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A13554 The progresse of saints to full holinesse described in sundry apostolicall aphorismes, or short precepts tending to sanctification, with a sweete and divine prayer to attaine the practise of those holy precepts / by Thomas Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1630 (1630) STC 23850; ESTC S1019 235,792 462

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lost Secondly other graces serve to the well-being or comfort of a Christian as sense of Gods favour peace of conscience joy in the holy Ghost alacrity in good duties sense and feeling of comfort in that estate these and the like may be quite lost David himselfe may pray Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation Psal. 51.12 Againe for the kindes of graces wee are to know that some are true saving graces as faith love zeale c. which are given to such as are effectually called fruites of the Spirit proper to the elect springing only in their gardens these cannot be wholly quenched although where these be the Spirit may be sore grieved as by Sampson David Peter Other graces are excellent but common not saving not sanctifying tending more to others good than their salvation that have them such as are historicall faith justice chastity temperance these and many the like may be quite quenched and never remembred As wee see in Saul 1 Sam. 16.14 The Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul namely which had beene present with him in many common graces and the evill spirit came upon him and in Iudas who had many excellent gifts yet it is said of him that the Divell entred into him who never comes but hee makes waste of all grace II. For the degrees of grace they are foure 1. Election 2. Iustification 3. Sanctification 4. Vocation Of these two are wholly laid out of our selves two are within our selves In the two former Election and Iustification a man cannot increase nor yet decay being two simple acts of God once wrought in him by himselfe immediatly and rooted in Christ who being the roote dies not and no more can the living branches in him The two latter because they are wrought mediatly by such outward meanes as are not alwayes alike may receive both increase and decrease A man may fall wholly from his vocation for Many are called but few chosen Matth. 22.14 and from a great measure of sanctification and from the whole comfort of true sanctification seeing nothing in his soule but the presence of corruption yea from many degrees of the soundest graces attending justification and eternall life Yet here some care is preserved in the heart of the elect by the Lord so as all sound grace is not quenched Here the case is as heretofore in the Romans warre if onely the top of the standart were stricken off the standart-bearer holding still the trunchion in his hand lost neither office nor honour but if hee lost the trunchion and suffered that to be beaten out of his hand he lost both So in our Christian warre if all care in the heart be expelled the honour and place of Christianity is lost and then men fall not away from their election but they that were never elected fall away Thus we see the meaning of this precept directed to beleevers who have received the Spirit for fire cannot be quenched but where it is that they should not quench the Spirit that it is not to be meant of an utter extinguishing of saving graces which cannot be but not to suffer any grace to be quenched in the brightnesse measure or degree of it this fire must be so farre from being quite put out that it must not be slackened or lessened it must be so farre from totall quenching as they must not let it decay in part or in any degree of it We come now to the points of instruction that this exposition affoords us The first is this All the godly have the Spirit of God else could he not be quenched this fire cannot be quenched but where it is Rom. 8.9 Ye are in the Spirit because the Spirit of God dwelleth in you and If a man have not the Spirit of God the same is not his Hence the godly are called the temples of the holy Ghost in whom he dwelleth as in his temples 2 Cor. 13.5 Prove your selves know yee not that the Spirit of God is in you unlesse you be reprobates 1 Ioh. 2.20 Yee have the anoynting which abideth in you Object The Spirit being infinite he is also in the wicked Answ. 1. He is one way in the wicked as in all other things by the infinitenesse of his essence another way in the godly by the presence of his grace and blessed effects 2. Hee is graciously present both with the wicked and godly but the former in common and generall graces the latter in speciall and saving graces In the former hee dwells as in the world for the good of the world and societies of men In the latter hee dwells as in his temples for the perfecting of the blessed communion of Saints both in grace and glory In the one by grace restraining in the other by renewing grace Reasons of the point are these 1. Members must needes have the same Spirit with the head as a branch hath the same sappe with the roote and as every member liveth by the same soule that the head doth This is the Apostles reason Rom. 8.11 The same Spirit that raised up Iesus from the dead shall also quicken your mortall bodies because his Spirit dwelleth in you 2. Christs promise is that his Spirit should supply his bodily absence Ioh. 16.7 It is meete I goe away else the Comforter shall not come but if I depart I will send him unto you for greater is our comfort in Christs bodily absence then wee could have in his bodily presence wee must not now gaze upon his holy flesh but the blessed merit of it If wee should alwayes corporally see wee could not spiritually beleeve saith Augustine Now Christ hath carried our flesh to heaven and opened the way by his flesh to our flesh in our flesh makes requests and prepareth places for us and supplies that comfort in the meane while by sending out his Spirit to glad our hearts 3. This commeth to passe by Christs effectuall and powerfull prayer Ioh. 14.16 I will pray the Father and he shall send you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever Now he was heard in all things Ioh. 11.42 But for whom prayeth he Answ. First for the Apostles and then for those that keepe the word and beleeve Ioh. 17.20 He prayeth not for the world verse 9. And for what prayeth he Answ. For a Spirit whom the world knoweth not neither can receive but the elect know him For ye know him for he dwelleth in you and shall be with you all Ioh. 14.17 4. The manifest accomplishment both of the promise and prayer proveth that the regenerate have the spirit of Christ in them Gal. 4.6 And because ye are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts which cryeth Abba Father Christs intercession is not a forcelesse prayer but according to his promise he sends out the Spirit which sending forth is not by change of place but by manifesting his operation in the gifts
have become better for good mens company Saul himselfe among the Prophets will prophecie And shall the wicked in their companies abet and further one another in evill and shal not good men in good 5. Observe the first motions of Gods Spirit and the ayme of God in his wayes with us and follow them For the first the prodigall sonne is a good example he had a motion and good inspiration he remembred the estate that he was in and the estate that he had beene in and the estate of his fathers house and in no case suffers this motion to die but followes it surely I will starve here no longer but resolves to goe to his father and goes Many kill good motions in the rise of them many follow them to purposes and resolutions but there they die few follow them to practise So in Gods wayes with our selves If he make our estates prosperous and advance us in the world above others what is his ayme but that we should be eminent instruments of his glory Many purpose when they come into great places of Magistracy or any preferment to doe much good every way but they suffer this purpose to die and never follow their resolution unto execution So what is the ayme of God in crosses and tryalls but to excite and exercise our graces which while we suffer to lie still God takes us in hand and mooves us and shakes us by the north winde of afflictions to blow our ashes and dust from us Therefore in every trouble let us follow this ayme of God and make account that every of them is the Lords bellowes to blow up our graces so shall our afflictions yea our sinnes themselves bee as the smithes water on coales to heate us the more 6. Let us exercise diligently our generall calling of Christians In our selves let us practise piety and keepe on worke the grace received for the Lord recompenceth the practise of grace with the increase of grace No man used his talent but with gaine And to others let us exercise friendly admonition exhortation reprehension and loving chastisement of such as are under our charge For first every Christian is a debter to every one and all gifts are given for the body Secondly the nature of grace is as fire which will fasten and kindle where ever it can find matter Thirdly the recompence shall be much increase as the meale in the barrell and the oyle in the cruse the more spent the more increased The speciall calling also feedes all graces and calls for the practise of them as of piety and justice patience and charity and the rest yea is indeed a schoole of all vertues 7. Propound wee still to our selves an higher pitch and a further degree of grace than as yet we have attained consider how farre wee are short of perfection Thus did Paul stirre up himselfe Phil. 3.13 I forget those things which are behinde and reach forth to those things which are before c. Men are never rich enough they think have never money enough so long as any are before them this makes them bestirre themselves to gather still But a little grace is enough yea a small measure is thought excesse and too much The Pharisy lookes to such as in his conceit are behinde him and then hee is not such a one or such a one But we must set before us the best examples and to imitate the best things in the best men and not onely men but the Apostle propounds to the Church the example of Christ that unerring patterne Heb. 12.2 Now to stirre us up both to avoid the meanes of quenching the Spirit and to use the meanes of quickning the Spirit 1. Let us consider that we must be countable for all our graces and all the meanes of grace our Master is an hard man and in the day of account will not call onely for his owne but for the whole tale and number and the evill servant that brought the owne talent but not the number was condemned Therefore neglect no meanes of well-doing 2. Cherish the Spirit and his graces for the blessings hee brings with him even all the fruites of the Spirit illumination consolation holinesse happinesse If while the Arke was in Obed-Edoms house he was blessed for it which was but a signe of Gods presence how much more blessed shall that heart be that entertaines himselfe Cheare the Spirit in thy heart and he will cheare thee 3. Whosoever will vexe the Spirit the Spirit will vexe him If the hypocrite quench him and grieve him he utterly departs and leaves and gives over that party unto death 1 Sam. 16.14 The good Spirit went and the evill Spirit came upon Saul and the Divell entred into Iudas Of them that by Apostasie so farre provoke the Lord it is most true Their latter end is worse than their beginning better for them they had beene heathens yea dogges better for them that the Spirit had never given them the least common grace better they had never knowne the way of truth and righteousnesse 2 Pet. 2.20 And if the godly quench him by security or any sinne hee will hide himselfe till they know what they have done Object What matter he will come againe if I be Gods no great harme if he goe for a while Answ. 1. Thou maist deceive thy selfe in thy reckoning and thinke he dwells in thee as one of the elect when he is in thee but in some common graces and then he goes quite away at length and never comes any more And likely it is that thou art such an one in whom this deceit discovers it selfe who canst be content he absent himselfe when as David prayed Lord take not thy holy Spirit from mee Psal. 51.11 2. Suppose he will come againe to thee that art the Lords yet hee will not come againe so freely but thou shalt know to thy cost what thou hadst and what thou hast lost and shalt shed teares and sigh and cry and learne how to prise him before he come againe See Cant. 5.2.6 3. Perhaps hee will neuer come with that abundant blessing as hee did before and thou shalt never attaine thy first love thy first joy and the comfort thou once hadst yea thou maist passe all thy daies in griefe to see how much thou wantest of thy selfe and to consider of thy decayes Therfore deceive not thy selfe watch thy heart to receive and entertaine the good Spirit whilest thou hast him lest he depart in displeasure and thou be left to lament thy losse VERSE 20. Despise not Prophecie THe Coherence of these words with the former is this The Spirit of God and his graces are continued and cherished in the hearts of beleevers by the meanes of Prophecy therfore if you would not have the Spirit quenched you must not despise Prophecy To finde out the meaning hereof consider these two things 1. What Prophecy is 2. What it is Not to despise it I. Prophecy in Scripture
thing more necessary than they all 3 That Christ commandeth the care of salvation in the meanes to take place of the care of enterteining his owne person and commendeth it in Mary 4. That these two callings are not contrary but subordinate for a man may have great imployments in the world and not remitt his service to the Lord Christ neither hath any man any allowance in any earthly businesse to be earthly minded 5. That this one thing being neglected all other things are unprofitable For what would the gaine of the whole world profite him that hath lost his owne soule Yea they be vile and lossefull How doth the holy Apostle esteeme of all things losse and dung in comparison of Christ in the meanes All without a mans selfe authoritie wealth favour honor all within himselfe as knowledge wisedome memory discourse profession revelation and the most excellent gifts which the Apostle had had in abundance all is lossfull that helpeth vs not towards heaven And indeed the glorious excellency of Christ in the Gospell is such as should draw all eyes from off these shadowes and vanishing contentments to the surpassing brightnes of it selfe The greater will prove their sinne and shame that shall set the Moone aboue the Sunne of grace or preferre pottage before the blessing the Swine before Christ and very husks before the bread in our Fathers house Now whereas many are convinced more easily that this care of this one thing is necessary on the Sabboth day but there be not a few that put it off with their holy-day clothes and are so farre from the vse of any publicke meanes in the weeke day as that they are ready to say of such as preach or heare a weekes Lecture as Pharoah of Moses and the Isralites desiring to goe into the wildernesse to worship Moses and Aaron why cause ye the people to cease from their worke get you to your worke to your callings much people are in the land and ye make them idle Therefore partly to stoppe such prophane mouthes and partly to satisfie the inquisition of others I shall not thinke much to give a word of direction in this particular onely ayming to advance this holy care which ought never to be laid aside but must runne through and quicken all the actions of our lives one day as well as another as the blood runnes in all the veines of the body to mainteine the life and vitall spirits in every member And first that we may make no more sins then God hath made nor by men where God hath left them free wee make it not a case of necessity either for a Minister to preach or for a people to heare a weekes Lecture for which we have no such expresse commandement as for frequenting the publicke exercises on the Sabboth day Yea we affirme that all men must ordinarily abide in their ordinary callings in the six dayes according to that commandement Six dayes shalt thou labour and that some men are more straitly tyed to sticke close to their callings as who can very hardly afford the time for a publicke exercise without disabling thēselves wronging their families But yet as the commandement on one side doth not so enjoine rest on the Sabboth as that on no occasion we may labour So on the other doth it not straitely enioyne labour on the six dayes as that on no occasion we may rest and refresh our selves Nay it was never the Lords intention to allow us the six dayes for our owne worke so as in any of them his owne worship at least private should be neglected Neither are we freed from the service of God on any of the sixe dayes no more than on the Sabboth because we must serve him on the Sabboth in duties of Religion and mercy onely So as when God is pleased to offer the opportunitie as where a willing Pastor calleth his people or a willing people ready to redeeme sometime in the weeke day calleth their Pastour to bestowe his paines for an houre or two in the weeke to so good a purpose as to heare Gods word and invocate his name in prayer and prayses I conceive it not onely lawfull but commendable and in some cases necessary for the people to heare For 1. That it is lawfull for the preacher to preach on the weeke day is not onely warranted by that vehement charge enjoyning him to preach the word to be instant in season and out of season but also by the practise of Christ himselfe who taught daily in the Temple Had it been unlawfull for us Christ would not have given us such an example which although it be not a law to bind us yet it is allowance upon just occasion Agreeable to whose example was the practise of his Apostles Yea of the Auncient Fathers themselves Chrysostome usually begins his Homilies with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yesterday we handled c. Bernard often concludes with his cras to morrow we will goe forward And most worthy Calvin ordinarily beginnes with his heri yesterday c. And how can wee grace their persons so much if we disgrace their practise 2. That it is lawfull for a people to heare on the weeke day is manifest in that all the people hanged on Christ daily teaching in the Temple and a great number continued with him three dayes together and spent some good time in comming and going It is plaine also that it was not the Sabboth when Mary satt downe to heare Christs gracious words being as is observed by Divines the sixt day before his death 2. If this practise was commendable in auncient beleevers how can it be but praise-worthy in us But the beleevers in the Primitive Church were commended for that they continued with one accord daily in the Temple Why Had they nothing else to doe Had they no callings no families no businesse to intend Certainely the spirit of God askes no such questions but speakes to their singular praise and approbation It is also recorded to the high prayse of the Gentiles that they besought Paul and Barnabas who had taught them the Sabboth day that they would preach the same wordes unto them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is betwixt that and the Sabboth following And that the Apostles did so according to their desire appeares in the next verse 43. Now who dare blame this desire in them which the spirit of God commendeth Or whence is it that what was praise worthy in them should be blame worthy and scorned amongst us 3. In some cases it may become so necessary as it shall proue a fearefull sinne to neglect this publike help on the weeke day As where a people are unprovided of an able and preaching Ministry on the Sabboth day I suppose none so unreasonable as to deny it necessary for them to seeke out and enioy at home or abroad the meanes on the weeke day unlesse we will wholly deny them the meanes
