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A89336 The touch-stone of conversion. Or, Marks of true faith. Wherein the impenitent sinner is rowsed. True beleever discovered. And doubting saint resolved. / By that excellent man of God now in heaven, Mr. Arthur Morton Scotch man. Morton, Arthur, Scotch man. 1647 (1647) Wing M2820; Thomason E1141_1; ESTC R210080 110,861 289

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drive us from infidelitie so do they clearly testifie the Lords great willingnesse to have poore sinners saved which is also a great encouragement to beleeve for not onely saith the Lord I will not the death of a sinner but here is our fault about this point of the Lords willingnesse to save us we will not rest upon the Lords revealed will as we ought to do but run to his secret will so weakning our confidence for which his revealed will affords us such plentiful grounds and so needlesly perplexing our selves for secret it is and secret it must be We should hold our selves then to the Lords revealed will and not pry into his secret this seems to be enjoyned by these two places especially to wit Deut. 29. v. last Secret things belong to the Lord but things revealed to us and to our children even all the words of his Law that we should do them As also Rom. 10. cited out of Deut. 30. Say not in thine hea●t Who shall go up to heaven c. But what saith it The word is nigh unto thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart even the word of faith which we preach So that in the point of our beleeving or perswasion concerning our election and salvation or of the Lords willingnesse to save us we should not look to the secret will of God thus perplexing our selves but we should betake us to Gods revealed will and Word and that two wayes to wit 1. to the word of faith Rom. 10. or of promise cleaving unto it for it is the ground and warrant of our faith 2. To the word of the Law Deut. 29. thus making our calling and election sure by well doing and evidencing to our own conscience the truth of our faith it working by love 2 Pet. 2. For if ye do these things entrance shall be ministred unto you abundantly c. Would you then be wise to salvation this is the way of it the way to be saved is to beleeve the word of promise Whosoever beleeveth in him shall not be ashamed the way to know if thou beleeve is by some effects of faith Whosoever calleth upon the Name of the Lord shall be saved Look if thou be such a one Both these two be set down in the former place Rom. 10. This is also clear that such a course as this is to be taken to leave the Lords secret will and to hold us to his revealed will 2 Tim. 2. where the Apostle saith The Lords foundation standeth sure the Lord knoweth who are his Q. But you will say the Lord knoweth it is true who are his but how shall I know this also my self if I be one of his A. This is his seal Let him that loveth Christ depart from iniquity try thy self by this his seal so then perplex not thy self with the Lords secret will But 1. beleevest thou the word of faith which is neer unto thee then thy faith hath saved thee be of good comfort Wouldst thou again know whether thy faith be true see if thou callest upon the Name of the Lord. 2. If thou depart from iniquity for then thou art a sealed soul but if thou castest off fear and restrainest prayer Job 15. then thou art not right A fourth notable Mean and prop and seed of Faith to obtain it and to strengthen it are the plentifull promises of mercy and forgivenesse of sins set down unto us in the Word even as the Apostle cals them Exceeding great and precious promises these well considered should mightily strengthen our faith Have we but the promise of an honest man for any businesse will we not rest and repose upon it and will it not breed in us and beget a great measure of assurance about the thing promised and shall we not then be made sure of this point of the remission of our sins by so many promises so often renewed of the faithfull and true God who is truth it self and not onely will not but cannot lye as the Apostle speaks will we rest upon the Word of a faithfull man and will not we rest upon the written Word of the true God So that we have both his Word and his writ for it he is a God of truth so called by Moses Deut. 32.4 and 7. v. 9. saith emphatically Know that the Lord thy God is a faithfull God who keeps Covenant and mercie he styles himself abundant in truth Exod. 34. Great is his faithfulnesse and love who keepeth truth for ever Psal 46. He is a God of truth Christ is called Truth it self The Way the Truth and the Life the faithfull Witnesse the holy Ghost the Spirit of Truth the Word of Truth And shall we doubt of the performance of these promises No let us with Sarah judge him faithfull who hath promised that so we may by faith also with her obtain the thing promised his truth shall be thy shield and buckler This might be sufficient for this Mean but for the further stirring up of our backward hearts of unbelief to beleeve let us consider these two things about the promises of forgivenesse 1. Their pregnancie and pithinesse 2. Their largenesse and extent 1. Then the promises of mercie and forgivenesse of sin be very pregnant and pithie the more to perswade and win upon our untoward hearts of unbelief for not onely doth the Lord simply promise to pardon our iniquities but he promises to blot them out Isa 43. and Col. 3. The same phrase is used to blot out the hand-writing of ordinances which was contrary unto us that he is not onely content to give us a discharge of the debt of our sins but because