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A20762 A guide to godlynesse or a Treatise of a Christian life shewing the duties wherein it consisteth, the helpes inabling & the reasons parswading vnto it ye impediments hindering ye practise of it, and the best meanes to remoue them whereunto are added diuers prayers and a treatise of carnall securitie by Iohn Douname Batcheler in Diuinitie and minister of Gods Word. Downame, John, d. 1652.; Payne, John, d. 1647?, engraver. 1622 (1622) STC 7143; ESTC S121690 1,341,545 1,134

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some delay we haue most doubted of them Finally knowing that he is good and gracious mercifull and bountifull both vnto all his elect and particularly vnto vs wee must seeke to confirme it vnto our selues by our owne experience and by calling to mind how often he hath pardoned our former sinnes and sealed this pardon in our hearts and consciences by the testimony of his Spirit how often we haue tasted how good he is in the fruits of his bounty and in the sweet feeling thereof haue had our hearts comforted and refreshed The which experience of times past will much strengthen our faith and hope Rom. 5. 4. for the time to come make vs wholly to depend vpon him and to consecrate and deuote our selues to his worship and seruice with all cheerfulnesse and couragious resolution notwithstanding all oppositions seeing by manifold experience we haue found that the God whom wee serue is Dan. 3. most mighty to defend vs most gracious true of his promises and bountifull in performance richly rewarding all those who feare and depend vpon him Thus knowing the vertue and efficacy of Christs death in taking away by the inestimable merit thereof the guilt and punishment of our sinnes we must striue to finde and feele it in our owne experience by obseruing how it hath been powerfull and effectuall in vs for the mortifying and crucifying of our carnall lusts and sinfull corruptions which heretofore haue ruled and raigned in vs. And this Paul meaneth when hee saith that he desired to know nothing but Iesus Christ and him crucified 1. Cor. 2. 2. namely this vertue and efficacie of it in himselfe in the crucifying of his flesh with the lusts thereof and not onely to know the truth of it which might easily be attained vnto by the relation and instructions of others In which sense he saith in another place that he accounted all things but losse Phil. 3. 8 9 10. for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Iesus and that he laboured aboue all things to know him and the power of his Resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings being made conformable vnto his death that is not barely to know these things or to beleeue them by faith but to haue the experience of the vertue of his Resurrection in raising him from the death of sin to holinesse and newnesse of life giuing him a full conquest ouer his corruptions and spirituall life and strength to serue God in some perfection Thus knowing the holy Ghost to be our sanctifier we must neuer rest till we haue some good experience of it in our selues in his purging vs thorowout body and soule from all sinfull pollutions and in our spirituall renewing and reforming according to Gods Image in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse Thus we must know the workes of God both towards our selues and others not onely by hearing reading and discourse but also by our owne obseruation and experience How liberally from time to time he hath rewarded our poore indeuours and imperfect seruice with manifold blessings and how hee hath corrected our sloth when as wee haue been cold and carelesse formall and negligent in his seruice with his fatherly chastisements How he hath visited our sinnes with crosses and afflictions yea speciall sinnes with speciall punishments which haue sprung as fruits from those cursed rootes and by following them as at the heeles haue plainly shewed from what causes they came or else haue bin so fitted and proportioned vnto them in likenesse and similitude that the correction hath as it were by the hand led vs to the sight of our sinne And how vpon our repentance and humiliation he hath graciously spared and freed vs from our afflictions when wee least thought of any deliuerance The which as it will notably preserue vs from falling into those sinnes for which wee haue been formerly corrected so when wee haue falne it will effectually mooue vs to rise out of them by vnfained repentance and confirme thereupon our affiance in God that seeing he is immutable 2. Cor. 1. 10. in his goodnesse he will now againe be alike gracious vpon our humiliation to deliuer vs from present and future euils Thus also in Gods dealing with others we may haue experience of his truth in his promises towards those that feare and serue him and in his threatenings against those that are wicked who make no conscience of their wayes but rebelliously sinne against him of his Iustice by obseruing his Iudgements executed vpon the wilfull transgressours of his lawes and his goodnesse and mercy towards those who indeuour to serue and please him whereby we Eccles 8. 12. shall be made fearefull to offend him and carefull to carry our selues so in an holy conuersation as that we may be accepted in his sight And as this experimentall knowledge of God and his workes will bee a notable meanes to restraine vs from all sinne and to further vs in all the duties of a godly life so also the like knowledge of our selues and our owne courses and actions will be a singular helpe to the same ends as when we not only know that we are wholly corrupted in our soules and bodies with originall sinne but also experimentally feele the venome and vigour of it working in vs disabling vs vnto all good duties and making vs prone vnto all wickednesse whereby we are made more carefull in the vse of all good meanes by which wee may be inabled more and more to mortifie and subdue it when as wee not onely after a generall manner know our naturall weaknesse and frailty whereby we are often ouertaken with manifold actuall sinnes but also obserue by particular experience our speciall slips and falls what corruptions are most potent in vs and vnto what sinnes our nature is most prone and wherewith we are most often foyled to the end that we may not rest vpon our owne strength which so often faileth but vpon the power and promises of God and with more feruency craue the assistance of his holy Spirit to strengthen vs against our corruptions and to subdue their power that they may not preuaile against vs as in former times When as we see that wee are defectiue in all good duties we must also by experience obserue vnto what speciall duties we are most auerse and which we performe with most difficulty bewraying in them our greatest wants and imperfections that so wee may goe about them with greatest resolution and vse our best indeuours to performe them daily in more perfection When as wee not onely know that we are continually tempted by our spirituall enemies but also finde by experience their particular tentations wherewith they most assault vs and most often foyle and ouercome vs that so wee may in these regards keepe a more speciall watch take more paines in repairing these particular breaches and arme our selues with more courage and resolution to withstand them in the next incounters §. Sect. 2 The experimentall
and ashamed in our selues that we can shoot no higher of which we haue the holy Apostle as a patterne for our imitation who forgetting those things Philip. 3. 13 14. which were behind namely the former part of his race in the way of godlinesse and reaching foorth vnto those things which were before to wit that Christian perfection vnto which he had not yet attained did presse towards the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Iesus Christ And this is that Euangelicall and Sonne-like obedience which God now vnder the Couenant of grace requireth of vs which if we labour to performe he will accept of vs in Christ and remember our sinnes no more but will Ier 31 34. Mal. 3. 17. 2. Cor. 8. 