Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n apostle_n doctrine_n prophet_n 1,605 5 6.3263 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A40091 A sermon preached at the general meeting of Gloucestershire-men, for the most part inhabitants of the City of London in the Church of St. Mary le-Bow, December the 9th, 1684 / by Edward Fowler. Fowler, Edward, 1632-1714. 1685 (1685) Wing F1718; ESTC R10668 14,518 40

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

A SERMON PREACHED at the General Meeting OF Gloucestershire-MEN For the most part INHABITANTS OF THE City of London In the Church of St. Mary Le-Bow December the 9th 1684. By Edward Fowler D. D. LONDON Printed by T. B. for Braybazon Aylmer at the Sign of the Three Pidgeons in Cornhill M DC LXXXV TO MY Honoured COUNTRYMEN Mr. John Haynes Mr. Aaron Pengry Mr. Richard Bishop Mr. Gwynnet Freeman Mr. Edward Sandys Mr. Edward Davis Mr. Anthony Partridge Mr. Stephen Rose Mr. John Ferrers Mr. William Till The STEWARDS of the late Gloucestershire-FEAST Gentlemen THE Sermon which in complyance with your desire I Preached to a very Numerous Meeting of our Country-men and the Publishing of which you since Requested I here present you with And God grant that this plain Discourse Composed in a hurry of other Business may in some Measure Contribute to the better observance of the great Praecepts of Fearing God Honouring the King and Loving one another therein recommended and inforced Then shall I have great cause to be thankful as to Almighty God for His Blessing on this endeavour so to your selves for putting into my Hands this opportunity of doing good I am Gentlemen Your Affectionate Countryman and Humble Servant EDWARD FOWLER A SERMON PREACHED at the Gloucestershire-feast 1 Pet. 2. 17. Love the Brotherhood Fear God Honour the King THat the Religion of which our Lord Jesus is the Founder is most admirably fitted for the making Mankind as happy as they are capable of being in this world as well as in the world to come is a no less certainly true than common observation As also that it tends as much to the happiness of Societies and Bodies Politick as of single Persons And were I to give a Demonstration of this I should need to do more than propose to your consideration this one short Verse Honour all Men Love the Brotherhood Fear God Honour the King If Christians generally practised the four duties which our Blessed Lord by his Apostle St. Peter here enjoyneth if they gave all Men the respect due to Human Nature to the Relations they stand in to each other and the Rank and Circumstances God hath placed them in if they loved one another as Brethren the Children of the same Father indued with one common Nature and Redeemed by one Saviour if they Revered the Divine Majesty and dreaded the wilful Transgression of any one of his Laws and under God Honoured their Kings as his immediate Representatives and Vicegerents If I say Christians were generally as willing to put these Duties in Practice as they are to acknowledg their Obligation to them I need not tell you that to live in Christendom would be to live in a Heaven upon Earth and in all likelyhood in a short time the whole World would be taken into Christendom In the handling of this Text I shall begin with the duties of Fearing God and Honouring the King and spend the rest of my Discourse upon that of Loving the Brotherhood each of which three Arguments doth well suit with the occasion of this Meeting but more especially the Last In the Prosecution of these Words Fear God ' Honour the King I will endeavour to shew these three things First What it is to Fear God Secondly What to Honour the King Thirdly That there is a necessary Connexion between these two Fearing God and Honouring the King First We will shew and that very briefly what is implyed in this Precept Fear God 1. To Fear God is to be possessed with an holy Awe and Reverence of his Infinite Majesty of his Glorions Attributes and Perfections Particularly of His irresistible Boundless Power of his Absolute Dominion over us and the whole World of His infinite Wisdom and Knowledg of His unspotted Purity and Holiness of His uncorrupted Justice and His inexhaustible Goodness The Fear of God doth presuppose an hearty belief and acknowledgment that all these Perfections are in the Divine Nature and implyeth in the first Place the being affected with Awe and Reverence towards God upon the account of all these He who understandingly believes the Existence of God must necessarily believe Him to be a Being Absolutely Perfect and Consequently must believe that He hath all these Perfections Of this Natural Light assures men no less than Divine Revelation And therefore the Philosophers who were hearty Asserters of the Deity which the Epicuraeans were not as Tully confidently and with great reason affirms have abundantly Preached this Doctrine as well as the Prophets and Apostles concerning God And he I say that Fears God doth so believe this Doctrine hath so lively and vigorous a Sense of the Truth thereof as to have an holy Awe and Dread of the Divine Majesty upon his Spirit upon the account of the foresaid Perfections of His Nature Each of which singly and much more altogether do make Him an Object of the Greatest Reverence Awe and Fear and each of them doth necessarily attract Fear from him who Considers it You may Object that the last of these Perfections viz. the Divine Goodness doth not seem to be attractive of Fear but of Love and Gratitude I Answer That it is no less attractive of Fear than of Love and Gratitude Not of a Slavish but of a Fillial Fear which is founded on Love and Gratitude and necessarily results from them And therefore the Prophet Hosea ch 3. 5. praedicts concerning the Children of Israel that They shall fear the Lord and his Goodness in the latter days 2. The Fear of God implyeth also the Expressing of this inward Fear and Reverence in our Outward Conversations in all the Actions of our Lives And it is impossible where there is an holy Awe of God in the Heart but it must express it self in the Life In short This is in the general the true Character of the man that Feareth God He is one who escheweth Evil. It was part of Job's Character that He feared God and eschewed Evil which are two Phrases to express the same thing and so are departing from evil and fearing God Prov. 3. 7. Fear the Lord and depart from evil He that Fearetb God is one that though he may happen to transgress a Law of God before he is aware and may be surprized into a sin yet dares not sin deliberately nor allow himself in the doing of any thing which God hath forbidden nor in the neglecting of any thing God hath commanded And therefore he endeavours sincerely to acquaint himself with his whole Duty He is one who dreads more to offend the great God than to provoke the greatest of Men As knowing that these have done their worst when they have killed the Body whereas Almighty God is able to destroy both Soul and Body in Hell Which is our Saviours Motive to the making of God the object of our greatest Fear Mat 10. 28. The Man that feareth God is so affected with those words as to be incomparably most afraid of the evil of
