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A58208 A guide to the Holy City, or, Directions and helps to an holy life containing rules of religious advice, with prayers in sundry cases, and estates ... / by Iohn Reading ... Reading, John, 1588-1667. 1651 (1651) Wing R447; ESTC R14087 418,045 550

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direct to salvation comfort the soul and make a man truly wise but only that which cannot be false that only is the ground of faith whatsoever is lesse is but opinion at most this infallible certainty is only in the word of God who cannot lye Let others magnifie traditions of men I will learne my religion here who but God could teach me Gods will and the mystery of salvation If the Oratour did justly reprove him that learned Greeke at Lilybaeum not at Athens and Latine at Cilicia not at Rome how much more culpable are they who neglecting Gods word will elsewhere learne religion 3. God hath spoken at sundry times and in divers manners by the Prophets and Apostles whose writings the same his infallible spirit endited to reveale his will concerning the duty and salvation of man and for a constant and unchangeable rule of faith and manners leading to the same As when he had shewed the Israelites his power and providence to feed them with Manna from heaven hee commanded that a part thereof should be laid up for posterity in the golden urne so when those divine clouds the Prophets and Apostles had showred downe their heavenly food of soules the commission was to them all which was to some write this for a memoriall in a booke Exod 17. 14. write the vision and make it plaine upon tables Habac 2. 2. what thou seest write in a booke Rev 1. 11. write for these words are true and faithfull Rev 21. 5. This is that Manna which was accommodate to every Palate it was milke to the child and strong meat to the man the Scripture is for all estates ages and conditions 4. Though the Scriptures are the only infallible dictate of the holy Ghost appointed to be the rule by which to try all doctrines yet the preaching of the same word expounding applying it by the Ministers of Christ is likewise the ordinance of the same God assisted by a sufficient measure of his spirit to the edifying and salvation of the hearers so is it the power of God to salvation to every one that beleeueth he hath said it is not you that speake but the spirit of your father which speaketh in you and take heed unto thy selfe and unto the doctrine for in doing this thou shalt both save thy selfe and them that heare thee 5. As Christ was the Prophet which God promised to raise up which every soule must heare which will be saved so was and is his spirit now speaking in the Preachers of the Gospell See Luk. 10. 16. and as salvation is by faith onely so is faith by hearing and that by the Word of God and how shall they learne without a teacher or preach except they be sent and furnished of God when he sent the Angell to Cornelius he could by the same have instructed him concerning his will but he remitted him to the Ministrie of Peter so when Christ appeared to Saul on the way he could as easily have told him what he should do as send him bl●nd to Ananias to restore him at once a double light but he would thus teach men a reverend esteeme and dependance on the ministry by which his purpose was ordinarily to bring men to faith and salvation To incite us to this duty of hearing let us consider that 1. As Aaron must be heard when he went into the holy place and the Prophet must heare the Word at Gods mouth and warne the people thereof upon paine of death so if they will not heare and be warned they wilfully perish 2. The Word is Gods Scepter of his Kingdome 't is his great mercy to give the light of the Gospell to a people as a starre to lead them to Christ when hee removeth the Candlesticke from others by nature as good as they The Queene of Saba said that Solomons servants were happy in that they might stand and heare his wisedome how much more happy are they who may in the Gospell heare the wisedome of Christ and be sensible of his saving power therein 3. This word as God owneth it for the dictate of his spirit and his ordinance so doth he indeed make it effectuall to convert the soule to make the simple wise unto salvation and the wise perfect and throughly furnished to all good workes 4. Hereby Satans Captives may be brought to repentance acknowledge the truth recover themselves out of his snare 2. Tim ● 24. to whom they must else like those care-bored servants be in vassalage for ever 5. The word of truth is safely heard though not alwaies so preached truth begetteth malice and so createth danger to the speaker where itching eares will not endure sound doctrine 2. Tim 4. 3. 6. It is the word of reconciliation 2. Cor 5. 19. the embassie of God to entreat us to be reconciled to him in Christ it profereth peace if we will embrace it if we hearken unto it as Jothan said God will hearken unto us it is the gladsome tydings of salvation the Gospell of peace Rom 10. 15. the savour of life to them who receave it as of death to them that reject it or neglect it every sermon setteth before us life and death blessing and cursing that we may choose as Fabius said to the Carthaginians when he shooke his robes In this bosome I bring you warre and peace choose which you will 7. The dangers are unavoidable to the refuser to heare this word 1. It is a desperate condition to be deafe to the ordinary remedy appointed by God to cure us read 2. Chron 36. 15. c. The Lord God of their fathers sent unto them by his Messengers rising early and sending because he had compassion on his people and on his dwelling place but they mocked the Messengers of God despised his words and misused his Prophets untill the wrath of God arose against the people and there was no remedy Therefore brought hee up them the King of the Chaldeans who slew their yong men with the sword c. See Jer. 19. 15. Jer. 29. 18 19. Jer 25. 8. 9. c. Levit. 26. 18. c. Deut. 21. 13. 15. Therefore did we heare a voyce of trembling and fear and not of peace therefore a voyce is heard in Ramah lamentation and bitter weeping for indeed hereby men desperately prevoke God Heb. 3. 16. It is the height of rebellion against him wherein they will admit of not treaty Deut. 1. 43. Isay 30. 9. the Physitians say deafnesse in a sharp fever is a signe of madnesse 't is nothing lesse here God will give them over to strong delusions to beleeve lies and be damned who will not receive the love of truth that they may be saved I will choose their delusions saith the Lord and bring their feares upon them because when I
179. l 11. had perished 204. l. 8. strings of musi●all ib. l. 23. therefore 1 in every ib. l. 26. ease of sorrows 213. l. 1. ha●e some remission 216. l. 6. so Haman 229. l. 12. in any creature may be defeated p. 246. l 4. who cannot give 249. l. 24. his posterity ib. l. 29. repaire 252. l. 11. the same spe●ch as reason 259. l. 12. seasonable 260. l. 16. his by just meanes 261. l. 31. themselves heires thereof 268. l 31. for or by any 273. l. 16. see thee impious 288. l. 19. there is compulsion 295. l. 19. to foment discord 296. l 14. with discretion 300. l. 18. did I desire a son 306. l. 33. or fatherly 307. l. 6. is no easier The prudent Reader may be pleased to amend other light slips and mispointings as the sense requireth A GVIDE TO THE HOLY CITY c. CHAP. 1. Concerning the necessity of a Christians aiming at a right end in all his actions 1 THere is an end of every action and intention which as the rudder of the ship though it come last is first purposed and guideth ●he whole course 2 By the instinct of Nature every thing worketh to some end which shewes is the perfection thereof to which what ever is not conducing is uselesse especia●ly reasonable creatures who have Will and Preëlection among them they propose to themselves more divine and excellent ends of their desires and actions who understand the cheife good to be attained true and ●ternall blessednesse in Christ are regenerate and repaired by the holy Spirit and wisdome of God 3 In every undertaking propose some certaine end and before thou enterprise examin that diligently run not on at adventure as children use in some unknown path till they loose themselves but carefully look to what end the way thou takest ●eadeth thee consider seriously what danger or profit is therein who knowes not that the end of sin cannot be happy because there remaineth something after it And that the end of the just man shall be peace at last The cause why so many run the broad way to destruction and so few the strait to eternall life must principally be want of a due forecasting what will be the end of that they doe fixing their hearts on the present evill which pleaseth them they regard not the misery which followeth their tasting the forbidden fruit but for its sake wilfully shut their eyes against their dangers or seeing and thinking them much lesse or the recovery more easie they desperatly venture in vaine hope of repentance and pardon and on the other part beeing too sensible of the difficulties which beset the way to heaven they doe not enough consider their future blessednesse and therefore either faint in their trialls their heart saying with prophane Esau Lo I am almost dead what is then this birthright to me Or doting on this