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A50480 En oligo christianos, the almost Christian discovered, or, The false-professor tried and cast being the substance of seven sermons, first preached at Sepulchres, London, 1661, and now at the inportunity of friends made publick / by Matthew Meade. Mead, Matthew, 1630?-1699. 1662 (1662) Wing M1546; ESTC R9895 121,691 343

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that goes to the bone and seems to indanger the life of the Patient and is not healed but with great skill and when it is healed leaves a Scar behinde it that when the Patient is well yet he can say here is the mark of my wound which will never wear out Vna eademque manus pulnus opemque tulit So a soul that is under Spiritual conviction his wound is deep and not to be healed but by the great skill of the Heavenly Physitian and when it is healed there are the tokens of it remaining in the soul that can never be worn out so that the soul may say here are the markes and signes of my conviction still in my soul 5. Natural convictions make the Soul shy of God guilt works fear and fear causes estrangedness thus it was with Adam Gen. 3.8 when he saw his nakedness he ran away and hid himself from God Ier. 31.18 Now spiritual convictions drive not the soul from God but unto God Ephraims conviction was spiritual and he runs to God Turn thou me and I shall be turned So that there is you see a great difference between conviction and conviction between that which is natural and that which is spiritual that which is Common and that which is Saving Yea such is the difference that though a man hath never so much of the former yet if he be without the latter he is but almost a Christian and therefore we have great reason to inquire more after this spiritual conviction For 1. Spiritual conviction is an essential part of sound conversion conversion begins here true conversion begins in convictions and true convictions end in conversion Till the sinner be convinced of sin he can never be converted from sin Christs coming was as a Saviour to dye for sinners and the spirits comming is to convince us as sinners that we may close with Christ as a Saviour till sin be throughly discovered to us interest in the blood of Christ cannot rightly be claimed by us nay so long as sin is unseen Christ will be unsought They that be whole needs not the Physitian but they that are sick Mat. 9.12 2. Slight and common convictions when they are but skin deep are the cause of much Hypocrisie Slight convictions may bring the soul to clasp about Christ but not to close with Christ and this is the guise of a Hypocrite I know no other rise and spring of Hypocrisie like this of slight convictions this hath filled the Church of Christ with Hypocrites Mat. 13.5 6. Nay it is not onely the spring of Hypoorisie but it is also the spring of Apostacy what was the cause that the Seed was said to Wither away Mat. 13.5 6. is was because it had no deepness of earth Where there is a through conviction there is a depth of earth in the heart and there the Seed of the Word grows but where convictions are slight and common there the seed withers for want of depth so that you see clearly in this one instance whence it is that many are but almost Christians when they have gone so far in Religion viz. for want of sound convictions Mat. 13.20 21. Secondly And this hath a neer Relation to the former It is for want of a through work of grace first wrought in the heart where this is not all a mans following profession comes to nothing that Scholar is never like to read well that will needs be in his Grammer before he is out of his Primmer Cloath that is not wrought well in the Loom will neither wear well nor wear long it will do little service so that Christian that doth not come well off the Loom that hath not a through work of grace in his heart will never wear well he will shrink in the wetting and never do much service for God it is not the pruning of a bad tree will make it bring forth good fruit but the tree must be made good before the fruit can be good Mat. 12.33 He that takes up a profession of Religion with an unbroken heart will never serve Christ in that profession with his whole heart If there be not a true change in that mans heart that yet goes far and doth much in the ways of God to be sure he will either dye an Hypocrite or an Apostate Look as in nature if a man be not well born but prove crooked or mishapen in the birth why he will be crooked as long as he lives you may boulster or stuff out his clothes to conceal it but the crookedness the deformity remains still you may hide it but you cannot help it it may be covered but it cannot be cured Iohn 3.5 So it is in this case if a man come into a profession of Religion but be not right born if he be not begotten of God and born of the Spirit if there be not a through work of grace in his heart all his profession of Religion will never mend him he may be boulsterd out by a life of duties but he will be but a Hypocrite at last for want of a through work at first a forme of godliness may cover his crookedness but will never cure it A man can never be a true Christian nor accepted of God though in the highest profession of Religion without a work of grace in the heart For 1. There must be an answerableness in the frame of that mans heart that would be accepted of God to the duties done by him his spirit and affections within must carry a proportion to his profession without Prayer without faith obedience to the law given without fear and holy reverence of the Law giver God abhors acts of internal worship must answer the duties of external worship Now where there is not grace wrought in the heart there can never be any proportion or answerableness in the frame of that mans heart to the duties done by him 2. Those duties that find acceptance with God must be done in sincerity God doth not take our duties by tale nor judge of us according to the frequency of our performances but according to the sincerity of our hearts in the performance It is this that commends both the doer and the duty to God with sincerity God accepts the least we do without sincerity God rejects the most we do or can do This is that temper of spirit which God highly delights in Prov. 11.20 They that are of a froward heart 1 Chron. 19 17. are an abomination to the Lord but such as are upright in their way are his delight We read it Godly sincerity The Apostle gives it a great Epithete he calls it in 2 Cor. 1.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sincerity of God that is such a sincerity as is his special work upon the soul setting the heart right and upright before him in all his ways This is the Crown of all our graces and the commendation of all our duties thousands
of Christ It is bad being at peace till Christ speaks peace nothing can truely pacifie conscience less then that which pacifies God and that is the blood of the Lord Christ Now the almost Christian quiets conscience but not with the blood of Christ it is not a peace flowing from Christs propitiation but a peace rising from a formal profession not a peace of Christs giving but a peace of his own making He silences and bribes conscience with a forme of godliness and so makes it give way to an undoing foul destroying peace he rocks it asleep in the Cradle of duties and then it is a thousand to one it never awaketh more till death or judgment Ah my brethren it is better to have conscience never quiet then quieted any way but by the blood of Sprinkling a good conscience unquiet is the greatest affliction to Saints and an evil conscience quiet is the greatest judgment to sinners 5. It is dangerous to be almost a Christian in respect of the unpardonable sin the sin that the Scripture saith can never be forgiven neither in this World nor in the World to come Mat. 12.32 I mean the sin against the holy Ghost now such are onely capable of sinning that sin as are but almost Christians A true beleiver cannot the work of grace in his heart that seed of God abiding in him secures him against it 1 Joh. 3.9 compared with the 5. Chap. 16 17 18. Act. 7.51 The prophane open ignorant sinner cannot though he lives daily and hourly in sin yet he cannot commit this sin for it must be from an enlightned mind every sinner under the Gospel especially sins sadly against the Holy Ghost against the strivings and motions of the Spirit he resists the holy ghost but yet this is not the sin against the holy Ghost There must be three ingredients to make up that sin 1. It must be wilful Heb. 10.26 if we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remains no more sacrisice for sin 2. It must be against light and convictions after we have received the knowledge of the truth 3. It must be destinatâ malitia Blasphemia in s●iritum sanctum ea est qua quis dest nata ma itia contra proprum anime sui sensum spiritus sancti grattam virtutem deique gloriam oprugnat Luc. Brugens in Mat. 12. in resolved malice Now you shall find all these ingredients into the sin of the Pharisees Mat. 12.22 Christ heals one that was possessed with a Devil a great work which all the people wondred at v. 23. But what say the Pharisees see v. 24. This fellow casteth out Devils by the Prince of Devils now that this was the sin against the holy ghost is clear for it was both wilful and malicious and against clear convictions they could not but see that he was the Son of God and that this work was a peculiar work of the Spirit of God in him and yet they say he wrought by the Devil Whereupon Christ charges them with this sin against the Holy Ghost v. 31.32 now these Pharisees were a sort of great professors compare this with Mark 3.28 29 30. whence I gather this conclusion That it is the professor of Religion that is the subject of this sin Not the open carnal sinner not the true beleiver but the formal professor Not the sinner for he hath neither light nor grace not the beleiver for he hath both light and grace therefore the formal professor for he hath light but no grace Here then is the great danger of being almost a Christian he is liable to this dreadful unpardonable sin 6. This being but almost a Christian subjects us to apostacy he that gets no good by walking in the ways of God will quickly leave them and walk no more in them this I gather from Hos 14.9 Who is wise and he shall understand these things prudent and he shall know them for the ways of the Lord are right and the just shall walk in them but the transgressors shall fall therein The just shall walk in them he whose heart is renewed and made right with God he shall keep close to God in his ways But the transgressours shall faell therein the word in the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 peshangim from a word that signifies to prevaricate so that we may read the words thus The ways of the Lord are right and the just shall walk in them but he that prevaricates that is a Hypocrite in the Ways of God he shall fall therein An unsound heart will never hold out long in the ways of God Joh. 5.35 He was a burning and a shining light and ye were willing for a season to rejoyce in that light Job 27.10 For a season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for an hour a short space and then they left him It is a notable question Job puts concerning the Hypocrite Will he delight himself in the Almighty will he always call upon God He may do much but these two things he cannot do He cannot make God his delight He cannot persevere in duties at all times and in all conditions Pro. 24.16 Deut. 33.27 He will be an Apostate at last the scab of Hypocrisie usually breaks out in the plague soar of Apostacy Conversion ground is standing ground it is terra firma but a graceless profession of Religion is slippery ground and falling ground Julian the Apostate was first Julian the professour I know it is possible a beleiver may fall but yet he rises again the everlasting arms are underneath but when the hypocrite falls who shall help him up Eccl. 4 10 Salomon saith Wo to him that is alone when he falls that is without interest in Christ why wo to him for he hath none to help him up if Jesus Christ do not recover him who can David fell and was restored for he had one to help him up but Judas fell and perished for he was alone 7. This being but almost a Christian provokes God to bring dreadful spiritual judgement upon a man Barrenness is a spiritual judgment now this provokes God to give us up to barrenness when Christ found the fig-tree that had leaves but no fruit he pronounces the curse of barrenness upon it Never fruit grow on thee more Mat. 21.19 and so Ezek. 47.11 The miry places thereof and the marish places thereof shall not be healed they shall be given to salt 2 Thes 2.10 11 12. A Spirit of delusion is a sad judgement why this is the almost Christians judgment that receives the truth but not in the love of it because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved for this cause God shall send them strong delusion Lu. 19.42 To lose either light or sight either ordinances or eyes is a great spiritual judgment why this is the almost Christians judgment he that profits not under the means provokes