12. spare vs as a man spareth his sonne who serueth him accept of the will for the deede and couering the imperfections of our obedience with Christs perfect righteousnesse and washing away the pollution and corruption of it in his most precious blood he will be well pleased with vs and approoue of vs as though we had attained to perfect righteousnesse §. Sect. 2 That a godly life chiefely consisteth in Euangelicall and filiall obedience and what this is And in this filiall obedience doth that godly life principally consist which we now intreate of for it is nothing else but a feruent desire sound resolution and sincere indeuour to conforme our whole liues in all holy obedience to Gods will that we may please him in all things and glorifie his holy name by our Christian conuersation or if we would haue a more full description of it A godly life is the life of a Christian who being regenerate quickned and illuminated by Gods Spirit and ingrafted into Christ thereby and by a liuely faith assuring him of Gods loue and his owne saluation doth in loue and thankefulnesse towards him desire resolue and indeuour to please him in all things by doing his will reuealed in his Word and to glorifie his name by walking before him in the duties of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety with faith a pure heart and good conscience all the dayes of his life In which description we are to consider two things First the person that leadeth this godly life and secondly the actions in this life performed by him the person is first named and then described by his state and properties Concerning the first he that leadeth this life is the Christian onely For as for the life of Heathens and Pagans seeme it neuer so strict iust and glorious as of Socrates Aristides Cato Seneca and such like it is voyd of all true godlinesse and not accepted of God because it is ioyned with ignorance of the true God and Iesus Christ idolatry will-worship infidelitie and all kind of heathenish impiety §. Sect. 3 That the regenerate onely can lead a godly life Neither doe all that beare the name of Christians leade this godly life but they who are so not in name and profession onely but in deed and truth that is such only who are in that state and qualified with those properties which are set downe in the former description As first that he be regenerate for they that are vnregenerate cannot performe any dutie of a godly life which is pleasing and acceptable to God because being out of the Couenant their persons and consequently their actions are not accepted of him but are the slaues of Satan held captiue to doe his will the 2. Tim. 2. 26. Eph. 2. 1 3. children of wrath and enemies vnto God and his grace dead in trespasses and sins and therefore no more able to doe the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse then a dead man is able to doe the actions of the liuing In which respect the Apostle saith that we are not of our selues able to thinke a good 2. Cor. 3. 5. Phil. 2. 13. thought nor so much as to will that which is good because it is God onely which worketh in vs both the will and the deed Neither can we better our estate by our own strength for as the Prophet teacheth vs as well may the Aethiopian Ier. 13. 23. change his blacknesse and the Leopard his spots as we doe well that are accustomed to doe euill So that the regenerate man alone can lead a godly life or performe any dutie acceptable vnto God for first Abel was accepted and then his sacrifice and our persons must first be sanctified before they Gen. 4. 4. can please God by our works of holinesse For as in the ceremoniall law the touching of holy things did not sanctifie and clense the polluted person but the person polluted did make the holy things to become vncleane as Haggai speaketh so the workes which in themselues materially Hag. 2. 12 13. are good and holy doe not sanctifie the vnregenerate man that doth them but through the taint and pollution of his sinne they also are polluted and defiled Now vnto this regeneration two things are necessarily required First that we haue the Spirit of God dwelling in vs And secondly the sanctifying and sauing graces of the Spirit which alwayes doe accompany it for the Spirit of God is the Author of our regeneration which begetteth vs vnto God according to that of our Sauiour Except a man be borne of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdome of God And that Iohn 3. 5. of the Apostle But ye are washed but ye are sanctified but yee are iustified in 1. Cor. 6. 11. 2. Cor. 3. 2 3. Tit. 3. 5. the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God It is the Spirit which mortifieth our sinnefull corruptions by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and so by destroying the kingdome of sinne raiseth vs out of the state of death and which giueth vnto vs the spirituall life of grace by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs resurrection which inableth vs to doe the actions of the liuing It is the Spirit that leadeth vs into all Iohn 16. 13. Rom. 8. 14. truth and hereby assureth vs that we are the sonnes of God seeing wee performe vnto him filiall obedience And therefore they who will walke in the wayes of godlinesse must haue this holy Spirit to bee their guide They who would outwardly mooue in the actions of piety and righteousnesse must haue this inward cause to stirre strengthen and support them for as well may a blinde man trauaile vncouth wayes without a leader or the body mooue without the soule as we goe in this Christian way or doe the workes of God vnlesse his holy Spirit be our guide and strength The which must mooue vs in the first place to labour earnestly to haue this Spirit dwelling in vs and to vse to this purpose that powerfull meanes of effectuall prayer seeing our heauenly Father hath promised to giue his holy Spirit to them that aske him as our Sauiour hath Luke 11. 13. taught
be throughly perswaded that hee shall ouercome them whereas on the other side for want of this faith or rather this speciall art of application many deare seruants of God are hindred and discouraged from going on in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse or else proceede with much vncomfortablenesse and disquietnesse because comparing their weakenesse with the difficulty of the worke they thinke that they shall neuer atchieue it in any measure acceptable to God though in the meane time they want not faith to rest vpon the promises of the Gospell the mercies of God and merits of Christ for their iustification and the bringing of them to euerlasting happinesse CAP. X. Of the third ground of a godly life which is a pure heart §. Sect. 1 Of a pure heart what it is and whence it ariseth BEsides those mayne grounds of a godly life before spoken of sauing knowledge and a liuely faith there are two other which Prou. 20. 9. arise and spring from them a pure heart and a good conscience By a pure heart I doe not vnderstand such an one as is free from all sinne and corruption for who can say I haue made my heart cleane I am pure from my sinne But such an heart as being regenerate by Gods Spirit is in part purified and sanctified hating sinne and louing vertue and holinesse in the inner man feeling the waight of corruption and desiring to be clensed from it and the want of grace and resoluing to vse all good meanes whereby it may be supplyed And this is a fruit of sauing knowledge which discouereth vnto vs how vgly sinne is in it selfe and pernicious vnto vs and the beauty and excellencie of grace and godlinesse in it owne nature with the profit which redoundeth vnto vs by it and also of a iustifying faith which applying the vertue of Christs death and resurrection doth mortifie our carnall corruptions and quicken vs in the life of grace making vs to hate that sinne which we formerly loued and to loue and imbrace that grace and vertue which in time past wee loathed and answerably to resolue that wee will vse all good meanes to be freed from the one and furnished with the other All which proceedeth out of our assurance of Gods loue which being shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost doth worke in them vnfained loue towards Rom. 5. 5. God againe whereby we desire resolue and indeuour to leaue and forsake what he hateth and forbiddeth and to imbrace and practise whatsoeuer he loueth and commandeth §. Sect. 2 That all true fruits of godlinesse spring from a pure heart And this is that pure heart which is necessary to a godly life as being a chiefe piller that supporteth it and a liuely fountaine from which all good and vertuous actions doe spring and flow For if the heart be pure it will purifie all our words and actions but if it be defiled we can expect no pure streames from a polluted fountaine according to that of our Sauiour Those things which proceed out of the mouth come foorth of the heart Mat. 15. 19. and they defile the man for out of the heart proceed euill thoughts murthers adulteries c. And therefore as it is in vaine to purge the streames when the fountaine is defiled because it will soone againe pollute them whereas if the spring be cleere it will soone clense the streames though much defiled that issue from it so is it with the fountaine of the heart and the words and actions which from it as streames doe spring and flow The heart is the roote and tree and the words and workes are the fruits it beareth which discouer what it is for a good tree bringeth foorth good fruits Mat. 7. 17 18. and a corrupt tree bringeth foorth euill fruits neither can a good tree bring foorth euill fruit nor a corrupt tree bring foorth good fruit as our Sauiour hath taught vs. It is the treasurie of all our thoughts speeches and actions And a good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth foorth Luk. 6. 45. that which is good and an euill man out of the euill treasure of his heart bringeth foorth that which is euill for of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh It is the King and Monarch in the little world of man which giueth lawes to all the other members raigning and ruling ouer them as it seemeth good vnto it It is the primum mobile and first moouer which giueth motion to all other parts as inferiour spheares and as it were the first wheele of the clocke whose motion all the rest follow standing still when it standeth and going as it goeth So that if the heart bee an inditer Psa 45. 