of illumination faith regeneration heavenly life sense and motion and for the most part they are never more comforted than when they are most afflicted which argueth a spirituall and inward Comforter whose joy the world cannot take away This puts beleevers in minde of their honourable and happy estate who are become temples of the holy Ghost who never comes but with a full horne and hand of blessing The Centurion thought himselfe unworthy that Christ in his base estate should come in his house How much more unworthy are wee that this spirit of glory should come into our hearts See hereby what account is to be made of a poore Christian let his outside be never so base yet he is so glorious within as God himselfe delights to dwell in him As we make much even of a wooden coffer that is filled with golde and pearles and precious things And if wee make so much of a man that beares about him a reasonable soule and because hee hath Gods image on him how much more should we make of a Christian because of Gods Spirit What a shame is it to thinke highly of a man for land in the field for oxen in his stall for money in his chest and not for graces yea the spirit of God in his heart what a heavy judgement hangs over them who account these the very offscouring of the world against whom the very Pagans and Heathens shall rise up in judgement who whensoever they spoyled Christians yet spared their Temples because of the honour of God but these destroy the temples of the holy Ghost and God will destroy them 1 Cor. 3.17 Againe this serves for the comfort of poore Christians Art thou contemned God hath more honoured thee than the world can disgrace thee Art thou in prison Behold thou hast the God of liberty with thee yea in thee Art thou in banishment What care where thou dwellest while God dwells in thee What comfort canst thou want while the Comforter dwells in thy heart Doest thou feare falling away Be not dismayed the spirit of God in thy heart will never shift his dwelling He shall dwell with you for ever Christ commands his Disciples where they finde intertainment not to shift their host much lesse will hee ever shift himselfe where once hee enters but thy heart shall be as the Temple was called Beth-gnolam an house of eternity Thirdly let this teach Christians to looke to their hearts that they may be pure and cleane for so pure a Spirit The uncleane spirit delights in spirituall sluttishnesse and many with the harlot provide their bed and all things deckt for sinne and Satan In one end he findes a gorge of drunkennesse in another a wardrobe of pride in another a stewes of uncleannesse and there he inhabiteth and solaceth himselfe But Gods spirit is most pure and although he will dwell in a poore and homely house yet it must be pure and cleanly Let us therefore honour this guest with the best roome and fit our hearts for him let us wash this roome with teares sweepe it with repentance beautifie it with holinesse perfume it with prayers decke it with vertues and hang it with sincerity feare not to make it too pure or holy care not for the scoffes of precisenesse When a great Embassadour is sent from a strange Country what care is taken to provide him a fit house and to decke it with fit stuffe beseeming so great a personage Now the holy Spirit is sent as an Embassadour from the great God to thee then prepare thy heart for him sweepe out carnall desires and lusts fill it with good cogitations that it may yeeld him fit entertainment and contentment Lastly this teacheth men to examine their sonneshippe by the presence of the Spirit with them For as the presence of the soule discovereth it selfe by the life so by the life of God and Christ is the presence of the Spirit discovered Many men while they trade in sinne wallow in lusts and become voluntaries to lusts of swearing railing drinking or any foule sinne under the reigne of which they are bondslaves will yet stoutly pleade for themselves Alas we are flesh and blood and what can we doe But know silly man know that flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdome of God thou must be more than flesh and blood or thou art none of Gods For If any man have not the spirit of Christ the same is none of his Thou maist as well say thou art no childe of God For if yee be sonnes hee sends his Spirit into your hearts Gal. 4.6 If of Christs body you have Christs spirit deny thy selfe a Christian if sinne must reigne But to returne to the chiefe intent of this use none we see can be assured he is the child of God but by the presence of the Spirit Quest. How shal I know that God hath given mee the spirit of adoption Answ. This question is very necessary though some thinke they cannot know their sonneship others that they neede not and so neglect it For the possibility hereof As hee that hath life in him knoweth hee hath life because he can stirre feele move walke and goe so here also And as for the necessity of it marke what the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 13.5 Know yee not that Christ is in you namely by his Spirit unlesse ye be reprobates Now the markes of the Spirits dwelling with us are most of them inward not discerned by outward sence as the soule in the body is not seene or felt but discovered by the effects and operations The first is Conviction Ioh. 16.8 When the Spirit shall come hee will reproove the world of sinne And the Spirit of God rebukes sinne in us by working in us 1. sence 2. sorrow for sinne 3. an earnest desire of mercy 4. a loathing and leaving of sinne All which we may see in those converts Acts 2.37 when once the Spirit came They were pricked in their hearts and said Oh what shall we doe to be saved The second is Subjection for the Spirit dwells that is not onely abides but rules and commands and governes as the master of the house and notwithstanding the presence of the flesh still the Spirit hath the upper hand therefore wee must submit our selves to this great housholder here must be agreement in mindes and wills for if an house be divided against it selfe it cannot stand 2 Cor. 10.5 The worke of the Spirit is to cast downe high things exalted against grace and to bring every thought into the obedience of Christ by working selfe-deniall and a willingnesse to undertake whatsoever the word suggests and a constant delight in the law of God The third is Direction Ier. 31.31 the spirit of God writes the law in the hearts of beleevers and so brings in a new light and yet more Iohn 16.13 Hee shall leade you into all truth hee saith not onely This is the way
are given over to their owne corruptions to commit grosse sinnes which even many civill men would not commit What fearefull sinnes did David moyle himselfe in when the spirit withdrew himselfe the sinnes of adultery carnall pollicy and shifting out of one sinne into another and falling from evill to worse How was Peter given up to lying swearing and forswearing for the time that a Iew might have beene ashamed on him notwithstanding all his former holinesse and gracious confession 4. Change Whereas the spirit being cherished there was a continuall feast in the soule and unspeakable glorious joy now being in part quenched hee brings a racke into the conscience of Gods childe and that conscience which before excused and justified now accuseth and terrifieth the burden of which is so heavie as all the mountaines of the world are light in comparison These terrours of conscience were the deepes out of which David even hopelesse and almost swallowed in the pit of despaire cryed to the Lord Psal. 130.1 5. Change Even the child of God quenching his spirit shall feele the smart and shame of his sinne which shall pursue him and vexe him and hee shall know what it is to exasperate the spirit Davids childe shall dye his daughter shall be defloured Ammon shall be slaine his wives ravished by his owne sonne himselfe driven out of his kingdome by Absolom Oh miserable change by quenching the spirit Fifthly Most men have the spirit of God and some motions but great is the difference betweene a godly man and an hypocrite in the one they are quenched quite in the other for the most part they are cherished and at last perfected As for example First hypocrites have knowledge as well as the godly but they quench it and fight against it therefore all good knowledge quite leaves them in the end but the godly carry their knowledge to heaven with them therefore the one is compared to the light of the Sunne which lasteth all day the other is like a flash of lightning suddenly appearing and suddenly vanishing Secondly hypocrites may be grieved for sin but it is onely and chiefly because of punishment not because of offence and they quench this griefe not willing to torment themselves before the time they runne into merry company and turne off sorrow lest they should disquiet themselves too much with such melancholy whereas the godly nourish godly sorrow and never cease sowing in teares till they reape in joy Thirdly hypocrites pretend great love to God but it is for his goodnesse to them not his goodnesse in himselfe for wages not for service but they utterly quench this love by the love of the world or pleasure or sinne and being grounded on earthly things when they faile it failes If Saul love God for his Kingdome when his kingdome failes his love quaileth too If Iudas love Christ for an Apostles place when that place will not holde him with further credit hee will for gaine betray his Master But the godly love him when he crosseth them and if he kill them they will trust in him much water cannot quench their love Fourthly an hypocrite hath many good motions the worst man living is not without some Balaam hath good desires but covetousnesse quencheth them Saul acknowledgeth his sinne and his sonne David to be better than himselfe but it was a blaze in straw suddenly quenched But the godly for the most part goe from motions to resolutions and so to practise many practises grow to habits and so to perseverance Well is it so such as have any assurance that the spirit is in them must have a speciall watch that they quench him not Then let Christians carefully avoid the meanes of quenching the spirit Quest. Which be they Answ. Three especially I. Fire is quenched when it is suffered to die of it selfe so is the fire of grace quenched 1. whē we use not our graces but let them be idle neither by them procuring glory to God nor good to men As iron let it be as bright as christall cast it by in a corner and not use it it will grow rusty and unprofitable even so will grace And the drowsie Christian though indued with good graces if he waxe idle his heart shall be like Salomons field of the sluggard all overgrowne with mosse and weedes which choake the good seede The health of the body is preserved by exercise so is the health of the soule by the exercise of grace the moth frets the finest garment when it is not worne standing water is sooner frozen than the running streame Secondly as fire dieth of it selfe when wee prepare not or adde not fit matter for the fewell and feede of it so suffer wee our graces to decay when wee neglect such meanes as God hath set apart for the strengthening and confirming of grace the case being with the soule as with the body which is in a continuall decay and needes daily repast or else it dies If a man forbeare his ordinary meales the naturall heate will decay and vigour and health and life and all so will the Christian if hee neglect the word the Sacraments meditation prayer watchfulnesse and the like Thirdly as fire must needes die of it selfe when we take away the fewell by which it should be nourished so is it in the matter of grace looke into the places where the word hath beene powerfully preached but is now removed and see if good things begun be not quite overthrowne and if ordinarily and for the general such people be not more profane than any other Many thinke they can walke many dayes without the strength of a Sermon But it was a miracle that Moses fasted forty dayes and forty nights and let Moses be away but a few dayes he shall surely finde a Calfe made Marke them that absent themselves from the assemblies of Gods people whether they doe not wither or no and fall by little and little into flat Atheisme If thou keepe not thy watch in the Temple if thou look not to the holy lights and fire morning and evening how will the Spirit be kept will thy graces in so great security be still lively While Thomas was absent from the company of the Apostles did hee not lose that manifestation of Christ which might have strengthened his weake and tottering faith and not so onely but grew hee not into a peevish infidelity that hee would not beleeve but upon his owne carnall conditions II. Another meanes of quenching the Spirit that is to be avoided is when the fire of grace is violently smothered by the contrary Sinne is as water to quench the grace of God both our owne and those of others For our owne sinnes First our sinnes of nature doe choake grace for our naturall corruption which the Apostle calls flesh doth ever lust against the Spirit and by reason of this there is never a grace of God in us but it conflicteth and is
conflicted by the contrary extreames the feare of God with distrust and presumption faith with naturall infidelity and so the rest Now therefore our naturall corruption must be daily wasted and mastered else will it be with us as a man that rowes against the streame if hee leave never so little he is driven twice as farre backe as ever he was Secondly sinnes in our affections doe marvelously quench the Spirit as the Apostle saith that Anger gives advantage to the Divell Eph. 4.26 27. Saul had many good motions but cherishing his anger against David hee lost the spirit of God and was haunted with an evill spirit not onely a melancholicke humour as some thinke but even an evill Angel So for voluptuousnesse a lust which while Herod cherished hee lost all his gifts And covetousnesse in Iudas lost all his gifts together with himselfe The light of the Sunne puts out the light of the fire and the love of the world puts out the love of God So for carnall feare the feare of men of danger of losse c. it quencheth thousands of good motions insomuch as men neither by 〈◊〉 nor yet by night dare come to Christ but 〈◊〉 themselves to be as the cake halfe baked on the hearth not warmed through Thirdly sinnes in our speeches corrupt communication vile speeches doe banish and vexe the Spirit Eph. 4.30 31. Let no speech that is corrupt proceede out of your mouthes and then it followes Grieve not that holy Spirit of God Therefore we must keepe our mouth with bit and bridle and see that our words issue from the spirit of grace and minister grace to the hearers Fourthly sinnes in action doe quench the Spirit exceedingly how did David after his sinnes of adultery and murther lose the feeling of the Spirit for sinne blindeth the minde hardeneth the heart and leaveth a blot behinde it Now among all actuall sins some there bee which more violently quench the spirit than other as 1. Sinnes that are studied and meditated which is not a slipping into sinne but as a pitching of a mans selfe into the sea A woe is denounced on them that devise wickednesse on their beds and in the morning practise it Absolom for two yeares together plotted his brothers death and at last compassed it How can this but extremely quench the spirit whose motions all the while are resisted 2. Sinnes repeated doubled and traded in which argues greedinesse and delight in sinne when men live in an evill course purposely and constantly These are as the complicated diseases seldome cured How often doe wee see ordinary drunkards quarrellers riotous persons left by God and his spirit and now ruled by the Dive●● and commanded by him to outrages against their owne and other mens lives 3. Sinnes against conscience when Gods word stands as an armed man in the conscience yet for all that the wretched sinner resists the lowd call of Gods word ringing in his owne conscience This is an opposing and a resisting of the spirit joyned with a wilfulnesse and obstinacy in sinne notwithstanding all calls to the contrary these sinnes thrust downe the regiment of the spirit and therefore David prayeth against them Psal. 19.13 Keepe thy servant from presumptuous sinnes that they prevaile not over mee So much of our owne sins The sins of others also are a great meanes to quench the spirit of God How doth profane company dead the spirit as Peter in the high Priests hall Salomon fell by the company of outlandish wives and shall we looke to stand where he fell The Israelites hated the Aegyptians and yet through conversing with them learned their manners Besides when wee thrust our selves into evill company we ordinarily say nothing at all or nothing but what is pleasing unto them by both these means the spirit is grieved and quenched But especially if they be the sinnes of superiours sinnes of Magistrates they suddenly infect and fall upon the inferiours as sudden raines fall off the hills into the valleyes and stand there But especially sinnes of Ministers by preaching seldome coldly or maliciously mens greene wood will not burne without better blowing As also when their lives are scandalous what will fire in preaching doe when a man carries water in his life and is noted with pride covetousnesse contention drunkennesse or any such foule lusts III. A speciall meanes of quenching the spirit which is to be avoyded is To grieve the hóly Spirit of God Eph. 4.30 Now he is grieved foure wayes 1. By not preparing or not preserving our hearts as sweete and holy Temples for him if we doe not wash trimme and perfume our houses and sweepe out every distastfull thing and beautifie them in most seemely manner for so honourable a personage If an honourable or noble person should vouchsafe to come to a meane mans house and finde the house sluttish and nasty annoyed with filthy smells and every way unprovided hee would be sorry hee came into such a noysome place and begin to thinke of departure So if the holy Spirit of God finde our hearts a sinke full of corrupt thoughts our speeches as noysome and filthy smells our actions foule and polluted he is sore grieved and will not stay 2. By shutting up and hardening the heart against the word and workes of God Psal. 95.10 Forty yeares long was I vexed in the wildernesse while they hearkened not to my voyce nor regarded my wonders Acts 7.51 Yee stiffe-necked and uncircumcised of heart yee have alwayes resisted the holy Ghost even as your fathers 3. By not following and fostering his motions who would not be grieved to see his counsell despised nay the contrary counsells of Satan himselfe tending to destruction to be preferred and wilfully undertaken How this drives away the spirit see Prov. 1.30 They would none of my counsell therefore they shall eate of the fruite of their owne way 4. By dishonouring him in his owne Temple can a man indure to be wronged in his owne house But so is he when we give way to lusts when we follow the sway of corruption the fashions of the world and forget the guest that is within and ought principally to be pleased Also when wee turne his gifts against himselfe our knowledge to puffe us up our wisedome to earthlinesse our zeale against zeale the word to maintaine our sinne the sacraments to feede our hypocrisie and the whole grace of God into wantonnesse Againe if we must not quench the spirit then must we observe and carefully mark not only the presence but the worke of the spirit and be able to judge whether he be quenched or no Therefore here I say to every one as Saint Paul said to Timothy 1 Tim. 4.14 Neglect not the gift that is given thee And this observation is of great use 1. Highly to esteeme the gifts and graces of Gods spirit and keepe them the more carefully 2. To be so much the more thankfull for them seeing