that may seem not sure for that may haply be lost therefore he will destroy the bond it self that it be not brought forth against us even blot it out Moreover lest blotting out should not seem sufficiently sure for some letters may remain and the whole purpose may be taken up by these few he hath promised to wash away our sins Ezek. 36. I will cleanse you from your filthinesse c. Isa 1. I will make you as the wooll Further lest even after washing some stain should remain in the third roome he is said to cover our transgressions Psal 32. as also 85. O but will ye say he hath a piercing eye and will see through any covering therefore the Scripture speaks of his casting our sins behinde his back that is out of his sight Obj. But you will say what cannot be seen may yet be remembred what cannot be seen by the eye of the body may be seen by the eye of the minde A. This he promises and it is a part of the Covenant that he will not remember our iniquities the words are very emphaticall lest we should think that faults once forgotten may be again called to memory therefore he saith expresly I will remember their sins No more Once forgot and ever forgot In that day the iniquitie of Jacob shall be sought for
that the Lord requires and if ye pray unto God for them Look to the sixth Commandment and see whether or no thine heart doth not often rise in anger against thy neighbour without or for a very small cause and thy mouth doth not break out into miscalling of him yea perhaps in cursing him which is the very height of murther And remember what our Saviour saith He that is angry with his brother without a cause is in danger of the judgement Or whosoever shall say to his brother thou fool or any thing as ill as this is in danger of hell fire Consider also the seventh Command and remember how it also is to be extended to thy heart and to thy speeches and so meets with all thy unclean thoughts and unclean speeches And look how thou hast carried and doest carry thy self in the other points of sobriety in thy drinking in thy eating a point certainly that many fail in and few consider yea and in thy wearing Consider the eight Command and see if perhaps thou hast not wronged thy neighbour in his goods but how hast thou imployed thy own how wilt thou clear thy accounts to him who will take account of the talents he hath committed to thee hast thou not spent much superfluously and unnecessarily when the members of Jesus Christ have been like to starve for want Look to the ninth Command which forbids thee to speak to the disgrace of thy neighbours name whether it be true or false that thou speakest for love should cover imperfections and we are commanded to do as we would be done to And see the propension of thy heart to break this Commandment nothing so incident to us as in our discourses to fall upon our neighbours imperfections and to talk of them with delight a signe we want that love which is the summe of all As for the tenth Command those that see any thing cannot but see that body of death I have gone briefly through the Commandments touching onely these things that I think people are most guilty of so to lead you to the knowledge of sin without which there can be no humiliation no repentance no amendment I beseech you take heed to the particulars and apply them to your selves and pray the Lord more and more to give you the eye-salve and to open your eyes that ye may see the wonderfull things of the Law that ye may see what is displeasing to him and dangerous to your own souls II. Secondly having thus applyed the Law to your selves for the knowledge and discovery of sin Then in the second place apply the threatnings and curses of the Law to your self for your humiliation and to this end consider the severitie and greatnesse of them the universalitie and extent of them they are certainly exceeding great and fearfull they extend to the body to the minde to the temporal and spiritual care of a man to this life and to the life to come and they are very fearfull in all these respects Consider chiefly the universalitie of these threatnings in regard of their object every one great and small young and old he or she are lyable to the curses of the Law we should consider this for we are exceeding prone to make an exception and to blesse our selves in our hearts when God curses and to slip the choller But what saith the Scripture Cursed is every one that abideth not in all things c. And tribulation and anguish is on every soul that d●th evill c. We should also consider the truth of him that hath pronounced these threatnings even God that cannot lye Heaven and earth shall passe away but not one j●t of his Word shall passe away Now all this is little enough to move us for we are wonderfully given to this to shift the threatnings of the Law off from our selves although we cannot deny that the Lord is true that hath pronounced them yet indirectly our unbeleeving shifting hearts do it like those of whom the Prophet Jeremy speaks Chap. 5.12 They have bolyed the Lord saith he and said this evill shall not come upon us What else do they that walk in their sins and yet think that the threatnings of the Law shall not over-take them but even give the Lord the lye And again although the threatnings and curses of the Law be so generall and univerfall as ye may see Deut. 29. the Lord fore-sets that there shall be some and alas would to God that the most part were not so who when they hear the curses of the Law shall neverthelesse blesse themselves in their own hearts and shall say I shall have peace though I walk in the imaginations of my own heart how