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A17385 A commentary upon the three first chapters of the first Epistle generall of St. Peter VVherin are most judiciously and profitably handled such points of doctrine as naturally flow from the text. Together with a very usefull application thereof: and many good rules for a godly life. By Nicholas Byfield preacher of Gods Word at Isleworth in Middlesex. To which is now newly added an alphabeticall table, not formerly published. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653.; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Commentary: or, sermons upon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the ten first verses of the third chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the first chapter of the first Epistle generall of Peter. aut 1637 (1637) STC 4212; ESTC S107139 978,571 754

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husbandman that his land beare no thornes not briers not weeds if it beare him not good graine It is not enough for a servant that he do his Master no hurt but he must ●ee to it that he do his Masters worke For first obedience and good fruits are required at our hands in the Law of God besides the prohibition of sinne Secondly Christ dyed to this end that we might live righteously as well as die to sinne Thirdly because all the gifts of the Spirit bestowed on us in our regeneration are given to profit withall not to lay them up in a napkin 1 Cor. 12. Fourthly because we shall be judged at the last day according to our works Rom. 2.6 Use. And therefore this shewes the dangerous folly of such carnall people as think if they come to Church and live civilly and doe nobody no wrong they are out of all question in a right course And besides it should awake carelesse and sluggish Christians to look to their gifts and remember what accounts they will give to God for their unprofitablenesse and unfruitfulnesse 2 Pet. 1.8 Doct. 3. It is from hence evident that the only living is to live righteously He is worthy to be sayd to live that lives to righteousnesse a religious life is the best life And these are the reasons First because it is the most honorable life For to live to righteousnesse makes a man highly in the favour of God Psa. 11.7 Prov. 15.9 and it shewes that a man is borne of God 1 Ioh. 2.29 and besides it helps a man to the best and most blessed memoriall Prov. 10.7 and the fruits of righteousnesse are the best means of glorifying God Phil. 1.11 And therefore Salomon sayd well that the righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Pro. 12.26 And David saith They are the only excellent Ones Ps. 16. whereas every wicked man is lothsome and a sinfull life is a shamefull life Prov. 1● 5 c. 14.34 Secondly because it is the most profitable life and the most gainfull for blessings are upon the head of the righteous Pro. 10.6 The wicked worketh a deceit●ull work but to him that ●oweth righteousnes shall be a sure reward Pro. 11.18 And righteousnesse is both the best riches and the most durable Pro. 8.18 19 20. And it hath the promise of this life as well as the life to come 1 Tim. 6. Iob 8 6. And the profit of righteousnesse will help a man when he is to die when the treasures of the wicked will profit nothing Pro. 10.2 Yea a good man lacketh not an inheritance for his childrens children and the wealth of the sinner is many times layd up for the juit Thi rely because it is the safest and quietest life Hee that walketh uprightly walketh surely Prov. 10.19 and the fruit of righteousnesse is peace Iam. 3.18 For Gods promise is that no evill shall happen to the just whereas the wicked shall be filled with mischiefe Pro. 12.21 And Gods blessing makes them rich and he mingles no sorrow with it Pro. 10.21 and 15.6 And righteousnesse is reckoned as an impenetrable a●mour 2 Cor. ● 7 And God doth marke every one that doth righteousnesse and solaceth his heart Esay 64.5 And the very doing of good is sweetnesse to the ●ou●e Pro. 13.19 And whereas there is no peace to the wicked the righteous is at peace with God with Angels with the creatures and with all godly men Fourthly because it is the most durable life for the feare of the Lord prolongeth the dayes but the yeeres of the wicked shall be shortned Pro. 10. 27.30 The way of righteousnesse is life and in the path-way thereof is no death Pro. 12.28 As a whirl-winde so is the wicked seene no more but the righteous is an everlasting foundation Prov. 10.25 Fiftly because it is a life that ends the best of all mens lives for the wicked is driven away in his wickednesse but the righteous hath hope in his death and great hope too having the promises of a better life and so much glory as the eye of mortall man never saw nor eare of man heard nor came into the heart of a naturall man Pro. 14.32 1 Tim. 6. 