they are so freely conferred upon us as David Psal. 116.12 Oh what shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards mee 3. To binde us to the more care in dispensing them for the greater our receit is the greater is our Lords expectation 1 Pet. 4.10 Let every man as he hath received a gift minister the same to others as a good steward of the manifold graces of God 4. To enable us to make up our accounts according to the number and measure of our gifts Matth. 25.24 the master observes the number of talents and the servant that received tenne talents must bring in according to tenne Quest. How shall I know if the Spirit be quenched or no Answ. By the application of this observation thou shalt see whether thou art gone forward or backward whether thou hast quenched or cherished the Spirit This examination shall be reduced to five particular heads in respect of 1. Graces 2. Good motions 3. Good duties 4. Sinne and 5. the Spirits worke on thy affections First examine thy selfe in graces received both for number and measure 1. If the Spirit in respect of the number of graces be quenched try thus If a man make no conscience of some points of doctrine or practise which heretofore he hath made conscience of as swearing usurie lying gaming family-duties and the like now the Spirit is quenched hee is like a man who being in decay for matters of the world doth cast off some of his traine So also when a man is not able to feede his understanding and practise as one ignorant about what he may imploy his head and hands A tree being in decay withers first at toppe because it cannot send sappe so farre from home so is the life of grace knowne to be in decay if it feede not all the parts of the Christian course Or to use our owne Metaphor As an aged man appeares by his head his white haires shew a decay of naturall heate and moysture so a Christians falling from right understanding judgement and practise is as white haires and argues a decay of spirituall heate and vigour For preservatives in this case first consider that God expects the number of talents committed unto us Secondly why should wee be like the brute beast which wants the art of numbering why should wee be as the silly bird that layeth twenty egges yet take away all but two she is as well and as painfull for them as for all and all because she wants numbring How can a Christian be so simple as to please himselfe as much with few graces as with many 2. In regard of the measure of graces try thus If a man waver and stagger in that wherein hee hath beene constant still he hath some faith some zeale some patience diligence and other graces but he wants that measure which sometimes he had now though he have an under measure in all yet hath he quenched the spirit Even as an olde man is knowne to be decayed because though hee have his whole number of parts that ever he had yet he hath them not in that measure of vigour as formerly hee had them For preservatives against this decay first consider that the Church of Ephesus is blamed for falling from her first love that degree of carefulnes which once she had Rev. 2.4 Secondly consider that we are commanded in the Scripture to adde grace to grace as dayes are added to our lives 2 Pet. 1.5 6. yea in respect of the measure and strength of grace 2 Tim. 2.1 Thirdly this is remarkable that those whose hearts have once beene heated with the fire of Gods spirit and afterwards have abated doe grow more frozen in iniquity than any other as water once hot is afterward most colde and freezeth hardest Secondly examine thy selfe in regard of good motions If these be lessened the spirit is quenched As for example when thou hast beene moved to heare the word and hast neglected it for some vaine pleasure or some small profit or sometime thou hast a motion to leave thy swearing cursing lying usurie gaming c. Gods spirit did knocke at the doore of thy heart but thou didst shut the doore against him and keptst out that heate which hee would have put into thee this is to quench the spirit Take heede lest failing thus in so necessary duties thou faile of the meanes whereby thou shouldest rise Repent and doe the first workes or else I will come unto thee quickly saith the Lord and remove thy Candlesticke out of his place Rev. 2.5 And againe Matth. 21.43 I say unto you the Kingdome of God shall be taken from you and given to a nation that will bring forth the fruites thereof Thirdly examine thy selfe in regard of good duties after this manner 1. If in stead of fervency in prayer thou findest thy prayer colde dead remisse formall interrupted with idle and wandering thoughts now the spirit is quenched who makes us cry and stirres up groanes which are unutterable 2. If once comming to the word thou wast wont to finde it sweete and a word of life unto thee but now thou commest with an impenitent heart a slumbering and a sleepy conscience oh certainly the spirit is now quenched who is never so sweete and cheerefull as in the word for he thawes the benummed heart and makes it burne by opening the Scripture A man in a swone if rubbing and Aqua vitae fetch him not againe his soule is gone the same is thy case if the spirit of God do not revive and quicken thee 3. In keeping the Lords Sabboths if sometimes thou couldest account thē thy delight the most comfortable day of the week but now thou formally passest them over not altogether hardened but with colde and heavie motions in confessing sinne in petition in thanksgiving if thou be slow of heart to beleeve heare and meditate in the word by this know that the spirit is quenched in thee who worketh joy and sweetnesse in the heart while it is in the presence of God and societies of the Saints 4. If after the performing of good duties thou hast sometimes found cheerefulnesse strength and good assurance thy selfe refreshed by them and better disposed but now thou findest in thee loathing or discontentment no strength or small comfort know for a certaine that the spirit is quenched some sinne or other is as a cloud hindering the beames of his sweete grace and comfort from thee Psal. 77.2 3. I sought the Lord yet my sore ranne and ceased not my soule refused comfort I did thinke upon God and was troubled I prayed and my Spirit was full of anguish Verse 7. Will hee absent himselfe for ever and will he be favourable no more Consider here what a dead carkasse is without the soule and so is all our service without the spirit Fourthly examine thy selfe in respect of sinne thus 1. If some sinne which was of great burden and weight
in thy estimation doe now seeme lesse and lesse dangerous if sometimes thou couldest not be comforted in the sence of sinne and the same sinne now move thee nothing at all thou couldst not abide cursed speaking in others now thou fallest to it thy selfe thou couldst not away with idle and gracelesse companions now thou canst now hast thou quenched the spirit 2. If thou be apt to rush into sinne once conquered thy strength is abated 3. If thou be unwilling to heare any of thy sinnes reproved the spirit is quenced because he rebuketh sinne 4. If the word and rodde preserve thee not from sinne the spirit is not present in thee 5. If after sinne committed thou doest not more hate it and sorrow for it than before thou lovedst it and rejoycedst in it if thou hast not a more constant care to avoid sinne than before yea if thou hast not a greater zeale in doing good know for a certaine that some sinne in thee or other is as water cast upon the spirit Fifthly and lastly examine thy selfe concerning the worke of Gods Spirit on thy affections thus If thy love of heavenly things be abated or be more to earth than to heaven if thy joy be troubled if thy conscience be perplexed with accusations if there be in thee an excessive feare of death or the like certainly the spirit is now quenched looke well unto it Object Alas I have found my affections more fiery than now they be I have had a great measure of zeale for God much indignation against sinne fervent affection in Gods service joy in God comfort in my selfe and in good duties but now it is not so with me I could never attaine the like affections as at first what may I thinke of my selfe Answ. We must wisely distinguish of the diffusing of grace from the decaying of it In earthly marriage love will be more vehement at first because lesse diffused but afterward is rather more extended than languishing so it is in the heate of grace But how may I know it thus 1. If thou be displeased that thou canst not get thy heart to the highest pitch of delight in grace 2. If thou still hungrest after grace and a further measure as one that hath tasted hony desireth more so having tasted of the spirit doest earnestly desire a greater measure of it 3. Stickest thou to the meanes in publicke and in private and wilt not be driven off still lying at the Poole where the spirit mooveth then discourage not thy selfe but goe on comfortably this small affection toward the Lord and his grace be it but as a graine of mustard seed it shall outgrow all choke weedes and master and kill whatsoever affections would overtop it So much for the second use Thirdly seeing negative precepts include the affirmative every Christian must hence be stirred up to stirre up the gift of God that is in him and not suffer it to decay 2 Tim. 1.6 A fit lesson even for Timothy himselfe For first the Spirit is ever working something in Gods children worthy the stirring up he is no where idle but still beautifying perfecting his own dwelling 2. Every Christian hath some graces to stirre up else were there no difference betweene him and a naturall man who wants the Spirit 3. No Christian hath any grace so perfect but it needes stirring up where growth is there is no perfection 4. Without stirring the fire dies so the Spirit for which cause the Apostle useth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blow up Quest. What meanes may wee use to blow up the Spirit Answ. 1. The word of God in the publicke and private use of it First the preaching of the word as it begets so it nourisheth grace The Ministry is instituted and gifts given to men not onely to lay to foundation of our happinesse but to build us up till we meet together in a perfect body Ephes. 4.11 12 13. Naturall food strengthens the body by the daily use of it spiritual food strengthens the soule by the continuall use of it Those that say they know as much as they neede or as much as the Preacher can tell thē never truly saw their great weaknesse for let any good conscience say if it neede not the word continually David a man of singular grace yet lay fouly in his sinnes till Nathan came and stirred him saying Thou art the man Despise Prophecy and quench the Spirit where vision faileth grace perisheth Secondly the word must be privately read and conversed in for such is the excellency and power of it that it transformes the minde conversant in it unto it selfe and to be affected as the pen-men were holily and graciously Besides it begets and furthers found judgement whereas others erre not knowing the Scriptures and it stirres up good affections and gracious desires Againe the word must be meditated on in private without which hearing and reading are to little purpose Psal. 1.1 Blessed is the man that meditates in the law of the Lord continually And here is mutuall helpe for hearing and reading doe feede meditation and meditation doth fasten them Why else hath God given man a reasonable soule but to meditate upon his word and workes Or why else hath he set apart a whole day in seaven especially for meditation if it were not a notable meanes to excite grace Or why else did our Lord take all occasions from the workes of God to teach and instruct us but for our example that we should tread in his holy steppes We see the first meanes 2. The Sacraments were instituted to strengthen our faith which in it selfe is weake and to keepe in continuall memory the covenant betweene God and us with the meanes thereof yea the very preparation to them includeth a speciall meanes of stirring up our graces of repentance of renewing our faith of obedience thankfulnesse and all the meanes of growth in the covenant And much more strength doth a good heart finde in the celebration of them Therefore to forbeare them of contempt argues no member of Christ and of negligence to forbeare is to cast ones selfe into the judgement of God 3. Prayer sets all graces on worke as faith in Gods promises charity toward our brethren hope which lookes for the performance of that we pray for humility in confession of sinnes and sense of wants thankfulnesse for supplies and leave to pray and by exercise in prayer wee get the spirit of prayer Luke 11.13 Our Father will not deny his Spirit to them that aske him 4. Company or commerce with the godly doth exceedingly sharpen our graces One candle lights another and one sticke of fire kindles another A lesser sticke may kindle a billet so the strongest Christian may receive furtherance from the weakest Paul himselfe might be comforted by the Romanes chap. 1.12 And when Silas came Paul burned in the Spirit But how can one coale alone by it selfe keepe it selfe glowing Yea evill men
is used both in a strict and in a large sense In a strict sense it is used for prediction or foretelling of things to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to foretell So those holy penne-men of Scripture are called Prophets 2 Pet. 1.10 And Philips foure daughters Prophetisses Acts 21.9 In a large sense Prophecy is taken for the interpretation of the word of God and the holy Scriptures And this is a gift of the holy Spirit enabling men to expound Prophecies concerning Christ and to interpret and apply the writings of the Prophets and Apostles Thus the word is taken Rom. 12.6 Having Prophecy let us Prophecy according to the analogy of faith And Ephes. 4.11 Christ ascending into heaven gave some to be Prophets speaking of Evangelicall Ministers This latter Prophecy being here meant hath two parts preaching and prayer for every Prophet is partly the voice of God to the people and partly the peoples voice unto God God said of Abraham Gen. 20.7 Give the man his wife againe and hee will pray for thee for hee is a Prophet And both of them are joyned together 1 Cor. 11.4 Both these parts of Prophecy are here meant especially the former which hath two parts first teaching which stands in right interpreting of Scripture giving the right sense raising sound doctrines and beating downe contrary errours Secondly exhorting which is the applying of doctrines to the use of edification and consolation These were distinguished in the primative Church into seuerall offices of Doctors and Pastors because of the abundant gifts then given and the indistinct multitude of beleevers not brought into distinct congregations but now for the most part they are confounded into one For the proofe of these parts of Prophecy see 1 Cor. 14.3 He that prophecieth speaketh to men for edification for exhortation and consolation II. To despise is not onely openly to contemne preaching and publike prayers but lightly to regard or carelesly to heare the word for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies basely to account of a thing and esteeme it nothing worth and of no reckoning which indeede is all one with despising it And the Apostle intendeth when he saith Despise not that they should not onely not loath and contemne the word but honour it highly esteeme it heartily love it yea sincerely follow it So the children are said to despise the counsell of their parents when they doe not follow it For thus the phrase Not to despise is used in Scripture Psal. 51.17 A broken and a contrite heart O Lord thou wilt not despise that is highly esteeme value at a high prise and rate In such speeches by a meiosis lesse being spoken than meant Christian men and women must not onely not despise but conscionably embrace the preaching and ministery of the word 1 Cor. 14.1.3 Above all other speciall gifts desire and esteeme Prophecying Prov. 8.32 33. Heare instruction and be wise refuse it not Blessed is the man that heareth me watching daily at my gates and giving attendance at the posts of my doores One reason hereof is in the Text By faithfull preaching the Spirit and his graces and motions are quickned and cherished as by it they are begun and continued 1. The Ministery is the chariot of the Spirit whereby he rides gloriously into the hearts of the elect Acts 10.44 While Peter spake the holy Ghost fell upon them which heard his words 2. Prophecy is that which inciteth and provoketh us in our dulnesse and quickens us to the faithfull imployment of such gifts as are given us by the Spirit Eccles. 12.11 The words of the wise are like goades and nailes fastened by the masters of assemblies As goades to pricke us forward when wee grow dull and sloathfull in the practise of piety and vertue and as nailes to fasten us to the sound love and obedience of the truth when we grow either wavering weake or weary for so the Apostles by preaching confirmed the Disciples at Antioch Acts 14.22 So Ieremy calls the word of the Lord a fire shut up in his bones which warme and heates our colde and frozen hearts and quickens our graces as the two Disciples whose hearts glowed in them while Christ opened to them the Scriptures 3. Prophecy is powerfull for Edification in the knowledge of God and Iesus Christ in faith in godlinesse love zeale repentance newnesse of life and all the heavenly vertues For Exhortation which containes admonition and reprehension both which are speciall good meanes to awake and quicken us when coldnesse and carelesnesse creepe on us And for Consolation for seeing it is the portion of the Saints by many tribulations to enter into the Kingdome they have great and continuall neede of matter of comfort and strength the which being onely to be had from the conduits of comfort in the Scriptures and from the gracious promises conteined therein what a forcible argument is this to make us highly esteeme and joyfully embrace so gracious a meanes not onely of instruction but of strong consolation 2. The gift of Prophecy and faithfull preaching is that precious gift which our Lord Iesus when he left the world bestowed on his Church Eph. 4.11 For the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the Ministery for the building up of the body of Christ. Now with what safety can any man despise so great a gift of so deare a friend which hee was so carefull at his last departure to commend to his friends to so gracious a purpose and end as to gather them from under the wrath of God and from the dispersed and lost estate of the world whereas without vision or prophecy people are lost or as the word is naked exposed to Gods wrath and their owne perdition Prov. 29.18 Nay more the Lord in this one gift offers a whole mint of mercy to be divided among beleevers He offers us life of grace in it and therefore it is called the word of life and the word of grace Ioh. 6.33 the word that I speake unto you is spirit and life He offers us light of grace and glory without the shine of which glorious light of the Gospell men sit in darkenesse and shadow of death having their understanding darkned and strangers to the life of God through the ignorance that is in them Hee offers by it grace and peace with himselfe and in our owne consciences and therefore it is called a Ministery of reconciliation and the Gospell of peace whereby God through us beseecheth men to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.19 He offereth us faith by this gift of Prophecy this being the ordinary meanes by which we attaine that precious gift of gifts Rom. 10.17 Without hearing no faith Rom. 10.8 The word of faith which wee preach Lastly he offereth us by it the end of our faith even the salvation of our soules 1 Pet. 1.9 and therefore it is called a word of salvation Acts 13.26 Now what