many are there of this kind that ban swear and drink and rail and break the Sabbath securely and yet neverthelesse blesse themselves in their own hearts think that no such thing shall overtake them all secure sinners are of this sort O but what saies the Lord to such a soul The Lord will not spare him but the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against him and all the curses of his book shall come upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name under heaven O that secure finners would consider this But what shall I say of the slownesse of men and women to beleeve the Lords threatnings the curses of the Law they are so senslesse and stupid that when they see them executed upon others yea when they feel them upon themselves diseases upon their bodies grief upon their minds c. yet they conceive not they consider not that it is by vertue of the Lords threatnings that this comes upon them so to humble themselves under the mighty hand of God This the Prophet Jeremy Chap. 5. sets down to have been the senslesse condition of the people of his time Thou hast stricken them but they have not grieved thou hast confumed them but they have not received correction And he concludes Surely they are poore they are foolish they know not the wayes of the Lord nor the judgement of their God This is a lamentable case and yet a common case we should pray the Lord to save us from this senslesnesse They are happy that when adversitie comes upon them get grace from God to acknowledge it to be for their sins and so humble themselves and are not condemned with the wicked world for so they prevent the wrath which is to come But happie were we if we would beleeve Gods threatnings without feeling of them for then we should prevent afflictions also would we judge our selves we should not be judged c. Now there be two things especially that stand in the way and hinder the threatnings of Gods Law from having their due operation upon the hearts of men and women and makes men and women to be secure notwithstanding of the peremptory threatnings of the Law And I beseech you take heed unto them that ye be not also lulled
our eyes and therfore in these two notable places Exod. 34. and Nahum 1. which two places speak very gloriously of Gods mercie yet in both of them are interwoven these two peremptory speeches of Gods justice In the one He will by no means clear the guilty in the other He will not at all acquit the wicked Josh 24.19 20. when he was stirring up the Israelites to serve and worship the Lord their God he was loath that they should mistake the nature of him whom they undertook to serve that they should conceive as people are ready to do God to be all good and gracious and mercifull and therefore he tels them what a one he is not denying the former but putting them in mind of that which they were readie to forget what saith he He is an holy God he is a jealous G●d he will not forgive you your sins if ye turn from him he will consume you after he hath done you good But it may be alledged he speaks this to try them He doth indeed but he would speak nothing but the truth for that and I intreat you therfore think upon the Justice of the Lord and whereof before I have been speaking to you upon the extent of his Justice both in regard of time and of persons Men do think that Gods justice may be soon satisfied and his favour soon obtained but ye shall see the contrary in the iniquitie of Peor we are not cleansed from it even to this day and that although there was a plague amongst the people So Manasseh a point very considerable for thy continuall humiliation Moreover men do scarcely apprehend that the Lords justice and anger for their sins can reach to themselves but ye shall find it hath extended to others one man sinned and the Lord was wroth with the whole congregation If this were considered as I told you before we should take better heed to our selves then we do and take better heed to the repressing of sin Wo is me saith the Prophet for I dwell among a people of polluted lips strange is the contagion of sin This makes David to say that he will take order with his family No wicked person will I know and they that do evill shall depart from me V. A fifth mean of humiliation is a setting our sins in order before our selves that is to have a due and deep weighing of our sins in their greatnesse number manner and such other circumstances of aggravation This if we do not the Lord hath threatned to do Psal 50. Whereas if we would judge our selves the Lord would not judge us First then thou shouldst consider the greatnesse of thy sins and withall call to remembrance the ground I layed down before and did prove to be true to wit that the very least sin that ever thou committedst doth provoke the just and powerfull Lord the good and gracious God to wrath and that in so high a degree that he hath ordained it to be punished with eternall and intollerable torment which should be a ground not of a sleight and superficiall but of an exceeding care to prevent even the least sin and should make us see that our humiliation and our godly sorrow even for our smallest sins be more deep we have need of this greatly But to the point Consider now with thy self if so be the least even one of the least of thy sins be yet so great that it deserves eternall and intollerable torment and hath provoked the Lord so highly to wrath and cannot be expiated but by the blood of the Son of God for that blood cleanses us from all sin and there is no other name or mean under heaven to be saved O then what must be the deserving and degree of the punishment of