there the Devil and his Angels for whom Hell was originally prepared A Soul destitute of Love and fraught with the Contrary Qualities when it goes out of this Body will be prest down by them into the bottomless Pit 'T will as naturally sink down thither as the Stone or any Heavy Body falls to the Ground Hell is the very Center of all such Souls And therefore what remains but that we Hate this Malign Spirit as we Hate the Devil and that we Shun it as we would do Hell it self As also that we make it the Chief Business of our Lives to get our selves intirely possessed of the Godlike Spirit of Love of that Wisdom which is from above which is first Pure then Peaceable Gentle and Easy to be Entreated sull of Mercy and Good Fruits without Partiality and without Hypocrisy But it may be Objected are we obliged to be United in Love and Friendship with those who are Enemies to all Unity who do all they can to Encourage Faction and Sedition in the State and Schism in the Church and are Enemies both to our Ecclesiastical and Civil Government Hereto I Answer 1. If we could all be perswaded to love one another we should have no such Offenders as these among us All true Love and Unity hath its foundation as I shewed true Loyalty hath in the Fear of God And where that is as I shewed too there will be Submission to the Higher Powers The Combinations of Traiterous Factious and Schismatical Persons and indeed of all wicked Men whatsoever is as the Father saith Conspiratio non Unit as A Conspiracy not an Unity But because we cannot expect in this Depraved State of Mankind that so much as the Major part should be induced with the Principle of Love I answer 2. That there is a twofold Love a Love of Complacency and of mere Good-will Now as to the love of Complacency that cannot be between Persons of unlike Spirits and Tempers they cannot take delight in one another A Man of Loyal Principle and Practices can take no delight in a Man of Disloyal ones nor can any good Man take delight in a wicked Man nor ought he so to do if he could But then we ought still to retain the love of good-will for such we ought in this sense to love their Persons whilst we hate their Principles and Practices And we ought to express our good-will to their Persons by pitying them and praying for them and using all endeavours to reclaim them We ought as the Apostle adviseth with meekness to instruct those that oppose themselves if God per adventure will give them Repentance to the acknowledging of the truth And when there is a necessity of exercising Severity it should never proceed from a Principle of Revenge but the design thereof ought always to be the Preservation of the Government and the Reformation too of the Offenders when their punishment is not Capital So that in no case whatsoever Malice and Revenge Wrath and Fury may take place among us And all Men whatsoever should be Objects either of our Love of Delight or of Good-will And now my Honoured and Dear Country-men God Almighty grant that this our happy Meeting may contribute towards the promoting and encrease of Love among us And fully answer the Designs thereof expressed in the Tickets viz. Mutual Society and Charity And it is my humble request to you that this our first Feast after a long discontinuance may give a noble Example to all succeedings ones of forwardness to this great work of Charity The putting out to Apprentice poor Children of our Country or otherwise releiving the most Necessitous of our Brethren And farther God Almighty grant that no other strife no other Emulation may ever be discerned in Our Brotherhood than these most highly Praise-worthy ones viz. Who of us shall give the best demonstration to the world of his Fearing God and Honouring our King or of Honouring our King from the true principle of Fearing God and of sincere Zeal for the interest of the Government Who of us shall be most concerned for the Religion of our truly Apostolick Church in opposition to both its Adversaries Popery on the one Hand and Fanaticism under all forms on the other And who of us shall most hate medling with either of those Extremes who would fain change our Government whether Civil or Ecclesiastical A word or two more and I will no longer Trespass upon your Patience We have a Country I think take it altogether not inferiour to speak modestly to any one in England both for Riches and Pleasure and a Country that is Honoured with Inhabitants of Great worth and Great Quality equally with most in England She hath indeed but a few of the Nobility but among these She can boast of one Family of the very Highest Rank of Nobles And I can't but take notice farther of the Honour which some would have to be done our Country by an Antient Proverb the like to which no other place I ever heard of can lay claim to except Heaven it self Namely this As sure as God is in Gloucester-shire Our Country 's so abounding heretofore with Religious Houses hath been thought as Dr. Fuller and others say to be the occasion of this Proverb But though those Houses have been long gone which we have no cause to be sorry for except their Religion were better than it was I could be content we might never lose our Proverb on condition that it may never for the future be prophanely used as alass now it is and that this for the time to come may be the ground of it viz. That Gloucester-shire abounds above all other Countries with Love and Friendship Then there may be a defence made for such a Proverb as this For though God be every where yet is He most especially and peculiarly present there where Love reigneth For God is Love and those that dwell in Love dwell in God and God in them As St. John assures us I say upon so Blessed an Account as this Let this Proverb so it be never as I said for the future prophanely or irreverendly used to all Generations be continued THE END ERRATA Page 1. l. 10. read no more Page 13. l. 21. read Representing Viz. Ever since the Burning of London His Grace the Duke of Beauford's