1. 57. 7. 108. 1. of a good matter the tongue will be the pen of a ready writer if the heart bee prepared so also will be the tongue to sing and giue praise if it nourish euill thoughts like vnto discords there can be no good musike but if it be well tuned we shall in singing Hymnes Psalmes and spirituall Songs sing Col. 3. 16. with grace and make sweete melody in Gods eares And therefore Dauid desiring to make good speed in the way of godlinesse desireth first to haue his heart in larged with the loue of it I will runne saith he the way of thy Psal 119. 32. Commandements when thou shalt inlarge my heart §. Sect. 3 That God chiefly desireth the heart aboue all other parts And hereof it is that the Lord chiefly requireth the heart according to that of Salomon My sonne giue me thy heart The which also Dauid chiefly Pro. 23 26. 1. Chron. 28. 9. required of him in the seruice of God And thou Salomon my sonne know thou the God of thy father and serue him with a perfect heart and willing mind for the Lord searcheth all hearts and vnderstandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts It is aboue all other parts the sacrifice which is most acceptable vnto God according to that of the Psalmist The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise An Psal 51. 17. vpright heart is his chiefe delight and though he requireth sincerity both in our words and workes yet aboue all he desireth truth in the inward parts Vers 7. And if the heart be sincere and desireth to offer vnto God perfect seruice the Lord passeth by and pardoneth our imperfections and accepteth as perfect our weake and worthlesse indeuours according to that of the Apostle If there be first a willing minde it is accepted according to that a man 2. Cor. 8 12. hath and not according to that he hath not An example whereof we haue in Iehosaphat and Asa who though their inward corruptions did breake out into diuers open sinnes yet because they prepared their hearts to seeke the 2. Chr. 19. 3. Lord he esteemed them
hearts with renewed ioyes in the holy Ghost and after that they are exhausted with our infirmities and miseries renewed faith will like afresh Rom. 14. 17. Heb. 12. 11. hand draw new supplies from God the fountaine of our ioy vntill they be replenished and ouerflow Yea it will make our ioy not like that of worldlings in the fact and not in the heart momentany and mutable like the cracking of thornes vnder a pot whilst the brushie fewell of prosperity feedeth it but constant and permanent euen in afflictions and Rom. 5. 3. Iohn 16. 22. nothing shall be able to take it from vs. It will fill our hearts daily with the comforts of the Spirit when as being daily renewed it doth afresh assure vs of our communion with God and that Christ and all his benefits doe belong vnto vs which either respect this life or the life to come §. Sect. 5 Of diuers other benefits which follow the daily renewing of our faith Fifthly the daily renewing of our faith is the most effectuall meanes of our vnfained repentance For what can bee so powerfull an argument to make vs mourne for our sinnes with bitter griefe as with the eye of faith to looke vpon him whom by our sinnes we haue pearced and through the wound in his side to see his heart so replenished with diuine loue and as it were supplying the place of that blood and water that issued out of it and what can make vs more hate sinne or to resolue to please God in all holy and righteous duties then beleeuing that the Lord being so infinitely iust and abhorring sin with such implacable hatred that he spared not his onely begotten and most dearely beloued Sonne but when he bore our sinnes caused him to beare also our griefes and sorrowes wounded him for our transgressions and bruized him with the paines of death and fearefull burthen of his wrath for our iniquities to beleeue also that he is towards vs so infinitely merciful that he gaue his Sonne to vs and for vs to suffer all these torments for a time that wee might not suffer them for euer that he wounded him for our transgressions that we might be healed by his hurts cleansed and purified from the guilt punishment and corruption of all our sinnes with the streames of his blood acquitted by his condemnation and reuiued by his death For who is so audaciously desperate as to dare by voluntarie sinning prouoke such a Iustice who is so hard-harted and vngratefull as would be inticed with the baites of worldly vanities to neglect in any thing to please so infinite a goodnesse So what can more powerfully moue vs to flee all sinne and to practise with all diligence all Christian duties of holinesse and righteousnesse then by faith not only to inioy Gods present blessings in their owne worth and excellency but as earnest pennies and first fruits pledges and pawnes of heauenly and eternall reward wherewith God of his free grace hath promised to crowne all our labours and Illi terrena sapiunt qui coelestia promissa non habent Illi breui huic vitae se totos implicent qui aeterna nesciunt c. Hieronym ad Celantiam holy indeuours whereas if there were no beliefe and expectation of reward wee should faint vnder the waight of afflictions languish in the performance of Christian duties which are so ill esteemed and accepted in the world and be wholy taken vp in the pursuite of earthly vanities because we haue entertained no better hopes For as one saith They sauour earthly things which beleeue not heauenly promises They wholy addict themselues to things that belong vnto this transitory life which apprehend not those things which are eternall They feare not to sinne who thinke that it shall haue no punishment and finally they become slaues to their vices who expect not the future rewards of vertue c. Sixthly by this daily renewing of our faith wee shall bee strengthened against all the tentations of our spirituall enemies so as they shall not be Ephe. 6. 17. able to hurt and wound vs whether these darts be cast against vs from the right hand or from the left For faith as an impenetrable Shield enableth vs to ouercome and beate back tentations arising from worldly prosperity whilst apprehending heauenly and euerlasting excellencies it maketh vs to contemne these base and momentanie vanities and the tentations which arise from crosses and afflictions by perswading vs that they are the straight way that leadeth to happinesse that they are not worthy Acts 14 22. Rom. 8. 18. 2. Cor. 4. 17. 2. Tim. 2. 12. the glory that shall be reuealed that these light and moment any afflictions worke for vs afarre more exceeding and eternall waight of glory and that if we suffer with Christ we shall also raigne with him Finally faith thus dayly renewed not onely effectually perswades vs vnto an holy resolution of leading a Christian and godly life but also powerfully enables vs to performeall the duties thereunto required with alacrity and cheerefulnesse ioy and delight for it moues vs to consecrate our selues wholy to the seruice of him who hath graciously redeemed vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies and to testifie our loue and thankefulnesse vnto him who hath done all this for vs by our new obedience It vnites vs vnto Christ and applieth vnto vs the vertue of his death by which sin is mortified and crucified in vs we vnto it to the world so that we wil no longer serue them in fulfilling worldly and carnall lusts and the vertue of his resurrection whereby we are enabled to rise from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life It giueth vnto vs with spirituall life spirituall motion it cleanseth and changeth our hearts and taking away the old it worketh in vs a new nature which is actiue and operatiue in all holy and righteous duties and diligent and cheerefull in the performance of them And whereas before we either did them not at all or but in outward shew formally and coldly and that not without much paines and difficuly it enableth vs now to performe them like naturall actions with much ease and delight so as wee can say with Dauid that the Law of God is our Psal 119. chiefe delight better vnto vs then thousands of gold and siluer and sweeter then the hony or hony-combe And with our Sauiour that it is our meate Iohn 4. 34. and drinke to doe the will of our heauenly Father And as vnnaturall motions are not without outward violence lasting no longer then it lasteth but natural are easie and permanent as the Sun shineth and the riuer runneth of their owne accord freely and without compulsion so by helpe of this new nature which faith worketh in vs our actions and motions in the waies of godlinesse are easie and pleasant which vnto corrupt nature were euen in respect of the outward act harsh and