world resolve to settle their affections hereon this is the Jazer and Gilead which they would were their portion 4 The supreame and best end of all is Gods glorie into which ocean all desires and actions of the reasonable creature must emptie themselves subordinate hereto is the true blessednesse of the elect in the fruition of God the fountaine of all good in the life to come which naturall men mistaking sought in pleasures riches and such things as the world adoreth whereas indeed all those things if they could have met in one man should have come as short of making him truly happy as the intended top of Babel would have been from landing the builders in heaven 5 The way to this end is true holinesse that is faith ad obedience the end of the Commandement without faith apprehending Christ for our justification no workes are more acceptable to God then Cains sacrifice the sacrifice of the wicked Whatsoever is not of faith is sinne And without obedience there is no justifying faith Faith without workes is dead it saith as once barren Rahel give me Children or I die 6 That which we are to beleeve and obey is the infallible truth of God the first and second trueth God and his oracles and his will concerning our salvation sufficient to make a man wise there to revealed in his word the word and testimonie of man may be the ground of opinion which is of things probable but faith can stand on nothing but the word of God which is infallibly certaine and can have no falshood in it because he cannot ly this is contained in the bookes of the Old and New Testament this is a sure word 2. Pet. 1. 16. 19. for it was indited by the Spirit of God 2. Tim 3 16. 2. Pet 1 21 the same is the rule of obedience like the clowdie Pillar leading Israël into their promised rest Num 14 14 and the star to lead the wise men to Christ Math 2 9 whosoever will be saved must follow this guid hee that walketh without this g●eth like those Israëlites Num 14 40 to the Mountaine of the Canaanites to their own destruction for the Lord is not with him 7 That which is the object of faith is comprehended in the Creed which is the summe of the Gospell our obedience to God is set downe in the Law the summe whereof is love to God and to our neighbours Luk 10 27 28 The Prayer MOst gratious and most holy Lord God who dwelling in unaccessible light of Majestie and glory hast yet been pleased to manifest thy infinite power and unsearchable wisdome in all thy creatures especially those who thou hast created to thine own image to praise and glorifie thee in their eternall participation of thy divine blessednesse Give us true wisdome to consider the end for which thou hast made us make us truely understand that thy glory is incomparably better then all the creatures and our salvation then all the world Lord open our eyes that we sleep not in death let not the transitory dreames of this present life beguile us let not the malitious temper so prevaile upon our infirmities as ●o cause us s●curely to run on in the easie way to destruction but gratious Lord as thou hast appointed the end our eternall life so be pleased to dispose the meanes which may lead us thereto Thou canst as easily make us holy as command us to be so Lord therefore make us such as thou hast commanded us to be make us faithfull to beleeve in thee and obedient to serve and please thee as thou hast in thy great and tender mercy given thy holy word to be a light and true guid unto us so blessed Lord give us of the same spirit by which it was endited which may lead us into all truth and holinesse and these daies of sinne being ended into that holy and blessed inheritance which thou hast prepared for all those wh●m thou hast elected to eternall
either historicall such as the devill hath Jam 2. 19. or temporary Math. 13. 20. Act 8. 13. and this is either faith of miracles or a temptation of security for the devill himselfe will perswade obstinate sinners that they beleeve and are therefore sure of salvation that he may keep them without charity which is the life of religion and that one thing without which faith is dead perswade them to sin securely And there is also a sanctifying justifying lively faith proper to the elect only this purifyeth the heart gives us the adoption of sonnes and everlasting life concerning this faith we enquire and because the heart is so deceitfull and Satan suitable to teach hypocrisie so neerely to resemble true grace it highly concerneth every man seriously to examin whether his faith be true or counterfeit to which purpose take these rules Examin 1 Whether the more thou art perswaded concerning the assurance of thy salvation the more thou lovest God for his own sake and thy brethren for Gods sake Some vainely dreame of justifying faith though their conscience tells them they love but some for fashion sake or their own ends for Gods sake few if any and God onely as far as they hope he will blesse them that faith onely is available which worketh by love without which it is no more alive then a man without heat 2 Whether the more assurance of Gods mercies in Christ thou hast the more thou desirest to be further confirmed Blessed are they that hunger and thirst for righteousnesse for they shall be satisfied 3 Whether the more thou beleevest the more humble thou art God giveth grace to the humble when Paul was by Gods mercy brought out of his ignorance and unbeleefe he was not ashamed to acknowledge that which being in sin he would not have done of sinners I am chiefe True faith can no more be without humility then an house witohut a foundation the proud hypocrite resteth so securely upon his fruitlesse faith that he contemneth other men as if none were holy but himselfe and some few of his society which he vainely conceaveth have engrossed the infinite grace and spirit of God which freely and secretly worketh where others cannot judge thereof 4 Whether the greater perswasion thou hast of thy beleeving the deeper sense also thou hast of thy sanctification true faith is such a lively grace that it cannot be inactive where the natuall life is it will shew it selfe by some evident effects and so must the life of Grace to our consciences therefore the Apostle maketh the quaere know you not your owne selves how that Jesus Christ is in you except you be reprobates intimating that the regenerate and true believers doe indeed know and feele by comfortable effects that the Spirit of Jesus is in them for as many as are led by the Spirit of God are the Sonnes of God which walke not after the flesh and if we walke in the spirit we shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh by which thou must examine thy faith 5. Whether after many trials feares and doubtings doth the Spirit of God still returne and comfort thee so that thy faith is more assured after trials then before True faith like the needle of a compasse in the severall boords tacks and agitations of the ship at sea never resteth till it returne to its owne point and fixeth on the mercy of God againe as 't is written I was in misery and he saved me returne unto thy rest O my soule 6 Lastly examine the conclusions suggested to thy minde with the hope of salvation men shall sometimes have a chearfull perswasion that they are the elect servants of God and therefore shall be saved but yet have Naamans exceptives frequent in their resolutions to sinne God pardon thy servant in this upon this abused promise of God whosoever believeth not shall perish not considering that 't is no true faith which impropriateth the gift of God to wantonnesse or any purpose to enjoy the pleasures of sinne for a season but a dangerous tentation of security a meere snare of Satan perswading men that they have certaine interest in Gods promises that he might keepe them in some knowne sinne But if thy heart say thus I believe seeing therefore God hath shewed me this great mercy working this comfortable perswasion in me I will be more and more carefull of my waies that I may not offend so good a God and grieve his holy Spirit whereby he hath sealed me up to redemption I will strive to make my calling and election sure that an entrance into the eternall Kingdome of our Lord Jesus Christ may be more abundantly administred to me I will heartily endeavour to follow the guidance of his good Spirit who hath translated me from the kingdome of sinne and darknesse of ignorance into light and the kingdome of his dear Sonne by some measure of sancti●ication that I may make an end of my salvation with feare and trembling such a resolution is an undoubted adjunct of true faith purifying the heart slesh and bloud can never give this perswasion or resolution and Satan will not for though he will be contented to present some seeming good if he may thereby perswade a secure man to some reall evill yet 't is farre from his nature to move to good for any good end for this were to divide and ruine his owne kingdome and whole designe which is to make all others confederates in his rebellion and as desperate castawaies as himselfe It remaineth therefore that the Spirit of God against whose worke and purpose the gates of hell can never prevaile must be the sole Author of this perswasion and resolution I believe and therefore will doe my uttermost endeavour to be more holy then ever I have beene 7. Concerning the meanes to be used in the Word and Sacraments for the attaining of this faith I shall speake in its owne place 8. The Object of faith is the truth of God revealed in holy Scripture teaching us his will concerning our salvation the summe whereof are the Articles of our beliefe of which in the following Chapters A Prayer for Faith O Lord God of the spirits of just men Father of lights from whose fulnesse descendeth every good and perfect gift We humbly acknowledge our owne miserable hardnesse of heart wilfull obstinacy and disobedience to thy holy Word hath continually provoked thy justice to give us over to strong delusions and beliefe of lies to our owne destruction that the vaile should be laid over our hearts when we reade or heare the word of promise that Satan should be suffered to blind us that the light of the glorious Gospell of Christ might not shine unto us and that we might not be able to discover our interest in thy promises nor make any assured claime to the merits of thy
