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A65753 A vvay to the tree of life discovered in sundry directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptvres : wherein is described occasionally the nature of a spirituall man, and, in A digression, the morality and perpetuity of the Fourth Commandment in every circumstance thereof, is discovered and cleared / by Iohn White ... White, John, 1575-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing W1785; ESTC R40696 215,387 374

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necessarily attends upon it shall we think that the God of nature the fountain of all wisdome the first and best former of societies would leave the body of a society composed by himself as it were the work of his own hand in more hazard then men do the states which they settle and stablish by their counsell Again 2ly Because the Church of all societies most needs a law as being 1 Both the largest most dispersed of all societies we know that the larger the body of a State is and the more dispersed the more need it hath to be firmly knit together by those strong bands of society Now we see the smallest societies that are amongst men and the most neerly compacted together the inhabitants of one small City the fellows of one Colledge governed by laws and orders whereas the Church is the largest of all societies in the world in extent and most dispersed as being possible to be scattered over the whole face of the earth and consequently above all other states on earth needs to be established by the best laws as being hardest to be governed and most subject to disorder and confusion without them In the next place we see the laws of men reach no farther then the ordering of mens outward conversation 2 To be ordered in the very motions of the heart and meddle not with the inward thoughts and motions of the minde But in the government of the Church the chiefest work must be the ruling of the heart and conscience as the Apostle tels us that Gods word and laws reach to the imaginations of the heart and bring under the very thoughts to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10.5 and enter into the very dividing of the soul and spirit and to the discerning of the thoughts of the heart Which are 1 More various then outward actions 2 More speedily moved hardly governed Heb. 4.12 Now how much greater variety and diversity there is in mens thoughts then in their actions how much more easily and speedily they are moved and consequently with how much greater difficulty they are governed and kept in order is evident to all men Consequently we must conceive that the just wise and provident God that directed all men to give laws to order mens actions would himself much more give laws for the ordering and well governing of the thoughts and conscience Lastly 3ly And the Church being Gods more speciall care as being 1 His own inheritāce if God in the course of his Providence have taken order that other states to which he hath onely a generall relation as Lord of all the earth should be governed and ordered by fit laws for the preservation of society and peace we cannot deny but his care must be much greater for the governing and well ordering of his own people in whom he delights his chosen generation his peculiar inheritance which he hath set apart to bring forth fruits to himself Deut. 32.9 Rom. 7.4 in whose good or ill carriage seeing his Name is called upon them his honour is more interessed 2 In which his own honour is most interessed then any parents can be in the behaviour of his own children And consequently we must conclude that if all the States in the world were left without government yet God would give laws nay the most exact and perfect laws for the well ordering of his own Church seeing it redounds so much to his own honour as Moses tels us Deut. 4.7 8. Thus then the first Position proposed is evident enough This law can be found no where but in the Scriptures that the Church of God must have a law The next is more clear then it that this law can bee found in no other books then the Scriptures And to prove it we need no more but to put men to produce us any other volume besides this sacred book wherein that law is written let them name us to whose custody it was committed and where it may be found There is no reason the law given to the Church should bee committed to any other then the Churches keeping 1 Because the Church the keeper of its own records acknowledgeth no other 2 Other bastard-writings compared with it appear to be counterfeit now the Church acknowledgeth no other Book for the word or law of God but this alone neither did ever any dare to pretend that any other book besides this was Gods word or law if any should the very comparing of such bastard-writings with the true word would easily discover them to be no better then counterfeit But to clear this point more fully we shall desire to manifest this one truth more which any sober minded man will easily assent unto namely that it is neither possible nor in any sort convenient that the law for the governing