Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n speak_v true_a word_n 8,834 5 4.4618 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A49957 Chara tēs pisteōs The joy of faith, or, A treatise opening the true nature of faith : its lowest stature and distinction from assurance, with a scripture method to attain both, by the influence and aid of divine grace : with a preliminary tract evidencing the being and actings of faith, the deity of Christ, and the divinity of the sacred Sciptures / by Samuel Lee ... Lee, Samuel, 1625-1691. 1687 (1687) Wing L891 136,126 264

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the word therefore which is translated by Faith is a conjugate from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verity or truth For as much as Truth is the peculiar object of trust and whence some think the word Trust to be derived 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore judg that all lyars promise-breakers and false witnesses are unfit to be trusted with persons or matters of the very least importance and should be thrust out of all good mens houses and all civil society Psal 101.7 and should be forced to live among beasts or such as are like themselves which is worse and there cheat and abuse one another till their mutual extirpation or rather by godly and wise Magistrates be made to suffer the penalty prescribed by a wise and holy God Deut. 19.19 22 19. according to what their lies and false witness might have injured their brother whether in life member good name or estate they should suffer exactly the same punishment their eye should not spare nor pity according to the Lex Talionis or else the world will never be at rest nor quiet from wicked wretches But were this Law of God made the Law of Nations his blessing would follow it with more peace and tranquility then yet the world hath seen Well then as Truth is a most radiant attribute of God and dwells in his nature as he is Ens primum simplicesimum the eternal and uncompounded Being Job 4.18 And if Angels whom he charges with folly in comparison with himself do not raciocinari reason by mediums but act by intui●ion how much more does that most abstruse and immense being the Father of lights both in his cognition of all things at once and according to the purpose of his own will act in expressing and manifesting what he pleases to his creatures and shining upon that manifestation with such a glorious ray of truth that were it not from the darkness of our lapsed estate we should without any dispute or hesitation immediately imbrace it for the highest and unquestionable verity Hence it is that in whatever he speaks from his most holy mouth by Oracles or Prophets ratified in their authority from him must be judged a great presumption and impiety to call for a reason of any of his words or actions by bold and daring and impudent creatures For from the raies of truth streaming from the immense and soul-dazling sun of his verity flows all the certainty and stabiliment in the spirits of angels or men to fix and settle us in our belief and obedience Whoever then does believe sets his seal to the Word that God is true and he that doth not believe as far as in him lies would seem to induce John 3.33 that the holy and true God should be a lyar and deceiver and not to be trusted Such is the most horrible consequent of unb lief Though I am well satisfied that there are some trembling fouls that either from natural timerous tempers or some other dark incidencies upon their spirits do not come up to clear and comfortable actings of Faith The Lady Thomson late of Osterley park but now in heaven that abhorr the very thoughts of not trusting God upon his word of Promise and are truly gracious at bottom though cannot discern and know it As I knew not long since a gracious Person when discoursing of the work of God upon her heart ● John 5.10 6.29 said that she trembled at that Scripture in John of making God a lyar and that the deep pondring upon it was the beginning of her conversion One is apt to think it were a very easy thing to believe the holy God upon his Word Eph. 1 19 2 Thes 1.11 Eph. 3.16 17. 1 Tim. 1.15 but indeed renewed and sanctified persons have found it one of the most difficult works in the whole world because its contrary to nature to found our salvation upon anothers righteousness therefore needs a miraculous work from God to effect it in us It 's true that the doctrine of the Gospel is a most faithful saying that is a most certain and undoubted assertion full of grace and truth and worthy of all acceptation or embracing utrique ulnis in utraque cordis camera in our most intimate bosomes that Christ came into the world to save sinners But it requires almighty power of the spirit of Christ to bring us to the obedience of faith But of this more God granting in the sequel Now I 'le proceed about some things in the nature of Faith to which end I may recount that good old saying of Austin cited by some Accipe signas receive it that is believe it and thou fealest to the truth of