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

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and study of the Scriptures is evident by our use and custome in ordinary things of this life We chuse and husband our grounds according to the nature of the seed wherewith we intend to sow it and according to the nature and condition of that matter wherewith we fill our Vessels wee make choice of them appointing some for dry things and others for moist and fit them diversly for foul or clean In like manner must we consider the nature of the Word if we mean to order our hearts aright which are the grounds that must receive this holy seed the Vessels that must contain this precious balm We must therefore consider that the word is a pure word Psalme 119.140 that we may cleanse and purifie our hearts for the receiving of it We must know that the Law is spirituall Rom. 7.14 and heavenly James 3.17 that we may labour for spirituall and heavenly mindes to entertain it we must apprehend it as a word of power and authority the voice of God that mighty Creator of Heaven and Earth before our hearts can be subdued to receive and entertain it with that meeknes Jam. 1.21 and trembling of heart Isa 66.2 which is required We must be perswaded that it is a sure word 2 Pet. 1.19 a faithfull word Tit. 1.9 a vision that will not lye Heb. 2.3 as proceeding out of the mouth of him that cannot lye Tit. 1.2 or else we shall never be prepared to embrace it with faithfull and beleeving hearts without which the word cannot profit us at all Heb. 4.2 In the next place 2 By observing the end wherat the Scriptures aim we must take knowledge of the end wherefore the word was given if we mean to use and apply it as we ought seeing we know one cannot use an instrument aright unlesse he know for what use it was made Now the principall ends for which the Scriptures were given were First the manifesting of God unto us 1. Making God known to us 2. Directing our ways that we may honour him as God Secondly the directing of us in the course of our conversation not onely by informing our judgements but by obliging our consciences to guide our selves by the rules proposed therein in the course of our practise Wherefore the Prophet David used Gods Law as a lanthorn to his feet Psal 119.105 thinking on his ways that he might turn his feet to Gods testimonies v. 59. remembring that the things which are revealed 3. Yea converting the soul belong to us to do them Deut. 29.29 So that as the power of the Scriptures is to purifie the soul 1 Pet. 1.22 and convert it Ps 19.7 so the use of it besides is to make the man of God perfect unto every good work 2 Tim. 3.17 that so it may prove the power of God every way both to sanctification and salvation as the Apostle affirms it to be Rō 1.16 Without the knowledg of this principall scope whereat the word aims it will be impossible either to observe what we ought in reading the Scriptures or to apply them aright That we may therefore give fit directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptures it manifestly appears to be necessary to enquire first both into their nature and scope And as for their nature it cannot well be opened unlesse we consider the Author by whom the Scriptures were given from whom withall flows their authority the instruments by which they were conveighed to the Church and the matter or subject which they handle wherewith if we take in the scope at which they aim their necessary use unto us their power to command us and ability to work effectually in us and lastly their infallible and undoubted truth and righteousnesse will evidently appear So that we shall have just occasion to handle in order these four points 1. The Author from whom ariseth the authority of the Scriptures 2. The Penmen by whom they were written 3. The matter or subject which they handle 4. The scope or end at which they aim CAP. II. Of the Authour of the holy Scriptures SECT I. That they neither could nor were fit to be given by any other then by God himself IT must be considered that at present we have nothing to doe with Atheists Pagans Jews or Turks that deny the Scriptures either wholly or in part so far are they from acknowledging them to be Gods word but onely with such persons as admitting and allowing them to be the word of God doe yet want some clearer light and fuller evidence to work into their hearts a more certain perswasion and more feeling impression of that truth whereof they are convinced that all that is within them even their whole heart may not onely bow and stoop but be wholly thrown down and laid flat on the earth before this mighty scepter of the kingdom of Christ Wherefore we shall not need to bring in all the arguments that are used and taken up by others to prove the Scriptures to be Gods word but passing by amongst them such as are more obscure and farther deduced shall content our selves with such plain evidences of this truth as may be best understood of the simple and appear at the first view as being lively characters imprinted on the face and body of this sacred Book by that divine Spirit that composed it Before we lay open these evidences it will be needfull to demonstrate that it is neither possible nor fit that these Scriptures should flow from any other fountain then the most sacred breast of that holy Lord who is the onely fountain of all wisdome and truth and the God of all soveraignty and power A truth which will be easily acknowledged if in the first place we take notice that it is generally confessed that the Scriptures are or at least contain that Law which is left unto the Church of God for the right ordering thereof in all things which also is evident to all that read them And yet that this truth may be more fully cleared it will not be amisse to establish these two Positions First That the Church of God must have a Law Secondly That this Law can be found in no other books but the Scriptures That Gods Church must have a Law That Gods Church must have a Law proved 1 t By the light of Nature directing all societies to govern by Laws and that as it is a Church I conceive no sober man will deny if it were not proved being so clearly manifested by the constant practise of all Nations and societies of men from the beginning of the world as having found the establishing of laws the onely means of preserving themselves from ruine The truth is there was never found any Nation so barbarous that was not governed by some kinde of Law or other If then the light of Nature directed all men generally to the use of laws as the main band of humane society and the best remedy against confusion and ruine that
that two different constructions may be made of the same place of Scripture importing both of them a sense Orthodox and indifferently agreeing with the circumstances precedents and consequents of the Text. We may take which we please or both if need be In such a case a man is at liberty to embrace which he thinks best so he condemn not the other or to make use of them both for instruction and meditation as conceiving that the Holy Ghost who could in those as well as in other places have spoken more distinctly hath left those places of doubtfull construction to supply us with more variety of matter for our use and edification We meet sometimes with Parables and similitudes Similitudes must be extended no farther then the Holy Ghost intends them Nor any principles of truth built upon them which we must be carefull to extend no farther then the Holy Ghost intends them and that may be easily discerned by the occasion and by the scope of the Text. Now these similitudes being used for illustration by the holy Spirit we may easily make use of them so far but it is not so safe to build any principle of truth upon them which is not confirmed by other clear places of Scripture Where we find heavenly things expressed by earthly as when God is said to come down Resemblances of spirituall things by earthly must be understood spiritually to depart to sit to stand to have parts of an humane body when the state of glory is called a kingdome wherein men are said to have houses thrones c. we must understand the resemblances spiritually not according to the nature of those things by which they are resembled So Gods hand notes his power his eye his providence c. which also we must not proportion according to the scantness of a man but extend according to the infinitenesse of a God CAP. XIII Directions for raising observations out of the Scriptures for our owne instruction and edification ALl wise men in their writings as they do in other actions First propose unto themselves a scope or end at which they aime especially Secondly in relation thereunto they make choice of matters and subjects fit for that end which they propose unto themselves Thirdly those matters which they intend to handle they digest and dispose in such a method and Lastly they express and set them out in such phrases and forms of speech as may best fit the matter which they have in hand Seeing therefore God in these holy writings which we call the Scriptures speaks to men after the manner of men as he must do For raising observations out of Scripture 1. Search after the scope 2. Take notice of the matter 3. Observe the order 4. The phrases or expressions if he will be understood by them we must necessarily in the First place search after the end and scope at which he aims principally in these books Secondly we must take notice of the matters or subjects which he handles therein Thirdly we must carefully observe the order and method and Lastly the words and phrases of speech which the Lord makes choice of in expressing and setting down those things which he delivers in this sacred Volume Now the generall scope which God aims at in these holy writings which we call his word is that which he also proposeth unto himself in all his works The generall scope of Scripture is to make God known namely to make himself known unto men that they may honour him as God advancing him alone in their hearts and believing in and serving him alone may by that means further their own salvation That this is the end of the Scriptures is clearly testified by our Saviour himself Joh. 5.39 who upon this ground exhorts us to search the Scriptures because in them saith he ye think that is you make account you have eternall life and they are they which testifie of me And that which is spoken of the history of Christ Joh. 20.31 that it was written that we might beleeve him to be the Son of God and beleeving on him might have eternall life may be truly verified of God himself and of the scope of his word in generall For these purposes For which end Gods spirit handles subjects fit for it Recording his works and for the furthering of these ends God makes choice of and handles in the Scriptures such subjects as may make him best known unto us Such as are all his wares works as well of Creation as of Providence in the administration supporting and disposing all that he hath made Especially in the government of his Church 1. His lawes 2. The application of them by the Prophets especially in the government of his Church Secondly his Laws and Precepts which he hath given to his people for the right ordering of their waies Thirdly we have in the Prophesies the Application of these Laws and of the Sanctions annexed thereunto unto the manners and conditions of the people to whom they are delivered together with the histories both of the godly prospering in the waies of Gods service and of the wicked perishing in their rebellions Psal 92.15 Hos 14.9 1 Cor. 10.6 All discovering his glorious attributes In all which the Lord hath wonderfully discovered unto us his power goodness wisdome faithfulnesse justice and mercy The consideration whereof must needs or ought at least to work our hearts to a firm adherence to him To win us to adhere to him in faith love and feare in faith love and fear and quicken us to all duties of obedience in which he requires to be served unto which we are wonderfully encouraged by such examples as are layed down before us in the Word which manifest the righteousness and holiness of God rewarding every man according to his deeds so that all the waies of the Lord are right and the just shall walk in them but the transgressours shall fall therein Hos 14.9 SECT I. Of the subject matters handled in the Scripture and first of Gods works THe Scriptures in recording setting out before us the history of Gods works In the work of creation is manifested Gods begin first with the creation of the world with all things therein by his mighty word wherein is discovered unto us Eternity first Gods eternity who was before all things Psal 90.2 yea before time it self in which they were created and therefore must needs be from everlasting Secondly Self-being we may take notice of his self being who being before all things and giving being to all things must necessarily be of himself and could not otherwise have imparted that being to the Creatures which he had not in and of himself Thirdly we discover his free and overflowing bounty Bounty whom nothing could possibly move to create the world but his own goodnesse and who in creating it hath furnished and stored it with such infinite variety of all