great and unspeakable wickednesse were it to despise so great salvation to despise the word of life of grace of light of peace of faith and the end of it which is salvation for it is the ingraffed word able to save soules Iam. 1.21 3. Manifold is the evill that overtakes a despiser of Prophecy 1. He is destitute of the Spirit who hath no being no delight to be there as the connexion of the precepts witnesseth 2. Prophecy being neglected piety is lost and men prove profane persons this was a brand of Esaus profanesse that hee cared more for a meales meate than he did for the blessing Heb. 12.16 3. Despise thou prophecy thy prayer shall be despised and all thy service is abominable Prov. 28.9 and chap. 1.28 Because I have cryed saith the Lord and yee would not heare yee shall cry and not be heard 4. It ties and fastens sinne on men yea and heapes up judgement for first it nourisheth ignorance a maine supporter of Satans kingdome secondly it resisteth faith by refusing the onely and ordinary meanes of it thirdly it barreth out repentance because this is the meanes of our regeneraration and change of heart and life fourthly it makes sinne farre more sinfull because here is a refusall of mercy and grace offered by prophecy Ioh. 15.22 If I had not come and spoken they had not sinned but now they have no cloake for their sinne Fifthly the refusall of prophecy provoketh the Lord to give up men to vile affections to worke all uncleannesse with greedinesse because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved 2 Thess. 2.10 Lastly it tyes on judgement as fast as sinne and wraps the despiser in the curse of God Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect much more despise so great salvation Consider the threatnings Acts 13.41 Beholde ye despisers and wonder and vanish away Beholde I will worke a worke in your dayes which a man would not beleeve for the terrour of it out of Habak 1.5 This serves to reproove 1. Anabaptists and Enthusiasts who pretend the Spirit and despise prophecy they have the Spirit to guide them and therefore neede no preaching 2. Those profane Atheists at home who despising the Spirit of grace and the word of grace live as without God in the world Many who have Iacobs voice professe in word better things yet prize the preaching of Christ as a thing of nought It is better to be casting up some account or reading some history or walking in the fields or visiting some friends or perhaps going to a play than to a Sermon Are these the sonnes of Abraham or the sonnes of God and not rather the profane sonnes of profane Esau What can hee tell me saith one which I know not As if thy knowledge could priviledge thee to despise Prophecy And what thinkest thou These Thessalonians had knowledge as well as thou for they were taught of God 1 Thess. 4.9 yet must not they despise Prophecy and wilt thou despise it We see not saith another but that all this preaching doth breede barrennesse as an immoderate raine and brings preaching into contempt As if the abundance of prophecying did priviledge the profane heart to despise it The Israelites made just such another reason Oh wee have nothing but Mannah Mannah and our soule is weary of this Mannah and yet by their owne confession if they loathe this Mannah they must have nothing else to live by they shall surely die and their blood be upon them Object Wee see not that this preaching doth any thing but breede contention among Preachers and hearers Answ. As if because a bad stomacke turnes wholsome meate into bad humours therefore good meate must be despised and because mans nature spider-like turnes wholsome doctrine into poyson therefore wholsome doctrine may be despised Many other allegations the Divell puts into the mindes and mouthes of men against Prophecy because he knowes by preaching his kingdome falls like lightening Luk. 10.18 But those that feare the Lord will abhorre them 3. Others are reprooved who can be content to heare the word read and thinke themselves in good case if they can reade the word or good bookes at home but despise prophecy and interpretation which what else is it but to reject Gods wisedome in his owne meanes who hath set us apart to pray men in Christs stead to be reconciled to God The conversion of men was never committed to mens owne private reading no nor to the ministery of Angels no nor Christ himselfe undertooke to convert the world by his owne industry but left his Disciples to doe greater things than himselfe Ioh. 14.12 Contemne Gods meanes and thy owne shall never succeede Besides will not any say that hee understands better by interpretation of things than by bare reading Yes any but grosse malice and wilfulnesse 4. Others will heare the word not read onely but preached and yet despise Prophecy because they despise the practise of that they heare as Herod That which a man cares not to keepe hee despiseth Blessed are they that heare the word of God and keepe it and doe it Therefore beware of despising Prophecy and of receiving the grace of God in vaine 2 Cor. 6.1 but rather heartily and sincerely embrace it Meanes 1. Labour to see the necessity of it being the power of God to salvation Rom. 1.16 and a principall ordinance of his to reveale the great mysteries of salvation which thou canst never understand without a teacher 2. Make conscience of hearing the word often 1 Pet. 2.2 As new-borne babes feeling their want would sucke every houre of the day and night Esteeme it with Mary the one thing necessary 3. Attend at the gates of wisdomes house Prov. 8.33 It was the praise of these Thessalonians that they heard the word with all readinesse Act. 17.11 and a great worke of God in Lydia chap. 16.14 The Lord opened her heart to attend to the words of the Apostles 4. Rejoyce in it as the Iaylor Act. 16.32 Hee rejoyced that hee and all the household beleeved And the wise Merchant went away rejoycing Not to delight in the word is to despise it Ierem. 6.10 Beholde the word of God is to them a reproach why they have no delight in it 5. If thou wouldest not despise Prophecy despise not Prophets This were to despise Christ himselfe for Hee that despiseth you despiseth mee Luk. 10.10 But have them in singular love for their workes sake as our spirituall fathers begetting us unto Christ. Wee see how the Prophets of the olde Testament were esteemed even of Kings themselves as Ioash though a wicked King finding Elisha ready to die fell on his face and wept and cried My father my father the horsemen of Israel and the chariots thereof 2 King 13.14 And shall not beleevers in the new Testament honour the Prophets of the new Testament who as good lampes consume themselves to give others light But
Scripture in the Church and speakes not as a man but as a Iudge 3. The word hereafter must judge all things Iohn 12.48 therefore it is meete that it should judge them here and try them 4. No man will deny but that the Oracle in the time of the Law was a most sufficient and certaine rule in all cases because it was the lively voice of God himselfe But the Scriptures are titled to be the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lively Oracles Acts 7.38 Because though they were not delivered by lively voice yet by immediate inspiration from God and must be as Oracles to us in all doubts as David made them the men of his counsell Bellarmine here objecteth and saith that the Scripture is a Rule indeede but a partiall one or rather a briefe Commonitory to be eeked partly by Tradition and partly by the help of the Church I answer 1. Wee are content to leave that honour with them to write and speake most basely of the Scripture to set up their owne Traditions But the very light of Nature is against them herein for the Philosopher himselfe maketh it the part of a wise Law-giver to conteine as much in the Law as is possible and leave as little as may be to the liberty of the Iudge Now shall Wisedome it selfe Christ himselfe who hath the fountaines and treasures of wisedome prescribe a law to his Church which must be imperfect unlesse it be eeked by Tradition and by the helpe of a supposed Iudge For the Iudge of the Church is not the Pope Christs pretended Vicar but Christ himselfe the Popes destroyer 2. The very writing of the Scripture was to this purpose that the hazard might be prevented which the truth were in if it should spread it selfe by report onely and passe from hand to hand by Tradition as formerly it had done 3. The state of the Church of the New Testament should by this account be worse than the Old the Patriarkes should have had a more perfect word than we for they were taught and ruled by immediate revelation and infallible voice and if we should hold truth as trailed through the corruptest ages of the world and the unfaithfull hands of men we should be farre behinde them and the Apostle was out when he said Wee have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.19 that is a surer word of the Prophets 4. He hath lost his reason that will deny but that the first and chiefe Truth must be the rule and measure of all the rest and hee hath lost all religion that will deny that of all Truths behoofefull for salvation the Scripture is the principall and first the perfection of which David avoucheth Psal. 19.7 The Law of the Lord is perfect and Paul 2 Tim. 3.15 It is able to make the man of God perfect to every good worke Out of all this exposition ariseth this point of Doctrine That every Christian is bound in whatsoever thing he is to doe or beleeve first to try it by the touch-stone of Gods word Acts 17.11 the men of Berea are commended for searching the Scriptures to see whether the things spoken by the Apostles were so or no. 1 Ioh. 4.1 Try the Spirits And the same Commandement is in the Law Deut. 13.2 to try the Prophets not by events but by Doctrine if it were agreeable to the word This is that warinesse commended so often by our Saviour Christ as Matth. 7.15 I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause division and offences contrary to the Doctrine which ye have received and avoid them And for practises herein see Lament 3.40 Let us search and try our wayes c. that yee may proove what is that good that acceptable will of God Proving what is acceptable to the Lord. Let every man proove his owne worke and then shall hee have rejoycing in himselfe alone and not in another And why 1. Because there shall alwayes be false Teachers in the Church who shall easily misleade us into errour if we try them not This is the Apostles argument 1 Ioh. 4.1 Try the Spirits Why For saith hee many false Prophets are gone out into the world We reade of a lying Spirit in the mouth of 400 Prophets and in the New Testament that false Apostles came as they had beene the Apostles of Christ for if the Divell can transforme himselfe into an Angel of light no marvell if his Ministers can doe so More particularly the word of God witnesseth 1. That they shall come under Satans standart in great troupes 2 Tim. 4.3 Heapes of Teachers So wee reade that in the first foure hundred yeares after Christ which was the prime of the Church there arose 88 severall kindes of false Teachers seducing from the faith and mightily prevailing against the Church 2. That they shall come armed with all arts to deceive first they shall pretend simplicity they shall come in sheepes cloathing but inwardly are ravening wolves that is come in the habit of true Teachers being indeed false Apostles and deceitfull Teachers If Elias and Iohn Baptist come in rough and hairy garments the false Prophets also will weare a rough garment to deceive Zech. 13.4 Secondly for their Doctrine they shall alledge Scripture as the Divell did to overthrow Christ They shall obtrude errour under pretence of deepe learning as the sect of the Nicholaitans called their heresie profound learning but by the holy Ghost called the depth of Satan Rev. 2.24 So the Popish Doctours at this day pretend all the Fathers to be on their side all Schoolemen all Antiquity and Mysticall Divinity shut up in secrets and vaults of darke and unwritten Traditions when indeede it is a very cave of darknesse and the depth of the Divell Thirdly for their Authority they shall pretend themselves to be some great men as Simon the Sorcerer said he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 8.9 Angelicall Doctours Seraphicall Doctors the onely men of Authority Christs Vicars Peters Successours great Cardinalls on whom are set all the pillars of the state of the Church Catholikes and Catholike Doctours and the like yea sometimes they come armed with great signes and lying wonders pretending mighty miracles as Simon Magus did Acts 8.10 But alas What miracles did Calvin and Luther shew Romish Priests abound in miracles they cure strange diseases and cast out Divells c. Which indeede God may suffer them to doe sometime by sorcery sometime by jugling and knavery for a plague upon the unthankfull world which cared not to receive the truth in love as was foretolde 2 Thess. 2.9 10. For this purpose God sent them strong delusions Fourthly for their behaviour they shall pretend great humility Col. 2.18 Oh they dare not goe to God but by Mediatours Saints and Angels they must use much bodily affliction in chastising and whipping themselves as Baals
Gods part as well as their owne When Min●sters are diligent in doctrine careles in life they hold some good but not all Private men that carry themselves soberly and civilly and are fully content with the name of honest men holde some good but they reforme not their family nor walke religiously in the midst of their houses and so are farre from holding all good This is in matter of practise So in matter of judgement The truth and every part of it is our birth-right saith Cyprian wee must not lose a foote of it but hold the least truth Many hold fast the maine grounds and articles of religion but in things of lesser moment are altogether regardlesse as Bishop Latimer thought at first that the cause of the Sacrament was rather to be dissembled than suffered for but considering better that hee must holde all that is good himselfe happily suffered in it Nay we must not onely hold truth in sense but even the words wherein the Spirit of God hath conveyed it to us not departing easily from them for wee shall finde what great mischiefe hath oppressed the Church by taking liberty to depart from the very words of Scripture and in stead of them using other improper speeches to expresse the same thing As for example The Fathers used to expresse the Pastors of the Church by the name of Priests whereupon the Romish Church builds and backes her order of Priesthood Doctour Fulke in his sixth chapter of his defence of the translation against Gregory Martin hath these words It is a folly to thinke that a sacrificing office externall can be established in the new Testament which never calleth the Ministers thereof Sacerdotes or Priests They often call the Table of the Lord an Altar and the celebration of the Supper a Sacrifice and gave a reasonable good sence but had they kept to the words of the Scripture they had prevented much mischiefe springing thence For the Romanists make advantage of their speeches wrested out of their sense to set up that blasphemous doctrine of the sacrifice of the Masse And the word Masse what Papist knowes whence it comes being neither Hebrew Greeke nor Latine nor taken from any other language of any Nation but raked out of the bottomlesse pit without all signification unlesse it agree with our English word masse that is an heape a lumpe a chaos of blasphemies and abominations The like of the word Pope a strange unknowne and mysticall name the learned Papists knew it not but confounded themselves in the Etymologie of it some from Pape the interjection of admiration some from Papa which Latine children used to call their fathers by answering to our infants dad some from the Romane abbreviation of Pater Patriae expressed by pa pa and a pricke betweene some from the Siracusans word Papas signifying a father Such follies and ridiculous and childish dotages are they faine to wander in to seeke and finde their holy father the Pope who as himselfe is a beast rising out of the earth in whose forehead is written MYSTERIE so his name is mysticall and from men not from heaven not from the Scriptures yet is the name as ancient as Cyprian and used by the Fathers Wherein we may see how dangerous it is as Beza observes to decline from the word an hayre-breadth and not to hold all that is good even the least An arrow set a little awry at first makes a great errour before it fall at the marke How happy had it beene if the ancient Fathers otherwise godly and learned men had held them to the very names termes and proper words of Scripture rather than by departing therefrom have opened a flood-gate to Antichrists delusions who as Satan creepes in the darke and getting in his toe will shove in his bulke for give sinne an inch it will take an ell and so of the Man of sinne 4. Rule Hold most carefully the chiefe good things for so men doe in earthly matters Now there be three things worth most care in keeping 1. Gods favour presence and loving countenance Psal. 4. Lord lift up the light of thy countenance upon us let others keepe corne and wine keepe thou this feare sinne most of all as that which would most dangerously robbe thee 2. Thine owne sincerity uprightnesse and first love Iob 27.6 I will never lose my innocency till I die 3. The Crowne of life is promised to him that is faithfull to death Hold the kingdome fast in the meanes and so strive as thou maist obtaine As the Martyrs who apprehended it through fire and flames 5. Rule Hold all that is good stiffely and stoutly against with-holders and opposers for a man shall never hold good if he doe coldly approove it Hold it as one firmely glued to it for so the word signifies Rom. 12.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cleave to that which is good things glued are not easily disjoyned God hath by this phrase glued every Christian to every truth in judgement and practise and no man must separate himselfe from it Tit. 1.9 Holding fast the faithful word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contra 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against gain-sayers Take hold with both hands against hereticks tyrants false-teachers flatterers that have laid hold to snatch it from us or as men in perill of drowning lay fast hold upon any thing they can catch to save themselves and will not let it goe 6. Rule Hold the truth constantly to the death whatsoever the issue be Rev. 2.25 Hold fast that thou hast till I come as the renowned Saints and Martyrs who have rather parted with their lives than their depositum 2 Tim. 1.14 Let us therefore labour to see into every truth and seeing it let us hold it As that famous souldier Cynegrius held the shippe first with his right hand till that was cut off then with his left hand till hee lost that too and last of all with his teeth till his head and body were severed So let us resolve every one with himselfe That which I see to be good I will holde it so long as I live or breathe my hands my heart and soule shall cleave unto it I will carry it to heaven with me The second thing proposed is the meanes of holding that which is good I. If wee would hold things approoved to be good let us avoid carefully such things as would hinder us in holding them And they are of two sorts 1. Some shut out good things 2. others thrust them out or choake them The former are 1. Presumption of our owne wisdome and knowledge Humility stands porter at the doore of discipline Psal. 25.9 God teacheth the humble Ier. 13.15 Heare and give eare and be not proud Men of conceits will heare whom they list but an humble man will receive good even from the meanest though it be an earthen vessell Naaman from his servant and Iob from his hand-maid 2. Distempered affections as rash conceit
against the teacher which is an usuall bait of Satan to make all good things carelesly rejected Micaiah for this was turned out of dores as no fit Counsellor for King Ahab So the itching eare which is still desirous of novelties as the young man having heard the olde commandements would still heare more new And a tediousnesse in hearing the same things often which the Apostle calls a safe thing The latter are 1. Hardnesse of heart cast as much seede as you will among stones and cover them therewith no fruite followes for the stones hinder the rooting as we see in Pharaoh Mollifie the heart throughly and the word wil abide in it 2. Cares of the world which are as thornes to choake it All seede sowne among thornes getteth no strength but perisheth The Pharisies mocked Christ in his doctrine because they were covetous Luke 16.14.3 Voluptuous living makes men heare onely for fashion and to be like those widdowes which are ever learning but never come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3. or at least not to joyne vertue to their knowledge as the intemperate patient that heares the physitian but will not follow him II. Provide and furnish the soule with helpes to hold that which is good These helpes respect 1. Intention 2. Attention 3. Retention First the Intention must must bee cleane and sincere we must not heare for envie as the Pharisies and Iewes in Paules time nor for newes as the Athenians nor for gaine or curiosity as Felix but to receive as babes the sincere milke of the word to grow in grace thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 This intention shall be the better furthered by premeditation of the force use and efficacy of the word that it is the power of God to salvation the incorrupt seede the word of life the instrument of faith the sword of the spirit the bread and water that preserveth eternall life Secondly Attention must be used Acts 8.6 the people of Samaria gave heede to the things that Philip spake This attention is a keeping of the heart and affections to the word deliuered Acts 16.14 when Paul preached Lydia attended and the Lord opened her heart When Christ preached all the peoples eyes were fastened upon him Luke 4. Attention is the doore by which the word enters It is much furthered by a due estimation of the word Thy word saith David is wonderfull therefore my soule keepeth it Men will attend to their learned counsell when their free-hold is in question so here conceive aright of the word as a matter of life and death a matter that concernes thy inheritance in heaven thou wilt carefully attend it Thirdly Retention must follow In the body there are two nutritive powers one Attractive to draw meate into the stomacke the other Retentive to hold it there till it be turned into nourishment so in the soule And if the former draw too little the latter holds little and so the body pines and if the former draw too much that the body is not able to hold it the body pines still So here the soule must be still drawing but it must also forcibly holde it till the soule be refreshed Now this Retentive faculty is strengthened by 4. meanes 1. Meditation cleane beasts chew the cud Deut. 11 2. Consider the workes of the Lord Psal. 1.1 Meditate in his Law both day and night The acts of God must be in the mouthes of them that feare him Psal. 149. and 39.3 while David mused his