God. Thus Sarah acting by Faith judged him faithful who had promised and attained the end of her particular trust in the case whereunto God had spoken But not to dilate in generals I might proceed to the hononymy of the term and the various Synonymous expressions of it found in Scripture I might from fathers and schoolmen from confessions of the Reformed Churches and their commentaries common places and Systemes from controversial writings between us and the Romanists and from the many holy practical writers of our own on this very subject raise a great pile or mass of discourse and therein but actum agere over and over with the same in some little varieties But I forbear since my chief end and scope is principally to erect and comfort broken languishing spirits that hang in suspence as it were between the hopes of heaven and the fears of hell I would gladly put a Scripture staff even one of the staves of the Ark within the Sanctuary into the hands of every weary and heavy laden soul I shall not then be nice or over-curious in handling this point under the distinct heads of definition or description or in distinguishing it into several sorts and so proceed to examine all the causes effects properties adjuncts contraries and the several corollaries deducible from all or the cases of conscience doubts and objections afflicting troubled spirits for they are innumerable but only treat upon some particulars most practical and useful either past by or but lightly touched by others As Doctor Boodt that learned Physitian and of great request with the Reverend Bishop Vsher was more pleased to write de affectibus ommisses of cases not handled then to trouble the world with large bodies of Phisick over and over So should all endeavour not to burden the church of God with swelling discourses wrought up into a cumbersome Tympany out of others preceding who have done worthily in their generations but should either add quid novi or quid noviter either something new that may increase christians knowledg and grace or after a concise and clear method that may raise the fancy sortifie memory and take with such as are out of the church to help on their conversion Though I am sensible
bitter root of all this Wormwood and Gall and being very desirous to deal in compassion as having been under some tentations I spake with several and found upon conference these following to be the principal causes of this Bondage of Spirit The 1. Was great ignorance of the true nature of Faith and of the main fundamental Truths of the Gospel which did amaze me to find upon search in so many glittering talking but indeed shallow Professors 2. Another was the great Levity Vanity and Laxness of their lives trifling out their precious time in fidling querks tales and jests to please some whose Trenchers they hang upon like the Parasites in Theophrastus not li●e the blessed People of the former age who far outshined us in the purity of Conversation and therefore in the brightness of their assurance 3. Others I observed to be of a froward perverse ill-natur'd ill-conditioned sower humor full of prate and unprofitable multiplicity of words censures backbitings hollowness of true friendship often murmuring at God and quarrelling with their Superiors 4. Others I perceived to be naturally of a fearful timorous wavering inconstant suspitious spirit ever learning and never coming to the knowledg of the Truth 5. And to end most people extream worldly couvetous full of sordid over-reaching tricks and cunning cheats in dealing and unless for a show basely backward to any excellent works of charity and strict in examining the poor to find an evasion which Jerom so complains of in some of his age Such as these eat out the very power of godliness and rob themselves of the season of meditation Periclitatur religio in negotiis Piety is lost in a crowd of worldly business with these and the rest I must declare that the holy Spirit of God delights not to hold communion as being fiery or miry Spirits Hereupon in my retirements I hope by the Grace of God I pitcht my thoughts when I could not be so publickly useful as formerly upon the composing a small Treatise of the genuine nature of Faith and in a peculiar Chapter to shew the individual connexion of Sanctification of heart and life in every gracious Believer In the management whereof I thought it might not be inexpedient to lay its foundation upon the Doctrine of the verity of the Scriptures in one Chapter and of the Deity of our blessed Lord in a second after the Preface the former being the Doctrinal object of Faith the latter the personal Now forasmuch that in all Sciences there be certain Principles on which their Theoremes and Maximes are built we may consider of the like in Divinity that the Holy Scriptures 2 Tim. 3.15 16. being able to make us wise to Salvation are the only true Basis and Foundation on which all the great Doctrines of Holiness and Happiness do most firmly insist In particular that great point of Faith which bears it self on the new Covenant of Grace revealed in