said unto Peter and to the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren What shall we do Where four thing 1. Who said Such as were pricked Chap. 23. 2. When Presently Chap. 24. 3. To whom and so of whom do they seek direction namely of the Apostles who are considered in relation 1. To God where 1. The nature of their Office Chap. 25. § 1 2 3 4. 2. Their order of naming Chap. 26. 3. Their number Chap. 26. 2. To these Converts as the same who 1. Wounded them C. 27 2. Were derided by some of them Ch. 28 4. What they said where 1. A Compellation 1. Men Chap. 30. 2. Brethren Chap. 31. 2. A Consultation where 1. Who consult who 1. For number Chap. 32. 2. For inward motive Chap. 33. 2. About what even the saving of their souls Ch. 34. 3. The Consultation it self Shewing how such as are converted must be qualified namely They must 1. Consult and shew care of the main shaking off security Chap. 35. 2. Deny themselves 1. Specially in matter of salvation and in duties belonging to Conversion Chap. 36. Sect. 1 2 3. 2. Generally in all things else where 1. In what things 1. Absolutely Section 4. 2. In some case only as in things 1. Natural Sect. 5. 1. Faculties of soul 2. Things of this life 3. Life it self 2. Spirituall in 1. Duties § 6. 2 Gifts § 6. 3. Eternall as 1. In some accidentals of glory as 1 Degree Sect. 7. 2 Time Sect. 7. 2. In glory it self that concerning the salvation 1 Of others Sect. 8. 1 dead 2 living 2 Our own Sect. 9. With a Generall Reproof Sect. 10. 2. For what we are to deny our selves namely for 1. God in his 1. Perfections Sect. 11. 2. Glory Sect. 11. 2. Christ in his 1. Excellencies Sect. 12. 2. Alsufficiencie Sect. 12. 3. Our own souls considered in their 1. Worth § 13 2. Salvation § 13 4. Publick good of 1. Church § 14. 2. Common-wealth § 14. 3. Publick persons § 14. 3. Be ready to do Gods wil and to submit to it in matter of 1. Salvation Ch. 37. § 1 2 2. Religion and Worship Ch. 37. § 1 2 3. Odedience with the comfort of so doing at Christs coming Ch. 37. § 1 2 A TREATISE OF COMPUNCTION OR Pricking of Heart Acts 2.37 Now when they heard this they were pricked in their heart and said unto Peter and to the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren what shall we doe CHAP. I. Concerning the time of mens Conversion With Vses The good fruit of Peters Sermon THese words and the following shew the fruit and good effect of the Apostles teaching on the day of Pentecost especially of Peters Sermon which was the conversion of many Jewes Conversion even three thousand soules the beginning and preparation whereunto is contained in these words Where we have first Where 1 The Meanes Instrument of Conversion Gods word preached The Instrumentall cause of their conversion expressed which was Peters Sermon from the fourteenth verse to this verse but the vertue and power of the principall Worker which is God and Christ by the Spirit is included Secondly A double Effect First Their being wounded in heart Secondly The expression of their inward sorrow and care to be saved by their words Or we may referre all to these three Heads What these Converts First heard Secondly suffered thirdly said SECT 1. Concerning the change in Conversion NOw when they heard this The summe of what they heard is in the thirty sixth verse namely first The dominion of Christ Secondly Their sin in crucifying him This heard and beleeved Where 1. Time 2. Persons 3 Meanes of Conversion is made the ground of their conversion Where we may take notice of first the Time Now when secondly Persons They thirdly Meanes Heard this Where first the Act heard secondly Object this All which being expressed in the English are implyed in the Originall The Time Now and not till now The time of their conversion Now and not before though formerly these Jewes heard not only the Apostles but Christ himselfe often preach unto them Now they are pricked and cry out when before no word would pierce their hard hearts nothing was heard from them then but such like speeches as these Thou art a Samaritane and hast a Devill Away with him crucifie him c. but now they are inwardly wounded
vengeance on them that know not God that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power See wee then that we refuse not him that speaketh c. Heb. 12 25 26. 2.1 2 3. Let such look to this who finde an irresistible power in all sorts of temptations to sinne A reproof of such as suffer the world to be more powerfull in in them then Gods Word from their lusts or the men of the world who if they hold but up a finger it is as a strong cord to draw them with them into all excesse or the very looks and speeches of the harlot are enough to cause them follow though it be as the Oxe to the slaughter And so when they can find and professe that they can be moved even to tears at the beholding of a Play and that much sooner then at a Sermon as some have done Oh it s a signe the Devill hath a strong hold in them and hath taken up their hearts which are shut towards the word and open only to vanity Vse 5 5. Lastly If we have found any good by the word that we are become new men by it Being converted not to ascribe the glory of it either to our selves or to the gifts of the Minister 1 Cor. 3.5 let us give God his glory and not ascribe our conversion in whole or in part either to our selves to the power of our own will to our own wit aptnesse or good nature see Joh. 1.13 Mat. 16.17 or yet to the gifts and abilities of the Preachers what is Paul or what is Apollo I know some Ministers may be called powerfull Preachers in comparison of others namely such as follow Gods method of Preaching and that course which he chiefly blesseth yet it is not the Minister but God which converts opens the hearts pricks wounds and after heales it We may and must respect and honour such as so labour even with double honour but as the Ministers of Christ God himself must have the honour of their work We must not ascribe to them either too little but honour them for their works sake and be thankfull to them as to spirituall parents under God or too much but acknowledge the power and grace of God in and by their Ministery And thus for the power of the Word SECT 2. Concerning the profit of hearing Gods word With Vses 2 WEe note from this their hearing the word so as to be pricked and wounded Note 2. The profit of hearing Gods word and at length fully converted by it as the power of Preaching so The great good and saving effects of hearing aright We may see here how that the Hearing of Gods Word as it was taught by Peter and the rest Proved the means of their Conversion and Salvation For bereby first their eyes came to be enlightened 1 It opens the eyes to know Christ and they came to see both their own sins and their Saviour and at length to be directed in and to the only way of salvation vers 37.38 Thus our blessed Saviour discoursing and preaching to these two Disciples that went to Emmaus at length their eyes were opened Luk. 24.27 31. and they knew him yea afterwards presently appearing to them and the rest and aplying the Scriptures to the present occasion it s said He opened their understanding that they might understand the Scriptures and the Scriptures but that was by his powerfull Spirit accompanying his word seeing formerly he had expounded and opened unto them the Scriptures And thus the Lord teacheth men out of his Law which Law and word of his is a light to give us understanding of his ways and of our wayes too Psal 94.12 It enlightens our minds and directs our Path. Thy word saith David is a lamp or candle to my feet and a light unto my path Psal 119.105 It is given to direct and lead us in this our pilgrimage to heaven as once the fiery pillar and cloud did the Israelites to Canaan through the wildernesse and as Ships are directed by lights from without in their course into their dangerous havens which in some havens are double or two which are to be brought in a right line together in the Ships course so here is a double light this of the Word and that other of the Spirit accompanying the same by which we come effectually and safely to be directed 2 It awakens out of security Secondly This same Word did also by pricking and wounding these Jewes awaken them out of their security in which they did lie and should have lien for ever So God awakened David by the Prophet Nathan and rouzeth men daily from their quiet sleep in sin 3 It both wounds and heals Thirdly But as it did awaken them so pricking and wounding it did let out their corruption and made way for the perfect healing and cure of their soules 4 It is the ordinary means of conversion and salvation Fourthly In a word it thus proved a word of life to them and as we have said the means of their salvation And so indeed we must conceive of the word and the right hearing and preaching of it as of the means of our salvation So it was also in Lydia and the Jailor Acts 16. And contrariwise the rejection of the word preached Acts 13.48 is an adjudging of our selves unworthy of life Whence is it so This in briefe is not from the power of the word it selfe but from Gods appointment and blessing and by vertue of his Ordinance seeing he hath so ordained and appointed that faith should come by hearing Rom. 10.14 15 16 17. and hearing is by the word i. e. command and appointment of God as elsewhere on the text I shew To this end God stirres up and endues with gifts as here and sends Ministers where he hath any to save and accordingly by his Spirit whereof the word preached is the Ministery makes it effectuall in whom he pleaseth though by his absolute power he can if he would and doth where he will as in elect infants dying c. save and apply Christ by his Spirit onely Vse 1 Vse 1. This teacheth us as we desire the good and salvation of our souls Of Instruction Diligently to hear Gods word Why 1 Considering our ignorance to be diligent in hearing of Gods word as it is faithfully taught by the true Ministers and Teachers of it Our necessity requires it Such is our ignorance such is our Impotency we cannot save our selves First our ignorance is such naturally since we fell into sin and under the curse that of our selves we neither aright and convictingly know our sinfull or yet accursed condition We are apt to think well of our selves and of our own wayes though they be never so bad or accursed of God much lesse doe we
know of God or of his will concerning the meanes of our recovery and salvation till God in and by Christ declare it to us Joh. 1.18 neither know we the things of God or any saving truth as of our selves 1 Cor. 2.14 Nay Secondly such is our impotency that we cannot either know them or yet doe any thing for our selves in the businesse of our conversion 2 Our impotency both which he healeth us of till God by his word and spirit work the same in us God must create us anew by the same mighty power of his word by which at first he made the world Psal 33.6 John 3. We must be drawn Joh. 6.44 and born again of water and the Spirit as the ship cannot move it self but as it is first born up of the water Secondly set forward by the wind both being without her selfe Now this is done whilest we receive into our soules and affections the gales of Gods grace and blasts and breath of his Spirit by attentive hearing of his word by which his Spirit is ministred to us 2 How Let us then attentively hearken to Gods word and so seek and expect the good and profit of it Let us chuse Maries part Luke 10. 1 Take heed of lets and take heed of Martha's incombrances and of such lets as prove hinderances to the fruitfull hearing of it as of worldly cares pleasures and in a word of having our hearts set upon the things of the world as Oxen Farmes Wives c. 2 So hear as first meditate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now we cannot hear it aright unlesse we first seriously meditate on the things we do hear as the word here seems to carry a continued act when they had heard there was not an end the word still sounded in their ears that they were the Crucifiers of Christ that Christ whom they crucified was the Lord of life these nailes stuck in them whether they did eat drink lie down or arise Whilest the heart museth and meditates on an object it comes to be affected as Psal 33. Lament 3.19 20. 2 Pet. 2.8 Lot in seeing and hearing vexed his soul i. e. he pondered the evils done and was the more vexed with their unlawfull deeds 2 Apply it Secondly We must so hear as to apply particularly to our selves what we hear for so these here came to be wounded when the point of this sword was set to their breasts and they could not neither did offer to put it by This belongs both to the Preacher to doe who must not draw and only flourish his sword this sword of the Spirit but strike home with it his mark being only or chiefly the heart for so the word both hits soonest and pierceth deeper and becomes as nailes fastened by the Masters of Assemblies and also to hearers themselves who must help their spirituall Surgeons and Physicians to apply the plaister or potion by keeping the one close to the sore and the other in their stomack without casting it up But of these two On 1 Cor. 11.31 pag. 1332. c. Meditation and Application as meanes of Humiliation more largely elsewhere 3 Beleeve it Thirdly The word heard must be mingled with faith in those that hear it else it profits them not Heb. 4.1 2. 4 Obey it Yea fourthly it must be followed with obedience as here these both beleeved the things taught them to be true and being directed to repent and to be baptized they both repented beleeved and were baptized If then we would reap the fruit and benefit of hearing and be blessed thereby we must both hear and keep the word we hear Luk. 11. otherwise God will not hear us Zach. 7.13 Exhortation with other reasons In a word if we will be Christs sheep we must receive his mark and that must be in the eare John 10.3 27. Mat. 13.43 17.5 If we will be his servants for ever we must suffer him to bore our eares that the pearles of the Gospel may hang at them If we will either beleeve or pray aright we must hear aright the first link of that golden chaine of the Apostle is hung at the eare Faith cometh by hearing c. Rom. 10.14 17. And if we would find such saving effects of the word as these here we must so hear as they heard and as is said for when they heard they were pricked in heart and said Men and brethren what shall we do It s said of the Weasel Mustella concipit aure parit ore She conceiveth at the ear and brings forth her young ones at her mouth So the seed of Gods word received in at the eare and conceived there and in the heart bringeth forth the fruit of holy thoughts meditations and devotion and expressions of inward sorrow for sin at the mouth Vse 2 Vse 2 This being the profit of hearing and duty of hearers let us see what to judge Of reproofe 1. of scoffers 2. of enemies to hearing in others first of scoffers at the word c. Secondly of such as hinder and keep back others from hearing as Elymas would have done the Deputy such as are enemies to the spirituall good of soules and shew themselves children of the Devill Who are of the Devill whose office is to make the hearing of the word unfruitfull if he cannot keep them from hearing then he steales the Word heard out of their hearts as the birds pick up the seed after it is sown Luke 8. lest men beleeve and be saved but if he can he will keep them from hearing it herein like the Jaylour who though he suffered his Prisoners to have their hands and feet free yet he keeps the prison doore fast lockt and bard and so long he fears no escape of his prisoners so Satan lets such as he keeps captive it may be to have their hands at liberty to reach out an almes and sometimes their feet to go to Church to hear Prayers saith one but he will be sure to keep the eares Dr. Featly And under Gods wrath which are the gates and doores of their souls fast Yea such are also under the wrath of God 1 Thess 2.16 3. Of such as lightly account of hearing who to discountenance it prefer before it 3. Generally we see what to conceive of such as with whom Satan prevailes so far as either through meer negligence refuse to hear Gods word when they may preferring their ease and sloth or at least to hear it onely of such as are like themselves and will flatter them and are time-servers or through prejudice of the word to hear the voice of a man the Pope forbidding them to hear when yet God calls them to hear as our Popish Recusants or to stop their ears from hearing and lock up that door by breeding in them a contempt at least neglect of hearing not onely by pretending that we all know enough already practice is more needfull
or find content in their present condition they were stung and till they got ease in a very hell Thus it was with these Converts here what will then be the condition and sorrows of such as do remain live and dye impenitent Let it then be hence observed that sinne must never want sorrow Observe Sinne carries a sting with it never wants sorrow it carries a sting with it which will shew it self at one time or other It s like those locusts spoken of Revel 9.7.10 which have faces like men but stings in their tails like scorpions Such a thing is sinne though at first it may seem to have a beautifull face and appearance yet such as dally with it will find it will leave pricks at least and venemous wounds in the conscience such as have been named And though the conscience at length grow to be seared Though the conscience be seared senseles sometime yet it wil awaken here or in hell yet not onely the searing of it is not without pain or without many conflicts and terrours before it be deprived of all fence but God after awakens it to feel the horrour of hel even in this life though he deny such repentance as we see Judas Julian Nero Brutus King Saul who having an evil spirit which formerly had haunted him yet though as Brutus his malus Genius or Ghost which haunted him at Rome having for a while left him yet met with him at Philippi a little before his death though I say it left Saul often yet often it returned especially at Endor where Satan in the likenesse of Samuel told him that to morrow he should be with him 1. Sam. 28 29.20 which struck him with horrible amazement as there was cause Let this be thought on by all such as can find no delight in any thing but in sinne Vse For such as delight in sinne to expect bitternes Prov. 9.17.18 or so farre as there is sinne in the same The forbidden fruit seemed even because forbidden to promise more delight then all other trees yet it proved bitternesse in the end as sin will do so stollen waters and bread of deceit end in hell and prove like poyson given in sugar which may go down sweetly Which young men Eccles 11.9 but kindleth a fire in the bowels and bereaves of life Think of this you young men and rejoyce but know c. as you have lately heard remember the threefold sting which accompanyed and followed that of sin especially that of Conscience and of eternall torments Think of this ye Joviall and merry men of the world and merry men should think of how can ye be merry when so many thousand woes curses and vengeances belong unto you and hang over your heads sorrow you will find enough one day which may be to you without repentance but know assuredly that true repentance and conversion cannot be without sorrow seeing then sorrow must and will follow sin And either by godly sorrow in time to prevent it 1 Learn in time to sorrow soundly for sinne to be pricked wounded and in heart truly grieved for your sinne for such sorrow onely will prove saving and prepare you for through conversion and for sound and lasting joy as in these converts here 2 Otherwise know that you will gain nothing by sin or by living in it 2 Or assuredly to to look for it Grief of heart and pricking and wounding of the soul in some measure is the easiest which if you be afraid of chusing rather to enjoy your ease pleasures liberties then to be interrupted in the same by godly sorrow There is nothing gained by sinne then expect nothing in the end but hellish horrour terrours and torments not a pricking but piercing of the heart a breaking an opening a cutting a cleaving of it it may be even in this life and then a wounded spirit who can hear Prov. 18.14 but assuredly hereafter and for ever in hell For the prevention of which consider now well what you do what will be the end of your courses what the bitter and accursed fruits of your sinnes and of your smothering of the checks of your conscience Be now in time sensible of these things and consider this you that make nothing or but a jest of sinne or of conscience Take heed of lading A wounded name estate and broken bones nothing to the wounding of the spirit Psal 38.4 wounding and piercing your souls by voluntary and wilfull transgressions The soul hereby though for the present it be not perhaps so sensible yet insensibly is wounded and burthened with the guiltinesse of sinne whereby wrath is a treasuring up the burthen increaseth so long till at length your iniquities grow and go over your heads and as an heavy burthen prove too heavy for you Sinne long harboured within will at length fester break out into torments and in a word prove the death of the soul eternally The madnesse of men in falling into the greater evil for avoiding the lesse How is it to be wished then that men were as sensible of pricks and wounds in their hearts and spirits which by sinne are alwayes made though not perceived or believed or that they feared these half so much as they do a wounded body estate or name how sensible are men of the one and how fearlesse of the other hence they receive wounds on the inside and gashes in their consciences that the outside may be saved they will steal and do wrong to prevent poverty and yet poverty no such burthen as the guilt of theft they lye will falsifie word promise and oath to prevent or get out of debt and yet debt with man is no such burthen as debt with God which will exclude them out of heaven They will voluntarily smother the checks of conscience and repell the reproofs of the word that they may sinne more securely and with lesse trouble and yet this fire which thus smothered will once yea and for ever break out into flames doth infinitely surpasse that small seeming sorrow or lesser prickings which are in repentance They will go to witches to gain health and yet no sicknesse so ill as to be the devils devoted slave yea to save their skin their liberties their offices and to avoid reproach for Christ and persecution they will deny the truth of God and give the soul a thousand gashes to keep the skin whole and yet no losse to that of the soul Mark 8.36 What madnesse * Mr. Harris of a wounded spirit saith one is this This is to prick the hand to save the glove to hazard the head for the saving of the hat or of a feather to prick and wound the heart yea to kill the soul rather then to forgo a little vain and sinfull pleasure gain or honour alas they know not yet neither will they be told what the sorrows of a wounded spirit and conscience meane when God shall
visions and dreams 4. to the constancy of the martyrs sufferings 5. to Miracles 6. to Afflictions yet these all are to be considered onely either as Preparatives to conversion and furtherances of the work of the word and Ministery and not barely or as seals and confirmations of the truth of Gods promises made known and propounded in and by the Word 1 By the Sacraments 1. For the Sacraments they for their efficacy especially come in the order of nature after faith to confirm and strengthen the same the Sacraments seal and assure onely that which the word promiseth and that is Christ upon the condition of faith and repentance and so he is promised and truly offered in the Word and Sacraments both to good and bad Men grown professe faith and repentance before they be admitted to Baptism and so beleeving are baptized Mark 16.16 Infants within the Covenant promise so much by their sureties which if coming to yeers they perform not then they receive Christ onely sacramentally specially not by Baptism and retain onely the external sanctification of Baptism a subsequent faith is required of them when they shal be capable without which they have no internall effects of sanctification by the Spirit The change made in the soul is not by water or by the bare work wrought in Baptism but by Faith and that is the effect of the word Christ is the substance life and vigour of all Sacraments whom therefore no unbeleever doth receive now Christ and his Spirit are not divided he is not received without his Spirit nor but by his Spirit given by the word which is the ministration of the Spirit Vse Not to trust to Baptism or Profession without faith So that Baptism works not of it self without the Word and Spirit which for Vse doth teach us not to ascribe too much to outward Baptism or Profession without true faith and the effects of the word on our souls and in our lives so that we may say of Baptism as was said of Circumcision Rom. 2 25-28 29. It verily profiteth if wee keep the Law else it becomes no Baptism true Baptism is that of the heart in the spirit 2. Some are said to be converted by voices from heaven 2. Not by voyces Aug. Confes l. 8. c. 12. as S. Austin tels us of himself that by a voice from heaven saying to him take up and read he being by Gods providence directed to the place in Rom. 13.13 14. Not in chambering and wantonnesse c. was throughly converted as his friend Alipius by reading the next words Rom. 14.1 as formerly hath been mentioned And wee know for certain that S. Paul Act. 9. was by the voice of Christ from heaven converted But Saint Austin was not ignorant of Gods word which hee had then by him and was not unacquainted with his will Therefore being formerly a wanton and having much strife within himself and shewing a lothnesse to leave his pleasant sin this voice prepared him to yeeld more reverence and obedience to the word known which in effect though read by him yet being thus by divine providence directed to this passage and it by this means specially applyed to him and his present occasion the perfecting of his conversion formerly begun was thus effected by the power of the Word Vse Not to depend on immediate teaching from heaven or Hell Yet as wee now are not to depend on this manner of immediate direction from heaven so if it did not confirm to us the doctrine of the Scriptures neither it nor any doctrine brought us by voyce from Heaven or Hel would prove effectuall to work faith or to convert But though such voyces should teach us the same truths which the Scripture doth wee are not to depend thereon See Luke 16.27 28 29 30 31. The like wee say for Saint Paul's conversion hee knew what doctrine hee persecuted but beleeved it not till now howsoever it was Christs voice and word which changed him and his conversion was further perfected by the preaching of Ananias to him 3. Not by visions and dreams 3 Some mens eares are opened and their instruction sealed in a dream in a vision of the night c. and so are withdrawn from their purpose yet it is the word of the messenger an interpreter one of a thousand which makes all effectuall see Job 33.15 16 17 c. with 23 24 c. 4 Some have been converted by seeing the constancy of innocent Christians in their sufferings 4 Not by seeing the constancy of Martyrs Euseb l. 4. c. 8. and their rejoicing to suffer for Christ as Justin the martyr witnesseth of himself in his Apology to Antoninus But this was onely an occasion sanctified of God to him and others both then and of later times to sift enquire into that truth which they knew not before by vertue of which when by the teachers thereof they were acquainted with it they were converted as Lactantius also sheweth so that we are hence taught not to judge of truth simply by mens sufferings for no true conversion wil alwayes follow thereupon but of their sufferings by the cause and truth for which they suffer 5 Not by miracles 5 So Christ wrought many Miracles upon the sight of which many believed on him but what did they believe the word taught by him which formerly they did not rellish Miracles were not without the word they onely made way for it The word by the Spirit did truly and effectually convert them when once they were convinced by the miracle that it was the very word of God the miracles onely occasioned their convesion 6 Afflictions often are the occasion of mens conversion 6 Not simply by afflictions Anno 496. See Doctour King on Jon. lect 40. as well as miracles so Clodoveus a French King upon a great discomfiture was converted to be a Christian but he was first instructed by his Lady Crotildis and moved to embrace the Christian faith The like we see in King Manasseh 2 Chro. 33.11.12.13 Then he knew that the Lord was God he knew him before for the Lord spake to Manasseh and to his people but they would not hearken as verse 10. onely afflictions brought him to acknowledge God and to be convinced that it was hee whom hee had to deal withall and to hearken to his word and obey it by repentance So David before he was afflicted went astray but now saith hee have I kept thy word Psal 119. Hee knew Gods word before but now hee kept it This wee see in divers others on whom Gods word hath not its powerfull work in humbling them till some grievous crosse losse sicknesse or danger come to second the word and to occasion a more serious consideration and use-making of it all which work in and by the power of the word In all the forenamed instances Conversion is from the power of the Word and from other things onely