heart was warmed Phil. 4.8 whatsoever things are honest just and pure thinke on those things men have therefore evill thoughts because they nourish not the good 2. Conference which is a whetting of holy lessons both on our selves and others Deut. 11. the Iewes are commanded to conferre of the word early and late Acts 17. The Bereans are commended for comparing the Apostles doctrine with Scripture 3. A full purpose of heart to practise good things Psal. 119.106 I have sworne to keepe thy law and 50.16 Why takest thou my word into thy mouth and hatest to be reformed 4. Fervent and constant prayer which is the key of knowledge gets the hearing eare and the soft heart it is a key to open the coffers of God out of which we may take those treasures which are not from our selves but from above our reach III. Chuse sure and safe places to hold good things in First in memory we must remember good things we heare Deut. 4.9 Take heed to thy selfe and keepe thy soule diligently that thou forget not the things thine eyes have seene Psal. 119.16 I will not forget thy word and ver 93. I will never forget thy precepts because by them thou hast quickened me Secondly keep them in the faith of thy heart else all is unprofitable Heb. 4.2 for that onely gives them rooting in our hearts Col. 2.7 Prov. 4.21 Keepe them in the midst of thy heart then shall they be as alight in the lanthorne shining through every part of thy life This was the coffer that Abraham locked up the promises of God in and held them fast without reasoning though it was difficult and seemed impossible Rom. 4.20 and David Psal. 119.11 I have hid thy word in my heart Thirdly keepe it in the affections of thy soule love earnestly the word of God and all good things for the things that wee like not or affect not we care not for keeping The great commandement is to love the Lord with all thy heart And every Christian ought to appeale to the Lord himselfe as Peter to Christ Lord thou knowest that I love thee Iohn 21.16 And the tryall of our love to him is to keepe his commandements chap. 14.15 Fourthly keepe them in the practise of thy life and whole conversation 1. By professing good things as Christ himselfe professed a good profession before Pontius Pilate 2. By promoting all good causes to thy utmost power 3. By maintaining and defending all good things and causes 4. By suffering for good things and every way giving testimony and setting seale to them if neede be with thy dearest heart blood IV. If we would hold good things let us furnish and arme our selves against theeves and robbers 1. Our owne carelesnesse Many times we care not to understand the things of God vanity of minde worldly lusts and desire of riches partly take up the roome partly choake good things so as they are neither received nor held But if we understand not let us not be ashamed to enquire and seeke out till wee doe understand 2. Satans slynesse who steales the word and good purposes out of mens mens hearts strangely even while they looke on and consent Doe as Abraham who drave away the birds that troubled him in sacrificing Gen. 15.11 so doe thou drive away these ravenous birds that are sent by Satan 3. Temptation and persecution Much ground keeps the seede till the heate of persecution comes and in persecution falls away and
Satan if he cannot hinder us of our inheritance will surely give us as little peace in the way as he can and therefore hee will and doth often terrifie Gods people with hellish temptations with which he brings them so low that they see nothing lesse than peace of heart sometimes they be as men in a swone who live and yet know not they doe live Therefore how had wee need keepe on our armour to keepe our peace 4. Doe all duties sincerely and uprightly Marke and behold the upright man his end is peace Psal. 37.37 Be it never so weakely or imperfectly yet doe things uprightly humbly in respect of thy selfe and heartily in respect of God approving thy selfe to him 5. Suffer all affliction and hard measure joyfully for well-doing and good conscience rather than lose thy peace So did the Saints of God suffer joyfully the spoyling of their goods Heb. 10.34 and so did our owne Martyrs 5. This is a comfort for Gods children as Christ intimates Ioh. 14.27 My peace I give unto you let not you hearts be troubled Their God is a God of peace for the godly heart will say you speake of peace which is the onely portion of Gods people but alas who have lesse peace than they Sure I am will some say I have so many and so great afflictions in the world that I can scarce stand upright under them what may I thinke of my selfe Answ. 1. Is thy expectation of a peace outward in outward things if so where hath God promised thee such a peace without exception of the crosse 2. Is thy lot and portion other than the Disciples of Christ or Christ himselfe had they this outward peace No In the world saith he yee shall have tribulation but in mee ye shall have peace 3. Whatsoever or how great soever thy afflictions be thou hast the God of peace with thee and for thee yea and in thee and shalt not want a strengh to deliver thee out of all Object Yea but were my trialls onely outward from the world I could rejoyce but Satan molests me and disquiets the peace of my conscience by such strong and violent temptations as wound my soule and by such motions and thoughts as seeme to be brought out of the bottome of hell Answ. 1. Let not thy heart be troubled thou maist be at peace that Satan is thy enemy thou art not yet in his power 2. Thou maist have peace that thou seest and sorrowest for the uglinesse of these temptations and outstandest the violence of them thus they shal be thy exercise but not thy sinne 3. Thou hast a God of peace whom thou servest this God of peace will shortly tread Satan under thy feete Rom. 16.20 Object But neither the world nor the Divell could hurt me without my owne sinne but that which grieves my heart my owne sinnes doe daily disturbe my peace and grow to such a number and strength that I doubt I shall lose it quite Answ. Sinne indeede is the great trouble-house and enemy to peace But 1. know this to thy comfort that no sinne shall destroy peace but that sinne which hath peace 2. Consider that of the Prophet Esay 54.10 The mountaines may fall but Gods covenant of peace shall stand This God of peace hath made an everlasting covenant of peace and that must stand Lastly if God be the God of peace then godlinesse makes not any man unpeaceable or turbulent though the world condemne the godly as authours of dissention and the world would be quiet were it not for them But indeede the cause that they are unpeaceable in the worlds eye is because they will not lose their peace nor offend the God of peace nor exchange the peace of God and good conscience with the peace of the world But let such as love this God of peace labour to shew themselves sonnes of peace and shew this worke of God in their love of peace to which they are called Col. 3.15 shunning as rockes brawlings and contentions and fury and fiery affections with all pevish and sowre behaviours And if for not running with the world and for standing for the peace of God they shall bee accounted unpeaceable the God of peace will justifie them and they shall take their enemies booke of accusation and binde it on their shoulders and weare it as a crown on their heads Iob 31.36 Now to the petition 1. For full sanctification 2. For finall sanctification The former is set downe 1. In generall sanctifie you throughout 2. In speciall enumeration of parts spirit soule and body blamelesse For the meaning of the words we are to search and finde out foure things 1. What is this sanctification prayed for 2. What it is to be sanctified throughout 3. What be these parts enumerated spirit soule and body 4. How the Christian in all these parts may be kept blamelesse For the first Sanctification is the abolition of our naturall corruption and the renovation of Gods image in beleevers by the Spirit of God begun by grace in this life and perfected by glory in the life to come Here wee have foure things to be further explained First the Authour of this grace God himselfe Levit. 20.8 I am the Lord that sanctifieth thee And especially or more immediatly the Spirit of God whose peculiar worke it is 1 Cor. 6.11 and therefore hee is called the Spirit of sanctification Rom. 1.4 and it selfe the sanctification of the Spirit 2 Thess. 2.13 1. Because it is an effect of the Spirit who is the immediate worker of it 2. Because it is a signe and note of the Spirits presence even as the beames argue the presence of the Sunne And good reason for 1. in the beginning of this worke man is meerely passive for what can a dead man doe to his owne quickning and raising Eph. 2.1 2. Who can repaire nature depraved but the Authour of nature who can bring backe Gods image but he that at first made man in it This is to be borne of God and who begets the childe but the father 3. Our Apostle goes to God for it from which Ocean all streams come Secondly the Subject of this grace the elect onely for this worke is peculiar to such as shall attaine the perfection of it in glory It is true there is somewhat like sanctification in the hypocrite and reprobate some work of the Spirit by which they are said to be sanctified Heb. 6.4 and 10.29 But wee must know that sanctification is twofold 1. Externall in outward calling outward profession of Doctrine and administration of the Sacraments the very best of which is generall illumination and some slight reformation and this is common to reprobates 2. Internall a speciall renovation or a change of the whole man raising up the heart to holinesse by which gracious worke the true Christian is separated from all the profane and hypocrites of the world therefore 1 Pet. 1.2 hee calls the beleevers elect
to the sanctification of the Spirit so as this is a sanctification appropriate to the elect Thirdly the forme of sanctification And that is 1. in putting off of corrupt qualities 2. In bringing in new and inherent holinesse which daily changeth the beleever into the image of God as Col. 3.10 Seeing yee have put off the old man with his workes and put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the image of him that created him This new quality created in the hearts of the elect by the Spirit of God whereby they can in some measure truly hate and forsake sinne and truly love the Law of God with an indeavour to keepe it is the very being of sanctification Fourthly the processe of sanctification It is begun in grace here and not perfected till hereafter in glory Which is added 1. to distinguish it from justification which is perfect in one act 2. To note the toughnesse and strong heart of sinne which is slowly weakned here and never here perfectly subdued for in the most perfect the flesh lusteth against the Spirit Gal. 5.17 3. To shew that the matter of sanctification is to be in perpetuall motion as a living water Hee that is righteous must be righteous still Rev. 22.11 4. To shew that sound holinesse never gives over till it attaine perfection perfection is a fruite of soundnesse in grace The way of the righteous shines more and more untill perfect day Prov. 4.18 For the second What it is to be sanctified throughout Answ. 1. These Thessalonians were already sanctified and therefore the Apostle prayes that they might happily proceede to full sanctification 2. This full sanctification is partly in this life partly in the life to come the Apostle intendeth both the former first as a way to the latter The through sanctification in this life is the imperfect sanctification of parts the other is the perfect sanctification in degrees The former is 1. in respect of the whole rule of sanctification which is the Law of God when a beleever can truly say with David that hee hath respect to all the commandements Psal. 119.6 and 18.22 for all his lawes were before mee and I did not cast away his commandements from me 2. In respect of all sinnes it is a through change from all sinne not a turning out of one sinne into another nor a turning from all sinnes save one as Herod but an hating of all appearance of evills yea of darling and bosome sinnes yea of right eyes and hands Matth. 5.29 3. In respect of all gifts of sanctification which the Spirit gives in part to every beleever not onely knowledge faith love which are eminent but other inferiour also as patience meeknesse temperance peace with every other fruite of sanctification 4. In respect of all the parts of the man in which the Spirit of God putteth forth this noble worke as Cant. 4.1 c. the Church is described to be faire in all parts eyes hayre teeth lippes temples c. the sanctified person must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wholly perfect The latter i. full and through sanctification in the life to come stands in the perfection of degrees and in these particulars 1. An utter abolishing of sinfull flesh 2. A perfect freedome from all the causes and workes of repentance 3. Perfect and speciall communion with God and Christ and good Angels and elect men 4. Perfection of all graces both in kinde and in measure 5. A perfect exercising of our graces in glory and happinesse And all this our Apostle seemes to ayme at in the last words where he mentions the comming of Christ in which he shall attaine through and full sanctification For the third What be these parts mentioned spirit soule body Answ. 1. Some by Spirit understand the third person in Trinity as Ambrose Some a third part of man But the Scripture speakes but of two namely a body and a soule and Aquinas saith the spirit and the soule differ non secundū essentiam sed potentiam not in essence but as divers faculties Others by the spirit understand the whole man regenerate so farre as hee is opposed to flesh the man considered not according to the parts of nature but according to the parts of grace So Athanasius said Spiritus est donum quod jam per baptismum accepistis the Spirit is the gift of God received in baptisme for keep this gift saith he and both soule and body wil be unblamable This exposition is not unfit yet I take another to be fitter thus It is common in Scripture for our better apprehension of our duty to distinguish those faculties which God hath put in the soule of man that we might take notice of the worke of sanctification in the severall faculties There be two parts of man a soule and a body Of the soule there are two noble faculties under which all the rest are comprehended 1. the spirit 2. the will here called the soule by a Synecdoche of the whole for the part By spirit in this and all places where the spirit and soule are mentioned together is meant that noble and eminent faculty of mans soule called the understanding or minde the Philosophers call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the leader and ruler of all other parts and faculties and the most noble of all Vnder this is the conscience included which being renewed is called also by the name of Spirit Rom. 8.16 The spirit witnesseth to our spirits and Eph. 4.23 Be renewed in the Spirit of your minde 2. The other superiour faculty but not so noble is that whereby we doe will affect or desire that which wee understand and conceive to bee good This they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 under which is comprehended the will and affections So these words are used elsewhere Luke 1.46 My soule doth magnifie the Lord and my spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour 1 Sam. 18.1 The soule of Ionathan was knit to David that is his heart affections desires 3. The body is that part of man which is the house of the soule consisting of flesh bones humours and the like Now then the whole man is sanctified throughout 1. When the minde thoughts cogitations and conscience are pure and holy wisely to think and meditate and guide safely by wise discerning of things profitable and pertinent 2. When the heart affections and desires are rightly composed and given up to the guidance of right and renewed reason when a sound heart and a sound minde meete together 3. When the whole body as the soules instrument is in all the members of it obedient to act and effect good actions according to the dictate of right reason and the command of renewed will when the members are weapons and servants of righteousnesse Or more briefly when the spirit thinkes nothing the will affects nothing the body effects nothing contrary to the will of God For the fourth Quest. Here is perfection of holinesse
that God by his Spirit who onely can raise the dead in sinne would bestow this grace not belonging to the wicked upon these Thessalonians by which they putting off all the corrupt qualities of nature might by a new created quality in their hearts grow up in the image of God standing in knowledge true righteousnesse and holinesse And because they were already sanctified in part hee prayeth that they may goe on to through sanctification both here and hereafter for the present that they may attaine full holinesse in respect of all sinne which they must forsake and of the whole law and word which they must set before them in respect of all gifts principall and lesse principall and of all parts and faculties here expressed to be the spirit the soule and body that thus they may be blamelesse in respect of relation with Christ their head in respect of grosse crimes and reigning sinnes in respect of Christian inchoation of the Lords acceptation and of perfect consummation of whole sanctification at the comming of Iesus Christ. In that the Apostle prayeth for through sanctification and enumerateth the parts in which it is and desireth they may be kept blamelesse in every of them we learne that No Christian must content himselfe with the beginnings of holinesse but must proceede to full sanctification as vessells of honour to be full of goodnesse and knowledge Rom. 15.14 2 Cor. 7.1 Let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow up unto full holinesse in the feare of God 2 Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ Eph. 4.13 In all things grow up into him which is the head All which places shew that the whole life of a Christian must be a continuall progresse in sanctification 1. Our Text sets downe the orderly proceeding in this worke It must begin in the spirit and minde and then change the heart and will and so come forth into the body and actions that the whole man consisting of these parts may be blamelesse And further this care must be nourished untill the comming of Iesus Christ either to the generall or particular judgement All which shewes that the highest and most noble parts in man are corrupt and unholy and as the Apostle saith even the minde and conscience is polluted till this new quality be created for whatsoever is borne of flesh is flesh Ioh. 3.6 Who can bring a cleane thing out of filthinesse And therefore our whole life is little enough for the renewing of all these parts so corrupted 2. Sanctification is but in part in this life for God would have sinne left in the best our best duties spotted and a pricke left in our flesh to buf●et and humble us who else through the abundance of grace would be proud and lifted up out of measure and that wee might goe out of our selves to the Lord and begge the increase of grace and sanctification from him Adde hereunto that the weake measure of grace present is often interrupted our daily lapses disturbe it sinne makes daily b●eaches in it Satan incessantly plants his great Ordnance against it experience shewes how easily we lose both many degrees of it and all sense of it and therefore we had neede still to be repairing our selves A beggars coate needes continuall patching We cannot be rid of our ragges wholly and therefore we must ever be mending Souldiers that keepe a fort or hold looke what batteries and breaches are made by skirmishes and assaul●s on the day they will repaire them in the night else could they not hold out no more could we against Satan and our owne corruptions without daily repaire And as our houses so our hearts they will grow dusty and nasty if they be not daily swept and cleansed 3. Sanctification is a continuall act and proceeding in grace so long as we live because it is nothing else but a returne to our first estate and image to which wee cannot possibly attaine till death And therefore if wee would proceede to the glory of the Saints we must proceed in sanctification to the full measure of it for glorification is nothing but the end and perfection of sanctification 4. God hath set apart many excellent and glorious meanes for the perfecting of this his owne worke by all which if we rise not to full holinesse we shall frustrate him of his end The holy Scripture is able to make the man of God perfect to every good worke 2 Tim. 3.15 the holy Ministery of the Word and Sacraments are able both to beget and strengthen faith which purifieth the heart holy meditations conference prayers with promises of blessing and successe if wee rightly use them all these witnesse to us that the Lord would have us to be still adding what is lacking to our graces and rise up to full assurance and holinesse and as those that are planted in the house of God to be more fruitfull and flourishing in our age 5. The necessity and utility of this practise imposeth it on all the godly 1. In respect of the wickednesse of their hearts and a number of beloved and darling sinnes against which all care watchfulnesse and strength is too little 2. In respect of the steine and soyle of sinne which is like a crimson dye hardly fetched out of those that are the Lords for when the sting of sinne is gone and the guilt of sinne is taken away and washed in the Kings bath even the fountaine of the blood of the Sonne of God opened to the house of Iudah and Ierusalem for sinne and uncleannesse yet is there a staine of sinne left which remaineth to be washed with the fountaine of water for Christ came by water and blood this fountaine of pure water is the grace of sanctification which is as the flood Iordan to wash the soules leprosie which stickes faster than Naamans so as we had neede wash seven times that is often yea continually and yet for all that it shall be with the faces of our soules as with the faces of our children the dyrt shall sticke till it be washed off and being washed soone growes foule and dyrtie againe 3. In respect of good duties wherunto we shal ever be unapt unready further than by profiting in sanctification wee are kept in a readinesse For as a man in fetters and irons cannot doe any service to his Prince till his fetters be knockt off so here our corruptions and lusts are heavier and presse us downe harder than a thousand chaines onely the grace of sanctification unties us and gives us liberty in good duties 4. In respect of finall perfection which is not attained in justification but by sanctification It is true that justification heales the wound but sanctification shuts the skarre justification brings pardon but sanctification brings peace neither was there ever any justified person who had received the first fruites but hee longed for