those sacred Pages I thought meet therefore briefly to endeavour the proof of this high point that the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament are the undoubted Word of the living God and thereby to be received with all veneration imaginable as the solid fundamental of true Christianity in special of the weighty Doctrine of Faith And this I have the more willingly performed at the entrance of this Tract that good Christians may not I hope need to go otherwhere to draw but have sufficient to settle their Faith on this Foundation tho it be more amply enlarged upon abroad Now whereas it may be said that Principles are indemonstrable as in Mathematicks and other Sciences Suarez 5 to Mettaph L. C. we must understand that Maxim of the Principles of Essence and not of cognition or knowledg It is so as to the verity of Holy Scriptures we cannot demonstrate them any further and t is enough than that they are founded on the glorious Authority of the infinitely wise true and most holy God as consentanious to the verity and excellency of his nature and published by his injunction as the rule of life and means of communion with himself in eternal happiness The Lord hath spoken and who shall not tremble Amos 3.8 Oh that Majestick stile Ezek 14.4 c. Thus saith the LORD makes Men and Devils to quake and rottenness to enter into their Spirits when God sets it home upon their Consciences My Design then is to shew that at the Revelation and Exhibition of the holy volumes that I may both satisfie and confirm weak Believers and convince if possible scoffing Atheists that there were such mighty Testimonies of their divine original attending the dispensing of them to the Church and the World that may convince all of their Heavenly Off-spring if persons put not on the veil of wilful ignorance 2 Cor. 3.15 detaining the truth in unrighteousness And in the close it will appear that Hystorical Faith well grounded is useful to true and saving Faith. There are then two principal points which did await their sliding down from Heaven into the hearts of the illuminated Pen-men inspired by the Holy Ghost and the uttering of them to the People in their distinct Ages which may be comprehended in the first Chapter 1. The wonderful Oracles and Prophecies mentioned in those sacred leaves which have been punctually fulfilled in the several Generations of the Church 2. The Divine Miracles above and beyond the power of nature exhibited at those two great junctures the delivery of the Law by Moses and the promulgation of the Gospel at Mount Zion In the conclusion of this first Chapter I intend God willing to treat somewhat of the consignation of the Canon of Holy Scripture a Point much desired by some and may be of use to others In the second Chapter let us speak to the Deity of our blessed Lord which indeed is the grand point of Christian Religion the very Foundation of the Church of God as Nicephorus Callistus reports a Story of a deep Cave discovered at Jerusalem under the ruines of the old Temple when the Jews by the permission and instigation of Julian to contradict the Prophecy of our Lord would needs attempt to build it again but were beaten off by Thunder and Lightning where they found within it upon a Stone Pillar the Gospel of the Apostle John fairly laid and preserved Let the Patriarch protect the truth of the story I mention it allusively to this great Truth that lies at the Foundation of the true Church that the Deity of Christ the principal design of John's Gospel is the only Rock laid by the Father in Zion Isai 28.16 without which our Faith sinks and all our hopes vanish If that be a nullity all is gone Christianity is a vain Profession and our Bibles as to Christ and the new Covenant of Grace of no value Wherefore O Professors of this true Religion hold these two points inviolable as your lives The verity of the Scriptures and the Deity of
and then the Glory of Heaven shall continue to all eternity when God shall be All in All. SECT II. The Miracles in Scripture HAving Treated somewhat of the infallible Prophecies I shall now by the Grace of God rehearse some of the notable Miracles mentioned in Holy Scripture For as much as they are works above the power of nature therefore all Nations stand gazing at such mighty exhibitions of Gods Majesty such as curing blind-born Persons the restoring the dumb and lame who were so afflicted from the Mothers Womb yea reviving of many from death to life are they not undeniable Testimonies that such a one that performs these is a God or transacted by the immediate assistance and presence of God whence we may very well infer that what such a one speaks is to be embraced as by divine Authority For that glorious Person that manifests in his works such heavenly and coelestial power must be believed to be God and a God of supream Truth and highest verity as well as of surpassing power For infinite power and truth are and can be centerd no where but in a God. trey where their Brethren of the Race of Cham of near alliance to the Canaanites then lived which