1 Cor. 2.9 Sixtly because righteousnesse is more proper to the soule What is riches or honour or any outward thing to the soule of man or what shall it profit a man to provide the whole world to be his estate if hee provide not grace for his soule Riches profit but the outward estates of a man whereas righteousnesse profits the man himselfe And therefore Adams losse was greater in losing his innocency than in losing of Paradise What can it profit a man to have all other things good about him if he be not good himselfe Use. The Use should be first for triall Men should throughly search themselves whether they be indeed righteous men and the more carefully should they search because the most righteous on earth have their many ignorances and frailties There is no man but sinneth daily and in many things And besides a man may attaine to some kinde of righteousnesse and yet not enter into the Kingdome of heaven as there is a generation that are pure in their owne eyes and yet are not cleansed from their sins And the Pharisees had a righteousnesse that had many praises they gave almes and fasted and prayed long prayers and did that which was warrantable in respect of the Law outwardly and yet if our righteousnesse exceed not the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees we cannot enter into the Kingdome of heaven Quest. But how may a man know all his infirmities notwithstanding he be truely righteous and have such a righteousnesse as doth exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees Ans. For answer hereunto I will cast the signes of a righteous man into two rankes First such as describe him in himselfe secondly such as describe him in the difference from Pharisaicall righteousnesse The signes that describe him in himselfe either appeare upon him in his infancy or in his ripe age In the very infancy of the just man even when God first changeth his heart and cleanseth him and raiseth him up to live righteously there be divers things by which he may discerne the truth of his sanctification as First by the dissolving of the stoninesse of his heart When God comes effectually to cleanse a man he takes away the stony heart out of the body and gives him a heart of flesh he may feele his heart melt within him especially when he stands before the Lord when the Lord is fashioning of him for himselfe by his Ordinances Ezek. 36.25 26. He hath a new heart that hath not a stony heart Secondly by the rising of the day-starre in his heart The Father of lights when he renueth the heart of a man causeth a sudden and heavenly light as it were a starre to shine in the understanding by vertue of which men see more into
out such a project for reconciliation Besides what can God denie us if hee can give us his owne Sonne and who is pleased also in his Word to signifie so much and commanded it by his servants to be told to the parties offending that he hath found out such a way of perfect peace Thirdly Wee should hence be comforted in all the straits of godlinesse when the Lord goeth about to lay the foundation of grace in our hearts and to forme Christ in us vvee should remember it is the ●ords vvorke and it shall prosper if the Lord will have it goe on vvho can hinder it The gates of Hell shall not prevaile against it vvhen God builds it upon this Rock Fourthly it should teach us in all other distresses to trust upon God and never be afraid of the oppositions of men or the impediments of our deliverance For vvhat shall restraine Gods mercy from us If the Lord can bring about such a vvorke as this to found Sion by laying Christ as the chiefe corner stone in her then vvee may trust him in lesse matters The Lord vvill accomplish all the Counsell of his vvill and he that hath promised that all shall vvork together for the best will performe it To this end he pleade● this vvorke of ●ounding Christ in the vvomb of a Virgin of purpose to give them thereby a signe of deliverance then in a temporall affliction it is easie for him to save us and deliver us from all our troubles that can give us a Saviour for all our sinnes Lastly Ministers that are but under-Masons and Carpenters must learne to take all their directions at God both to see to it that they lay no other foundation then vvhat God hath laid vvhich is Iesus Christ and in all things to be faithfull in good vvorks as such as must make their accounts to God And thus of the Author Thirdly The time followes I lay or put Hee ●peakes in the present time yet meaneth it of a thing to be accomplished in the time to come For God laid Christ downe as the corner stone partly in his Incarnation vvhen hee sent him into the vvorld in the flesh to take our nature and partly hee is said to lay downe this corner stone vvhen spiritually