Sonne Jesus thou hast indeed said Whosoever believeth in him shall not perish but have life everlasting but faith is thy gift who hast also said Aske and ye shall have As therefore in the sense of our owne impotency so in assurance of thy truth we humbly in●reat thee to take from us all hardnesse of heart and unbeliefe and to worke in us a true saving faith in Christ Jesus establish the thing which thou hast wrought in us make us worthy of thy calling and fulfill all the good pleasure of thy goodnesse towards us and the worke of faith with power It is thy mercy that we believe helpe thou our unbeliefe Lord increase our faith let the little graine thereof which thy free spirit hath sowed in our hearts flourish into a tree of life that our troubled thoughts may build in the branches and rest under the shadow thereof O Lord consider our weaknesse the continuall incounters and violent assaults wherewith our soules enemy chargeth us restraine his malice beate backe all his ●iery darts that they may never touch our hearts holy Father pu● thou on us thy whole armour that we may be able to resist in the ●vill day that having finished all things we may stand fast above all give us the shield of faith seeing we are to wrestle not onely against flesh and bloud but against principalities powers worldly governours the princes of darknesse of this world and against spirituall wickednesse which are in the high places Our helpe standeth onely in thy name O Lord who hast made heaven and earth forsake us not in our trials O blessed Saviour who didst once pray for Peter that his faith might not faile him looke on our greater infirmities intercede for us present these our prayers in the precious censer of thine owne merits that we may continue grounded and established build us on the rocke that neither winde storme or flouds of trials may overthrow us nor the gates of hell prevaile against us O Lord thou hast beene pleased in our baptisme to engraft us into the mysticall body of thy Sonne Jesus l●t that sweet ointment which dwell●th fully in him descend upon ●s even the comfortable grace of thy holy Spirit which may worke in us a full assurance of our salvation Lord seale up thine owne covenant our redemption in our hearts and consciences by the sure and infallible testimony of the holy sanctifying Spirit say unto our soules that thou art our salvation let not our faith waver in any surges of afflictions try us not above that thou wil● make us able to beare chearfully and constantly give us assurance of thy mercies in Christ Jesus unto our ends and in our ends till our faith may be accomplished in the salvation of our soules and our soules fully satisfied in the seeing and living with our blessed Saviour and eternall enjoying all that which we have believed through him O Lord encline thine eare O Lord consider and doe it for the same thy beloved Sonne our onely Saviour Jesus Christ his sake AMEN CHAP. III. What we are to believe concerning God § 1. That there is a God § 2. That there is but one God § 3. That he is one in essence and trinity of persons the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost § 4. How we must labour to know him 1. THat which we are to believe concerning God is first that there is a God he that cometh to God must believe that he is where we must know that it is not enough to believe God to be such as a carnall heart may imagine him never any nation as I noted was so barbarous but that they believed there was some God though when men forsooke the true light of Gods Word and followed their owne inventions they quickly left the knowledge of the true God and his will hence came such varieties of superstition and monstrous formes of idolatry into the Heathen world for there is but one strait line of truth but error is manifold men framing to themselves both God and religious worship all erred in a confused variety making them Gods like unto themselves in bodily lineaments complexion habit manners and affections so the Aethiopians made them blacke the Thracians yellow the Barbarians rusticke the Grecians more court-like the wisest well knowing they erred but knew not in the darknesse of their minds how to finde the right way as many appeare by that one voyce of the Heathen I would said he I could as easily finde out truth as convince falshood We must therefore believe God to be such as he hath revealed himselfe in his holy Word for whatsoever else is imagined is an idol of mans owne heart and not God 2. The Scripture hath revealed First some things concerning Gods attributes Secondly and some things concerning the persons of the sacred Trinity Concerning his attributes these five conclusions are necessary to be knowne 1. We can understand what God is not he is not a body not gold nor silver nor any thing materiall or obvious to humane sense or apprehension whatever thou canst comprehend know that it is not God 2. No attributes can fully and according to Gods incomprehensible beeing expresse to us the nature of God because that which is finite can neither expresse nor apprehend an infinite 3. The attributes of God in holy Scripture doe sufficiently expresse him to us and declare as much as concerneth us to know of him for the wisedome of God can neither be limited nor defective though his essence be incomprehensible and unspeakable yet his Spirit in the holy Scripture descended to our capacity and in certaine attributes described by his owne essence 4. The attributes of God are either affirmative or negative they expresse the perfection of God as farre as we can understand as when he is called Jehovah wise good almighty just mercifull c. these divide or separate from him the imperfections of the creatures and shew his admirable perfections by a tacit comparing him with the imperfect as when he is called infinite incorruptible immortall 5. The attributes of God are either proper or ●igurative the proper are those which are properly spoken of God in respect of that which they import though improper if we consider their manner or measure of signifying The ●igurative attributes are those which are borrowed from humane conditions to bring things of themselves ineffable nearer to our apprehensions as when an eye an hand anger jealousie or the like are attributed to God and we must know that some of his proper attributes are incommunicable to any creature as Jehovah infinite omniscient omnipotent c and some are communicable according to an analogy measure or degrees of subordination as Lord King Wise c. 3. Concerning Gods essentiall properties we must know that there are not in God many or divers properties because he is one of a most simple pure and indivisible essence but in respect of our
is begotten not made sicut lumen de lumine verus Deus de vero Deo light of light God of God the Holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne from all eternity We must labour to know God not by a curious and vaine enquiry after his incomprehensible being which we can never know but by a true faith and humbled soule beleeving and considering him as he hath declared himselfe Christian faith saith in the Apostles words unto us there is but one God but among the professours thereof how many are the hearts like those Athenian altars Act 17. 23. inscribed unto the unknowne God ignorance of ●od is the mother of all impiety unthankfulnesse repining infidelitie securitie presuming to sin impenitencie therefore the wicked are said not to know ●od and obedience to his commandements is a sure marke that we know him Paul therefore wondreth at the Galatians that knowing God by the Scriptures they could turne back againe to beggerly and impotent rudiments at once shewing what we ought to know of God and what use to make thereof praying tha●●he Colossians might be filled with the knowledge of Gods will in all wisdome and spirituall understanding that they might walke worthy of the Lord and please him in all things being fruitfull in all good works and increasing in the knowledge of God this knowledge of ●od is more acceptable to him then sacrifice Hos 6. 