thy great and grosse sins and what meas●●e of wrath must th●u lye under in regard of them If thy flying and passing thoughts deserve such a punishment how then shalt thou be punished for thy entertained and fostered and delighted in sinful thoughts of covetousnesse revenge ambition uncleannesse c. If for every idle word thou must render an account in the day of judgement what account is then to be rendred of thy sinfull and so sinfull words wherewith thou hast blasphemed the great and dreadfull Name of the Lord thy God and for thy stinking corrupt communication unsavourie to a Christian eare but most abhominable to the holy Lord who is puritie it self and so cannot but highly abhor such filthinesse and which is an evident token that the unclean spirit hath possession of thy heart and mouth And finally if thy words and thoughts shall be so punished consider then what thy actions will bring upon thee for then sin is finished and if the least of thy sinfull actions shall be so severely taken order with O how shouldst thou tremble to think upon thy grosse trespasses and grievous offences in thy actions 2. Consider the number of thy sins if one sin deserves so much what will so many procure yea even thy great and grosse sins being so many in number and so often repeated Ye heard how severely and exemplarily the Lord punished his own people the naturall Olive for one act of one kind of sin and what then shalt thou expect for so many severall kinds of sins and so may acts of these kinds 1. For so often profaning his worship 2. So often profaning his Name 3. So often profaning his Sabbath 4. So many acts of uncleannesse 5. And which is worse then all this for so many times and occasions neglecting that great salvation And further by thy by-past great sins what innumerable certainly innumerable sins have escaped thee yea and daily do escape thee in these three respects to wit of thoughts words and manner of doing 1. The heart is desperately wicked and the imaginations thereof are evill continually whereby it comes to passe that out of that foule fountain is continually streaming out a source of sinfull thoughts 2. The tongue is also an unruly evill and it also makes us most frequently to sin against the Lord. And 3. Such is the pitifull corruption and pollution of our sinfull nature that we sin continually in the manner of doing even our best duties our best services are polluted our righteousnesse is like a menstruous cloth so that we are in regard of this corruption as one makes the comparison very like the snail that defiles all the way it passes through and leaves a slime behind it Even so do we in regard of this pollution of our nature defile all the footsteps we walk in there is the slime of sin to be seen in our best actions So that in respect of these three our thoughts our words and the manner of our doing we sin most frequently which is most pitifull Now since any of these deserve eternall to●ment what then do they being all joyned together 3. Consider the manner of thy sins for this addes exceedingly to the greatnesse of
right stamp And especially if thou knowest the very particular passages and clauses of the Word which did first beget faith in thee which strengthen thee in thy weaknesse and whereunto thy faith retyres in time of assaults for this Gods children do but on the contrary 1. knowest thou not rememberst thou not how or by what means thy faith was begotten 2. Findest thou thy faith all alike when thou usest the means and when thou usest them not or never usest any at all And 3. if thou shouldst be put to it hast thou no other warrant for thy faith but thy own phantasie apprehension or imagination that sandie foundation but doest want a particular warrant from Gods Word then be sure thy faith is but counterfeit it cannot be well come that we cannot tell how it is come And it is strange for a man to conceit that he shall have such a thing for such a man and yet hath never had his word nor hand for it So is it with the point in hand Thus ye see the first Mark true Faith alwayes leans to and holds by the Means whereas Presumption neglects the Means Q. Let me have another of these Marks II. A. Another is this true Faith is accompanied with frequent doubtings whereas Presumption never doubts Q. How prove you this Mark and how is the truth of it evidenced and cleared A. Thus if faith be true then sure the devill envies so precious a pearl and is evermore casting his fiery darts at it so to rob us of it or at least to impede our comfort Whereas on the other side if it be but presumption he knows it will not do the turn he lets it alone When the strong man holds the house all things are at peace Secondly the Lord will have his own exercised will a man plant a vineyard and not eat the fruit thereof The application is easie Art thou or hast thou been subject to doubting this is a token thy faith is true and otherwise Satan would not trouble it but certainly hast thou never doubted thou hast never beleeved III. A third Mark is whereas Faith or beleeving is A receiving of Christ Joh. 1. To so many as received him c. even to those who beleeues in his Name True faith receives Christ rightly upon the terms that he offers himself that is as it casts over upon Christ the burthen of it's sins so it is content to take up the easie yoke of his obedience in doing or suffering to take up the crosse and follow him for these be the termes whereon Christ offers himself Matth. 