humane will were most iust and holy yet professeth that he sought not his owne will but the will of his Father who sent him Neither Ioh. 5. 30. must we only deny our own wils in al our doings that we may submit them vnto Gods but also in our suffrings that so we may say with Dauid Here am 2. Sam. 15. 26. I let him doe to me as seemeth good vnto him and with our Sauiour Christ himselfe If this Cup may not passe by me not my will but thine bee done The Mat. 26. 39 42. fruits and benefits of which resigning vp our selues wholly to the direction and disposing of Gods will are great and manifold For thus all our actions must needs be pleasing vnto God seeing they are conformable to his owne will We shall liue the life of Christ when being wholly mooued Gal. 2. 20. and ruled by his Spirit we shall doe not our owne wills but his and the will of his our heauenly Father We shal be partakers of the diuine nature as the Apostle Peter speaketh when as keeping his residence in vs by his 2. Pet. 1. 4. Spirit his holy will doth raigne and rule in vs. Wee shall greatly profit in humility which is that Christian ornament that chiefly maketh vs glorious in the sight of God Wee shall be contented in all estates and reioyce euen in tribulation and affliction because the will of God is fulfilled in vs vpon which our will dependeth Finally the will of God shall be vnto vs as a most skilful and faithfull Pilot which standing at the sterne will direct vs in all our courses in this our dangerous passage thorow the sea of this world and preserue vs safe in all tempestuous troubles from falling vpon the rocks and shelfes vpon which we would often run and make shipwracke of our soules if we followed not this guide but were led by the direction of our owne corrupt and vnskilfull wills or by the traditions of others who are as ignorant as our selues §. Sect. 3 The second rule respecting our Sauiour Christ namely that we aime at him as the mayne scope of all our actions The second rule of direction for the leading of a godly life respecteth our Sauiour Christ namely that we propound him as the maine scope and marke at which we ayme in all our actions not resting in the best duties which we performe as hauing in them any sufficiency to make vs happie and blessed but vsing them as helpes to gaine Christ and to confirme and assure our vnion and communion with him by whom alone wee attaine vnto happinesse The end of our legall knowledge is not chiefly that wee may obey it and so liue in our owne righteousnesse but to discouer our misery both in respect of sinne and punishment that thereby we may be driuen out of our selues vnto Christ and seeke in him righteousnes and Joh. 17. 3. saluation The end of the knowledge of the Gospell and of all other knowledge learning and wisedome is to bring vs to the knowledge of Christ and him crucified for the sauing knowledge of this onely would make vs happie though we were meere Ideots in all other things whereas if we had all other knowledge of the secrets of nature the profundity of all Arts and sciences yea euen of the highest and darkest mysteries of Religion yet wanting this alone wee should bee miserable And therefore the Apostle neglecting the excellency of all other wisedome determined 1. Cor. 2. 1 2. not to know any thing saue Iesus Christ and him crucified In respect of this hee esteemed all other gaine but losse and dung and propounded this vnto himselfe as his chiefe marke vnto which he pressed with all his power that he might know Christ and the power of his Resurrection and the fellowship Phil. 3. 10 14. of his sufferings being made conformable vnto his death In which when he had attained vnto it in some measure hee chiefely gloried The end Gal. 6. 14. of our faith must not bee to rest in it as an infused grace for which in its owne vertue we are accepted but that it may serue as an instrument to apply and appropriate vnto vs Christ and his righteousnes in and by whom alone we are iustified in the sight of God The end of our hearing and reading the Word is not chiefely to commend vs vnto God by the performance of a religious act of his seruice but that wee may thereby come to the knowledge of Christ apply him vnto vs by a liuely faith The end of our receiuing the Sacraments is to confirme and assure our vnion and communion with Christ The end of our prayers is not that for themselues and their owne feruency and holinesse they should bee heard and granted of God but onely in the mediation and intercession of Iesus Christ Finally the end of all the duties of a godly life and fruits of new obedience is not to satisfy Gods Iustice and merit heauen but to assure vs that wee are ingrafted as liuely branches in the true Vine Iesus Christ and that wee haue from him this sap of grace which maketh vs fruitfull seeing without him we could doe nothing and that we are partakers of the vertue Ioh. 15. 4 5. and power of his death and Resurrection vnto Iustification and the remission of the guilt and punishment of all our sinnes seeing wee feele them powerfull in vs for our sanctification and for the abating of the corruption and subduing in vs the power of sinne so that it no longer raigneth in Rom. 6. 12. our mortall bodies Now the reason why we must not rest in our Christian graces and holy duties themselues but onely vse them to another end propounding vnto them as their mayne scope the gayning of Christ and that wee may hereby be more neerely and firmely vnited vnto him is because nothing in vs nor any thing done by vs is pleasing vnto God in it owne worth and excellency but only as it is accepted in Christ the Sonne of his loue in whom onely hee is well pleased for euen our prayers themselues Mat 3. 17. 17. 5. are but a lothsome sacrifice vnlesse our high Priest taking them at our hands doe put them into his golden Censor and sweeten them with Apoc. 8. 3. the odoriferous Incense and fragrant breath of his mediation and intercession Our best righteousnesse being imperfect and stayned with our corruptions like a polluted cloth will not indure the pure and parching eye Esa 64. 6. of Gods strict Iustice vnlesse our imperfections be couered with the perfect righteousnesse of Iesus Christ and the pollution washed away in his most precious blood And therefore let not this bee the end of all our Christian duties in a godly life that they may bring vs directly vnto God in their owne credit or procure his fauour in their owne worth and excellency for then hee will iustly reiect both
dishonor our Lord and Master weare his liuery to do him shame yea also disgrace our selues whilest we doe discouer our grosse hypocrisie in not answering to our profession nor performing such holy duties as are sutable vnto it whereby we shall moue the Lord in his iust displeasure to pull our liueries ouer our eares and so vncasing vs to lay open our hypocrisie to our shame and to turne vs out of doores This may moue vs also to fight couragiously vnder his Standard against the spirituall enemies of our saluation seeing if we slip out of his Campe after we haue receiued this pres-money and runne away wee deserue death by our apostasie or if we cowardly yeeld vnto the assaults and tentations of our spirituall enemies and doe not fight valiantly and performe faithfull seruice to our grand-Captaine euen vnto the death wee are well worthy to bee cashiered to haue no part in the glory of his victory nor any portion of ioy in his heauenly triumph §. Sect. 3 That the Sacrament of Baptisme furthereth vs in godlinesse as we are thereby ingrafted into Christ More specially the Sacrament of Baptisme is to the worthy receiuer a notable meanes to inable vs vnto the duties of a godly life First because Gal. 3. 26 27. thereby we are sacramentally ingrafted into the body of Christ and made members of his body spiritually by faith as wee are outwardly initiated entred and admitted by the Congregation as members of the visible Church according to that of the Apostle Ye are all the children of God by faith in Iesus Christ for as many of you as haue been baptized into Christ haue put on Christ By vertue of which incision we are inabled to bring forth the fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse according to that of our Sauiour I am the Vine ye are the branches he that abideth in me and I in him the same Iob. 15. 5. bringeth forth much fruit namely by that life and sap of grace which hee receiueth of me for without me ye can doe nothing For as the Impe or Cion liueth not by his owne life but being cast out of the stocke dyeth and withereth so being ingrafted into Christ we liue not our owne life but by vertue of that liuely sap of grace which wee receiue from him according to that of the Apostle I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in me and the Gal. 2. 20. life which I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the Sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me whereas he that abideth not in the true Vine Iesus Christ he is cast forth as a branch and is withered and men gather Ioh. 15. 