and consultation whom he meanes to save This for the first preparative and most generall Use CHAP XII Shewing the desperate estate of secure sinners and danger of a false peace 2 Second sort of uses concern such as yet have notbeen pricked or not sorrowed 1Vse of Instruction not to please themselves with their false peace NOw upon this Triall it will be discovered whether thou hast been pricked wounded convinced and made sorrowfull for thy sinne or not And first if not here is an Use and matter both of Instruction and of Exhortation to thee But if yea then here are other Uses for thee 1 The secure sinner whether of more profane or of civill conversation is hence instructed not to please himself in his secure estate or false Peace He that hath not in some good measure been under the spirit of bondage troubled for his fin pricked and wounded in conscience hath just cause to suspect himself all is not well Many please themselves in their secure courses load their consciences yea wound gash the same with the guilt of many enormous and grosse sins and yet blesse themselves in their condition and remain unsensible and of stupified consciences sorry they would be to be in such case as they have seen or see some others to be in who yet indeed are either in the state of grace or in a good way unto it Yet those other are such as these wretches should be if ever they prove true Converts Those other it may be with David have their sins often before their eys which draw out tears of true hearty yea alsoof saving sorrow repentance from them but these secure ones cast all behind their backs and leave all to be reckoned for hereafter are moved with nothing they either think say or do and are not willing at any time to have ought in their thoughts or before their eyes but such things as may give the flesh content and which may blind their eyes and besot their souls namely sensuall delights and pleasures gain nonours in the world love and favour of men and such like True peace distinguished from false 1 It goes with Righteousnesse Rom. 14 2.2 is grounded on the Gospel That it is no true peace but a fools Paradise and false peace which they enjoy is most evident 1 True peace and righteousnesse go together the Kingdome of God is not meat and drink or pleasures or ought else of that nature but righteousnesse and peace and joy in the holy Ghost But their peace and joy is not such 2 True peace is grounded on the Gospel of peace which works reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 but their false peace cannot endure the Gospel or the reproofs of the word as we see in Ahab hating Michaiah and may see in these men not enduring to be told of their sinnes or to be called to mourn and to weep for the same and for their ensuing miseries 3 It issues out of sorrow for sinne 3 In a word true peace sound and solid comfort is for order of nature yea and working after yea out of true sorrow for sin trouble of conscience and spirit of bondage as hath already plentifully been shewed their 's not being such cannot be good ● Terrour ●secure ones who have not arowed for sin Let me then read thee thy doom thou secure sinner whosoever thou art and shew thee what cause thou hast to suspect thy self till thou hast at least been wounded pricked and pierced in thy couscience for thy sinne in some sense and feeling of Gods displeasure against thee for the same Their secure estate is a signe that they are stil 1 in their naturall condition and in sinne Simil. This is a sign 1 that thou art still in thy natural that is in thy damnable estate in which thou camest into the world and wast by nature a child of wrath as well as others Is sin no burthen to thee It is a signe thou art yet in sin as in thine own element For as the weight of water is not felt in the water as not of a man who shall dive deep into the sea whereas one hoggeshed of water on the land would crush him so to a soul any way separate and divided from sin who her it be in its judgement will or aff●ction sin will be as it was to David and heavy burthen too heavy for it to bear and will make the soul to cry to God for ease as finding no peace Psal 38.1 2 3 4 rest or health because of its sin whereas if the soul be not in some measure burthened and troubled with sin but do still make light of it as Samson did of the brazen gates of the City and do still bath it self in the delights and pleasures of sinne it must needs prove that it and sinne is yet all one and that there is no separation made between them as yet and consequently that it remains in its naturall and damned estate and that sin unsorrowed for will prove to it as that dead sea of Sodom which causeth all living things to dy that come into it 2 That they are in Satans possession 2 And so this false Peace is also a signe that such an one is in Satans possession all things are so quiet within him Satan molests none so much as those that make from him and those he will not suffer to be quiet as we have heard onely the Lord first by his word troubles those souls he means to save all is so quiet as by the Angel the waters were troubled before any cure was done Now what a condition it is to be in Satans keeping yea possession let any wise man consider 3 and dead in sin 3 This condition of secure sinners doth plainly shew them to be dead in and by sinne and deprived of all spirituall sense and life To be without the sense of feeling is a certain signe of death now these being wounded as being without sense stung and pierced by the word yea hewed by it for such are the effects of the word even 〈◊〉 slay and kil men that is to devote the impenitent to certain destruction yea damnation of soul and body yet shew themselves no whit sensible but are as dead and senselesse blocks under the lashes and strokes of the word herein like the drunkard or as he described Pro. 23.34.35 lying down in the midst of the sea or upon the top of a mast They have strucken me shall be say and I was not sick they have beaten me and I felt it not c. 4 That they are far from Repentance 4. It s a signe that secure sinners have not as yet entred the porch or so much as touched the threshold of the School of Repentance whereof this pricking of conscience in my text is made the first stop as hath been so largely shewed and proved It is a strong argument that the word the means and
seeing nothing is more opposite or a greater enemy to this pricking of heart or to the tender plyable humble and contrite heart such as I desire and endeavour to bring you to then is hardnesse and senselesnesse of heart and soul And thus having according to my office endeavoured to prepare the way for you and to gather out the stones I will come a little nearer to direct you to the Means Isa 62.10 by the use of which with Gods blessing you may attain to true compunction of heart and contrition of spirit the thing I aim at CHAP XV. SECT 1. Of the means of true compunction and sensiblenesse and first of Gods word heard Meanes of compunction and sensiblenesse such as was in these Jews and shall be at their calling again recalled and applyed THis pricking of heart as we have heard doth imply first tendernesse and withall pliablenesse to Gods word and will Secondly sensiblenesse and sorrow for sin not excluding fear of Gods judgements such as was in these Converts in my Text who were 1 pricked in heart that is wounded in conscience and made sensible of their sin and danger 2 Pliable to Gods will saying what shall we do And such as shall be again in these Jews at their conversion when first they also being convinced and made sensible of their sin in piercing and crucifying their Saviour shall mourn bitterly for the same Zach. 12.10 and shall no longer be stiffe-necked or abide in unbelief Rom. 11.23 such a heart was that of King Josiah and such as was in good King Josiah which was both tender and humbled yea rent and sorrowfull which made him both mourn within himself and send to enquire of the Lord with readinesse of heart to obey 2 Chron. 34.19 21 27. That then which I desire to bring or at least to direct you to The divers phrases signifying this compunction of heart is that which the Scripture in variety of phrases signifies not onely by the tender heart and heart of flesh Ezek. 11.19 and 36.26 but thus to have the heart pricked as in my Text to be of an humble and contrite heart Isa 57.15 to be of a wounded spirit Prov. 18.14 of a broken heart Psal 51.17 and to have the caul of the heart rent as Hos 13.8 Joel 2.13 God onely can and doth soften the heart Now howsoever we are exhorted hereunto and directed to the means by which it may be wrought in us yet we must know it for an undoubted truth that it is God who onely makes the heart truly humble tender and senfible Ezek. 11.19 and 36.26 Jer. 23.29 I will give them an heart of flesh which he doth by the meanes of his word which becomes as fire and as an hammer by his Judgements Mercies which yet he doth by Meanes 1 by his word and Corrections c. which he requires we attend unto and make a right use of by hearing meditation application and prayer so that whilst we thus do we are said to humble our selves though it be God by whose hand and power such hearts are given us 2 Chron. 30.11 12. 1 by our hearing his word faithfully taught 1 Make conscience of hearing of Gods word as it is taught especially by such as Peter here and other the Apostles were who without flattery in a zeal of Gods glory and of the Conversion of those they preached unto in power also and demonstration of the spirit now more abundantly powred upon them told these Jewes and convinced them of their sins that they were the crucifiers of Christ whose glory also they set forth Such teaching convinceth and judgeth the harers yea makes them judge themselves fall down and worship God and whilst the secrets of their hearts are made manifest acknowledge a divine presence and power in the preacher 1 Cor. 14.24 25 So was it here with these Converts who found a greater and more effectuall power in the word preached and thus brought home to their consciences The power of Gods word in pricking the heart which Miracles did not in these Jews then in all the miracles which God shewed either before and at the death of Christ when yet the very stones and rocks and the vail of the Temple were rent asunder or now at this time when besides the mighty noise and shew of fire or fiery tongues from heaven they saw and heard the Apostles men of no note nor learning speak in all languages the wonderfull things of God Acts 2.13 so in David they mocked at that but were pricked wounded with this Thus David after his sin of numbring the people came to a sense of his sin and his heart pricked or smote him for it and brought him to confession of it but when after the Lord had sent the Prophet Gad unto him to convince him by offering him an hard choice for that is given as the reason so that a Sam. 24.10 11 12. I do not say the word is alwayes thus powerfull or in all some are more hardened by such a ministery as the anvile by the strokes of the hammer God justly denying them his grace and not working in power with his word onely I say if the word thus preached do not prick if the word do it not nothing will do it wound and mollifie the heart nothing will do it If God by his word and spirit breath not upon the soul the soul cannot breath out so much as a sigh for sin if that wind blow not the waters of repentance will not flow if he send not out his word Psal 147.17 18. Exod. 17.6 our icy hearts will not be thawen if Gods presence promise and power be not there mans indeavours are not of effect If God stand not upon the rock our rocky hearts though Moses smiting the same shall never bring forth water onely where God will soften and wound the heart he by such a Ministery as is named shews out his power and poures out his spirit and makes his word effectuall to that purpose Wherefore if indeed we would have such hearts wrought in us we must indeavour to live under such a ministery we must desire yea and strive to live under a searching and forcible Ministery where we may hear such doctrine and so handled and applyed as that the secrets of our soul our secret sins and our hearts may be ransacked sifted and tried we may be made known to our selves and become vile in our own eys the deceits of our false hearts discovered and our sin and danger fully revealed to us without all flattery and partiality Till we be within such a distance and compass as within which the word is onely except extraordinarily active wee can expect no such at least saving effect from it Buy the truth then and spare for no cost rather then want it and accordingly to spare for no cost that is such wholsome and powerfull teaching account
hate every false way True hatred is out of true judgement So by stronger resolution against sin as in Joseph who had not so much sorrow for sin that wee read of as he had strong resolutions and reasonings whereby hee withstood very strong temptations by more watchfulnesse as in Job 3 Of watch fulnesse I made a covenant with mine eys why then should I think upon a maid Job 31.1 and in David Psal 39.1 I said I will take heed to my wayes c. So by more obedience by more carefulnesse 4 Of obedience carefulnesse and other fruits of godly sorrow by more faith in flying to Christ for acceptance by anger against our selves when we have sinned by a greater measure of fear lest wee offend God so again by more vehement desire to please God better by more zeal and by a holy revenge on our selves and sins in the mortifying of them By these wee either prevent sin and consequently the cause of sorrow or otherwise both give to others and get to our selves testimony that our sorrow if it be not so very much for the measure as it was not in Joseph Zacheus Lydia or with these Converts in my Text yet that it is true and sound for the nature of it SECT 2. Signes of true sorrow and what sorrow is not sound 3 Judge when thy sorrow is enough by the signes of true sorrow THerefore thirdly Learn to judge of thy self and of thy sorrow by the true signes of godly sorrow Wouldest thou then know whether thou be savingly pricked or no This may be tryed known and distinguished from unsound sorrow 1 By the Antecedents causes and grounds of it 2 By the Concomitants of it 3 By the Consequents and effects thereof which two last we will not speak of so much severally as joyntly seeing the effects and consequents may in a large sense be called and accountted Concomitants And first by the antecedents and causes of it Gods word working by his Spirit 1 True Contrition is the fruit and effect of Gods word onely faithfully taught convictingly applied both by the teacher and hearer and made effectuall by the holy Spirit of God as in these Converts here who when they heard were pricked and Jer. 23.22 It is the causing the people to hear Gods onely word not mans which turns them from their evill way and from the evill of their doings Which conversion and sorrow though it be often occasioned by judgements felt or feared yet it is wrought effectually by the holy Ghost accompanying the word The spirit of grace and supplication was first promised to be poured out as it was on the day of Pentecost and then it s said They shall look upon him whom they have pierced and they shall mourn for him and be in bitternesse c. Zech. 12.10 Such sorrow is not sound as is caused Now try thy sorrow from hence whether it be not a sorrow and pricking 1. From Envie many men sorrow and their sorrow is very great and inward 1 By envie at the prosperity either of the wicked but the true cause of it is envie thus the Psalmist or Asaph was envious at the wickeds prosperity but it was onely in a temptation and in a short fit Thus saith he my heart was grieved or leavened and sowred and I was pricked in my reins Psalm 73.21 Lo here a pricking in the reins and grief of heart and that in a godly man yet it was no godly sorrow Psal 73.22 but such as argued much folly and ignorance and was repented of and sorrowed for Which though it be in godly men yet is no godly sorrow And now doubtlesse many good men grieve and inwardly fret to see or to have seen evill doers prosper in their way and to bring wicked devices to passe ready to think them the onely happy men but this their sorrow is no fruit of Gods word but of their own ignorance folly yea brutishnesse Psalm 73.22 and 92.6 7. Neither should such simply justifie themselves in this their grief which seems bent against wicked men or think they do well in it It is an ungrounded grief there is no cause for it or ground in Gods word which dehorts every where from it as Psalm 37.1 Prov. 23.17 and 24.1 Such grief argues not true zeal against the wicked but rather some discontent with Gods government and providence Or much lesse of the godly whom to see prosper is a grief to the wicked How much lesse then may they justifie themselves in their grief whose sorrow is grounded on the welfare of Gods people to see them prosper to see their horn exalted with honour and that they have or see their desire upon their enemies The wicked shall see this and be grieved Psalm 112.8 9 10. he shall gnash with his teeth and melt away poor comfort may such have of their sorrow and I beleeve it is the onely or chief sorrow that some especially in these dayes do shew though somewhat else may be pretended to justifie their grief though perhaps through their blindnesse and love to their own conceits opinions and superstitions they pretend it is upon other and better grounds as to see religion and devotion with reverence to holy things as table altar Temple-wals and to names as to the bare empty name and sound of Jesus even when it is indevoutly pronounced and heard so of Church Lord-bishop and the like neglected and not regarded and learning to be discouraged c. 2 By anger when upon the reproofs and discoveries made by the word men are angry at the teachers of it 2. There is a sorrow and that upon hearing of the word faithfully preached and applyed but it is meerly grounded upon anger such as was in those that heard Stephen Acts 7.54 who when they heard such things as he most truly and faithfully taught were cut to the heart and gnashed upon him with their teeth through grief anger and indignation Consider whether ever any other sorrow or upon other ground hath been wrought upon thee in the hearing of the word Thou perhaps hast gone out of the Church and go away sorrowfull Matth. 19.22 grieved and sorrowfull but no otherwise then that Justitiarie that rich youung man went from Christ sorrowfull why his hypocrisie was by Christ discovered and he tryed in his affection and love to his bosome sin of covetousnesse This made him displeased with that doctrine and sorrowfull in himself so I believe it is with too many now who come jocund and well conceited of themselves and of their own righteousnesse and innocency to the hearing of the word but return sorrowfull from it but their sorrow is out of anger against their teachers who convince them of their sins and beat them from their vain holds and confidence in themselves which sorrow therefore being not an effect properly of the word or yet spirit of God but of the spirit of anger
teach and write so that their doctrine now written was to be the only Canon and rule of all Christian doctrine and religion to the end of the world Though the office cease who had speciall gifts of miracles to confirm the same whose office though in regard of the speciall priviledges of it which were many was temporary and ceased with them yet their doctrine unto which the Church of God ever since is tied and ministery which was as to pray so to preach the Gospel and to administer the Sacraments ceaseth not yet not according to the common duties of it prayer preaching c. which continue still but is to continue in such as succeed them therein to the end of the world Mat. 28.19 20. God promising the direction and assistance of his Spirit to them and to all such as shall teach the same doctrine These were they who by preaching Christ unto these Jewes and by the extraordinary work of the holy Ghost now sent down upon them pricked and wounded their consciences unto whom accordingly they seek for direction ease and comfort as to their only spirituall Physitians Doctr. The only way to be directed and eased in conscience is to seek to Gods faithfull ministers Whence from their example men are taught how to get ease to their wounded consciences namely by having recourse to the messengers of God and faithfull ministers of Christ For so the Apostles are to be considered here namely as preachers of the Gospel and such as under Christ did know how to speak a word in season to him that is weary Isai 50.4 Quest Why did not these here seek to their own Rabbines to the chief Priests learned Scribes Quest Why did not these here seek to the Scribes and Pharises devout and zealous Pharisees as they would be taken who sate in Moses seat Answ Alas They could expect poor comfort or direction from them whom they saw to be in the same condemnation with themselves Answ They were guilty Mat. 27.3 4 and the crucifiers of Christ more then they were They might consider what little comfort Judas in the distresse of his conscience found from them he might go hang himself for any comfort they either could or would give him and so he went from them immediately to the gallows or Tree Where the heart is truly touched it seeks only to Gods faithful messengers for cure and help It is ill seeking comfort to our consciences from such as are deep in sin yea in the same sins as we our selves Such great Rabbies as these in all ages know better how to wound and intangle mens consciences then to heal them and knew better to intangle consciences then to cure them They care least for men of scrupulous and tender consciences Such as make no conscience at all of sin unlesse in hypocrisie like themselves who Matth. 27.6 seemed to make some conscience of putting into their Treasury the price of blood but none at all of taking it out such I say are fittest for their turnes Only the faithfull Ministers of Christ can afford true comfort Why No they must be the faithfull Ministers of God and of Christ that can afford true comfort to troubled Consciences and that for these Reasons 1. This comfort and cure of Consciences is originally only in God and Christ that good Samaritan who was sent to heal the broken in heart 1. They only are in Christs stead who is the author of comfort as we have heard out of Isai 61.1 2 c. and Luke 4.18 19. Yet thus he is not alwaies in person or yet by his Spirit alone but by his word and the preaching of it which is the ministration of the Spirit So that those only and they are rare that dispense the Gospel most faithfully as the Ministers of Christ in his name and according to his will and word are they by whom Christ affords true and solid comfort to wounded consciences and by whow he refresheth the weary soul See Job 33.19 20. to 26. The blessing to be expected only from Gods ordinance These and none but these have commission from him and the power as to bind so to loose Mat. 16.19 John 20.23 Gods ordinance then is to be looked unto who having appointed the preaching of the Gospel to the same end hath also annexed his promise thereunto where his word is faithfully dispensed from which ordinance only of his we may expect a blessing 2. The same hand of the Surgeon which wounds is fittest to heal 2. The same hand that wounds is fittest to heal seeing the wounds made by the word are not the wounds of an enemy but friend Surgeon and Physitian If the Surgeon lance and cut as he doth it with intention to heal so he onely is the fittest to undertake that cure he that pours in wine is fittest to pour in oyl also Such an ones words are like if any truth be in it the sword which making the wound doth also the cure if the weapon-salve be applyed unto it or as they say concerning the wounds made by the darts of Achilles which could no otherwise be cured but by his salves Onely Gods faithful Ministers are the men that savingly both wound and heal We had need then be well directed and guided yea know well to whom or to what to have recourse for comfort to our grieved hearts SECT 2. False means of cure to be abandoned Vse 1 1 IN such case then when thou art pricked in conscience or inwardly troubled in soul To seek for cure of conscience only to Gods faithful Ministers seek onely to such as have been named and seek directions chiefly from Gods faithfull Ministers not neglecting the advice of godly faithful and experienced Christians and not 1 To merry company and drinking And here take heed Satan is a Mountebank and his Apothecaries will prescribe poysons Some yea thine own false heart perhaps will bid thee go to mirth and merry company so to drink away sorrow which yet will return and prove like the hand-writing to Belshazzer on the wall 2 To musick some to other sports and to musick as Saul when the evill spirit came on him must have a Musician to play unto him 3 To sleep some lie down and sleep that they may forget their sorrow 4 To their wealth some seek to comfort themselves in the sight or thought of their gold and silver store and abundance which no more can cure these prickings of conscience then the stone or gout or not so much some in trouble of conscience 5 To physick as if it were but meer melancholy fly to physick and to the bodily Physician with neglect of the spirituall as King Asa 6 To the Divell and witches some will send thee to the god● of Ekron with King Ahaziah 2 King 1.2 or to the witch of Endor with King Saul in his great straits 1 Sam. 28.15
but by opposing to it not only practice but secondly reading thirdly the spirit and inspirations fourthly praying which may also answer so many objections 1. Practice as if they needed no more knowledge 1. What can we hear say some that we have not heard the greatest defect is in the practice of duties To which I answer First we may hear that which we have forgot our memories are like leaking vessels Heb. 4.1 or we have made little use of what we know and so stand inneed of stirring up see 2 Pet. 1.12.13 Secondly We must heart to have our affections wrought upon till which time all our knowledge or hearing availes nothing as these Jewes heard formerly from these Apostles and from Christ himself that they never beleeved till now viz. that Jesus was the true Messias and therefore were never pricked in heart or wounded savingly till now So for other affections besides sorrow as joy hope fear zeal Thirdly The same word of God the more it is boulted the more meale like good corne it yeeldeth like a plentifull mine in which the deeper we dig the veine proves the richer 2 Pet. 3 18. Psal 119.18 and we should grow in knowledge and desire to see deeper into the wonders of Gods Law 2 Reading Rom. 10.17 2. Some reject hearing and preferre the reading of the word in publick and in private yea the reading of printed Sermons as more accurate for the most part To these I only at this time oppose Gods Ordinance from which onely we may expect his blessing by vertue of his promise annexed It s said Faith comes by hearing but the hearing is by the word and commandment of God Bare reading is not such preaching as the Scripture commends to us It is the Gospel preached which is Gods power to salvation Rom. 1.16 and the preaching of the Crosse which though it be to such as perish foolishnesse yet unto us which are saved it is the power of God 1 Cor. 1.18 Naamans cleansing was no effect properly of the waters of Jordan but of faith and obedience to Gods word c. 3 Some expect to be taught without the ordinary means of hearing 3 Inspirations Iohn 6. Psal 94.12 seeing it is written They shall be all taught of God And Blessed is the man whom thou teachest out of thy Law True God can save without the word and teach us onely by his spirit so he can feed us without bread as he did Moses for forty dayes in the Mount and he fed the Israelites in the wildernesse with extraordinary food from heaven when they wanted ordinary But God works now and usually by meanes not by miracles As therefore no man contemnes ordinary and corporall food because God can feed us otherwise and as the Israelites having the fruits of Canaan to feed on depended not any longer on Manna from heaven so we must not neglect the hearing of Gods word preached because God can give the spirit without it as to elect infants dying in infancy because God doth not at least ordinarily give his Spirit but by the word which where preaching is and may be had it were presumption tempting and mocking of God to expect it yea a provoking of God to give over to delusion of Satan 4 Those that oppose prayer to preaching 4 Prayer that Gods house is an house of Prayer not of Preaching Domus Orationis non Orationum and of Sermons Of Orations to God not from God to us True Christ said indeed his house was a house of Prayer but where said he so was he not then preaching in the Temple to the buyers and sellers and was there not in the Temple as well the Oracle and the Lamp of God dayly burning a type of his word as well as the Altar of Incense But I ask Who can pray aright that knowees neither what to pray for nor how both which are taught us by the word How can we pray aright without faith or call on him on whom they have not beleeved how shall they beleeve on him of whom they have not heard or how shall they hear without a Preacher Rom. 10.14 And so how can men in prayer confesse sin and yet not know sin by the word c. Not to mention that Prayer and Invocation is often in Scripture taken for the whole worship of God Gen. 4 26. Acts 2.21 and so it includes preaching too Vse 3 Vse 3. Lastly It is a good signe of good intended by God to such as to whom he sends his Word and Ministers It s a good signe where the word is and is reverently heard if especially they reverently and meekly hear and receive the word without quarrelling with it or the Preacher when their sins are discovered they convinced Christ his Kingdom and glory advanced as here comes next to be shewed It s a good signe that God hath some to call convert and save eternally And it may and should encourage all to hear with deligence alacrity and hope to reap the good fruit of their hearing yea to long for and desire it and not to put any barre in the same by their negligence in hearing prejudice had of the Preacher either his person matter and doctrine being Gods pure word though harsh to us or manner and plainnesse As contrariwise where either there is no preaching or no sound preaching or conscionable hearing and practice of things heard it s a signe that whether Christ with draw himself from a people or come by his word to such it is in judgement and for their further hardening and blinding as Joh. 9.39 Isa 6.9 10 11. CHAP. IIII. The object of our hearing generally and specially and what doctrine is like to doe the greatest good With Vses 2 TTe Object of their hearing This 2 The Object of hearing or these things or that which was spoken to them by Peter and the rest on this day when the Spirit came upon them so visibly 1 Generally Gods words 1 In general the Object of our hearing is and should be the word of God only taught by such faithfull Ministers of Christ as he stirres up calls and assists by his Spirit Thus every-where we are called on to hear the word of the Lord Isa 1.10 Jer. in the mouth of Christ and of his Ministers 2.4 7.2 -20. c. the voice of Christ or Christ himself Mat. 17.15 hear him Joh. 5.25 10.3 -16. yea of his Messengers Prophets and Ministers Zach. 7.7 seeing he that heareth them heareth Christ Luke 10.16 Luke 16 29-31 And this is no other then the voyce of the Spirit speaking in by the word as in Noah Gen. 6.3 which God hath of old promised to accompany his word Isa 59.21 and since the ascension of Christ also who hath promised by his spirit and power to be present with his Messengers to the end of the world Mat. 28 18 19 20. and to send the Spirit the Spirit of
