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A41649 A word to sinners, and a word to saints The former tending to the awakening the consciences of secure sinners, unto a lively sense and apprehension of the dreadfull condition they are in, so long as they live in their natural and unregenerate estate. The latter tending to the directing and perswading of the godly and regenerate unto several singular duties. As also a word to housholders stirring them up to the good old way of serving God in and with their families, from Joshuah's resolution, Josh. 24. 15. As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord. Set forth especially for the use and benefit of the inhabitants of St. Sepulchres Parish, London by Tho. Gouge, late pastor thereof. Gouge, Thomas, 1605-1681. 1668 (1668) Wing G1371; ESTC R222576 207,485 324

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though your sins be never so great and hainous yet upon your repentance through the mercy of God in Christ they shall be so abolished as if they had never been committed 3. They exclude no time for the sinners coming unto God but whensoever sooner or later first or last so that he come in truth he shall find mercy and forgiveness Ezck. 33.12 The promise lyeth in the day that the sinner turneth Seeing therefore oh sinner God hath not excepted thy person nor thy sins no thy time of coming do not thou except thy self saying thy sins are greater than can be pardoned and thy day of grace is past Oh do not so great an injury to God as to set any bounds or limits either to his mercy or to his promises 3. The power of God to save the worst of sinners appeareth from his actual receiving the most heinous sinners to mercy The greatest sinners that we read of in Scripture have obtained mercy Who greater than Mannasseh who was a Sorcerer an Idolater a Murtherer and what not and yet was received to mercy And who greater in the New Testament than Paul who was a Blasphemer and a Persecutor of the Saints and People of God and yet was received to mercy Now what God hath done formerly he is still able to do he is still the same God his power is no whit lessened nor diminished Oh sinner what ground hast thou then to question the mercy of God to thy soul if thou dost in truth turn from thy sins unto him and earnestly beg the pardon and forgiveness of them I know indeed that before God giveth a sight and a sense of our sins we are too too apt to presume but our understandings are no sooner inlightned to see our sins and our consciences awakened to feel the burden of them but we are very apt to despair it being the great design of our adversary the Devil either to make us dye in a senseless calm or else to perish in a desperate storm Oh saith the awakened sinner my sins are many for number and heinous in their quality having aggravated them by many amplifying circumstances Certainly there is no hope of mercy for such a wretched sinfull creature as I am whose sins are greater than can be forgiven But take notice I beseech thee of these two things 1. Though in thy self there is nothing but ground and matter of despair yet in the mercy of God through the merits of Jesus Christ there is ground enough of comfort and encouragement 2. How many and heinous soever thy sins have been yet if thou canst find an heart to turn from them unto God and in good earnest set upon the practice of an holy life and so become a new creature God will receive thee to mercy But still beware thou abuse not mercy by making it thy encouragement to sin turn not this cup of Salvation into a cup of deadly poyson let not the doctrine of infinite mercy be thy damnation abuse not mercy as thy encouragement to sin but improve mercy as thy encouragement to repentance 2. For the Willingness of God to save poor sinners even the worst of them it doth appear 1. From Gods description of himself Exod. 34.6 7. The Lord God merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression and sin Why should the Lord proclaim himself merciful and gracious to forgive all manner of sins but for the encouragement of poor penitent sinners to come unto him with hope of acceptance There is not a letter in this name of God not a word in this description of him but fully and adequately answers all the objections which may be made by poor sinners against their own souls Obj. 1. Wilt thou say that thy condition is as bad as the worst having been as great and hainous a sinner as ever lived upon the face of the earth A. To answer this God here declareth himself to be the Lord merciful The Lord therefore able to save thee to the utmost Though thy sins be never so many and hainous yet he is able to save thee from them all And he is merciful therefore willing to save thee for in him there are bowels of mercy pitty and compassion and he delights in mercy Obj. 2. Wilt thou say thou art in thy self most unworthy to partake of any mercy from God having nothing in thee to commend thee to him or to move him to extend his mercy unto thee A. To this the Lord answers in the next place that he is gracious and therefore what he doth he will do freely without any respect of works or worthiness in us for grace is to shew mercy freely The mercy God ever shewed to any of his people was originally founded in himself alone in his own goodness and loving-kindness The Apostle therefore calleth it the good pleasure of his goodness Whereupon saith the Lord himself I will be gracious to whom I will be gracious and will shew mercy on whom I will shew mercy Obj. 3. Wilt thou further object and say thou hast mispent the flower of thy youth and the strength of thy age in vanity and pleasure thy whole life hath been a continued course of sinning against God so that thou hast cause to fear that God hath given over looking after thee and that his patience towards thee is expired and thy day of grace past A. To this the Lord answers in the following words that he is long-suffering Not only merciful and gracious but likewise long-suffering to thee-ward not willing that thou shouldst perish but that thou even thou shouldst come to repentance He still waiteth for thy repentance and reformation that he may be gracious unto thee Obj. 4. Wilt thou say that though the Lord hath shewed himself merciful gracious and long-suffering unto others yet thou art so destitute of all grace and goodness that thou hast little hope of partaking thereof A. To this the Lord answers in the next words that he is abundant in goodness as he hath extended his grace mercy and patience unto others so he hath enough and enough for thee his store is no whit diminished by what he hath given out but as he is an ever-flowing so an over-flowing Fountain of all grace mercy and goodness for the supply of his people he is abundant in goodness Obj. 5. Wilt thou say that though the Lord be abundant in goodness yet thou art fearfull whether he will extend his goodness unto thee A. To this the Lord answers that he is abundant as in goodness so in truth God having in his word promised to receive all poor penitent sinners unto mercy who will in truth turn from their sins unto him his truth and faithfulness ingageth him to shew mercy unto thee and to receive thee into the arms of his free grace upon thy true and unfeigned repentance Obj. 6. Wilt thou say God is indeed
