Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n spiritual_a zeal_n zealous_a 54 3 9.4053 5 false
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
A85881 The arraignment of pride, or, Pride set forth, with the causes, kinds, and several branches of it: the odiousness and greatness of the sin of pride: the prognosticks of it, together with the cure of it: as also a large description of the excellency and usefulness of the grace of humility: divided into chapters and sections. / By W. Gearing minister of the word at Lymington in Hantshire. Gearing, William. 1660 (1660) Wing G430; Thomason E1762_1; ESTC R209642 162,907 286

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

great presumption to arrogate or attribute or assume too much to our selves or rely too much upon our own strength for if we be left never so little while to stand upon our own feet we slip and slide and fall presently men of this humour be like a company of drunken souldiers who seem very valorous while the wine hath overcome their wits but when they have slept out their surfeit and be come to themselves do oft betake them to flight and think one pair of heels worth two pair of hands The Scripture tells us that the way of man is not in himself and Christ tells us Heu nihil invitis fat quenquam fidere divis Virg. AEneid Opem mihi feras Domine ne scandalizer Chrysost that without him we can do nothing Joh. 15.5 We must not therefore promise any thing of our selves but rather pray that God would direct us in our promises and enable us to perform them It was Peters fault that he did not he should rather have prayed as Chrysostome saith Lord enable me that I may not be offended then rashly have promised I will not be offended We are here assaulted with many temptations sometimes at the right hand by prosperity sometimes at the left hand by adversity sometimes privately sometimes publickly sometime in one sort sometime in another therefore we have need of strength beyond our own and to be strengthned sometimes in our understandings and judgements that we may discern and distinguish between good and evil truth and falshood sometimes in our wills that we may make a right choice according to our understanding and knowledge and sometimes in our affections to teach us to love hate fear c. what and how we ought both for the matter manner and measure Gods children in Scripture are compared to good and fruitful trees now to keep the comparison what is it for a tree to be of a good kind fruitful and planted in a fertile soil unless it be hardy and able to endure and bear out Summers heat that it spill it not and winters frost and cold that it chill and kill it not in like manner unless we be strengthned supported and sustained from above we shall never be able to hold out and bear about the many troubles and trials that will befal us for as our natural life is strengthned and preserved by food and such necessaries as be needful for our bodies so our spiritual life must be maintained by the graces of Gods Spirit as needful and necessary to our souls Briefly we need strengthning that we may be able rightly to use our spiritual armour both defensive and offensive Paulus Jovius as its best for us and appointed to us else as Scanderbeg told one that beg'd his sword it would do him but little good or stand him in small stead because he had not his arm too so we can make but poor use of Gods armour unless we be strengthned by his arm Col. 1.11 with all might according to his glorious power CHAP. 23. Of Pride of Grace and of Humility it self Pride of Grace is when Christians swell and grow big with conceit of their own perfection and in comparison of their grace zeal knowledge conscience and obedience do not stick both to slight and condemn their brethren others are carnal they spiritual others are weak they strong others ignorant they see the truth others are luke-warm themselves zealous professors nay some there are that are proud of humility it self and proud that they are not proud Pride begets diseases out of pretious remedies saith Chrysolgous Mr. Foxe said As I get good by my sins by being made thereby to take the more heed to my waies so I get hurt by my graces Ex remediis generat morbos superbia Chrysolog Serm. 7. by being proud of them Bernard tells us of one who bewailing his own condition said He saw thirty vertues in another whereof he had not one in himself and peradventure saith Bernard of all his thirty he had not one like this mans humility A man truly humble indeed attributeth and arrogateth nothing to himself but ascribes all to God Humilitas dum proditur perditur nor will he willingly lose this jewel of humility by proclaiming he hath found it for it is the greatest pride that may be to be proud of not being proud Every one should see that his heart be not pufft up with spiritual graces for what hast thou that thou hast not received saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 4.7 Thou hast not these graces because by nature thou art better then others for thou art a childe of wrath as well as others Hierome saith of the Lady Paula She was least that she might be greatest by how much more she humbled her self by so much the more by Christ she was exalted Ephes 2.3 Minima fuit ut esset maxima quantò magis se dejociebat tantò magis à Christo sublevabatur latebat non latebat Hieron Caetera vitia in peccatis superbia bonis maximè timenda August ad Dioscor Epist 56. she lay hid and yet she lay not hid other vices in sins but pride is most to be feared in Gods good gifts and graces CHAP. 24. Of the Odiousness of Pride SECT 1. PLato once said of moral vertue that in it self it is so beautiful that could a man see it in its proper colours it would even ravish the eyes of the beholders and make them fall in love with it so I may say of sin and especially of this sin of Pride that it is so ugly that the vilest sinner in the world durst not commit it did he behold the deformity and ugly visage thereof Pride is a sin very odious both to God and man 1. It is very loathsome in the eyes of God it is one of those sins that Solomon sets down to be an abomination to him Prov. 6.16 17. Prov. 16.5 Every one that is proud in heart is an abomination to the Lord and if the person be abominable then all the services be abominable God doth not vouchsafe so much as a favourable look towards proud persons though the Lord be high Ps 138.6 yet he hath respect to the lowly but the proud he knoweth a far off he looks upon them with contempt they stand at a great distance from God and God from them Prov. 3.34 surely he scorneth the scorners Whensoever God seeth a proud man he saith Behold mine enemy Isa 66.2 To this man will I look saith God that is poor and of a contrite spirit c. i. e. to the man that is poor in spirit God cannot look above him for there is no superiour to him nor look round about him because there is none that is equal to him Father Son and Holy Ghost are but one God but he looks downwards and the lower and more humble any man is the more the Lord regards him Morlorat in Luc. 1. saith