truth to abide with us for ever John 14.16 17. to teach us all things and to bring all things to our remembrance whatsoever he had said unto us This is that Spirit speaking in his word It only must be heard which we are to hear Revel 2.7 11 17 -29. This is the word which we only are to hear Why No Word else will profit us Why In one word No other word will profit us without this no conversion see Jer. 23.21 22 -32. Therefore they i.e. such as God sent not but prophesie false dreames and stand not in Gods counsell shall not profit this people at all onely saith God if they had stood in my counsell and had caused my people to hear my words then they should have turned them from their evill way c. 1Vse For teachers to preach no other doctrine Vse 1. For us preachers to direct us as we intend any good to the poeples soules to lay aside all conceits and inventions and doctrines of men our own and others much more to abandon all Doctrines of devills such as are named in 1 Tim 4.1 2 3. and so generally all other Popish and Antichristian doctrines and to preach onely Gods pure word unto his people Vse 2. For hearers 1 Not to depend on Revelations without the word 2. For hearers to desire only such teaching And therefore not to depend upon the teaching of the Spirit by Revelations Inspirations c. without the word but onely according to it Much lesse upon apparition of spirits out of hell supposed Purgatory or yet heaven Luke 16.29 30 31. 2 To take heed first what secondly how they hear Gods word must be heard as his word 2 To take heed what they hear Mark 4.24 If any speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Isa 8.19 20. Yet how can they hear Luk. 8.18 they must hear and received it not as the word of men but which it is in trurh as the word of God which effectually and which only effectually worketh in them that beleeve 1 Thess 2.13 where faith also is required in our hearing without which it profits not Heb. 4.1 2. So long as young Samuel ran to old Eli when God indeed spake unto him 1 Sam. 3.4 5 c. 10.11 he had nothing revealed to him but when he could say Speak Lord for thy servant heareth he had the word effectually made known unto him 3 By so hearing it to approve our selves Christs sheep 3. Let us all by hearing onely Christs voyce in the mouth of his faithfull servants approve our selves to be Christs sheep even by this ear-mark Joh. 10.3 27. My sheep hear my voyce c. Let us not be beat from hearing it by such Popish Wolves as will say unto us as the wicked Jewes to the people He hath a Devil and is mad why hear ye him John 10.20 but let us rather reverently set our selves in Gods presence with Cornelius and say as Acts 10.33 We are here present before God to hear all things that are commanded thee of God It is this word of God only thus heard and obeyed James 1.22 23 24 25. which will save our souls 1 Tim. 4.16 John 5.25 Revel 3.20 And as in the Text. 2 The speciall Object of their hearing 2. But more specially What word was this these here heard and which did wound their spirits I answer That which Peter now spake unto them the summe whereof is in the verse before the Text Therefore let all the house of Israel know assuredly that God hath made that same Jesus whom ye crucified both Lord and Christ Which is according to that main passage in his Sermon verse 23.24 Him being delivered by the determinate counsell and free knowledge of God ye have taken and by wicked hands have crucified and slain Whom God hath raised up and who verse 33. being by the right hand of God exalted and having received of the Father the promise of the holy Ghost he hath shed forth this which ye now see and hear What Word and Doctrine then was that which so wounded and pierced them It s reducible to these two heads First concerning Christ his natures office glory exaltation and dominion Secondly concerning themselves their sin and wickednesse which thus was discovered reproved and they convinced and deeply charged to be the crucifiers of this so gratious a Lord yea of the Messias who was sent unto them and of their Saviour Note Their former blockishnesse and how they came to be convinced This blockishnesse was great before not to know or acknowledge him whom they seemed so long to look for but so to carry themselves towards the Messias which teacheth us for our humbling that the very sight and presence of God and of the things we seem most to long for as every way satisfactory to our desires is not enough to satisfie us unlesse God do further strike in by his grace and powerfull Spirit But now being thus charged and convinced August in Psal 43 began to think say Alas what will become of us seeing he is so great and glorious whom we have slaine For now they see and are convinced who this Jesus was that he is the Lord of glory which they saw not before 1. Cor. 2. Now they see and are convinced of their vilenesse guiltinesse of wrath of their bloody practices and cruelty as having persecuted murthered an innocent of their base and vile unthankfulnesse against so gracious a Saviour Benefactour and Physician who came to save heale and cure them This was the nature of the Doctrine which so wounded them Whence Observe What Doctrine is like to doe the greatest good Answ That which most advanceth Christ and debaseth man Why 1. let us observe and wisely consider What Doctrine or Teaching is that which is likliest to do the greatest good and which is most availeable to conversion and to the salvation of mens soules Here we may conclude it that it is that doctrine which most advanceth Christ and sets forth his glory and the glory of the Father and which withall most debaseth vilifieth convinceth sinfull man letting him see his filthinesse guiltinesse unworthinesse and inabilities Why 1. Because such Doctrine onely sets forth Christ as Christ as a Saviour as a Surety as a Physician as the sole Prophet Priest and King of his Church and so most glorifieth God and Christ in his goodnesse bounty mercy and in the freenesse and power of his saving grace none of which can so gloriously and fully appear as when mans sinfulnesse polution of nature his guiltinesse unworthinesse and impotency is according to truth and the evidence of Gods word laid open to the full 2. Because without such doctrine man will never come to know either God Christ or himself aright whithout such knowledge no salvation because no true or through humiliation self-denial conviction faith c. Vse 1
the Lord of glory would not have crucified him This is the reason why till this day they do reject him and are rejected of him and till this vail shall be taken from off their eyes and hearts they will never convert to God as we may see in Paul before and after his conversion A notable instance we have of Paul who whilst he was and remained ignorant of the excellency of Christ and stood upon his own outward priviledges and righteousnesse he advanced himself against Christ and his people and persecuted them but after Christ spake to him from heaven he is base in his own eyes denies himself and his own righteousnesse accounting all losse yea dung to win him and for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus his Lord he now admires nothing but Christ and determines to know or highly to esteem of none or nothing but Christ crucified See Phil. 3.5 6. with 7 8 9. 1 Cor. 2.2 So Job speaking of God to his friends and in Job Shall not his excellency make you afraid Job 13.11 and to God of himself after his eye had seen him I abhor my self and repent in dust and ashes Job 42.6 2. Of their own vilenesse 2. Again Why do men carry themselves in their sins so proudly against Christ and God dishonour him daily yea hate and persecute him and his servants but because they are ignorant of their own vilenesse guiltinesse and wretched condition they know not their need of him and therefore they both reject him and remain in their sinful course without check wounding pricking and remorse of conscience Revel 3.17 Contra. the true knowledge of Christ and our selves would humble us Wherefore I say to you as Christ himself said to the woman Joh. 4.10 If thou knewest the gift of God and who it is that saith unto thee Give me water thou wouldst ask of him c. So if we knew what a precious gift Christ is to us what a glorious holy God he is in himself c. and so withal saw our own need of him we would seek to him in all humility and self-denial we would buy of him c. as his own counsel to us is Revel 3.18 yea we would repent verse 19 and be vile in our own eyes we would mourn whilst we looked on him whom we have crucified c. as Zech. 12.10 we would be pierced to the heart and cry out Away with all priviledges power of will goodnesse of nature legal righteousnesse civilities formalities yea away with Scepters Kingdoms Crowns all give me Christ or else I die none but Christ nothing but Christ c. 4Vse for us Ministers to teach such doctrine as may humble men 4 Vse Now that you may thus do it concerns us in duty to God and love to your souls to teach such doctrine as this to you and as we desire the conversion and salvation of your souls we must make Christ fully known unto you and accordingly seek to prepare you for him by beating down the pride of your own conceits and all high thoughts and imaginations by beating you off your own bottoms Our duty is to form Christ in you Gal. 4.19 which cannot be done till ye be nothing in your selves and form Christ in them as in the creation the earth at first was rude and a confused chaos out of which all things were made so all things must be defaced even the goodly face of your own righteousnesse and moral vertues all high things and conceits must be brought to rubbish levelled with the ground before you can be made new men or Christs image stamped on you You must then either give us leave or we must take leave to tell you even you as well as Peter told the Jews that you are the crucifiers of Christ as well as the Jews your sins brought him from the bosome of the Father to die for them being as it were the setters on and principals An endeavour thus to do whereas the Jews were but instruments and accessaries they cried Crucifie him crucifie him in the court of Pilate but our sins cried Crucifie him in the court of Heaven yea by charging men now to be the crucifiers of Christ still we pierce and wound him as ill as they they pierced him with a spear thorns and nails we with reproaches our sins are as the gall and vinegar to him and by yeelding to sin in any kinde we so far and as much as in us lieth drive one nail more into his hands yea the spear into his heart yea so many sins so many nails thorns and spears And in plainer terms let me tell you that he against whom you sin is the Lord of glory who is the Lord of glory you cannot be so ignorant of it as the Jews were you have often been told it you have seen his works in the Church you professe to believe as much as these converts here either saw or heard on this day of Pentecost the Son of the eternal Father and therefore are lesse excuseable It is no lesse then the eternal Son of the eternal Father whom you crucifie afresh and put to an open shame Heb. 6 6. It is no other then his Spirit which you grieve then God whom you pierce And doth not this pierce and wound you as it did these here Oh that I might see it Do not you and to derogate from his glory and to adde to their own whilst they oppose his wisedom and are you not even they who derogate from his glory and adde to your own Do not you oppose your own widom to his accounting your folly true wisdom and his wisdom folly Do not you stand upon your own righteousnesse good meanings civil life formal Worship and so far exclude his righteousnesse as Paul did before his conversion righteousnesse will and Soveraignty and generally the Pharisees Yea are not you those that oppose your selves against him as your King doing your own will more then his yea by exalting your selves and the creature do you not undermine his Soveraignty I speak not now whilst I speak to you of the more grosse Idolater the heathen or Papist who denying the sole Soveraignty of God over them give and ascribe it some to Saints Angels and Images by Invocation and Worship some to the Pope on earth by slavish subjection honouring Idols nor yet onely of such as magnifying men more then God serve other mens humours lusts opinions but are not you to whom I speak many of you such as serve prefer and obey your own lusts more then God by your sensuality and worldlinesse and preferring their own will and lusts and so doing do not you in effect say Who is the Lord or who is this Christ that we should obey him or be subjected to him that we cannot follow our own delights or do our own will for him Let us break his cords we will not
expected finding themselves to have been worse afraid then hurt This should teach us wisedom and not either to be led away with pleasures present or to be so out of love with Gods ways But I hasten CHAP. VI. How Peters Converts came to be pricked in conscience BEfore we particularly shew the Order and Degrees of Conversion It would first be inquired and considered How these converts came to be pricked Answ how these Converts here upon Peters Sermon came thus to be pricked I answer They God opening their hearts as he did Lydia's to attend came upon Peters wise and skilfull handling and applying of the sharp sword of the spirit or word of God which pierceth to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit and by piercing pricketh at once to see and be convinced within themselves of their sinne against Christ in crucifying of him 1 Generall and of Gods wrath thereupon and vengeance hanging over their heads and of their own just damnation and hereupon were pricked in heart struck with fear made sorrowful When Peter so deeply charged them that they were the crucifiers of Christ they knew well and remembred that they indeed had desired Pilate to crucifie him and now hearing and by such apparant signes from heaven as on that day which in some degree had astonished them all seeing a divine power therein and being told that it was Jesus now exalted to glory Verse 33. who shed forth that which they did now see and hear and apprehending him to be indeed a King the Christ and that Lord who now as David foretold did sit at the right hand of God they are afraid of him as of an avenger now raigning in heaven whom on earth as a bountifull and mercifull Saviour they contemned and slew 2 Particular By being convinced of their sinne 1 Of murder 2 Parricide More particularly they hearing and generally believing that to be true which they were told concerning Christs glory do see and are convinced 1 Of sinne their sinne 1 Of murther whereby they procured or consented to the death of Jesus as a man yea an innocent man 2 Of Parricide and withall of extream ingratitude and unthankfulnesse in crucifying him as Jesus as a Saviour yea as their own Jesus who came to save them 3 Of Infidelity and unbelief whereby they so long had rejected him their onely Messias or Christ 3 Of unbelief refusing him that spake unto them and whom God had annointed to be their teacher or their Prophet 4 Disobedience and their Priest yea King 4 Of Disobedience in not submitting themselves to him as their Lord and King 5 Of Impenitency 5 Impenitency obstinacy and hardnesse of heart in not repenting and relenting at his doctrine and preaching who was incarnate and came into the world to call them to repentance 6 Ignorance 1 Cor. 2.8 6 Lastly of their Ignorance of him as Lord of glory whom if so they had sooner known to be they would not have crucified him But now conceiving of him as Lord and Christ they are wounded and pricked in that they wounded and pierced him Even as Pauls conscience was touched a little after he had reviled the high Priest when once he came to know him so to be Act. 23.5 but much more when he came first to know Christ and that it was he even the Lord of glory whom he persecuted in his ignorance and unbelief Act. 9.5.6 1 Tim. 1.13 2 of judgement which made them 1 fear 2 These Jews thus convinced of their sinne 1 fear and quake in apprehension of Gods judgements due to such grievous sinnes and offences as have been named whilst they now see that as Christ himself told Paul afterwards they did all this while but kick against the pricks and run upon their own death and destruction in provoking the mighty God and Christ their Lord and King against them Now they look upon him whom they had peirced and see him whom they slew to be one who being Lord of heaven and earth was able yea for ought they then saw ready to destroy them in souls and bodies and therefore they tremble 2 Despair of themselves 2 Yea they withall despair in themselves and see themselves unworthy of that salvation which they rejected and are at their wits end not knowing what to do to undo what they have done or to appease Gods wrath Thus they came to be perplexed troubled and sorrowfull and pricked in heart 3 Sorrow They came thus to be pricked by reasoning within themselves Now this was done by a kind of reasoning with themselves and communing with their own hearts by a practicall syllogisme The Proposition whereof the Law written in their hearts and word of God afforded them in effect this Murtherers especially of their Saviour and of the Lord of life are under the curse Gal. 3.10 and no murtherer or none that hates his brother hath eternall life abiding in him John 3.15 But saith Peter and their own consciences We are murtherers and that even of Christ then follows the conclusion Therefore we are under the curse and debarred of life Now out of this conclusion made by conscience follows in the affections fear despair in themselves sorrow horrour and perplexity in a word wounding and pricking and it is as when an evil doer a secure sinner thief or murtherer Out of the conclusion of which syllogisine issued this pricking is apprehended and brought to the barre where the Judge giving the charge declares what is Law what sinnes and crimes are against Law and by Law deserve death after which the Malefactour is accused of such crimes as deserve death and by sufficient witnesse proved to be guilty and he himself cannot deny the fact whereupon the Judge passeth sentence of condemnation and of death at which the party is stricken with astonishment and pricked at heart as with the point of a sword Such is the work of conscience in sinners the same conscience being as a Law to inlighten and to judge generally of good and evil it is also a witnesse to convince and lastly a Judge to give sentence against it self and so to terrifie Thus it was with these Jews and no otherwise it is with other Converts as comes now to be shewed so that looking on this pricking of heart as the beginning of or first step to conversion we do raise and make this Generall observation following namely that CHAP. VII SECT 1. That all true Converts must first be pricked in heart Hence with the explication of the point True Converts must first be pricked in heart SVch as God will convert and save must lesse or more be first pricked in heart for their sin Such as to whom God intends to shew mercy must in some measure be troubled in mind and conscience in sight of their sinne and miserie So that so long as sinne never troubles men there is no conversion as we see
in those many other Jews who hearing the same Sermon yet were nothing moved The method of handling this point Concerning this large and usefull point of Doctrine we will proceed in this method first to shew the truth of it and that it is so the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 then the or reasons why it is so 3. the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or manner order and degrees and steps of conversion 4. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the uses of the point and so we are to give you this point with its 1. Explication 2. Illustration 3. Demonstration 1 The Explication of it 1 It s not meant of infants so dying 4. Application 1 For the explication of this point it holds true in men 1 Of age and understanding living under the means I do not say that elect Infants dying in the womb birth or in their Infancy have such prickings or convictions of conscience as having no knowledge of sinne or of wrath and judgements Gods work on them is a work of mercy not so much of power whereby through the spirit more immediately without the word he both imputes Christ and the benefits of his death to them by vertue of his covenant and free promise How Infants are converted and sanctifies them in the womb or after but not always in outward baptism by a habitual principle of grace wrought immediately by the Spirit of Christ which was merited for them as well as for others and is accordingly given and applyed to them by it whereby as members of Christ they as wel as others 1 Cor. 12.13 by one spirit are baptised into one body are made to drink into one spirit 2 It holds not on the contrary that all that are pricked in conscience shall be converted 2 I do not say on the contrary that all such as are pricked in conscience or troubled for sinne are therefore or shall certainly be converted or saved unlesse their trouble proceed orderly and to such a degree of contrition as to which the promise doth belong and may be proved otherwise in regard of other graces concomitant to be saving of which trialls and measure of saving sorrow hereafter Much more then a bare legall terrour of conscience and other works are required in true Converts That the Impenitent wicked and reprobate may be pricked It is plain All come not to it as being given over to a reprobate mind and shut up in hardnesse of heart yet many who come to it yet go no further and so they miscarry in the end as we see in King Ahab who was humbled when he heard of Gods judgement for killing of Naboth As we see in King Ahab yet returned to other like sinne hating Michaiah and perished in the guilt of it unrepented so in King Saul who was pricked and relented after he had wronged David King Saul and yet saw Davids integrity yea he wept and yet returned to that sinne of persecuting him So many after their sinne of dunkennesse whoring murther have no doubt some legall qualmes of conscience some fits some stirrings and stingings thereof but no more as we see in Felix Felix Acts. 24.25 who hearing Paul reason of righteousnesse temperance and Judgement to come trembled yet he shuffled off the matter and continued in his unrighteousnes Intemperance as we may well deem in his security without fear of Gods judgements otherwise he would neither have expected mony as a bribe that he might loose Paul nor yet have left him bound to gratifie others And what think we of Cain and Judas both which confessed their sin to be great Cain Judas and had horrour thereupon and were wounded yet Judas was a devil and died desperately Cain did wear it away as much as he could by building him a strong City The other Jews and though conscience of his sinne still pursued him he never truly repented but died a reprobate And as we have heard before divers of the Jews who heard Stephen preach to them and charge them with the death of Christ as these here were charged by Peter seemed to be more then pricked Acts 7.52.54 they were cut to the heart through the accusations and convictions of the word yet they sought not to the remedy as these here but stoned Stephen and so increased their own condemnation Yea these here being pricked are yet verse 38. bid to repent Lastly the very fiends of hell do tremble The devil and yet are not capable of repentance But speaking of men we may conclude that it falls out with many of them These either despaire as it doth with some women who in false conceptions and abortions though they be put to grievous pains as much as they that come to their full time yet they miscarry in the birth so these hypocrites sometime they be much abased by the Law yea even to despair yet they are either swallowed up in that pit or are healed sleightly and so grow secure or els they have bin falsely healed with fair words by temporizing teachers and popish mountebanks and so in Gods wrath given up to security imagining it to be true peace of conscience and to hardnesse of heart sleeping dying in that senseles estate or otherwise seek to put away such heart-qualms by mirth musick merry company drinking gaming or by wordly employments that they may no longer hear the noise and cry of conscience within or put away their sorrow by following sports c. dealing with their conscience as some with those poor innocent children which being sacrificed to Moloch in Topheth whilst they were tormented in the brazen bull or calf by fire put under drums and other noise were used and raised to drown the cries of the poor infants as well as the parents pity Legal terrour then is but a common gift and doth not necessarily bring on conversion Quest. This pricking being but a common gift what is the difference between the elect and reprobate in their legal sorrow If you now ask me what may be the difference between one truely and savingly pricked in conscience and an hypocrite between an elect childe of God and a reprobate and how one may be known from another when and whilst they are both wounded and pricked I answer It s hard at first for a by-stander to judge of them till the event and effect of their sorrow and other concomitants do shew the same and so we shall try it afterward Onely we may say there is a difference though we cannot for the present see it Both may be under the spirit of bondage a while and apprehend slavish fear and terrour of heart as Rom. 8.15 2 Tim. 1.7 This spirit of bondage is common to the elect with the reprobate but with much difference 1. in regard of God 2. themselves and 3. the event and different issue The difference is 1. in Gods intention shewed 1. Gods
be throughly converted CHAP. VIII Shewing the reasons why God will have all Converts of age to be first brought under the spirit of bondage THese Reasons I reduce to these two generall Heads 3 The Demonstration or reason● of the main Doctrine And why God will bring all Converts under the spirit of bondage This he doth with respect 1 to their good 1 To their profit 1 Mans own Good 2 Gods Glory 1 God will in his providence have our hearts to ake by bringing us in some measure under the spirit of bonage and have us thus wounded at least pricked before he receive us for our own Good who otherwise would neither know our selves aright nor acknowledge our want and need of Christ whilst we missed him not nor prize him aright For methods sake know the good which God intends his elect by thus dealing with them is according to that usuall division of good Profitable Comfortable Honourable 1 The Profit of this method which God useth with his so far as it is to be reaped in this life may be referred to their Justification and Sanctification 1 God thus brings home to himself wandring sinners as he did the Prodigall 1 To their Justification who never had any thought of returning to his fathter till all outward means and succours failed him and till he saw himself destitute of mony friends food yea of very husks the meanest of meats he like a man out of his wits and not himself never came unto himself neither thought of coming or returning to his father till then Luk. 15. Now in this prodigall every wandring sinner who proves a true Convert is meant who is also compared to a lost or wandring sheep after which the shepherd sends out his dog to bring it into the fold Particularly God will have us feel somewhat of our own burthen and see as it were the flashes of hell-fire Particularly and so he turns the Law loose upon us a while both in the strict commands of it 1 To cause them see their own guiltinesse as also in the curse annexed to the transgressours of it 1 That we might acknowledge see and be convinced of our own guiltinesse and of the infinitenesse of our desert and debt which our Saviour signifieth unto us in the parable of the debter who ought his Master ten thousand talents which howsoever he at length did graciously remit yet before he forgave it he strictly required the whole debt of him commanding all he had to be sold even wife and children that it might be paid yet this was but to bring him on his knees that he might desire beg sparing and compassion Matth. 18.25 26. God thus wounds the spirit and lets men feel the burthen of their sinne which who can beare that so they may cry out with Davd Mine iniquities are gone over mine head Psal 38.4 as a heavy burthen they are too heavy for me 2 God thus doth 2 To humble them in sight of their inability that in a sense of our burthen of our own inability to undergo it we might be humbled and have those proud high and lofty thoughts which we have had or have of our selves brought down and levelled with the ground Till this be done the sinner will ever find something in himself to oppose against the work of grace who els would never seek to Christ Luk. 8.43.44 either his own righteousnesse and morall vertues and civil life his own power of will or somewhat ese like the woman in the Gospel whom Christ healed of her bloody issue who so long as she had any thing of her own left to bestow upon Physicians she never thought of Christ onely when after twelve years she had spent all her living upon Phsicians neither could be healed of any she sought to Christ and was healed Man naturally is like the wild asse colt or like the asse used to the wildernesse Jer. 2.24 that snuffeth up the winde at pleasure which must first be taken down and tamed and like the wild young horse that must be ridden in deep and tough lands run against the wall and otherwise affrighted by being brought to the brow of some high hill and rock before it be tamed or made serviceable 3 To make them willing to seek after help 3 Thus God makes the heart plyable and bores the ear to receive instruction and to hearken after the means by which it may receive help or ease making it to seek help out of it self else where as Paul smitten down from his horse Lord what wilt thou have me to do and as the Jailour humbled by an earth quake What shall I do to be saved and as these in my Text who when they were pricked in heart said What shall we do as the hunted or shot hart flees to his harbour or to Dictamnum the herb which causeth as they say the dart to fall out or as the stout lion which sought to Androgeus a man to get the thorn pulled out of his foot 2 Cor. 12.4 Or to accept of it being offered as Paul having a thorn in the flesh sought earnestly and often unto Christ 4 At least men thus are made willing to accept of help when it is offered which so many daily having never been in such strai●s nor suffered any pangs of conscience do neglect the sick only not the whole do see their need of the Physician 5 To prize Christ 5 God will thus beat men off their own bottomes to see their accursed condition that they may more highly prize Christ and his benefits as thirst makes us relish our drink and by sickness we better know how to value health by imprisonment liberty and in a word as one contrary makes us better to judge of the other None can ever so truly prize the worth of Christs bloud as those that have groned under the burthen of their sinne and have been filled with Gods wrath God then by such stings in the conscience causeth men seek to Christ and make use of him as of old he sent fiery serpents Numb 21.8 that such as were stung by them might look to the brazen Serpent which was a type of Christ crucified and be healed as Absolom set Joabs corn on fire 2 Sam. 14 30. to cause him to come unto him 2 God takes this course with sinners 2 Their sanctification and to affright them from sin to make them weary of their sin and willing to part with it which otherwise would never be there is that nearnesse yea Onenesse between the soul and sin as hath been said The corruption of the soul would never be let out but for this pricking When are men willing to pluck out the right eye or When do they yield their hand or foot to the surgeon to be seared or cut off but when they see and are perswaded that they cannot retain these and their lives too when the Gangrene