by meanes he formes Christ in the hearts of men in the visible Church Now the Lord speaketh in the pres●nt time I doe lay for divers reasons ●irst To signifie that the care of that businesse was then in his head he was plotting ab●ut it and did continually minde it Secondly To signifie that howsoever the maine worke of the open restoring of the world by Christ in the calling of the Gentil●s was long after to be done yet God did spiritually forme Christ in the hearts of the remnant so as at all times he did more or lesse further his building Thirdly To note the certainty of the accomplishment of it hee saith Hee did then doe it to assure them it should as certainly be done as if it were then done which should teach us to beleeve God and never limit him When wee have his promise let us reckon upon it if God promise us any thing it is as sure as if we had it Thus of the time Fourthly The manner followes noted in the word Laid I lay There are many things imported under this similitude that Christ is laid as the Mason layes the chiefe corner stone in the earth For it imports First The divine nature of Christ that hee was before he was incarnate as the corner-stone was before it was laid for a foundation Christ descended from heaven Eph. 4.7 9. Secondly The unchangeablenesse of Gods ordinances concerning the giving of Christ. Hee hath laid him as a foundation that hee would not have taken up againe Thirdly the hiding of the glory of Christ and of his life He is of a singular use to the Church and the Frame of God's work appeareth in his members but Christ himselfe is hid with God Col. 3.3 He is like the stone hidden in the earth he is buried in the ground and therefore wee should be the more patient if our life be hid also with God Fourthly It may be by this tearme the mysterie of the birth and conception of Christ is intimated God digged the ground of our natures in the womb of Christ that he might lay Christ there c. Fifthly so it may likewise import the sanctification of the humane nature of Christ who was qualified as the stone is squared when it is laid downe Thus of the manner The place followes In Sion Sion for certaine was a Fort of the Ieb●sites built on a hill close to Jerusalem which was taken by David and called the City of David 2 Sam. 5.7 the Temple being afterward built here The Church of the Jewes was called Sion because here they assembled and so afterwards it was the title given to the Church of God both of Iewes and Gentiles that agree in one faith and true Religion Zach. 10.11 And in especiall by Sion is meant the place of the assembly of the Saints the Sanctuary In the twelfth to the Hebrewes verse 22. it is thought to signifie the Saints in heaven even the Congregation of the first borne In this place it must need● meane the Christian Church in which God built the new world laying the foundation in Christ i●car●ate whi●h began in Ierusalem even at Sion in the Letter Now when the Lord cal●s his Church by this name of Sion it is to import divers things partly to tell us what we were by nature and partly to tell us what we are by his grace and favour By nature what were our assemblies but Forts of Iebusites in which multitudes of locusts swarmed we were Ca●aanites enemies to God and all true religion we were the halt and the blinde mentioned Mich 4.6 7 alluding to that in 2 Sam. 5.6 7. But being conquered by David our King even Christ the Sonne of David we are new fortified for his use and our estate is fitly resembled by Sion 1. The Church is like Mount Sion for visibility Christians are like a Citie on a hill they are such as all sorts of men easily take notice of not that th● men of the world are in love with Christians but many times out of the hatred of the truth set they eyes and thoughts upon them Matthew 5 c. Secondly The godly are like Mount Sion for unremoveablenesse they that trust in the Lord are like a mountain men may as soon remove a mountain as remove them from God and happinesse in God Psal. 126.1 Thirdly the Church is like Sion in respect of Gods habitation there God dwels there he keeps house there and in the assemblies thereof hee feeds his people The Sanctuary is Gods foddering place it is the City of God the mountaine of his holinesse the City of the great King the City of the Lord of Hostes God shines there Psal. 48.1 2 8. Psal. 50.2