of the Church should be given by any other then by God himself Besides 1 t It was not possible that any other then God himselfe should give this law 1 Because it rules the spirit of man to which no creature can give a law As being unable to take accompt of the breach thereof 2 Because Gods will must be the Churches law First then it is not possible and that upon a double ground The first is that God being a Spirit and therefore to be worshipped and served in spirit and truth John 4.24 the laws that prescribe the duties of that worship and service must of necessity reach to the spirit and inward man Now the giving of such laws is beyond mans power and therefore no law-giver from the beginning of the world ever took upon him that task And indeed it were absurd for a man to give such lawes of the observation or breach whereof he could take no account now we know seeing no man can know the thoughts of another mans heart it is impossible for him to judge whether they be answerable or contrary to the law by which they were appointed to be ordered The second reason why it is impossible for any other then God himself to give a law unto the Church is because it is agreeable to all rules of equity that Gods own will should be the law and rule to all creatures seeing they are all the work of his hand much more to the Church which besides her Creation Being his own both by Creatiō and Redemption he hath purchased to himself by the blood of his Son Act. 20.28 And consequently being his own by the strongest title must be disposed according to his will even by our Saviours rule which allows one to doe with his own what he will Mat. 20.15 If then Gods will must be the creatures law who can give it but himself for who hath known the minde of the Lord Rom. 11.34 Surely if none known the things of man but the spirit which is in man Now none can know Gods minde but himself the minde of God can much lesse be known by any
them either took from the Sibylls books or from some other directions pretended to be given by the Gods themselves Neither can we possibly be assured that such rites as we worship God withall In the observation of the Sabbath use of the Sacraments c. are accepted unlesse God himself prescribe them as we see he did the whole form of ceremoniall worship in the Leviticall law and the Sabbath and Sacraments both in Paradise and under the Gospel by our Saviour Christ And for the services which are to be performed to men first we finde little in the Precepts of such as are meer Moralists concerning that fountain of those duties whence they ought to flow which is love without which none of them is accepted 1 Cor. 13.3 Neither doe we finde that measure of love required by them which our Saviour commands to love our neighbour as our self Mat. 5.44 wherein he affirms we go beyond naturall men and consequently implies that we doe more then naturall reason teacheth whence it will follow that the law which requires that duty was not given by man and therefore must needs be acknowledged to be the Precept and Word of God and not of man Nay beyond all this 3. Most of all self-deniall which nature never taught we find that Gods Word requires of us the deniall of our selves and that every way both of our own vvisdome to prescribe as the Lord requires his people to do not vvhat is right in their own eyes Deut. 12.8 but what is right in the eyes of the Lord their God Deut. 13.18 and of our own ability to undertake and perform as our Saviour requires us to bring forth fruit in him vvithout vvhom vve can doe nothing Iohn 15.5 and of our own ends as the Apostle tels us that vve must bring forth fruit unto God Rom. 7.4 that he may be glorified Mat. 5.16 and therefore the Prophet cals Israel an empty Vine because he brought forth fruit to himself Hos 10.1 whence it is that our Saviour makes this self-deniall the first step to Religion Mat. 16.24 A duty that humane reason is so far from prescribing that it cannot so much as allow and submit unto it when it is prescribed and that because it cannot finde out mans emptinesse and weaknesse the ground on which self-deniall is founded or at least sensibly acknowledged Wherfore the Scriptures which require that duty which is so contrary to the principles of nature must needs be the Word of God Thus we see that the subject which the Scriptures handle is above the pitch of humane wisdome whether vve look to the grounds of faith or rules of practise which are layed down therein The true knowledge of God vvhom the world hath not known the great and glorious works of the worlds Creation vvith the time manner and order thereof And of mans Redemption after his fall and corruption thereby together with the state into which he is redeemed to be mystically united to Christ by the Spirit which gives him interest in his merits and righteousnesse makes him Gods childe by adoption and an heir of glory The duties of fear love and affiance in God all grounded on the true knowledge of him And lastly the service of love to man binding him to love his neighbour as himself yea his very enemies and above all things to deny