suppose beginning in the hand or foot if it be suffered further to spread will be their death when Zipporah saw her husbands life endangered if not her own she circumcised her son and cut off his foreskin which otherwise she was loath to do Thus God presents sinners with a true apprehension of his eternall wrath due unto them for their sinne and sets hell-gates open before them in the way of their lusts and fills their hearts with such terrours and horrours that they see no safety to their souls in the ways of sin and so as Pharaoh by strong hand at length did let the people go and the Philistines sent home the Ark so God if he love us especially makes us weary of sin and saves us even by fear not to say that such as have most smarted for sin at first in the pangs of their new-birth are not so easily drawn back to such or any other sins Again the spirit of bondage becomes to them a spirit of sanctification and it may be observed that such of all others as have been deep liest wounded at the first prove the holiest Christians afterward throughout the whole course of their lives 2 As the spirit of bondage proves a spirit of liberty freeing men from sin 2 God doth this to the increase of their joy and of Sanctification delivering from the power of sin so also it leads men to sound and solid joy and true comfort there is no comfort but to such The first work of the Comforter even when it is sent by that name and to that intent is first to convince of sinne so Habbak 3.16 and Psalm 94.12 13. Ease to sores which being whole do throb and rage is got by pricking lancing searching sleep is sweetest after labour and a pardon from the King most acceptable when after judgement passed the head hath been laid on the block and joy follows the labour of child-bearing 3 as also for their greater honour Rom. 8. 3 I might adde that God takes this course with such as he will convert to glorifie them the more thus to sanctifie them and to make them the more glorious in holinesse and holinesse we know or sanctification is the beginning of our glorifications Yea it is their glory thus to be made vessels to bear the name and glory of Christ before men which none do more then such as have been deepliest humbled Such of all other are fittest and ablest to glorifie God as having most experience of his justice mercy wisdome goodnesse and can best speak to his praise which to do is our glory more then his God gets nothing by us our acknowledgement of him makes him no wiser juster holier happier then he ever was even before any creature was made when he then sets and imprints on us the stamps of his glory and shews forth in us his justice mercy goodnesse c. That is in deed and for substance our gloglory not his There is somewhat excellent truly added to us nothing to him 2. God takes this course with converts for his owne honour And yet we may truly say God takes the aforesaid course with those he means to convert for his own glory that is for the further manifestation of the same and for this main end that the whole worke of conversion may appear to be his not ours 1. That of his Justice 1. His very Justice manifests its selfe in and by these terrours of conscience whilst the convicted sinner is made to see the depth of his own ill deservings is presented with the sight of hell which by such is acknowledged and made inwardly to acknowledge that it were but justice in God to cast him into the same yea so strong is this apprehension in some that for a long time they can see nothing but justice Howsoever this makes them at first and ever after to confesse and give the glory of justice to God acknowledging how just their condemnation should be if God did deal with them according to their deserts being ready ever to justifie God as cleer whensoever he judgeth Psal 51 4. Rom. 3.4 Thus all by sin are brought under the Law and the Law is let loose upon sinners threatens damnation and nothing but justice appears and vers 19. that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God God will not in this work of conversion suffer his justice to be swallowed up of mercy he must and will be acknowledged just before mercifull taking us as it were by the throat Mat. 18.28 bidding us pay all we owe when indeed with that poor woman 2 King 4.1 we have nothing at all to pay And so in every convert he takes away all matter of glorying letting them see the depth of their desert and their own both unworthinesse of mercy and inability and impotency to make themselves any help Is● 66.2 Job 9.13 2 His mercy which thus is more felt And by so doing whilst the best are made to tremble before him and that the proud helpers do stoup under him he makes way for his mercy that he may be the more glorified both by shewing mercy and by the acknowledgement of mercy by those that finde mercy as it is Gal. 3.22 The Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that beleeve or as Rom. 11.32 God hath shut up or concluded them all i. both Jew and Gentile in unbeleef that he might have mercy on all For so by shuting all up under sin and wrath his mercy is more felt and admired by such as finde mercy and thankfully acknowledged The foregoing terrours of justice in the converted which makes them smart makes mercy relish better with them and be more esteemed by them yea all the world may now see and that acknowledge the receiving and conversion of sinners is meerly of mercy None derogate more from Gods mercy and the freenesse and power of his grace then such as not sensible enough of their wounds and misery by sin ascribe somewhat in their conversion to themselves neither can they be so truly thankfull as others And by thanks or offering praise unto God God professeth himself to be glorified So that God by thus humbling men Pal. 50.23 as is said with terrours doth but make way and prepare matter of praise and thanksgiving to himself in due time which accordingly we see given unto him by Paul even upon this ground 1 Tim. 1.13 14 15 16 17. I saith he being before a blasphemer and persecuter and injurious obtained mercy And the grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant Christ came to save sinners of whom I am chief howbeit for this cause I obtained mercy that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering Now unto the King eternall c. be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen So elsewhere crying out in a sence
of his bondage under the law of sin O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Rom. 7.24 apprehending his deliverance by Christ he adds I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. 3 His power wisdom Lastly the glory of Gods wisdom and power doth also thus shine out to the world by this his manner and method of dealing with converts and in making them new creatures We all do confesse that the works of creation especially the heavens do declare the glory though not the will of God How much more doth his glory appear in this work of effectual Redemption Psal 19.1 where by a like manner of proceeding his glory appears in greater brightnesse as in the creation There and here he works by contraries he in the creation made first a confused vast and grosse Chaos or rude lump where was nothing but darknesse and confusion yet out of that darknesse he brought light out of that confusion he brought order and this goodly frame and comely structure of Heaven and Earth do shew his wisedom power goodnesse beauty and glory beyond all expression Rom. 1.20 21. and he is glorified or should be in and by the right acknowledgement of these Oh how then doth his glory appear when in the new creation or conversion of a sinner he first casts all strong holds and high things into ruinous heapes into rubbish into a confused Chaos staining the pride of man laying him level with the ground what darknesse is in the minde what impotency in the will what confusion in the affections yea what feares and terrours is the confounded soul first brought into and yet such is the infinite power and wisdom of God he out of these ruines raiseth a goodly building even an house a Temple for himself to dwel in he brings light out of darknesse strength out of weaknesse order out of confusion joy out of sorrow and feares in a word heaven out of hell God in dealing roughly with such intends and prepares way for mercy Now for the conclusion of these proofs we hence may see how mans greatest good is wrought and Gods glory most manifested whilst God in the conversion of a sinner shewes himself terrible as there is just cause in us why he should indeed be so and so he is to impenitent sinners and yet intends nothing but love and mercy and by humility to exalt us to glory dealing with us as Joseph dealt at first with his brethren roughly imprisoned some charging all of them to be spies and threatning them and yet he even intended to discover himself in due time as a loving brother unto them Thus before God entred into covenant with his people to be their God Exod. 19. he shewed himself most terrible unto them by lightning fire thunder and black clouds Heb. 12.18 19. c. yea when the Spirit was sent down on the day of Pentecost Act. 2.2 6. there was a mighty rushing winde from heaven and shew of fire whereby they were confounded or troubled in minde and thereby the better prepared to hear that word which so wounded and pricked these converts in their heart And so was Elias prepared to hear the still voyce of God in which God made his will known to him by a strong winde rending the mountaines by an earth-quake as also the Jailor Acts 16. and by fire And so were the Israelites humbled terrified driven out of themselves by thunder and raine in time of harvest and prepared for repentance 1 Sam. 12.17 18 19 20. Let this suffice for the Demonstration of the aforesaid point of doctrine after which should follow the Application of it by way of Vse but to make further way for the same we will as we at first propounded speak of the Order degrees and steps by which God proceeds in perfecting this work of Conversion CHAP. IX Of the order of Conversion first as it depends on Gods Love Where ten Approaches of Gods grace to us 4 The Order steps and Degrees of Conversion and of faith THE work of mans Conversion is an effect both of Gods Love and of his power and so is to be considered of us but yet especially according to the latter respect which is more pertinent to my scope There is an order of Gods proceeding in each of these but first we may briefly consider that there is an order to be observed between these two First Love and then Power the one leading the way to the other The Conversion of a sinner faith and the meanes of both come to us first from the Love and then from the power of God And first as it depends on love in God not but that the power of God accompanieth his Love for Gods love is an effectuall and working love it is reall and operative in its time and the Love of God goeth along with his power even then when he seems to pull and rend us in pieces by his power his seeming rigour is mitigated and moderated by mercy and ever tends to and ends in the good and conversion of his elect This is taught us Jer. 31 3. I have loved thee with an everlasting Love therefore with loving kindnesse have I drawn thee So Joh. 6.37 and 44. All that the Father giveth me lo there is Gods free love shall come unto me c. there is expressed the power of his grace And no man can come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him No man can come to Christ but by Gods free grace in love giving Christ as a surety John 3.16 and then by power applying him to our justification as our head Rom. 3.25 26. It skills not much in shewing the order degrees and steps by which Conversion is wrought whether I name it conversion faith yea or salvation seeing each includes or inferres the rest Ten divers degrees and approaches of Gods grace to us First then briefly for the Order of Gods work of Love by which we come to conversion faith to all other saving and sanctifying graces and to salvation 1 We must first begin with the consideration of Gods eternall decree of Election and Predestination To which purpose see and consider of these places of Scripture Ephes 1.3 4 5 c. Gods blessing us in time is according to his election of us in Christ before all time 1 Election Tit. 1. so 2. Thes 2.13 Matth. 11.25.26 hence faith is onely of Gods elect and onely such as are ordained to eternall life beleeve Acts 13.48 2 Next to this there is Gods sealing and ordaining of Christ the object authour and finisher of our faith 2 The sealing of Christ Heb. 12.1 from eternity also Joh. 6.27 1 Pet. 1.19 20 21. Where of Gods covenant with Christ and transaction with him 3 The publishing of the Promise 3 There is the publishing and promising of Christ made of old to our first parents after the fall
occasionally And that it may further appear that Gods power goes along with the Word preached and heard wee will briefly shew this first In the persons who preach and hear secondly in the work of the Ministry it self and in the order thereof The power of which is further shewed 1 In the persons of Preachers who by the power of God are 1. Called 1. There is a power goes along in the very calling and sending of Ministers their calling and abilities are from Gods power When Christ called Peter and Andrew James and John from their fishing trade Matth. 4.18 19 20 21 22. was there not a secret power drawing them to leave both ship and father Zebedee and to follow him but especially in calling Matthew from that gainfull trade the receit of custome Matth. 9.9 who forth with arose and followed him so in calling of Paul to be an Apostle and after when the holy Ghost said Separate me Barnabas and Saul c. Acts 13.2 Men may not arise from their ordinary callings and thrust themselves into the ministery unlesse God more immediately and extraordinarily do call them as Christ did these named where to his authority he adds inward power to obey Men may not then thrust in themselves into the Ministery as of themselves that power and authority belongs to God and Christ to call them 2. Inabled with gifts 2. Men even the best are of themselves insufficient to these things and unable to discharge such a weighty duty what through bodily what especially through spirituall defects and inabilities but yet God enables such as he calleth and makes them able Ministers 2 Cor. 3.5 6. Vse c. who therefore are taught not to trust to their own gifts studies and endeavours men so doing fail most of all as might by instances be shewed 3. Made willing and encouraged 3. Men often are unwilling by reason of the greatnesse and danger of the task to undergo or undertake such a great difficult and hazardous work as we see in a like work how unwilling upon this ground of inability Moses was to obey Gods call but see Exod. 3.11 12. and 4.10 11 12. Jeremy was foretold of such things but strengthened and encouraged against them see Jer. 1.6 7 8 9 19. And when he was by discouragements ready to give over Gods spirit quickned and set him to his work again Jer. 20.2 From this power it is that godly Ministers do so constantly holdout and still preach for all their discouragements and that they dare oppose and reprove even great ones for their sins as John did Herod who if either they resist the word or hate and persecute their reprovers for their faithfullnesse they so doing do resist the power and spirit of God in them and the ordinance of God There is a wisedom and spirit by which these speak which the ungodly though learned otherwise are not able to resist Acts 6.10 In a word when Christ sent his Apostles to preach to the Gentiles saying go teach all nations and it is premised Mat. 28.18 19 All power is given unto me in Heaven and in Earth which was spoken for their encouragement who had a mighty work in hand the Conquest of nations to Christ and were to meet with the wisdom and power of the world to withstand them 20. This promise is extended to us even unto the end of the world 2 For hearers 2. Of hearers whose 1 Hearing or willingnesse to hear is a work of power first It is a work of power that men come to hear being called It is God that humbles them and gives them an heart to do his will in obeying even the commandment of godly Magistrates therein as 2 Chron. 30.11 12. That some being called by the bell or otherwise come to church to hear Gods word especially as Gods word and as in obedience to him with desire of profit as verse 8. when others having the same call refuse go to cards drinking walking abroad or to a Masse in a word refuse to come It is not from any power of mans will but from the spirit of God moving the heart of the one effectually and leaving the other to their own hardnesse who as Popish and profane Recusants now being by Moses the godly Magistrate called on refuse obstinately saying we will not come up which Numb 16.12 Vse by the way 1 shews The justness of Gods judgements on all such Recusants being given over to their hearts lusts and 2 teacheth all such to acknowledge his power and mercy to them whose hearts tell them they come to the hearing of his word in obedience and with desire to profit thereby 2 When men thus lend their presence 2. So their attending yet it is God onely who by his Spirit opens their hearts 1 to attend as he did Lydia's Acts 16.14 So that it is a signe when men do not attend to the word which they hear that corruption and Satan is strong 2Vnderstanding of the word 2 To understand the Scriptures which otherwise they could not though delivered to them by the mouth of Christ himself Those to whom he expounded in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself stood in need that he should also by his power open their understandings that they might understand the Scriptures Vse See Luke 24.27 with 45. So that men must not so much trust to their own piercing wits and understandings in their giving the sense of the Scripture or expounding the mysteries of Religion especially those deep points of Predestination and Election 2 This power is shewed in the effect of the Ministery 2. And so we come to see Gods power in and by the Ministery who by his Spirit goes on with his own work and makes it powerfull to conversion as 1 Cor. 3.5 6 7. 2 Cor. 3.3 whosoever be the Planter yet it is God who by his Spirit gives the blessing and increase Whatsoever be the pen yet it is God who by his Spirit writes with it It is Gods ordination yea and power by which hearing faith and obedience cometh Rom. 1.16 10.17 All which should teach us 1 to magnifie the ministry of the word even in the mouth of weake man if otherwise faithfull as Gods power to salvation And 2 to see and try our selves whether it be so powerfull in us or yet have such a powerfull and saving worke in us as it hath in many others SECT 3. The order of the work of Conversion and first of the Law 2. The order of Conversion in regard of the work it self The popish order disallowed ANd thus we come more particularly and neerer to the work it self and to shew in what order God by his word doth work conversion and beget faith in us Schoolmen and Papists make three degrees of penance or of repentence 1 Compunction 2 Confession 3 Satisfaction the first is of the Heart the second is of the Mouth the third
is of the Hand in and by works but because they explain themselves dangerously in these and because a reprobate may have them all as well as their converts for all three were in Judas I leave them The order noted which some others observe Others much better make the order this by reducing the whole work to these six heads 1. This trouble of minde and conscience upon sight of sin and misery 2. Consultation hereupon what in such case to do 3. To be broken-hearted humble and contrite 4. Secret desire of forgivenesse with confession of sin and hope 5. Forsaking of all and highly prizing the pearl of the Gospel 6. Application of Christ and his promise Thus that worthy Divine old Mr. Rogers See also who list Mr. John Rogers of Faith Seven Treatises Treat 1. Chap. 4. Treat of the Christians Apparelling by Christ part 3. Sect. 73. on 1 Cor. 1.30 pag. 117 c. Chap. 2. I have also my self endeavoured to shew how faith is wrought and from thence discovered many mens false faith Onely now I will briefly note thus much Before the grace of Conversion and Faith be fully wrought the Spirit works orderly by the word assisted as is said sometimes by Miracles Afflictions c. so that there is first a work of the Law then of the Gospel not but that the Gospel hath also some work on the soul like unto that of the Law which therefore so far I refer to the work of the Law if not of Moses There is a double orderly work of Gods power both of the Law and Gospel 1. By the precept Mark 11.15 yet of Christ The Law then yea and so the Gospel hath a work 1. In and by the Precepts of it as when it saith Thou shalt have no other gods besides Mee and so in the other Commandments Yea so also the Gospel Repent ye and beleeve the Gospel and so it works on the understanding 2. In the Sanction of it 2 By the Sanction Gal. 3.10 Deut. 27.26 whereby it is established and a curse annexed to the breakers of it Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them So faith the Gospel Except ye repent ye shall all perish And Hee that beleeveth not the Son Luke 13.5 shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Joh. 3.3 6. And thus it works on the Conscience By both which works men are brought under the spirit of bondage brought to self conviction and beat out of themselves despairing wholly of themselves or of any help or succour from their own wisdome righteousnesse holinesse power The distinct works of the Law The distinct and 〈◊〉 works of the 〈…〉 1 Revealing of sin 2 Increase of sin and orderly proceeding of it I take to be this whereby it makes way for the mercy of the ●●●●●el This it doth 1 by revealing sin which formerly lay hid Rom. 3.20 2 By increasing sin not but that the law is holy but this it doth accidentally through our corruption for the commandment once coming to the conscience and shewing its spiritual nature sin which lying in the heart as well as in the outward man was thought to be dead reviveth Rom. 7.9 and taking occasion by the commandment Vers 11. deceiveth us and thereby slayeth us and worketh in us all manner of lust when the commandment cometh sin aboundeth and appeareth to be sin yea out of measure sinfull This the law doth in and by the precepts of it 3 Causing of wrath 3 By causing wrath that is by revealing foreshowing and threatning of wrath convincing the soul thereof and shewing God to be truly angry Rom. 1.18 that his wrath is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse and unrighteousness of men and against theirs in particular 4 Horrour and fear 4 Hereupon follows horrour and amazement through fear of this wrath and of the Justice of God The soul is at a stand the hammer of the Law hath given it such a blow that it is dazzeled confounded and knows neither what to think of it self nor what to do as it was with Saul posting to Damascus yea it with Belshazzar see 's the vengeance written and the hand-writing of condemnation against it self apprehending nothing but some fearful and sudden wrath ready to befall it so that it begins to quake and tremble as he did in the midst of his jollitie in an expectation of some fiery indignation his life even that of his soul hanging in doubt before him fearing day and night as having no assurance of it and having nothing in his eye but his sin the cause of his fear and damnation and death as the wages and fruit of his sin which seeing God hath him in chase he knowes not how soon or suddainly it may befall him And this is that spirit of fear 2 Tim. 1.7 Rom. 8.15 and of bondage spoken of in scripture Heb. 2.14 5 Sorrow and griefe 5. Now with this or upon this apprehension of cause of fear there goeth or followeth sorrow wounding pricking of heart stinging of conscience and present feeling of hell torments lesse or more For what is painfull when it is present is not without pain in the certain expectation of it as on the contrary a man may and the true Christian doth even under affliction rejoyce in hope of glory so these I speake of do sorrow and feel sensible grief in the fear of hell the soul is wounded pierced and stabbed as with the point of a sword hell is already begun in the conscience which saith I have thus and so sinned against a just God and damnation is my portion and thus the curse of the Law particularly seizeth upon the soul 6. Self-despair 6. This is accompanied with self-Judging and through a sight of its own inability to help it self with self-despair also whereby the soul lies plunged as a bull in the net and by striving is more intangled seeing its own help-lesse and so hope-lesse condition lying in bondage under the fear of death and of eternall wrath Now this as the three former is as from the Sanction of the Law and curse annexed and denounced to the breach of it so especially it flowes from the conclusion of that practicall syllogisme spoken of which conscience makes where is both self-judging an act of conscience and affections sutable stirred up in the will and soul 7. Consultation and a driving of a man out of himself 7 Now this desperate condition of the soul makes it it may be but alwayes with those whom God will convert look about to see as it were if any help or meanes of help be neer and causeth a consultation and an inquiry after them if possibly there may be cure as in these here in Saul or Paul and in the Jaylour and this I make also a work of the Law and of natural conscience the law being