things all of them excellent and perfect in their kind so that the heavens and earth are full of his riches Psal 104.24 25. Fourthly Power we cannot but acknowledge his infinite power vvho by his vvord alone created the vast bodies of the heavens and the earth and the hoast of them by the breath of his mouth Psal 33.6.9 Fiftly Majesty vve cannot but admire his incomprehensible majesty manifested in that magnificent palace of Heaven vvhich he hath prepared and furnished for himselfe vvhence he sends forth that glorious creature the light and makes it his covering as he doth the clouds his chariots Ps 104.2 3. Perfection In the sixth place his infinite perfection is manifested in imparting to the creature all those severall perfections that vve find in them vvhich must needs therefore be in a far more eminent degree in him that gave them Lastly Wisdome his unconceiveable wisdome is fully evidenced in the infinite variety wonderfull order mutuall correspondence and usefull serviceableness of all those creatures that he hath made one to another Psal 104.24 Next to the Work of Creation are Gods acts of Government and Administration of all that he hath made All which appeare likewise in his works of administration or providence wherein we may again take notice of all those glorious Attributes that we have formerly mentioned especially of his wonderfull power and faithfulnesse in supporting by his own hand all that he created by his Word So that they continue to this day according to his Ordinance Psal 119.90 91. propagated in their kinds which we must esteeme no other then a continued Creation Psal 104.30 provided for by his care Psal 145.15 16. and Psal 147.8 9. directed by his wisdome and power to doe whatsoever he commands Iob 37.12 Psal 148.8 So that the creatures severall motions and operations even of those which are carryed according to the course of nature are to be looked upon as so many acts of God in and by them in whom they move and have their beeing Acts 17.28 ordered by him according to his Will and that even the smallest amongst them and in their most inconsiderable motions even to the Sparrowes lighting to the ground Mat. 10.29 These Acts of Gods Providence are most clearely and especially manifested in ordering and disposing of the affaires Especially in ordering the affaires of men and wayes of the sonnes of Men whose courses of life and works if we compare with Gods dispensations towards them we shall easily be able to discover his perfect Justice Discovering his Justice and Holinesse in rewarding men according to their deeds and Holinesse in rewarding every man according to his deeds his mercy and faithfulnesse towards his servants notwithstanding their manifold failings which either God graciously passeth by Ps 130.10 11. or corrects only in mercy His faithfulnes and mercy towards his own as Psal 89.32 22. and faithfulnesse Psal 119.75 turning even their chastisements and afflictions to their good Psal 119.771 His exact Justice upon the wicked whom he puts away like drosse Psal 119 119. His Patience towards the wicked His incredible patience and long suffering even towards the vessells of wrath fitted to destruction Rom. 9.22 continuing unto them the common blessings of this life Mat. 5.45 although fatting them thereby to the day of slaughter that when they have filled up the measure of their iniquities the wrath of God may come upon them to the uttermost 1 Thes 2.16 His faithfulnesse and truth in fulfilling his word not only in his promises of mercy to his owne servants as it is testified His Faithfulnes and Truth in fulfilling his Word Josh 21.45 but withall in executing his judgments threatned 2 Kings 9.36 of which there failes not one word as that wicked King testifies 2 Kings 10.10 His Power in raising and casting down whom he will His power in raising up and pulling downe at his pleasure Psal 113.7 Luk. 1.52 His wisdome in preventing and overthrowing the devices of the crafty Iob 5.12 13. His Wisdome in preventing wicked mens policies taken in their own snares causing their own tongues to fall upon themselves Ps 64.8 and bringing about all their counsels to concur to the execution of his will even in those wayes by those meanes by which they labour most to oppose it as it evidently appeared in the cursed practises of the Iewes and Pilate against our Saviour Christ Act. 4.27 28. For the discovering and observing of those glorious Attributes of God in those works of his Providence we must of necessity make a diligent enquiry into every kind of them particularly and distinctly All which that we may discover we must search into his workes particularly as indeed the workes of God are sought out of all that have pleasure therein Psal 111.2 as well that we may yeeld unto God his due honour as that we may from the consideration of those works gather grounds of comfort and instruction to our selves Above all the rest into that glorious work of our Redemption But above all the rest of these great works which God hath wrought we must be most carefull in searching throughly into that glorious and never sufficiently admired mysterie of mans Redemption by Jesus Christ which the very Angels themselves desire to search into 1 Pet. 1.12 In whose comming into the world by the will and appointment of his Father and taking unto himselfe the nature of Man his abasement in that Nature not only to the forme of a servant but besides to the very death of the Crosse his Triumphing therein over Satan death and hell manifested to the world by his glorious Resurrection from the dead Wherein his unsearchable wisdome unconceiveable love exact justice almighty power and faithfulnesse are more clearly discovered then in all the rest The unsearchable wisdome unspeakeable yea unconceiveable love and mercy exact Justice Almightie Power and stedfast Faithfulnesse and Truth of the holy Lord are more clearly discovered unto us then they are in all the rest of the works which he hath wrought And for that cause the History wherein these things are recorded is above all others most fully and exactly penned and the truth thereof most faithfully attested by foure severall witnesses and those without all exception and consequently it is to be most carefully studied and throughly searched into by us What the maine scope of the Evangelists is in penning that History of the Birth Life The maine scope aimed at in the penning that history is that we might beleeve that Jesus is the Sonne of God Death and Resurrection of our Blessed Saviour hath been intimated already namely to work our hearts to beleeve that Jesus Christ is the Sonne of God that beleeving we might have eternall life Iohn 20.32 And to this purpose they in the first place beginne with the description of our Saviours person and therein they set out unto us his two distinct Natures
Cap. 5. That the Scriptures containe all things necessary to salvation Pag. 63 Cap. 6. Of the scope of the Scriptures which is Gods Glory and mans Salvation Pag. 70 Cap. 7. That they which read the Scriptures must be men of spirituall mindes Pag. 76 Sect. 1. The description of a spirituall man Pag. 78 Sect. 2. Of the spirituall mans operations Pag. 86 Sect. 3. Of Faith and the two sorts of Faith Historicall and Iustifying Pag. 90 Sect. 4. Of Spirituall experience other meanes of comprehending things spirituall Pag. 115 Cap. 8 Of the choice of fit times for reading the Scriptures Pag. 125 Cap. 9. Of particular preparation before reading Pag. 133 Cap. 10. Of reverend attention and heedfull observation in reading the Scriptures Pag. 141 Cap. 11. Of duties after reading the Scriptures especially Meditation and Prayer Pag. 149 Cap. 12. Directions for the right interpretation of the Scriptures Pag. 160 Cap. 13. Directions for raising observations out of the Scriptures for our owne instruction and edification Pag. 169 Sect. 1. Of the Subject matters handled in the Scripture and first of workes Pag. 172 Sect. 2. Of the Laws given by God to his Church and recorded in Scripture Pag. 197 Concerning the Morality of the fourth Commandement Sect. I. That the Law of the Sabbath in the fourth Commandement is Morall and therefore perpetuall Pag. 213 Sect. II. Answer to the Arguments against the institution of the Sabbath in Paradise Pag. 133 Sect. III. The morality and perpetuity of the Sabbath proved out of the fourth Commandement Pag. 253 Sect. IV A continuation of the consideration of the rest of the Laws recorded in the Scripture with such instructions as may be drawn from them Pag. 300 DIRECTIONS FOR THE PROFITABLE Reading of the Scriptures CAP. I. Of the necessity of preparation thereunto THat the reading of the Scriptures is nothing else but a kind of holy conference with God Preparation in the reading of the Scriptures wherein we enquire after and he reveals unto us himself and his will we shall manifest more fully hereafter when we shall shew that these holy writings are the Word of God himself who speaks unto us in and by them 1. Inforced 1 t Frō the presence of God with whom we confer in reading Wherefore when we take in hand the Book of the Scriptures we cannot otherwise conceive of our selves then as standing in Gods presence to hear what he will say unto us So much the Prophet seems to imply Psal 73.17 when he expresseth his consulting with Gods Word by that phrase of going into the Sanctuary of God for there indeed was Gods Word kept that is going in unto God as going into the Sanctuary is tearmed 2 Sam. 7.18 these kinds of expression seem to imply that when we betake our selves to the reading of the Scriptures we come in unto God or stand in his presence to enquire at his mouth Now with what reverence it becomes us to stand in Gods presence Requiring therefore of us due reverence in performing that duty 1. From the Majesty of God appears not onely by Jacobs fear after he knew God was in the place where he lay Gen. 28.16 17. but farther by the caveat given by Solomon to take heed to our feet when we enter into Gods house Eccles 5.1 and that upon a double ground partly because God is in heaven ver 2. that is high and full of Majesty and consequently to be attended with reverence 2. From the sense of our defilements and inabilities and fear and partly because we have shooes on our feet which God warns Moses to put off Exod. 3.5 when he stood in his presence that is to speak in S. James his phrase we have filthinesse and superfluity of naughtinesse in our hearts which must be laid aside that when we come unto God to be taught by him we may receive his word with meeknesse James 1.21 So that both the Majesty and Holinesse of God whose eyes are purer then to behold evill Hab. 1.13 and the corruptions and defilements of our own hearts necessarily require an heedfull 2ly Frō the inconveniences that follow neglect of such preparation and carefull preparation of our selves before we enter into Gods presence to enquire at his mouth and look into his word The necessity of this preparation when we read the Scriptures will be yet more evident if we observe the ill consequents which follow the neglect of this duty in such persons as either wholly or too often omit it who boldly entring into Gods presence 1 Unfruitfulnesse in our selves and handling the holy things of God with unwashen hands that is reading his word with unsanctified and unprepared hearts as they come unto the work without due reverence so they return for the most part without fruit 2 Discredit of the word it self and by that means bring up an ill report upon the sacred ordinance of God as if it were a dead letter without any quickning power at all unsavoury food without nourishment unfruitfull seed that yeelds no encrease Secondly 3 Discouragement to others by the same means they weaken the hearts of such as might be encouraged to undertake this holy exercise from the use whereof they are much deterred when they observe some of those that are frequent in the practise of this duty remain still ignorant unfruitfull dead-hearted and disconsolate And lastly 4 Discomfort to our selves they occasion discomfort to themselves when notwithstanding the use of this means they finde themselves ever learning and never come to the knowledge of the truth remaining still either in ignorance or in disobedience of heart at least in much deadnesse of spirit without zeal life or activity in holy duties Thus we cannot but observe with grief of heart an exercise in it self every way usefull fruitfull and comfortable if it be duly and conscionably performed by the neglect of carefull preparation become not onely unfruitfull and unprofitable but besides by necessary consequent unpleasant distastefull and burthensome to those that use it To manifest the necessity of due preparation in reading the Scriptures much more might be spoken and many more ill consequents might be observed that are occasioned by the neglect thereof But the considerations already mentioned are sufficient to evince the usefulnesse and necessity of such a preparation Taking that therefore for granted that this duty of preparation when we undertake the reading of holy Scriptures must be performed our next work must be to give directions for the manner and order how the Readers heart must be fitted to the performance of this task which cannot well be done without taking knowledge of the nature of that word which is to be read and of the end and scope at which it aims That the observation of the nature of Gods word which we read 2 Directed by considering 1. the nature of the Scriptures may much farther us in this duty of preparation to the reading