6. without this a man can doe nothing but erre had he never so great a zeale of God if we will serve and please him wee must know what he delighteth in ignorance of the truth and unitie of God begat that monstrous idolatrie of many false Gods had they knowne there is but one they would not have worshipped many had they knowne him to be omnipotent spirituall wise mercifull just they would not insteed of him have adored any impotent Idol which they knewe could not help nor deliver it selfe from fire or violence neither was sensible when it was making to avoid such mischeivous errours it is necessary that we should know the Lord as he hath revealed himselfe least we heare that which Christ told the Samaritan Joh 4. 22. yee worship that yee know not that there is but one God the Almighty creator and mercifull preserver of all things three persons but one deity Say not why should I vainly strive to know him who is incomprehensible and unspeakable If I cannot drinke up the whole river shall I not tast to quench my thirst Because I cannot receive all the beames of the Sun shall not I use a moderate light thereof If I were admitted into Paradise because I cannot eate all the fruit should I not tast of the tree of life I cannot know God as he is in his incomprehensible being I will endeavour to knowe him as he is good and gratious to me I will consider his power providence mercy and benificence who hath with so full an hand bestowed things temporall on man that nothing can be desired but his blessing on them nothing could be wanting would not man be wanting to himselfe in the right use of Gods favours in the booke of Grace I will consider his great and admirable favours and his counsaile for our salvation in Christ To conclude observe these rules 1 Take heed that thy extravagant thoughts carry thee not by vaine and curious speculations to prie into the Arke whereby thou maist more easily loose thy selfe then finde the truth marke and follow the wisdome of God for thy salvation when God would open the truth and mysteries of eternall life to man he provided that wee might know those things which were necessary to obtaine eternall life but those things which are too curious and profane minds he spake not where the Scripture hath not a tongue have thou not an eare 2 Measure not all things which thou canst know and beleeve by carnall reason for if he said to Moses desiring to come nigh and to discover that fierie mysterie which burned and consumed not loose thy shooes from thy feet how much more must we put off our carnall senses when wee draw nigh so glorious and holy a God that we may think on him with pure and untroubled affections 3 Be thou not over long or curious in the contemplation of the deity but when thou thinkest thereof cover thy face with the Cherubs wing let thy thoughts be full of humilitie sobrietie and holy asc●●tions by zealous prayer When Jacob saw a vision in the fields of Luz waking he said how fearefull is this place How much should the presence of God aw us when we doe by our meditations as it were come into his presence and view his dreadfull holy and glorious Majestie Therefore as thou lookest but sparingly on the Sun thou gazest not long though it be the dayes eye of so great and comfortable use to thee so meditate on God It is behoofull and comfortable for thee to remember that God is ever present with thee it will aw thee in thy behaviour and sustaine thee in thy sufferings but it is not safe to fix thy thoughts in any searching meditation of him 4 As he that will looke upon the Sunne will finde it under some thin clowd so thou must do here Christ in his humanity is as the sunne in a cloud the safest way to looke on the Godhead is through the vaile of his flesh and in him to consider what a one God hath shewed himselfe to us in him wee see his wisdome severity and the unsearchable riches of his mercy all that which is necessary for us to know concerning him 5 Labour for purity of heart the more thou performest Gods will the more thou shalt know him Yea and a prudent consideration of thy selfe shall advance thy knowledge of God that thou maist beleeve in him and forsaking thy selfe rely only on him A Prayer O Most gratious Lord God beeing of beeings unaccessible light life of life father of the spirits of the just infinite incomprehensible Lord God of power wisedome mercy justice truth who dwellest in that unsearchable glory and Majestie to which none of all thy creatures can attaine Lord God of gods King of Kings slow to anger of great goodnesse and compassion who hast beene pleased out of thine owne eternall love to man even before he was to elect him and in thy creating him to put thine owne glorious image of light and knowledge upon him to extend a gratious hand of providence over him to looke downe from the habitation of thy glory to consider the things which are done among the sonnes of men looke downe O blessed Lord God upon mee wretched sinner by the malitious tempter and mine owne wilfulnesse blinded and deprived of that excellent light of my creation and despoyled of that purity of heart conformity of will and actions wherein I had ability to serve and please
to the wicked Princes and Priests is treason against the City Pauls madnesse to Festus moving of sedition and heresie to Tertullus and blasphemie to the Jewes 5. Pride as 't is written they dealt proudly and he●rkned not unto thy commandements they who in the height of a carnall heart resolve not to change their resolutions cannot abide to heare any thing dissenting the proud heart cannot endure any contradiction 6. Love of the world the tares thereof choke up the good seed so that it cannot finde roome in the heart to fructify this makes the negotiators excuse their not comming to the spirituall feast they must prove their Oxen and survey their new purchases the married thinke they owe no excuse this makes Felix put off hearing the Gospell to some convenient time when Satan and the world will this makes the formall hypocrite who will seeme a great servant and lover of the word goe away heavy if it bid him sell and give to the poore or secretly murmur if it touch his fraud of fals weights resolving to follow the word no further then it will comply with his gains the Prophet describeth such they heare thy words but they will not doe them with their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetousnesse c. 7. Satans subtilty distracting their thoughts so that they attend not and catching away that which is sowed in their heart perverting the sense embittering wholsome doctrine with some dislike distast irksomenesse of the hearer or suggesting some impertinent thoughts so to sill and busie the mind that it cannot attend to nor receive the word the mind of a good hearer must be like the arke of the testimony in which was onely the tables of the Law The conditions necessary to profitable hearing are that we take heed 1 Whom 2. What. 3. and how we heare 1. Christs sheep will not hearken to a stranger Joh. 10. 5. and God saith of seducers Thou shalt not hearken to the voyce of that Prophet 2. We must take heed what we heare Mark 4. 24. Evill Words corrupt good manners 3. We must he cautious how we heare Luk 8. 18. The gate of life and death had need be guarded with all diligence while Eve left it open to the Serpent shee quickly perished The conditions of hearing are that we must heare 1. Faithfully without which the word profiteth not the learner must beleeve specially in Gods schoole wee must not perversely affect to bring Gods assertions to the touchstone of our sense or carnall ●eason to make the Lawes of our owne faith with Thomas I will not beleeve except I see or to require demonstration and proofe of Gods truth whose part it is to pronounce not to proove because he is the onely competent witnesse to himselfe all the creatures can adde no credit to his assertions it is enough to conclude a thing true if we can prove that God said it because he is essentially truth whatsoever is not true is neither God nor of God It is impossible for him to lye as 't is impossible for him not to be or to change his being true now because wee are not capable of the infinite counsell and truth of God he complieth with our capacity and speaketh after the manner of men by litle litle destilling that dew of heaven on our understandings which may not overwhelme and drowne them but make them fruitfull not powring out his depths of knowledge on us as he can speake but as we can apprehend Therefore we must adore those mysteries which we cannot examine and beleeve every syllable of Gods word to be infallibly true though our reason come infinitely short of sounding the depth thereof 2. Attentively we must come to a sermon not for feare or fashion but with an hearty desire to be edified and therein shake off all oscitancie carelesse drouzinesse and wandering thoughts which will else render all our worke fruitlesse the Auditors thirst to heare is the speakers supply when they attend the spirit powreth out abundantly as the widowes oyle encreased while there were vessels to receive it bee thou present in minde indeed to receive the word or else a bodily presence will no more profit thee then did Satans appearance among the Saints advantage him bring me an heart free from all worldly distractions said Chrysostome hearing is the port of wisdome the sense of descipline admirable is the power of the tongue which the good God gave to be the soules interpreter that the spirits of men otherwise close prisoners in those hou●es of clay might convay a mutuall intelligence and communicate their secret senses to each other through the eare the heathens intimated 〈◊〉 their legends of Amphion building the walls of Thebes and Orpheus charming the eare with notes so sweet that he made brutes attentive brought some from the dead we better knowe the morall in the admirable power of speaking able to unite men in civill societies and an holy communion to edifie and by the power of Gods spirit working therein to raise the dead in sinne to newnesse of life but all this must be done with an attentive eare the hearing eare so the Hebrewes put 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cor audiens for an understanding heart 1 King 3. 