6. them and cast them into the fire and they are burned More specially being baptized into Iesus Christ we are baptized into his death and Resurrection from which such vertue and vigour is deriued vnto vs that wee are not onely thereby washed and purged from the guilt and punishment of all our sinnes but also inabled to mortifie and crucifie the old man the flesh with the sinful lusts therof raised from the death of sin to holinesse and newnesse of life The which is not onely sacramentally signified by the outward washing and sprinkling with water which serueth to cleanse vs from our bodily defilements by our stay and as it were burying vnder it representing our mortification death and buriall to sinne and our rising out of it signifying our spirituall Resurrection to a new life but also certainly sealed and assured and powerfully conueyed to the worthy receiuer that is to little children elected to saluation potentially the inward vertue lying hid in them till being come to age it be produced into act by a liuely faith and to those of yeeres actually who with the outward washing apply by faith the blood of Christ for the purging of them from the guilt punishment and corruption of their sinnes and the vertue of his death and Resurrection for the killing and crucifying of the flesh with the lusts thereof and their spirituall quickening vnto holinesse and new obedience And hereof it is that the Apostle draweth from our Baptisme effectuall arguments to perswade vs vnto and worke in vs sanctification and holinesse of life How shall we saith he that are dead to sin liue any longer therein Know ye not that so many of vs as were baptized into Iesus Christ were baptized into his death Therefore we are buried with him by Baptisme into death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the Father euen so we also should walke in newnesse of life for if we haue bin planted together in the likenesse of his death we shall be also in the likenesse of his Resurrection Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sinne might bee destroyed that henceforth wee should not serue sinne c. §. Sect. 4 Secondly as it is the Sacrament of our new-birth Secondly Baptisme doth inable vs vnto the duties of a godly life as it is the Sacrament of our Regeneration and new-birth not onely signifying but sealing and assuring yea powerfully conueying to the worthy receiuer by the inward operation of Gods Spirit which powerfully worketh together with his holy ordinances the spirituall life of grace potentially to the elect Infants as they potentially haue faith and by Gods Decree are ordained to beleeue and actually to those who by faith apply vnto themselues Christ and all his benefits By which spirituall life and quickening power they are inabled according vnto their age and growth in Christ to moue and worke in the duties of holinesse euen as the child which is new-borne moueth as soone as it liueth first more weakly and afterwards more strongly as it increaseth in age and growth in strength and stature Neither is the vertue of Baptisme thus quickening vs to newnesse of life to be limitted and restrained to the time past or to the present act of administration as though it did no more but purge and cleanse vs from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes past and mortifie our originall sinne in which we were borne or raise vs who were dead in trespasses and sinnes vnto the first beginnings of spirituall life and motion bringing vs as it were to the birth and then vtterly leauing vs to be nursed and nourished by other meanes but the power and vigour of it continueth and extendeth it selfe to the whole course of our liues and is an effectuall meanes being recalled to our minds and afresh applyed by faith both to assure vs of the pardon of all our sinnes as it is the seale of the Couenant whose vertue continueth not onely at the first act of sealing but as long as the tearme specified in the writing and therefore must continue in full vertue for euer to our vse seeing it is a seale affixed to an euerlasting Couenant and also with no lesse efficacy to mortifie
Body a bloody sweat And his externall sufferings as his betraying by his owne Apostle his apprehension by his cruell enemies who haled him before the Iudgement seat as a malefactour who was the Lord our righteousnesse falsly accused him who had committed no sinne and in whose mouth there was no guile vniustly condemned him who was iust and innocent mocked and scorned him blindfolded and buffeted him reuiled and spit vpon him clothed him with purple and crowned him with thornes whipped and tormented him crucified and killed him And here we may meditate of this kind of death which was most bitter and painfull ignominious and shamefull accursed and vncomfortable seeing he suffered not only a bodily death but the wrath of God which is the death of the soule and was vtterly emptyed as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 2. 8. of all diuine comfort and was as a man forlorne and forsaken of God in his owne sense and apprehension which made him to cry out vpon the Crosse My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Thus also wee haue matter of meditation from those things which followed his death as from his triumph vpon the Crosse ouer the wrath of God the curse of the Law Satan death hell and all the enemies of our saluation in respect of the vertue of his merits From his descension and buriall whereby he was held for a time vnder the arrest of death From those things likewise which were done by him in his state of exaltation as his Resurrection mansion vpon the earth for the space of forty dayes teaching and instructing his Disciples in those things which appertained to his Kingdome His Ascension sitting at the right hand of God and there making intercession for vs. And that which followeth of all these as the generall effect and fruit of them all the great worke of our Redemption So haue we matter of meditation from Christs Kingly Office by which sitting at the right hand of his Father in all glory maiesty and power hee raigneth ouer all the world and more peculiarly ouer his Church And heere we may meditate vpon the parts of his Kingly Office which are his speciall administration and generall and last Iudgement In the former wee may consider the gouernment of his Church and the abolition of the kingdome of darknesse In that we may meditate on his calling and gathering of it out of the world and the consecration of it being gathered by his presence and protection prouiding for it all necessaries and preseruing it from all dangers where we may take occasion to meditate vpon all Gods blessings and benefits both temporall spirituall and eternall which he hath and will bestow generally vpon his whole Church and also vpon those which he hath particularly and in speciall manner vouchsafed vnto vs both in our preseruation from euill and fruition of good The abolition of the kingdome of darknes is the ouerthrow and destruction of all his enemies and especially that grand aduersary Antichrist the whore of Babylon §. Sect. 7 Of the externall meanes of executing Gods Decree of Election Moreouer we may haue plentifull matter of meditation from the externall meanes of executing the Decree of our Election As from the Couenant of grace made with vs in Christ wherein the Lord hath promised that he will be our God and wee shall be his people the remission of our sinnes and saluation of our soules grace and all good things in this life and euerlasting happinesse in the life to come vpon the alone condition of faith which being liuely and effectuall bringeth forth the fruits of vnfained repentance So also from the meanes whereby this Couenant is administred namely the ministery of the Word and administration of the Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper both which affoord vnto vs plentifull matter of meditation From the degrees likewise of the executing Gods Decree of Election and Reprobation As the loue and free grace of God in Christ and the degrees of the declaration of this loue both in this life and afterwards The first degree in this life is our effectuall calling the parts whereof are our election and separation from the world Gods donation giuing Christ vnto vs to be our Sauiour and vs to Christ to be saued by him and finally our insition into Christ and vnion with him From the meanes of executing this our calling which is the sauing hearing of the Word the softening of our hard hearts making them humble contrite penitent and sorrowfull for sinne which are all preparatiues to our sound conuersion and regeneration whereby wee who were dead in sinne are quickened and reuiued by the Spirit of God effectually applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and Resurrection From the worke of grace thus begun in vs we may haue much profitable matter of meditation As of the illumination of our minds with sauing knowledge of iustifying faith with the causes effects degrees properties and signes of it our iustification by faith in Christ our reconciliation and adoption and manifold other priuiledges of the faithfull of which I shall haue occasion to speak hereafter The speciall fruits of faith respecting our Iustification as our entrance into grace by which wee stand the loue of God shed abroad in our hearts confidence free accesse to the Throne of grace peace of conscience ioy in the holy Ghost and an holy glorying in Gods benefits The fruits of faith respecting our adoption as the Spirit of adoption hope Christian liberty So also we haue excellent matter of meditation from our sanctification the causes effects degrees properties meanes and signes of it and from the speciall parts of it our mortification vnto sinne and vinification to newnesse of life From the imperfection of our sanctification which is but begun in this life and to be perfected in the life to come and that by reason hereof the reliques of all sorts of sinne doe still remaine in vs blindnesse in our mindes errour in our iudgments impurity in our consciences forgetfulnesse in our memories rebellion in our willes security impenitency infidelity and hardnesse in our hearts corruption and disorder in our affections and by reason of all these many sinnes breaking out into our actions And heere we may meditate of those speciall sinnes and corruptions whereunto our natures are most prone and wherewith wee are most often ouertaken and of the meanes whereby we may mortifie and subdue them that they may no longer beare this sway in vs as in former times So also wee haue heere occasion to meditate of our begun sanctity in all our parts and actions of the internall holinesse of our natures and the change that is wrought in vs by repentance from euill to good from corruption to grace the which is to be obserued in all our inward faculties as the holinesse of our minds and vnderstandings in their spirituall illumination whereby they become wise and prudent in the things appertaining to God and our saluation the purging of our