reconciled yet they are so busily imployed in following foolish vanities that they forsake their owne mercy Ionah 2.8 They will not answer when God calls but reject his Word and grieve his good Spirit and abuse his patience and bountifulnesse and so heape up wrath against the day of wrath Thirdly others seeke mercy but they seeke it not aright they faile in the manner as either they seeke it coldly and carelesly praying but for fashion sake or with their lips without power of affections They speake for mercy but they doe not care for mercy they neither observe nor regard whether their petitions bee granted or denied and this is the condition of the ordinary sort of men Or else they seeke mercy corruptly without sincerity of of the heart as when men pray God to forgive them the sinnes which yet they mind not to leave Now this is a shamefull kinde of seeking mercy For God stands upon it that we must forsake our wickednesse or else he will not forgive Esa. 55.6 2 Tim. 2.19 Or else lastly men seeke it too late ●● Esau sought the blessing when it was gone Heb. 12.15 They may call when God will not answer Pro. 1. Zachar. 7. And this is the case of some that put off their repentance untill the latter end But have now obtained mercy Doct. The godly are exceeding happy in the obtaining of Gods mercy All that are called in Christ Jesus even all that have truly repented themselves of their sinnes are certainly under mercy and in th●t respect in a marvellous safe and happy condition Three things are distinctly imported in the observation First the on● i● that God is mercifull Mercy may bee obtained Ionah 4.2 Psal. 116.5 and 86. Secondly that penitent sinners doe obtain mercy I●●l 2.13 Es● 55.7 Thirdly that such as have obtained Gods mercy are in a marvellous happy case in comparison of what they were before in It is enough if wee obtained mercy whatsoever we obtaine not Hence the phrase Thou hast covered him with thy mercy And our happinesse in respect of the interest we have in Gods mercy is the greater if we consider either the properties or the effects of Gods mercy There are foure admirable properties in the mercy of God which he shews to his people First his mercy is tender mercy Psalm 51.1 which hee shewes in divers things as First that he is full of compassion in pitying the distresses of his people no father can so pitty his child Psalm 103.13 Hence his bowels are ●aid to bee troubled for them or to sound in him Where is the sounding of thy bowels saith the Prophet Esa. 63.15 Ier. 31.20 The word Misericordiam imports as much for it sounds misery laid to the heart God then is mercifull in that he layes our miseries to his heart Secondly that he waits to shew mercy Esa. 30.18 watching for all opportunities as it were to prevent us with his blessings Thirdly that he is slow to anger not easily stirred to displeasure when he hath shewed his favour Psalm 103.1 He is a God of judgement that considers the weaknesses and infirmities of his servants as knowing whereof they are made Esa. 30.18 Psal. 103. Fourthly that if he do see some more prevailing evills in his people yet hee will spare as a father spares his onely sonne Mal. 3.17 And if he doe chide yet he rebukes his people still with great affection Ier. 31.19 and he will quickly give over and not chide alwayes Psal. 103. He is ready to forgive as soone as they call unto him Esa. 65.23 and 55 7. Psal. 103. Fifthly that if he doe bring affliction upon his people to humble them yet he will not consume them but will repent him of the evill Ioel. 2.13 Deut. 32.36 Amos 7.36 Sixthly that in shewing his love he is of great kindnesse called the marvellous loving kindnesse Psal. 17.7 hence resembled to marriage kindnesse Hos. 2.19 No husband can be so fond of his wife as God is of his people nor can any man devise such wayes to expresse kindnesse as God doth to his people Seventhly that his mercy is without all grievance to him Mercy pleaseth him Mic. 7.18 It breeds as it were an unspeakable contentment in God himselfe when he hath dealth mercifully with his servants Secondly his mercy is immense unmeasurable and this is exprest by divers formes of speech in the Scripture Thus God is said to bee plenteous in mercy Psal. 86.5 aboundant in mercy 1 Pet. 1.3 rich in mercy Eph. 2.4 His mercy is great above the heavens Psal. 108.5 Gods Word herein hath magnified his name above all things Psal. 138.2 He hath a multitude of mercies Psal. 51.1 manifold mercies Nehem. 9.19 They are unsearchable high as the heaven is from the earth Psal. 103.11 His kindnesse is said to be marvellous loving kindnesse Psal. 17.7 Which must needs appeare to be so because he is a Father of mercies all mercies in the world flow from him 2 Cor. 1.3 and all his paths are mercie and truth Whatsoever hee doth to his people is in mercy Psal. 25.6 And therefore the Prophet that could find similitudes to expresse the faithfulnesse and judgements of God by yet is faine to give over when he comes to his speciall mercy to his chosen and vents himselfe by exclamation Oh how excellent is thy mercy Psal. 36.7 8. Thirdly this mercy is the more admirable in that it is free which appeares divers wayes First in that it is shewed without deserts on our parts which