11. Now presumption makes termes of it's own thinks to have Christ to take the burthen of their sins but never thinks upon the taking on the yoke of his obedience The application here also is very easie Hast thou with thy cleaving to Christ for the remission of thy sins resolved to take on also the yoke of his obedience in doing and suffering and doest thou it in fighting against thy most pleasant sins and cleaving to the hardest duties with denying thy self then be sure thou hast rightly received Christ and consequently rightly beleeved thou hast made him thy Lord and he shall be thy Saviour thou hast made him thy King and he shal be thy Priest thou makest conscience of the precepts of the Word and therefore thou hast interest and shall have thy comfort in the promises But on the contrary thou who ever thou be who thinkst that thou beleevest in Christ and in the mean time livest as thou pleasest following the broad and easie way of thy own heart and the customes of an evil world and not the strait way of Christs obedience thy faith is but presumption Go seek true faith seek it earnestly and thou shalt find it but it will not be easily gotten how thankfull should they be who have found the way unto it Q. Which be the Marks that follow faith A. Sundrie Though the Spirit of God insists upon two especially to wit the love of the brethren and obedience unto Gods Commandments 1. Then obedience unto Gods Commandments is set down most frequently in Scripture for a mark of faith and regeneration this is the Lords seal to depart from iniquitie saith Paul Shew me thy faith by thy works saith James And our Saviour He that hath my Commandments and keepeth them c. And in John's first Epistle it is often inculcated Chap. 1. If we walk in darknesse and say we have fellowship with him we lye and do not the truth But if we walk in the light as he is in the light then we have fellowship one with another and the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin Now what is it to walk in the light but to walk according to the rule of Gods Word which the Scripture cals a lantern to our paths and this is to obey Gods Commandments So Chap. 2. Hereby we know that we know him if we keep his Commandments Obj. But the naturall man the hypocrite will go far in the point of obedience and every one hath some measure of obedience A. This is true and therefore we must be carefull to see the soundnesse and rightnesse of our obedience by these Marks which are not to be found in the naturall mans obedience 1. He whose obedience is sound makes conscience of secret sins and secret duties betwixt God and him as well as of publick sins and of publick duties he is as loath to intertain a sinfull thought in his heart as to commit a sinfull deed before the eyes of the world is as well carefull to discharge those duties which are to be done secretly in his closet between his God and his own soul as of the publick which are to be done in the Church this is a token of the true fear of God and of true respect to him 2. He whose obedience is sound makes conscience of small sins I mean that are small in the eyes of the world as of great for he knows every sin highly offends God and deserves eternall damnation he knows he who said Thou shalt not kill he said also Thou shalt not swear whereas the unsound obeyer uses to weigh sin in the ballance of mans estimation and not in the ballance of the Sanctuary from whence it is that he makes small account of many sins as of a small ordinary oath to speak corrupt communication to let it slip in merriment to lye for recreation c. this is not to walk according to that rule Thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts diligently 3. A sound obeyer makes conscience of Gods Commands even those which most controuls his profit pleasure or credit But the unsound obeyer he will with Herod do many things but when the duty comes once to crosse controll or be in competition with any of these there he sticks namely if it come in competition with that of these that is his god his idoll which he most looks to How few
as I could and yet finde but little increase either of faith it self or of these Markes of Faith A. Whereas ye say that ye have not prayed so frequently nor so fervently as ye should this is a great and ordinary fault and should be helped for the Lord doth greatly require fervency Iames 5. in praying seeking with the whole heart asking seeking knocking yea the matters themselves requires it also for these things concerne both the Salvation of our own soules the making of our calling and election sure the good holy and acceptable will of the Lord our God and can there be matters of greater consequence and importance Whereas you say that you have thus prayed and so fear that seeing the Lord will be sought for these things and that he hath promised them upon the condition of seeking and of fervent seeking that therfore ye shall want them consider that the grace of seeking he promiseth it also Zach. 12.10 I will powre upon them the spirit of grace and supplications and Rom. 8. The Spirit helpeth our infirmities yea for thy comfort he is found of them who seeke him not much more will he be found of thee who seekest him though weakely But for the last a main point that you say you have prayed often and fervently but finds no successe Remember that thou must not limit the holy one of Israel how often did he call and ye did not heare By Faith and patience we inherit the promises But one thing I would inquire If with praying thou hast joyned the using of the meanes for otherwayes pray thou never so much thou shalt not obtain for as in things that concernes the naturall life it were but idlenesse and scorne to pray and in the mean time not to use the meanes even so is it