suffer thine eyes to bee blinded and dazeled with the sudden flashes of worldly vanities which like lightening passe swiftly away and leaue nothing behind but blacke darknesse so as thou canst not discerne the beauty and brightnesse of spirituall graces and heauenly excellencies Doe not content thy selfe with a slight and superficiall view of these following reasons which perswade thee for thine owne good vnto the duties of a godly life nor to haue read them ouer with a curious eye rather to see what may bee said then with a purpose to make vse of them for thy practice of holinesse if thou be thorowly conuinced by euidence of truth shining in them but ponder them seriously with thy selfe and if thou finde them to beare any waight be perswaded by them to neglect no longer thine owne good nor to deferre and put off the seruing of God in the duties of a godly life but seeke first his Kingdome and righteousnesse when as thou shalt plainly discerne Deut. 6. 24. that his glory and thy good are through his mercy so matched together that thou canst not seeke the one but thou shalt assuredly finde the other §. Sect. 2 That by leading of a godly life we are assured of freedome from all our sins both in respect of their guilt punishment and corruption Now the good things which accompany the duties of a godly life are either the benefits which as fruits and effects attend vpon it or those speciall and rich priuiledges wherewith God of his free mercy is pleased to crowne his owne graces and to reward as with rich wages that poore seruice which we performe vnto him The benefits which follow a godly life are either priuatiue consisting in our freedome from euill or positiue in the fruition of good and both of them either temporall or eternall The priuatiue benefits of this life are many according to the multitude of euils vnto which it is liable both in respect of sinne and punishment from which in the greatest and worst part we are by the benefit of a godly life freed and deliuered For first if wee leade a godly life it will be a meanes to assure vs of our freedome from the guilt of all our sinnes by sole vertue of Christs death and blood-shed applyed vnto vs by faith both in regard that these holy duties of a godly life are the vndoubted fruits of a liuely faith approuing it to bee sincere and vnfained and as fruits of our Sanctification assuring vs that the same vertue of Christs death and Resurrection which wee finde effectuall for the mortifying of our sinnes and our spirituall quickening vnto holinesse and newnesse of life hath been already alike effectuall vnto vs for the freeing of vs from the guilt of sinne in our Iustification of which the other are but fruits and effects And secondly wee shall hereby be freed in the greatest part from our fleshly corruption and innumerable actuall sinnes seeing those Psal 119. 9 10 11. that are carefull to please God in the duties of a godly life doe bend their whole force in the vse of all good meanes for the subduing of their carnall lusts that though they dwell yet they may not rule and raigne in them resist as much as in them lyeth all the tentations of their spirituall enemies alluring and drawing them into sinne and keepe a conscionable and diligent watch ouer themselues that they may not wittingly and willingly commit any thing which Gods Law hath forbidden and condemned Whereof it commeth to passe that howsoeuer they are sometime and it may be not seldome ouertaken through humane frailty and infirmity and so contrary to their purpose and resolution are led captiue into sinne yet are they by this care and circumspection preserued from falling into any knowne transgression for the most part and from hainous and grieuous sinnes which wound and waste the conscience and like the hectique feuer consume the graces of God as it were the vitall spirits which preserue the spirituall life into which worldly and carnall men who neglect the duties of a Godly life doe ordinarily fall and make them as it were their ordinary trade Or if through violence of tentation and neglect of keeping their watch they haue been surprised vpon a sudden and ouertaken of such sinnes yet hauing this care to please God in the duties of a godly life this will but very rarely happen and when it doth yet they doe not like wicked men multiply their transgressions by committing often the same hainous sinne nor impenitently continue in it from day to day and yeere to yeere but being through frailty falne they doe not lye still but labour to come out of it by vnfained repentance Now how inestimable this benefit is which accompanyeth a godly life whereby in the greatest part we get victory ouer our corruptions by which others are conquered and as slaues held captiue and preserued from falling into innumerable and those the most hainous sinnes it will easily appeare if we consider the greatnesse of the euill from which we are hereby deliuered namely from sinne which aboue all things in the world is most odious vnto God and most pernicious vnto our soules and bodies as being the root and fountaine of all those mischiefes and miseries vnto which men are lyable both in this life and the life to come §. Sect. 3 That by leading a godly life wee are freed from the punishment of our sinnes The which also may be a second motiue to perswade vs vnto a godly life in that being thereby in the greatest part freed from our sinnes in respect Prow 19. 23. of their corruption and sinfull acts and wholly in assurance of faith from the guilt of them by vertue of Christs death and obedience applyed vnto vs we doe also hereby escape the punishments which are due vnto them Of both which the saying of Salomon is verified The feare of the Lord tendeth to life and he that hath it shall abide satisfied he shall not be visited with euill to wit either of sinne and punishment And againe The Prou. 14. 27. feare of the Lord is a fountaine of life to make vs depart from the snares of death For first the faithfull which walke in the waies of holinesse and righteousnesse are wholly freed by the death and sufferings of Christ from all punishments properly so called which are inflicted to satisfie Gods Iustice seeing Christ hath made full satisfaction for all their sinnes and therfore as it would not stand with the Iustice of God to let them goe vnpunished so neither that they should be twice punished once in our surety and the second time in our selues as I haue proued at large in another place Christian Warfare the third part Whereas those who make no conscience of their wayes and neglect the duties of a godly life being out of Christ doe beare the punishment of their sinnes themselues both in this world and the world to come Secondly by