necessarily attends upon it shall we think that the God of nature the fountain of all wisdome the first and best former of societies would leave the body of a society composed by himself as it were the work of his own hand in more hazard then men do the states which they settle and stablish by their counsell Again 2ly Because the Church of all societies most needs a law as being 1 Both the largest most dispersed of all societies we know that the larger the body of a State is and the more dispersed the more need it hath to be firmly knit together by those strong bands of society Now we see the smallest societies that are amongst men and the most neerly compacted together the inhabitants of one small City the fellows of one Colledge governed by laws and orders whereas the Church is the largest of all societies in the world in extent and most dispersed as being possible to be scattered over the whole face of the earth and consequently above all other states on earth needs to be established by the best laws as being hardest to be governed and most subject to disorder and confusion without them In the next place we see the laws of men reach no farther then the ordering of mens outward conversation 2 To be ordered in the very motions of the heart and meddle not with the inward thoughts and motions of the minde But in the government of the Church the chiefest work must be the ruling of the heart and conscience as the Apostle tels us that Gods word and laws reach to the imaginations of the heart and bring under the very thoughts to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10.5 and enter into the very dividing of the soul and spirit and to the discerning of the thoughts of the heart Which are 1 More various then outward actions 2 More speedily moved hardly governed Heb. 4.12 Now how much greater variety and diversity there is in mens thoughts then in their actions how much more easily and speedily they are moved and consequently with how much greater difficulty they are governed and kept in order is evident to all men Consequently we must conceive that the just wise and provident God that directed all men to give laws to order mens actions would himself much more give laws for the ordering and well governing of the thoughts and conscience Lastly 3ly And the Church being Gods more speciall care as being 1 His own inheritāce if God in the course of his Providence have taken order that other states to which he hath onely a generall relation as Lord of all the earth should be governed and ordered by fit laws for the preservation of society and peace we cannot deny but his care must be much greater for the governing and well ordering of his own people in whom he delights his chosen generation his peculiar inheritance which he hath set apart to bring forth fruits to himself Deut. 32.9 Rom. 7.4 in whose good or ill carriage seeing his Name is called upon them his honour is more interessed 2 In which his own honour is most interessed then any parents can be in the behaviour of his own children And consequently we must conclude that if all the States in the world were left without government yet God would give laws nay the most exact and perfect laws for the well ordering of his own Church seeing it redounds so much to his own honour as Moses tels us Deut. 4.7 8. Thus then the first Position proposed is evident enough This law can be found no where but in the Scriptures that the Church of God must have a law The next is more clear then it that this law can bee found in no other books then the Scriptures And to prove it we need no more but to put men to produce us any other volume besides this sacred book wherein that law is written let them name us to whose custody it was committed and where it may be found There is no reason the law given to the Church should bee committed to any other then the Churches keeping 1 Because the Church the keeper of its own records acknowledgeth no other 2 Other bastard-writings compared with it appear to be counterfeit now the Church acknowledgeth no other Book for the word or law of God but this alone neither did ever any dare to pretend that any other book besides this was Gods word or law if any should the very comparing of such bastard-writings with the true word would easily discover them to be no better then counterfeit But to clear this point more fully we shall desire to manifest this one truth more which any sober minded man will easily assent unto namely that it is neither possible nor in any sort convenient that the law for the governing of the Church should be given by any other then by God himself Besides 1 t It was not possible that any other then God himselfe should give this law 1 Because it rules the spirit of man to which no creature can give a law As being unable to take accompt of the breach thereof 2 Because Gods will must be the Churches law First then it is not possible and that upon a double ground The first is that God being a Spirit and therefore to be worshipped and served in spirit and truth John 4.24 the laws that prescribe the duties of that worship and service must of necessity reach to the spirit and inward man Now the giving of such laws is beyond mans power and therefore no law-giver from the beginning of the world ever took upon him that task And indeed it were absurd for a man to give such lawes of the observation or breach whereof he could take no account now we know seeing no man can know the thoughts of another mans heart it is impossible for him to judge whether they be answerable or contrary to the law by which they were appointed to be ordered The second reason why it is impossible for any other then God himself to give a law unto the Church is because it is agreeable to all rules of equity that Gods own will should be the law and rule to all creatures seeing they are all the work of his hand much more to the Church which besides her Creation Being his own both by Creatiō and Redemption he hath purchased to himself by the blood of his Son Act. 20.28 And consequently being his own by the strongest title must be disposed according to his will even by our Saviours rule which allows one to doe with his own what he will Mat. 20.15 If then Gods will must be the creatures law who can give it but himself for who hath known the minde of the Lord Rom. 11.34 Surely if none known the things of man but the spirit which is in man Now none can know Gods minde but himself the minde of God can much lesse be known by any
in the everlasting flames of hel fire if men sin against the law and under promise of eternall life if they fulfill it Whereas men that require an orderly conversation outwardly threaten and promise onely some outward and temporary good or evill These differences between divine and humane Authority laid together may help us to a description of them severally The description of divine Authority by which their natures are best distinguished Divine Authority is that power of God founded upon the totall dependence of all creatures upon him and upon his infallible wisdome truth and goodnesse by which hee hath right to prescribe and manifest all grounds of truth to be beleeved and assented unto upon his own testimony without contradiction and to give rules of practise to be embraced with all the heart as perfectly holy just and good because he commands them under the rewards and penalties of everlasting life and eternal damnation Humane Authority And humane is a limited power derived from God to man by which he is warranted according to Gods will for the furthering of publique good to prescribe unto such as are put under his power rules of order in their conversation for preserving peace in a way of godlinesse and honesty binding those whom they command in all things not contrary to Gods law to conform their practise and actions thereunto for the Authority which commands them in Gods name under the rewards and penalties of some outward good or evill By this which hath been delivered concerning the grounds and extent of that divine Authority which we challenge and claim to be due to the Scriptures we may observe what power this sacred Word ought to have over mens hearts and consequently in what manner it ought to bee heard read and received Whatsoever it proposeth the heart must assent unto and beleeve without contradiction or debate how probable or improbable soever it appear to carnall reason And whatsoever is commanded therein the whole heart and every thought of it must stoop unto and embrace as holy and good howsoever it please or displease the naturall man and that meerly for the Authority of him that commands it CAP. IV. Of the Pen-men of the Scriptures that they were holy men inspired and guided in that work infallibly and wholly by the Spirit of God BOth the clauses of this Proposition Saint Peter knits up together in one testimony affirming that no prophesie of Scripture is of private interpretation nor that those prophesies came in old time by the will of man but that holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1.21 Who the most of these holy men were it is well known to the Church the titles of their Books bearing their names The Scriptures delivered 1 t By holy men as was most fit And that they were holy men the histories of their lives remaining still upon record and their honorable memory in the Church to this day sufficiently declare such as were Moses David Solomon the Prophets and Apostles And that the rest whose names are either concealed or doubtfull were such likewise will be evident to any indifferent person that shall consider two things First 1. They must bee such that had so near communion with God we know that God will be sanctified in all that come near him Lev. 10.3 as it is meet he should seeing his eyes are purer then to behold evill Heb. 1.13 one that is glorious in holinesse Exod. 15.11 and whose house holinesse becomes for ever Psal 93.5 Now then for Gods honour it was fit that none should be employed in this work of publishing Gods will and law to his people which so nearly concerned his own and his Churches service and wherein they were to be admitted into so near a degree of familiarity with him as to bee made acquainted with his chiefest secrets but onely such persons as were approved for holinesse Secondly 2. And by this means some respect is won to their writings the corrupt nature of men is such as we know that the least occasion would be sufficient to breed distaste of that which nature in it self is so averse from as the dressing vessell or sometimes servitor that presents the sick man the meat which his stomack loaths moves him to abhor it and consequently if there were just exception against the persons that bring it the message it self would quickly be distasted as the Lords offerings were for Elies wicked sons 1 Sam. 2.17 So that it concerned the Lord both for his owne honour and his Churches good to deliver his Word by the hands of holy men It addes something to the estimation of the Scriptures that they were written by such holy men as we have formerly mentioned but this at the uttermost addes unto them onely an humane respect 2. Directed by the Spirit of God but that which procures unto them divine reverence which ought to make all hearts stoop unto them is that they were written by the direction of the holy Spirit the Spirit of truth especially if we throughly consider what manner of direction it was which was given unto these holy Pen-men of these sacred Oracles in the composing therof The Apostle 2 Pet. 1.20 21. describes that kinde of assistance of the holy Ghost in the delivery of the Scriptures two ways First by way of negation that they were neither of private interpretation nor came by the wil of man Secondly he describes the same assistance affirmatively testifying that they spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost In the former of these Not by the abilities of nature wherein he expresseth this manner of delivering the Scriptures by way of negation the Apostle excludes the working of the naturall faculties of mans minde altogether First the understanding when he denies that the Scripture is of any private interpretation or rather of mens own explication that is it was not expressed by the understanding of man or delivered according to mans judgement or by his wisdome So that not onely the matter or substance of the truths revealed Both in the matter and expressions but the very forms of expression were not of mans devising as they are in Preaching where the matter which men preach is not or ought not to be the Ministers own that preacheth but is the Word of truth 2 Tim. 2.15 but the tearms phrases and expressions are his own Secondly he saith that it came not by the will of man who neither made his own choice of the matters to be handled Neither of them suggested by mans understanding nor directed by his wil farther then to understād approve what the Spirit suggested But the Pen-men were carried by the holy Ghost nor of the forms and manner of delivery So that both the understanding and will of man as farre as they were meerly naturall had nothing to doe in this holy work save onely to understand and approve that which
was dictated by God himselfe unto those that wrote it from his mouth or the suggesting of his Spirit Again the work of the holy Ghost in the delivery of the Scriptures is set down affirmatively when the Pen-men of those sacred writings are described to speak as they were moved or carried by the holy Ghost a phrase which must be warily understood For we may not conceive that they were moved in writing these Scriptures as the pen is moved by the hand that guides it without understanding what they did For they not onely understood but willingly consented to what they wrote and were not like those that pronounced the Devils Oracles rapt and carried out of themselves by a kinde of extasie wherein the Devill made use of their tongues and mouths to pronounce that which themselves understood not But the Apostles meaning is that the Spirit of God moved them in this work of writing the Scriptures not according to nature Yet understandingly willingly but above nature shining into their understandings clearly and fully by an heavenly and supernaturall light and carrying and moving their wils thereby with a delight and holy embracing of that truth revealed and with a like desire to publish and make known the secrets and counsels of God revealed unto them unto his Church Yea beyond all this the holy Ghost not only suggested unto them the substance of that doctrine which they were to deliver and leave upon record unto the Church for so far he usually assists faithfull Ministers in dispensing of the Word in the course of their Ministery but besides hee supplyed unto them the very phrases method The holy Ghost made choice both of the expressions and methods and whole order of those things that are written in the Scriptures whereas he leaves Ministers in preaching the Word to the choice of their own phrases and expressions wherein as also in some particulars which they deliver they may be mistaken although in the main fundamentals which they lay before their hearers and in the generall course of the work of their Ministery they do not grosly erre Thus then the holy Ghost not only assisted holy men in penning the Scriptures but in a sort took the work out of their hand making use of nothing in the men but of their understandings to receive and comprehend their wils to consent unto and their hands to write downe that which they delivered When we say that the holy Ghost framed the very phrase and style wherein the Scriptures were written we