instrument working by the spirit without the fruit of the word true repentance hath not had as yet any healing or saving work on the soul What vertue is there in that Physick which makes not the Patient sicker then he was and puts him not to pain What healing vertue is in the plaister if it smart not and it s a sure signe that the dislocated or broken bone is not brought right to its place if there be no pain felt in the setting Where no sorrow follows sin where no remorse of conscience is in sinners and come short of Reprobates as not so humbled and sensible as was 1 King Ahab 2 King Pharaoh who confessed his sinne they may justly seem to be in worse case then many who now are deeply plunged into hell How many have we that never hung down the head with King Ahab nor were moved with any denunciation of judgement How many who never yet were so much humbled as King Pharaoh a very reprobate but remain yet obstinate and obdurate they are called upon to let their beloved and gainfull sinnes go and to part with them as he was to let the people of Israel to go out of his land which at length he did though with little thanks being forced thereunto by the extremity of plagues from God but do many of us so much as he Exod. 9 27.28 and 10.16 17. he confessed his sin and said I have sinned this time the Lord is righteous and I and my people are wicked intreat the Lord for it is enough c. and I have sinned against the Lord your God said he to Moses and Aaron and against you sought the prayer of Moses and 12.31 32 33. now therefore forgive and intreat the Lord your God that he may take away this death onely yea at length he did according to Gods command let the people go yea was urgent upon them apprehending nothing but death for him and his who said we be all dead men and dismissing them he said go and at length though forced did obey be gone and blesse me also But have we not many that never yet confest their sinness as he did who never intreated Moses or any faithfull Minister of God to pray for them in all their life who never yet obeyed God or put away their beloved sins neither in love to God nor in fear How many amongst us are there that never see not confess their sin or shew any readiness to turn from their evil way when God stands in their way by his judgements threatned as yet did Balaam Num. 22.34 that never had any such good motions savoury thoughts and speeches as hee had 3 Balaam but wil go on in the very face of God and in despite of his judgements threatned yea it may be also inflicted as Isa 57.17 and so in other sins God meets men in the way of infamy for their uncleanness and yet they wil go on in that way stil in the way of their hatred and plotting mischief against Gods faithful servants and yet they wil on stil in that way which yet Balaam did not for seeing at length the Angel and his sword drawn in his hand hee bowed down his head and fell shat on his face saying I have sinned for he went with a purpose to curse Gods people now therefore if it displease thee Numb 22.31 -34. I wil get mee back again How many who never relent for any wrong they do Gods faithful servants as yet did Saul a reprobate towards David 4 Saul 1 Sam. 24.16 17 18 19. 5. Herod Who never reverence Gods Ministers or hear them gladly or upon hearing reform and do many things as yet did Herod who yet afterwards took off John's head and yet not without sorrow Who never tremble when they hear Discourses and Sermons of righteousness temperance and judgement to come as yet Felix did and yet they I beleeve as unrighteous 6 Felix Acts 24.25 intemperate and lyable to judgement in many other regards as Felix was Nay never complain so much as Cain did 7 Cain either of sin or punishment or of being cast out of Gods presence but rather please themselves in their sins and cast themselves daily out of Gods presence and favour and make themselves unworthy to partake with Gods people in the communion of Saints Yea lastly Have we not many who come short even of Popish penance who never were yet so compunct in heart and troubled in conscience as was Judas 8 Judas who never confessed their sins by name and with aggravation of it as he saying I have sinned in betraying innocent blood neither ever made restitution as he did of goods ill gotten or sought to give satisfaction for any wrong done by them The folly of such secure sinners Oh then the extreme folly and madness of such secure sinners who think themselves in good case and wil hope to be saved as wel as any and yet come short of very reprobates But if those named and such like who shewed more compunction of heart and therein and in their confessions of sins and other works and their certain damnation Jude ver 7. have so far outstripped and gone before you be yet gone to hel to the divel and to destruction and now suffer the vengeance of eternal fire what wil become of you secure and senselesse sinners who feed sport play minde the world use means of unlawful gain without all fear of Gods judgements so much and so often threatned in his name by his ministers and executed by himself on others How shal you escape the damnation of hell where shall you appear who yet shew not such remorse as these reprobates did You must needs then in this your case be thought to be next door to hel and to the estate of damned spirits being so stupified as not to be moved with Gods threatnings no not with his gracious promises and peremptory commands Vnlesse they do not onely outstrip these but all Temporizers whosoever And yet my deerly Beloved whose salvation I long after and do thus seek though you should do as much as these named yea though you should go as far in humiliation sorrow zeal and reformation as either these or any other bare Temporary yea as far as hee did to whom our Saviour said Thou art not far from the Kingdom of heaven even as far as Jehu in zeal against other mens sin as far as Ananias to part with a great portion of thy goods for the publick good of others as far as Demas and Alexander to forsake the world and thy hopes in it and to follow poor Christ yea to venture thy self as Alexander the Coppersmith did in cleaving to the truth as far as Nicolas who was chosen Deacon by the Church for that reverend respect they had of his gifts or lastly as is said as far as Judas who being an Apostle could both pray and preach with great
from him Or otherwise as is said by a good but ungrounded conceit of thy self and of thine own estate being alive before the Law come closer and neerer home to thy conscience thou thinkest thy self safe and in good estate Rom. 7.8 and apprehendest no danger or judgement as belonging to thee but onely to others But in a word know and remember that though thou be thus partiall towards thy self yet God is not as hath been said though thou hide cover and conceal thy bosom sin neither searching it out thy self nor suffering the word to search thee yet God will search thee and finde it out Thy safest way were to judge and condemn thy self that thou mayst not be condemned and judged of the Lord and to imitate the poor and humble Publican who smote on his brest and heart confessing and craving mercy for his sin and to beware of the proud Pharisee his self-justification 5. Flattery of soothing Prophets 5. And as part cause of the former beware of smoothing and flattering teachers who howsoever sometimes they may make a flourish and declame it may be against sin and tell of Gods judgements yet they will have a care that they come not so neer as to offend thee or to touch thee in thy speciall sin if especially thou be one in place or who mayst come even with them again These men heal before they hurt and what stings others the faithfull servants of God have left in the mindes and consciences of any they seek to pluck out and to heal the wound with their oyly words being like the false Prophets of old of whom and of the Priests it was said They have healed the hurt bruise or breach of the daughter of my people slightly saying Peace peace when there is no peace Jer. 6. v. 14. And when Gods deerest servants tell the people of particular judgements belonging to them and so by wounding and pricking their consciences bring them on in a good way towards repentance these flattering Prophets strengthen their hands that they should not return from their wicked wayes by promising them life Ezek. 13.22 onely wounding and making sad the heart of the righteous whom God hath not made sad In this case I must say to you if you would be pricked and savingly wounded for your sins as the Lord in another case said to the Kings of the Nations Therefore hearken not ye to your Prophets nor to your Diviners c. for they prophesie a lie unto you to remove you far from your Land and that ye should perish Jer. 27.9 10. and Jer. 29.8 6. Lastly 6. Vnbelief take heed of unbelief want of faith to beleeve Gods true Prophets when they tell you of the danger of your sin keeps you from applying the threatnings of God to your selves so that you reap no fruit by the word but though fairly warned and called to repentance with hope of mercy perish through your own unbelief in his wrath as it was with those of the old world whereas Noah himself by faith being warned of God of things not seen as yet moved with fear prepared an ark to the saving of his house Hebr. 11.7 So wee read of Enoch Jude v. 7. though but the seventh from Adam and in the beginning of the world who yet set the end of the world or the day of judgement before him prophesying thereof whereas secure men through their unbelief never humble themselves if then till judgements be upon them being herein like such as hearing thunderclaps far off are not moved till they be as present over their heads and some hurt in their sight be done then with Pharaoh they tremble but not till then So want of faith in Christ keeps men from being sensible of their sin and from being pricked in conscience for it When was it that these Converts in my Text were pricked in heart It was when they heard and withall beleeved that Christ whom they crucified was the true Messias So it was foretold Zech. 12.10 that when they should look upon him whom they had pierced they should be pierced themselves and mourn bitterly and be sensible of their sin which shall be fulfilled especially at the conversion of their Nation but then they must no longer abide in unbelief Rom. 11.23 Seeing then faith is the gift of God we must earnestly pray for it and carefully attend to the ministry of the word by which it is begotten To withdraw from the hearing of the word either in regard of presence of body or attention of mind is to keep our selves out of the sphere and compasse within which onely the word of God that sword of the Spirit is active and operative and will reach and pierce us SECT 2. Le ts removed which make the soul senseless And first Sensuality and worldliness 2 Lets keeping the soul from being sensible of pricking BUt men who cannot avoid the stroke of the word the scorching of that fire the smiting of heart and conscience having such teachers as smite home and will not suffer them by their evasions shifts excuses and extenuations to put by the blow yet as experience sheweth shew themselves little sensible of the same neither are they truely made sorrowful thereby being like Jacob or Israel Mens senselsness for blindnesse deafnesse incredulity senselessness and stupidity on whom it is said the Lord poured the fury of his anger and the strength of battell and it set him on fire round about yet he knew not and it burned him yet he laid it not to heart Isa 42.25 or like the drunkard who may say They have stricken me and I was not sick they have beaten me and I felt it not Prov. 23 25. being past feeling Ephes 4.19 and of cauterized consciences 1 Tim. 4.2 Now there are divers things which bereave men of all spirituall sense and pain which accordingly if we would become true mourners for sin we must carefully beware of and see that wee give no way unto them Men have ways and means by which they for the while especially become insensible of pain by pricking Divers things bereaving men of the sense of bodily pain As Deep sleep Searing burning bone-setting incision cutting off a member and the like as by the use and application of narcoticall or stupefactive medicines and potions by being cast into a deep and dead sleep by which all their senses even that of feeling are bound up so by searing and burning whereby the part is mortified and the inward humidity dried up So I have heard and read Bewithching how in the body of witches in covenant with the Divel in the place where by sucking or otherwise he sets his mark or Sacramental signe the place is so benummed and deaded that a pin of a great largeness and length may be thrust in to the head without the grief or any sense of the party by which means if that mark or bewitched place can be but once found out
continuing long and no hurt done to any they took to their old way without any terrour as formerly and asked by strangers what it was It is said they the Whooper of the Wood and made no more of it So it is with sin if we accustome our selves thereunto it brings us to carelesnesse and that to senselesnesse so that at length custome our own and others shall be pleaded and at length is pleaded for and made to justifie wicked acts and made a justification of our wicked practices as we see in those idolatrous women pleading for their Idolatry we will do as we have done Jer. 44.17 So Papists harden themselves in their superstitions and common people in their profaning the Sabboth by their sports may-games and in other their sinfull customes Thus the heart is hardened at length and becomes senselesse Simile even as some parts of the body become through use callous brawny dry and dead a dead and thick skin growing over the flesh which may be pricked or pared without sense of pain as we see in labourers SECT 4. Two moe lets Gods secret vengeance and Hardness of heart with the nature and danger of it and Means to prevent it 5 Gods secret vengeance 5 THere is Gods secret vengeance which wee are to take notice yea to take heed of whereby he gives obstinate and presumptuous sinners over to stupidity and senselesnesse denying and withholding his grace and the blessing of his word and other means from such as have neglected or abused the same whereby he bereaves obstinate sinners of sense Thus he tels Isaiah what the effect of his prophesying should be Go tell this peopple Hear ye indeed but understand not and see yee indeed but perceive no make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavie ●and shut their eyes lest they see with their eys and hear with their ears and understand with their hearts and convert and be healed Isa 6.9 10. which terrible doom wee now are the more to be afraid of because it is six times made use of in the New Testament Matth. 13.14 Mark 4.12 Luke 8.10 John 12.40 Acts 28.26 Rom. 11 8. which is more then is done by any other Text of the Old Testament So elsewhere Isa 29.10 The Lord hath poured out upon you the spirit of deep sleep and hath closed your eys the Prophets and your Rulers the Seers hath he covered c. Here my counsell is Take heed you do not so long dally with God smother his truth blind your own eys neglect his call who are taught not to dally with God make light of the offers of his grace despise his threatnings and corrections that you provoke him to curse his own Ordinances to you and give you up to senselesnesse and final impenitency and Indolency Hearken then to his first call Heb. 3.7 and to day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts lest he give you up to finall hardnesse as now it follows 6 The not fearring the judgement of hardness of heart 6. Lastly As fear God who thus by our dallying may be provoked to deprive us of all spirituall sense and feeling so also be afraid of Hardnesse of heart whether acquired and attracted by your own means by your sensuality presumption carelesnesse giving way to beginnings custome of sinning or inflicted by Gods just judgement giving you wholly up to your own lusts or to Satan to harden you Keep so much sense as of all other evils and judgements to be most afraid of this for if God once give a man up to it which if we wil avoid we must fear it is worse then to be given up to the divel so was the Incestuous Corinthian who came to sense of his sin and repented to life and salvation but these are denyed that which they never cared for true sense of sin sorrowing for it and repentance and so are next door to hell it self It is a fearfull judgement and evill which opens her mouth for them they being in condition next to the estate of damned spirits seeing their damnation is sealed upon them and they kept under darknesse and in the insensible chains of the guilt of their sins and of their obstinate hardnesse to the judgement of the great day making men 1Vnpliable to the word stif-necked stony This hard heart is 1. An unpliable heart a dry stiffe and stony heart whereby men become stif-necked wilfull strong-headed like untamed beasts that will not admit of the yoke It is that Adamantine heart spoken of Zech. 7.12 implying a stony hardnesse Physicians would call it a Tophos or a callositie or brawny hardnesse like unto that white hard and dry substance that conglutinates broken bones It is according to S. Paul Ephes 4.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blindnesse or rather hardnesse of heart Such in the soul as when in the body any part of it whether inward as the liver or spleen or outward becomes hard through the dyring up of the inward humidity Dry and seared whether by any infirmity as scirrous tumours or by searing or burning with an hot iron as in beasts which are gelt and then seared or by labour Such is a hard heart being destitute of the moysture of Gods grace and of his spirit a stiffe and obstinate heart which will not bow nor yeeld to Gods word by obedience matth 23.17 It s an impudent heart as Ezek. 2.14 and 3.7 by which men grow worse and worse till they perish Impudent It is an impenitent and unyeelding heart Impenitent like metal unmolten an heart resisting the word and spirit Acts 7.51 It is such a heart as was in the Jews before and now is in them since they are cast off Rom. 11.25 on whom is Cains curse It s a heart of Belial a wicked heart without yoke Deut. 15.9 that Beasts heart which was given to Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 4.16 Howsoever it is a disobedient and gainsaying heart disobedient and unyeelding Rom. 10.21 and makes men so I is such an heart as is not moved at threatnings so as to be broken thereby or at promises so as to be molten by them at judgements inflicted to be humbled or at mercies to rejoyce or be thankfull at injunctions or commands of God to obey or perform them being contrary to the tender heart or fleshy heart which is obedient Contrary to which is the tender heart the soft fleshy and plyable heart such as was in these Converts here who being pricked presently offered themselves ready to obey saying What shall we do so in Paul Lord What wouldst thou have mee to do and in the Jaylour What shall I do to be saved This is the heart of flesh in mercy promised to 〈◊〉 as shall be saved Ezek. 11.19 and. 36.26 The tender heart pliable shewing its tenderssene both to God such as was in good King Josiah 2 Chron. 34.27 whose property is to
be plyable and yielding both to God and man 1 It stands not out against or resists Gods word but quakes at threatnings melts at promises is humbled at judgements as 2 Chron. 30.10.11 not such as was in Zedekiah 2 Chron. 36.12 of whom it is said he did evill in the sight of the Lord his God and humbled not himself before Jeremiah the Prophet speaking from the mouth of the Lord or in Belshazzar framing to his will Dan. 5.21.22 who did not humble his heart though he knew all such evils and judgements as befell his father for hardening his mind in pride verse 20. In a word the soft heart yields like soft wax to the impressions of Gods grace word and spirit and like molten metal frames to the form and obeys that form of Doctrine whereto it is delivered as the phrase is Rom. 6.17.2 The tender heart shews it self also towards others by shewing forth bowels of pity to men in misery and man by pity and kindnesse Heb. 13.3 and of kindnesse and forgivenesse to such as do it wrong Ephes 4.32 2. This heard heart I speak of as it is stiffe stony and unpliable so it is also insensible void of all spirituall sense especially that of feeling this is through want of spiritual life 2 unsensible and without life where no life is there is no sense at all and where life is though other senses may be wanting yet not that of feeling that sense though it be not the most noble for so is the sense of sight and hearing yet it is the most necessary sense there being no life without it where it is wholly wanting or lost it of all senses alone is diffused throughout all parts almost of the whole body and it being lost there is no more intercourse of vital and animal spirits or influence of them by the nerves into other parts and consequently no longer any proportion or harmony of qualities or of temperament in which proportion the native moysture and heat is founded and consisteth So that feeling and sense of pain is needful to the very being of every creature arguing spiritu-death and so is spiritual feeling as necessary to the being of the new creature so that we may conclude that the heart which is an insensible heart is a dead heart Eph. 4.18.19 alienated from the life of God at least and that is bad enough possessed with a spirit of slumber and dead sleep whilest not one but all the senses of the soul are holden in it as the bodily senses in and by bodily sleep and that through a kind of dregginesse which stoppeth the passages of the spirits Or at least a dead sleep depriving men of their spiritual senses by which the whole heart and soul is made unsensible for hereby men are without 1 Hearing Isa 6.9 2 Seeing Isa 6.9 Ephes 4.18 3 without all spiritual Tast Rom. 8.5 4 Smel 2 Cor. 2.16 Lastly without feeling Ephes 4.19 having their hearts fat and insensible Isa 6.10 yea in a dead sleep and sleep of death and therefore insensible insensible of good and evil of mercies and of judgements of grace and sin without true love desire and joy in the one and without Fear Being contrary to the sensible heart 1 Kings 3.9 shame anger and godly sorrow in the other contrary to which heart is that which having a new life put into it and it awakened out of the Lethargie or rather death of sin begins spiritually and savingly 1 to hear for so we read of an hearing heart for which Solomon prayed 2 to see Ephes 1.18 1 Cor. 2.14.15 3 to tast 1 Pet. 2.2 3. with Psal 34.8 Cantic 4.11 4 to smel Cantic 1.3.13 16. 4.10 11. 2 Cor. 2.14.16 and 5 lastly to feele when by self-denial the fat of this grosse heart as it is called Mat. 13.15 which makes it also without sense Psal 119.70 Mat. 13.15 is consumed and offered in sacrifice to God according to the type Levit. 3.3 such a sensible heart was in these converts here who being self convinced self condemned and denying themselves were pricked in heart and through sense of pain cried out and sought help elsewhere then in themselves and accordingly found it I have thus set the benefit of the tender sensible heart against the other that by the opposition I might better shew the wofull condition and miserable estate of such as who being past feeling The miserable condition of senselesse and hard-hearted sinners give themselves over whether unto Laciviousnesse or to any other sensual and sinful course of life and who accordingly are given over in Gods most terrible but just wrath to this the worst of all evills on earth even the judgement of an hard and senselesse heart and all with this further aym that hereby the sinner that would attain to true compunction and pricking of heart for his sin and so to true conversion and salvation would above all be most afraid of this heavy judgement of hardnesse of heart and of whatsoever may cause or procure the same Such as are given over to it are irrecoverably left to the judgement of the great day seeing their judgement here is to be denied all sense of their dangerous and damned condition into which they have voluntarily brought themselves and so being left to themselves and to their own lusts as incorrigible Psal 81. and to Satan Hardnesse of heart the greatest Let to saving pricking 2 Pet. 2 4. and most to be laboured against as his prisoners to be reserved in chains of darknesse of mind and dedolent and final impenitencie kept and brought forth to that judgement wherein their case is now become like that of the devil and his angels whose judgement that is Of all lets then to this pricking of heart take heed of this of hardnesse of heart for where it is the judgement is to be deprived of all sense of sin and feeling of wrath till the soul be plunged into hell and become irrecoverably miserable and then lie under the sense of Gods severest wrath and eternall displeasure not to fear it is a signe of it Oh therefore get your hearts possessed continually with fear of this dismal evil and ever be afraid to be given over to it Now let me tell you not to fear it when you hear so much of it is a signe it hath already seazed upon you and benummed your spirituall senses especially if you have any long while lived fruitlesly or presumptuously under the means Young men especially to take heed of it and therefore especially it belongs to young men to take notice hereof who by reason of their age are not yet perhaps so hardened in sin through the deceitfulnesse of it There is a naturall tendernesse in us whilst we are young or a lesser degree rather of hardnesse which gets strength and proves habituall through use and age if it be not in time prevented Let such then
especially labour to keep tendernes of heart take advantage of their youth and without delayes and procrastination begin to repent and to shew themselves sensible of their sin and of Gods displeasure lest whilst they presume of more time stregth God give them up to hardnesse and finall impenitency Jer. 13.23 It is hard doing good when once we are accustomed to evil The longer the young plant or tree groweth the deeper root it taketh and whilst custome is not in time resisted it becometh necessity Directions and Means to prevent it 1 Fear it above all evils Therefore that hardnesse of heart prove no let to thy repentance follow these few directions 1 Fear it as thou woulest fear the devil himself blessed is he that thus feareth None are further from the danger of it then those that fear it most the not fearing it is the next way to fall into it or rather a signe it hath taken hold on us already If now when you heare so much of it your hearts be not struck with some terrour but that you account all you heare as an idle and empty sound of words your case is dangerous and much to be suspected Fear it then when it is so and fear it lest it be so with you a Pray against it Now if you fear it as you have good reason then in the next place Pray most earnestly and continually against it pray that God would not take his word and ministery of it from thee whereby thou shouldest be hardened and left without the direction instruction and reproof of the same as he threatens to such as in time repent not by it Revel 2.5 Pray that through thy abuse of the word he deny thee not the blessing of it and make it to thee as the white of an eg as the savour of death Pray that he would not send thee such teachers as never or sleightly reproving thee shall so seem to approve of thy courses and help to harden thee to thy destruction and that thou be not hardened under the reproof of Gods faithfull Ministers as were the Jews Isa 6.10 and 63.17 pray that God would not take away his fear from thee Jer. 32.40 or harden thy heart against it Psalm 51.11 or his holy Spirit which commonly in the motions of it accompanieth the word preached but having given way to thy lusts with David pray with him and say Oh cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from mee Whatsoever thou deny me or take from me be it wealth estate friends office c. yet take not thy holy Spirit from thee Oh beloved it is the Spirit of God which mollifieth the heart and therefore pray that God would never suffer thee so much or so long to provoke him as that he should say of thee as of the old world a little before their destruction Gen 6. Psal 19.13 my spirit shall not alwayes strive with him Pray and say Lord keep me from presumptuous sins and yea pray as he himself hath taught thee lead us not into tentation Psal 81.11.12 Pray that God would not give thee up to thine own hearts lusts to thine own will desires affections or to doe evil without check or controll of thy conscience or of his spirit that he would deny and crosse thee in all evill or hurtfull purposes desires endeavours and teach thee withall to account such crosses thy greatest blessings on earth and that he would in mercy rather hedge up our way then that we should lose our selves by straying out of the right way as Hos 2.6 7. 3 Beware of evil company and example 3 Take heed of evill and lewd company whose example and encouragement may help to harden thee and acquaint thy self with those that are good and provoke and exhort one another daily while it is called to day lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne 4 Take heed of such things as make way for hardnes Heb. 3.13 Take heed of such evils and sins as procure it as of all those lets formerly named that of inconsideration First set thy sinne before thee be at some distance with it whilst sin and thou art all one thou wilt never be sensible of it It is an experienced rule The objects of senses being close placed to the organ of the senses makes no sensation as colour near the sight is not discerned and so in the rest And withall take heed of such sinnes as procure hardnesse and provoke God to give thee up to it as especially these first little love to the word and truth this makes God give men up to strong delusion 2 Thes 2.10 11. 2 too much love and desire to be flattered as in Ahab hating Michaiah and giving heed to flattering prophets he shall have such sent him in wrath 1 Kings 22.8 22 23. 3. Idolatry as Hos 4.17 Ephraim is joyned to idols let him alone and Rom. 1.21 22 23 with 24 26. there is like reason for spirituall Idolatry with the creature and when mens hearts are joyned to their lusts 4. Presumptuous sinnes as in Elies sonnes 1 Sam. 2.22 -25. Heb. 10.26.27 and 12.16.17 5. Corrupt affections which provoke God to punish by giving up to a reprobate mind Rom. 1.27 28. 6 generally rejection of God and disobedience to his word Psal 81.11.12 1 Pet. 2.7 8. with scandall unjustly taken at the truth Matth. 15.12 13 14. Let them alone c. 5 Make not light of sinne be not greedy after it retain shamefastnesse Lastly Make not light of 1 sin account no sin light or little make it not so by your extenuations and justifications catch not at occasions of sin be not greedy after sinfull delights gain c. This will either make you or prove you to be past feeling retain shamefastnes tendernes lest once passing those bounds you grow extremely impudent in sinning as Isa 3 9. Jer. 8.12 and as young women or men when once they have lost modesty and shamefastnesse they grow impudent and blush at nothing Or of reproof of the word 2 Of reproof snuffe not at it hate not your reprovers so onely do scorners Prov. 15.12 be not grieved when the word of God finds you out 3 Of Gods threatnings Or of Gods threatnings which strikes terrour into tender souls 2 Cor. 5.11 they tremble at Gods word Isa 66.3 Gods punishments are fear full to them Job 31.23 and Pal. 119.20 account not Gods threatnings as wind Jer. 5.13 make not a jest of them Jer. 23.33 flatter not thy self against them Deut. 29.14 20. These are ill signes and would in time be abandoned Thus you have heard somewhat largely of the hard heart and the evill and danger of it it being a senselesse heart a sensuall heart a fat and grosse heart a seared and a gangrened heart a brawny and callous heart a stony heart in a word a bewitched heart yet not impertinently I hope