doe them Happy is that man that his conscience tells him that his will is now framed to Gods will and in regard of Evangelicall obedience which stands in true purposes and endeavours hee may say since the time of his calling unto the grace of the Gospell with the Apostle Acts 23.1 I have lived in all good conscience untill this day 3. It must be a peaceable conscience in that hee hath done or not done it is at peace with God and with it selfe This is when it excuseth the person aright both for his person and for his actions First for his person as now reconciled justified accepted Secondly his actions as having a true desire and endeavour to please God in all things Now the conscience being truly peaceable it riseth up to be truly joyfull which makes the heart merry and cheerefull as a continuall feast neither wants he any good cheare that hath it Prov. 15.15 Nor wants hee good company that hath a good conscience he can rejoyce alone without all other company or comforts The heart is held up in absence of all worldly comforts and in presence of all worldly evills and none can take away the joy of it 4. It must be a watchfull not a sleepy conscience a waking not a remorslesse conscience 1. It watcheth against all sinne both to be committed and as a faithfull monitor pulls the Master backe As also for sinne already committed and smites with remorse and biting as David I have done very foolishly Object But doth not a bad conscience shew some remorse after sinne what else did Iudas Answ. Yes but with this difference 1. A bad conscience hath some scratch on the outside and sometimes a deeper gash and an incurable wound but it never goes on to godly sorrow as a good conscience doth 2. It seekes not to the remedy but sinkes under the burden the wound bleedes to death as in Iudas Secondly a good conscience watcheth to all good duties and occasions desirous to please God in all things and at all times according to the conscience enlightened This pure clearing peaceable and waking conscience is necessary to an unblameable and renewed spirit Thirdly seeing the true evidences of the purenesse and holy temper of the spirit are holy and well guided thoughts wee must carefully looke to our thoughts and cogitations Here 1. Choose them so as thou be sure thy heart be a receptacle of holy thoughts examine them whence they come and whither they goe and by examination thou shalt finde some vaine and evill thoughts these thou must hate all of them Psal. 119.113 And if thou hatest them put away the evill of your thoughts and Ier. 4.4 Let the wicked forsake his thoughts knowing that evill thoughts are as damnable as evill actions Acts 8.22 pray if thy thoughts may be forgiven which implies guilt Some thou shalt finde wandering roving thoughts which must be taken up as vagrants and corrected lest as Dinah thou be defiled and corrupted with fleshly lusts passe them away quickly Some other thou shalt find idle thoughts but unnecessary send them away harbour no idle thoughts nor yet cast them out without censure and disgrace Some are perhaps lawfull but lesse necessary put these of till another time that the more necessary may take up the roome Some are unruly thoughts rising up against against God or men thoughts of infidelity of revenge dishonourable thoughts against Gods servants and ordinances all such disordered and proude thoughts must be brought into the subjection of God 1 Cor. 10.4 2. Watch them well being so infinite so quick and nimble and in so secret a place being also so slippery so soone interrupted and corrupted by idlenesse by society loosenesse of senses roving of affections unallowed objects therefore set a sharpe eye upon them and seeing that will not serve bring them under Gods eye keepe them close to God for as the husbands eye and presence is the best way to preserve the wives chastity so the heart betrothed to God carrying it selfe in his sight is not easily polluted with strange and uncleane lusts To enforce this watch know it differenceth from an hypocrite First an hypocrite can watch over words and actions in respect of man but a godly man watcheth over his thoughts onely the true sanctified man makes conscience of the tenth commandement for the government of his thoughts and desires Secondly it differenceth from a wicked man who dare not act many evils but none so foule but hee dare insatiably minde and contemplate them Here is a difference whereas wicked men are most carelesse of their thoughts the godly have most complained of them Rom. 7. and then have beene most truly comforted in them whiles the conscience of thoughts hath beene a true triall of their sincerity 3. Labour to feede thy thoughts 1. with the sweetest 2. with the most necessary objects First the sweetest objects are heavenly things Col. 3.1 Seeke the things which are above Iesus Christ and his merits the happinesse of heaven and the chiefe good which is God himselfe O how might the minde be fed and ravished with these contemplations what sweetnesse might a man sweeten and season the dayes of his vanity withall if he would minde heavenly things and thinke on the way thither Is it not a description of ancient beleevers to thinke on his name Mal. 3.16 Secondly the most necessary profitable thoughts are 1. to thinke often of our sinnes both to call to minde some sinne past unrepented as also to prevent some sinne thrusting in 2. To thinke on good duties to excite to some duty neglected and to apprehend occasion and season of some offered unto us 3. Of the vanity of this life and our departure hence 4. Of Gods comming to judgement and our finall account and reckoning Prov. 14.22 To them that thinke on good things shall be mercy and truth Now whereas some thinke thoughts free and others conceit liberty and impossibility and most no necessity of this guiding the conscience and thoughts To them I say First as thoughts be so are words and actions out of the heart commeth thefts adulteries therefore rectifie these Secondly good thoughts are evidences of the Spirits presence being his immediate motions wee of ourselves not able to thinke one good thought 1 Cor. 2.5 Thirdly God will call them to strict account and in judgement make inquisition after them their thoughts shall accuse or else excuse one another Rom. 2.15 Fourthly even good thoughts are recompenced David had but a thoughts to build the house of God and God rewarded it with building him an house and stablishing him a kingdome 2 Sam. 7.16 and Psal. 32. I thought I would confesse my sinne and thou forgavest me all The Prodigall thought to returne and his father thought to meete him Thus carry thy thoughts begin the day with holy thoughts and meditations which is a sweete seasoning In the night call them in to thinke of God
determine thy will with his as David Psal. 39.9 I held my tongue and spake nothing because thou Lord didst it There must be but one will betweene God and a faithfull soule betweene Christ and a Christian. Quest. How may I know my will thus denied renewed freed and framed to God Answ. The signes of it are 1. in respect of it selfe 2. in regard of sinne 3. in regard of good duties 1. In respect of it selfe it will not runne before but will waite upon sanctified knowledge and renewed reason it will not inthrall the light of the minde to inordinate desires it will be prooving still what is the good and acceptable will of God It will resolve and purpose that so long time as it is in the flesh to walke after the will of God 1 Pet. 4.2 2. Thou shalt know it in regard of sinne 1. It is resolute in resistance of sinne and the occasions for although the will renewed admit sinne in respect of corruption yet it selfe is in great part set against sinne that it willeth it not fully it purposeth not to sinne as David I vowed I will keepe thy judgements it hath a fast purpose to cleave to God Psal. 119.104 and hates all the wayes of falshood 2. When it yeelds to sinne it is with griefe it doth not sleepe in sinne so but that the heart waketh So the Apostle Rom. 7.15 he even hateth sinne while he is a doing of it I hate that I doe 3. After sinne it riseth timely by repentance if he fall into sinne he hardens not his heart Prov. 28.14 he wills it not neither before nor after there is a strugling and a reluctation in him against it and thus you may know the will rightly framed 3. In regard of good duties it will not onely be well-doing but chearefull in well-doing he doth good duties willingly freely There is a difference in doing one and the same action betweene a good man and a wicked man the worke of the will renewed is not onely to take opportunity to doe good but seeke opportunity to doe it it will not doe good of constraint but will doe it with willingnesse he will doe it cheerefully as a good Pastour feedes his flocke not by constraint but of a willing minde 1 Pet. 5.2 Quest. Why should wee thus looke to our wills Answ. First the state of Christianity is rather a willing than a doing the will of God thou that canst doe no more wouldst thou doe lesse Secondly no greater plague can befall a man than to be given up to his owne will the holding to a mans owne will is the losse of the will and soule too Thirdly as thy will is pleased with the sinne so it shall be revenged in the sorrow of it that will of thine that will not be compelled to obey shall be compelled to suffer all the plagues of sinne by a just recompence are laid upon the will as his sinne was a resistance and renouncing of the will of God for in hell no sinner shall ever obtaine what hee would but shall ever sustaine what hee would not Thus God brings the wayes of the wilfull sinner upon his owne head Ezek. 11.21 Thirdly to keepe the soule blamelesse we must narrowly watch all our affections wherein the soule moves it selfe every where for man by his fall hath lost not his affections but the holinesse and rectitude of them for now man naturally hateth the Lord and his image in his word in his servants and graces he feares and flies what hee should most joy and delight in that is God himselfe he joyes in swallowing the pleasures of sinne the baytes of his perdition hee is angry and impatient at God himselfe as Ionas and carried with a rageing madnesse causelesly and intemperately on any occasion And therefore we must fly to the grace of regeneration which doth not abolish affections but the disordered motions of them and restores them towards their originall rectitude and goodnesse Where this worke of grace is not and where the spirit hath laid no bridle upon the affections no marvaile if that soule runne riot into all unruly lusts and make it selfe blame-worthy and guilty every moment of foule sinnes Yea where this grace is care must be to preserve it even in every affection the least disorder of any of which is enough to impure the soule and leave it under blame Now the rules of keeping the affections unblameable and then for the reasons I. To keepe thy affections unblameable thou must labour seeing they cannot be unblameable if they be not good in the rise to get a good rise for thy affections a good motion must be from a good mover labour to see who is the mover of thy affections whether the Spirit of God or the wicked spirit or thine owne carnall spirit Excellent are those affections that are moved by the Spirit of God as when feare anger love joy griefe are 1. grounded on just causes 2. guided by the rule of renewed reason for the Spirit never moves but according to the word 3. tempered in ordinate measure now they become servants of grace Whereas if thy owne carnall spirit move them contrary to the word for their subject object manner or measure now they turne enemies to God and to thine owne soule II. Be sure they be carried upon right objects onely set thy affections where Gods Spirit would set them Here first the proper object of love is God himselfe and not for his gifts but for himselfe and of Iesus Christ whom if any man love not let him be accursed and that not as a Iesus onely but as a Lord And then the things of God wee must covet the most excellent gifts and with Mary choose the better part even our part in the Gospell and word of Christ and then entirely love the friends of God all our delight must be in the Saints that excell in vertue Secondly the object of our anger is sinnes not persons nor so much the sinnes of others as our owne which are nearer us Thirdly the object of our joy is pardon of sinne Gods favour and countenance Psal. 4. It is wrong placed when it is in the creature not in the Creatour when in the gift not in the giver Fourthly the object of our patience is evills of punishment which we must patiently suffer but not evills of sinne as Moses Fifthly of our feare the true object is God more for his goodnesse than greatnesse more for his mercy than justice Mercy is with thee to be feared Psal. 130.4 more lest we offend him than be offended by him And so in the rest What a businesse now is it to keepe our affections upon allowed and warrantable objects III. In these best objects see they be most vehement and intense To doe this observe these rules First bestow on the best things the best affections thou must love the Lord thy God with all thy soule all thy heart and strength nay more thou
shew all love to their persons still All which discovers a great deale of corruption in our affections First Many hate sinnes in another and not the same sinnes in themselves and this is the hatred of the person and not of the sinne Secondly many seeme to hate evill but not out of love to goodnesse some say they hate Popery but are farre from the love of the truth they dislike grosse profanesse drunkennesse adultery but have no affection to true godlinesse hatred of evill is joyned with cleaving to good Thirdly many hate most where God most loves as persons for grace sake and two sorts of men are the butts of the hatred of this age 1. Zealous and godly Ministers because their life and doctrine reproove evill mens workes Ahab hateth Eliah Hast thou found mee O mine enemy the more they love the lesse they are loved for a Minister to hate mens sinnes or to speake the truth doth it deserve such hatred If we should love mens sinnes wee should hate their persons and if we hate not our brothers evill we could not wish his good 2. A generation of men who are so precise they will not sweare nor be drunke nor game away their time they are Iewishly strict in keeping the Saboth so zealous as they cannot abide the sent of Popery they repeate sermons pray in their families cleave to the Scripture in all things so curious and nice they will touch nothing that is uncleane But are these hated of God Nay are they not in singular favour with him 2. Are not their workes objected against them the workes of God imposed by God upon all Christians upon paine of damnation as to hate swearing to be strict in the Saboth to detest Popery to be frequent hearers of the word to set up Gods worship in the family to cleave to the Scriptures and get out of the way of evill men In this way which they call heresie must we worship God 3. All this zeale against zeale is kindled not with a coale from the Altar but fired with a flame from hell Iohn 15.19 Because I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you 4. How generall is the hatred of grace by gracelesse men that pinch and reproach good affections zeale they call distemper sorrow for sinne is but melancholy and next to madnesse love of the word is but precisenesse and more than needes love of good men but faction and partiality hatred of every evill worke but singularity holinesse a kinde of heresie purity hollownesse and all that is nought How unlike is the world to God and Christ who commended shewes of goodnesse in the young man never quenched smoking flaxe but kindled it and enflamed it and whosoever hateth grace in another first hates it in himselfe 5. How generally doe we love and cherish in our selves what the Lord hateth First hath hee not specially manifested his hatred against an outward forme of religion severed from the power and life of it Esay 1.14 My soule hateth your feasts and new Moones his owne institutions because they were severed from faith truth and inward holinesse But how generall is the profession of religion without power prayer of words not of spirit hearing without conscience of doing washing the outside when all is foule within Secondly how great indignation hath he testified against people unfaithfull in the covenant as a jealous husband hates the wife of his bosome that playeth false with him Ier. 12.8 yet how universall is our unfaithfulnesse to God the contempt of grace the slighting of the meanes the Apostacy and turning backe of the kingdome from God So as we see how our affections are swerved from the rule and what great neede we have to be stirred up to a more carefull watch over our affections Consider therefore and see the mischiefe of disordered affections First how powerfully they draw us from Christian duties as how they interrupt prayers which was the Apostles argument betweene man and wife an heart troubled with passions cannot be familiar with God nor behold his face no more than a man can see his owne face in a troubled water Consider how they hinder the powerfull working of the word 1 Pet. 2.1 Therefore lay aside all malice envie c. and then receive the word A full vessell can receive no liquor sweete water in a fusty vessell is but lost seede cast among thornes commeth to nought how they unsettle the heart in grace pulling it off from confidence in God love of the truth from exercise of grace from the joyes and consolations of the Spirit For as no man can see the beames of the Sunne when the heavens are covered with clouds so cannot the soule discerne the shining beames of Gods love when it is clouded with passion Secondly how potent are unruly affections to draw us from our duty so suddenly and violently doe they carry us into many sinnes how suddenly are great professours snatched into the love of the world and so become Apostates as Iudas and Demas How doth the love of the world draw on a number of sinnes and drowne men in lusts and perdition How suddenly was David snatched into foulest sinnes not watching his affections How was Peter pulled from his purposes and promises by inordinate selfe-love to the deniall of his Master Acquaint thy selfe with the difficulty of guiding the affections aright for though the common errour thinke it the easiest thing in the world yet the whole power of nature cannot reach it for what a divine wisdome is required holily to temper the affections and keepe them even To temper faith and feare that they enterfeare not to mingle love and hatred that they entrench not one another to holde the ballance even betweene Moses zeale and Moses meeknesse to contend for faith and not be contentious to be couragious and bolde and yet suspitious and alwayes fearefull to be christianly patient and not stoically insensible The same Spirit must afford this wisdome that appeared in the shape of a dove and of fire Consider the necessity of this care and carriage of our affections 1. In beholding the numbers of occasions which daily thrust in upon us to thrust them besides their right objects and enthrall us in pride unjust anger envie wantonnesse carnall love feare c. And were there no such outward occasions who feeles not the spirit in him lust after envie and after the world and after all forbidden fruites so as all care is too little wisely to watch and prevent the continuall disorder of the whole man by his affections 2. What great necessity is it that wise Christians difference themselves from common men it is a great weaknesse to corrupt our affections by the provocations of wicked men to shoote in their bowe to doe as they doe But the godly must be different from them not feare with their feare nor joy with their joy nor kindle anger by theirs nor curse when they