mean not that he altered the phrase and manner of speaking wherewith custome and education had acquainted those that wrote the Scriptures Yet uttering his own expressions as it were in the sound of their voice but rather speaks his own words as it were in the sound of their voice or chooseth out of their words and phrases such as were fit for his own purpose Thus upon instruments men play what lesson they please but the instrument renders the sound of it more harsh or pleasant according to the nature of it self Thus amongst the Pen-men of Scriptures we finde that some write in a rude and more impolished style as Amos some in a more elegant phrase as Isay Some discover art and learning in their writings as S. Paul others write in a more vulgar way as S. James And yet withall the Spirit of God drew their naturall style to an higher pirch in divine expressions fitted to the subject in hand How needfull it was that the Spirit of God should solely manage and accomplish this work of penning the Scriptures hath been shewed already in the former point wherein we proved that the Scriptures must necessarily be the Word of God seeing faith can stay it self on no other foundation then a divine testimony and our services cannot be accompted a duty of obedience unlesse it be done in obedience to Gods will which can be made known no other way then by his own Word Now the inferences hold strongly thus The Scriptures are Gods own Word therefore they must be delivered by his owne Spirit seeing none else could know Gods minde as none knows the minde of man but the spirit which is in man 1 Cor. 2.11 CAP. V. Of the Subject or Matters handled in the Scriptures that the Scriptures containe all things necessary to salvation IT much concerns such as addresse themselves to the reading of the Scriptures The subject matters revealed in Scriptures are to know what subject they handle of what nature it is whom and what it concerns as being an effectual means to awaken the heart and quicken the affections of men unto that holy exercise For all experience makes it evident that men usually attend carefully to such things as most neerly concern themselves 1. Such as concern men 2. And in the highest degree and are not much moved usually with things in which they have no speciall interest And are serious in matters of importance on which their own safety or their estate depend but sleight things that are of small worth and of no great moment to their gain or losse Wherefore to move men to be serious in reading the Word it is needfull to make it evident that the subject thereof is high and heavenly exceeding mans wisdome and therefore worthy to bee throughly searched into And besides of such importance to us that upon it depends our everlasting happinesse the way whereunto and means whereof are set down therein Seeing therfore it appears that the Position proposed and the consideration thereof are so pertinent to our present purpose and therefore fit to be handled in this place it will be needfull to open it more fully and to that purpose to expresse First what is meant by things necessary to salvation Secondly how the Scriptures doe containe them Concerning the former of these two Necessary imports not 1. A naturall necessity 2. Nor meritorious by necessary we understand not a naturall necessity by which the beeing of one thing depends upon another as the effect doth upon the cause no nor a meritorious necessity by which salvation might be earned as one earns his wages by his labor in either of which senses it is impossible that any thing should be necessary to salvation which can have no cause in nature nor be earned by desert seeing it is a free gift But a necessity imposed by the will of God Rom. 6.23 Eph. 2.8 But by necessary we mean a necessity imposed by the will of God who bestowing eternall life freely had power to bestow it on what conditions he pleased and hath promised it onely under the Covenant of faith and obedience the rules whereof being contained onely in the Scriptures and therein fully they are for that cause said to contain all things necessary to salvation When we say it is onely the will of God that makes faith and obedience necessary to salvation we deny not but this will of his hath in this as
in all things else respect to his own glory For the advancing of his own glory 1. Our faith bearing witnesse to his Al-sufficiency Truth 2. Our obedience to his Authority Righteousnesse Yet are not all things in Scripture alike necessary which is testified at least by our faith and obedience For our relying on him by faith bears witnesse to his sufficiency faithfulnesse truth as our obedience in submitting chearfully to his will in all that he commands acknowledgeth his Authority Wisdome and Holinesse So then this will of God in requiring of us these conditions is every way just as well as free Now when wee say the grounds and rules of faith and obedience contained in Scripture are necessary to salvation we mean not that all are of like necessity Ignorance or unbeleef in God or Christ excludes absolutely from salvation John 3.18 so doth not ignorance or unbeleef in some temporall promise although it cannot be excused from sinne In brief then when we say all things necessary to salvation are contained in Scripture we mean both that the things written therein are necessary to that end although not alike necessary and that there is nothing necessary to that end that is not to be found there We are next to shew what we understand by this tearm containing Scriptures containe things 1. In expresse tearms 2. By necessary consequence Now things may be contained in Scripture either expresly and in plain tearms or by consequence drawn from some grounds that are delivered in Scripture and one of these two ways all grounds of faith or rules of practise are to be found in these holy writings It is no where affirmed in Scripture in expresse tearms that the holy Ghost is God but we read 1 John 5.7 that the Father the Word and the holy Ghost are one and from thence infer by necessary consequence that the holy Ghost is God because he is one with the Father who is God We are no where in precise words commanded to baptize infants but from the precept given to the Fathers to circumcise them we take our selves to be warranted to baptize them because Baptisme and Circumcision are in substance one Sacrament Wee are no where expresly commanded to discover the fault of what we sell or to give a just value for that which we buy But we have generall rules commanding us to speak the truth from the heart Ps 15.2 To doe as we desire to be done unto Mat. 7.12 and forbidden to defraud our brother in any matter or goe beyond him in bargaining which imports as much Thus where all things needfull to be beleeved or done are not clearly expressed in Scripture yet they are implied and drawn out from thence by necessary consequence This truth that the Scriptures contain whatsoever is necessary to salvation is sufficiently ratified by evident testimony of the Word it self which sends us to the Law and to the Testimony Isa 8.20 tels us that in them we have eternall life John 5.39 that they alone are able to make the man of God perfect to every good work 2 Tim. 2.17 and wise to salvation ver 15. that the Law of God is perfect Psal 19.7 and though there be an end of all other perfections yet the commandement is exceeding broad Psal 119.96 that is comprehends all needfull things so that nothing is wanting in it Whence proceeds that curse upon every one that addes as well as upon them that take away from that Book Rev. 22.18 Yea besides this truth is consonant to all grounds of reason whatsoever our adversaries alledge to the contrary For first we have reason to presume It was fit that God should deliver his will in writing 1. As the most easie way to make it publike that God would take the easiest way for the instruction of his Church now it is evident that it is more easie to leave things upon record in writing then to charge them upon mens memories especially when they are many and consequently must burthen the memory whereas lying before mens eyes in writing they may easily be overlooked at all times without trouble If it be replied that traditions are few and may therefore be easily remembred VVe answer first they may bee infinite for ought we know seeing no man ever took upon him to tell us how many they are And secondly be they more or fewer yet they are more easily preserved by writing then by tradition as all men know Again it was fit that in teaching his Church 2. As the safest way to prevent corruption God should take the safest way and freest from errour as well for his own honour as for his peoples good both which must needs be extreamly hazarded and hindered by corrupting the truth with errours which lead men into perdition and can hardly be prevented by delivering the word by tradition partly because many mens memories are weak and a great part are negligent especially in things of this nature and lastly because many are maliciously bent against the law which the wisdome of the flesh cannot admit Rom. 8.7 whereas the word written being an unerring record easily helps the weak and convinceth the refractary by setting the undoubted truth before mens eyes Farther 3. As the best way to win credit to his Word seeing the word is the ground of faith it is fit that it should be so delivered as might win most credit and estimation amongst men Now we know that written records are most authenticall and of most accompt with men and therefore are fittest to work men to assent unto the truth of God It is true I grant that mens faith depends neither upon wirting nor tradition but upon the testimony of the Spirit that dwels within the godlies hearts manifesting that the truth proposed is the word of God Notwithstanding the outward credit which the Scriptures carry amongst men by which such as are won afterwards to beleeve beginne at first to think reverently of them and others that beleeved not are restrained from scorning or opposing them seems to be much furthered by the Authority that the writing brings unto those records which are received and submitted unto by the Church and commanded and countenanced by the testimony thereof Lastly 4. And as most honourable whereas there is so much honour done to all humane laws by which States are governed that they are composed into one body and preserved in books written or printed for that purpose it seems absurd that God should deliver his law thus by patches part by writing and part by tradition resembling the feet of Nebuchadnezzars image Dan. 2.33 part of iron and part of clay and unworthy both of the Majesty of him that gives the law and of the law it self that is given And if we may take precedent from former times we may say with our Saviour from the beginning it was not so For when God left the law to be delivered by tradition he delivered it
the all-sufficiency of God may be more admired as Isa 51.12 13. Psalm 146.3 4 6. manifesting that they were nothing at the first have nothing now but what is borrowed from God and that too in a very scant proportion So that if we enquire where wisdome power sufficiency and perfection are to be found the depth saith it is not in me the sea answers it is not in me all creatures they have heard the fame thereof Job 28.22 but onely the mighty Creator of heaven and earth hath possessed all these things in the beginning of his ways Thus the Word sets out riches mens strong City Prov. 18.11 to be nothing Prov. 23.5 strong wals no better then ripe figges that fall into the eaters mouth Nah. 3.12 horses and chariots a broken reed Psal 20.8 unable to save a man Psa 33.17 honour an empty breath gracing no man without wisdome Psal 49.20 men lighter then vanity Ps 62.9 Princes but a puffe Psal 146.4 nay whole Nations but as the dust of the ballance Isa 40.15 nothing nay lesse then nothing ver 17. Thus the Scriptures setting God and the creatures one against another like a foil under a diamond God in his absolute and transcendent perfections the creatures though excellent by the beauty that God hath given them yet empty weak and contemptible compared with God doe advance his glory beyond comparison So that as the height of heaven is seen by this that when wee have climed the top of some high mountain which when we stood in the low valley seemed to touch the skye we find our selves to be as far from heaven as we were before So when we have beheld the greatest excellencies of the most admired creatures it is no more in comparison of Gods perfections then if we had seen the basest worm By these divers ways doe the Scriptures advance Gods honour and throw down all creatures at his foot The next scope of the Scriptures The secōd scope of the Scriptures our salvation furthered 1. Proposing the meanes thereof is the furthering of mans salvation which they effect two ways First by proposing the means of salvation and secondly by winning our hearts to entertain them First then they present unto us God himself offering life and salvation in Christ that beleeving in him we might have eternall life John 3.16 Next the Scriptures propose the rules of an holy life being the way that leads to salvation and so serve for a guide to direct us Psalm 119.105 A Counsellor to advise us ver 24. shining out unto us as a light in a dark place 2 Pet. 1.19 discovering unto us the way and the crooked paths on either side of it leading to death and destruction The next means by which the Scriptures further our salvation 2. Winning our hearts to embrace it by the Spirit accompanying it is by winning our hearts to embrace and seek it which it performs by the Spirit that accompanies it for that onely quickens the soul Iohn 6.63 by giving us a taste of the heavenly gift and enabling us to comprehend with all Saints the breadth length depth and heighth thereof Eph. 3.18 whereupon we desire and seek it with all our souls Withall it causeth us to relish Gods Gommandements which we finde sweeter then honey to our mouths Ps 119.103 or at least provokes us to a longing desire after them as David opened his mouth and panted longing for them Ps 119.131 wishing