short pag. 13 Thirdly They that can hear such Truths as this without serious reflection and self-examination may suspect the goodness of their condition pag. 14 The Doctrine reassumed and demonstrated by Scripture evidence 1. By the example of the young man in the Gospel pag. 14 15 16 2. Proof from the parable of the Virgins pag. 17 18 19 20 3. The Demonstration from Isa 58.2 The Text opened pag. 21 22 23 25 For the more distinct prosecution of the point is shewed First How far a man may go what at tainments he may reach unto what progress he may make in Religion and yet be but almost a Christian Secondly Whence it is that many go so far as that they are almost Christians Thirdly Why they are but almost Christians Fourthly What the reason is why men that go so far to be almost hristians go no farther then to be almost Christians Quest 1. How far a man may go in the way to heaven and yet be but almost a Christian This shewn in Twenty several steps 1. A man may have much knowledge and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 27 Object But is it not said This is life eternal to know the onely true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent answered pag. 28 29 30 2. A man may have great and eminent gifts yea spiritual and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 31 1. Gifts from the common work of the Spirit pag. 32 2. Gifts from the use and good of others ibid. 3. It is beyond the power of the greatest gifts to change the heart pag. 35 4. Many have gone loaden with gifts to hell ib. Three things must be done for us if ever we avoid perishing pag. 36 5. Gifts may decay and perish pag. 37 Object But doth not the Apostle bid us covet after the best gifts why covet them earnestly if they avail not to salvation answered pag. 37 38 3. A man may have a high profession of Religion be much in external duties of godliness and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 38 1. A man may profess Religion and yet never have his heart changed pag. 40 2. A man may profess Religion and live in a form of godliness pag. 41 42 3. Custom and fashion may create a man a professor pag. 43 44 45 4. Many may perish under a profession of Godliness pag. 46 Object But is it not said He that confesseth me before men him will I confess before my Father which is in heaven pag. 47 Answered pag. 48 4. A man may go far in opposing his sin and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 49 1. A man may be convinced of sin and yet be but almost a Christian ibid. 2. A man may mourn for sin pag. 50 Object But Doth not Christ pronounce them blessed that mourn pag. 51 Answered Those that mourn for sin truly it must flow from spiritual conviction ib. 2. It must be more for the evil that is in sin then the evil that comes by sin ib. 3. A man may make confession of his sin to God and to others and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 52 Object Doth not the Apostle say if we confess our sins he is merciful and just to forgive us our sin answered pag. 53 1. Many confess sin out of custom ibid. 2. Many confess lesser sins pag. 54 3. Many confess sin in general ibid. 4. Many confess sin only under extremity pag. 55. 5. Many confess sin but with no intent to forsake it ibid. 4. A man may forsake sin and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 56 Object But is it not said He that confesseth and forsaketh shall have mercy Answered pag. 57 1. A man may forsake his sin not as sin ib. 2. Open sins may be forsaken when secret sins are retained pag. 57 2. A man may let one sin go to hold another the faster pag. 58 4. A man may let all sin go and yet a sinner still ibid. 5. Sin may be left and yet loved pag. 51 6. Sin may be chained and yet the heart not changed pag. 59 60 5. A man may hate sin and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 60 61 Objection arising from Rom. 7.15 answered A man may hate sin 1. For the shame that attends it pag. 62 2. A man may hate sin more in another then in himself pag. 63 3. A man may hate one sin as being contrary to another ib. 4. Not hate sin as sin but as contrary to his beloved sin pag. 64 6. A man may make great vows and promises strong purposes and resolutions against sin and yet be but an almost Christian pag. 65 1. Purposes never hurt sin ib. 2. Troubles and Afflictions may provoke us to large purposes pag. 66 3. Purposes may be onely a temptation to put off Repentance pag. 67 4. Nature unsanctified may make great purposes pag. 68 It may be from conviction of sin approving of the Law and defire to be saved ibid. 7. A man may maintain a strife and combate against sin in himself and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 70 71 72 V. A man may desire Grace and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 73 What desires of grace are grace pag. 74 What desires of grace are not true pag. 75 VI. A man may tremble at the word of God and yet be but an almost Christian pag. 77 T wofold trembling pag. 78 VII A man may delight in the word and Ordinances and yet be but an almost Christian pag. 79 Delights that flow from grace ib. Delights when no grace pag. 80 VIII A man may be a Member of the Church of Christ and yet be but almost a Christian IX A man may have great hopes of Heaven and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 83 Properties of a true hope ib. Groundless hopes pag. 84 85 X. A man may be under visible changes yet be but almost a Christian Threefold change may be when as yet the soul is not renewed pag. 90 91 92 93 XI A men may be very zealous in matters of Religion and yet be but almost a Christian pag. 94 Several kinds of zeal none of them true and sound pag. 96 to 104 XII A man may be much in prayer yet be but almost a Christian pag. 105 What prayers speak a man an altogether Christian ibid. What prayers speak a man an almost Christian 106 to 109. Whether answer of prayer evidence the truth of prayer answered 110. Whether the stirring of the affections in prayer argue the truth of prayer pag. 111 XIII A man may suffer for Christ and yet be but almost a Christian ibid. What suffering for Christ is a note of sincerity 113. What suffering for Christ is the suffering as a Christian pag. 113 114 XIV A man may be called of God and imbrace his call and yet be but an almost Christian pag. 114 T wofold call of God pag. 15 16 XV. A man may have the Spirit of God and yet
a common work of the spirit now a man may partake of all the common gifts of the spirit and yet be a reprobate for therefore they are called common because they are indifferently dispensed by the spirit to good and bad to them that are beleivers and to them that are not They that have grace have gifts and they that have no grace may have the same gifts for the spirit works in both nay in this sense he that hath no grace may be under a greater work of the spirit quoad hoc as to this thing then he that hath most grace a graceless professour may have greater gifts then the most holy beleiver He may out-pray and out-preach and out-do them that in sincerity and integrity out-go him 2. Gifts are for the use and good of others they are given in ordine ad alium as the School men speak for the profiting and edifying of others so says the Apostle 1 Cor. 12.7 Ephes 4.12 Dona dantur in adjutorium gratie They are given to profit withal Now a man may edifie another by his gifts and yet be unedified himself He may be profitable to another and yet unprofitable to himself A lame man may with his crutch point to thee the right way The Raven was an unclen bird yet God makes use of her to feed Eliah though she was not good meat yet it was good meat she brought and yet not be able to walk in it himself A crooked Taylor may make a suit to fit a strait body though it fit not him that made it because of his crookedness The Church Christ Garden inclosed may be watered through a woodden gutter The Sun may give light through a sluttish window and the field may be well sowed with a dirty hand 1 Cor. 9.27 The efficacy of the Word doth not depend upon the authority of him that speaks it but upon the authority of the God that blesses it So that another may be converted by my preaching and yet I may be a castaway notwithstanding Balaam makes a clear and rare prophesie of Christ and yet hath he no benefit by Christ There shall come a Star out of Jacob and a Septer shall rise out of Israel But yet Balaam shall have no benefit by it I shall see him but not now I shall behold him but not nigh Numb 24.17 God may use a mans gifts to bring another unto Christ when he himself whose gifts God uses may be a stranger unto Christ one man may confirm another in the faith yet himself may be a stranger to the faith Acts Mon last Edit 3. vol. p. 141. Pendleton strengthens and confirms Saunders in Queen Maries days to stand in the truth he had Preached and to seal it with his blood and yet afterwards plays the Apostate himself Scultetus tells us of one Joannes Speiserus a famous Preacher at Ausborough in Germany Scuitet Annol P. 118 in the year 1523. who Preached the Gospel so powerfully that divers common Harlots were converted and became good Christians and yet himself afterwards turned Papist and came to a miserable end Thus the candle may burn bright to light others in their Work and yet afterwards go out in a stink 3. It is beyond the power of the greatest gifts to change the heart a man may Preach like an Apostle pray like an Angel and yet may have the heart of a Devil It is grace onely that can change the heart the greatest gifts can't change it but the least grace can gifts may make a man a Scholar but grace makes a man a beleiver Now if gifts can't change the heart then a man may have the greatest gifts and yet be but almost a Christian 4. Many have gone loaden with gifts to Hell no doubt Judas had great gifts for he was a Preacher of the Gospel and our Lord Jesus Christ would not set him in the work and not fit him for the work yet Judas is gone to his own place the Scribes and Pharises were men of great gifts 1 Cor. 1.20 and yet where is the wise where is the Scribe 1 Cor. 1.18 The Preaching of the Cross is to them that perish foolishness Them that perish who are they who the wise and the Learned both among Jews and Greeks these are called them that perish Surgunt indocti rapiunt caelum dum nos cum doctrina nostra in Gehennam detrudimur said a great Bishop when he saw a poor Shepheard weeping over a Toad The poor illiterate World attain to Heaven while we with all our learning fall into Hell There are three things must be done for us if ever we would avoid perishing We must be throughly convinced of sin We must be really united to Christ We must be instated in the Covenant of grace Now the greatest gifts cannot stead us in any one of these They cannot work through convictions They cannot effect our union They cannot bring us into Covenant relation And consequently they cannot preserve from eternal perishing and if so then a man may have the greatest gifts and yet be but almost a Christian 5. Gifts may decay and perish they do not lie beyond the reach of corruption Joh. 4.14 indeed grace shall never perish but gifts will grace is incorruptible though gifts are not grace is a spring whose waters fail not Isa 58.11 but the stream of gifts may be dryed up If grace be corruptible in its own nature as being but a Creature yet it is incorruptible in regard of its conserver as being the new creature he that did create it in us will conserve it for us he that did begin it will also finish it Heb. 12.2 Gifts have their root in nature but grace hath its root in Christ and therefore though gifts may die and wither yet grace shall abide for ever Now if gifts are perishing then though he that hath the least grace is a Christian yet he that hath the greatest gifts may be but almost a Christian But doth not the Apostle bid us covet earnestly the best gifts 1 Cor. 12.31 why must we covet them and covet them earnestly if they avail not to salvation Luk. 12.21 Gifts are good though they are not the best good they are excellent but there is somewhat more excellent so it follows in the same verse yet I shew unto you a more excellent way and that is the way of grace one dram of grace is more worth then a talent of gifts gifts may make us rich towards men but it is grace that makes us rich towards God Our gifts profit others but grace profits our selves that whereby I profit another is good but that whereby I am profited my self is better Now because gifts are good therefore we ought to covet them but because they are not the best good therefore we ought not to rest in them we must covet gifts for the good of others that they may be edified and we must covet grace