the tearme gracious every where given to God in Scripture doth import Secondly in that God is tyed to no man nor to any posterity of men hee hath mercy on whom he will have mercy Rom. 9. Thirdly because it is extended to all sorts of people If the rich mercy of God could have been obtained only by Kings or Apostles or the like it had beene the lesse comfortable unto us but bond as well as the free the Barbarian as well as the Grecian the Gentile as well as the Jew the poore as well as the rich may bee possessed hereof Hee doth not spend all his mercy on Abraham or David but hee reserveth mercy for thousands Exod. 34.6 and will bestow the true mercies of David upon meaner men Esa. 55.4 His mercy is over all his workes especially over all his spirituall workes in Jesus Christ Psal. 145.9 Fourthly it appeares to be free because it can be alone God can love us though no body else doe though Abraham know us not yet God will be a father unto us and never leave us nor forsake us Esa. 63.15 16. Ob. But might some one say In the second Commandement it is plaine that God shewes mercy to them that keepe his Commandements It seemes then his mercy is not free but he hath respect to deserts in us Sol. First our keeping of the Commandements is not alledged as the cause of mercy but as the signe of mercy The words shew to
high in our unworthy conceptions of his Justice Power Eternity Wisedome and Mercy For the second way of glorifying God What heart could stand before his holy presence if he should examine us in justice 1 For our language What man is hee that hath not cause to mourne for his want of language daily in expressing of the praises of God! When did we make his praise glorious have our mouthes been filled with his praise all the day long 2 For our extreame unthankfulnesse when wee meet with God himselfe we have beene healed with the nine Lepers but which of us have returned to give glory to God in the sound acknowledgment of his goodnesse to us It is required we should in all things give thankes and yet we have scarce used one word of praise for a thousand benefits 3 Our slight acknowledgments of sin our backwardnesse to search our waies our carelesnesse when wee know divers grievous faults by our selves either avoiding Gods presence and making confession for fashions ●ake neither out of true griefe for our sinnes and in a speciall manner doe we faile in those cases of trespasse or sinne that com● to the knowledge of others Do we knowledge our sinnes one to another Oh how hard it is to bring us to bee easie to give glory to God herein What man is hee that liveth and hath not failed of the glory of God about the Sabbath Do wee delight in Gods work Have we consecrated that day as glorious to the Lord Have not our mindes run upon our own waies After what an unspeakable manner have we slighted God in his Ordinances Lastly what shall we answer to the Lord for our neglects of Jesus Christ Have we glorified the Son or rather have we not shamefull wants still in our faith Which of us can say that he lives by the faith of the Sonne of God And are not our affections to the Lord Jesus extreamly dull and adverse Where is the longing desire after him and the fervent love of his appearing And for the last way of glorifying God by effect How unprofitably and unfruitfully doe the most of us live Who hath praised God in our behalfe Whom have we won to the love of God and the truth Where are our witnesses that might testifie that our good works have caused them to glorifie God But especially woe be to scandalous Christians that have either caused wicked men to blaspheme or Gods little ones to take offence and conceive ill of the good way of God if they repent not it had beene better for them they had never beene borne And as for wicked men that are openly so to give a touch of them and their estate they have reason to repent in sackcloth and ashes if their eyes were but open to see what terrour is implied in this doctrine and how God will avenge himselfe upon them both for their not glorifying of him and for changing his glory and for the opposing of his glory 1 In not glorifying God they have spent their daies without God they have either not conceived of him at all or in a most meane and vile manner they have not honoured him in his ordinances or in his Sabbaths they never loved the Lord Jesus in their hearts c. 2 In changing the glory of God they have done shamefully Some of them have turned Gods glory into the similitude of an Oxe or a Calfe that eareth hay Some of them have given his praise to Images and the workes of their hands Some of them have fixed the glory of their affections upon riches pleasures and favour of men Some of them have made their belly their god and some have given their bodies to harlots Thirdly in opposing