is toucht as I remember by Procopius in his Vandalick Wars others Procop The standing still of the Sun seems hinted at by Plautus in the double day I think in his Amphilryo 4. The fourth wonder may refer to the retrocession or going back of the Sun in the dayes of Hezekiah which engaged the King of Babylon to send an Embassy on purpose to search out the truth of that Prodigy In reference to which this is remarkable that some Eclipses mentioned to have happened before Hezekiahs dayes are all found by our modern Astronomical Tables as exact as if those Prodigies had not been extant which may give to some a little more facile apprehension of the motion of the earth then the Perepatetick School will as yet admit For the Phoenomenon or apeearance may be solved by a miraculous stopping of the Earths diurnal motion though its annual in the Zodiack might continue 5. The fifth concerns that extraordinary Star which aypeared at the Birth of our Lord to the Magi in Kedemah or the East by the River Euphrates Mat 2 2 who came 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from Jobs East Countrey whereof before and which presaged as they thought in those dayes the rising of some Grand Emperor out of some Eastern Nation whereof Suetonius speads Percrebuit in toto oriente c. that there was a presage of one that should Rule the whole World sueton in Vespas c 4 Tacit hist l 5 pluribus persuasio inerat c which they applied to Vespasian but more truly concerned our blessed Lord whose Kingdom was to be universal and eternal There is a passage also about Herod at this time which tho no miracle yet it was a prodigy of cruelty which that infamous Prince perpetrated in the Land of Judah and herein may somewhat concern this Treatise that it sets the time of the Epiphany or coming of the Magi or wise men to our Lord a little before that Lunar Eclipse in March which preceded that Tyrants death who slew so many innocent children and his own son among the rest that gave occasion to the Emperor Augustus to taunt him with that scoff Macrob saturn l 2 c 4 that he had rather be Herods Hog than his son counting him for a Jew and I think he was a proselyte tho indeed he were an Idumaean of Ascalon by birth that is of that Idumaea or Edom so called in the days of our Lord as may be observed in Ptolomies greek Geography lying in the south-part of Judah 6. But the most remarkable miracle was that of the Suns Eclipse at our blessed Lords passion because it disappeared and was mantled with pitchy darkness near the Full-Moon of the Passover paul Diacon max in scholl ad Dionys Orig tract 29 30 in mat Euseb edit scal●austin Eph 156 which is impossible in the course of nature For proof whereof Eusebius gives in ample testimony in his Chronical Canon citing the 14th Book of Phlegon of Trallis who asserts it to have happened in the fourth year of the 202 Olympiad Dionysius also the Areopagite is mentioned by the Magdeburgenses for an Epistle of his written to the Citizens of Heliopolis or On in Egypt wherein that common saying is avouched for his Deus naturae patitur Magd cent 1 l 1 c 11 p 381 august in Ep Rom de civit Deil 10 c 27 Euseh in vit Constantini aut mundi machina collabitur The God of nature suffereth or else the frame of the world is flying in pieces Besides what Petrus Comester records where ever he had it that the Philosophers of Athens disputed about this Eclipse as being the occasion of building that Altar to the unknown God Tho Pausanias as I remember declares it to have been erected upon the great devastation made by that fearful pestilence at Athens pausan in atticis Laert in Epimedid Lucian philopatri Oecumenius c. in the time of the Peloponnesian War so notably described by Thucydides But passing that the aforesaid admirable Eclipse of the Sun being celebrated near the Full-Moon of the paschal solemnity It must needs follow that the Moon her self must be prodigiously and totally Eclipsed being near her opposition at the same time Nay there was moreover another Eclipse of the Moon in her natural course in the Evening of the same day as by calculation out of the Tables doth manifestly appear the scheme whereof is exhibited by Buntingius in his chronology and I think declared by others also So that there were three Eclipses in the compass of one natural day that all the inhabitantsround the globe might read in the heavens some wonderful work about that time Lang. de christ annis had they known the language of those glittering lamps whose places being then near the Equinoctial the sun in Aries the Moon in Libra they might be seen almost from Pole to Pole. Such a Spectacle as never had happened from the foundation of the World and possibly may never again It being a superlative attestation to the glorious sufferings of our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Concerning the darkness of that time how dreadful and universal it was others having discoursed I shall not enlarge Many other wonderful Miracles transacted by the Prophets in the Old Testament and thousands by our Lord and many of his Apostles in the new are set down for the confirmation of the holy Oracles Several things and some persons mentioned in the Sacred Books are likewise glanced at by the Heathen Writers Such persons as the Magi are hinted by Laertius some things mentioned by Celsus in Origens refutation of his Heathenish Opinions by Julian Porphyry Apollonius c. who endeavouring to undermine the Authority of the Scriptures