though those who are in their youth and prime age be weary faint and vtterly fall yet if being humbled in the sense of our owne weakenesse we doe deny our selues and waite vpon the Lord he will renew Phil. 1. 6. our strength and we shall mount vp with wings as Eagles we shal run and not be weary and walke and not be faint This worke of regeneration is not our own but the Lords who is as able willing to perfect a work as to begin it for not to finish what he hath vndertaken and begun were a signe either of inconstancie or want of power whereas he is immutable and omnipotent according to that of the Prophet Shall I bring to the birth and not Esa 66. 9. cause to bring foorth saith the Lord shall I cause to bring foorth and shut the wombe saith thy God Though then the duties of a godly life seeme vnto vs hard difficult and euen vnpossible yet let not this discourage vs seeing nothing is impossible with God though they bee so farre aboue our abilities Luk. 1. 37. that they also exceed our hopes so as we scarce dare sue and seeke after that power of performance which God requireth and we desire let vs remember that the Lord is able to doe exceeding abundantly aboue all that we aske or Eph. 3. 20. thinke according to the power that worketh in vs. And though we are ready to stumble at euery stone of offence and to sinke in euery tentation let vs goe on cheerfully for all this seeing our God is able to keepe vs from falling and to Iude vers 24. present vs faultlesse before the presence of his glory with exceeding ioy Yea he is ready to preuent vs with his grace and not only to worke in vs as in the Prodigall son some good desires of returning vnto our heauenly Father Luk. 15. that we may serue him but euen when he seeth vs afarre off he will run to meet vs giue vs kind intertainment and feast vs so with a banket of his graces that we shall be inabled with cheerfulnesse to doe his worke And therefore though we find neuer so mighty opposition as soone as we are entred into the course of Christianity yet being assured of Gods presence and assistance let not this dismay vs For if God be with vs who can be against Rom. 8. 31. vs Pharaoh may wel frowne and storme against vs but his ruine shal be our safety The deuill may rage and as it were rend vs with his tentations but out he must come leaue his hold when God commandeth him Though we apprehend the greatnesse and difficulty of the worke and our owne weakenesse and insufficiency to goe thorow with it let not this discourage vs from vndertaking it for the Lord is with vs his grace is all-sufficient and his power is manifested and glorified in our infirmities Though we are weake 2. Cor. 12. 9. Eph. 6. 10 13. in our owne strength and able to doe nothing yet we are strong in the Lord and in the power of his might with the Apostle able to do all things through the power of Christ which strengtheneth vs. Though we through our corruption are prone to fall into any sinne the Lord shall deliuer vs from euery euill 2. Tim. 4. 18. worke and preserue vs vnto his heauenly Kingdome and finally though we are so fettred and gauled with our naturall corruptions that wee can scarce creepe in the wayes of Gods Commandements yet we may resolue to run Psal 119. 32. in them with great agility and swiftnesse when he shall be pleased to inlarge our hearts They saith an ancient Father who resolue to passe from the loue of worldly pleasure vnto an honest and vertuous life finde it at the Cyr. in Hesaiam lib. 4. cap. 55. first a rough and vncouth way which is hardly passable For the sweetnesse of a long settled and confirmed custome opposeth and hindreth them and lothnesse to breake it doth much intoxicate and disturbe their mindes Neither can our carnall affections be easily shunned or subdued nor is the way of vertue plaine and easie to euery one who offereth to run in it But yet God prospering and helping vs forward and smoothing and leuelling these rough and vnpassable wayes a man may easily escape or ouercome the assaults of his owne carnall affections and couragiously mount vnto the top of the hill of vertue §. Sect. 3 That God the Sonne ioyning with vs taketh away all difficulty Secondly God the Sonne ioyning with vs in the duties of a godly life will take away all difficulty and enable vs to performe them with all cheerefulnes and delight For being vnited vnto him by a true and a liuely faith and ingrafted into this blessed fruitfull Vine as liuing branches wee shall receiue such spirituall life and sap of grace from him that we shall bring forth the ripe grapes and pleasant fruits of holinesse and righteousnes Being knit vnto him in this blessed vnion and becomming liuely members of his body wee shall haue communion with him and receiue such vertue and vigour as shall be effectuall not only for our iustification but also for our sanctification From his death Rom. 6. 4. we shall receiue vertue strength for the mortifying of the flesh and the sinfull lusts thereof so as it shall no longer reigne and rule in vs as in former times and from his Resurrection such a quickning power as will enable vs to rise out of the graue of sin and to walke in the waies of holinesse and righteousnesse bringing forth the plentifull fruits of new and true obedience Besides our Sauiour who exhorteth vs to take his yoke vpon vs offreth himselfe to ioyne with vs and to be our yoke-fellow and as the taller and stronger Oxe drawing together with one that is lesse and weaker easeth him of the chiefest part of the burthen so our Sauiour so farre exceeding vs in greatnesse and strength doth free vs from all irkesomnesse and cumbersome tediousnesse of that burthen which he layeth vpon vs by bearing it vp vpon his owne blessed necke and shoulders Neither doth he call vs vnto him to trouble and vex vs but to ease and comfort vs. Not to oppresse vs with a burthen aboue our strength but to lighten vs of the intolerable load of sin by taking it vpon himselfe in stead wherof he layeth vpon vs his sweet and easie yoke of Euangelicall obedience according to that his gracious call and inuitation Come vnto me all yee Matth. 11. 28 29 30. that labour and are heauie loaden and I will ease you take my yoke vpon you and learne of me for I am meeke and lowly in heart and yee shall finde rest vnto your soules for my yoke is easie and my burthen light So that though it be a yoke and burthen yet it needs not dismay vs seeing it is but light and easie in comparison of that
vs. §. Sect. 4 That the Spirit of God is the Author of spirituall life 1. And if we thus gaine his company and giue him friendly intertainement when he dwelleth in vs possessing our vessels in sanctification and honour Thes 4. 3. Eph. 4. 30. 1. Thes 5. 19. that they may be fit Temples for this pure Maiestie and not vexing and grieuing this holy Ghest by quenching those good motions which he suggesteth vnto vs then will not he be idle in vs but will direct and guide vs in all our wayes and inable and strengthen vs vnto all Christian duties of holinesse and righteousnesse nor come alone to dwell in vs but accompanied with the sweet society of all sanctifying and sauing graces And first of all he will quicken vs in the life of grace who were before dead in trespasses and sinnes and giue vnto vs spirituall motion in all holy actions Eph. 2. 1. the which though at first it be but weake and scarcely to be discerned like a child newly quickned in the wombe yet shall it increase by degrees vntill we be strengthened for the spirituall birth and grow vp from age to age and from strength to strength vnto a perfect man and vnto the Eph. 4. 13. measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ of which life the Spirit of God is the principall Author according to that of the Apostle If the Spirit of Rom. 8. 11. him that raised vp Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised vp Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortall body by his Spirit that dwelleth in you without the which we cannot once mooue in the wayes of godlinesse nor after that we haue begun proceede or grow vp vnto any perfection And therefore when we finde our selues dead and dull vnto all good actions we are earnestly to pray with Dauid that God will reuiue and quicken vs Ps 119. 25 107. by his grace and holy Spirit that we may become actiue and able to performe the duties of a Christian and holy life §. Sect. 5 That the Spirit inlighteneth vs in the wayes of godlinesse Secondly hauing giuen vnto vs this life of grace hee will in the next place indue vs with spirituall light and illuminate the blinde eyes of our mindes that we may vnderstand the will and wayes of God reuealed in his Word and attaine vnto such a measure of sauing knowledge as may be sufficient to direct vs in all our thoughts words and actions And this is that voyce of the Spirit which in our conuersion vnto God secretly whispereth in the eare of our minds as it were behind vs saying This is the way walke yee in it when ye turne to the right hand and when yee turne to Esa 30. 20. the left This is that day-spring which the Sunne of righteousnesse with his arising hath caused to appeare and visit vs to giue light vnto vs who sate Luk. 1. 78 79. in darkenesse and in the shaddow of death and to guide our feete into the way of peace This is that Comforter which our Sauiour promised to send after his resurrection who should leade his Disciples and with them all the faithfull into all truth This is that grace of God which hath appeared teaching Iohn 16. 13. Tit. 2. 11 12. vs to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world This is that holy oyntment and precious eye-salue which openeth and illighteneth the blinde eyes of our minds that we may know all things appertaining to our saluation so as we need no Tutor to teach vs any other doctrine but as the same anoynting hath 1. Ioh. 2. 20 27. taught vs of all things Whereof he is called the Spirit of truth not onely because he is most true and Truth it selfe but also teacheth and guideth vs in the wayes of truth And the spirit of illumination and wisedome not onely Ioh 14. 17 15. 26. because there is in him a measure without measure of light and knowledge but also illighteneth our minds darkened with ignorance and maketh vs who were only wise vnto euill wise vnto good and to the eternall Ier. 4. 22. saluation of our owne soules And vnlesse we be thus illightened by the Spirit of God and haue the way of saluation reuealed vnto vs it remaineth an hidden mysterie of which we are not capeable in our naturall vnderstanding for as the Apostle teacheth vs The naturall man vnderstandeth Eph. 3 3 5. not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can 1. Cor. 2. 