and condition out of their own houses in some parts of England but especially in Ireland as also by Sea as they go for New-England and other parts putting them to most miserable slaverie so by Antichrist and spiritual Babylon tyrannizing over soules and bodies as elsewkere and formerly killing massacring spoiling and laying waste whole Townes Cities Provinces and Countries by their cruell and mercilesse Souldiers witnesse not onely of later times Roehel in France and those of the Valtoline where Christians have been forced to flie their Countrey others staying to renounce their Religion in hope and promise of life and then cruelly slain the Enemie boasting they had now slain both bodies and soules of Heretickes so at this time in the lower Hassia but especially divers places of Germany and of the Reformed Churches there as the Palatinate Bohemia Silesia anno 1640. and now at this present the Lower Hassia over-run with barbarous Souldiers burning killing and spoiling without all respect to Sex Age or Order forcing men to leave their own homes to seek to maintain life by feeding on carrion and such like burning and demolishing their Churches and Colledges and School-houses impoverishing all of all sorts especially their Ministers and School-masters three hundred and more of whom at this time are forced to seek and by the recommendation of their Princesse The Landgrave of Hassia to desire the charitable and bountifull relief of Christians in other Provinces and Kingdomes for the present relief of the foresaid Ministers and Rectors of Schooles Octob. 1641. And for the re-edifying of their Churches and Schoole and should not we be affected with these things and weep with them that weep and shew a fellow-feeling with them making their case our own We should be alike affected with them not knowing how soon it may be so indeed in the mean time so remembring them that are in bonds as bound with them c. which is the Apostles exhortation Hebr. 13.3 Herein following the example not onely of Moses as was Moses whose heart melted when he looked on his brethrens afflictions in Egypt but especially of that worthy Nehemiah who at a great distance and Nehemiah hearing of the miseries of the Jewes that had escaped and which were left of the captivity Nehem. 1.3 4 5 c. that they were in great affliction and reproach that the wall of Jerusalem was broken down and the gates thereof burnt with fire sate down and wept and mourned certain dayes and fasted and prayed before the God of Heaven This made him no doubt mourne for his own and others sinnes against which God by every judgement of his doth testifie that he hath just cause and matter against us and ours This is a noble president for us to follow seeing we want not like occasion and it would bring us to a mourning temper and disposition to weep even for our own as well as others sins At this time also the bleeding condition of Ireland would not be forgotten 3 specially we are to meditate on the sufferings of Christ for us 3. Lastly view we in our thought and meditations attentively the sufferings and greatnesse of the sorrowes of our Lord and blessed Saviour Jesus Christ dying for us with the cause thereof in our selves and sinnes together with the love of God and Christ himselfe in giving himselfe for us We should look on his sorrowes not with a spirit so much of compassion as of compunction not weeping for him in pitie so much which silly ignorant people and women can do when they see his Passion prophanely acted on the Stage and on our wounding him or in the streets in their Corpus Christi Playes or when they look upon the Crucifix striking and beating on their breast● as in true sorrow for out own sinnes by which we pierced him and in some sense do daily pierce him by the same so these Jewes here in my Text no sooner had Christ by the Word evidently set forth to be the true and onely Messias Gal. 3.1 and crucified among them by being charged and convinced that they were the Crucifiers of him but they were thus savingly pricked in heart as it was foretold of them and of those yet to be called by the Prophet Zechary They shall look upon him by the eye of meditation whom they have pierced Zech. 12.10 and they shall mourn for him as one mourneth for his onely son and shall be in bitternesse for him as on that is in bitternesse for his first-borne Consider herein Christ his bitter death not onely what thou must expect to suffer in thine own person for ever unlesse thou now be pricked in heart for him as well as he was pierced in heart head and hands and feet for thee but his infinite love as also on his infinite love in suffering such things for us who would suffer so much for thee and interpose himselfe between his Fathers wrath and thee yea receiving in his own bowels the javelin of his Fathers anger to keep it from thee to whom onely it was due as in like case did it not thinke we both trouble David to thinke of Jonathans hazards for him and also cause his heart to melt in true love to Jonathan who shewed himselfe so loving to him Will it not pricke and wound thy heart to consider this thy dear and truest Friend for thus he was wounded in the house of his friends one the racke of the Crosse for thee to the end that thou mightest never come unto it Zech. 13.6 how should yea and would this meditation if seriously made use of melt and mollifie our hard hearts and overcome all our obstinacies His sorrowes well thought on would helpe to break our hard hearts but his love appearing in the same would and should melt and thaw them 3 God softens our hearts by his mercies which we should often thinke of to that end And so generally the meditation of his mercies a thousand wayes manifested to every one of us How did hard-hearted Sauls heart melt into teares when he saw and was convinced of Davids love integritie and respects to him and his life when in the very act of his hostilitie against David yet David spared his life And how was Davids own heart humbled at the relation of Gods many mercies against which he had sinned The like in the Israelites 1 Sa. 24.16 17. 2 Sam. 12.7 8 9-13 who upbraided by Gods mercies in bringing them out of Egypt lift up their voice and wept so that the place had its name thence and was called Bochim or Weepers Judges 2.1 2 3 4 5. They considered Gods kindnesse to them and their unkindnesse to him and thereupon wept such consideration of mercie shewed or offered to the unworthy is foretold to worke shame in the sinners and loathing themselves Ezek. 36.25 26 c. with verses 31.32 O then hearts harder than the Adamant that are not
softened with the milke of this love of God! ye stout-hearted sinners and be moved therewith be moved and affected with grief to consider and thinke how ye sin against the bountie of God expressed to you in all temporal blessings which you enjoy and they are well nigh infinite in his patience towards you not cutting you off and sending you to Hell in your sinnes but chiefly in his gracious and morcifull disposition to wards you in offering himselfe more willing and ready to be reconciled to you than you are by true repentance sorrow and submission to seek it at his gracious hands O base hearts who by living still in your sinnes and without all sorrow taking pleasure in the same do seek his dishonour Do ye so requite the Lord O foolish people and unwise Deut. 32.6 7 c. Doth not this stab thy heart O my people may God now say to us and much rather than to his unthankfull people of old What have I done unto thee and so in Micah 6.3 4 5. John 10.32 Many good workes may Christ now say to us also have I shewed you from my Father for which of those workes do ye stone me How should you answer but with more humilitie sinceritie and selfe-deniall as it followeth in Micah Verse 6. Wherewithall shall I come before the Lord and bow my selfe before the high God Yea and instead of all other sacrifices there mentioned offer that of an humble and contrite spirit and resolve to walke humbly or humble your selves to walke with God O that I could hear your relenting hearts as overcome with his free mercies and offers of his grace to sound and eccho out such voices and to say What any mercie or hope of mercie for such a vile Wretch bold sinner base Varlet as I Might not God many yeares ago in his just displeasure have sent me from the wombe to Hell O Patience Would any man have put up such injuries at my hands as God hath done dishonours or would I my selfe shew like kindnesse to any who had multiplied wrongs against me O it grieves my soul that I have so grieved him beast that I am O how have I been besotted not to see better to answer his love Men and brethren what shall I do to purchase his favour whereof I have made my selfe so unworthily I resolve therefore to wallow in ashes and to repent in dust and ashes and not for a world to offend him as I have done SECT 5. Gods Majesty thought on would abase us 4. The serious thought of Gods high Majesty will humble us HEre again I might direct you to a meditation also of the high and glorious Majesty of the high and holy God of his greatnesse excellencie power wisdom glorie and all other Attributes of God that so we may no longer harden our hearts against him Psal 95 3-8 9. Deut. 10.16 17 18 -20 21. that the immutabilitie of his decrees Job 23.13 14 15 16. and his excellency may make us afraid Job 13.11 37.23 24. that his mighty power may cause us prepare to meet him by repentance Amos 4.12 with 13. as we see in Rahab Josh 2 10.-12 13-18 And that we may at length learne with Job to acknowledge our vilenesse and to abhorre our selves and repent in dust and ashes Job 38.2 3 c. 40.2 3. 42.3 with 6. But I will hasten to the last Direction without which all the rest will be used in vain and it is prayer 〈…〉 SECT 6. Earnest Prayer a means of Humiliation 5 Withall wee must earnestly pray to God who onely can humble us LAstly Seeing God onely as hath been said can humble and soften the hard and stony heart of man wee are if wee truly desire to have tender pliable sensible and humbled hearts most earnestly to seek the same by prayer of God 1 By others 1. If thou canst not through weakness of gifts or distractions pray of thy self desire the assistance of some godly and compassionate Christian to pray with thee and for thee that God would graciously and powerfully work in thee what thou desirest In such case yea howsoever send for the Elders of the Church when thou feelst thy heart any thing hardened or thy self to be in any distress of soul or body that they may pray over thee James 5.14 2 By our selves But 2. Is any among you afflicted or would any of you be indeed truly afflicted in conscience and come to some remorse for his sin Let him pray saith Saint James himself It s hard if any man who hath a true and inward desire of any thing he wants or would have If I say he cannot breathe out one sigh and some way or other though brokenly express himself to God Broken prayers oftentimes shew a broken heart and spirit which God will not despise But as thou art able beg earnestly daily and constantly an humble soft and relenting heart with godly sorrow for all and every sin It s no easie thing to break the pride and stoniness of the heart it requires help from heaven and power from above If God do it not it will never be done Wee have Gods promise But now we have his promise for it if we will earnestly seek unto him for it as for all other things freely promsed Ezek. 36.26 32 37. Beg earnestly that God would melt and soften thy heart and must be earnest be importunate with him till he hear thee his word is past and if thou faint and weary not it shall in Gods fittest time and urgent with him and in that measure and manner which he thinks good be accomplished and fulfilled Challenge God of his promise of powring upon thee the spirit of grace and of supplications that looking upon Christ thou maist mourn c. Zech. 12.10 God as hath been said must by his Spirit breath in before thou canst breathe out by thy spirit one sigh for thy sin And in thy prayer complain to God of thy hardnesse and say Lord why hast thou hardened my heart from thy fear Isa 63.17 Lord I have an hard proud and stubborn heart it is too hard for mee do thou take it down break and humble it If thou art not heard for the present yet cry still give not over yea and constant wait on him for an answer in due time who hath long waited for thee Rom. 10.21 Deut. 22.26 and for thy Repentance Cry aloud to God for help as the virgin was bound in case shee were forced else lost both her reputation and her life Cry to God before for help and after for pardon so shall not thy hardness of heart be imputed to thee or be thy ruine That which unfainedly thou desirest might be done and grievest if it be not done that shall by Gods mercy in Christ be accounted to thee as done And with our prayer wee must joyn 1. Fasting Now to make thy prayer more effectuall
did from Christ but come not sorrowfull to Christ or his Ministers seeking ease to their burthened conscience yea many mens sorrow is such as drives them from God and Christ as Judas and Cain in their pangs of conscience Judas came not to Christ for mercy though he were at hand yea a Saviour at hand but to the high Priest and at length hastened to the Divell Cain flees from the presence of God to build him a City for his safety Others in distresse and anguish of conscience do not betake themselves to prayer or to God his Ordinances and Ministers but with Saul to musick to the Witch of Endor to the Divell Of which more hereafter 5. With coming to God and to the throne of grace 5 Prayer there is prayer and deprecation for pardon where the soul is truly humbled as in Manasseh and in the humbled Publican Lord be mercifull to mee a sinner Luke 18.13 Here is a sinner that is one laden and touch'd in heart for his sin and here is his prayer for pardon and mercy But this follows upon the former and belongs partly to somewhat following Yet it convinceth many who never seek ease by hearty prayer for mercy from God unlesse it be for removall onely of their justly deserved punishment 6 Reformation of life and a holy walking with God 6. True humiliation is accompanied with reformation of life and with a holy walking with God onely such humiliation is acceptable to God which is so followed Therefore the Lord shewing how we may come and bow our selves acceptably before him and what is good this is the chief That we walk humbly or humble our selves to walk with God Micah 6.2 8. such a soul as hath been truely pricked hath been taught its lesson for medling again with sin as hath been said And godly sorrow changeth the heart works in it an hatred of sin a love of righteousnesse in a word Repentance 2 Cor. 7.10 that is a change and alteration both of heart and life whilest the unfained tears of true sorrow do not onely like the waters of the red sea drown the whole army of our sins but like the dew and rain from heaven water and refresh our earthy hearts yea make the soul to bring forth and bud Isa 55.10 and to be fruitfull in all righteousnesse and in the fruits thereof Without returning again to sins formerly repented Such a soul returns not at least habitually unto wickedness as we have shewn Ahab Pharaoh Felix and Judas did and as is the guise of hypocrites who after some seeming sorrow and forced tears return with the swine to the same or worser sins again But do thou examine thy heart and consider well with thy self whether thy humiliation have effectually taught thee to walk both humbly and constantly in a course of humiliation yea and reformation with thy God An unreformed life is inconsistent with an humbled heart SECT 3. Other Concomitants gathered from the Text as 1. Confession of sin Other effects and concomitants of godly sorrow gathered more specially from the text it self TO proceed As the afore-named particulars have been afforded us from other Texts of Scripture which more expresly couple them with humiliation sorrow of heart and feeling the load and burthen of sin so though we will exclude none of them from having been in these converts yet we will fetch some signes Effects and Concomitants of true Contrition more specially from the Text it selfe Some besides Hope of which I have spoken formerly gather hence these two Effects of true Contrition 1. Confession 2. Detestation of sin 1 Confession of sin even to man 1. Here is implied if not expressed an open and free Confession of their sin of murther and of crucifying their Saviour wherewith v. 36. they were charged they deny not their guiltinesse nor are ashamed to lay open their disease to their spirituall Physicians they in effect confesse themselves guilty and onely seek direction what to do to be saved from deserved wrath saying Men and Brethren What shall we do And to say truth where the soul feels the burthen and load of sin it will seek ease by disburthening it self by free and willing confession of the same as to God especially so also to man to men of God especially to able and mercifull men and Ministers who are not onely able to speak a word in season for comfort and direction but tender-hearted pitifull and mercifull who will sympathize with it yea are faithfull both for their unpartial dealing with the wounded spirit not healing it with fair words and flatteries and also for secrecie No ease without this in some cases so far as it is fit It is with the soul in this case as with the stomack if it be overcharged with surfetting and thereupon sick and pained it seeks and gets ease by vomiting so in like proportion the soul having surfetted on sin and now sensible of the load of its sin will seek ease by confessing thereof both to God and in some cases to man too where either his sin hath been open and scandalous or personall to the hurt and wrong of any or where he finds not comfort and sense of pardon from God for by making it known to some faithfull Minister or experienced Christian he may hope for some help by their prayers and wise directions Have you who pretend sorrow for sin thus done or have ye not rather Application and do you not stand out against the reproofs of Gods word and Ministers to such as will not be convinced denying justifying or at least extenuating and lessening your sins I tell you a heart truely contrite and broken will soon be convinced None will sooner take shame to themselves by a free and ingenuous confession of sin or take shame to themselves then such as are most sensible of their dishonours done to Gods great name thereby If by taking shame to themselves they can any whit redeem Gods honour they will readily do it And therefore I ask again In case you have made some confession of your sin as even a Pharaoh and a Judas may do have ye therein aimed at Gods honour and do you therefore by confession take shame to your selves that you may give to God the honour of his Omnisciency Justice Holinesse as is fit Many as condemned persons rather then they will shame themselves by a true confession of the sins for which they justly suffer or thereby honour Gods justice which hath found them out or yet the justice of the Law by which they stand condemned as yet the good thief did on the crosse will with that other gracelesse thief chuse rather presently to go to hell with the guilt and load of their sins upon them Such are the Pseudo-martyrs of the Romish Synagogue and thousands moe wherein they come short of Judas who confessed his treason against the innocent Lamb of God Or if with
hid I said I will confesse my transgressions unto the Lord and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin Psal 32.3 4 5. These here in effect do the same by these words of theirs confessing as hath been said their sins and finding like mercy ver 38. On the other hand Cain being pricked in heart and conscience for his bloody sin and in Cain doth also speak and utter and some other Jews but what words of despair so those Acts 7.54 being cut to the heart gnashed upon Stephen with their teeth and uttered words of desperate rage and madnesse crying out with a loud voice and stoning him v. 57. And howsoever in affliction the tongue sometime belie the heart Hypocrites may counterfeit Psal 78.34 35 36. as in the grosser hypocrite yea also self-deceiver who when God smites them enquire early after him as did the Israelites in the wildernesse Neverthelesse they did flatter him with their mouth and they lyed unto him with their tongues Yet I say in true grief the tongue truly sympathizeth with the heart and expresseth the affections of it truly as in the Parrot Yet they bewray themselves by their words c. which being beaten cryes like it self with its naturall voyce and not as at other times like a man artificially And though Pharaoh Judas and many like unto them seem to shew by their words and confession some compunction of heart yet both their words being well weighed at least their after-deeds do shew the hypocrisie or deceit of their hearts and that their grief was not true and genuine for their sins but for the punishment and through legall terrours or meer naturall conscience within them Contrariwise a good heart being smitten of God will either be silent unto God and not dare to mutter or murmure against him or withall it will utter onely good words as we see in Job chap. 1.21 22. and chap. 13.15 Though he slay me yet will I trust in him Thus it is constantly with it though perhaps in a fit it may forget it self and utter words of discontent as we see in the same Job and Jeremiah and others The reason of all this is that sincerity and integrity which is in the heart of those whom God doth soundly touch Reason which is a single heart not a heart and a heart or a tongue and life different from the heart which it seems Nature it self would teach us all seeing Anatomists teach that the heart and tongue hang upon one string Dr. F. ibid. so that when the heart is moved with any passion or perturbation the hammer as in the former resemblance beats upon the bell and the mouth soundeth and answers the motions and affections of the heart Vse 1 In our sorrows to shew our sincerity by our words and by the nature of them Let us therefore when Gods hand toucheth us shew by our words and deeds also sutable that our hearts are inwardly well affected and truly humbled under his hand for our sins truly desirous how to pacifie him and to procure true peace to our consciences It s a signe the hearts of many are but lightly pricked or touched with remorse for their sins they do so little complain or make their moan to others who may afford them ease by their counsell and good directions As on the other hand such as most complain out of an inward feeling of their sins and who accordingly move doubts and questions concerning their estate of soul are none of the worst Christians at least they are in a good way 2 And so generally For more general Vse It were to be wished that men by their words and language as also by the nature and quality of their discourse and speech did shew the soundnesse holinesse and integrity of their hearts within more then they do The heart will be venting it self by the tongue and commonly according to that abundance which is in the heart the mouth will be speaking A reproof of such as pretending good hearts yet are tongue-tied Many talk much of their good hearts to God ward but if their hearts within were so good holy hearts believing hearts humble hearts hungering hearts zealous hearts as they pretend they would not be so tongue-tied as they are either to God-ward or towards others If Gods word were in the heart of many Ministers 1 In Preaching at least as a burning fire they would soon grow weary with forbearing to preach and to speak in his Name Jer. 20.8 9. though his word should be made a reproach to them and a derision daily So if the hearts whether of many Ministers or others 2 In Prayer were truly pinched with sense of their own and peoples wants they could not take up with bare generall forms of words in their seeming prayers or with a generall invitation of others to pray or at best to joyn with them in rehearsing more then praying the Lords prayer The heart truly touched with a sense of its own guiltinesse and of Gods displeasure or of its own wants could not take up with forms of words framed by others or at least long rest in them but would vent it self by words at least by sighs and groans sutable to its condition Such as complain that for any expressions of their own they are tongue-tied in Prayer let them strive to get better hearts sensible hearts sanctified hearts hearts full of the spirit of God which is a spirit of grace and of supplication Zech. 12.10 for were they full of it they would otherwise vent themselves then they do whereas now they draw neer to God onely with the mouth and with their lips honour him but have their hearts removed far from him Isa 29. ver 13. their hearts are more tyed and shut up then their tongues and so in effect both are tyed to God-ward So many are and some complain that they are not so profitable in discourse and in private conversation with others by holy conference as they should be 3 In speaking of good things by instructing exciting and for God exhorting encouraging of others yea admonishing and reproving them for their vanity oaths reviling of Gods people and his people and for their speaking evill of Gods good ways But if these would look into the true cause hereof they would finde that either the Law of God is not at all in their hearts for then they would speak wisdome and their tongue would talk of judgement or that their hearts are not so holy so charitable and compassionate towards others so zealous for God and his honour and such beleeving hearts as they should be or for time of profession calling and means might be But for a tongue that straitens it self to speak of better things then are in the heart A dissembling tongue reproved c. either in matters of God and of profession of godliness or in duties and profession of love towards others this is
But should not a people seek unto their God for the living to the dead c. Isa 8.19 20. Some will direct thee to such Ministers of Antichrist as would heal a wounded conscience with Reasons 7 To the Ministers of Antichrist and not by the Word and promises thereof who turn rather tormentors then Physicians taking often as a worthy Divine observes advantage of the bruisedness of mens spirits to relieve them with false peace for their own worldly ends D. Sibs Bruised reed p 202. inasmuch as a wounded spirit will part with any thing who counsel for themselves and for their own gain Herein are they like some cruel Surgeons who delight to make long cures to serve themselves upon the misery of others 8 Not to Libertines Familists and Antinomians Lastly some take an easier course which is not the curing but the searing of the conscience These are our Familists Libertines and Antinomians if you please so call them who will tell you if your conscience be troubled for any sin though otherwise gross especially after your supposed Conversion or that Christ is once come to you that your sin is onely an act of the outward man who do not cure but sear the conscience and therefore ought not to trouble your conscience yea they will tell you that to be troubled for sin again is to bring your selves back under the spirit of bondage Conscience of sin is but slavery whereas not to know See Calvin's Tract contra Libertinos or as their phrase is to unknow sin that is not to take such notice of sin as to be troubled in conscience for it upon conceit of displeasing God thereby and of incurring his disfavour is to be like unto Adam in his innocency who then knew onely good and not evill By all means say they you must take heed of being cast down for any failings Their Objections against us Yea they tell us It is vain babling when men are cast down to raise them by duties and flat daubing to build men on doings though duties died in the blood of Christ But contrariwise we build not men on duties but on Gods free and gracious promises answered which promises being yet made upon conditions the conditions must not be excluded they are indeed required of us as duties How we cure how we teach duties but not performed by any strength of our own and so they being rightly performed are blessings and gifts of Gods free grace and consequently meet to assure us but merit nothing they are to be done because commanded but not to be rested in or trusted to as any way meritorious Not so as to rest or trust in them duty must be done but when we have done it we must and do say We are unprofitable servants we have done that by Gods blessing and powerfull grace which was our duty to do Luke 17.10 So that we see duty is commended where merit is condemned But tell me Doth not Peter here raise men cast down and asking what they shall do by duties when ver 38 and 39 he bids them repent and be baptized and elsewhere Acts 16.31 beleeve And is there not a renewed act of repentance and of faith flying to our Baptism and to the Covenant there sealed after particular failings required Are not men called on to repent and do their first works Rev. 2.5 But to what end not to rest in them we abhor that but to help us to Christ and as assurance of our election but onely to fit and prepare us to come to Christ and to establish our own hearts seeing we cannot do any of these things but by the effectuall grace of God and to make our calling and election sure to our selves see 2 Pet. 1.5 6. c. with v. 10. for so after doubts and dejections we are raised comforted and assured of the constancy of Gods love and grace to us in Christ so also Hebr. 12.12 13 14. I am sure the Apostle Paul both requires this casting down for failings 1 Cor. 5.2 blaming the want of it and commends such as in whom it is 2 Cor. 7.7 8 9 10 11. Take we heed therefore that we seek not to vain helps as Hos 5.13 and in case of trouble of conscience that we fall not into the hands of such Physicians of no value as who in stead of curing will kill us but happy is he that findes such a wise faithful able and godly Physician for his soul that can direct him how to secure his estate to answer Satans objections and scruples of conscience to assure him of his adoption he hath found a jewell for such a one is one of a thousand Job 33. SECT 3. Containing two moe Vses Vse 2 A Second Use of what hath been said is to discover the paucity of such as are truly wrought upon by Gods word Discovering that few are pricked in conscience fo● sin and thereby wounded in their spirits for sin we must needs conclude so much for most Congregations because there is so little recourse to the spirituall Physician so few doubts and cases of conscience propounded to him The Divine's house as once was said of the Lawyers house should be Oraculum Civitatis as the Oracle of the City and we plainly see it that the Lawyers house or chamber is frequented yea thronged in a Term or Session-time especially when the Divines house by all is passed by there is so little resorting to good Ministers for counsell an argument men are more careful and more sensible of their outward estate titles goods then of the estate of their souls they question and find the one questioned much more by men then the other by Satan or their own doubting consciences but flocking to Lawyers to secure their estates They desire to know the worst in their estates titles to lands and claims and must yea will what-ever it cost know of their Lawyer what to do to secure themselves and estates when like care is wholly neglected for their souls though inwardly they have many doubtings and gripings of conscience How also is the Physician for the body sought to and to Physicians of the body and the Surgeon in case of a distempered body a wound a broken and dis-joynted bone Yea as is said in case of some trouble of minde how shall we finde or to places of sport c. it may be Play-houses gaming-rooms at home or abroad drinking-houses and the like filled and all to put away melancholy when the Divine is wholly passed by Nay do not many wish the Minister if faithfull and godly far enough off them in such case do they not or would they not think themselves happy So far are they from being troubled in conscience that they are ready to cry out they cannot be quiet for their Minister Onely troubled that such faithfull Ministers are so neer them and in case any such godly