will so satisfie comfort and erect the Spirits of feeble and staggering Believers that they may the more sweetly and firmly lay the stress of their fears in life and death upon this Rock in Zion and if they will be but careful and vigilant as to holy walking and be earnest in Praver to enjoy the beautiful and Soul-refreshing influences of the Holy Spirit They may then walk safely and joyfully through the valley of the shadow of death till they arrive at the mountain of Glory And so I proceed to the second part of this Treatise about the nature and actings of Faith it self more immediate and particular PART II. Of the Nature of Faith in particular Having in the first part of this Treatise laid the precious foundation upon those two marble r●cks the D●ctrine of the Divinity of the Scriptures and the Deity of Christ which may be likened to those vast and stately fulciments which Solomon built on the sides of Mount Moriah to sustain the grandeur of the Temple I should now proceed to erect the strong hold of confidence the pleasant Palace of assurance wherein that beautiful Daughter of Zion the grace of faith sits as upon a throne of every within the Curtains of our second Solomon And this I shall endeavour in the Ten Apartiments or Chapters following Chap. 1. Of the Name and Nature of Faith. Chap. 2. The various Expressions setting out its nature Chap. 3. The lowest or least degree of saving Faith. Chap. 4. Of Justification the immediate effect of Faith. Chap. 5. Of entring into Covenant with God by Faith. Chap. 6. Of the necessary and inseparable connexion between Sanctification or holiness and Faith. Chap. 7. Of the Infirmities of Believers Chap. 8. Of assurance or joy of Eaith how attained with some clear signs Chap. 9. The danger of Vnbelief Chap. 10. The happy Fruits and benefits of Faith. And so conclude the whole with some Corollaries by the blessed leave and help of our gracious God. I intend not to enlarge very much on any but to be briefest on those where others have been copious On the second third sixth and eighth I would insist a little liberally it being my primary design to strengthen the weak believer and in courage sinking spirits beseeching them to meditate seriously on the directions for understanding the nature of Faith in the first and second and to be consciencious in their holy care of walking with God in the points pr●scribed in the 6th chapter That so they may live more comfortably dye more sweetly and reign victoriously And now let us walk together into the first chapter by the gracious assistance of our holy and ever-blessed God. CHAP I. Of the name and nature of Faith THe Rise or Origen of this word is from the Italian Fede and that from the Latine Fides and that as some conceit from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to perswade and that from the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cicero in his Offices descants on the word Fides as if so term'd quia fit quod di●tum because we believed what is spoken or promised shall be done Our English Saxon word Believe comes from the Dutch lieven and that as 't is thought from the old provincial Latine among the Roman Colonies in those quarters Libeo Libet to list or consent to a thing with love or liking and that the word Love comes from a Teutonick word of the same extract Verloff which signifies to assent Now as one of the Ancients says consensio est volentis consent is the act of a person that is willing so to believe is to consent freely and with love to the truth of what is spoken which breeds conviction and satisfaction on the mind of man. Now the inclination of the will to believe is wrought by God and if any question why one is perswaded by God and not another Psal 119.36 Let him take his answer from holy Paul that 't is God that maketh to differ and O man who art thou that repliest against God and if that please not let the bold fellow go look another 1 Cor 4.7 Rom. 9 20. But as Austin treats him caveat presumptores c. Let him take heed of presuming in curious searches and determining the mysteries of grace and the counsels of God. Is it not abundantly enough that thy heart is softned melted inclined to cast thy self wholly on the free-grace of the New-covenant when others repelling the glorious light of the Gospel run back again to the Old Covenant of works and split themselves upon the rock of presumption expecting divine mercy without the merits of Christ and so rush upon the pikes and spears of divine justice and vengeance to their eternal ruine But to prosecute our work To Believe is to be perswaded and satisfied in our hearts and consciences of what God hath