And then we glorifie God in our bodies First when we consecrate them to his service leading an holy and godly life that as he is holy we be also holy in all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 1.11 Ephes. 1.4.6 to be holy to the praise of the glory of his grace Secondly when wee outwardly acknowledge and publish the glory and majesty of God offering him the calves of our lippes the sacrifices of praise and telling what hee hath done for our soules Psal. 50.23 he that praiseth me glorifieth me Thirdly when by our holy conversation wee invite others to glorifie God when men seeing our good workes glorifie our heavenly Father Matth. 5.16 And the reasons of the precept are strong 1. Our bodies they are his by creation redemption and preservation and should not every workmanship serve to the use of the workeman should not the thing bought with a deare price be usefull to the buyer 2. They are not onely his but his Temples The law of nature commands the Temples of God to be kept pure and cleane the Heathens would with great charge decke the Temples of their gods though some that would goe for Christians care not how Gods house lieth their kitchins and stables shall lie handsomer than Gods house if they can hinder it in themselves or others Now our bodies are the Temples of the holy Ghost and where should God be glorified and praised and receive oblations but in his owne Temple 3. To sinne against our owne bodies is to commit sacriledge against the house of God and profanely to spoile Gods Temple of the holy treasures and vessells that were laid up in it And he that destroyes the Temple of God him will God destroy and one way or other will the Lord testifie his wrath against his owne sacred Temple so profaned Christ will whippe buyers and sellers out of his Temple and if they returne hee will overthrow the Temple it selfe and a stone shall not be left upon a stone How suffered the Lord Ierusalem the holy City to be burnt the Arke the most holy place to be carried captive when they were profaned Doe thou robbe God of that glory which he expecteth in the Temple of thy body his hand will be against thee in severity And as the more holy the place profaned the more wrath brake out so the more profession of holinesse thou makest if thou glorifie not God in body and spirit the more severe shall bee thy ruine Ierom in an Epistle to Paulinus tells him that from the time of Adrian to Constantine the great those most famous and priviledged places above all other were most profaned and rejected by God So as in the very place of Christs resurrection there was erected an image of Iupiter On the hill where the Crosse was set up was erected a marble statue for Venus goddesse of lust In Bethlem famous for Christs birth was set the grove of Adonis where the women at a set time every yeare were wont to lament Adonis the Parramour of Venus Even these places of the resurrection of Christ of his passion and his birth the Lord makes them eye-markes of his judgements If God spare not the most holy places if profaned upholde his glory in the Temple of thy body else his jealousie will not spare thee The second generall rule is in Rom. 6.13 Take heede thou give not up thy members weapons of unrighteousnesse to sinne but of righteousnesse to God The Apostle speaketh to those that are regenerate who are said to doe that which Gods grace makes them able to doe And first drawes their eyes backe to the state of nature and corruption in which lately they were while sinne reigned in their mortall bodies to which as to an Emperour 1. they yeelded obedience 2. tooke up weapons that is their owne members and powers of body and minde in the defence of sinne as resolute subjects to that commander Secondly and then drawes them to doe as much now for grace unto which they are called as they did for corruption while they went freely after the motions and commands of sinne Give up your members weapons of righteousnesse The Apostle implies that every regenerate man stands in a pitcht field wherein the Commander or Generall is grace or righteousnesse the quarrell is for God his glory his cause joyned with our salvation the weapons are our owne members which we must give up to righteousnesse That is First we must take new commandements from grace as the souldier depends on the mouth of his Generall for his direction Secondly we must frame to ready obedience be the service never so difficult or dangerous Thirdly stoutly and couragiously fight against sinne as formerly before regeneration we did for sinne and acquit our selves like men And good reason for 1. Kings are maintained and held up in their throne First in peace by the ready obedience of their subjects Secondly in warre by their willingnesse to fight for them If subjects will doe neither of these the King must fall So whatsoever profession we make of grace if thus we withdraw our members from the rule from the quarrell of grace grace is deposed from his reigne and sinne stands in his state and power 2. Weapons and Armes are used in defence of the King and Country and the friends of the King and Country but not against them it is high treason for a subject to take up Armes against his Prince none will doe this against the King or his friends but robbers and common enemies So it high is treason for a man to imploy the members of his body against Grace his Generall and Commander and therefore the Apostle exhorteth us to give up our bodies and members as weapons of righteousnesse being called unto grace let the whole outward man follow the commands of grace Thirdly in our whole course and conversation labour to expresse Gods Image not contenting our selves to get it into our nature onely but also into our conversation Rom. 8.1 Walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit Men deceive themselves while they content themselves with a supposed presence of the Spirit while there is no walking after the Spirit which is a going after the Spirit as a guide and leader of their speeches and actions for that man who must be freed from the condemnation of sinne must be freed also from vaine conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 The power of sinne must be beaten downe in the life and vanities of life and pleasure must be suppressed which still thrust in upon them that professe the teaching of grace who sometimes are carried after carnall delights strange apparell lightnesse of carriage dancing gaming and excesse of pleasures which the spirit should have mortified and brought in a cleane contrary course prescribed in the word and exemplified in the examples of the Saints but especially in that unerring patterne Iesus Christ himself who was led by the Spirit in every motion even the least For thinke we that the
eye gusht out with rivers of teares because men kept not the word Psal. 119.126 These sinfull objects every where should be the griefe of our soules and as swords piercing our hearts which we can too easily conceive pleasure in 5. Our eyes should be ever looking homewards and heavenwards and towards the end of our way as quicke travellers gaze not on things before their feet but hasten to the end of their way This is by heavenly conversation and constant expectation of our Lords returne to take our account we should long after Christ and the place of his abode there should our hearts be where our home is our house our husband our father our eldest brother even Christ himselfe is Thus to order our eyes consider first the danger of a neglected eye in Eve shee saw the fruite was good and forgot the commandement Potiphars wife cast her eye immodestly on Ioseph and said Lye with me David saw Bathsheba washing and was all inflamed It can looke to all things else but not to it selfe that thou mightest looke to it so much more And if the eye spy not nets laid for us it selfe becomes a net Ambrose Secondly an evill eye is made a signe of an evill heart Mark 7.22 out of an evill heart commeth an evill eye and if the eye be evill the body is darke Matth. 6.23 Thirdly a man that gives his heart to God will give his eye too for God calls for both Prov. 23.26 My sonne give me thy heart and let thine eyes delight in my wayes And if thou give him not both he cares for neither and if thou give him not thine eye as well as thy heart thou wilt lose thy heart quickly the adulterous woman will steale away thy heart though thou seemest to give it to God if thou watch not thine eye Fourthly know that if thou wilt not looke to thine eyes hee that made the eye must needes see thee Psal. 94.9 he sees the least unlawfull looke Lots wife cannot turne her face backward but hee sees and smites This is Salomons argument to the young man that will walke in the sight of his owne eyes that God will bring him to judgement Eccles. 11.9 if thou wilt walke after the sight of thine owne eyes doe but know that for thy quicke and nimble and unallowed lookes thou shalt come to judgement Now the directions for the eare The heart cannot possibly be kept in good state without diligent observation of the senses no more than a Citty can be defended where the ports and gates are cast open And as in the keeping of a gate of a Citty diligent care must be taken whom they let in and whom they let out So in keeping this sense we must know 1. when to shut it 2. when to open it First we must keepe shut our eare against the voice of the tempter that Satan and sinne enter not by this wicket Eve not doing this death entred into her soule and all ours Secondly wee must keepe out the entising and alluring of sinners which are as the Syrens songs Prov. 1.10 My sonne of sinners entise thee consent not And take heede of evill rotten and poysonfull communication let no evill corrupt communication passe through thine eares for evill words corrupt good manners and the want of learning this counsell is the bane of all modesty and civility in this age for this corrupteth first the heart and then the conversation it is like fire cast into a barrell of gunpowder that sets all on fire presently A Christian must neither speake filthy language nor heare it Thirdly keepe out reproaches slanderous and reviling tales whisperings against the good names of our brethren for what difference is there betweene carrying of Satan in the tongue or in the eare A good man will not slander with his tongue nor receive it into his eares David sinned in the ease of Mephibosheth by meanes of slanderous Ziba whom he should have driven away with an angry looke Fourthly wee must not heare or give heede to false doctrine errours heresies and libertine opinions contrary to truth received Deut. 13.3.8 If thy brother thy owne sonne or thy daughter or the wife that lyeth in thy bosome or thy friend which is as thine owne soule intice thee secretly saying let us serve other Gods c. thou shalt not consent unto him nor heare him neither shall thine eye pittie him nor shew mercie nor keepe him secret but thou shalt even kill him and thine hand shall be first upon him to put him to death and then the hands of all the people c. 1 Tim. 4.1.7 Beware of this itching eare which comes to Church rather to censure the Preacher than it selfe as Herod having Iohn before him sought some miracles to please his curiosity but sought not grace for his salvation and departed and left Iohn as he found him as the beasts uncleane went out of the Arke uncleane came they in and so they went out They sinne against this rule that desire novell doctrine forsake the beaten path and simplicity of received truthes and runne into new and strange conceits and confused errours troubling with the faith of men the peace of the Church and happy proceedings of the Gospell Fifthly especially beware of hearing Gods name blasphemed by oathes and cursed speeches or his religion or profession or servants dishonoured without our defence A godly heart is carefull neither to sinne himselfe nor communicate in the sinnes of others In a word in all the speeches we heare remember Iob 34.3 The eare tryeth words as the taste tryeth meates to let no words goe downe into the soule which are not wholesome else we are justly blame-worthy by neglecting this sence Secondly we must learne to know when to open the eare As 1. To heare the word of God This is called an hearing eare and an obedient eare an eare inclined to heare wisdomes sayings Prov. 4.20 Remember it is a note of him that is of God to heare his word hee heares what the Spirit saith to the Churches Iohn 8.47 hee is swift to heare Iames 1.19 2. There is a deafe eare by which men become like the idols that have eares and heare not And this being a great plague is followed with a greater the eare turned from hearing the Law Gods eare is turned from hearing his prayers his very prayer is abominable what then is his person Now would you know whether you have this hearing eare or not take it thus It is Swift Patient Wise. First swift to heare on all good occasions it knowes God hath given him two eares and on either side of the head to teach him to apprehend all occasions to gaine instruction Secondly patient in hearing our owne sinnes disgraced the coare of our owne corruptions lanced and let out our owne duties described it must be a boared eare like Christs signified by that boared eare of the Iewish servant Exod. 21.6 a painfull signe of perpetuall subjection and
Nay perhaps those that have built an Arke to save others as Noahs Carpenters shall be drowned themselves Yea more a man may defend the word as Iulian and receive within him the seede of the word and bring forth some fruites as the bad ground did and all this is like effectuall calling Thirdly by ineffectuall calling a man may come to see his sinne to sorrow and grieve for it to confesse his sinne be humbled for it ashamed of it to acknowledge his estate to be nought and preferre the state of the godly before his owne yea wish and desire to change estates with them as Balaam He may crave pardon of his sinne desire the prayers of Saints as Pharaoh and Simon Magus He may refraine himselfe in many sinnes as Haman He may fast and rent his clothes and lie in sackcloth as Ahab He may doe many things at the direction of the word as Herod for Iohn and yet be in the gall of bitternesse And is not this like effectuall calling Fourthly by ineffectuall calling a man may attaine to some kinde of faith can beleeve Christ a Saviour can get a perswasion that Christ redeemed him can taste some sweetnesse as if hee drew vertue from Christ can rejoyce as in a good estate as the stony ground received the seede with joy Luke 8.13 And some that being not onely enlightened but taste of the good word and power of the life to come shall quite f●ll away Hebr. 6.6 And some we reade of denying the Lord that bought them that is both in their owne profession and perswasion and in the charitable judgement of others This is so like effectuall calling as no man but would thinke them sheepe of Christ as themselves doe but are not Fifthly by ineffectuall calling a man may partake of the Spirit of God and be in some sort sanctified by the blood of the Covenant Heb. 10.29 Hee may attaine unto many excellent graces as joy in hearing sweete gifts in praying power in preaching a kinde of love of God humility under the hand of God as Ahab a reverencing of good men as Herod reverenced Iohn a seemely externall worship of God bounty and freenesse to uphold the worship of God and not sticke at thousands of rammes and rivers of oyle Vnto a fiery zeale for the Lord of hoasts and upholding his worship as Iehu who seemed a servant that could not abide his Masters dishonour but departed not from the sinnes of his fathers All which a man would thinke belongs to sound and effectuall calling This likenesse therefore of the one with the other makes effectuall calling the more hardly discerned Now therefore seeing this outward and ineffectuall calling brings us not into grace with God without the inward 2. Seeing it is common to good and bad Matth. 22.9 Call in all you finde 3. Seeing it is unprofitable as what profit had Ismael of his Circumcision Esau in Isaacks family or Iudas in Christs family being profane 4. Seeing to be in the Church and not of it is to deprive himselfe of the chiefe priviledges of the Church which is remission of sinnes and life everlasting We must therefore labour to finde in our selves such sure markes of effectuall calling as yet were never found in hypocrites that wee may be sure our calling is sound and saving proper to the elect a note and forerunner of eternall glory Quest. What are these markes Answ. 1. A discerning of the voice of him that calleth this implies hearing For hee that heareth not Gods word is not of God Ioh. 8.47 But besides hearing First here is a spirit of discretion putting difference betweene truth and errour good and evill Cant. 2.8 It is the voice of my welbeloved and Ioh. 10.8 My sheepe heare my voice and a stranger they will not heare Secondly there is a perswasion of him that calleth Gal. 5.8 which is beyond hearing called the hearing eare which hypocrites want Thirdly there is a yeelding unto the perswasion that it passe not without some such effect as is not to be found in any hypocrite The faithfull have an oyntment given them and see Christ in his voice comming every day nearer them than other It is the voice of my welbeloved Beholde hee comes leaping over the mountaines skipping over the hills See this in some instances The Lord pleaseth to speake and utter his voice sundry wayes outwardly and inwardly 1. Outwardly 1. In the ministery of the word and Sacraments 2. He calleth by the voice of his mercies and corrections 2. Inwardly by the still voice of his Spirit to the conscience Now wee shall see effectuall calling answers all these I. If God speake in the ordinary meanes and Ministery an heart effectually called heareth the word not onely to know it but to be directed by it not onely to consent to the truth of it as hypocrites and Divels may but to approve and like it to receive it not into the eare onely but into the affection and not into the affection of joy onely as the hypocrite but of love feare trembling and the rest and not into the affections onely but into the conscience whereby they let it in further and allow it a deeper rooting than any hypocrite can doe And therefore in the one it is an illumination like a blaze soone extinct againe in the other it is a cleare light and lampe that carries them along into the bride-chamber In the one it is like a sodaine flash of lightening as soone gone as come in the other it is like the Sun-shine that shines all the day long for direction and comfort For the parts of the word the Law and the Gospell If God speake in the Law an heart effectually called heares that voice not onely to see his sinne and sorrow for it which an hypocrite may but to hate his sinne to loathe it and leave it yea not to leave many or all but one all but our Herodias but to forsake even the most beloved and bosome sinnes Hee heares the voice of God in the Law as a rule of life not onely to restraine corruption but to drive him out to sound renovation and reformation Hee heares the voice of the Law to get out of his estate of nature and to get into the state of the godly not at death onely as Balaam but in his life and to apprehend so the end of godlinesse as he useth the meanes to compasse it whereas an hypocrite aimes at the end but either passeth over or slubbers the meanes If God speake in the Gospell an heart effectually called heareth that voice offering grace and pardon to it which because it is weary and laden this voice is as flagons of wine to revive his soule ready to faint in him but an hypocrite being not seriously humbled heares carelesly The former heares this voice as an instrument of saving faith by which he beleeves Christ not onely a common Saviour but his in speciall not to wish onely