9. without whose attention it cannot be 3. Prudently which is 1. By resolving to obey Gods word in every part this is the end of our hearing not the hearers but the doers of the Law shall be justified be yee doers of the word and not hearers only deceiving your own selves Happy are they who heare and do thereafter too many are all for hearing and nothing for practice like those monstrous Fanetii who had eares disproportionably great for the body if the whole were hearing where were the smelling 't is the symtome of a queazie stomacke to desire to tast many things and to be able to digest nothing The word of God is quicke and active like the snow and raine it doth not in vaine descend but doth his will who sent it making the good grow up to the blessing and the evill like fowle weedes more ranke for the fire 't is as the Arke at Obed Edoms house a blessing at Ash●od a curse we must not thinke 't will lye dead it maketh the disobedient like the first sinner slie and strive to hide from God it leaves him excuselesse to the more stripes by how much more he knew his masters will and would not doe it read Deut ●9 19 20 21. wee many times wonder why the Lord afflicteth us we may easily know 't is for the contempt and neglect of his word we heare but obay not except where we please which is indeed to idoll our own affections not to serve God we at our pleasure make free choice which of Gods
a weapon in one hand and a building instrument in the other that wee may at once desend and edi●ie 3. Compose thy body to such a reverend posture in respect of Gods presence and the testimony of men and Angells who behold thee that thou maist thereby contribute to the Minister hearers the assistance of thy devout gesture attention countenance and voice as occasion serveth to say Amen 3. After hearing 1. Lay up the seed in a faithfull memory least the evill one come take it away and leave thee fruitlesse that thou maist be a doer of good works and not a forgetfull hearer and so bee blessed indeed as 't is written Heare therefore O Isra●l observe to doe it that it may bee well with thee lay that to heart which thou hearest throughly applying it to thy selfe as if God pickt thee out of all the congregation to speake to thee that he might draw thee to repentance and salvation thus must thou lay up his words in thine heart and hald fast that thou hast received thou learnest only so much as thou remembrest excuse not thy selfe upon a bad memory thou seldome forgettest where thou seriously lovest where is that old man that hath forgotten where he hath laid his gold Use the best meanes by repeating writing calling to memory some things at least when thou commest home thou shalt in this constant practice ●inde thy memory amend 2. Meditate and examine how thou hast profited by hearing in case thou finde hardnesse of heart and ba●rennesse in thy soule be not discouraged God hath his times Moses smote the rock at Horeb twice before it would yeeld at last it sent out abundant streames of living waters God speaketh once and twice and man perceiveth not line must be unto line and precept unto precept happy he who once resenteth give it not over still practise the beast which ruminateth not was reputed uncleane the morall is they are wicked who call not oft to minde that which they have heard Be constant in examination of thy selfe after every sermō thou hearest to dresse our selves we are contented often to consult our glasse how well and decently 't is done how few doe it after hearing If thou wilt doe thy selfe right herein thou shalt at last feele the power of Gods word in thy soule Doth any enquire how shall I knowe when I heare the word as I ought The signes are 1. Joy of the holy Ghost so went the shepheards home so the Eunuch so many of the faithfull 2. Desire to heare more as those happy converts Act 13. Act 17. 32. the spirituall eare is not satiate with hearing when good Josiah had heard the Law read he gave present charge goe and enquire the Lord for us 3. Profitting by the sincere milke of the word growing thereby from strength to strength from grace to grace 4. Faithfull resolution to doe all that which thou hast learned as Israel once professed otherwise it had beene better never to have knowne the holy commandement it being lesse sin to be ignorant of Gods word then to despise it knowne Herod did many things but his dispensation with one sinne overthrew all the rest 5. Hearty and unfeigned repentance such as we read of in the Jewes at Peters sermon Act 2. 37. such as is commanded Rev 3. 3. 6. Filial feare of God this is the end of speaking and hearing to feare God and keep his commandements is the whole duty of man 7. Readinesse to impart to others what we have learned that they may teach their children said Moses Deut 4. 10. so did holy Abraham his family 3. Lastly againe commend thy soule to God that hee may send thee the former and later raine upon the seed sowed in thine eares to enable thee to bring forth happy fruitsthereof to make it powerfull and comfortable to thee in life and death A Prayer before hearing the word O Lord God eternall who hast laid the foundation of the earth and formest the spirit of man within him who art the father of light and causest the Sunne of righteousnesse to shine unto people sitting in darknesse in the region and shaddow of death that the glorious light of the Gospell might appeare to them that they may therein knowe thee beleeve see thy saving health and bee fruitfull in good workes to thy glory and the assurance of their own hearts before thee wee humbly acknowledge that we we are most unworthy of the least of all thy mercies specially of that light of truth which thou hast abundantly and long bestowed upon us seeing wee have not yet brought forth fruits worthy amendment of life but have walked every man in the stubbornesse vanity and security of his owne heart as if we had not knowne thy will thou hast allured us with promises and deterred us from our wicked waies with threatnings and sore afflictions accordingly sent upon us but wee have answered all with contempt security adding transgressions to transgressions till they have beene multiplied over our heads ascended up into thy presence and thence with wilfull hearts and violent hands pulled downe thy severe judgements upon-our selves as appeareth this day so that in our own conscienc●s we doe deserve to heare that sentence on the barren tree cut it downe and cast it into the fire why keepeth it the ground barren That thou shouldst give us over to our owne vile affections and destruction of body and soule by taking away the comfort of thy word from this sinfull nation by permitting those sonnes of confusion who of our selves have risen up speaking perverse things still to prevaile against the unity of this Church and State that thou shouldst send us strong delusions who would not receive the love of the truth that thou shouldst suffer a fearefull darknesse againe to cover this land that night should be to us for a vision and darknesse for divination that the Sunne should goe downe upon our Prophets whose words and ministry we have so much sleghted and contemned and that the day should prove darknesse over them that thy word should become a savour of death to us and every prophesie wee heare rise in judgement against us O Lord we cannot be ignorant that our obstinary is such as that thou who art an holy and just God canst have no pleasure in us we have so often stopped our eares to thy law that we may well expect that thou wilt not accept our offerings and incense of prayers in our distresse who have wearied thee with our words and drawne neere to thee with ●eigned lips b●t our hearts have beene far from thee we are become the border of wickednesse and thou hast beene sore displeased with us because we have not hearkned to thy Prophets who cryed to us to turne from our wicked waies we have indeed not layed their messages to heart but refused to hearken and pulled away the shoulder we made