spoken and promised in the holy Scriptures On the other side to beget a confidence and trust as to what any man speaks or asserts among several Nations according to their civil municipal Laws there must intervene a proof or an ascertainment made by the instrument of a publick Notary or by trusty witnesses of the vicinage as among the Northern Nations recited in Lindebrogius c. or else by sound arguments that cannot be refelled without incurring gross absurdities as in cases of unknown Murders the wonderful providence of God doth shine forth in their discovery by such methods and probable arguments which procure an acquiescence and quietation of spirit as to the truth of the things delivered But in divine cases 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am sufficiently satisfied and perswaded by the meer word of God Rom. 8.38 When I am sure that God has said it I believe it for in things Divine there can be no sublimer proof then the testimony of God himself For the very being of an infinite God determines his verity and when our imperfect and lapsed reason and many times misguided by education and the secret impressions of converse from designing persons that are apostates from the truth doth thr'u pride and envy and delight in contention study to contradict and invalidate the texts of sacred Scripture Let 's remember that infinite Wisdome had it so pleased him could have amazed us with such potent arguments that might strike us dumb and muzle and astonish us as our Lord did the Pharisees at every turn God is Truth and Truth Essential the fountain of all Truth and in him is no darkness at all Not one Iota or tittle of any of his sacred words can be infringed by the least or greatest of Errors John 1.5 Whence it comes that the truths of Gods revelation are the grounds of all the firmitude and stability of our spirits which otherwise might waver Isa 7.9 2 Chron. 20.1 and wander from their constancy per avia eserti through the gloomy by-paths of error to all Eternity In the significant language of the Hebrews
Lordship and drunk down the royalty of fishing in many Rivers As 't is easy to see in the turns of estates from the old to new upstart races in the antiquities of many counties described by diligent men of late But what is worst of all they are ready to sink into everlasting burnings in flaming pitch and brimstone in that direful and bottomless lake Quest 2. If true holiness be so rare a Jewel and always connexed with true Faith then help us to know whether we are indeed truly sanctified Answ 1. I answer we may know that we are truly sanctified if we have been exercised in godly sorrow and repentance for sin joyned with an holy hatred against it True penitent tears like salt-waters do purge and cleanse the soul Bitter sorrows and an inward sense ef Gods wrath with an holy awe of Gods precepts and threatnings Z●ch 12 10. and a sincere desire of a mendment fit the souls pallace for the carrying on of grace Holiness of life and reformation of our ways does alway follow inward and sincere Repentance 2. An inward satisfaction with and some delight from the heart in a convincing Preacher that searches his heart to the bottom and le ts out the old corruption and then pours in the Samaritan Oyle of the Gospel upon the acute wine of the Law yea he reverences and loves him for his work sake and faithfulness to his Patient Obj But may not an unfanctified person shew outward holiness and have some inward dogmatical Faith as Herod and others A. Their Obedience is neither universal nor permanent Luk. 8.13 Heb. 6.4 10.24 2 Pet. 2.20 and their Faith not rooted in an unfeigned love to Christ No more here to this intending a further measure in the eighth Chapter To conclude about Sanctification with the words of that holy and reverend Person Bp. Vsher in his little sheet about the two Witnesses Being askt by a Lady of Honour what Sanctification was after some modest diversion brake out into this expression That it was the offering up tho whole will to God See Brit. Divin● at Dort. p. 11● which was more than all burnt offerings and Sacrifices To which I may subjoyn that none need to dread or fly back from the flames of affection in this free-will Offering tho' it be difficult to ●●esh and blood for t is perfumed with the Frankincense of our Lords passion-offering at the brazen Altar and the fragrant mingled Incense of his intercession at the golden Altar So that in conclusion all the holy wayes of wisdom are pleasantness and all her paths are peace Thus much at present to explain a little the nature of holiness in this Chapter together with a sad lamentation dropt upon the Herse of vain Professors in these dayes But le ts add Let him that stands take heed lest he falls be not high-minded but fear for thou standest by Faith Rom. 11 20. 