while they might have shelter in it but when it suffers forsake it least it should fall and the fall should be upon them I am perswaded this is not the least reason why God hath brought the wheel upon the profession of Religion viz. to rid it of the vermine He shakes the foundation of the house that these Rats and Mice may quit the roof not to overturne it but to rid them out of it as the Husbandman fans the Wheat that he may get rid of the ●haff The Halcyon days of the Gospel provoke Hyyocrisie but the sufferings of Religion prove sincerity Now then if custome and fashion make many men professours then a man may profess Religion and yet be but almost a Christian 4. If many may perish under a profession of godliness then a man may profess Religion and yet be but almost a Christian Psal 50.5 Now the Scripture is clear that a man may perish under the highest profession of Religion Christ cursed the Fig tree that had leaves and no fruit It is said Mat. 8.12 That the Children of the Kingdome shall be cast out into outer Darkness who were these but they that were then the onely people of God in the World by profession that had made a Covenant with him by sacrifice and yet these cast out Mat. 7. v. 22. In Mat. 7.22 you read of some that came and made boast of their profession to Christ hoping that might save them Lord say they have we not prophecyed in thy name cast out Devils in thy name done many wonderful works in thy name v. 23. Now what saith our Lord Christ to this Then I will profess unto them I never knew you depart from me Mark here are them that prophecy in his name and yet perish in his wrath in his name cast out Devils and then are cast out themselves in his name do many wonderful works and yet perish for wicked workers The profession of Religion will no more keep a man from perishing then calling a Ship the Safeguard or the Good-speed will keep her from drowning As many go to Heaven with the fear of Hell in their hearts so many go to Hell with the name of Christ in their Mouths Now then if many may perish under a profession of godliness then may a man be a high professor of Religion and yet be but almost a Christian Mat 10.32 But is it not said by the Lord Christ himself he that confesses me before men him will I confess before my Father in Heaven Now for Christ to say he will confess us before the father is equivalent to a promise of eternal life for if Jesus Christ confess us God the Father will never disown us Sol. True they that confess Christ shall be confessed by him and it is as true that this confession is equivalent to a promise of salvation But now you must know that professing Christ is not confessing him for to profess Christ is one thing to confess Christ is another confession is a living testimony for Christ in a time when Religion suffers profession may be onely a lifeless formallity in a time when Religion prospers To confess Christ is to chuse his ways and own them to profess Christ is to plead for his ways and yet live besides them Profession may be from a feigned love to the ways of Christ but confession is from a rooted love to the Person of Christ To profess Christ is to own him when none deny him to confess Christ is to plead for him and suffer for him when others oppose him Hypocrites may be professors but the Martyrs are the true confessors profession is a swimming down the stream confession is a swimming against the stream Now many may swim with the stream like the dead fish that cannot swim against the stream with the living fish many may profess Christ that can't confess Christ and so notwithstanding their profession yet are but almost Christians 4. To come yet nearer A man may go far in opposing his sin and yet be but almost a Christian How far a man may go in this work I shall shew you in seven Gradual instances First A man may be convinced of sin and yet be but almost a Christian For 1. Conviction may be rational as well as spiritual it may be from a natural conscience enlightned by the word without the effectual work of the Spirit applying sin to the heart 2. Convictions may be worn out they many times go off and end not in sound conversion saith the Church we have been with Child we have been in pain we have brought forth wind Isa 26.18 This is the complaint of the Church in reference to the unprofitableness of their afflictions and it may be the complaint of most in reference to the unprofitableness of their convictions 3. many take convictions of sin to be conversion from sin and so sit down and rest in their conviction That is a sad complaint God makes of Ephraim Ephraim is an unwise son for he should not stay long in the place of the breaking forth of Children Hos 13.13 Now then if convictions may be onely from natural conscience if they may be worn out or may be mistaken and rested in for conversion then a man may have convictions and be but almost a Christian Heb. 12.16.17 Secondly A man may mourn for sin and yet be but almost a Christian so did Saul so did Esau for the loss of his birthright which was his sin and therefore he is called by the spirit of God prophane Esau yet he sought it again carefully with tears But doth not Christ pronounce them blessed that mourn Mat. 5.4 Blessed are they that mourn Sure then if a man mourn for sin he is in a good condition you see saith Nazianzen Greg Naz. Jrat 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that salvation is joyned with forrow Sol. I answer it is true that they who mourn for sin in the sence Christ there speaks of are blessed but all mourning for sin doth not therefore render us blessed 1. True mourning for sin must flow from spiritual conviction of the evil and vileness and damnable nature of sin Now all that mourn for sin don't do it from a through work of spiritual conviction upon the soul they have not a right sense of the evil and vileness of sin 2. True mourning for sin is more for the evil that is in sin then the evil that comes by sin more because it dishonours God and wounds Christ and grieves the Spirit and makes the soul unlike God then because it damns the soul Mat. 8.12 Now there are many that mourn for sin not so much for the evil that is in it as for the evil that it brings with it there is mourning for sin in Hell you read of weeping and wailing there The damned are weeping and mourning to eternity there is all sorrow and no comfort as in Heaven their is peace
when will and affections are for sin and plead for it conscience is againstit and many times frights the soul from the doing of it And hence men take that which opposes sin in them to be grace when it is onely the work of a Natural conscience they conclude the strife is between grace and sin the regenerate and unregenerate part when alas it is no other then the contention of a natural conscience against a corrupt will and affections And if so then a man may have great strifes and combates against sin in him and yet be but almost a Christian 5. A man may desire grace and yet be but almost a Christian so did the five foolish Virgins Mat. 25.8 Give us of your Oyl what was that but true grace it was that Oyl that lighted the wise Virgins into the Bridegrooms Chamber They do not onely desire to enter in but they desire Oyl to light them in wicked men may desire Heaven desire a Christ to save them there is none so wicked upon earth but desire to be happy in Heaven But now here are them that desire grace as well as glory and yet these are but almost Christians 〈…〉 But is it not commonly taught that desires of grace are grace Nay doth not our Lord Christ himself make it so Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness for they shall be filled 〈…〉 It is true that there are some desires of grace which are grace As 1. When a man desires gra●● 〈◊〉 a right sense of his natural 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he sees the vileness of sin and the woful defiled and loathsome condition he is in by reason of sin and therefore desires the grace of Christ to renew and change him this is grace This some make to be the lowest degree of saving faith 2. When a man joyns proportionable endeavours to his desires doth not onely wish for grace but work for grace such desires are grace 3. When a mans desires are constant and uncessant that cease not but in the attainment of their Object such desires are true grace They are a part of the especial work of the Spirit They do really partake of the nature of grace now it is a known makim Quicquid participat de natura totius est pars totius That which partakes of the nature of the whole is a part of the whole the filings of gold are gold The Sea is not more really water then the least drop the flame is not more really fire then the least spark for these do participare de natura totius But though all true desires of grace are grace yet all desires of grace are not true For. 1. A man may desire grace but not for it self but for somewhat else not grace for grace's sake but for heavens sake He don't desire grace that his nature may be changed his heart renewed the Image of God stampt upon him and his lusts subdued in him These are blessed desires found onely in true beleivers The true Christian onely can desire grace for graces sake but the almost Christian may desire grace for Heavens sake 2. A man may desire grace without proportionable indeavours after grace many are good at wishing bad at working like him that lay in the grass on a Summers day crying out O si hoc esset laborare Oh that this were to work Salomon saith Virtutem exoptant contabescuntque relicta Pers the desires of the slothful kills him How so For his bands refuse to labour Prov. 21.25 He perisheth in his desires The beleiver joyns desires and indeavours together Impii non curant quercre quem tamen desiderant invenire eupientes coasequi sed non sequ Bern. one thing have I desired of the Lord and that I will seek after Psal 27.4 3. A mans desires of grace may be unseasonable thus the foolish Virgins desired Oyl when it was too late Eccles 8.5 The beleivers desires are seasonable he desires grace in the season of grace and seeks in a time when it may be found The wise mans heart knows both time and Judgement He knows his season and hath wisdom to improve it Sera sapiunt Poryges The silly sinner doth all his works out of season he sins away the seasons of grace and then desires grace when the season is over the sinner doth all too late as Esau desired the blessing when it was too late and therefore he lost it whereas had he come sooner he had obtained it Most men are like Epimetheus wise too late they come when the Market is done when God hath shut in shop then they have their Oyl to get When they lye upon their death beds then they desire holy hearts 4. Desires of grace in many are very inconstant Hos 6.4 Ionah 4.6.7 and fleeting like the morning dew that quickly passes away Or like Jonah's Gourd that springs up in a night and withers in a night they have no root in the heart and therefore quickly perish now then if a man may desire grace but not for graces sake if desires may be without indeavours if a man may desire grace when t is too late if these desires may be but fleeting and inconstant then may a man desire grace and yet be but almost a Christian 6. A man may tremble at the word of God and yet be but almost a Christian Dan. 5.6 as Belshazzer did at the hand-writing upon the wall Isa 66.2 But is not that a note of sincerity and truth of grace to tremble at the word doth not God say to him will I look that is of a poor and contrite spirit and trembles at my word Sol. There is a two fold trembling First One is when the word discovers the guilt of sin and the Wrath of God that belongs to that guilt this where conscience is awake causes trembling and amazement thus when Paul Preached of righteousness and judgment Act 24 25 it is said Felix trembled Secondly There is a trembling which arises from a holy dread and reverence of the Majesty of God speaking in his word this is onely found in true beleivers and is that which keeps the soul low in its own eyes Therefore mark how the words run in Isa 66.2 To him will I look that is of a poor and contrite spirit and trembles at my Word Iames 2.19 God don't make the promise to him that trembles at the word for the Devils beleive and tremble the word of God can make the proudest stoutest sinner in the World to shake and tremble but it is to the poor and contrite spirit that trembles where trembling is the fruit of a spirit broken for sin and low in its own eys there will God look Now many tremble at the Word but not from poverty of spirit not from a heart broken for sin and low in its own eys not from a sense of the Majesty and holiness of God and therefore notwithstanding they tremble at