that his ways were directed to keep Gods statutes Psal 119.5 craving Gods help to assist us therein to order our steps in his word Ps 119.133 promising to run the way of Gods Commandements when he shall enlarge our hearts Ps 119.32 afflicting our selves for our wandrings from them and praying to be brought back into a right way Ps 119.176 Thus Gods word stirs up the desires of the soul after God and Christ and thereby moves us to take hold of eternall life An effect of which none misse but such as reject and put it off from themselves with those Acts 13.46 CAP. VII Who they are that profit by reading the holy Scriptures that they must be men of spirituall mindes IT is an evident and known truth They must have spiritual minds that understand the Scriptures Because the Scriptures thēselves are spirituall that to the apprehending of any thing there must be a correspondence in nature between the faculty and the object that it apprehends as between light and the eye between meat and the taste Seeing therefore as we have made it evident already the most part of the matters handled in Scripture are spirituall it is impossible that they should be comprehended by any other then by a spirituall minde 1 Cor. 2.15 A naturall man being as uncapable of the right understanding of spirituall things as a beast is of rationall discourse That is both uncapable to comprehend them in their own nature and much more to approve them seeing he esteems them foolishnesse 2 Cor. 2.14 It is true Yet it is all mens duty to read and study them that the study of the Scriptures is every mans duty according to that generall exhortation John 5.39 seeing they were intended by God unto the whole Church whose revealed will is that all men should be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth 1 Tim. 2.4 And if all men are bound to doe the things revealed Deut. 29.29 it must needs be granted that they are bound to know them Wherefore it must necessarily follow that none can be excluded from the reading of the Scriptures in which those duties are prescribed All that we affirm is this But onely spirituall men profit by them as they ought that of those that doe and ought to read them none can profit by them as they ought unlesse they be men of spirituall mindes without which they can neither understand nor beleeve them such as mixe not the word with faith profit not by it at all Heb. 4.2 Notwithstanding Notwithstanding those that come not prepared with a good heart 1. May receive it while they are reading the endeavours of those that have not yet gotten such spirituall mindes are not altogether vain if there be in them any true desire to get the knowledg of those heavenly mysteries revealed therin For though they come not prepared with such an heart as is required when they take the work in hand yet God may give it them while they are about the duty as he opened Lydiaes heart while she was hearing S. Pauls Sermon Acts 16.24 and converted three thousand in hearing of Saint Peters Sermon Act. 2.41 Or the Spirit may afterwards bring those things to remembrance 2. Or the Spirit may bring them after to remembrace 3. Or at least they may by reading be restrained if not converted which they seemed to sleight at the first reading and may then work effectually by them as he dealt with his own Apostles Iohn 12.16 Or lastly though there follow no
effectuall work of grace yet there may ensue by the knowledge of the ways of godlinesse some restraint from evill and the practise of some good duties as Herod did many things upon Iohn Baptists preaching Mark 6.20 though he were far from effectuall reformation SECT I. The description of a spirituall man A Spirituall man is a member of Christ A spirituall man is 1. A member of Christ endowed by his Spirit with an habituall power to comprehend and embrace all things spiritually We call him a member of Christ because he becomes such an one in the very instant of his regeneration being united to him by the Spirit of sanctification For seeing there is no fountain of life but God alone nor any means of conveighing it to us but onely by Christ especially the life of grace Iohn 5.26 who therefore cals himself the life Iohn 14.6 and with whom our life is hid in God Col. 3.3 we cannot receive this spirituall life any way but by our union with him Wherefore every regenerate person is said to abide in Christ Iohn 15.4 to live in him Gal. 2.20 to dwell in him Eph. 3.17 to be a member of his body 1 Cor. 12.27 to be quickned in him Eph. 2.5 to be created in him Eph. 2.10 to bee nourished and encrease in him Col. 2.19 So evident a truth it is that every regenerate person is made a member of that body whereof Christ is the head This person thus made a member of Christ 2. By his Spirit abiding in him hath the same spirit by which he is united unto Christ continually flowing unto him from him who is the head and fountain of life and quickning him with that habituall power which enableth him to do all things spiritually A power it must be to distinguish it from those acts of illumination wrought sometimes in unregenerate men as in Balaam Num. 23.5 24.15 16. and Saul 1 Sam. 10.10 whereby they have some light at present and remain afterwards in darknesse like the Air illightened by the Sun which retains that light no longer then the Sun shines into it because it hath no fountain of light in it self whereas a regenerate man hath an anointing abiding in him 1 Iohn 2.27 a mind to know God 1 Iohn 5.21 We call this power habituall 3. And planting in him a spirituall ability wanting a fitter name to expresse it because it abides constantly in him that receives it as habits doe in those that have them from which notwithstanding it differs because habits are partly and sometimes wholly acquired by use and often practise whereas this is not gotten but infused And besides this cannot be lost as naturall habits may but abides for ever Iohn 14.16 as flowing to him that enjoys it from the never-failing springs of Gods all-sufficiency and immutability and conveighed unto him and continued by the infallible means of his inseparable union with Christ by the eternall Spirit We tearm it for distinctions sake a power or ability though in proper speech names of natural things cannot in all things expresse or fit those which are spirituall Called a seed The Scriptures tearm it a seed 1 Iohn 3.9 as being indeed the beginning of spirituall renovation from which it grows and encreaseth to farther perfection sometimes they tearm it a spring or fountain A spring or fountain as Iohn 4.14 yeelding a lasting supply of grace as a fountain doth of water sometimes from the Authour from whom it is derived The life of Christ Aspirituall principle the life of Christ 2 Cor. 4.10 11. There are that call it a spirituall principle and that is the name that we shall most frequently use in the ensuing discourse What name soever we give it we may not conceive it to be a new faculty added unto those which are in men by nature A man when he is regenerate hath no more faculties in his soul then he had before he was regenerate Which is no faculty added to those which are naturall But a natural faculty altered Only in the work of regeneration those abilities which the man had before are improved and receive a farther strength to comprehend and work spiritually as they did naturally before regeneration Thus our bodies in the resurrection from the dead shall have no more nor other parts then they have at present onely those which are now naturall shall then be made by the power of God spirituall 1 Cor. 15.44 But a more lively resemblance of this change in the faculties of the soul And brought under the government of the Spirit in this work of regeneration we may discern in those naturall and sensitive faculties which we have common with beasts For they having no higher principle then sense use them sensually but a man enjoying the same faculties under the command of a reasonable soul useth them rationally So happens it in a regenerate man his understanding will and affections which when they had no other command but reason had no more but rationall operations now being under the guiding of the Spirit of Christ ruling in him work spiritually Hence it is that a regenerate man every where in Scripture is said to walk after the Spirit Rom. 8.1 to be led by the Spirit Gal. 5.18 to walk in the Spirit ver 25. This principle of spirituall life Which is the root of spiritual habits improperly so called planted in a regenerate person by his union with Christ is the fountain or root of all those habits of spirituall grace which are severally distinguished by the names of faith hope love fear c. although to speak properly Properly onely diversifications of the actings of that spirituall principle they are but the diversifications of the actings of that spirituall principle within us distinguished by these names which withall after the manner of naturall habits are much encreased and strengthned by the use and much exercise of them and are as much weakned by disuse and neglect of exercise Out of that which hitherto hath been spoken we may see that a regenerate man hath in him these three things First a principle of spirituall life Secondly spirituall habits of faith hope love fear c. which flow or spring from that principle Lastly spirituall motions and operations according to those habits The manner of giving or planting this spirituall principle in a regenerate man 4. Given by way of infusing or shedding we expresse by the tearm of endowing now that wholly excludes all working or endeavours of men in gaining it as indeed it must be acknowledged to be Gods gift Iohn 3.10 In a more strict signification it is called infusing or pouring in or out as that phrase is applyed Ioel 2.28 and Acts 2.35 to expresse the large and plentifull bestowing of the gift of tongues as it is in other places to signifie the like manner of giving other spirituall graces which the Apostle affirms God shed on us abundantly through Christ Tit.
but in this place we understand by it both the apprehension of such as are represented and the judging of them after they are apprehended by way either of approbation or disallowing both these acts of the understanding the Apostle mentions Phil. 1.9 Againe although embracing seeme first to import election of the will 2. Embracing including the motions of the will and affections yet here we include under it the prosecution of things chosen with the affections of desires hopes cares joyes c. Together with the opposite motions of rejecting hating fearing shunning c. of such things as the understanding in judgement disallowes By All things we understand things of all kinds 3. All things whether naturall or spirituall or mixed 1. Natural Now Naturall things are all sorts of creatures with their severall qualities adjuncts and operations which though they are themselves naturall yet their first cause their dependences ends relations and whole order of administration are of spirituall consideration which therefore a meere naturall man can neither throughly comprehend nor at all judge of aright as the Psalmist witnesseth Psal 92.6 as a spirituall man which the Scripture calls a wise man can doe Hos 14.9 neither consequently can he make that right and holy use of them which a spirituall man may doe and doth usually Psal 64.10 Spirituall things 2. Spiritual are God himselfe in the first place whom the world hath not knowne John 17.25 as spirituall men doe 1 Iohn 2.13 and next the things freely given us of God as the Apostle termes them 1 Cor. 2.12 especially Christ with all his treasures which the Apostle affirmes none but a spirituall person can comprehend 1 Cor. 2.14 as being hid from all ages and generations and manifested onely to the Saints Col. 1.26 27. and that by God himselfe Mat. 11.25 Those things which are of a mixed nature 3. Mixed are spirituall things expressed and represented by such as are naturall as are the Word and Sacraments For in the word the phrases and formes of speech are according to nature and of use amongst naturall men but the things meant and expressed by them are spirituall And in the Sacraments the elements and the Sacramentall actions by which they are used and applied we know are naturall but those things that are represented by them are wholly Mysticall and Spirituall in both the naturall man understands the phrases expressions and rationall discourse in the Word and in the Sacraments not only the visible Elements and actions but their signification also but the things signified in both seeing they are such as eye hath not seene and that cannot be comprehended by any Naturall meanes they cannot be understood by any naturall man All the difficulty in unfolding this truth lyes in interpreting this terme Spiritually 4. Spiritually a word that may be taken in a double sense as is also the word Spirit whence it is derived For a spirit in strict signification is that which is absolutely and meerely so and in that sense the name is appropriated to God alone Iohn 4.24 According to this sense Spirituall is that which is of or belonging to God or heavenly and spirituall Comparatively a Spirit signifies that which is lesse grosse or materiall to which is opposed grosse carnall and sensuall both senses may be included under this terme in this place Againe to comprehend spiritually may be referred First to the object comprehended Which referred to the object imports 1. to comprehend that in things which is spirituall Or by a Spirituall Light to comprehend all things and so it signifies to comprehend that which is spirituall in that object Secondly it may be referred to the meanes and it signifies to comprehend things by a spirituall light or judgement Lastly referred to the manner it implies to comprehend in a Supernaturall way which we specially intend in this place though withall we include both the former senses What it is to comprehend or understand things spiritually is hard to expresse as it is hard to describe what it is to see or heare which are well knowne to such as see or heare but is impossible to be described so distinctly by discourse Resembled by sight to which