1 Cor. 4.7 and that grace of God alone makes thee to differ Let us now finish this excellent and useful Subject of Holiness tho' mixt with some warm reflections for the good of souls and come to a very comfortable Subject about the Beauty and joy of Faith in the Throne of assurance tho' I should interweave a shorter Chapter about the infirmities of Believers to prevent stumbling at the threshold of Assurance and now I hope somewhat to change my voice in more sweet lessons of comfort for the use of broken and mournful Saints The Foundation indeed is laid in the Doctrines of Faith and holiness if faithful Souls will diligently build gold and precious stones upon it they may erect the most stately and Imperial Temple in the whole World not like the Pygmy Pyramids of Egypt up to the Clouds and Vapors but like the Cedar-Temple of the second Solomon all wrought with Saints and Cherubims whose Pinacles reach within the highest Heavens nec habent umbras all shadows and mists are fl●d away Still remember that all must pass thru ' the Temple of vertue and grace before they can enter the Temple of heavenly glory CHAP VII THis Chapter about the infirmities of Believers for the same fore-written causes I lay aside at present and proceed to the Eighth about the Doctrine of Assurance CHAP. VIII Of the Assurance of FAITH THe nature of Assurance and Method to attain it is the Subject of this Chapter In former times Faith was represented under the notion of assurance or a Saints particular certainty that Christ died for his own soul among the rest of Believers Like to that special priviledg to which Paul prescribes Ga● 2. ●0 that Christ loved him and died for him But now more diligent observation of Holy Scripture and experience hath cleared up this point that assurance is the belief Rom. 5.1 that we are justified by Faith in Christ and so have peace with God. It is the application of Faith or a perswasion of our hearts concerning the love of God. Joh. 3.19 When the Spirit of God sets his seal upon our hearts with the impression of the image of Christ as in wax or as the Antients graved the effigies of their Princes on a Cornelian or Opal or such precious Stones Eph. 3.12 Joh. 14.23 It produces a confidence of access by Faith in Christ and is daily more and more evidenced by the abode of both Father and Son with us when the ripe Grapes of Eshcol are cast into our bosoms and Christ himself comes in to sup with us Rev. 3.20 Assurance shines by a reflex beam of the souls eye upon it self When a Saint sitting down in the closet of his own heart takes a clear view of his face in the glass of Faith. I may term it a Saints belief of his own Faith. Assurance is the cream of Faith when t is settled it s the joy of Faith springing in the Soul from the warm healing beams of the Sun of righteousness rising upon its humble valleys Some take Faith to be a trust on the promise for remission of our own sins in particular or conjoyned with reliance dependance adherence and affiance When having cast all our hope and expectation of heaven and happiness into the arms of Christ alone and thence infer the promise to have been made to us in particular by an immediate consequence drawn from our special and personal application of the indefinite or more general promise and taking it as a divine Oracle to us in particular and therefore call it special Faith the promise being thereby assigned to me immediately as certainly as to any in the world because I have set to my seal that God is truth and accepted him upon his Word When this is done to wait with joyful expectation that God will perform it at the day of Christ But what is all this any more than Faith and assurance tied up together in a bundle of sweet smelling Myrrhe Psal 1.6 drest up in various words to
River Kishon that ancient River or River of Antiquities or great battels of old but now swelling to a great overflow swept away the Host of the Canaanites How did the Lord tame the pride of Egypt by locusts hail fire and frogs and darkness that might be felt thick fogs as black as pitch and many other ways How did God subdue the proud Pope Hadrian by a fly c. There 's no age but ecchoes and cries aloud to all people to prove and make all to acknowledg the Soveraign Dominion of the Lord of Hosts in the Heavens Earth and Seas and over all Creatures nay under the earth in Mineral Caverns if Paracelsus and the Learned Agricola write true stories of multitudes of Spirits and living creatures in the bowels of the earth All testimonies trumpeting aloud how God at times arms what of his Hosts he pleases for the protection of his Church and the ruine of his enemies Famous is that memorial of the cloud which presented its dark side to the Egyptians but gave light to Israel when the Red-sea stood up in heaps and the depths were congealed or frozen in the heart or midst of that sea Exod. 15.8.14.22 so that the waters became as a wall to his people which the Egyptians essaying to pass thorough were drowned Nay the wonderful motion of the tides which is so great a mystery Heb. 11.29 Exod. 15.10 Psal 147.18 is managed by Gods Wisdom and the inconsiderable sands are a boundary to the Ocean determining how far his waves shall toss themselves and go no further Jer. 5.12 They have their stated and fixed limits by the laws of