him Now it is presumption and therefore sin to hope in the mercy of God otherwise then by eying the promise for the promise is the Channel of mercy the Pipe through which it is conveyed all the blessedness the Saints injoy in Heaven is no other then what is the fruit of the promise relyed on and hoped for here on Earth A man hath no warrant to hope in God but by vertue of the promise 3. A man may hope for Heaven and yet not cleanse his heart not depart from his secret sins that hope of Salvation that is not accompanied with heart-purification that is a vain hope 4. A man may hope for Heaven and yet be doing the work of Hell he may hope for salvation and yet be working out his own damnation and so perish in his confidences This is the case of many male agendo sperant sperando pereunt like the Water-man that looks one way and rows another many have their eyes on Heaven whose hearts are in the Earth they hope in God but chuse him not for a portion they hope in God but do not love him as the best good and the refore are like to have no portion in him nor good by him but are like to perish without him notwithstanding all their hopes Job 27.8 What is the hope of the Hypocrite though he hath gained when God takes away his soul Now then if a man may have great hope of Heaven that hath no grace if he may hope in mercy without eying the promise if he may hope without heart purifying if he may hope for Heaven and yet do the work of Hell surely then a man may have great hopes of Heaven and yet be but almost a Christian 10. A man may be under great and visible changes and these wrought by the Ministry of the Word and yet be but almost a Christian Herod was it is said when he heard John Baptist Mar. 6.20 he did many things and heard him gladly Saul was under a great change when he met the Lords Prophets 1 Sam. 10.10 he turned Prophet too Nay it is said v. 9. of that 1. Sam. 10. that God gave him another heart Now was not this a work of grace and was not Saul here truely converted one would think he was but yet indeed he was not For though it is said God gave him another heart yet it is not said that God gave him a new heart There is a great difference between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lebh acher another heart and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lebh chadash a new heart God gave him another heart to fit him for a Ruler but gave him not a new heart to make him a beleiver another heart may make another man but it is a new heart that makes a new man Again Simon Magus is a great proof of this truth he was under a great and visible change of a sorcerer he was turned to be a beleiver he left his Witch-crafts and Sorceries and imbraced the Gospel was not this a great change Act. 8.13 If the Drunkard doth but leave his Drunkenness the Sewarer his Oaths the Prophane person his Prophaness they think this is a gracious change and their State is now good alass Simon Magus did not onely leave his sins but had a kind of a conversion for he beleived and was Baptized But is not that man that is changed a true Christian Sol. Not every change makes a man a Christian indeed there is a change that whoever is under it he is a true Christian Act. 26.18 2 Cor. 5.17 When a mans heart is so changed as that it is renewed when old things are done away and all is become new when the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the new creature is wrought in the soul when a man is turned from darkness to light from the power of Satan to God when the mind is inlightened the will renewed the affections made Heavenly then a man is a Christian indeed But now you must know that every change is not this change For 1. There is a civil change a moral change as well as a spiritual and supernatural change Many men are changed in a moral sense and one may say they are become new men but they are in heart and nature the same men still They are not changed in a spiritual and supernatural sense and therefore it cannot be said of them they are become new creatures Restraining grace may cause a moral change but it is renewing grace that must cause a saving change Now many are under restraining grace and so changed morally that are not under the power of renewing grace and so changed savingly 2. There is an out ward change as well as an inward change the outward change is often without the inward though the inward change is never without the outward A mans heart cannot be sanctified but it will influence the life but a mans life may be reformed and yet never affect or influence the heart 3. A man may be converted from a course of prophaness to a form of godliness from a filthy conversation to a fair profession and yet the heart the same in one and the other A rotten post may be guilt without and yet unsound within Hypocrita in verbis sanctus in corde vanus intus Nero foris Calo. Audi nemo melius specta nemo pejus Mat. 23.25 It is common to have the outside of the Cup and Platter made clean and yet the inside foul and filthy Now then if a man may be changed morally and yet not spiritually outwardly and yet not inwardly from a course of prophaness to a lifeless forme of godliness then a man may be under great and visible changes and yet be no more then almost a Christian I do not speak this to discountenance any change short of that that is spiritual but to awaken you to seek after that change which is more then moral It is good to be outwardly reformed but it is better to be savingly renewed I know how natural it is for men to take up with any thing like a work of conversion though it be not conversion and resting in that they perish eternally 1 Thes 5.23 Beloved let me tell you there is no change no conversion can stead your souls in the day of judgement on this side that saving work which is wrought on the Soul by the Spirit of God renewing you throughout the sober man without this change shall as surely go to Hell as the beastly drunkard Morality and civility may commend us to men but not to God They are of no value in the procurement of an eternal Salvation Mat. 21. ●1 A man may go far in an outward change and yet not be one step nearer Heaven then he that never was under any change nay he may be in some sense farther off as Christ saith the Scribes and Pharisees were farther from Heaven with all their shew of godliness then Fublicans and
promise to Sol. There is a suffering for Christ that is a note of sincerity and shall have its reward Col. 1.24 Mat. 5.10.11 12. That is when a man suffers for a good cause upon a good call and with a good conscience for Christs sake and in Christs strength when his sufferings are a filling up that which is behind of the sufferings of Christ when a man suffers as a Christian as the Apostle hath it 1 Pet. 4.6 if any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed Mat. 14.28 29. when a man thrusts not himself into suffering but stays Gods call such suffering is a proof of integrity But now every suffering for Christ is not suffering as a Christian For 1. A man may suffer for Christ for that profession of Religion that is upon him the World hates the shew of Religion times may come that it may cost a man as dear to wear the Livery of Christ as to wear Christ himself 1 Tim. 1.19.20 2 Tim. 4.14 Alexander had like to have lost his life for the Gospels sake Acts 19.33 yet he was that Alexander as is generally judged that afterward made Shipwrack of faith and greatly opposed Pauls Ministry 2. A man may suffer for Christ and yet have no true love to Christ This is supposed in 1 Cor. 13.3 Though I give my body to be burned and have not charity it profits nothing Love to Christ is the onely noble ground of suffering but a man may suffer much upon other ends 1. Out of Opinion of meriting by our sufferings as the Papists or 2. Out of vain-glory Vicit amor satriae laudisque immensa cupido or for applause among professors some have dyed that their names might live or 3. Out of a Roman resolution or stoutness of spirit 4. Out of a design of profit as Judas forsook all for Christ hoping to mend his Market by closing with him or 5. Rather to maintain an Opinion then for truths propagation Socrates dyed for maintaining that there was but one God but whether he dyed rather for his own Opinion then for Gods sake I think it is no hard matter to determine Thus a man may suffer for professing Christ and yet suffer upon wrong principles Now then if a man may suffer for Christ from the profession that is upon him or suffer for Christ and yet not truely love him then a man may suffer for Christ and yet be but almost a Christian 14. A man may be called of God and imbrace this call and yet be but almost a Christian Judas is a famous instance of this truth he was called by Christ himself and came at the call of Christ and yet Judas was but almost a Christain But is not the being under the call of God a proof of our interest in the predestinating love of God doth not the Apostle say whom he predestinated them he called Rom. 8.30 Nay doth he not say in the same verse whom he called them he justisied Nay doth not God call all whom he intends to save Mat 20.16 Sol. Though God calleth all those that shall be saved yet all shall not be saved whom God calleth every man under the Gospel is called of God in one sense or other but yet every man under the Gospel shall not therefore be saved For many are called but few are chosen There is a twofold call of God Internal External 1. There is an internal call of God Now this call is a special work of the spirit by the Ministry of the Word whereby a man is brought out of a state of nature into a state of grace out of darkness into light Act. 26.18 from being vessels of wrath to be made heirs of life Joh. 6.45 I grant that whoever is under this call of God is called effectually and savingly called to be a Christian indeed Every man that hath heard and learned of the Father comes to me 2. There is a call of God which a man may have and yet not be this call there is an External call of God which is by the Ministry of the Word Mat. 22 9 Now every man that lives under the Preaching of the Gospel is thus called God calls every soul of you to repent and lay a sure foundation for Heaven and salvation by the word you hear this day But now every man that is thus called is not therefore a Christian For. 1. Many under the call of God come to Christ but are not converted to Christ have nothing of the grace and life of Christ such as he Mat. 22. who when Christ sent out his servants to bid guests unto the Marriage came in at the call of Christ but yet had not on the wedding Garment v. 11. that is had none of the grace and righteousness of Jesus Christ 2. Many that are under the call of the Gospel come to Christ and yet afterwards fall away from Christ as Judas and Demas did it is said 2 Tim. 4.10 when Christ preached a Doctrine which his Disciples did not like that from that time many of his Disciples went back Joh. 6.66 and walked no more with him Now then if many are under this external call of God onely if many that come to Christ are not converted to Christ but fall away from Christ then a man may be called of God and yet be but almost a Christian 15. A man may have the spirit of God and yet be but almost a Christian Balaam had the spirit of God given him when he blessed Israel Numb 24.2 Balaam saw Israel abiding in Tents and the spirit of the Lord came upon him Judas had for by the spirit he cast out Devils he was one of them that came to Christ and said Lord even the Devils are subject to us Saul had 1 Sam. 10.10 Behold a company of Prophets met him and the spirit of God came upon him and he prophecyed among them But you 'l say can a man have the spirit of God and yet not be a Christian indeed the Scripture saith If any man have not the spirit of Christ Rom. 8.9 he is none of his but surely if any man have the spirit of Christ he is his Sol. There is a having the spirit which is a sure mark of Saint-ship Where the spirit is as an effectual prevailing principle of grace and sanctification renewing and regenerating the heart Ro. 8.26 Where the spirit is as a potent worker helping the souls infirmities Joh. 14.16 Where the spirit is so as to abide for ever But now every man that hath the spirit hath not the spirit in this manner For 1. A man may have the spirit onely transiently not abidingly the spirit may be in a man and yet not dwell in a man the spirit is where ever he dwels but he doth not dwell where-ever he is he is in all but dwels in Saints onely he is in all per divinitatis