faith answers The Scripture sets it out by resemblance of outward senses as Heb. 5.14 and amongst the senses sets out the two wayes of discovering things spiritually faith by sight and experience by taste So Abraham beleeving Christ by faith is said to see his day Iohn 8.56 And taste which shadowes out spirituall experience Moses to see him that is invisible Heb. 11.27 And againe we are said to taste that is prove by experience that the Lord is good 1 Pet. 2.3 both are joyned together Ps 34.8 The two severall wayes of comprehending things spiritually Faith and Experience we are now to enquire into describing them as plainely as the nature of them will give leave SECT III. Of Faith and the two sorts of faith Historicall and Iustifying FAith or beleeving is in common use of speech taken for inclining strongly in opinion unto that of which we have no infallible assurance Faith not taken here as opposed to certaine knowledge and in that sense it is opposed to knowledge which signifies assurance of some thing upon certainty Butimporting certain knowledge upon Divine testimony and that most commonly by some sense or other But amongst Divines Faith is commonly taken for a full perswasion of any truth upon Divine Testimony This Faith is usually distinguished into Historicall Temporary and Justifying Faith as for that which they tearme the faith of Miracles it concernes not the subject that we have in hand But because Temporary faith will hereafter appear to differ not in nature but onely in some degree from Historicall faith we shall need onely to entreat of that and Justifying faith at present The nature of true faith and the difference between that and the other which we call Historical will be most easily clearly discovered by setting downe a briefe description thereof True or justifying Faith described and by explaining the severall parts of it afterwards We therefore define faith to be a spirituall habite by which a Regenerate man having in himselfe upon a Divine testimony an evidence of the truth and goodnesse of the Promise and Covenant of eternall Salvation through Jesus Christ relies on him onely for everlasting life and blessednes We call Faith an habit Which is 1. An Habit yet unlike it 1. Seeing it is infused not gotten by use 2. And cannot as habits may be wholy lost because it much resembles those habits which are properly so called especially in this that it is hardly or according to truth never to be removed or wholly lost Although otherwise it differ from them in this that those naturall habits are acquired by use whereas faith is infused by the Spirit of grace if we respect the first planting of it in the heart
testimony which our Saviour calls the Revelation of flesh and blood Mat. 16.17 as the Apostle doth the other The Demonstration of the Spirit 1 Cor. 2.4 and a little after The Revelation of things by the Spirit which are understood onely of spirituall men ver 10.14 15. We call that a Divine testimony which is given by the Spirit of God to that spirit which is within a regenerate person For unto any testimony two things are required First the manifesting and presenting that which is to be credited or beleeved Secondly an ability in him to whom it is witnessed to understand it otherwise the proposing any thing by discourse to a beast that wants reason to understand speech or the relating of any thing to a man that hath reason in the Greeke tongue who understands no language but English is no testimony no more then it is to a deafe man that cannot heare Wherefore to make a divine testimony there must be both a divine testimony unto a man and withall a mind in him able to understand that revelation First therefore the Spirit of God must reveale and manifest unto a man that truth that is to be beleeved as the light discovers any visible object Next there must be in that man a light planted in his heart which the Apostle 1 Iohn 5.20 tearmes An understanding to know him that is true as the light or visuall faculty is planted in the eye or else he cannot comprehend that light that shines unto him For want of this inward light it was that the Israelites who had seene with their bodily eyes all Gods wonders and by reason were forced to acknowledge that they were wrought by the finger of God yet are truly charged by Moses not to have an heart to perceive nor eyes to see nor eares to heare unto that day Deut. 29.4 The evidence then which a true beleever hath of any truth of God By way of Demonstration farre different from conviction by reason which he embraceth is the manifesting of that truth unto the spirit not onely by a form of words to the naturall understanding but beyond that by a kind of Demonstration unto the spirituall minde as the evidence of any object to the eye is by the shining of the light upon it which makes it appeare to be such as it is This kind of testifying or evidencing things in a spirituall way the Apostle calls Rom. 8.16 As representing the things themselves in their proper species the witnessing of Gods Spirit with our spirit mentioning expresly two spirits whereof if either be wanting there can be no divine Testimony The beholding of Divine truths with a such spirituall eye represented by way of Demonstration is so necessary that without it men could not be witnesses Without which beleevers could not be Gods witnesses or at least sufficient witnesses to Gods truth For he that will testifie any thing upon credit must see it with his owne eye or discerne it by some other sense of his owne Otherwise he that testifieth a truth upon another mans relation beares witnesse rather to the relator then to the truth related So that to make men witnesses to Gods truth they must not onely have it related unto them but besides further manifested by way of Demonstration and spirituall evidence that they may say with the Apostle 1 Ioh. 1.3 That we have seene with our eyes and looked upon declare we unto you Which not onely winnes much credit with others but mightily affects the person himselfe as it did Iob when he thus saw God Iob 42.5 and Abraham when he saw Christs day Iohn 8.56 It is evident then that true Faith is grounded upon a Divine testimony Whereas Historicall faith rests on an humane Testimony In the next place we must make it appeare that Historicall faith relies onely upon an humane testimony Now it cannot be denied that the truths of Divine mysteries though they cannot be found out by mans reason as the Apostle tells us they never entred into mans heart 1 Cor. 2.9 yet are they all consonant to right reason and it is as evident that the testimony of reason Embracing divine truths is an humane testimony I say then that historicall faith rests not upon the evidence or demonstration but upon the reasonablenesse of divine truths 1. For the reasonablenesse of them rather then upon Gods testimony of them which therefore mans reason cannot but assent unto For example the Creation of the World Resurrection of the body Incarnation of Christ and may be acknowledged by reason to be possible upon the supposition of Gods Almightinesse yea and fit to be done by him whose scope is to make knowne his Power Psal 106.8 and to magnifie his Word that is 2. Or if on the testimony of the Scripture yet upon an humane testimony Because he beleeves the Scriptures themselves 1. Either upon the Churches testimony of them 2. Upon the reasonablenesse of truths delivered therein his mercy promised in his Word above all his workes Psal 138.2 to set out in ages to come the riches of his grace Eph. 2.7 So that howsoever these are Mysteries of faith yet seeing Reason which is an Humane testimony may approve them it is evident that an Historicall faith beleeving these things for the Reasonablenesse of them is but meerely upon an Humane Testimonie Nay if he should goe a steppe further and beleeve any thing that is written in the Scriptures for the Testimony of the Scriptures yet still he beleeves upon an Humane testimony because he beleeves the Scriptures themselves upon Humane testimony as upon the generall consent for the Church which receives the Scriptures as the Word of God or upon the probability and reasonablenes or of the things therein delivered lastly upon the observation of the Truth of those holy writings in most things which makes them beleeved to be true in all For the Assent unto one thing for another is built upon that to which we first give our Assent As a stone in a wall though it lies immediately upon that stone that is next under it yet is indeed supported by the foundation which beares up all the building We see then a wide Difference between Justifying and Historicall faith in the cause subject and ground of Assurance we shall finde no lesse in the Object Now the generall Object of Faith we know is Gods Word and Promise which onely is a sure ground to build Faith upon as being the Word of the God of truth Deut. 32.4 A fourth difference betweene justifying and Historicall faith in the Object of both who cannot lye Tit. 1.2 or denie himselfe 2 Tim. 2.23 or change his minde Num. 23.19 So that his Word must needs be Everlasting Ps 119.144 founded for ever v. 132. upon two unfailing foundations his Everlasting Truth and unresistible Power But the particular Object of justifying Faith is Gods Promise of Reconciliation and Salvation by Christ in whom onely we are
cranall men lose all the benefits that Christ brings with him because thay refuse Christ and his yoak which they cannot brooke by any meanes The second difference betweene a true and temporary Beleevers taste The first relisheth Christ him selfe A Second Difference between a True and Temporary beleevers taste is in the Proper object of them both For that which a true beleever findes sweet unto him is Christ himselfe and the heavenly and spirituall Treasures that he brings with him In which a temporary beleever findes no relish at all but that which affects him is some supposed carnall commoditie or Temporall good which he hopes to gaine by Christ Like one who taking Pills wrapt in Sugar tastes onely the Sugar but not the Pill it selfe The other some outward good which he hopes to gaine by him the bitternesse whereof which he can by no meanes brooke is such that if he tasted it it would cause him to spit it out againe Thus farre we have described the Temporary Beleevers taste of the heavenly gift the like relish unto this he hath of the good Word of God The difference of true and temporary Beleevers taste in the Word of God Now that may arise either from the Novelty of the knowledge revealed therein which affected the Iewes in Iohn Baptists Ministery as our Saviour tells them John 5.35 As it did likewise the Athenians in S. Pauls Acts 17.20 21. or at the most from the large promises expressed therein which also as hath beene intimated he understands carnally and hoping to gaine to himselfe an interest in them upon that false supposisition he is transported with a carnall joy and delight Mat 13.20 which is soone altered into a discontented humour when he finds himselfe mistaken in his hopes The next thing that affects a temporary Beleever is the powers of the world to come Their different taste of the powers of the world to come So he cals that future heavenly blessed condition of the Saints called the power of an endlesse life Heb. 7.16 not like this present estate weake and infirme but full of power and glory called therefore a glorious inheritance 1 Eph. 18. and Glory which shall be revealed in us Rom. 8.18 a Kingdome that cannot be shaken Heb. 12.28 whereunto our bodies laid downe in Weakenesse shall be raised up in Power 1 Cor. 15.43 Now a temporary beleever mistaking and apprehending this estate to be some outward happinesse and hoping to have some title to such a Glorious Condition may please himselfe with that phantasie for a season and so may seeme to finde some sweetnesse in the powers of the World to come which if he understand aright he would finde no delight in as being unsutable to his disposition The Last clause How a temporary Beleever may be partaker of the Holy Ghost that they are partakers of the Holy Ghost may be probably meant of the gift of Tongues and Prophesying which they that have are said to receive the Holy Ghost Acts 8.17 and 11.1 because even these common graces are reckoned amongst the gifts of the Spirit 1 Cor. 12.10 11. which he bestowes sometimes even on unregenerate persons as appeares Mat. 7.22 and 1 Cor. 13.12 the Apostle supposeth one may have all these gifts without true love that is without true Sanctification So that in all these Clauses there is nothing affirmed of a temporary beleever but that which may be without true Sanctifying Grace for ought appeares to be contrary These temporary beleevers our Saviour Mat. 13.20 21. A Temporary Belcever like Stony ground and Marke 4.16 17 18. resembles to the Stony and Thorny ground neither of which brings any fruit to perfection and yet the latter goes farther in entertaining and cherishing the seed of the Word then the former The stony ground which is soft above and hard underneath represents unto us an heart moved with fodaine affection Having his affections somewhat moved but the depth of his soul his Understanding and Will hardned still by the hearing of the Word Mat. 13.20 whereupon without any setled judgement or well grounded resolution or any great examination of the way that he chooseth he entertaines the Word and seemes to embrace the rules that it prescribes So that it falls out that the principall parts or depth of the soule the Understanding and the Will are not wrought upon to any purpose in this seeming change but remaine hard and untractable as they were before Hence it comes to passe Whence it is that he shews himselfe sodainly and at first cheerfully in profession that as corne which is covered with a shallow earth shootes up and shewes it selfe quickly above ground Mat. 13.5.20 whereas that which hath depth of earth spreading the roots downwards is longer ere it appeare and shew it selfe above the earth So he that entertaines the Word onely with a slight and ungrounded affection sodainely appeares and shewes himselfe in outward profession falling on to the practice of holy duties before his heart be setled in the love of the truth as it fell out in Herod Mark 6.20 This notwithstanding he seemes to set upon with much cheerefulnesse and present delight either for the novelty of the way or for the advantage which he hopes to gaine thereby such a person Simon Magus is described to be Acts. 8.13.19 The third resemblance between this ground and the Temporary Beleever is that as in the stony ground wanting depth of earth the seed can take no strong roote in it to yeeld sufficient nourishment that it may hold out when the heate comes So the Word which enters not into the depth But having not sentertained the Word with a well setled judgement and resolved will or middest of the Heart as it ought to doe Prov. 4.21 that is which wants firme setling in the judgement which must approve it upon good knowledge as David doth Psal 119.97.128 and in the well setled resolutions of the will upon that approbation ver 106.111 reckoning before-hand what it will cost according to our Saviours counsell Luke 14.28 whereof S. Must needs fall off in time of Triall Paul warnes the Disciples Acts 14.22 shewing himselfe a precedent thereof unto them Acts 20.23 24. upon which firme resolution must be setled must needes wants meanes to hold a man fast to it in time of triall This is the Nature and fault of the Stony ground but that which is Thorny A Temporary Beleever resembled to Thorny ground and the Temporary beleever resembled thereby goes a step further for the Seed that lights upon it meeting with a deeper earth neither shoots up nor vanisheth so sodainly as the former and yet though it wither not Which bath more depth of earth more setlednesse in judgement and resolution But for the want of cleansing the heart of worldly cares and preasures failes in the end Wanting a cleare light to discover fully the excellency of Christ and the vanity of the