himself So that the Scripture discovering those things which naturall reason could never finde out must needs be acknowledged to be delivered by God himself and to be his Word MARK III. Of the powerfull effects of the Scriptures upon mens hearts which discover them to be the Word of God THe two former Markes of the Scriptures which manifest them to be the Word of God appear as it were in the face and body of that sacred volume this third Mark is taken from the wonderfull and supernaturall effects that they work upon the heart and conscience which are such as cannot possibly be performed by any other then a divine Power These effects may be reduced unto three heads First the wounding and terrifying Secondly the converting and renuing Thirdly the comforting and reviving of the heart Neither of which being possible to bee wrought by the power of man as we shal manifest by and by it must needs be granted that the Scripture which produceth such wonderfull effects is not of man but of God seeing we know no cause can work an effect greater and of an higher nature then it self To begin with the first The first Effect of the Word the pricking of the heart Differing from naturall terrours the terrours and prickings of heart which are caused in men by Gods Word It cannot be denyed but there may be and are sometimes wrought in mens hearts some naturall terrours which may cause in them much unquietnesse but between such naturall passions and these spirituall agonies which are wrought by the word there will appear a wide difference if they be well examined and that more ways then one 1. In the grounds upon which they be raised 2. In the effects produced by them The grounds of naturall terrours 1. A naturall sense of sin 2. A naturall acknowledgment of Gods Justice Holinesse and Power which may be easily made manifest by observing first the grounds whence either of them doe arise And secondly the effects which the one and the other produce in those on whose hearts they make impression with the different consequents that follow thereupon Concerning the grounds upon which terrours are raised in mans heart the causes of such as are naturall appear to be evidently different from those which raise spirituall passions For we cannot be ignorant that every man by nature having imprinted in his heart some rude notions at the least both of good and evill and withall some acknowledgement of Gods Justice Holinesse and Power and having besides a conscience within his own breast sitting as Judge to passe censure upon his own ways and actions before which his thoughts accuse or excuse one another as the Apostle speaks Rom. 2.15 must needs have usually some sense of every known sin either more or lesse Whence it follows that the more the conscience is illightned and by that means awakened to look back upon a mans own sin and the wrath of God lying upon him for sin and his powerfull revenging hand pursuing him the more he must of necessity be distracted in his thoughts with fearfull terrours which may cause his life to hang before him All working in the heart fears of punishment Deut. 28.65 and to be bitter unto him and yet these terrours as arising from naturall principles are meerly naturall being caused by a naturall sense of sin and acknowledgment of Gods wrath and fear of his own danger thereby which any man may have by nature From this apprehension of the guilt of sin The grounds of spirituall terrours and fear of the punishment that follows it the causes that affect a godly
duties wherein they please him Object But some feele no such Spirituall life in themselves 1 Chron. 29.9 and griefe at sinfull courses Psal 119.136 What shall we thinke then of the condition of those that feele no Spirituall life at all in themselves but are alwayes complaining that they are senselesse and dead I Answer Answ 1. Their cōplaints argue that they have it For dead men as they feele not so they complaine not that a wicked man may judge himselfe to be without Spirituall life by the very judgement of Naturall Reason or being convinced by the Word but such a man feeles not his deadnesse nor is grieved at it though he may be affected with the consequents of it sometimes nor labours to get life but he that grieves and is continually unquiet in such a seeming dead condition and labours all he may to get out of it manifestly discovers to others though himselfe discerne it not that there is yet life remaining in him ● For he that is once dead complaines nor grieves no more Yea the same persons 2. Their striving to move go on even in their greatest weaknesse farther discover some degree of Spirituall life remaining in them not onely by their striving to walke in God's wayes when they finde no ability to doe it with the Apostle Rom. 7.19 and though they cannot runne the wayes of Gods Commandements with that largenesse of heart they desire Psal 119.32 yet they move forwards according to their ability 3. Their griefe at Gods dishonour by themselves others and in the middest of their senslesnesse can be grieved both at foule dishonours done to God and at the miseries of his