praesentiam Lumb 1. sent dist 17 but dwels in Saints onely per inhabitationis gratiam the Hypocrite may have the spirit for a season but not to abide in him for ever 2. A man may have the spirit and yet not be born of the spirit Joh. 3.4 5. every true Christian is born of the spirit a Hypocrite may have the gifts of the spirit but not the graces the spirit may be in him by way of illumination but not by way of sanctification by way of conviction but not by way of conversion though he may have much common grace for the good of others yet he may have no special grace for the good of himself though his profession be spiritual yet is his state and condition carnal 3. A man may have the spirit onely as a spirit of bondage thus many have the spirit working onely to bondage The spirit of bondage is an operation of the holy Ghost by the law convincing the conscience of sin and of the curse of the law and working in the soul such an apprehension of the wrath of God as makes the thoughts of God a terrour to him This spirit may be and often is without saving grace this operation of the spirit was in Cain and Judas Though none that receive the spirit of adoption but they first receive the spirit of bondage yet many receive the spirit of bondage that never receive the spirit of adoption 4. A man may have the spirit of God working in him and yet it may be resisted by him it is said of the Jews Isa 63.10 they rebelled and vexed his holy spirit and the same sin is charged upon their Children Acts 7.51 ye stiff necked and uncircumcised in heart ye have always resisted the holy Ghost as your Fathers did so do ye The Hypocrite retains not the spirit so long as to come up to Regeneration Adoption but quenches the motions of it and thereby miscarries eternally 5. A man may have the spirit and yet sin that unpardonable sin he may have the Holy Ghost and yet sin the sin against the Holy Ghost nay no man can sin this sin against it but he that hath some degree of it The true beleiver hath so much of the spirit such a work of it in him that he cannot sin that sin He that is born of God sins not to wit that sin unto death for that is meant 1 John 5.16 17 18. The carnal professed sinner he cannot sin that sin because he is carnal and sensual having not the spirit Jude 19. A man must have some measure of the spirit that sins this sin so hath the Hypocrite he is said to be partaker of the Holy Ghost Heb. 6.4 and he onely is capable of sinning the sin against the holy Ghost Now then if a man may have the spirit transiently onely not abidingly if a man may have the spirit and yet not be born of the spirit if he may have the spirit onely as a spirit of bondage if a man may have the spirit working in him and yet it may be resisted by him if a man may have the spirit and yet sin that unpardonable sin against it then surely a man may have the spirit of God and yet be but almost a Christian 16. A man may have faith and yet be but almost a Christian Lu 8.13 the stony ground that is those hearers set out by the stony ground for a while beleived It is said Joh. 2.23 that many beleived in the name of Christ Fides mi nime fide quippe ex miraculus nata yet Christ durst not commit himself to them Though they trusted in Christ yet Christ would not trust them and why because he knew all men v. 24. he knew they were rotten at root notwithstanding their faith a man may have all faith even to the removing mountains and yet be nothing 1 Cor. 13.2 But how can this be that a man may have faith and yet be but almost a Christian doth not our Lord Christ promise life eternal and salvation to all that beleive is not this the Gospel that is to be preached to every creature He that beleives shall be saved Mark 16.16 Jam. 2.19 Sol. Though it is true what our Lord Christ saith that he that beleives shall be saved yet it is as true that many beleive that shall never be saved for Simon Magus beleived yea James saith the Devils beleive and tremble now none will say these shall be saved 2 Thess 3.2 As it is true what the Apostle saith all men have not faith so it is as true that there are some men have faith who are no whit the better for their faith You must know therefore there is a two fold faith Special and Saving Common and not Saving 1. There is a saving faith Col. 2.12 This is called faith of the operation of God It is a work of Gods own spirit in the soul It is such a faith as rests and casts the soul wholy upon Christ for grace and glory pardon and peace sanctification and salvation It is an united act of the whole soul understanding will and affections all concurring to unite the soul to an alsufficient Redeemer Act. 15.9 It is such a faith as purifies the heart and makes it clean it influences and gives strength and life to all other graces Now whoever hath this faith is a Christian indeed this is the faith of Gods elect Tit. 1.1 But then 2. There is a common faith not saving a fading and temporary faith there is the faith of Simon Magus as well as the faith of Simon Peter Acts 8 13 v. 23. compar Simon Magus beleived and yet was in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of iniquity Now Simon Magus hath more followers then Simon Peter the faith of most men will at last be found to be no better then the faith of Simon Magus For Luk. 22 32. First The faith of most is but a temporary faith it dures for a while and then dies and perisheth true and saving faith such as is the faith of Gods elect cannot die it may fail in the Act but not in the habit the sap may not be in the branch but it is always in the root That faith that perisheth that faith a man may have and perish Secondly There is a faith that lies onely in generals not in particulars as there is a general and particular object of faith so there is a general and particular faith The general object of faith is the whole Scripture the particular object of faith is Christ in the promise Now many have a general faith to beleive all the Scripture and yet have no faith to make a particlar application of Jesus Christ in the promise Devils and Reprobates may beleive the truth of the Scripture and what is written of the dying and suffering of Christ for sinners but there are but few that can close up
part of his obedience to the will of God though it be done in much weakness because though the beleivers hand is weak Eph. 6.6 Rom. 6.17 yet his heart is right the Hypocrite may have the most active hand but the beleiver hath the most faithful and sincere heart 3. A man may obey the law and yet have no love to the Law-giver a carnal heart may do the command of God but he cannot love God and therefore cannot do it arigt for love to God is the foundation and spring of all true obedience every command of God is to be done in love this is the fulfilling of the law Rom. 13.10 The Apostle saith Though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor and though I give my body to be burned these seem to be acts of the highest obedience yet if I have not love it profits me nothing 1 Cor. 13.3 4. I might add that a man may be much in obedience from finister and base selfish ends as the Pharises prayed much gave much alms fasted much but our Lord Christ tells us that it was that they might be seen of men and have glory of men Mat. 6.2 5 16. most of the Hypocrites piety empties it self into vain glory and therefore he is but an empty vine in all he doth because he bringeth forth fruit to himself Hos 10.1 It is the end that justifies the action indeed a good end cannot make a bad action good but yet the want of a good end makes a good action bad Now then if a man may obey the commands of God partially and by halves if he may do it and yet be in his natural state if he may obey the commands of God and yet not love God if the ends of his obedience may be sinful and unwarrantable then a man may be much in obeying the Commands of God and yet be but almost a Christian 19. A man may be sanctified and yet be but almost a Christian every kind of Sanctification doth not make a man a new creature for many are sanctified that are never renewed You read in the 10. Chap. to the Hebrews and the 29. vers of them that count the blood of the Covenant wherewith they were sanctified an unholy thing But doth not the Scripture tell us that both he that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all one for which cause he is not ashamed to call them Brethren Heb. 2.11 and can a man be one with Christ and yet be but almost a Christian Sol. To this I answer you must know there is a twofold work of sanctification spoken of in Scripture The one common and ineffectual The other special and effectual Rom. 8.13 1 Pet. 1.2 Heb. 13.21 That work of sanctification which is true and effectual is a work of the spirit of God in the soul inabling it to the mortifying of all sin to the obeying of every command to walking with God in all well-pleasing Ephes 5.30 Now whoever is thus sanctified is one with him that sanctifieth Christ will not be ashamed to call such brethren for they are flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone Mat. 12.44 Ro. 6.11 But then there is a more common work of sanctification which is ineffectual as to the two great works of dying to sin and living to God This kind of sanctification may help to restrain sin but not to mortifie sin it may lop off the boughs but it layeth not the Ax to the root of the tree it sweeps and garnishes the room with common vertues but doth not adorn it with saving graces so that a man is but almost a Christian notwithstanding this sanctification Or thus there is an Inward and Outward Sanctification Inward Sanctification is that which deals with the soul and its faculties understanding conscience will memory and affections Outward Sanctification is that which deals with the life and conversation both these must concur to make a man a Christian indeed therefore the Apostle puts them together in his prayer for the Thessalonians 1 Thes 5.23 The God of peace sanctifie you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the comming of our Lord Jesus Christ Heb. 10.22 Non magna munera sed immunis manus mensq sincera deo placent A man is then sanctified wholly when he is sanctified both inwardly and outwardly both in heart and affections and in life and conversation Outward sanctification is not enough without Inward nor inward without outward we must have both clean hands and a pure heart Psal 24.4 the heart must be pure that we may not incur blame from within and the hands must be clean that we may not incur shame from without we must have hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and bodies washed with pure water We must cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 inward purity is the most excellent but without the outward it is not sufficient the true Christian is made up of both Mat. 27.24 Mat. 23.25 Now many have clean hands but unclean hearts they wash the outside of the cup and Platter when all is filthy within Now the former without the latter profiteth a man no more then it profited Pilate who condemned Christ to wash his hands in the presence of the people Manus abluit cor polluit he washed his hands of the blood of Christ and yet had a hand in the death of Christ The Egyptian Temples were beautiful on the outside but within you should find nothing but some Serpent or Crocodile He is not a Jew which is one outwardly Rom. 2.28 Judas was a Saint without but a sinner within openly a Disciple but secretly a Devil Ioh. 6.70 Some pretend to inward sanctity without outward this is the pretence of the open sinner though I sometimes drop an idle foolish word saith he or though I sometimes swear an Oath yet I think no hurt I thank God my heart is as good as the best such are like the sinner Moses mentions that blessed himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine own heart to add drunkness to thirst Deut. 19.20 Some pretend outward sanctity without inward such are like the Scribes and Pharises who outwardly appear righteous unto men but within are full of Hypocrisie and iniquity Mat. 23.28 fair professors but foul sinners Inward sanctity without outward is impossible for it will reforme the life outward sanctity without inward is unprofitable for it will not reforme the heart a man is not a true Christian without both the body doth not make a man without the soul nor the soul without the body both are essential to the being of man so the sanctification of both are essential to the being of the new man True Sanctification begins at the heart but works out into the life and conversation and if so then a man
may be called of God 15. He may in some sense have the spirit of God 16. He may have some kind of faith 17. He may love the people of God 18. He may go far in obeying the Commands of God 19. He may be in some sense sanctified 20. He may do all as to external duties that a true Christian can and yet be no better then almost a Christian The second Question Why or whence is it that many men go so far as that they come to be almost Christians First It may be to answer the call of conscience though few men have grace yet all men have conscience Now do but observe and you shall see how far conscience may go in this work 1. Conscience owns a God and that this God must be worshipped and served by the creature Atheists in practice we have many such as the Apostle speaks of Tit. 1.16 They profess they know God but in works they deny him But Atheists in judgment none can be Tully a Heathen could say nulla gens tam barbara c. Now their being such a light in conscience as to discover that their is a God and that he must be Worshipped by the help of farther light the light of the word a man may be inabled to do much in the ways of God and yet his heart without a dram of grace 2. Know this that natural conscience is capable of great improvements from the means of grace sitting under the ordinances may exceedingly heighten the indowments of Conscience though they do not sanctifie conscience it may be much regulated though it be not at all renewed it may be inlightned convinced and yet never savingly converted and changed Ye read in Heb. 6.4 of some that were once inlightned and tasted of the Heavenly gift and were made partakers of the holy ghost What work shall we call this It could not be a saving work a true change and conversion of state for notwithstanding this inlightning and tasting and partaking yet they are here said to fall away v. 6. Luke 22.32 Deut. 33.27 Had it been a true work of grace they could never have fallen away from that a beleiver may fall but he cannot fall away he may fall foully but he can never fall finally for underneath are the everlasting arms his faith is established in the strength of that prayer of Christ that our faith fail not nay