untill that Jonah be cast overboord we can never appease the surges of a troubled mind this must thou seek through hearty sorrow for thy sinnes this restringent acrimonie shall heale the fountaines that death and barrennesse may no more flow from the minde into thy words and actions t is a good signe of recovery when the disease changeth place so when we are pleased with repentance who woont to please our selves in sinne t is a token that sin declineth in us Secondly by committing thy workes unto the Lord so thy thoughts shall be established and lastly by filling thy soule with such happy thoughts as constant meditation on Gods word will furnish thee with as t is said let thy minde be upon the ordinances of the Lord and meditate continually on his commandements he shall establish thine heart and give thee wisdome at thine own desire 8 Overcome thyne own minde and in every thing as much as possibly thou canst subject it to right reason let not affection or passion master it 9 Set thy minde ever upon some good to prevent the rising of evill thoughts that the tempter may never finde thee at leisure to entertaine him The minde is naturally active and prone to thoughts yea when thou sleepest it hath its motions give it some businesse it cannot be inactive as the earth neglected for want of culture bringeth forth noisome weeds so will the minde evill and vaine extravagancies of thoughts if thou busie it not in good yea the light of reason is eclypsed by the mischievous interposition of vitious thoughts yet tyre not thy minde with too much or too weighty affaires proportion thy undertakings to thy strength the minde requireth some intermissions and rest which otherwise like the fields with perpetuall bearing will grow fruitlesse the unbalasted ship is easily overset with every gust of winde and too much loading sinketh her There is an Arke of Gods secret counsell into which thy thoughts may not looke there are also admirable mysteries out of which God calleth as out of that ●iery bush come not nigh hither put off thy shooes from off thy feet resigne thy thoughts to Gods immensity it is enough to beleeve his truth though thou canst not examine his incomprehensible secrets if thou wilt play with these flames thou shalt burn thy wings God hath revealed enough to make thee happy ambition of knowing more destroyed mankinde Commune with thine owne heart concerning that which may better thee Psal. 77. 6. and make thee happy divine soliloquies are a kinde of rapt to heaven and prepossession of that blessednesse use thy heart to thinke of good and heavenly things and such will thy thoughts words and actions be the heart of the wise teacheth his mouth Custome is a second nature therefore also the wiseman saith Wisedome resteth in the heart of him that hath understanding if the wicked the worst of fooles have any notion thereof it no more resteth with him then lightning in the aire 10 Set God ever befor●●●ee as a searcher of hearts and that which thou woulde●t be ashamed to speake before others be ashamed to thinke with thy selfe Thoughts are the word of the heart which God heareth who therefore saith wherefore thinke yee evill in your hearts And curse not the King no not in thy thought bee thou pure in heart if ever thou meanest to see God let not thy heart dissent from thy tongue neither desire to seeme more holy then there thou art if thou intend to please him for he is omniscient 11. Pray the Lord to create a cleane heart and to renew a right spirit within thee to encline thy heart unto his testimonies to give thee an heart to know him to prepare thy heart that thou maist truely feare him meditate on him and love him above all and that he who cast out the tumultuous rabble from Jairus house would also be pleased to cast out of thy soule and mynde all those thoughts which offend him or hinder the riasing up thy soule to the life of grace CHAP. XIX Of the thoughts and ordering thereof § 1. Concerning the right ordering the thoughts in respect of some particular passions affections and perturbations of mind in their distempers of love and delight § 2. Of joy reioycing myrth and sorrow § 3. Of 〈◊〉 hatred malice envy § 4. Of impatience patience discontent and a contented mind FOR the right ordering the thoughts arising from some particular aff●ctions or passions which usually discompose and render the mind lesse apt for the service of God and lesse comfortable to our selves we must ever have in mind the generall rule before laid down that extreame and violent passions of any kind are distempers of the soule which at best befoole a man if not as ●yp●crates thinketh make him mad they are like a deluge which rather overflow and drown then refresh the mind they are like an enraged Sea full of hazard they distu●be the intellectuals and distract the will look how all things in troubled waters seeme wreathed and disordered which in the still are cleerely seene so is it here the calme af●ections are more accommodate for Gods service and our use to come to some pa●ticulars Love and delight are great 〈◊〉 in this present life every man hath some love and delight there is none that liveth without these The skill is That we set them on right ob●ects as God Psal. 37. and heavenly things so they cannot fall into excesse and goodnesse so shall they make us good and happy 2. That we pervert not the order we must no● love or delight in any thing before God let him be our 〈◊〉 and cheife love and delight and we shall be happy in all that is subordinate 3. That no inferiour love or delight draw as away from Gods love there is a time place and measure for secular delights so far as they are subordinate to God make us more fit for his service and administer occasion and matter of thankfulnesse to him if otherwise if God love us he will take that away from us which else would take us from him a necessary rule for them to consider who too impatiently beare the losse of that they much loved or delighted in 4. That we neither love nor delight in any worldly thing otherwise then to hold it with a loose hand contented to part with it when God pleaseth to take it back again it was Jobs resolution the Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away and blessed be the name of the Lord. Concerning joy rejoycing and mirth the rules are that 1. God would not have us disconsolate but to rejoyce and be cheerfull in him evermore Dedolency melancholy dejectednesse worldly sorrow bitternesse of spirit and secret repining against Gods providence are dangerous symtomes of unbeleefe for if being justified
this is a prudent expectation of future good the fulfilling of all God's promises in Christ for this life and that to come This is a vertue infused into our hearts by the holy Ghost this is in God who cannot deceive as 't is written Be of good courage and hee shall strengthen your heart all yee that hope in the Lord. God's eye is upon them and they trust in him who will certainly perform his promise and happy are they the Lord taketh pleasure in them their expectation shall be gladnesse Prov. 10. 28. they have hope in death Prov. 14. 32. they are saved hereby Rom. 8. 24. hopes in any creature but hope in God maketh not ashamed because he is good to all them that trust in him this hope is not humane or conjecturall such as may be deceived but divine grounded on the infallible Word of God who is our hope The object of this hope is all that which God hath promised remission of sins grace glory all things necessary for this present life and the life to come the instrumentall cause hereof is justifying faith whence it springeth as it is written Faith is the substance of those things which are hoped for the supream end God's glory the subordinate our salvation and present comfort and that which serveth hereto the effect gratitude to God who begetteth us againe to a lively hope in Christ sanctimony 1 Joh. 3. 3. expulsion of servile feare dependance on God casting all our care on him fortitude in bearing afflictions joy in adversity The subject the saint of God onely faith and hope accord in the cause God's Spirit giveth both and in the certainty as we beleeve so wee hope they differ First in that faith begetteth hope and so in the order of nature is before hope Secondly faith looketh on the trueth of Gods promises hope on the goodnesse thereof as faith can have nothing but infallible trueth for it object so hope can have nothing but good faith apprehendeth the trueth hope patiently expecteth the fulfilling thereof the object of this hope hath foure conditions It must be 1. Good 2. Future 3. Difficult 4. Possible 1. Good whatsoever is not such may be an object of feare it cannot be of this hope now whereas there is a true good the object hereof so is there an appearing or seeming good which being not true causeth a vaine or impious hope as if a man hope for ease pleasure riches honours these are not true goods nor of themselves good but in their use the hope thereof therefore may be vaine and failing if a man hope for revenge on his enemy satisfaction of his lusts or the like this hope is impious and cannot but faile or make a man unhappy in the end but if we hope for Gods glory our soules health our comfort or what else is truly good it is true hope and shall attaine even where it seemeth to the world to faile as when we pray for some temporall thing which God seeth not good to grant as when Christ prayed that the cupp might passe from him when Moses hoped to goe into Canaan he was heard and Moses not defeated of his hope because in both God did that which was best and that is ever consistent with true hope which prescribeth not God but confidently expecteth either that which it hopeth or something better 2. Future Rom. 8. 24 25. joy is of things present or so presented as when we rejoyce in hope Rom. 12. 