Gods glory they have likewise offended grievously they have spoken evill of the good way of God they have abused his servants and so despised him they have set themselves against his Sabbaths c. to omit that they have opposed Gods glory in their hearts by setting up Idols there by allowing striving to maintain Atheisticall conceits against God The second use should be therefore to beget in us a care to use all means to dispose of and fit our selves that we might make God glorious and so amend and redresse our waies herein and that wee may the more effectually bee wrought upon herein I will consider of two things First I will briefly shew the reasons should stirre us to all possible care and diligence herein Secondly I would shew how wee may distinctly attaine to the glorifying of God in all the three waies before mentioned For the first Divers considerations should move us to the care of magnifying or glorifying of God by all the waies we can First it is a great honour that God doth unto us to account himselfe to receive glory any way from our endeavours Shall the creature be admitted in any sense to that glory to make his Creator to make him I say in his excellencie or glory God doth account himselfe to receive a new Beeing as it were by those inward conceptions of his glory and by those outward honours done unto him Shall the King of glory vouchsafe to dwell in our hearts and shall we not be exceedingly desirous to entertaine him Secondly not to glorifie God is to sinne grievously it is not arbitrary but most dangerous to allow our selves either in inward neglects of God or in outward unfruitfulnesse Shall wee attribute so much every day to the creatures we deale with and shall we know or acknowledge so little of the Creator It cannot be safe to slight God Thirdly it is one of the first things that breakes out in the new Converts so soone as any of the Gentiles are visited of God in the same day they glorifie him by conceiving gloriously of him and by magnifying God in himselfe and his servants and service c. And therefore without singular danger of losing our evidence of our calling we must attend to this Doctrine how hard soever it seeme Fourthly wee are bought with a price and are Gods and therefore now both in soule and body we should be wholly devoted to his glory 1 Cor. 6 ult as God hath glorified us in our creation and the many treasures he hath given us in Jesus Christ and we hope the accomplishment of ma●chlesse glory in heaven and shall wee not bee zealous for the glory of the Lord Many glorious things bee spoken of us through his grace and shall wee thinke or speake meanely of God Fifthly the Lord our God exceeds all things in glory and therefore wee should extoll his praise above the heavens and the whole earth should shew it selfe to be full of his glory Sixthly he is our heavenly Father and can we thinke too well of him or doe too much to win him praise Matth. 5.16 Lastly thinke with our selves What make wee in Gods Vineyard or Orchard If we be trees of his planting ought we not to be filled with the
say that is he may be insallibly assured of it And this is true in two respects first he may know that he is truely called and converted and elected of God secondly he may know his calling in respect of the warrant of all his particular actions as here he may know what is required of him in his carriage towards his enemies Now that every true Christian may be sure of his calling and election and may know his conversion is most apparent by these Scriptures 2 Cor. 13.5.1 Cor. 3.16 2 Tim. 1.12 Heb. 8.11 1 Iohn 2.3 3.14 4.16 5.13 19. And that every Christian is bound to seeke this assurance and knowledge is apparent by many reasons As first from Gods Commandement he requires it of us that we should with all diligence seeke to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Secondly many reasons may be gathered from the effects and benefits such knowledge and assurance will bring to us Assurance is profitable for many things In generall it is our best riches on earth Col. 2.2 and in particular 1. It estates us in all the promises of God when we know we are truely called then we know our right to all the promises of Gods Word 2. It purifieth the heart and life of man Acts 15.9 for when we know we are the children of God we are thereby stirred up to the greater care to please God and walke in his waies 3. It greatly staies and supports the heart of man in the evill day when temptation or afflictions befall us yet the comfort of our assurance sustaines us and refresheth us greatly For helpe in the evill day the Apostle saith we should above all things put on the shield of faith which if it remove not the crosse yet it qu●ncheth the fiery temptations of Sathan with which we may be assaulted Eph. 6.16 and it greatly helps us against the feare and terrour of death Heb. 10.19 20 22. In a word it overcomes the world 1 Iohn 5.4 5. 