he tels us expresly that it is eternal life which he gives from which we shall never perish John 10.28 This work then here spoken of cannot be any saving work because it is not an abiding work for they that are under it are said to fall away from it but though it be not a saving work yet it is a supernatural work it is an improvement made by the word upon the consciences of men through the power of the Spirit and therefore they are said to tast the good word of God and to be made partakers of the Holy Ghost they have not the spirit abiding in them savingly but striving with them and working upon them convincingly to the awakening and setting conscience on work And conscience thus stirred may carry a man very far in Religion and in the duties of the Gospel and yet be but a natural conscience A common work of the spirit may stead a man very much in the duties of Religion though it must be a special work of the spirit that steads a man to salvation a man may have the assisting presence of the spirit inabling him to preach and pray and yet he may perish for want of the renewing presence of the spirit inabling him to beleive Judas had the former and yet perished for want of the latter he had the spirit assisting him to cast out devils but yet he had not the spirit renewing him for he was cast out himself Thus a man may have an improved conscience and yet be a stranger to a renewed conscience and conscience thus improved may put a man very much upon duty I pray God none of us mistake a conscience thus improved by the word for a conscience renewed by the spirit the mistake is very easie especially when a life of duties is the fruit of it 3. The conscience of a natural man is subject to distress and trouble though a natural conscience is not sanctified with grace yet it is often troubled at sin trouble of conscience is not incident to beleivers onely but sometimes to unbeleivers also A beleivers conscience is sometimes troubled when his sin is truely pardoned and a natural mans conscience is troubled for sin though it is never freed from sin God sometimes sets the word home upon the sinners conscience and applies the terrours of the law to it and this fills the soul with fear and horrour of death and hell now in this case the soul usually betakes it self to a life of duties meerly to fence trouble out of conscience 2 Sam. 14.30 31. When Absalom sets fire on Joabs corn fields then he runs to him though he refused before so when God lets a spark of Hell as it were fall upon the sinners conscience in applying the terrours of the word this drives the sinner to a life of duties which he never minded before The ground of many a mans ingaging in Religion is the trouble of his conscience and the end of his continuing in Religion is the quieting of conscience if conscience would never check him God should never from him Natural conscience hath a voice and speaks aloud many times in the sinners ears and telleth him this ought not to be done God must not be forgotten the commands of God ought not to be slighted living in sin will be the ruine of the soul and hence it is that a natural man runs to duties and takes up a lifeless and graceless profession that he may thereby silence conscience As a man sick in his stomack what ever sweet morsel he hath eaten he brings up all and although it was sweet in the eating yet it is bitter in the rising So it fareth with the sinner when he is Sermon-sick or Conscience-sick though his sin was sweet in the practice yet the thought of it riseth bitter upon the conscience and then his profession of religion is the pill he rouleth about in his mouth to take away the bitterness of-sins tast 4. Natural conscience inlightned by the word may discover to a man much of the misery of a natural state though not effectually to bring him out of it yet so as to make him restless and weary in it it may shew a sinner his nakedness and hereupon the soul runneth to a life of duties thinking hereby to stead the misery of his case and to make a covering for his nakedness It is said Gen. 3.7 That when Adam and Eve saw they were naked they sewed Fig leaves together and made themselvelves a covering So when once the sinner seeth his nakedness and vileness by reason
then if I profess Religion if I make mention of the Name of the Lord and make my boast of the law and yet through breaking the law dishonour God if I live in the love of any sin and make use of my profession to cover it then am I an Hypocrite and my duties flow but from a natural conscience but on the other hand if I name the name of the Lord Jesus and withal depart from inquity if I use duties not to cover 2 Tim. 2.19 but to discover and mortifie sin then am I upright before God and my duties flow from a renewed conscience 4. A natural man pride's himself in his duties if he be much in duty then he is much lifted up under duty so did the Pharisee Luk. 18. Luke 18.11 12. God I thank thee that I am not as other men are and why where lay the difference why I fast twice in the week I give Tithes of all c. 2 Tim 4 2 But now take a gracious heart a renewed conscience and when his duties are at highest then is his heart at lowest Thus it was with the Apostle Paul he was much in service in season and out of season Preaching up the Lord Jesus with all boldness and earnestness and yet very humble in a sense of his own unworthiness under all I am not worthy to be called an Apostle 1 Cor. 15.9 To me who am less then the least of all Saints is this grace given that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ Ephes 3.8 and again in the 1 Tim. 1.15 of sinners I am cheif thus a beleiver when he is highest in duties then is he lowest in humility duty puffeth up the Hypocrite but a beleiver comes away humbled and why because the Hypocrite hath had no visions of God he hath seen onely his own gifts and parts and this exalteth him but the beleiver hath seen God and injoyed communion with God and this humbleth him communion with God though it be very refreshing yet it is also very abasing and humbling to the creature Jerome observeth on Zephaniah 1 Chap. 1 v. where it is said that ushi was the son of Geduliah the son of Amariah That Amariah signifieth the Word of the Lord Gedaliah signifieth the greatness of the Lord and Cushi is interpreted humility or my Ethiopian So that saith he from the Word of the Lord cometh a sight of the greatness of the Lord and from a sight of the greatness of the Lord cometh Humility Now then if I pride my self in any duty and am puffed up under my performances then have I not seen nor met with God in any duty But on the other hand if when my gifts are at highest my heart is at lowest if when my spirit is most raised my heart is then most humbled if in the middest of all my services I can maintain a sence of mine own unworthiness if Cushi be the Son of Gedaliah then have I seen and had communion with God in duty and my performances are from a renewed conscience 5. Look what that is to which the heart doth secretly render the glory of a duty and that is the principle of the duty in Habakkuk 1.16 ye read of them that Sacrifice to their net and burn incense to their drag where the glory of an action is rendered to a mans self the principle of that action is self all Rivers run into the Sea Eccl. 1.7 that is an argument they came from the Sea so when all a mans duties terminate in self then is self the principle of all Now all the natural mans d●●●●s run into himself he was never by a through work of grace truely cast out of himself and brought to deny himself and therefore he can rise no higher then himself in all he doth he was never brought to be poor in spirit and so to live upon another to be carryed out of all duties to Jesus Christ Ps 115.1 But the beleiver giveth the glory of all his services to God what ever strength or life there is in duty God hath all the glory for he is by grace outed of himself and therefore seeth no excellency or worthiness in self Gal. 2.20 I laboured more abundantly then they all saith the Apostle but to whom doth he ascribe the glory of this to self no yet not I saith he but the grace of God which was with me 1 Cor. 15.10 when ever the grace of Christ is wrought in the heart as a principle of duty you shall find the soul when it is most carried out with a yet not I in the mouth of it I live yet not I I laboured more abundantly then all yet not I self is disclamed and Christ most advanced when it is from grace that the heart is quickned the twenty-four Flders cast their crowns at Christs feet Rev. 4.10 There are two things very hard one is to take the shame of our sins to our selves the other is to give the glory of our services to Christ Gal. 6.8 Now then if I sacrifice to my own net if I aim at my own credit or profit and give the glory of all I do to self then do I sow to the flesh and was never yet cast out of self but act onely from a natural conscience but if I give the glory of all my strength and life in duty onely to God if I magnifie grace in all and can truely say in all I do yet not I then am I truely cast out of self and do what I do with a renewed conscience 6. Though a natural conscience may put a man much upon service yet it never presseth to the attainment of holiness so that he carrieth an unsanctified heart under all How long was Judas a professor and yet not one dram of grace that he had got the foolish Virgins you know taok their lamps but took no oyle in their vessels Mat. 20 3. that is they looked more after a profession then after sanctification But now when a renewed conscience putteth a man upon duty it is successed with the growth of holiness as grace helpeth to the doing of duty so duty helpeth to the growing of grace a beleiver is the more holy and the more heavenly by his being much in duties Now then if I am much in a life of duties and yet a stranger to a life of holiness if I maintain a high profession and yet have not a true work of sanctification if like children in the Rickets I grow big in the head but weak in the feet then have I gifts and parts but no grace and though I am much in service yet have I but a natural conscience but on the other hand if the holiness of my conversation carrieth a proportion to my profession if I am not a hearer of the word onely but a doer of it if grace groweth in seasons of dutie then do I act in the things of God from a renewed
commands and all out of a desire of salvation so then put these together and there is an answer to that Question The call of conscience The power of the word The affectation of credit and The desire of salvation These may carry a man so far as to be almost a Christian The third Question propounded is this Third Whence is it that many are but almost Christians when they have gone thus far what is the cause of this I might multiply answers to this question but I shall instance in two onely which I judge the most material First It is for want of right and sound convictions if a man be not throughly convinced of sin and his heart truely broken whatever his profession of godliness may be yet he will be sure to miscarry every work of conviction is not a through work There are convictions that are onely natural and rational but not from the powerful work of the spirit of God Rational conviction what Rational conviction is that which proceeds from the working of a natural conscience charging guilt from the light of nature by the help of those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those common principles of reason that are in all men This is the conviction you read of Rom. 2.14 15. It is said that the Gentiles who had not the law yet had their consciences bearing witness and accusing or excusing one another though they had not the light of Scripture yet they had convictions from the light of nature now by the help of the Gospel light these convictions may be much improved and yet the heart not renewed Spiritual conviction what But then there is a spiritual conviction and this is that work of the spirit of God upon the sinners heart by the word whereby the guilt and filth of sin is fully discovered and the wo and misery of a natural state distinctly set home upon the conscience to the dread and terrour of the sinner whilst he abides in that state and condition And this is the conviction that is a sound and through work many have their convictions but not this spiritual conviction Quere Now you 'l say suppose I am at any time under conviction how shall I know whither my conviction be onely from a natural conscience or whether they be from the spirit of God I should digress too much to draw out the solution of this question to its just length I shall therefore in five things onely lay down the most considerable difference between the one and the other 1. Natural convictions reach cheifly to open and scandalous sins sins against the light of nature for natural conviction can reach no farther then natural light But Spiritual conviction reaches to secret inward and undiscerned sins such as Hypocrisie Formality Lukewarmness deadness and hardness of heart c. Observe then whether your trouble for sin looks inward as well as outward and reaches not onely to open sins but