sound direction The word it self is every way as able to heal as to wound and so should the teachers of it also be Some they say can raise and call up spirits but not lay them Pharaohs sorcerers could by their inchantments bring blood and frogs so increasing the like plagues sent of God but they could not kill them or cause the plague they brought depart and cease no Moses must do that both for those brought by him and those brought by the Sorcerers Exod. 7.22 and 8.7 8. Vse 2. Being wounded and pricked in heart by the word in the ministery of it Use 2. thinke not the worse of the minister as if he intended your hurt or disgrace Being wounded not to conceive worse of the minister Each faithful minister though he seems to deal sharply with you yet aimes at your good if he wound you it is because he sees that course to be the only way to purge cleanse and heal you If they preach damnation to you it is to bring you to salvation If by discovery of your sin they seem to shame you it is to bring you to glory And when once they see you truly pricked and wounded they are both able by Gods assistance and as willing and ready to heal as they were to wound as ready with their oil as with their wine As the very mercies of the wicked are cruel so the wounds of faithfull Ministers and of the righteous generally are mercies their smiting a kindness their reproofs an excellent oyle Psal 141.5 3. To fly not from but to God though seemingly an enemy 3. Being wounded flie not from God from his word and ministers but to them Usually men fly from such as would wound them conceiving them enemies and in the hearers of the word it is too usually done by many who being touched by the sharp reproofs of the word forsake their teachers as either too saucy with them or too strict little thinking that thus flying from them they forsake their own mercies These converts here did otherwise betaking themselves and flying not from but to those that pricked them being indeed inwardly sustained by a secret power to expect help and direction from the same Apostles and no other If thou then or whensoever thou shalt be wounded in like case consult and say Come and let us return unto the Lord for he hath torn and he will heal us he hath smitten and he will binde us up After two daies will he revive us in the third day he will raise us up and we shall live in his sight Hos 6.1 2. If God by his word do wound If he help not all other help is in vain it is in vain to seek to any other for cure when he is displeased who can afford help if he deny it resolve therefore if thou must perish as thou art sure enough to do if God save not to die before the footstool of his mercy he may save thee though in seeming thine enemy at least if he do not no other can imitate the Lepers of whom we have heard 2 Kings 7.4 5 c. But if being wounded in conscience thou seek to any of the aforesaid uncomfortable means thou so forsakest the fountain of mercy and with Cain fleest from the presence of God Thus do many who as one saith well as they beleeve without repenting and therefore their faith is presumption so they repent without beleeving and therefore their repentance is desperation They mutter and murmure and are like the chaffe which when it is shaken flutters in the face of the fanner as angry with him as those Jews Acts 7. flying in Stephens face but the godly are as great wheat falling down at the feet of the fanner as these converts here humbling to Peter c. What shall we do And so we come to the third relation which may be considered between these Apostles and some of these Jewes if not all CHAP. XXVIII Shewing how Gods Ministers and people are and shall be sought to and honoured by those that disrespect them 3. The Third relation of these Apostles being the same who formerly were neglected if not mocked 3. UNto whom then did these here in their distress of conscience seek saying Men and brethren c. I answer unto those whom formerly they contemned or at least neglected and accounted meanly of and in likelihood some of these were in the number of those that in the morning of the same day mocked and derided if not reviled them v. 13. saying These men are full of new wine But now that they are truly touched and pricked in heart they seek unto them with all submission and prostration of themselves and of their own wisedome and wills desirous to be directed and willing to be commanded by them by those that now seek unto them They are now taken down off the high conceit they had of themselves and in an high esteem of these Apostles they make their moan and requests unto them seeking comfort and direction from them whom formerly they so lightly accounted of if not railed on and mocked Howsoever they now thus honour those whom they formerly contemned Note The godly shall be honoured of those that contemn them 1. Often in this life which their enemies do 1. Either willingly as being converted Thus shall it be done to the man whom the King of heaven delighteth to honour Even such as seek their disgrace shall be made to honour them at one time or another 1. In this life Or 2. hereafter They shall be made to do it either willingly or against their wills 1. Willingly in and by their conversion and alteration of judgement concerning the faithful servants of God So that whereas they have spoken evill against them as evill doers they shall now by the others good works which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation and so acknowledge them the true servants of God Thus the Jaylour having thrust Paul and Silas into an inner prison and made their feet fast in the stocks came not long after trembling and falling down before their feet seeking help and comfort from them washed their stripes and so did them honour Acts 16.24 -29 30 c. This is according to the promise Isa 60.14 The sons also of them that afflicted thee shall come bending unto thee and all they that despised thee shall bow themselves down at the soles of thy feet and they shall call thee the City of the Lord the Zion of the holy One of Israel 2 Vnwillingly As 1 It may be Or 2. Unwillingly 1 By command of others as in Haman by command of higher powers So proud Haman who formerly despised good Mordecai and now had plotted his and the Jews destruction was commanded to honour him and afterwards all the Jews also in the person of Queen Esther a Jewesse before whom Haman stood up to make request for his life to her Esth 6.10 11.
being men are hence taught not to take to themselves more honour then is fit for them such as hath been named if through mens error or superstition it shall be given unto them They may learn that lesson from John the Baptist who had the opportunity of being honoured and acknowledged as the Messias or Christ if being asked he had but said it yea from Peter who refused Cornelius his devotion in falling down at his feet and worshipping him saying as we have heard Stand up for I my self also am a man Acts 10.25 26. And lastly from Paul and Barnabas who being reputed as Gods and called by the name of heathenish gods and when sacrifices were ready to be offered to them cried out Acts 14.13 14 15. Sirs Why do ye these things we also are men of like passions with you c. But doth the Pope thus yea or did some other inferiour Bishops thus who could be content to have the Popes title of Holinesse indeed gods true title and attribute put upon them without rending his garment Or should the best deserving among the Ministers of Christ take Gods honour to themselves or if it be by flatterers given them should they let it rest with themselves they may remember how King Herod was eaten up with wormes for so doing And I know none who willingly so doth but the Divel who among the heathen sought Gods honour and took it being given so becomming their god seeking the like honour still in the person of the Pope especially as elswhere more largely I shew Vse 2 Now Secondly for others they are hence taught 1. As not to give flattering titles unto man Concerning others Job 33.23 24. 1. To honour Ministers as men of God so not to deny to the true Ministers of Christ such honour and respect as is due unto them as men of God God will not have them despised as being men or sons of men and in regard of outward relations and respects in the world as birth wealth c. oftentimes mean men for so do proud and scornfull men who oppose their own temporall honours birth wealth offices or dignities to Gods word in such mens mouthes scorning that such as they term and account to be ex faece plebis of the dregs of the people and not worthy to sit at their table c. should teach reproove or controul them No God will have us look on them as men of God as his messengers and substitutes of Christ doing that and executing the same office which Christ executed on earth Rom. 15.8 being a minister of the circumcision or of the Jewes and now would execute if he were to live on earth The name and office of Minister then is honourable and not to be slighted neither is it by any so much scorned as by the Ministers of Antichrist The honour to be done them that are truly faithfull is 1. To receive and hear them as the Ministers of Christ 1. By acknowledging them such Gal. 4.14 and so as Christ himself as once the Galathians did Paul and to receive the word they teach as the word of God himself 1 Thes 1.13 2. By our obedience 2. To obey them in the Lord Hebr. 13.17 3. By our love 3. To love or esteem them very highly in love for their works sake 1 Thes 5.12 13. 4. By affording them maintenance and double honour 4. To honour them with double maintenance especially such as labour in the word and doctrine 1 Tim. 5 17. In a word God will not have his ministers wronged in their office he will maintain them in it whilest they attend thereon He hath given a charge concerning them saying Do my Prophets no harm Being men they are subject to many wrongs and disgraces and to take heed of wronging them but if any wrong or disgrace them as and because men of God that is in or for their faithfulnesse zeal and conscionableness in their callings God himself will require it and requite it even as David avenged on King Hanun the disgrace done his Ambassadors so 2 Chron. 36.16 They so long mocked the messengers of God and despised his words and misused his Prophets untill the wrath of the Lord arose against his people till there was no remedy or healing 2. To depend on the ministery of man 2. That God is pleased to teach us by men and that as is said in great mercy to us we are all hence taught to acknowledge Gods ordinance and to depend on the ministery of men his men his faithfull servants Mal. 2.7 though not without trial of them whose lips should preserve knowledge And though such among men be rare Job 32.22 23 c. and that there be false teachers and some such as Paul foretold told the Elders of Ephesus of saying Also of your own selves shall men arise speaking perverse things to draw Disciples after them Acts 20.29 30. who are to be tried by the rule of Gods established truth as Deut. 13.1 2 3. Acts 17.11 1 Joh. 4.1 yet we are not to neglect the ministery of man as such do as depend 1. On immediate revelations of the spirit without the word or against it For as we must not quench the spirit and not on revelations of the spirit Or 2. of Angels Or 3. of apparitions of the dead Or 4. on witches c. so not despise prophecying 1 Thes 5.19 20. 2. On Angelicall revelations 3. On Apparitions of the dead as Papists do Luke 16.30 31. They have Moses and the Prophets let them hear them c. 4. On diabolicall Oraches on witches south-sayers against whose inchantments God hath given us his son in our nature and his substitutes See Deut. 18.10 11. 14 15. Isai 8.19 20. CHAP. XXXI Shewing that Ministers are Brethren one with another and with their people with Vses Brethren THis is the second title given by these humbled Jewes and not scorned by these great Apostles 2. The second Title here given Brethren It might seem some boldness if not sauciness to some that private men should be so familiar with such eminent men and great Apostles and I will not say what humane weaknesse would have done if these Apostles had appeared in the silken sattin golden habit of their pretended successors And yet me thinks men of humbled spirits and distressed in soul and conscience would hardly have given flattering titles or much respected them the more for their gay clothes I dare say A title too mean in these our daies it would be thought want of good manners at least if not sauciness and pride in any of the Laity now to speak so to Peters successors though he should be a King that should in humility call the Pope Brother Pope Paul the fourth would disdain that Appellation who could at table publikely say that he would not have any Prince for his companion but all subject under his feet which he said striking his foot
against the ground But Peter here his first predecessor as he would have it took no exception at men meaner then Princes yet accepted by Peter and the other Apostles who called them all brethren by which kind acceptance of the title they shew how the men of God though the greatest Apostles should not only be content to be esteemed of by the meanest of their hearers Vse 1 even as their brethren And not to be disdained by Gods Ministers now 1 Pet. 5.3 who must behave themselves as brethren First with the people but to account of the meanest as of their Brethren and to shew the same by carrying them selves as tender shepherds to the flock not as being lords or lording it over Gods heritage Let them behave themselves as brethren First with their flock 1. By tenderness of affection and sympathy learning the same from their great master Christ Jesus Hebr. 2.7 and 4.15 and from Paul Gal. 6.1 2 Tim. 2.24 25. 2. By love and good agreement avoiding all unnecessary suits and jarres with such as they instruct 1. By sympathy as they desire to see any good fruit of their labours among them 2. Good agreement yet they must also take heed of becomming through too much or needless familiarity with them in good fellowship as they call it Brethren in evill 2. Among themselves 2 Let them carry themselves also as brethren among themselves as here all these Apostles agreed in one and conversed lovingly together which is not so soon done as said seeing before the death of Christ some of these Apostles by themselves and friends sought preheminence above their brethren yea all of them strove who should be greatest though now upon our Saviours reproof of them and that they had all received the gifts of the holy Ghost which taught them humility they carry themselves as loving brethren one towards another without envy or contempt one of another A reproof or discovery of some mens pride It were to be wished that it were so now adaies that pride or at least high place and lordliness did not make some to disdain to account or call others as faithfull it may be and as painfull in the ministery as themselves their brethren unlesse perhaps with the distinction of brother or fellow-Presbyter least that brother should think himself a Bishop though for Scripture Bishops he may be assured he is one and as true a Chaplain of Jesus Christ as some other who carry a greater port on earth Here the Apostles took it not ill to be called men and brethren as indeed they were in a large sense brethren in that they were men In what sense the Apostles were Brethren to these Jews and of the same Country and Nation and as now they were growing to be brethren in affection and spirituall obligation as Christians This was the humility of the Apostles and yet it was no pride in these humbled souls to speak to them in the stile of Men-brethren But you will say Whether beasts be our brethren Dr. F. Are there any brethren that are not men Yes saith one if we will beleeve the Legend of S. Francis for he saluted ordinarily beasts when he met them in this manner Brother Oxe brother Bear brother Wolf But this is a note beneath Gamoth and a degree below lowlinesse it self I add it is as much under true humilitie being a shew and affectation of it in a proud Friar as the other is above it in a proud Pope and Prelate Vse 2 As this said especially concerneth Ministers so now a word more by way of Vse as it concerneth hearers For the people Dr. Featly on this Text. Egeon Askew of brotherly Reconcilement c. For I list not enter upon the large discourse of Christian Brother-hood the distinctions of brethren yea or yet the Exhortation to maintain such brother-hood Others have done it largely and learnedly and I would nott too much burthen my Discourse which already is grown much bigger then at first conception of it I conceived it would prove Hearers are to conceive of their Teachers as brethren and accordingly 1. To be perswaded of their love and sympathy Let Hearers then conceive of their Teachers being faithfull especially not onely as men subject to like passions but as brethren Accordingly let them 1 Be perswaded of their love even when they do rebuke and reprove and of their sympathie towards them in anguish of conscience as of loving brethren neither of which these Jews could expect from their own Rabbies the high Priests Scribes and Pharisees no more then Judas found from them 2. To be more familiar with them 2 Let them have especially in like trouble of conscience recourse more familiarly to them by conference and craving their advice even because they are brethren assuring themselves that none but inhumane and disdainfull men will take it ill to be sought unto in such case Where they have a faithfull Minister they may confidently expect from him tender-heartednesse and sympathie and accordingly loving usage as from a naturall brother 3. Not to despise them though they themselves be great on earth 3 Lastly Great ones on earth as wel as others are taught to honour good Ministers as their brethren and not to scorn or to account meanly of them or of their calling They are our brethren and so far our equals the calling being in it self as honourable and they in regard of their calling as any other Nay they are to be respected and honoured as our elder brethren seeing they come in stead of the most honourable in the Family these being as elder brethren even of the first-born Numb 3.12 who before the Levites were taken in their steads did minister to the Lord as Exod. 24.5 The first-born then even among Lords and Dukes were to perform that office then neither were it any disparagement to their birth if so it were now at least they should not in regard of the calling despise their Brethren And thus for the Compellation Now of the Consultation in these words What shall we do CHAP. XXXII Consultation of many about the good of their souls is no Conventicle c. 2 The Consultation and how occasioned THese are words full as of sorrow and fear yet not without some hope as formerly hath been shewed so of care and perplexitie of spirit They are now convinced of their own guiltinesse they are forced to acknowledge that Christ whom they crucified is indeed the true Messias exalted by the right hand of God to sit at the right hand of God and to have shed forth this which they did now see and hear being now ready to make his foes and who were they more then his crucifiers his foot-stool Acts 2.33 34 35. They being by the word also convinced hereof apprehend wrath and damnation as most justly due unto them And therefore as men at their wits end and as having no help in
is to be the more magnified by us Now the way by which God gives an issue God only gives the issue by giving repentance c. as in David is by repentance faith confession of sin prayer self-condemning and self-deniall punishment of offendors judging our selves and others with reformation of things amisse as we see here in these Iewes and in the Jaylor so also in David who through his pride and folly in the needless numbring of his people 2 Sam. 24.14 17 18. was brought into a great strait I am said he in a great strait he knew not what to doe what to chuse yet he finds a good issue by his casting himself upon God and his mercy by his confession of sin 1 Chron. 21.13.16 17. and prayer for himself and his people joyned with fasting and sackcloth by rearing an Altar and offering of sacrifice as the Prophet Gad directed him See this also in Joshua who through the sin of Achan in Joshua with the whole host of Israel is brought into marvellous straits whilest the men of Ai prevailed against them Josh 7.6 7 8 9. Alas O Lord God what shall I say when Israel turneth their backs before their enemies c. What shall I say either to thee O Lord whom doubtlesse we have offended though as yet I know not wherein Or to this people to whom I ever promised good success and victory in thy name or to the enemies whose mouthes I cannot stop from blasphemies or to my self in answer to mine own doubts concerning thy truth and promises Yet God gives him an issue also Get thee up for he with his clothes rent with the Elders of Israel was faln upon his face before the Ark of the Lord untill the eventide wherefore liest thou upon thy face Israel hath sinned I will not be with you any more except ye destroy the accursed from among you c. This done God was appeased But now where in such straits and convictions of conscience men doe not betake themselves to such like courses of repentance Impenitent persons exclude themselves from mercy faith prayer c. but thinke to wrastle it out by their own strength or other meanes they shut the door of mercy against themselves and cast themselves into straits inextricable and such as wherein they perish as the forenamed Cain who in such straits built him a city unto which but not unto the Lord he betook him for safety and as Iudas who in like case sought to the High Priests but not to Christ for mercie and in others especially at the last day when sinners shall be speechlesse and seeing Christ in glory and as their judge shall not know either what to say or do or whether to flee from his presence Nay even in this life when evill men will not flee to God by repentance confession faith and not repenting amendment c. and so serve his providence and make way for his mercy they not only put themselves they put God willing to save them into straits as not knowing what to do unto them but be it spoken with reverence God himself to some stand so that he being loth they should perish knowes not what more to say or do unto them in mercy especially and so as may stand with his glory who will not save men in their sins unless he should utterly destroy them So God to Ephraim and Judah O Ephraim what shall I do unto thee O Judah what shall I doe unto thee for your goodness is as a morning cloud Hos 6.4 and as the early dew it goeth away And may not inlike manner the Lord complain of our unto wardness unfruitfulness and iniquity saying What could have bin done or what can I do more to my vineyard with his honour and holinesse What can I do more with my honor to you who so long have abused my mercy not feared my threats made light account of my word smothered checks of conscience out-wrastled a while to the stifling of the spirit your fears doubts and inward anguish by your own meanes unlesse I should utterly destroy you seeing you by self-deniall and going out of your selves wholly will not seek your helpe and salvation from me And assuredly dear brethren seeing your sin hath brought you into such a distressed condition as that all the world cannot help you if God in mercy help you not unlesse damn them and that again by your presumption and bold trusting to your selves and security and self-confidence you bar up Gods mercy and his power against your selves I say know it assuredly that mercy it self shall never save you till or unlesse you in sence of your hellish and slavish condition under the power of sin and wrath and acknowledgement of your own inability and by an absolute deniall of your selves do seek help and salvation out of your selves in God only according to the direction of his word and faithfull Ministers and dispensers of it and from the power of his saving grace So did these here And so I return to the Observation propounded Those whom God will save must by self-deniall seek salvation out of themselves SECT 2. Why we are to deny our selves and all goodness in our selves in the matter of Salvation YOu perhaps will say did these here in the Text so Or did the Jaylor so when he asked What must I do to be saved Quest Did these Iewes seek salvation out of themselves It seems they are all for doing and works and that they sought though the way of salvation from others yet the cause of it in themselves and in their own doings What shall we do I will not deny but that generally men seek their own good by their own doings when they so speak of doing they of themselves by nature know no other way and are ignorant of Jesus Christ and his righteousnes and so seek righteousness not by faith but as it were by the works of the Law Rom. 9.32 as did the Jews whilst they stumbled at Christ For so according to that condition at the first even in nature intire did the Covenant run Men not knowing Christ commonly and naturally seek their own good from their own doings but more expresly afterwards when the Morall Law was given to the Jewes Do this and thou shalt live Which condition yet was in the true intent of it for conviction and to shew man his unrighteousnesse and impotency and so to prepare him for Christ when he should be made known unto him unto whom accordingly even in the time of the Law men had recourse in the promise and by their legall sacrifices all of them types of Christ and from the first condition of works which yet was for conviction and to prepare them for Christ so that being in their consciences convinced of their sins and of their just desert of death they betook themselves those I mean who understood what they did by