1.21 and particularly of worldly cares which choak the word Mat. 13.22 2. Of all worldly thoughts and of all manner of distracting thoughts of what nature soever which must needs hinder attention while we are about this serious work And lastly of all unquiet passions of anger feare joy sorrow c. 3. And of all distempering passions which unsettle the heart pervert the judgment and bring perversnes into the will and so hinder and distract all the faculties of the soul that it cannot receive discern imbrace the word as it ought Next 2. By awing the heart with due reverence of God before whom we stand and hath power to command us to possess the heart with Reverence we must advisedly consider with what and whom we have to doe while we are reading the Scriptures That the God before whose presence we stand first is our God by Creation Psalme 100.2 3. and Redemption Isa 43.1 and Covenant Deut. 26.17 and therefore hath right to command us what he pleaseth according to our Saviours intimation Mat. 20.15 to whose will and word we have already vowed obedience which we must the more carefully perform because he can find us out in all our failings as knowing our very thoughts afar off Psalme 139.2 much more having all our waies before him Psalme 119.168 and being one who will not forgive our wilfull transgressions Iohn 24.19 20. such considerations cause us to receive the Word with that trembling of heart which God so much respects Isa 66.2 withall we must know that the Word is a Law that must sway our hearts being so righteous and holy in all things Psalme 119.128 that we cannot but approve it Nay so good verse 39. that we cannot but submit to it with all cheerfulness as being ordained to us for our good Deut. 6.25 who submitting thereunto and walking according to it have our fruit in holiness and the end everlasting life 3. By stirring up in our selves a spirituall Appetite to the word Rom. 6.22 Thirdly we must labour to quicken and work into our hearts a Spirituall appetite after the Word such as Iob found in himself Job 23.12 and holy David Psal 119.131 which ariseth both from the sense of our emptinesse for the full soule loatheth the hony and the hony combe Prov. 27.7 and withall of the fitnesse of the Word to supply unto us whatsoever we want hunger after as being the food of our souls 1 Pet 2.2 the word of eternall life Iohn 6.68 which quickens us Psalme 119.50 and is besides sweet and pleasant above measure verse 103. In a word all those Motives which we prescribed before to be used to stirre up our selves to undertake this holy exercise must be againe called to mind when we set about it Fourthly 4. By awaking our faith 1. By remembring that it is the word of the God of truth That we may awaken and strengthenen our faith to entertaine and beleeve the Word we must consider that it is the word of him that speakes righteousnesse Isa 45.19 whose faithfullnesse is to all generations Psalme 119.90 and who hath founded his testimonies forever verse 152. So that we have great reason to build firmely upon every tittle and syllable which we find in this Word without doubt or question 2. That he hath made it his power to salvation Besides that we must remember that God hath made this word his power to salvation Rom. 1.16 mighty through him to cast down strong holds 2 Cor. 10.5 and hath promised that it shall not returne empty but shall surely execute that for which it was sent Isa 55.10 11. Indeed it wondrously furthers the operation of the Word in our hearts when we set these promises before our eyes and urge God with them and challenge the making of them good unto our soules God indeed much delights to be pressed with his word and to be called upon as Elisha did when he stood by the waters of Iordan and smote them with Elijahs Mantle crying out Where is the God of Elijah 2 Kings 2.14 In the fifth place the heart must be made pliable and soft 5. By softening the heart and making it pliable like that good ground Luke 8.15 for soft things we know easily take impression of any forme that is imprinted on them as the Apostle calls the Doctrine delivered to the Romans Rom. 6.17 It was the tendernesse of Iosiahs heart mentioned 2 Chron. 34.27 which caused that deep impression in his spirit by the reading of the Law verse 19.21 This pliablenesse of heart we are brought unto by casting aside of our owne wills and wisdome which stiffen our hearts against Gods counsells as appeares by those rebellious Jewes Ier. 44.16 Indeed a very foole is more tractable then one that is wise in his own eyes Prov. 26.12 This tendernesse is called opening of the heart Acts 16.14 which is the work of the Spirit much furthered by awing our hearts with a reverend feare of his Majesty before whom we stand Which being to be wrought by God onely it is needfull when we begin the work to lift up the heart unto God in prayer Their presence before God made Cornelius and his company so apt and ready to heare S. Peters Sermon Acts 10.33 Now seeing it is the work of God only to frame us to such a disposition of heart who only can take away the stony heart out of our bowells and can in stead of it give us a heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 we must in the last place before we enter upon this work lift up our hearts to him in prayer to open our eyes Psalme 119.18 enlarge our hearts verse 32. incline them to his testimonies verse 36. and that to keep them to the end verse 112. Ordering our steps in them verse 133. and acquainting us with the will of God by his Spirit to teach us to doe them Psalme 143.10 according to his promise to send his Spirit to lead us into all truth Iohn 14.16.30 Some short effectuall prayer to this purpose to close up our meditations in this preparation of ours to the reading of the Word representing unto God our dependence on him alone which is a meanes to make us humble thankfull for his assistance to prosper us in the use of his own ordinance seldome returnes without a gracious answer and is of great use unto us both to keep down the swelling of our hearts if we find that this work prospers in our hand 2. And to make us good bushands of the grace which we receive as manifestly discovering that the grace we receive comes from God unto whom we have addressed our selves by prayer which takes away all glorying in our selves 1 Cor. 4.7 and withall it makes us carefull to be good husbands of that which we have received from Gods hands as well knowing that seeing we have no more then he is pleased to bestow upon us it is not in our power
to command it when we will CAP. X. Of reverend Attention and heedfull Observation in reading the Scriptures First such Preparation to the reading of the Scriptures as we have before prescribed cannot but dispose the heart to heedfull attention consisting in the uniting of the thoughts together Attention consists in the uniting and fixing the thoughts upon what we read and bending and fixing them upon that which is read To this attention men are often stirred up when they are to heare God speak unto them as Psalme 49.1 Thus the people of Israel when they were to receive the Law in mount Sinai were first prepared unto attention by the sound of a Trumpet This attention we may be moved unto by considering the person that speakes and the nature of that which is spoken The authority and wisdome of him that speaks requires great attention of him that reads or hears Gods Word Required 1. From the authority and wisdome of him that speakes A child must hear his Father Prov. 4.1 A subject must attend reverently to the words of a Ruler Iob 29.21 Yet none of them is our potter as God is Isa 63.4 or made us as he did Ps 100.3 nor consequently can challenge such respect from us as he may Gods people must heare because it is God that speakes Exod. 20.1 Psalme 50.7 and 81.7 Besides the wisdome of God requires our diligent attention as it is required upon that ground Psalme 49.2 3. now it is Christ that speaks in his Word who is the wisdome of his Father 1 Cor. 1.24 in whom are hidden the treasures of wisdome Col. 2.3 Again 2. From the Subject which the Scriptures handle the Matter or Subject which is handled in the Scriptures requires of us great attention not only for the weight and importance of those high mysteries which are therein revealed But besides that for the great interest which we our selves have in those things which we find in that sacred volume as being directed unto us 1. Weighty and mysterious 2. Neerly concerning us and written for our instruction Rom. 154. containing our evidences and the title that we have to eternall life John 5.39 the lawes and directions which we and our children must observe that we may doe them Deut. 29.29 especially seeing all those things concern us in the highest degree yea much more neerly then our estates liberty peace nay then our lives themselves So that we have great reason to attend diligently to every tittle written in this book much more heedfully then Benhadads Messengers did to the words of Ahab 1 Kings 20.33 Besides In attention mark both the matters expressions our heedfull attention to the Matter or Substance of that which we read in the Scriptures we must take speciall notice of the phrase wherein it is expressed Partly because many of the phrases used in that book are not vulgar or of ordinary use Some of them unusual and therefore not so easily understood unless they be carefully observed Thus S. Peter tells us of many things in S. Pauls Epistles hard to be understood 2 Pet. 3.16 Partly because the Scriptures themselves being as they are very copious and full of matter as David tels us the Law is exceeding broad Psalme 119.96 are oftentimes brief and short in the Phrases and expressions whence it must needs follow Most of them brief and of large signification that the words must needs be of large signification so that if they be not well observed much of the matter contained in them may easily be lost Unto this Attention must be joyned judicious Observation Unto attention adde observation of speciall passages which is nothing else but the fixing and staying of the mind upon some speciall passage where we find things represented unto us either more weighty in themselves or else more proper to our selves for our particular use and occasions It is true that all Gods Testimonies are wonderfull in themselves Weighty in themselvs or more proper to us Psalme 119.129 all of them pure verse 140. righteous concerning all things verse 128. yea all of them are profitable to give understanding Psal 119.130 to cleanse ones waies verse 9. to convert the soule Psalme 19.7 to make the man of God perfect to every good work 2 Tim. 3.16 yet there are some things in Scripture more important then others and some more usefull then others for some persons times and occasions Together with Attention Observation A third duty Approbation and affent to what we read there must necessarily be joyned Approbation of every truth revealed in the Scriptures such as we find in holy David Psalme 119.128 not onely because Gods Law is the truth verse 142. and therefore must be approved by us 1. Because it is the truth of God 2. Because till our judgment approve it we canuot beleeve it that came therefore into the world that we might bear witness to the truth as our Saviour speakes of himself Iohn 18.37 without which God hath no honour by us at all seeing it is the receiving of his testimony by us by which we seal to his truth Ioh. 3.33 But besides because we can neither believe that which we approve not in our judgment nor possibly bring our hearts to yeeld unto it true and sincere obedience This assent which we give unto Gods Word This assent is not forced only voluntary but necessary in approving whatsoever it presents unto us is neither forced nor onely voluntary but rather necessary as is the judgment of sense For when the eye judgeth of colours or the taste of meates it is not in the power of either of these senses to judge otherwise of them then they appeare to the sense that apprehends them This approbation of those severall truths which are contained therein is an acknowledgment that they are not only righteous and true Psal 119.137 138. with the Psalmist but withall with the Apostle that they are good Rom. 7.16 as also the Prophet acknowledgeth Psal 139.19 which is the onely meanes to bring our hearts to love and delight in them which indeed is the fullest testimony that we can give to the perfection purity and excellency of them every way Psal 119.96.140 It is true that every godly man at all times gives his assent to every truth of God revealed unto him but the help of that Anointing which abideth in him and teacheth him all things Neither is alike firme at all times because the evidence by which it is discovered is not alike cleare at all times 1 Iohn 2.27 Notwithstanding that assent is not alike firme at all times because the evidence by which he acknowledgeth it is not alike cleare at all times but is sometimes obscure like the twilight at other times full and perspicuous as the sunne is shining in his strength Such a full closing of our hearts with every particular truth which we meet with in reading Gods Word we