in things concerning the spirituall life the Lord will no more work without meanes in regard of the one then in regard of the other to pray and to neglect to use the meanes in either of these is to tempt God and to put him to the working of wonders and miracles It 's true that prayer is the main thing and brings a blessing upon our using the meanes use we the meanes never so diligently unlesse by prayer we get the Lord to blesse them he that buildeth buildeth in vaine But on the other side as our using of the meanes cannot serve the turn without the Lords blessing and working of his Spirit obtained by prayer So the Lord although he can yet will he not give any grace without we use the meanes for ordinarly he works by meanes Hence is it Work out your salvation Plough up the fallow ground of your hearts Edifie one another in your most holy faith which is the point in hand Q. If I did not with prayer use also other meanes I were greatly to be blamed but I use them according to my power I frequent the word Sacraments c. A. This is good and commendable to use the means in generall but if thou think to speed in that great work thou must not onely do so but shouldest in speciall take heed to this point to wit not onely to use the means in generall but to observe what be the proper peculiar particular most fitting and convenient means of that grace that thou dost want to beget and entertain it and carefully to be meditating about them and feeding upon them especially so feeding your self with food convenient for every grace both the own proper peculiar means this is to be as the Apostle speaks a wise master-builder As we had need of wise master builders so we had need our selves to be wise builders One that is building an house or wall he will not take any stone that is neerest by him but he will look what stone will fit such a place and this he takes Even so we should not think it enough in the working of the work of our own salvation we should not think it enough I say to use the means in generall for thus want of wit may make much work and we may be long enough ere we come to the point but we should use the neerest most commodious and most convenient means for the begetting of that grace we stand in need of For example feel we want or weaknesse of the love of God then should we meditate upon his goodnesse kindness● bountie patience pitie truth mercie and the rest of his amiable properties his favours deliverances benefits In a word how good he is in himself and how good he is towards thee Or doest thou find the want of the fear of God or of reverence towards him meditate seriously of the glory majestie of God and the rest of his awfull properties especially if thou hast found any touch of his justice So find we that the work of humiliation is but small and weak this is the ground-work and should be well looked to you feed upon the threatnings and curses of the Law the severitie of them and their universalitie how none escape them being guiltie of the same sins My heart trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid because of thy judgements Upon the fiercenesse of Gods anger against sin who knows the power of his wrath the infinitenesse and strange extent of his justice His judgements are past finding out especially hast thou found a touch of these by experience And to come to the point in hand fearest thou the want or feelest thou the weaknesse of Faith then betake thy self to the particular means of faith as namely the precious promises of the remission of sins the sure invitations to accept of mercie the pregnant passages of Gods mercifull nature the Covenant Oath c. this is properly and wisely to work out the work of your salvation to work and to work it out even first of all to search and try how it fares with thee in regard of this work whether this work be at all begun in us or not if the ground work be layd or not the ground-work of humiliation and if that be layed how far is it gone on whether we have gotten faith love c. and where we find it at a stand or stay there I say we should set too carefully and advance the work then we should pray most earnestly and use the means most diligently I mean the proper and particular and most convenient means as wise builders And as in building so in repairing our spirituall building we are to take the same course for what we have got before the stamp of them will be ready to slip out of our hearts and memories and we are not busier in building then Satan is in breaching and therefore as we are builders so we must be repairers also And surely whosoever will keep this course of diligence using feeding and meditating upon the particular means not leaning to them but upon the blessing of the Lords Spirit procured by prayer no doubt shall find an happie progresse in the