glory where then is our free-will to attain salvation before our calling can we not holde our salvation after our calling unlesse God holde it for us and can wee lay holde on it before our effectuall calling Away with such Pharisaicall and proud conceits of Popery that all the glory and praise may be ascribed unto him whose faithfulnesse can and will present us spotlesse before the presence of his glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. Let us cast downe our crownes at the feete of the Lambe and put off all praise of doing any thing from our selves and confesse that unlesse the Lord should adde his last worke to the first all were lost In naturall life our selves conferre nothing to our lives or being at first and after we are it is Gods care that preserves us for man lives not by bread onely but by every word of God Neither doth mans life stand in abundance Luke 12.15 Much more in supernaturall life his worke it is to preserve us whose will is to save us Secondly it serves for a ground of consolation in that the authour of all our grace is faithfull and unchangeable hee beginneth and accomplisheth and worketh all our workes for us He not onely bestoweth a free grace upon his people but undertakes to preserve and perfect it And therefore we may 1. Rely confidently upon this faithfulnesse for all supplies roule all thy burden upon him and he will doe it Psal. 37.5 2. By prayer of faith importune his faithfulnesse not to forsake the worke of his owne hands till hee have finished it Hereby commit thy whole way unto him commend thy selfe thy soule unto him in well-doing and hee will keepe it 2 Tim. 1.18 3. Rest thy selfe undaunted in afflictions in dangers and losses seeing Gods faithfulnesse will keepe thee safe he will keepe thy salvation for thee Heaven is reserved for thy childes part no great matter what other things be lost or endangered 4. Findest thou want of strength in temptation feelest not thou the joy of thy salvation groanest thou under the burden of corruption weaknesse of faith dulnesse in duties goe to this faithfulnesse of God importune him for needfull grace say to him Oh thou that art a faithfull God thou hast called me and therefore doe thou doe it finish and perfect thine owne worke in me Thirdly for a ground of watchfulnesse and care over our selves that we may not grow either secure or idle and say If God will keepe us all is well for hee keepes his owne by meanes and keepes none who have not a care to keepe themselves Quest. What are the meanes whereby God will keepe me Answ. 1. Hee finisheth the worke begun by the word the arme of God which began it Observe the worke of the word in thee Keepe the word and it shall keepe thee attend the word for the powerfull preaching of Christ keeps the soule till the day of Christ. 2. By his holy Spirit who renewes our strength and graces therefore stirre up the Spirit that is in thee and cheare him in thy heart by listening to his motions and taking his part against thy daily corruptions 3. By the grace of faith 1 Pet. 1.5 Yee are kept through faith to salvation Therefore nourish faith quicken it encrease it walke by faith live by faith observe the growth of faith in the power of prayer and strength in good duties this is the victory that overcomes the world 4. By his daily providence guiding us to such courses and companies as by which we may not be losers in grace but gainers keepe thee in thy wayes and hee will keepe thee in them Psal. 91.11 Beware of consenting much more of delighting in sinne and sinners Fourthly a ground of thankfulnesse for graces received all which have flowed from Gods faithfulnesse Hast thou faith hope strength peace of conscience or comfortable assurance ascribe all the glory to God who hath declared his faithfulnesse in giving and encreasing and upholding the same whereas every day our weaknesse and carelesnesse would lose it every sinne might forfeit it and every assault of Satan and seducers would easily robbe us of it Prize this estate in grace make it sure a man will be sure of a good title of any thing hee holdes Rejoyce in it and in the evidences of it as well as in it selfe VERSE 25. Brethren pray for us IN these words the Apostle commendeth a duty of love toward their Ministers which must expresse it selfe in earnest prayers for them In which words 1. wee have a loving compellation Brethren to these onely the duty is directed for they onely can pray or can be heard the wicked mans prayer because he wants the Spirit wants faith is no sonne none of the brethren his prayer is abominable 2. The persons commended to their prayers For us that is Paul Silvanus Timotheus chap. 1.1 men of highest place of most excellent gifts and of rarest graces the Ministers of their faith These chosen vessels and worthy instruments request the prayers of inferiour and ordinary beleevers 3. What the things be which they must pray for in their behalfe and these are elsewhere expressed First for gifts and skill in dispensing the mysteries of the Gospell that they may speake the word as it ought to be spoken Ephes. 6.19 20. And for mee that utterance might be given that I may speake boldly as I ought to speake Did Paul need their prayers for that purpose and doe not ordinary Ministers much more Secondly for liberty and free passage of the Gospel in the mouthes of the Ministers that without let and impediment the Gospel might be preached without interruption or contradiction 2 Thess. 3.1 Brethren pray for us that the word of God may have free passage This is called sometime the opening of a doore which was shut Col. 4 3. Praying for us that God may open to us a doore of utterance Thirdly for happy successe and prosperity of their labours in the hearts of the Saints for their gathering 2 Thess. 3.1 Pray for us that the word of God may be glorified even as it is with you Now the Thessalonians had received it in power and with much assurance People must pray that by the labour of their Ministers the conversion and salvation of men may be furthered for Paul may plant and Apollos may water but unlesse God give the increase all is lost 1 Cor. 3.7 Fourthly for the daily sanctification of their persons that they may by unblameable conversation remove the lets and scandalls which might hinder their doctrine and become examples to their flocke in good life and in expression of all good workes So the Apostle Hebr. 13.18 Pray for us for we are assured that we have a good conscience in all things desiring to live honestly As this is an argument that you should pray for us being innocent and honest men so pray that wee may so continue Fifthly for the protection and safetie of their
distressed consciences 107 Sound doctrine must be strongly held for 3 reasons 127 Doctrine of faith all grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 343 E. Eare to be shut 5 rules 288 Hearing eare knowne by 3 notes 291 Elias sinned not in calling for fire from heaven but the Disciples did two differences 116 Eye must be watched in 5 things 282 Why we must carefully order our eyes 4 reasons 287 Examples of Scripture warrant not our marriage with IIdolaters 3 reas 162 Examples to uphold our perseverance 4. 330 F. No fall so wofull as to fall from grace 16 False rules of triall of things 6. 73 Ancient Fathers avoided all conformity with heretickes in their externall ceremonies Instances 160 Fantasticall and forreigne fashions of apparell condemned 5 Arguments 122 Faithfull is God 4 wayes 334 Faithfulnesse in the Creator and creature differ in 4 things Ibid. Faithfulnesse required in our promises 339 In our callings 340. In our friendship 341. In communicating our talents 342 Faithfulnesse of God preserveth to salvation all that are effectually called 4 reasons 385 Fearfull is the condition of that man that repines at a powerfull and faithfull Ministry 3 reasons 406 Fire of the Spirit how quenched 3 Fire of grace violently smothered how 22 Folly of those that neglect the assurance of their owne salvation 4 reasons 365 Forefathers way no sure rule of tryall 5 reasons 77 Foure excellent fruits in avoiding petty evills 152 Sweet fruits of well guiding our affections 6. 270 G. Gifts of the Spirit to be observed in our selves for 4 reasons 26 Gifts of God which and how without repentance 390 Godly by the inhabitation of the Spirit both honoured and comforted 9 Godly must be carefull not to quench the Spirit 5 reasons 14 God called the God of peace 3 reas 175 Godlinesse makes no man unpeaceable or turbulent 188 Godly company a meanes of growth in holinesse 3 wayes 213 God to be glorified in our bodies how 273 God must be glorified in our bodies 3 reasons 274 God is most faithfull 4 reasons 336 Glory of Christ now vailed 3 wayes 310 True goodnesse groweth from good to better and so is best at last 227 No good must be held but after tryall 132 Good things must be carefully held and kept for 5 reasons 125 Good actions spoyled in undue circumstances 113 Graces of the Spirit compared to fire in 5 things 3 Grace quenched in what degrees 5 Graces of some kindes not wholly extinct 4 Grace as fire suffered to die of it selfe 3 wayes 20 Grace in others must be excited 3 reasons 37 Grieve the Spirit 4 wayes 25 Growth in holinesse rare 4 proofes 220 Grounds on which the prayers of people for their Ministers must be raised 3. 401 H. Hand to be ordered 5 rules 292 The heart must be kept pure for the pure Spirit of God 10 For keeping the heart 5 generall rules 247 The heart how bounded within Gods limits 3 directions 252 We must hate where the Lord hateth 4 instances 261 Hatred of evill knowne by the practise of the contrary vertue 165 Helpes of perseverance 5. 327 Wee must hold onely that which is good and all that is good 132 Humility in lowest degree pretended by seducers 64 I. Iesuiticall confusion of phrases hath beene the confusion of the world 95 No Iewells to be so carefully kept as our soul●s and spirits 2 reas 232 and 4 reasons more 235 Image of God must be gotten not onely into our nature but into our conversation 277 Implicit popish faith refu●ed 69 No imperfection hinders Gods faithfulnesse 4 Instances 337 Illumination is not sanctification 4 reas 205 In all indifferent things 〈◊〉 are to avoid all appearance of evill and scandall with 4 limitations 149 Indifferent things to be forborne for edification with 4 cautions 117 The inside to be washed first for 5 reasons 236 Invocation of Saints departed derogateth from the glory of God 97 L. Lawes humane imperfect rules of life for 4 reasons 81 Lots of perseverance to be removed 5. 324 Losse of worldly things no losse to losse of spirituall graces 143 Love our neighbor as our selves with what conditions 116 We must love most where God most loveth 4 instances 260 M. Man by nature more prone to any evill than to the least good 3 reasons 67 Manifold mischiefes which overtake the despisers of Prophecy 5 instances 45 Man of God 1 Kings 13.6 praying in an Idolatrous Temple no warrant for us 4 reasons 157 Marriage with Idolaters unlawfull 4 reasons 161 Marks of effectuall calling reduced to 3 generall heads 370 Meanes of quenching the Spirit 3. 20 Meanes to blow up the Spirit 7. 33 Meanes to embrace Prophecy 5. 48 Meanes of holding that which is good 4. 137 Meanes of maintaining sound peace of conscience 5. 185 Meanes of attaining a full measure of holinesse 209 Meanes to keepe the tongue blamelesse 4. 298 Meanes of perseverance in generall 3. 322 Meanes by which God keepeth his owne 4. 394 Meditations helping the increase of holinesse 1. Concerning God 3 2. Concerning our selves 4 3. Concerning holines it self 209 Meditations to stablish us against persecutions 326 Members must be weapons of righteousnesse how and why 275 Memory how to be kept unblameable in 2 things 245 Men of greatest grace neede the prayers of weaker Christians 3 reasons 398 Merits humane against analogy of faith 91 Merit an ambitious word in reference to man not found in Scripture 100 Ministers must not onely preach but pray for their people 3 reasons 172 Ministery powerfull must be conscionably embraced for 3 reasons 42 Mischiefe of disordered affections 266 Motions of the Spirit much different in the godly and wicked 4 instances 18 Motions of the Spirit to be observed 36 Motives to stirre up the Spirit 4. 33 Motives to carefull use of meanes of quickening the Spirit 3. 38 Motives to full sanctification 6. 221 Motives to perseverance 5. 329 Motives to finde in our selves the sure signes of effectuall calling 4. 383 Monasticall life refuted by 6 reasons 93 Multitude of voices not to be numbred but weighed 56 N. Naamans practise no warrant for us to be present at Idolatrous service for three reasons 158 Name of a Christian hath in it many motives to grow up to full holinesse 226 Necessary duties must be done though all the world be offended 148 Necessity of increasing in holinesse 4 reas 203 Necessity of carefull keeping our selves drawne from our selves in 4 things 233 Necessity of well guiding our thoughts 4 reasons 245 Necessity of well ordering our affections 2 reas 268 O. Obedience of faith all grounded upon Gods faithfulnesse 344 Right objects of our affections in which they must be most vehement and intense 258 Choyse objects for the eye 5. 284 Objections against perseverance answered 304 Objections from infirmities of our prayers answered 400 Outward man must be kept blamelesse 3 reasons 300 P. All peace must be from the God of peace 3 reas 179 No peace to be affected but
that which is an effect of Gods mercy in Christ. 183 Perseverance of Saints set on 3 sure grounds 303 Perseverance is never divorced from true faith 3 reas 312 Perseverance most assaulted by Satan 314 Lets of it 5.324 Meanes 3.322 Meditations to stablish it 326. Motives to it 329. Examples 330 People must pray for their Ministers 3 reas 401 People neglecting to pray for their Ministers lay themselves under the guilt of many sins 5 instances 402 Perseverance of Saints all grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 351 Places choyse and safe to keepe good things in 4. 140 Popish doctrine leades men away from Christ 6 instances 101 Popery most pleasing to corrupt nature 6 instances 104 Popish doctrine a most desperate and uncomfortable doctrine and therefore false 5 instances 107 Pope a strange mysticall name unknowne to the learned Papists themselves 135 Power of Christ discernable in our effectuall calling by 4 signes 362 Preservatives against decay in the measure of graces 3. 29 Present at Idolatrous service unlawfull with pretence of keeping the heart to God 5 reasons 156 In all our prayers we must behold God a God of peace 177 Prayer a meanes of growth in holinesse in 4 things 212 Prayer for perseverance not in vaine for them that shall persevere 3 reas 306 Prayers of faith all grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 347 Prophecy what 40 Prophets not to be despised 49 Propound to our selves still an higher pitch and degree in grace 37 Prosperity of the wicked no true peace 4 differences 182 Profession of faith must all be grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 348 Q. To quench the Spirit more damnable than to want him 16 Questions Whether a doctrine backed with consent of ancient Fathers or the authority of Councels or other Antiquity may not be free from tryall 54 Whether any thing comming backed with example of great men or of the generall multitude or custome ofttimes be free from triall 55 Whether any thing comming with Caesars authority and superscription be exempted from triall 56 Who must try all things 57 How a man may know anothers calling 354 Whether a man called alwayes know his calling 359 R. Reason corrupt no right rule of tryall for 3 reasons 74 Recreations on the Sabbath of what kinde 119 Regenerate said to be blamelesse in 5 respects 196 199 Renovation in all the faculties 197 Renovation must be without as well as within 3 reas 278 The retentive faculty of the soule strengthened by 4 meanes 140 Rules of tryall whether the Spirit be quenched reduced to 5 heads 27 Rules in respect of our owne sinnes shewing the Spirit to be abated 5. 31 Rule of all tryalls what 58 Our Rule must be ever in our hand 88 Rules for tryall of all doctrines 6 132 Rules for holding good 6 90 Rules to keepe the affections unblameable many 257 S. Sanctification unsound wants 3 things which should make it hold out 382 Sanctification the description explained in 4 things 189 Sanctification of the Spirit why so called sundry reas 190 Sanctification in perpetuall motion 4 reas 191 Thorow sanctification in this life in 4 things 192 Full sanctification in the life to come in 4 things 193 Sanctification stockes up the roote of sinne civility onely cuts off some waste boughes 307 No Saint in earth none in heaven ●●8 Saints have all the same Spirit for 4 reasons 6 Scriptures the rule of all tryalls 4 reasons 59 Scriptures afford us five safe rules concerning following our forefathers 78 Shew of evill in doctrines must be avoided 153 All shewes of evill must be shunned in practise and behaviour 154 Signes of the Spirits presence 6. 1● Signes of generall Apostacy among our selves 6 316 Silence of God must not animate sinners 4 reasons 85 Singlenesse of heart knowne by 3 signes 249 Similitude betweene calling effectuall and ineffectuall five instances 367 Sinnes of others great meanes to quench the Spirit 24 Small evills to be shunned for 4 reasons 156 167 Speech given men why 3 uses 294 Spirit what is meant by it in Scripture 1 Spirit the same in the godly and wicked but differently 7 Spirit subject to be quenched in the best 14 Spirit of God is holy both in his nature and operation 15 Spirit discerned to be quenched both in the 1. number 2. measure of graces 27 Spirit referred to man what it meaneth 193 Spirit how taken away from the Saints 4 wayes 307 Stage-playes ought not to be frequented 6 reasons 121 Successe no certaine rule for actions 85 T. Teachers no way disparaged by triall of their doctrines but the truth a gainer by it 70 Things to be tryed what 52 Theeves and robbers incessantly stealing good things from us 3 sorts 142 Three things in a mans selfe call on him for growth in holinesse 223 Thoughts how to be holily ordered 242 Thoughts to be watched and why 243 Time of a mans calling not alwayes knowne 3 reas 357 Tongue abused 5 wayes 295 Tongue to be ordered and watched for 4 reasons 298 Trial● whether the Spirit be quenched in regard of good motions 29 Whether in regard of good duties 4 rules 30 Triall of things what 52 Trialls of growth in holinesse 5. 16 Traditions unwritten rejected 4 reasons 61. ●01 Transubstantiation against the analogy of faith ●0 Truth not to be tryed by persons but persons by truth 54 True teachers not so assisted but that they may deceive and be deceived ●● That is the true doctrine which giveth mos● 〈…〉 ●●stances ●7 V. Vniversall election and redemption derogateth from Gods glory 99 Vsury cond●mned 96 W. Well watching of the heart stands in 4 things 250 The will to be rightly ordered 4 rules 253 The will must determine with God and for God in every thing Instances 254 The will renewed knowne by many signes 255 The will of man why it must be well bended 3 reasons 256 Wicked men esteeme the godly unpeaceable because they will not lose their peace 188 Christian wisdome will avoid all beginnings and appearances of evill 151 Seeking to witches condemned by 6 reasons 118 Whole man sanctified throughout in 3 things 195 Word and Sacraments in their reverent use doe notably excite the Spirit in us 33 Word a meanes to increase holinesse 4 wayes 212 The word upholds us in our way 4 wayes 327 Our words must be faithfull 4 reasons 338 Working on the sabboth day condemned 7 reasons 119 Worst things must be most hated 260 GOod Reader among some smaller faults in printing which wee desire thy curtesie to passe by two are observed as changing the sence Page 268. line 28. reade those 4 lines thus All wise and 〈◊〉 walking is included under the affections of the feare of the ●ord 〈◊〉 the ●uties of the whole Law are all 〈◊〉 prized under 〈…〉 Love Page 319. li●e 3 〈…〉 highly 2 Tim. 2.25 Magnes amoris amor From my study Novemb. 17. the happy day of that admired Queene Elizabeth the worlds wonder the famous Mother of our