are to labour for and to pray for and indeed when men clearely discerne the glory But when it shines to us clearly transports the heart with spirituall raptures Which sometimes fall on us in reading and necessarily cause some pause in the work in hand 1. Because the minde wholly taken up therewith cannot at present attend other things 2. Because such affections being kindled in a sluggish heart need to be fomented lest they goeout like fire in greene wood and beauty of those heavenly Mysteries and taste the goodnesse of them they cannot but ravish readers with admiration as Psal 119.29 bring the heart to value them at an inestimable rate ver 72.127 transport them with strong and heavenly affections towards them of love ver 97. desire ver 131. and joy ver 111.162 It happens somtimes that such Spirituall Raptures seize on a man even while he is reading the Scriptures as the Disciples hearts burned within them whilest our Saviour talked with them going to Emaus Luke 24.32 whereupon the heart opens it selfe to close with and draw in that ravishing Object as it is probable Davids did Psal 119.131 which will necessarily enforce him to make some pause in the worke which he hath in hand for a little while which must need happen partly because the minde while it is wholly taken up with that truth which it embraceth cannot easily attend any thing else at that present as it falls out that when a mans eyes are dazled with beholding the Sunne they can for the present see nothing else perfectly And partly because such new begotten affections seeing they are kindled in an heart too sluggish of it selfe neede to be cherished and kept alive lest they languish and grow cold againe as fire if it be kindled in greene wood goeth quickly out if it be not quickned a while by blowing Such short pauses upon such occasions if they happen to us in reading the Scriptures rather further then hinder us in our work For a godly spirit quickned by such sweet refreshings receives encrease of alacrity and is thereby strengthened to goe on with much greater life to the end of this holy exercise which by such an help is if not more speedily yet doubtlesse more effectually and to better purpose performed The truth is such a pause neede not detaine us long but the affections being refreshed by some short meditation on that which moves them a man may set on to the worke againe and after that is fully ended he may resume againe into his thoughts and satisfie himselfe with the fuller contemplation of that object that so much affected him CAP. XI Of duties after Reading the Scriptures especially Meditation and Prayer TOo many Readers of Gods Word The error of such as content themselves with bare reading without meditation afterwards are like unto the person described Iames 1.24 who beholding his face in a glasse goeth his way and forgets of what shape he was Or like Ezekiels hearers who as soone as they had pleased their eares with his Sermons laid aside the thoughts of what they had heard out of their hearts and still went on in their old wayes of covetous practise Ezek. 33.31 32. In like manner fares it with these men when the Chapter is read the worke is ended in their opinion the Bible is laid aside and together with it all thoughts of all that they have read as if there were no farther use to be made of that holy exercise It may be probably conceived And the cause of it that these men are drawne to this duty rather out of conviction of conscience that such a duty ought to be performed or by love of the credit either of knowledge or of the forme of godlinesse rather then by any true desire either of a comfortable communion with God in the holy use of his ordinances or of the excellent fruits of this holy exercise the encrease of knowledge of God and Christ which the Word brings Iohn 15.39 with like encrease of every other grace the converting of the Soul Ps 19.7 cleansing of ones wayes Psal 119.9 subduing the thoughts to the obedience of Christ 2 Cor. 10.5 and making the man of God perfect to every good work 2 Tim. 3.17 so that it is no marvell if God in Justice deny these men those fruits of Grace The end of studying the Scriptures is not only knowledge but practise and Sanctification which they never desired Wherefore seeing practise and not bare knowledge is or should be the end and fruit of the study of the Scriptures as Moses expresly tells us Deut. 29.29 we must conceive that after we have read them the greatest and hardest part of the task is still behinde 1. We must therefore Meditate upon what we have read Wherefore after we have read any part of Scripture our speciall care must be when we have done to recount and revolve in our mindes those things that we have read and to meditate on them seriously Herein our first labour must be to finde out the true sense and meaning of the words 2. Searching out the true Sense and scope of the word which we have read 3. Singling out and applying what is of more speciall use to our selves 4. Working those things upon our hearts till they warm our affections 5. Advising how we may bring them into practise together with the scope unto which they are directed Secondly having discreetly chosen out such things as we judge to be of greatest use to our selves for the building of our faith or directing our practise we must carefully apply them to our selves our conditions and occasions Thirdly after that is done we must whet them upon our hearts till they warme and quicken our affections Lastly we must advise about and resolve upon the meanes to bring all into practise Such places of Scripture as either expresse unto us Mysteries hard to be understood or set them out in darke and unusuall Phrases of speech of which sort S. Peter tells there be many in Pauls Epistles 2 Pet. 3.16 need to be the more diligently scanned and if our own understanding be too weak to search into the meaning of them we may doe well to make use of other mens writings or conference But for finding out of the scope of any place of Scripture there needes a wise Judgement directed by the due consideration of the precedents and consequents Though all Scriptures be usefull every way yet some may concerne us more particularly compared with the substance of the matter handled in that place which we have in hand In the Second place though all Scripture be profitable for doctrine reproofe c. 2 Tim. 3.17 and so no part of it must be slightly passed over yet seeing some things therein delivered may more nearely concerne us in respect of our dispositions condition of life and accidentall occurrents our care must be in reading to single out such things as we finde fittest for our selves
the former I answer that the same exception lies against all Gods commandements and the supposed impossibility ariseth especially from the unwillingness of their own minds and lastly the expence of time or labour is not so much as may well be spared from their vanities or if an houre or more in a day be spared from labours God can recompence it by his blessing without which early rising and hard labouring are to little purpose Psal 127.2 To the later sort I say that we come far short of our duty in all our services that we deal with a gratious Father who accepts us according to that we have if there be a willing mind 2 Cor. 8.12 as requiring mercy rather then sacrifice Mat. 9.13 Only our endevour must be to do all things as perfectly as we can and for that purpose the rule must be set downe in the exactest manner which also serves best both to direct us and to quicken our endevours and besides to stir us to thankfulness for Gods gracious acceptance of our imperfect services and pardon of our failings CAP. XII Directions for the right interpretation of the Scriptures NOt only the matters and subject which the Scriptures handle being high and mysterious in their nature which the Psalmist calls Wonders Psal 119.18 but besides that the phrase manner of expression which is in many clauses far from vulgar or common use make many things in Scripture hard to be understood as the Apostle acknowledgeth 2 Pet. 3.16 wherefore there is required much wisdome and diligence in searching after the true sense of Gods word without which we cannot but erre dangerously in the grounds of our faith and in the rules of practise It will be therefore needfull to set before us such rules as may help to direct us in finding out the true sense of the Scriptures But before we come to lay downe these rules we must necessarily agree upon two conclusions The first is acknowledged by all men without contradiction which is That there can be no infallible interpreter of the Scriptures but God himselfe The second though it be somewhat more questioned then the former yet is as true as it in all points namely That every Godly man hath within him a spirituall light by which he is directed in the understanding of Gods mind revealed in his word in all things needfull to salvation Concerning the former of these two conclusions we must necessarily acknowledge that seeing no man knows Gods mind but himself as the Apostle affirmes Rom. 11.34 1 Cor. 2.16 therefore none can interpret his word in places doubtfull None can interpret Scriptures but God himselfe but himself For seeing Gods mind cannot be otherwise known to us then by the words wherein it is expressed and when the words are such as may import divers senses who can tell in which of those senses God used them and would have them taken by us but himself that uttered them unlesse some other person were privy to his thoughts As for the second conclusion Every godly man hath a light in himselfe to shew him the mind of God in his word that godly men have a light within their own breasts by which they are able to understand Gods meaning in his word in things necessary to salvation we know that God hath promised by his Prophet that no man shall need to teach his neighbour because every man shall know him from the greatest to the least Jer. 31.34 And the Apostle that the anointing that they have abiding in them shall teach them all things 1 Joh. 2.27 the Anointing there mentioned is that spirit which is given us of God by which we know the things that are freely given us of God 1 Cor. 2.12 by which every man understands spirituall things as every man sees and discovers naturall things with his own eyes That every man should have within himself such a light or spirituall understanding Which conduceth 1. To Gods honour as we have mentioned before by which he may discover and know the mind of God revealed in his word conduceth much to Gods honour two waies 1. As having as many witnesses as believers For first God hath by this means as many witnesses of his truth as there are true believers of whom every one knows what he speaks Ioh. 3.11 by his own understanding and becomes thereby a more authenticall witness unto others of that which he believes upon a more certain ground then if he had seen it with his own eyes Secondly 2. And those more fully discovering his truth and more affected with it every godly man having this inward light by which he discovers the mind of God speaking in his word knows his truth more fully and cleerly then he could possibly do by the helps of any other mans light and finds his heart thereby more affected with those glorious and holy truths which the Word reveals understanding the righteousness and purity of that Word as David did Psal 119.138.140 which indeed is the only true means of admiring and honouring God for that holy word in which are discovered such glorious excellencies that our very souls are ravished with it as Davids was Psal 119.97 upon the discovery of the sweetnesse thereof vers 103. Besides 2. To our comfort when we see with our own eyes it is a singular comfort to every godly soul to see with his own eyes It 's true that it is a great comfort to a blind man to meet with a faithfull guide whom he may trust to lead him on in his way but it comes nothing neer the content which a man that hath eyes takes when with them he sees the way in which he walks This discovery of the truth of God revealed in his word is the only means of grounding our faith preserving us established in the truth against errours and apostasie and of filling our souls both with present comforts and future hopes This inward light may much be cleered and enlarged by 1. The Ministery of the word 2. Conferences It is true that this inward light or anointing as Saint John calls it may be much cleered and enlarged by such helps as God is pleased to afford us by the ministery of his word by private conferences and reading of godly mens writings which are therefore to be made use of diligently and constantly and therefore they are justly to be suspected who rejecting them brag of I know not what inward light which they have received 3. And reading of godlymens books which too many neglecting endanger themselves which too often by the event at least is discovered to be a seducing spirit of errour leading them from one phantasie to an other to the endangering of their own souls and such as cleave unto them These helps therefore which we have mentioned are not to be despised nor yet any farther to be depended on then as spectacles serving to make things clearer unto the light which we have within