4. The faith of a Christian is all his living he lives by faith in all the occasions of life as his faith helps him when all other meanes faile him and makes all other meanes more successfull when he useth them The just man lives by faith The people in captivity that were Gods children raised a living for themselves in a strange land by their faith Hab. 2.5 5. It puts life into all the duties of religion or righteousnesse it worketh by love it ●ets all our affections on worke towards God and his people and creatures Gal. 5.6 6. It opens a spring of grace in the heart of a Christian every good gift from above is excited and made to flow from within him by the benefit of his certaine knowledge and assurance of faith Iohn 7.38 Now if any aske how a Christian comes to know his calling I answer 1. By his sensible feeling of his sins to be a heavie burthen to him of which he is truely wearie so as he desireth more to be rid of them than of any burthensome crosse whatsoever Mat. 11.29 9.13 2. By his manner of receiving the voice of Christ and the preaching of the Gospel not in word but in power The voice of Christ hath a marvellous power over him above all things in the world which appeares by the effects of it for he seeles in hearing the word first such an estimation of it as he acknowledgeth nothing like it for power and wisedome 1 Cor. 1.23 24 Secondly he finds at some times especially such an assurance of the truth of his religion and the doctrine he heareth that he is fully established and freed from his naturall uncertainties about the true religion Thirdly the Word worketh in him spirituall senses and very life from the dead which he feeles in all parts of his conversation making conscience of his waies in all things bewailing his frailties and striving to be such as God would have him to be Fourthly it makes him to separate himselfe from the world avoiding all needlesse societie with the wicked and exciting in him constant desires to use the world as if he used it not Fiftly much spirituall joy before the Lord even then when in respect of outward things he is in much affliction The most of these effects are noted 1 Thes. 1.4 5. 3. By the image of the vertues of Christ in his heart by new gifts in some measure for when God calls a man he reveales his Son in him Gal. 1.15 16. There is begotten in him a likenesse of Christ his very disposition is changed into the similitude of the vertues of Christ God gives him a new heart with the image of Christ stamped upon it and he is like Christ in respect of lowlinesse of minde and meekenesse and contempt of the world and love of God and the godly mercy wisedome patience love of his very enemies and desire to live without offence and praying to God as to his Father Quest. But if Christians may know their calling what should be the reason that so many Christians are so unsettled and are not assured of their calling Answ. Distinguish of Christians some are Christians in name and outward profession but not in deed being not at all converted though they have the meanes of conversion and this is the estate of the most men and women in all places Now some are indeed converted but are weake Christians as it were infants that lie but in the cradle of religion Now for the first sort the answer is easie They know not their calling because they are not called yea they are so far from knowing it that they generally are offended at it that we should teach that any body can know his owne calling certainely Carnall Christians then know it not because they have it not and in particular the causes why these Christians attaine not assurance is because they rest upon common hope of mercy in God which house is but like the house of a Spider and will give up the ghost when the evill day commeth upon them And besides they live in knowne sins which they love and preferre before all things can be offered to them by the Gospel Now it is impossible to have true assurance and to lie at the same time in knowne grosse sins without repentance And further many Christians by their wilfull unteachablenesse and incurablenesse in sinning doe so provoke God that all meanes notwithstanding yet those things that concerne their peace are hidden from their eyes Luke 19.42 Now for the weake Christian the causes of his want of assurance are such as these sometimes ill opinions about assurance either that it may not be had contrary to the charge given 2 Pet. 1.10 or if it be had it will not be profitable contrary to the reasons given before Sometimes it is their ignorance they are so unexpert in the Scriptures that not discerning the frame of godlinesse in generall they can never tell when