Creation which has settled their channels into which they shall subside at his command Some there be to mention it a little that would inferr the sea to be higher than the earth from such a Text. But 't is a mistake and misapply of Scripture Jonah 1. Exod. 20.4 Psal 24.2 Psal 107.23 which expresly sets the waters under the earth and that it is establisht upon the floods and mentions mens going down to the sea in ships If the sea were not lower comparatively to the ordinary surface and globe of the earth besides the mountains how can all the Rivers r●n down into the sea if the earth out of which they spring Psal 42.10 Eccles 1.7 Jer. 51.42 were not higher wherefore the Prophet alluding to the natural situation foretells that the sea should come up upon Babylon and more to that purpose But this belongs not properly to our present work only so far as to shew that God rules the raging seas and the stormy winds fullfil his pleasure Let 's step to Land and end our voyage with one note more Psal 1●8 8 to observe how that God injoyned Israel to plow and sow for six years but must trust him for the seventh and part of the eighth till the harvest came living for the while on the blessed providence of God sending them the greater plenty in the foregoing years 4. Fourthly and Lastly le ts touch a little upon the mysterious government of the Church by his most Holy Spirit swaying his golden scepter in the hearts of Converts and ruling them by his rod out of Zion But this refers to that great point of communion with the Spirit of God Psal 110 2. which this treatise only considers in the doctrine of assurance Chapter 8th and in one further consequence following which is the seventh 7. We may learn from the preceding tract that the knowledg of our Faith and the attainment of assurance flow principally from the influences of the Spirit of God. He is the profound teacher of all mysteries and the worker of Faith and therefore gives the clearest evidence without the necessity of arguing when he is pleased to speak to the heart Joh 16.13 He shall teach you all things our Lord promises and guide into all truth He glorifies the Son receives of his shews it to us and manifests things to come Where he teaches any doctrine he works the knowledg and sense of it into the heart and causes us to believe He is the former of faith he commands and inclines us to trust and imprints the image of Christ upon us Epist Gassendi de motu impresso c as the vis impressa sends out a power from the hand or instrument upon the ball arrow or bullet which together with the air that 's gathered by the force into an impulsive vortex behind the body as in the ignis lambens carries on the motion to the end of its vigor 'T is more abundantly here when the spirit becomes the arm of God to break the stone in the heart he moves works in the most intimate recesses of the soul he shapes and forms the new Adam within us and inspires it with fire from the throne between the wheels of the cherubims Ezek. 10.7 He is the skilful architect of the Temple of the Church cementing the living stones together which were cut out of the mountain of the divine Decrees to make a glorious Habitation for God by the Spirit Eph. 2.22 Let 's then never forget to be earnest in prayer for the gift of the spirit since the influx of all grace and the beautiful enamel of our hearts with heavenly gifts flows from this holy spirit of Vrim and Thummim And the truths in Scripture can only be settled and confirmed upon our hearts by him He is like the master of Assemblies that fastens the nail in a sure place Eccles 12.11 like the great shepherd that knock's in the paxilli in caula the stakes about the hurdles of the sheep-cotes to keep the harmless creatures from the Wolves close and warm together in a dark and stormy night 8. Another deduction from the former treatise may be that the number of true believers is very small for the generality of the world knows not God in Christ The Turks indeed own him for a great Prophet but disdain his banner The Jews confess there was such a person at Jerusalem but contradict his message blaspheme his Deity and stumble at his sufferings Among the various nations bearing the name of Christian what wild confusions and absurdities are practised in Muscovy by the testimony of the ingenious Olearius Marriage and what rude mixtures and barbarities are found among the Abyssins south of Egypt as we are taught by that learned Writer Ludolphus or what ignorances blind Customs and perverse worshippings are notified among the Armenians Ludolph Edit 1684. Fol. Maronites or Thoma-Indians as are related by Breerwood Paget and in the collections of travels in Purchas and several others What shall we say to the corruptions among the Pontificians nay in the Reformed Churches of God in the world and how are the lives of most grown degenerate and prophane insomuch that one has adventured to pronounce that 't is hazardable whether above one in a million may be saved I remember also to have read somewhere Dr. Mouli● that Chrysostome should say to