to secret lusts to inward and spiritual sins and if so this is a sure sign of the work of the spirit because the trouble occasioned by these sins bears a more immediate relation to the Holiness of God who onely is offended by them they being such as none else can see or know 2. Natural convictions deal onely with a mans conversation not with his state and condition with sins actual not original But spiritual convictions reach to all sins to sins of heart as well as sins of life to the sin of our nature as well as the sins of practise to the sin that is born in us as well as the sin that is done by us Where the spirit of the Lord commeth to work effectually in any soul he holdeth the glass of the law before the sinners eyes and openeth his eyes to look into the glass and to see all that deformity and filthiness that is in his heart and nature Ro. 2.14 The Apostle Paul saith I had not known sin but by the Law Rom. 7.7 How can this be true that he had not known sin but by the law when as the light of nature discovers sin It is said of the Gentiles That having not the law they are a law unto themselves This sin therefore that the Apostle speaks of is not to be understood of sin actual but of sin original I had not known the pollution of nature that fountain of sin that is within this I had not known but by the law and indeed this is a discovery that natural light cannot make it is true the Philosopher could say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that lust is the first and cheif of all sins Timon apud Laertium but I cannot think he meant it of original sin but of the inordinacy of appetite and desire at most for I find that the wisest of the Philosophers understood nothing of original sin hear Seneca Erras si tecum vitia nasci putas supervenerunt ingesta sunt sin is not born with thee but brought in since Tam fine vitio quam sine virtute nascimur Quintilian saith it is more marvel that any one man sins then that all men should live honestly sin is so against the nature of men how blind were they in this point and so was Paul till the spirit of the Lord discovered it to him by the word And indeed this is a discovery proper to the spirit It is he that makes the sinner see all the deformity and filthiness that is within it is he that pulleth off all the sinners rags and makes him see his naked and wretched condition it is he that shews us the blindness of the mind the stubborness of the will the disorderedness of the affections the searedness of the conscience the plague of our hearts and the sin of our natures and therein the desperateness of our state 3. Natural convictions carry the Soul out to look more on the evil that comes by sin then on the evil that is in sin so that the soul under this conviction is more troubled at the dread of Hell and wrath and damnation then at the vileness and heinous nature of sin But now Spiritual convictions work the soul into a greater sensibleness of the evil that is in sin then of the evil that comes by sin the dishonour done to God by walking contrary to his will the wounds that are made in the heart of Christ the greif that the holy Spirit of God is put to this wounds the soul more then a thousand Hells 4. Natural convictions are not durable they are quickly worn out they are like a slight cut in the skin that bleeds a little and is soar for the present but is healed again and in a few days not so much as a Scar to be seen But Spiritual convictions are durable they cannot be worn out they abide in the soul till they have reached their end which is the change of the sinner The convictions of the spirit are like a deep wound in the flesh
perish and go to Hell in the midst of all their performances and duties meerly for want of a little sincerity of heart to God Jer. 17.9 Now where there is not a change of state a work of grace in the heart there can be no sincerity to God-ward for this is not quid proveniens a natura it is not an herb that grows in natures garden the heart of man is naturally deceitful and desperately wicked more opposite to sincerity then to any thing as things corrupted carry a greater dissimilitude to what they were then to any thing else which they never were God made man upright now man voluntarily losing this is become more dislike to himself then to any thing below himself he is more like a Lyon a Wolf a Bear a Serpent a Toad then to man in innocency So that it is impossible to find sincerity in any soul till there be a work of grace wrought there by the spirit of God and hence it is that a man is but almost a Christian when he hath done all The fourth Question 4. What is the reason that many go no farther in the profession of Religion then to be almost Christians Reas 1 1. It is because they deceive themselves in the truth of their own condition they mistake their state and think it good and safe when it is bad and dangerous A man may look upon himself as a member of Christ and yet God may look upon him as a Vessel of wrath as a Child of God by looking more upon his sins then his graces more upon his failings then his faith more upon in dwelling lusts then renewing grace may think his case very bad when yet it is very good I am black saith the Spouse Cant. 1.5 and yet saith Christ O thou fairest among Women v. 8. So the sinner by looking more upon his duties then his sins may think he sees his name written in the book of life and yet be in the account of God a very reprobate Gal. 6.3 There is nothing more common then for a man to think himself something when he is nothing and so he deceives himself many a man blesses himself in his interest in Christ when he is indeed a stranger to him many a man thinks his sin pardoned when alas he is still in the Gall of bitterness and bond of liniquity Act 8.23 Many a man thinks he hath Grace when he hath none there is saith Salomon that makes himself rich Prov. 13.7 and yet hath nothing This was the very temper of Laodicea Rev. 3.17 Thou sayst I am rich and increased with goods and have need of nothing and knowest not pray mind that that thou art wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked Thou knowst not as bad as she was she thought her state good as poor as she was in grace she thought she was rich as miserable and naked as she was yet she thought she had need of nothing Now there are several rises or grounds of this mistake I 'le name five to you Gen. 27.36 Supplan tativum cor prae omni First The desperate deceitfulness of the heart of every natural man Jer. 17.9 the heart is deceitful above all things the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the same with Jacobs name now you know he was a supplanter of his Brother Esau he is rightly called Jacob saith he for he hath supplanted me these two times So the word signifies to be fraudulent subtile deceitful and supplanting Thus is the heart of every natural man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deceitful above all things Ps 52.4 Ye read of the deceitfulness of the tongue And of the deceitfulness of riches Mat. 13.22 Prov. 31.30 Job 6.15 And of the deceitfulness of beauty And of the deceitfulness of friends Rev. 20.3 But yet the heart is deceitful above them all nay you read of the deceitfulness of Satan yet truely a mans heart is a greater deceiver then he for he could never deceive a man if his own heart did not deceive him Now it is from hence that a man presumes upon the goodness of his case from the desperate treachery of his own heart Prov. 28.26 How common is it for men to boast of the goodness of their hearts I thank God though I do not make such a shew and pretence as some do yet I have as good a heart as the best Oh do but hear Salomon in this case He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool will any wise man commit his money to a Cutpurse will he trust a Cheat It is a good rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 remember to distrust and it was Austins prayer domine libera me a meipso That man that trusts to his own heart shall be sure to find himself deceived at last Secondly This mistake arises from the pride of a mans spirit there is a proud heart in every natural man there was much of this pride in Adams sin and there is much of it in all Adams sons it is a radical sin and from hence arises this overweening opinion of a mans state and condition Salomon saith Eccles 7.16 Aug sent 36 be not righteous overmuch Austin speaking occasionally of those words saith it is not justitia sapientis but superbia praesumentis not meant of the righteousness of the wise man but of the pride of the presumptuous man Now in this sense every carnal man is righteous overmuch though he hath none of that righteousness which commends him to God viz. the righteousness of Christ yet he hath too much of that righteousness which commends him to himself and that is self-righteousness A proud man hath an eye to see his beauty but not his deformity his parts but not his spots his seeming righteousness but not his real wretchedness Ephes 3.8 1 Tim. 1.15 Lu. 18.11 It must be a work of grace that must shew a man the want of grace The haughty eye looks upward but the humble eye looks downward and therefore this is the beleivers Motto the least of Saints the greatest of sinners but the carnal mans Motto is I thank God I am not as other men 1 Sam. 21.14 Thirdly Many deceive themselves with common grace instead of saving through that resemblance that is between them as many take counterfeit money for current coyn so do too many take common grace for true in similibus facilis est deceptio Saul took the Devil for Samuel because he appeared in the mantle of Samuel so many take common grace for saving because it is like saving grace a man may be under a supernatural work and yet fall short of a saving work the first raiseth Nature the second onely reneweth Nature though every saving work of the spirit be supernatural yet every supernatural work of the spirit is not saving and hence many deceive their own souls by taking a supernatural work for
he is annointed and sent to bind up the broken hearted to comfort all that mourn Isa 61 1 2 Oh therefore if you would be sound Christians get sound convictions ask those that are beleivers indeed and they will tell you had it not been for their convictions they had never sought after Christ fo● fanctification and salvation they will tell you they had perished if they had not perished periissem nisi periissem they had been in eternal bondage but for their spiritual bondage had they not been lost as to themselves they had been utterly lost as to Christ 3. Never rest in convictions Direction 3 till they end in conversion this is that wherein most men miscarry they rest in their convictions and take them for conversion as if sin seen were therefore forgiven or as if a sight of the want of grace were the truth of the work of grace That is a notable place in Hos 13.13 Ephraim is an unwise Son for he should not stay long in the place of the breaking forth of Children The place of the breaking forth of Children is the Womb as the child comes out of the womb so is conversion born out of the womb of conviction Now when the child sticks between the Womb and the World it is dangerous it hazard's the life both of Mother and Child so when a sinner rests in conviction and goes no farther but sticks in the place of the breaking forth of Children this is very dangerous and hazards the life of the soul You that are at any time under convictions Oh take heed of resting in them do not stay long in the place of the breaking forth of children though it is true that conviction is the first step to conversion yet it is not conversion a man may carry his convictions along with him into hell What is that which troubleth poor creatures when they come to dye but this I have not improved my convictions at such a time I was convinced of sin but yet I went on in sin in the face of my convictions in such a Sermon I was convined of such a duty but I slighted the conviction I was convinced of my want of Christ and of the readiness of Christ to pardon and save but alass I followed not the conviction My brethren remember this slighted convictions are the worst death-bed companions There are two things especially which above all others make a death-bed very uncomfortable 1. Purposes and promises not performed 2. Convictions slighted and not improved When a man takes up purposes to close with Christ and yet puts them not into execution and when he is convinced of sin and dutie and yet improves not his convictions Oh this will sting and wound at last Now therefore hath the Spirit of the Lord been at work in your souls have you ever been convinced of the evil of sin of the misery of a natural estate of the insufficiency of all things under Heaven to help of the fulness and righteousness of Jesus Christ of the necessity of and resting upon him for pardon and peace for sanctification and salvation have you ever been really convinced of these things Oh then as you love your own souls as ever you hope to be saved at last and injoy God for ever improve these convictions and be sure you rest not in them till they rise up to a through close with the Lord Jesus