12. hope maketh that present by a prepossession of that which is to come for hope cannot be of that which is present 3. Diff●cult such are all things excellent it may be that deluded hope maketh it an easy step to heaven and salvation but they that doe indeed goe that way shall find it narrow and set with a world of difficulties that which in truth is hard designe and vaine hope feigne easy but nothing truly good is such 4. Possible that which is impossible to carnall reason may be hoped for because 't is possible to God therefore Abraham believed above hope and we look for the resurrection of the dead and some things which sinfull men think possible are impossible all things are possible to God which he will doe and he will doe all that he hath promised but some things God will not do and so are impossible God will not lie nor be unjust for that importeth impotency which is in any measure evill in it declining from God so that to hope that those things which God hath said concerning secure sinners shall not come to passe is a vaine hope for 't is impossible for God to be untrue To resolve to sinne and yet to hope for pardon is a vaine hope because it is impossible for God to be unjust a severe document for presumptuous sinners who will enjoy their lusts and pleasures glut themselves with revenge and yet hope when this life's scene is done the few petitions of our epilogue shall purchase favour no no thou that with purpose to sinne prayest God to be merciful doest in effect pray God to be unjust and indulgent to an impenitent sinner which being impossible it concerneth thee to arise from sleep and shake off all deluding and vaine hopes that thou maist lay hold on the true and never failing which is the anchor of the soule laying hold on the land of the living entring in within the vaile ease of sorrow griefes asswager afflictions comforter despaires antidote helmet of salvation bond of breaking hearts Faith's perspective the soules attourney sent before to take livery and seisen of our heavenly inheritance the Neho where we take a view of the promised rest the faithfull spie to discover the holy land bringing us the tastes from Escoll the fruits of the spirit the possession which they have who have no more and yet are rich 4. Concerning hope these rules must be held 1. Prepare thy selfe hereto with the loines of your minde girded with resolution and sobriety with purity of life For every one that hath this hope purgeth himselfe as hee is pure True hope and resolution to live in any known sin are incompatible the holy man's hope never faileth finally the Heathen could say Fortune hath often deserted the innocent but good hope never 2. Hope to the end or perfectly the perfection of hope is perseverance we must waite for the adoption the redemption of our body though deferred hope make the heart sick though it tarry waite for it shall surely come what ever the tryall be resolve with Job though he kill me I will wait on him we are Christ's if we hold fast the confidence rejoycing unto the end though through humane frailty thou sometimes feare yet be confident When I was afraid I trusted in thee feare and hope may dwell together specially where feare of God
shall we report of thee to our King replyed Say there is a man in Athens who can hold his peace at supper 'T is true a wide eare and a close mouth belong unto the wise though callings and occasions are herein very considerable if a pastor fear to warne his auditors of sinne hee becommeth guilty of their blood who perish therein their rule is to be discreet in silence and profitable in word that they neither speak things to be concealed nor conceale that which should be spoken Incautious speech leadeth men into errour and indiscreet silence leaveth them therein I speake here of private interests wherein three things excellently become a man wisdome in the minde modesty in the countenance and silence in the tongue it is a safe abstinence How often do we or ought we to repent of our words how seldome of our silence In passion we are too apt to speak grief hath many tongues and it is not easie therein with A●ron to hold our peace though very advantagious which the heathens seemed to intimate in placing the image of Angeronia with the mo●th bound up on the altar of Volupia to shew that they who do prudently conceale their sorrowes and anxieties by patience shall attain comfort 't is great wisedom neither to take notice of every injury nor to publish every griefe 6. Let thy words be few and opportune not as a fools who careth not what but how much hee speaketh speak only that which thou certainly knowest and thereof that which is necessary and no more To heare much and say little giveth credit and weight to that which thou speakest whereas no man much regardeth a man prodigall of words when a long winded Orator had delivered a tedious embassy to Agis and demanded what answer he should carry back Tell them said hee that I was as long silent as you speaking seldome doth the hearers attention and patience hold out in long discourses it is often with them as with the Philosopher who said to a railer insultingly crying after his tedious reviling him have I sufficiently curried you Sir truely no for I marked nothing of that you said It was the wise mans observation A ●ooles voice is known by multitude of words and in the multitude of words there wanteth not sinne hee that hath knowledge spareth his words The empty cask soundeth lowdest and hee that worst can will speak most certainly because they love to heare themselves they cannot reasonably think that any man willingly yeeldeth his eares to be afflicted with their braying hee that speaketh much letteth slip some things foolishly a wise man never speaketh too much nor a fool too little It were to long too reckon up the several evill proceeds of talkativenesse how many mischievous discoveries of secrets come form hence How many schismes factions contentions One gave it for a reason why Lycurgus gave enough yet but few lawes to the Lacedemonians because few lawes are sufficient for them who speak little A necessary point of consideration in these sad times wherein most mens eares have runne out into tongues and that impious liberty hath set the world on fire As thy words must be few so let them be reasonable that may be well spoken at some time in some place on some occasion to or before some persons or by some man which wanting these seasons becomes unsavoury odious and dangerous a word spoken in due season how good is it It is ever a shame to speak foolishly and many times mischievous to speak that which if seasonably might be wisely said Cicero might have contemn'd bloody Antonie's sword had he spoken alwaies as foolishly as once he did Let eminent men be ever cautious what they say the obscure idiot may with little hazzard say any thing the Autors name stampeth a deep impresse of good or evill a puny orator seldome staines his desk with blood 7. Let thy speech be for matter modest not impudent true and peaceable not offensive and giving matter of con●ention and quarrel savouring of meeknesse and humility not insolent religious not profane The speech is the mindes index out of whose abundance it floweth and so obscenity not onely bewrayeth an evill heart but corrupteth the hearer howsoever some are so desperately infected with this sinne that they have no sense of danger but count it good wit and immodest behavior good breeding and that 't is a shame not to be impudent yet the Spirit of God which cannot erre arrangeth foolish talking and undecent jesting with fornication and that with privation of the kingdome of heaven Secondly let thy words be true the wicked are of lying tongues now whether it be a pernicious lie against faith charity or good manners which advantageth one and hurteth others or a jesting lie which is told solâ mentiendi libidine out of a pleasure in lying or out of an habituall lability and sliperinesse of tongue or unfaithfulnesse of a bold memory or a vaine ambition to please the hearer or an officious lie which whether it hurt none or advantage some to keep or get money to preserve life or any thing else of a friend all lying is sinne and hurtfull to the lyar at least who therein is a childe and imitator of Satan it is one of the things which God hateth the pernicious lic is indeed most devillish but sinfull is the most excusable of all lies for wee may not doe evill that good may come nor distrust the Providence of God as if he could not provide for his just meanes Not only impious but vaine is the lying which so many thinke lawfull because gainf●ll for the getting of treasures by a lying tongue is a vanity tossed to and fro of them that seek death All lying is condemned by the God of trueth who will shut lyars out of heaven Revel 21. 15. therefore it behoveth thee 1. To have trueth in thy inward parts to set the heart-searching God ever before thee and a watch before thy lips to say nothing before thou have throughly examined the trueth thereof to consider God's justice on lya●s for whose sake he hath a controversie with the land so that seldome do lyars unto the second generation thrive upon the face of the earth all the lyar saith is a building upon quick-sand and cannot long stand to deceive that 't is an odious brand of dishonor insomuch as when hee speaketh trueth hee is not beleeved but truth it selfe is suspected for his sake 2. To pray to the God of trueth with Agur Prov. 30. 8. to remove far from thee vanities and lies 3. To depend on Gods providence and trueth so as not to lye for thine owne or any mans sake 4. To avoid that Athenian fancy of telling news specially evil strange or incredible 5. To be no tale-bearer Pro. 18. 8. Levit. 19. 16. Pro. 26. 20. Ezek. 29. 2. Pro.