people As some persons being so weakned by sicknesse that they know not either what they doe or what is done unto them nor have any sense of their owne life yet are offended at the flashing of a candle in their eyes or a pinch or other violence done unto their bodies Wherefore we must needes grant a Spirituall Sense exercised in discerning good and evill Heb. By this Experience we discern 1. Good 1. God himselfe exceeding good 5.14 and by that a Spirituall Experience of both Of Good the Author whereof is God whom we taste to be Good 1 Pet. 2.3 Psal 33.8 by the experiments of his mercies in generall Psal 145.9 10. and to our selves in particular as David found in his owne case Psal 116.5 7. and righteous as he proves and shews himselfe experimentally by his workes Psal 58.11 especially faithfull to his servants By the same experience we finde the things given us of God to be good his Spirit 2. His coūsells and graces Psal 143.10 his Counsells good and that such bring great peace Psal 119.165 the work of Sanctification in us exceeding good in mortifying our corruptions in quickning to holinesse yea all the fruits of the Spirit love joy peace c. Gal. 5.22 Besides 3. The effects of his ordinances Prayer by this Experience we finde the good effects of Gods ordinances Prayer powerfull with God Psal 18.6 as appeares if not by a direct answer by message as Dan. 9.13 Act. 10.4 or voice from Heaven as Iohn 12.48 yet by reall effects Psal 116.2 3. and evidence to our own spirits Psal 66.19 20. which much easeth the heart The Word 1 Sam. 1.18 The Word searching the thoughts 1 Cor. 14.25 Heb. 4.12 Pricking the heart Act. 2.37 and subduing it to the obedience of Christ Act. 2.37 41. Converting the soule Psal 19.7 yea making wife to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 wiser then all the World Psal 119.98 99 100. Comforting the spirit ver 50. By the same Experience we discerne evill 2ly By the same Experience we discern evill The vanity of all the creatures riches and honour which make one no better then a dogge that dies in a ditch Ps 49.20 and leave him a foole at last Ier. 17.11 Wisdome and whatsoever is admired amongst men Vanity Eccles 2.15 so that by experience one findes an end of all perfection Psal 119.96 the pleasures of sinne leaving a man in all evill Prov. 5.14 without fruit Rom. 6.21 sinne it selfe out of measure sinfull as the Apostle expresseth it Rom. 7.13 making a man a very beast Psal 73.22 Withall it makes one finde the corruption of his whole nature Psal 51.5 Abomination of his righteousnesse Isa 64.6 Inability to any good Rom. 7.18 even so much as to thinke any good thing 2. Cor. 3.5 This Experience wonderfully strengthens Faith This Spirituall Experience much 1. Strengthens faith when by the events we finde all things to be as we beleeved as the Israelites beleeved God when they saw the Egyptians drowned Exod. 14.31 and David knew that God favoured him by his deliverance Psal 41 11. and his confidence that God would deliver him was because God had delivered him 1 Sam. 17.37 see 2 Tim. 2.17 18. Secondly 2. Quickens Affection Experience wonderfully quickens affections by those sensible Objects which it discovers as the sight of Iosephs chariots wonderfully revived Iacobs heart Gen. 45.27 and Gods deliverances of David wonderfully encreased his love Psal 18.1 and 116.1 It is true indeed that Faith workes more stedfastnesse and firmnesse of adherence Markes of Spirituall Affections 1. When they are kindled by Spirituall objects but Experience usually breeds the greater strength of affections These Affections we may know to be Spirituall if First they be kindled by Spirituall objects such as are the Sense of Gods Love manifested unto us in the experiments thereof in pardoning our sinnes Psal 103.3 Luke 7.47 in guiding us by his Counsell Psal 73.24 mastering our corruptions preventing our errours 1 Sam. 25.32 griefe and feare for his displeasure Psal 77.7 8. occasioned by our sins Ezra 9.15 yea for his dishonour by other mens sinnes Psal 119.136.139 Secondly 2. When they are seasonable when they are answerable to Gods dealing with us rejoycing and mourning seasonably when God calls us to either Eccl. 7.14 not preposterously 3. When they keepe the heart humble and tractable as Isa 22.12 Thirdly when they keepe us within our bounds humble and tractable like the Psalmist Psa 131.2 in a reverend feare of Gods Majesty Lastly when they provoke and quicken us to holy duties not onely of Prayer or thankesgiving but generally of all service and obedience as they doe the holy Prophet Psal 116.16 17. It is true that Yet it is only the Spirit of God which must testifie to our spirits that they are such when all is done none can assure us that our affections and motions are Spirituall but the same Spirit which workes them in us which as it testifies with our Spirit that we are Gods children Rom. 8.16 so doth it assure us that we are moved by his Spirit It cannot be prevented but that many men will deceive themselves mistaking carnall motions for Spirituall as Iehu did 2 King 10.16 But although some men think they