work of his salvation But above all we should remember not to lean to the Means but to the Lords Spirit for if it be true of the temporall much more of the spirituall Vnlesse the Lord builds the house he that buildeth buildeth but in vain True it is that the Lord pities our foolishnesse and as he hath a gracious care and providence of the salvation of mens bodies so much more hath he a gracious providence over the souls of his own though they be not so thriftie and wise in their own generation as they should making them meet with such doctrine books conference that is most sutable to their present case but for all this the rule of the using of the particular means is much to be observed Q How then would you have me go about the particular means of Faith to get to the promises the Covenant c. and to apply them to my self For this I would gladly do but while I am about the doing of it I dare not apply them to my self I think they do not belong to me although very sweet in themselves and that because I find not these Marks in me which are in Gods children now the promises onely belong to such I see no thing in me but corruption wants c. and misse all these Marks that you were speaking of that flow from Faith A. This is one of Satans greatest stratagems and wiles as is to be seen by the experience of Gods children for exceeding many are born back from laying hold on the promises and other grounds of confidence upon the very same considerations and all by the subtiltie of Satan and their own ignorance not considering the order and nature of things and so very dangerously and preposterously run first to the Marks of Faith which they will not fail to misse and so be discouraged or else if any do seem to find do build upon a wrong ground and so are readie to be deceived Whereas indeed they should first betake themselves to the Means that so they may get both a sound and a strong faith First I say then that this preposterous running to the Marks and effects of Faith so incident to many instead of the Means it comes from not considering rightly what is the very true nature of faith to wit that it is a resting upon the word and promise of the faithfull and powerfull God alone Faith is by hearing and hearing is by the Word of God Even as beleeving of a man is a relying upon his word and promise This is an easie point but for all that not duly considered by many which makes them take this wrong course for let sundrie be posed especially those who run so hastily to the Marks of Faith and so discourages themselves to look to the Means let sundrie I say be rightly examined it shall be found that they make not their faith to rest upon any thing in God his truth c. but upon something in themselves Or to give it the most favourable expression they make their faith not to be a resting upon Gods word but upon his work should some be asked what did first induce them to beleeve and consequently what is the ground of their faith They would answer Because they did find such a change in their life and so forth Now this is a very dangerous mistaking for this sort of faith that leans only primarily to such a ground must be a very unstable faith mans life being so changeable but also if this be the first and onely ground of their faith it must be a very false and unsound faith and not partaking of the very nature of faith which is to rest on Gods Word and not on his work upon the faithfulnesse and power of God and not upon any holinesse in us Obj. But you will say Is not this a very good ground to strengthen our faith and assurance to wit by our good works and sanctification of life A. I grant it is a good way to strengthen faith in it's own place but I say that this assurance is not the assurance of Faith and beleeving properly and that it is not that to the which in the first instance we should betake us and that it is not the chief prop of our confidence much lesse the onely and that those who make it the onely have not true faith at all For the further clearing of this consider that Divines have well observed that there is in the point of considence a twofold assurance one of adherence the resting on Gods Word which is faith Another which they call the certaintie of evidence taken from the Marks and effects of Faith By the one we beleeve by the other we know that we beleeve The one is an act of faith whereby a man beleeves and is justified the other is an act of experience in an old beleever whereby he sees and knows that he beleeves the one is a direct act of the soul the other is a reflect act of the soul whereby looking back upon it self it finds by clear marks and effects that this Mark of faith is wrought in it and greatly rejoyces therein Both these assurances the Scripture recommends unto us the one while we are commanded to beleeve and rest upon Gods Word the other while we are enjoyned to try whether we be in the faith or not to make our calling and election sure by well doing And further the Scripture is written to beget both these assurances in us Joh. 20.31 And again for the other 1 Joh. 5.13 Now if ye would ask which of these assurances hath the preheminence surely the first in these respects 1. Because that is it alone that makes up faith for it is a resting upon Gods Word and so that which saves the soul and glorifies God most 2. It is most sure as leaning to the most sure grounds immutable strong consolations to wit divine testimonie even the promise of him who cannot lye whereas the other being deduced by way of application assuming conclusion reasoning all which all being subject to be deceived cannot be so infallible 3. And lastly the first is the more constant assurance for it leans upon the truth mercy goodnesse of God and upon his promise all which admits no change Whereas the latter assurance being taken from some effects in us which are very changeable it cannot choose but varie also so that it is the first that holds out in the stormes of tentation desertions and afflictions and that is our surest anchor in all these stormes Were it not for thy Word I had perished c. It is the first assurance then that both saves the soul and that can make a man most constantly to have comfort in himself or to go on in the service of God and which is chiefly to be marked that it is the first assurance onely that makes faith Now although the first assurance in these respects have the preheminence yet neverthelesse the other is not