Christ and so end in a sound and perfect conversion Thus shall you be not onely almost but altogether Christians FINIS THE TABLE A AFflictions and the pressures of outward evils will make a man pray p. 109 C Christian What meant by it p. 5 Many are almost and yet but almost Christians p. 9 Whence is it that many go so far as to be almost Christians p. 15 160 Whence it is that many are but almost Christians when they have gone thus far p. 180 Caution to take heed we be not almost and yet but almost Christians p. 227 This condition of all other Greatly unprofitable p. 228 Exceedingly uncomfortable p. 229 Desperately dangerous p. 232 Combate against sin may be In a man that is but an almost Christian p. 70 71 Church members not alway real Christians p. 80 Change Visible changes may be in a Christian not renewed p. 90 to 93. Christ A man may suffer for Christ and yet not be sincere with Christ p. 111 What suffering is a note of sincerity p. 112 Suffering as a Christian p. 113 114 Call A man may be called of God and yet be but almost a Christian call two fold p. 115 116. Conviction How to know whither our conviction is onely from a natural conscience or from the spirit p. 18 Natural conviction what p. 180 Spiritual conviction what p. 181 Spiritual conviction an essential part of sound conversion p. 187 Slight conviction the cause of much Hypocrisie p. 188 Conscience What is the difference between a natural and renewed conscience Answered in seven particulars p. 160 to 175 D DEsires see grace Delight A man may delight in the Word and Ordinances and yet be but almost a Christian p. 79 Duties A man may do all as to external Duties and Worship that a true Christian can and yet be but almost a Christian p. 146 Wherein the difference between them doth lye p. 147 to 150 Directions for the obtaining a through work in the heart the being not onely almost but altogether Christians p. 271 to the end E Examination our duty to inquire whether we are either but almost or altogether Christians p. 213 Arguments pressing upon us its practice p. 114 to 118 Eight Characteristical Notes for tryal p. 218 to 226 Exhortation to be not onely almost but altogether Christians p. 246 Motives to it p. 247 to 270 F FAith A man may have faith and yet not be a beleiver p. 121 Saving faith what called in Scripture p. 123 Common faith what p. 114 to 118 G GIfts A man may have great gifts and yet be but almost a Christian p. 31 Gifts for the good of others p. 32 Gifts from the Common work of the Spirit p. 32 Beyond the power of gifts to change the heart Gifts may decay and perish p. 37 Desires of grace are grace 73 74 what not p. 75 H HOpe Great hopes of Heaven not alway true hope p. 83 Properties of true hope Ibid Groundless hopes p. 84 85. K KNowledge A man may have much of it and yet be but almost a Christian p. 27 Threefold end men have in desiring knowledge L LOve A man may love the people of God and yet not with a true love p. 128 What Love to the Children of God is a true love p. 130 For what an almost Christian Loves a Saint p. 132 His Love onely carnal p. 133 Lust Espoused in the heart hinders a hearty closure with Christ p. 203 M MOtives pressing Christians to go farther then those that have gone farthest and yet fell short p. 247 N
NAture may put a man upon prayer p. 106 O OBedience A man may obey the Commands of God and yet be but an almost Christian p. 135 True obedience hath a threefold property It is Evangelical p. 135 It is Vniversal p. 137 It is Continual Ibid P PRofession a man may have a high profession of Religion and yet be but an almost Christian p. 38 Profession argues not the heart changed p. 40 Profession may stand with the forme of godliness p. 41 42 Custome and fashion may create a man a Professor p. 43 A man may perish under a Profession p. 46 Objection against it answered p. 47 Prayer a man may be much in Prayer and yet but be an almost Christian p. 105 What prayer is from the working of Gods Spirit Ibid What prayers argue a man a stranger to the spirit of prayer p. 106 107 Whither answer of prayer evidence the truth of prayer p. 111 Whether stirring of the attentions of prayer argue truth of Prayer Persecutions see Christ Most Professors like Iron between two Load-stones p. 204 Q TWo Questions we should often put to our selves p. 212 R REligion What is the reason that many go no farther in the profession of Religion then to be but almost Christians answered p. 193 1. Because they deceive themselves in the truth of their own condition p. 194 Several rises of deceit and mistake about our condition p. 125 202 S SIn A man may go far in opposing it yet be but almost a Christian p. 49 He may be convinced of it ib. Mourn for it p. 50 Confess it p. 52 Forsake it p. 56 Though not as sin p. 57 Open and not secret ib. Let one go to hold another the faster p. 58 Sin may be left yet loved ib. Sin may be nated by an almost Christian p. 60 61 For shame p. 62 More in another then in himself p. 63 As one sin is contrary to another sin Ibid Spirit a man may have the spirit and yet not Spiritual p. 117 Some kind of having the Spirit is a sure mark of Saintship p. 118 All that have the Spirit have it not in this manner p. 119 1●0 Sanctification A man may be Sanctified and yet be but an almost Christian p. 14● Sanctification Inward p. 142 Sanctification Outward p. 143 144. Salvation No easie thing p. 206 V VOws may be made against sin and not kept and upon what grounds the almost Christian doth so Virgins what understood by the Word p. 17 Folish Virgins but almost Christians p. 20 W VVOrd a man may tremble at the Word and yet be but an almost Christian p. 77 78 Y YOung man in the Gospel but an almost Christian p. 15 Z ZEal not always a sign of sincerity p. 96 Several kinds of Zeal none of them true and sound p. 96 to 104 Books printed for and sold by Thomas Parkhurst at the sign of the Three Crowns over against the great Conduit at the lower end of Cheapside THe Annotations on the whole Bible or all the Canonical Scriptures of the Old and New Testament together with and according to their own Translation of all the Text as both the one and 〈◊〉 ●ther were ordered and appoint●● 〈…〉 of Dort now faith●● 〈…〉 ●●llared for the use of Great 〈…〉 at the earnest desire of many ●●●●ment Divines of the English and ●●otish Nation in folio A Commentary upon the three first Chapters of Genesis by Mr. John White in fol. A learned Commentary or exposition upon the first Chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians by Dr. Richard Sibbs published for publique good by Thomas Manton Folio There is come forth Mr. William Fenner his continuance of Christs Alarm to drowsie Saints with a Treatise of effectual Calling The killing Power of the Law The Spiritual Watch New Birth A Christians ingrafting into Christ A Treatise on the Sabbath which were never before Printed bound in one Volume Fol. and may be had alone of them that have his other works as well as bound with all his former works which are newly printed in the same Volume The History of the Evangelical Churches of the Valleys of Piemont Containing a most exact Geophraphical Description of the place and a faithful account of the Doctrine life and persecutions of the Ancient Inhabitants Together with a most naked and punctual relation of the late bloody Massacre 1655. and a Narrative of all the following transactions to 1658. Justified partly by divers ancient Manuscripts written many hundred years before Calvin or Luther By Samuel Morland Esq in Fol. Divine Characters in two parts acutely distinguishing the more secret and undiscerned differences between the Hypocrite in his best dress of seeming vertues and formal duties and the true Christian in his real grace and sincere obedience by Mr. Samuel Crook in fol. An Exposition with practical Observations continued upon the thirty second the thirty third and the thirty fourth Chapters of the Book of Job The Substance of Forty-nine Lectures delived at Magnus near the Bridge London Being the tenth and last part extant By Joseph Charyl preacher of the Gospel and pastour of the Congregation there in quarto The humbled sinner resolved what he should do to be saved or faith in the Lord Jesus Christ the onely way of salvation by Mr. Obadiah Sedgewick in quarto The Fountain opened and the water of life flowing forth for the refreshing of thirsty sinners by the same Author in quarto Anatomy of secret sins presumptuous sins sins in dominion and uprightness on Psal 19.12 13. together with a Treatise of the sin against the Holy Ghost by Obadiah Sedgewick The hypocritical Nation described with an Epistle prefixed by Mr. Samuel Jacomb in quarto A Sermon of the baptizing of Infants by Mr. Stephen Marshal in quar The unity of the Saints with Christ the Head by the same Author in quarto Truth brought to light and discovered by time or an Historical Narration of the first fourteen years of King James in quarto The Tryal of the Marquess of Argyle wherein you have his Inditement and his Answer together with his last speech and words upon the Scaffold in quar of 〈…〉 of Iniquity now a work in the Romish Church wherein 1. The incarnation of the Son of God is fully displayed 2. Ceremonies in point of worship proved to be by Christ abrogated 3. Christian liberty with its eight Steps and five boundaries by Thomas Dowglass M. A. in quarto An exposition upon the whole book of the Canticles by R R. Moses and Aaron or the Priviledges and Boundaries given by God both to Magistrates and Ministers Mr. Robinsons Christians Armour in large Octavo A book of Emblems with Latine and English verses made upon Lights by Robert Farlie small Octavo The one thing necessary By Mr. Thomas Watson Minister of Stephens Walbrook Octavo The Riches of grace displayed in the offer and tender of salvation to poor sinners by Obadiab Sedgewick in Twelves Hidden Manna by Mr. Fenner in Twelves Picturae Louventes or Pictures drawn forth into Characters in Twelves A most excellent Treatise containing the way to seek Heavens Glory to fly Earths Vanity to fear Hells horrour with godly prayers and the Bell-mans Summons Twelves The Wedding Ring fit for the finger being a Sermon Preached at a Wedding at Edmonton by William Secker The singular Actions of sanctified Christians in several Sermons on the 5. of Mat. 47. by the same Author Tentation the Nature Danger Cure in four parts Together with the Remains of that eminent Divine Mr. Richard Capel The Doctrine of Justification of a Sinner wherein are handled the causes of a sinners Justification examined and applied in a plain doctrinal and familiar way by Charls Chaucy Gospel-glory without prejudice to the law shining forth in Father Son and Holy Ghost for the salvation of sinners by Richard Byfield in octav A glimpse of Gospel Glory being the sum of several Sermons on 2 Cor. 3.18 Preached by W. Sherwin printed 1652. An Exhortation to the Churches of Bohemiah to the Churches of England wherein is set forth the good of unity Order Discipline and Obedience in Churches rightly constituted With an Exhortation premised of the Order and Discipline used in the Churches of Bohemia Dedicated to his most Excellent Majesty Charls the Second in Holland at his departure for England if possibly it may be for an accommodation among the Church of Christ By John Amos Comenius the onely surviving Bishop of the remains of those Churches Grace to the humble as a preparation to the Sacrament in five Sermons by Dr. John Preston Johnsons Essays expressed in sundry exquisite Fancies Sion in the house of mourning because of Sin and Suffering being an exposition on the fifth Chapter of the Lamentations by D S. Pastor of Vphingham in the County of Rutland Groans of the Spirit or the Trial of the Truth of Prayer A Handkercher for Parents wet eyes upon the death of their children or Friends The Dead Saint speaking to Saints and Sinners living in several Treatises viz. On 2 Sam. 24.10 On Cant. 4.9 On John 8.15 On John 1.50 On Isa 58.2 On Exod. 15.11 Never published before By Samuel Bolton D. D. late Mr. of Christs Colledgge in Cambridge Peoples need of a living Pastor at the funeral of Mr. John Frost M. A. by Zach. Crofton A Treatise against the Toleration of all Religion By Mr. Thomas Edwards Chatchizing Gods Ordinance in sundry Sermons by Mr. Zachary Crofton Minister of Buttolphs Algate London the second Edition corrected and augmented A Theatre of Political flying Insects Wherein especially the Nature the Worth the Work the Wonder the manner of the right-ordering of the Bee is discovered and described By Samuel Purcas M. A. and Pastor at Sutton in Essex The second part of Mans wilful impenitency upon Ezek. 18.32 By Mr. William Fenner late of Rochford in Essex with some other pieces of his preserved by a special Providence A Sermon preached at the Funeral of Mis. Elizabeth Moor the 27 of February at Aldermanbury There is in the Press an excellent Treatise of Mr. George Swinnock upon making Religion ones Business in Quarto There is in the Press several Sermons of Mr. Jerimiah Burroughs on Isa 62.7 v. and Luk. 10.5 6. and on the 15. of Prov. and the 19. preached at Gilses Cripplegate published by those that subscribed his former Treatises FINIS