3 Honourable 3 And as this Being in Christ is spirituall so you see it is also Honourable for hereby though otherwise never so mean in the world we become and are the sons of God John 1.12 4 Rich whereby we partake of his Annoynting he becoming to us a Prophet 4 It is also a rich Being whereby we becoming by it members of Christ and that both in regard of body and soul 1 Cor. 6.15 17. Rom. 12.5 do partake of his Annoynting that is of his Spirit Joh. 2.27 and of all the gifts of it Acts 2.17 18. as these in my Text did ver 38. by which he becomes to us a Prophet revealing in us and to us the eternall will and good purpose of the eternall Father concerning our salvation Priest John 1.18 a Priest to reconcile us by his blood to bring us into favour with God again and to keep us in the same by interceding for us and by pleading our cause at his Fathers right hand King A King to rule and guide us by his word and Spirit and to fight for us and protect us against all enemies bodily spirituall eternall and infernall in the mean time enduing us with the riches of all his merits And what are all earthly things to this Being 5 Blessed and much better then a sinfull Being 5. It is also a blessed holy and happy Being Eph. 1.3 and in that regard infinitely better then our being in sin and under wrath as wicked men are who being out of Christ are never well or to their content but when they are drunk merry secure proud in the fashion of the world and in their heart glorifying themselves as Babylon is brought in Rev. 18.7 saying in her heart I sit a Queen and am no widow and shall see no sorrow Such a Being is a miserable Being and as it is sinfull so is it temporary and shall end when endlesse sorrows beign whereas our Being in Christ as it is from eternity 6 Eternall even before our being in the world and before our effectuall calling namely in Gods election Ephes 1.3 4. yea and after our calling notwithstanding our falls which do not separate us from Christ after we once be truly in him though thereby wee have no incouragement to sin so it is to eternity Here in assured hope and right we even now being raised in our bodies and sitting together inheavenly places namely in Christ Jesus and hereafter in the full fruition and beatifying vision and sight of him In these regards wee are to deny our selves in the rest These things considered should we not for Christ and the injoying of him be content if need so require to deny our selves in all things else What shall we lose if forgoing all things else we gain him and such a Being in him which as is said includes a fulnesse of all things and is better then any being else out of him as being an estate and a Being most stable spirituall honourable rich and blessed even to eternity and to labour after this Being seeing hereby we 1 Get somewhat to oppose our naturall and carnal selves And this the rather should we now by self-denyall and seeking to become new-creatures in him labour for inasmuch as so we shall finde 1 That in us which will enable us to withstand and oppose our carnall sinful and naturall selves and Being which Being alone swayes all and carryes us from God and Christ to all evill Where there is nothing but a naturall or a sinfull Being it will never yea it can never oppose it self but being one with it self seeing nature wil not otherwise oppose or den itself will seek ever to maintain it self in its own proper Being as carnall wisdome will never oppose or deny it self but when Christ is once our wisdom and we are once made wise in him carnall reason and wisdom will finde opposition from spirituall wisdom so generally when we are all and onely flesh and carnall fleshly and carnall men and company without us and such like motions within us have us at command and no temptation is truly and spiritually unlesse upon carnall naturall worldly and base respects withstood But that then is no true genuine or full self-denyall nature or the flesh rules and commands all still Onely where we have a new being in Christ there we have that which truly and diametrally will oppose corruption and the fleshly part and self in us So onely it is with the truely regenerate where the spirit in them as a new and supernaturall principle doth lust against the flesh and though it lust and strive against the spirit yet the spirit in the end prevails There is no true self-denyall of a mans self but by the spirit of holinesse and of power This helps to enable us to deny our selves 2. Thus by becoming new creatures in Christ 2 Finde f●ll●● content we onely finde true full and every way satisfactory content which makes us willing to deny our selves and to forsake all whether sinfull or yet if need be naturall contentments for him and for God in him No content out of Christ which men in vain seek Whilest men want Christ and enjoy not God in Christ they seek contentment in and from every thing but finde it in nothing They know no sufficiency but such as is in themselves or in the creature or if you will in God and Christ injoyed and had in their own way and as carnall reason or proud nature shall dictate to them and direct them They want the fruition of God which now is had onely in Christ and so they want contentment yet because they would have it they seek it either in some base lust and sinfull way from their lusts whether open or more secret which to them is as their God and they know no other happinesse and so every hypocrite lives in some sin or other or from the creatures or from the creature as from riches favour of men friends honours c. unto which they flee for their comfort or otherwise for defence and protection or from themselves in whole or from themselves as from some worth or merit in them or at least in part so seeking salvation not from Christ alone as if he alone were not alsufficient and alone able to content them but from some supposed merit or satisfactory works of their own or other mens from some goodness of their own nature or some power of their own free-will or from their duties in which they rest or at least from their duties otherwise good and necessary to help us unto Christ and to assure us of our being in him in which they rest and with which being otherwise it may be with diligence and zeal performed they altogether take up and so for want of denyall of themselves in them come short of Christ Whereas if these men did apprehend the fulness of Christ and saw and
did acknowledge an alsufficiency every way in him they would soon go out of themselves not in part onely but wholly and be taken off their own bottoms making God in Christ their onely shield in all their fears and dangers Christ is and ought to be All unto us and their exceeding great reward Gen. 15.1 in all their wants and weaknesses yea and Christ alone should and would be All unto them and in all things as he is to them that know him aright who of God are or have a Being in Christ Jesus who of God saith Paul is made unto us wisedome and righteousness and sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 1.30 And now that we know the excellency and fulness of Christ let us whilest we deny our selves who alone sets price on all things else or that we may so do make him All unto us and in all things yea and above all things accounting all things nothing and as very cyphers alone nay though multiplied without him and the least things precious where he is also injoyed in which regard the second Temple in glory exceeded Solomons because of Christs presence Hag. 2.9 Mat. 2.6 Micah 5.2 Psal 37.16 and Bethlehem was not the least but greatest among the Princes of Juda because Christ was born there So a little wealth with Christ and righteousnesse is better then the riches of many wicked Yea brown bread with Christ and the Gospel is good chear So a little respect and honour in the world yea the very suffering of shame with him and for his name is great honour and matter of much rejoycing Acts 5.41 Phil. 1.29 which without him are nothing Prov. 23.4 5. 1 Tim. 3.8 Tit. 1.7 11. yea very dung And contrariwise what is abundance and all riches without Christ but meer nothing or things which are not what is gain without him but filthy lucre All is but dung without him or in comparison of him Phil. 3.8 but with Christ the dunghill is a Pallace as in Jobs case the dung cart a precious odour whence the saying of one Constantine who being with other martyrs carried in a dung-cart to the place of execution Well saith he whereas all our sufferings and sacrifices Isai 64.6 yet are we a precious odour and sweet savour to God in Christ So what are all priviledges works vertues righteousness of ours without Christ but filthiness and dung So that God of old threatned to cast the dung of their solemn feasts upon the faces of the wicked Priests Mal. 2.1 2 3. And said are in him asweet savour unto God He would not smell in their solemn feasts Amos 5.21 that is any sweet savour as he doth from the sacrifice of Christ Eph. 5.2 and from such as offer their sacrifices in Christ as from Noah Gen. 8.21 and 2 Cor. 2.14 15. We are unto God a sweet savour of Christ in them that are saved and in them that perish So the liberality of the Philippians towards Paul in prison Phil. 4.18 was an odour of a sweet smell a sacrifice acceptable well-pleasing to God Such are the prayers of Saints Rev. 5.8 Why should we not then strive to be all in Christ and to make him all unto us Make we then 1 Cor. 1.30 Christ All to us First wisedom and that both Author and as the conduit pipe by whom through the means of his Word and Spirit true wisedome is conveyed to us being content to be made wise only according to the wisedom in his Word 1. Wisedome both Author and Object revealed thereby and made effectuall by his spirit Matth. 11.25 26.27 Luke 10.21 22. and not according to books of vanity and policie and Object with Paul determining not to know any thing save Iesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 whom to know is eternall life Joh. 17.3 So we shall defeat the wisedom of all plotiers and the wiles of Satan 17.3 Phil. 3.7 8. Hereby we become wiser then the wisest on earth then all our enemies that plot against us Yea whilest we are and will be wise only in Christ Satans wiles stratagems and devises against us shall be defeated God will over-reach him and all his instruments on our behalf and out-shoot them in their own bowes making their wisedome foolishness and them the authors of their own shame and ruine and find good success in all our undertakings Never any failed that in his undertakeings counsels and actions followed the direction of Gods word and suffered that to go before him and that left the issues and events of his actions so undertaken to Gods wise ordering and disposall 2. 2. Righteousness Make we again Christ righteousnesse unto us in the matter of our justification as Paul did Phil. ● 8 9. reposing our whole confidence in him alone and holding our selves compleatly righteous in him without either any act of our own as concurring to our justification with God or work of his in us other then that of faith or supposed merit our own or others or treasury of the Church So and no otherwise shall we partake of those rich benefits by which we also gain many other benefits 1. Pardon of sin 2. Imputation of his obedience active and passive 3. Adoption and Son-ship Joh. 1.12 and so to be heires of God and joynt heires with Christ himself 4. His Intercossion and appearance in the presence of God to answer for us Hebr. 7.25 and 9.24 3. 3. Sanctification 1. In all our wants of grace We from what hath been said see reason also to make him as God hath made him to us our sanctification and that first in the want true or supposed of this or that grace or measure of grace in the sence whereof it may be we go mourning and are ready to thinke our selves hypocrites at least if not reprobates In this case comfort we our selves whilest we hunger and labour after more grace and rest we in this that Christ is our Sanctification accounting his grace sufficient for us which for the present we have 2 Cor. 12.8 9. and that as he answered Paul crying out unto him of some infirmity of his his grace is sufficient for us His grace first of justification by which in Christ we are accounted perfectly sanctified and by faith in heart purified then of sanctification begun in us which God in Christ accepts of for the present Even this very thing that with Paul we are sensible of our failings would fain do better cry out of our infirmities to God for help and more grace accounting our corruptions as so many heavy burthens to us This is not done without Gods grace and spirit for we cannot so much as breath out a sigh for sin till God breath it in Zach. 12.10 Rom. 8.26 Now this measure God is pleased to accept of for the present as sufficient and Christ to us in stead of all graces as purposing to perfect his own strength in our
grace from whom is both the will and the deed the power and the act Phil. 2.13 Even speciall and effectuall● It was Gods effectuall work on the heart of these converts that they were so willing to obey and so desirous to be directed what to do by such as they now judged able and faithfull to direct them aright even as it is with others both in and after their first conversion Such desire onely to know what to do that is pleasing to God and they are ready to do it yet do they not ascribe the power to themselves but to Gods grace and the effectuall work of his Spirit so David Cause me to know the way wherein I shall walk and teach me to do thy will as in David It seems then he was willing ready and resolved to walk in that way and to Gods will when once the one or the other should be made known unto him But what will he do this by his own strength though now converted no for besides the force of the words cause me to know and teach me to do which imply more then a generall direction even an effectuall knowledge and practice he hereunto craves the speciall help and effectuall assistance of Gods holy Spirit or as some read the words is assured of the same Thy Spirit is good lead me or thy good Spirit shall lead me into the land of uprightness quicken me O Lord for thy Names sake Psal 143.8 10 11. Howsoever thus it is with true converts and in these Converts as with these here who as they were willing and ready to follow good direction given which was to repent and beleeve so this readinesse as also the act and performance after was Gods work in them As on the contrary the high Priest and whole councell of Elders and Scribes being in like manner charged and convinced by Stephen as these here by Peter to be the betrayers crucifiers and murtherers of Christ opposed and stoned him Acts 7.51 52 c. and the doing thereof was the work of the Divell in them and of their own wicked and obstinate wils whereby being stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears they resisted the holy Ghost and became the authours of their own hardening and damnation But we rather hasten to the Vse of the former Point and to an end of all By what is said wee see what to judge of disobedient and refractory sinners Vse 1 and of all such as being convinced of their sins as these here were and called to repentance Of reproof of such as resist the work of grace and withstand their own salvation proudly withstand God without any trembling at his word Isa 66.1 2. and are ready to say with proud Pharaoh Exod. 5.2 Who is the Lord that I should obey his voyce and with those citizens by whom such as I speak of are meant wee will not have this man to reign over us Luke 19.14 And Our lips are our own who is lord over us Psal 12.4 These very Jews both more anciently as also Gentiles Pilate and Herod and others that rejected and persecuted Christ are meant by David therein a type of Christ in his sufferings when he brings them in Acts 4.27 28. saying Let us break their that is the Fathers and the Sons bands asunder and cast away their cords from us Psal 2.1 2 3. These bands Jer. 27.2 3 -6 7. and cords Job 39.13 Ezek. 4.8 were signes of subjection and restraint yet though these bands of Christ be also bands of love Hos 11.4 and his yoake be easie Matth. 11.29 30. these proud and disdainfull ones refuse to serve Christ and will none of him Such are also their scholers who now being called upon and now in and by the ministery of the word to repent convert and turn from their own evil wayes and to be subject to Christ as their Prophet Priest and King will none of Christ will not deny their own wisdom that they may be wise onely by his word will have as an hand in the meriting and work of their own salvation so other Priests and Intercessours then he whether refusing to take on them Christs easie yoak and in a word will not submit themselves to him as their King to be guided by his word to repent and beleeve on his name or to forsake any sin for which they are reproved and of which convinced being ready to say Who is the Minister what saucy and bold fellow is he who thus reproveth us As for the word that thou hast spoken unto us in the name of the Lord we will not hearken unto thee But we will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our own mouth Jer. 44.16 17. This if it be not so openly said of all yet is done by all such as answer not Gods call when they are invited to repent and told of Gods heavie judgements if they repent not yea also by such as by outward profession and seeming repentance have been thought to have taken Christs yoak upon them but are such as have revolted or casting it and his cords off after a seeming profession and played the Apostate from him by making defection to Popery Antichristianisme Arminianisme Lutheranisme and to other errours and to the doctrine at least practice of Libertinisme by imbracing this present evill world in the lusts of it and by licentiousnesse of life being such as the Princes of Judah of old were Hos 5.10 who were like them that remove the bound as not willing to be kept within the limits of Gods word and like those great men to whom Jeremy did speak Jerem. 5.5 and of whom he saith But these as well as the poor and meaner sort of people have altogether broken the yoake and burst the bands Their doom But their doom there follows ver 6. as also the like or worse doom of all disobedient impenitent and refractary sinners elsewhere not onely a lion out of the forrest shall slay them but God himself will be as a lion unto them as he threatned Ephraim saying I will be unto Ephraim as a lion and as a young lion which is more fierce to the house of Judah I even I. the great glorious and mighty God will tear and go away Hos 5.14 15. not tear and heal unlesse timely repentance follow Hos 6 1. but tear and go away and leave them for ever unlesse in time they in sense of their guiltinesse acknowledge their offence and seek my face But of these mens doom more hereafter We are hence taught and instructed Vse 2 when God calls us to repentance Of Instruction and exhortation especially by his Ministers and messengers sent of purpose to that end not to harden our necks not to be stiff-necked as we and others formerly have been but to give the hand or yeeld our selves unto the Lord c. 2 Chro. 30.8 to humble our selves to walk with our God to tremble at his
set himself against them yea them against themselves making them a terrour to themselves A wounded name estate leg or arm wounded or broken may be born but who can bear a wounded spirit saith Solomon when the bones within are broken will it not cause roaring ask David Psal 32.3.4 and 51.8 ask Hezekiah Isa 38.13 And yet what is all this to the eternall endlesse and easelesse torments of hell These things would be considered Oh consider this then in time you that are so secure and fearlesse that care not what you say or do how many oaths you swear how many Sabbaths and Sermons you neglect how many you cozen or wrong in their goods name chastity your sinne one day will shew it self in its colours and your consciences will prove burthens to you heavier then mountains your hard hearts shall be broken and you crushed punished and tormened for ever Rather in time chuse to be when ye hear these things and in the timely belief of them savingly pricked as these here were who in the apprehension of such effects of sinne as you have now heard did presently seek to prevent them and being thus pierced and pricked sought help and healing which accordingly they presently found becoming true converts and partakers of Christ And so leaving the consideration of this sorrow as a bare affection in the sinner The third Relation of this pricking of heart is to the whole work of Conversion as the beginning thereof and an effect of sinne we come to speak more of it in relation to this great work of conversion and as the first step and beginning thereof leading to Christ and to salvation So that taking these first words They were pricked in heart with those their other words following what shall we do and upon direction given them their doing accordingly verse 38.39 c. they will afford unto us this observation That a legal terrour of conscience and sorrow for sin through sence of misery thereby deserved is the beginning of Repentance and first step to Conversion So that we are occasioned here to take notice or at least to consider of the order of conversion and of the steps and degrees thereof and how men are brought to Christ to faith and to salvation which we will speak of in its place after some generals are first observed CHAP. V. SECT 4. Pricicking of heart considered as the first step to true Conversion And that Conversion must begin at the heart with reasons and uses of the point THe most generall observation which we will hence first raise is this Doctr. Conversion must begin at the heart that true and saving Conversion begins and must begin at the heart By heart in Scripture is generally meant the soul and all the severall powers and faculties of the same as understanding What is meant by heart here memory conscience will and affections joyntly and severally as might easily be shewed but for our present use we here by heart chiefly understand the Conscience and will with the affections which by this pricking came both to be pained and to be severed and parted from sinne which was all one with it and the corruption of the same to be let out Yet I take the Conscience here is more specially meant Especially the conscience as in Davids case when he came to see and to be convinced of his sinne of Pride in numbring of the people it is said and Davids heart smote him and David said as these here were pricked in heart and said 2 Sam. 24.10 c. and we shall anon see that this pricking issued out of the conclusion of that practicall syllogisme which being thus convinced their consciences made The heart in true conversion must first be pricked wounded and put to pain as David was in his repentance and as it was here with these Converts yea and as God requires of all true Penitents Turn you even to me saith the Lord by Joel with all your heart and rent your heart and not your garments Joel 2.12.13 c. Reasons why Reasons why Hebr. 3.12 The heart is the First and chief offender Math. 15.18.19 It hatcheth and harbours sinne Jer. 4 14. 1 The heart is the first and chief offender It first turns from God and by unbelief departs from him if the body or bodily parts act any evill that evil is first hatched and forged in the heart for out of the heart proceed evill thoughts murders adulteries fornications thefts false witnesse blasphemies which defile a man yea it is the heart that harbours sinne and evil thoughts as in a common June O Jerusalem wash thy heart from wickednesse how long shall thy vain thoughts lodge with in thee yea it is the receptacle and lodging of the Devil himself who takes up the chief rooms thereof And Satan and filleth the same Act. 5.3 Joh. 13.2 The whole imagination and all the purposes and desires of the thoughts of the heart are onely evil continually Gen. 6.5 It s a proud heart festered The heart of man is a proud heart swollen with pride as is a bladder and therefore stands need of pricking It is a festered heart full of corruption and putrifying sores and stands need of opening searching and lancing by the knife of the law and sword of the spirit which is the word of God It is a hard heart hard as a stone and stands need of breaking and bruising There is a stone in the heart and hard heart hard 1 as a stone the cure whereof is like that which is of the stone in the bladder there must be sharp incision and God must come with his pulling and plucking instruments ere sin and that hardnesse can be got out of it 2 as mettal Yea It is hard as mettal men being said to have their necks as iron sin news and their brow brasse Isa 48.4 Jer. 6.28.29 whereby is meant the hardnesse of their hearts and obstinacy and to be brasse and iron so that the founder often melteth in vain the bellows that is the lungs of the Preacher shall sooner be burnt then the wicked and their wickednesse plucked away Yet being so hard it must be not onely broken with the hammer of the Law but molten if it be possible with the fire partly of Gods judgements threatned by the Prophets and in part executed by God himself who threatens to blowe upon his obdurate people in the fire of his wrath Ezek. 22 18-20 21. and to melt them in the midst thereof but chiefly of his love in the Gospel ere it can be cast into a new mold It then especially musst be dealt withal in the first place 2. The heart is most acceptable to God 2 The heart of all other parts is the most acceptable sacrifice to God indeed seasoning all the rest God requires it as his sacrifice My son give me thine heart Prov. 23.26 It s that which every one accounts
some soft spirits then many blowes will do upon some harsh crosse and sturdy natures CHAP. VII SECT 4 Who are more roughly and who are more gently dealt withall Who they are that are more roughly or more gently dealt withall in their Conversion The difference is to be considered with respect to their different conditions VVHO then are they with whom God deals more roughly and who are they who are more gently dealt withall 1 We heard but now that some have more stout and sturdy natures then others and hard and knotty wood must have a hard wedge Some have more tender consciences then others and are of a fearfull nature apprehensive of the least sin and judgement threatned so that the same thing which scarce troubles another doth wound them deeply Yea they apprehend cause of fear and trouble needlessely and through the predominancy of naturall melancholy suffer such fears to prevail with them and so lie long under such slavish fears before they will be satisfied and comforted Thus they are afraid if they be alone in the dark 1 present some being at the time of their conversion 1 Of more hard and sturdy natures then others of more tender and fearfull consciences as if the devill were ready to seize on them and to carry them to hell The sense of any thing fearfull as of fire lightning thunder boysterous winds uncouth apparitions presents them with no lesse then with sudden destruction if not with the fire of hell Yea they dare hardly eat drink or apparrell themselves further then extream necessity or shame drives them to it because of their unworthinesse and least they so increase their own condemnation and so they bereave themselves even of lawfull and necessary comforts which otherwise they are bound to use even of their necessary food and sleep and withall have their minds quite taken off their lawfull callings not able through a conceit of their own unworthinesse and as if all such labour were in vain to do any ordinary work of their speciall callings Thus Satan working through Gods permission with their melancholick disposition and too tender or apprehensive consciences holds them a long time under bondage when others of stouter spirits sounder judgements and not of so nice or timerous consciences escape these needlesse and slavish feares which yet the other by Gods mercie break through at length too 2 Of greater parts gifts and places and so more puffed up thereby Again some men are puffed up with high conceits of themselves in regard of their gifts parts places and high callings which keep many from hearkening to any ordinary means and motives which are used to humble them and so indeed wholy from Conversion Now if God intend the Conversion of such he deales with them commonly after a rougher manner seeing a small thing will not tame their lofty fierce and fiery spirits so he took down Paul yea struck him down by a visible apparition and audible voice from heaven when being highly conceited of his own legal righteousnesse and strongly confident of the goodnesse of his cause and Profession in the height of his zeal he was galloping hard on in the way of persecuting of the Saints of God On the other hand many that have not any great matters in them to stand upon and being of meaner rank and estimation in the world have nothing to oppose against the reproofs of the word or against the simplicity and seeming meannesse of the Preacher and so are sooner convinced and stand not in need of such terrours to tame them 2 Some have been more grievous sinners 2 Past having been either great siners and have run both deeper and longer in debt with God then others they are deeply defiled in sin double died their sins are scarlet sins and have taken deeper root in them through custome and continuance and have more poysoned and corrupted their natures other wise bad enough In which regard if God intend any mercy to such as indeed his mercy when he pleaseth to shew it shines most in such he more deeply and sensibly humbles them then others When once he opens their eyes to see their sin in the right hue of it it being of so grosse a nature appears most loathsome and ugly and more foul then sinnes of lower stature and growth and so the guilt and consequently the burthen thereof will lie more heavy upon the soul and presse it more down to hell then sins of lesse hatefullnesse till it please God in mercy to remove it and to assure them of pardon As sin brings them deep in debt with God so before they get a discharge from God they must proportionably pay for it not by way of satisfaction but of humble acknowledgement whilst they are made to feel in their own consciences some weight of it proportionable to the greatnesse of their sin for the greater the burthen is the greater will be the pain of the back though afterward finding ease their comfort is also answerable in measure to their former dejections and oftentimes much more then theirs who having not formerly sinned in like gorsse manner finde not it may be at first those terrours yet afterwards in the course of their lives they pay for it and what they escaped at the beginning they meet withal in their progresse finding an abatement of the others comforts in which regard some have compared the former sort to such as pay a great fine and sit on a small rent Simil. the later to such as pay but a little fine but then their rent is greater Hence it comes to passe that some mens sins are not so easily washed and done away as others are their poison not so soon purged out their wounds and festered sores not so soon cured as some sores may be let out with the pricking of a pin when others will scarce be cured with much and painful launcing and cutting Some are well educated and brought up in religious families and places where they are watches over or better educated instructed and well catechized where they for the most part see good examples and are kept from evil and lewd company These have grace instilled into them by degrees drop by drop and consequently not having laden their consciences with grosser sins when they come to be convinced of the guilt of original and their other lesser actual sins they are not so deeply stricken and wounded in heart therewith as others are who have more given the reins to their lusts and made a longer trade of sin These as they are more insensibly wrought upon by the Law and sooner humbled herein as one compares them like to Neias hawks which being taken out of the nest Simil. though they have a wilde nature yet are sooner manned then the haggards which have long preyed for themselves which must be kept from sleep hooded and much pains taken with them ere they be thorowly tamed and brought to the Lure so