he may neither perplexe nor disturb it Lord whose providence sleepth not preserve us and ours sleeping waking living and dying that in every estate it may appeare wee are thine through Jesus Christ our Lord. AMEN The prayer of a wounded spirit against temptations O Lord God Almighty all-seeing examiner of the heart and reines who knowest before wee aske what wee have need of who by thy holy spirit helpest our infirmities who know not what to pray as wee ought and thereby makest requests for us according to thy will with nnutterable groanes which thou only understandest helpe my infirmities endite my praiers and restraine the busie malice of the tempter Direct my praiers as incense in thy sight let them come into thy presence through Jesus Christ our onely redeemer and advocate Trueth it is O Lord that all things shall worke together for the best to them that love thee and are called according to thy purpose for thou hast said it and that it shall be good for mee which thou doest to mee I am confident O my God that it shall once appeare that it is happy for mee that I have been in trouble when after the tryal of my faith and exercise of my patience thou shalt give mee the quiet fruits of righteousnesse I beleeve that they shall not finally miscarry who trust in thy mercy this is the voice of my faith in thee whom I beleeve and know to be the God of trueth but O Lord thou best knowest that I am also fraile flesh and blood full of infirmities feares doubtings and failings because mine iniquities have taken such hold on mee that I cannot looke up they are more in number then the haires of my head so that my heart faileth mee neither have I to deale with flesh and blood onely Lord thou knowest those unseen powers of darknesse which wth restlesse encounters assault my soule to destroy it O Lord God of my salvation be not thou farre from mee shew thy power and deli●iver mee from the messengers of Satan which are too mighty for mee rescue mee bridle their insolent malice binde the st●ong man and deliver thy vessel from his usurping tyranny that I may in every faculty of my soule serve and please thee pardon all my sinnes for thy holy sonne Jesus sake who died for mee heale my wounded soule which hath to the present sorrow of my heart so often sinned against thee hide not thy face from mee in the time of my trouble forget not my bitter affliction which maketh mee goe mourning all the day long while the insulting enemy oppresseth mee thou art my King command deliverances I am poore and needy destitute of helpe and strength to resist Satan's fiery darts put thy whole armour upon mee that I may be able to stand arise for my helpe O thou Preserver of men redeeme mee from the devouring lyons mouth for for thy mercy sake thinke upon mee make haste to helpe mee make no long tarrying O my God suffer mee not for any tryals to fall from thee lay no more upon mee then thou wilt give mee strength patience and perseverance to beare cheerfully confirme mee unto my end that I may be blamelesse unto the day of our Lord Christ give mee a blessed effect of and issue out of every tryal that the more thou permittest mee hereto the more certaine experience I may have of thy mercy and the greater assurance that thou wilt never faile mee nor forsake mee that I may through him who hath by suffering vanquished death hell and him who had the power of death overcome all these spiritual wickednesses which fight against my soule I have trusted onely in thy mercy holy Father who hast ordained strength in the mouths of babes and in●●●s strengthen mee unto the end that my heart may rejoyce in the salvation spare mee that I may recover my strength put thou a new song into my mouth that I may praise thee for my deliverance and declare unto afflicted sinners what thou hast done for my soule Lord heare mee and have mercy upon mee Lord who art ever more ready to give then wee can be to aske deny not the requests of a poore sinful soule crying unto thee for Jesus Christ his sake our only Lord and Saviour AMEN CHAP. XXIX Concerning the guidance of the minde in the encrease of wealth § 1. Afflictions common their fruit in good men Poverty a great tryall riches great temptations commonly mistaken § 2. How to guide thy selfe in the encrease of riches or a full inheritance 1. TEmporal afflictions are common to the just and wicked wee are here like the clean and unclean in Noah's ark shut up in one condition into afflictions wee goe like Israël and the Egyptians into the red-sea to events most contrary deliverance or destruction to the saint they are but as the raine to the arke the more it fell the more that was lifted up Being sanctified they give understanding and are though rough-handed yet excellent masters of vertue like biting frosts to the trees restraining the luxuriant sap and rendring them more fruitfull 2. Among other afflictions in this life want and poverty as among temptations wealth is not the least These are commonly the minds Scylla and Charybdis the two great and antient diseases of Republicks Families and incautious soules there being great hazard in either concludeth a necessity of a right guidance of the minde herein so great as that the wise man deprecated both extreames Give mee not poverty nor riches Having spoken of those things which appertain to man are in man or incident to him within it is requisite that wee consider him in the discomposures which proceed from things external as poverty imprisonment banishment old age sicknesse and death In these first estates which I proposed my purpose is to lay down some rules directing how happily to use the one and bear the other 3. Because riches are great temptations and men are commonly deceived in judging of them too much admiring and affecting these and as much impatient of poverty whereas indeed they are neither absolutely good nor alwaies signes of an happy owner but good or evil according to their use and therefore are they commonly evil because as Aristides said Many use riches ill few can well therefore it highly concerneth those who enjoy encrease or great riches to mark and practice these and the like rules 1. If riches encrease set not your heart thereon Psal 62. 10. where they have the heart there is no place for faith charity humility equity modesty or honesty He saith not Get not riches but set not your heart upon them for so they carry it away from God many of the Saints have been rich but their rule was not to trust in uncertain riches all earthly possessions often change their owners often desert and leave them to wants The heathen Solon told Croesus as much though he could not beleeve