Observ. Miracles cannot be wrought but by divine power For miracles alter the order and course of nature which none can do but he which hath appointed and set that order namely God I will not insist on this that I may hasten to that which I mainly intend in this Treatise CHAP. II. The Exposition and Observations arising out of verse 3. IN verse 3. follows Christs answer to Nicodemus which is continued to verse 22. In which Christ first declareth the necessity of Regeneration in these words Verily verily I say unto thee except a man be born again he cannot s●e the Kingdom of God Before we come to the substance of Christs discourse observe we his manner of entertaining Nicodemus You have heard from the foregoing verses that Nicodemus was both a Pharisee and a Ruler both which sorts of men most of all opposed Christ. And you have heard of his weakness how through fear and shame he went to Christ by night being loth to be seen with him Yet Christ re●ects him not but kindly entertains him and instructs him in such points whereof he was ignorant though they were fundamental points necessary to salvation Whence we may observe Observ. Christ is ready to entertain those that in truth and uprightness seek unto him though their weaknesses and in●●rmities are many He rejecteth not such as are weak in faith for their weakness We read in the History of the Gospel that when Christ lived upon the earth he rejected none who came unto him in uprightness of heart Some indeed went away of themselves but he turned away none Only he seemed once not to regard the Woman of Canaan But why Surely not out of any purpose or intent to reject her or turn her away but only to make known the greatness and strength of her faith For in the close Christ saith unto her O Woman great is thy Faith And can any imagine that now Christ is in Heaven he hath not the same bowels of compassion towards those that come unto him which he had when he was upon the earth Questionless though he be there free from passion yet not from compassion towards weak believers That which was long before Phrophesied of him by Isaiah ever was and will be found true in him namely A bruised reed shall he not break and the smoaking flax shall be not quench that is He shall not deal roughly and rigorously with weak Christians such as are weak in grace but mildly and gently For the end of Christs coming was to seek and save that which was lost And can we imagine that Christ who seeketh after those who go away from him will reject any who do in truth seek after him Yea Christ is naturally very merciful and tender as he hath beams of Majesty so likewise bowels of mercy pitty and compassion His tenderness over weak Christians is set forth in Scripture by a Mothers compassion over her sucking child the Son of her Womb and by a fathers pittying his children So that I may upon good ground conclude that Christ will not cast away or reject such as are weak in faith because but children but most willingly and readily embrace them because Children What encouragement should this be unto all poor believers how weak soever their faith is to go unto Christ as for the strengthning their weak faith so for the subduing their strong lusts and for the reviving their drooping souls For your further encouragement you have Christs gracious invitation come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest Hath he bid thee come and will he reject thee when thou comest Hath he called come ye holy ones come ye righteous ones come ye strong ones and you only shall have rest Hath he not invited the weak and the weary also the drooping and fainting soul Go poor weak soul go unto Christ behold he calleth thee go unto him and thou mayst expect thy cure Questionless one special reason why Christ shewed himself so willing and ready to hearken unto the cry of those who came unto him for the cure of their bodily distempers when he was upon the earth and to heal the same was to stir us up to go unto him for the healing of all our spiritual maladies and diseases For Christ came not into the world to heal bodies but souls And therefore when the name Iesus was given him the reason is said to be this Because he shall save his people from their sins Not their bodies from sicknesses but their souls from sins Art thou bound under any spiritual infirmities Do as those sick and diseased persons did when Christ was upon the earth who are said to go unto him in faith believing he was both able and willing to cure them whereby they drew vertue from him for their healing Art thou troubled for the weakness of thy faith complaining thou hast no assurance of thine interest in Christ no assurance of the pardon of thy sins Go unto Christ by prayer for encrease of faith believing that he is as able so willing to strengthen thy weak faith And fear not thou shalt find such measure of strength added to thee as Christ seeth best and as shall be sufficient for thee Art thou sensible of the working and stirring of corruption in thee fearing lest it should get dominion over thee Lay hold on that promise Sin shall not have dominion over you And in confidence of his faithfulness that spake it apply thy self to Christ by prayer for his making good that good word to thee and then stand still and see the salvation of God Lust as strong as 't is will not be able to stand before the prayer of faith only be carefull that when thou hast made thy Prayer thou set a watch Art thou assaulted with the temptations of Satan and fearest that he may get the victory over thee Go unto Christ by prayer for strength and support against them believing there is as a power in Christ so a willingness in him to succour and strengthen thee and thou shalt be sure to find if not deliverance from temptations yet grace sufficient to resist them and power to overcome them Lastly Art thou troubled with an hard and obdurate heart with a filthy and unclean heart with a worldly and covetous heart with a proud and barren heart Go unto Christ by prayer believing there is as a power so a willingness in him to mollifie thine hard and obdurate heart to purifie thy filthy and unclean heart to spiritualize thy worldly and covetous heart to humble thy proud heart to make fruitfull thy barren heart And doubt nor but thou shalt find thine hard and obdurate heart in some measure softned thy filthy and unclean heart in some measure purified thy worldly and covetous heart in some measure spiritualized thy proud heart in some measure humbled and thy barren heart in some measure made fruitfull And certainly one