14. he know them because they are spiritually discerned and the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God and they vnto whom by the Spirit they are reuealed Vers 10. 11. Vnlesse this light shine in our hearts we remaine in more then an Aegyptian darkenesse sitting still in errour and sinne and not being able to mooue in the actions of holinesse and righteousnesse neither is it possible that we should walke in the wayes of God vntill by the light of his Spirit they be reuealed vnto vs. Finally we must first know the will of God before wee can doe it and so attaine vnto euerlasting blessednesse And Ioh. 13. 17. therefore in the next place if we would leade this godly life we must desire to be inlightened by Gods Spirit in the knowledge of his will and to haue the light of spirituall wisedome added to the life of grace that knowing it in our vnderstandings we may yeeld obedience vnto it in our liues and conuersations praying to this purpose without ceasing for our selues as the Apostle for the Ephesians That the God of our Lord Iesus Christ the Eph. 1. 17 18. Father of Glory would giue vnto vs the spirit of wisedome and reuelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of our vnderstanding being inlightened that we may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints c. §. Sect. 6 That we must bee ingrafted into Christ before wee can leade a godly life The second maine thing required in those who are to leade a godly life is that they be ingrafted into Iesus Christ by vertue of which vnion he becomming their head and they his members they haue communion with him and are made partakers of the vertue of his death and resurrection Rom. 6. 12. whereby their sinnes are mortified and crucified so as they can no longer raigne in their mortall bodies and they quickned vnto holinesse and newnesse of life and so inabled to bring foorth the fruits of obedience in the whole course of their conuersation For we are naturally dead and buried in the graue of sinne and not able to stirre or mooue in the actions of godlinesse but no sooner are we ioyned to him and touch his body crucified by the hand of faith
truly sayd that the iust doe liue by their faith and that they cannot leade their Heb. 2 4 liues in holinesse and righteousnesse without it For there are so many mighty enemies that encounter vs in this way so many difficulties and dangers which we must ouercome so many duties contrary to our corrupt nature to be necessarily performed and so many strange corruptions to be mortified and subdued in vs that if we respect our owne strength it will plainely appeare to be vtterly impossible to goe forward in the course of godlinesse or to attaine vnto any measure of that sanctification which we labour after whereas contrariwise if wee renounce our selues and our owne strength and by a liuely fayth rest vpon the power and promises of God for the beginnign continuing and perfecting of this worke then neede we not to be discouraged by our wants and weakenesses from vndertaking or proceeding in it nor by the malice and might of our spirituall enemies or any other difficulties which meete vs in the way seeing we are assured that the Lord our God is all-sufficient to remoue all impediments to giue vs strength against all opposition to make things in themselues impossible to become possible and easie vnto vs and not only able but also willing to bring vs on in the wayes of godlinesse and to perfect that good worke of grace in vs which he hath begunne In which respects we haue great cause with all courage and cheerefulnesse to vndertake this worke and to goe on in the wayes of godlinesse if by faith wee are once perswaded that we shall in Gods good time ouercome our spirituall enemies subdue our strong corruptions performe with ease and comfort those duties which seeme yet so difficult and in some good measure attaine vnto that sanctification and holinesse of life which wee labour after §. Sect. 5 Of the meanes whereby wee may strengthen our faith in the assurance of our sanctification Now the meanes to attaine vnto this faith and to be more and more confirmed in it is to consider that God the Father hath elected vs as well Ephes 1. 4. to the meanes as to the end and as he hath ordayned vs vnto life eternall so also that we shall walke in the way of holinesse and righteousnes that leadeth vnto it according to that of the Apostle he hath chosen vs before the foundations of the world that we should be holy and without blame And therefore as his election is certaine to bring vs vnto euerlasting happines so also to conduct vs thither by this way of holinesse eyther by a shorter cut as the thiefe vpon the Crosse who was not cōuerted before he suffred or by alonger way as Simeon Iohn the Apostle and many others So in that golden chaine of saluation whom hee did predestinate them also he called Rom. 8. 30. whom he called them he iustifyed and whom he iustified them he glorifyed the decree of God is coupled and linked vnto the end by the meanes which come betweene them Againe we haue Gods promises vpon which wee may build our faith as well for our sanctification as for our saluation and that not only as the promises of life eternall include the promise of holynesse and a godly life as the way that leadeth to that end but seuerally and in speciall manner For in the Couenant of grace the Lord promiseth to write his Law in our hearts by which phrase is signified that we shall not only know his will in our vnderstandings but incline vnto it with our affections Ier. 31. 34. that we may practise it in our liues euen as the law of nature written in the heart of Adam by creation inabled him both to know it and also to imbrace and obey it So God promiseth that vnder the Kingdome of Christ he will take away their corruptions of nature and make them to become new creatures Yea the Lord hath not onely said but Esa 11. 6 9. sworne it that all who are redeemed out of the hands of our spirituall enemies Luke 1. 74 75. shall worship and serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the daies of their liues that is not by fits and starts but from the day of their conuersion to the day of their death Againe the Lord promiseth to giue his Spirit to those that aske him and our Sauiour that he will send the Comforter who shall leade vs into all truth so that he shall not barely teach Luke 12. 11. Iohn 16. 13. vs the way but guide vs in it subduing the flesh with the lusts thereof and inabling vs to withstand the tentations of Satan and the world to ouercome all difficulties and to hold out in our profession and practice of true godlinesse vnto the end Moreouer we may haue a sufficient ground for this speciall faith if we consider that the vertue of Christs death being Rom. 6. 4. applied by faith is as effectuall for the mortifying of our flesh and sinfull corruption as for the taking away of the guilt and punishment of our sins and that his resurrection is as powerfull to rayse vs vp to newnesse of life in this world as to the life of glory in the world to come and therefore they that haue part in Christ may apply him vnto themselues by faith for assured sanctification as well as for iustification or saluation according to that of the Apostle But ye are in Christ Iesus who is of God made vnto vs wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption that is not 1. Cor. 1. 30. onely sufficient to make vs holy by imputation of his holinesse but by working in vs inherent holinesse by his Spirit Finally the holy Ghost who dwelleth in vs is all-sufficient to perfect the worke which hee hath begun and will not willingly lose his labour in giuing it ouer before he Phil. 1. 6. hath attayned his end And therefore though our flesh be neuer so rebellious he both can and will tame and mortify it though our enemies bee neuer so many and malicious he is all-sufficient by his owne strength in our greatest weakenesse to ouercome them And though we meete with neuer so many difficulties he will so assist and strengthen vs that they shall not bee able to hinder vs from proceeding in the way of holinesse till we come to our place of happinesse Now if by these considerations we strengthen our fayth in this speciall perswasion that if wee will waite Gods leysure in the vse of all good meanes wee shall certainely attayne vnto that sanctification which we labour after it will bee a notable incouragement to make vs goe on cheerefully in the practice of all duties which concerne a Christian life for who would not couragiously fight that is beforehand assured of victory or run a race that is sure to come to the goale and winne the garland or vndertake waighty and necessary enterprises though of great difficultie if he
yet in the euening before he goe to bed For though this something be better then nothing yet consider that the morning sacrifice was no lesse required of God then the euening that the seruants of God haue risen betimes to call vpon him that we cannot looke to prosper in any of our labours if we haue not first craued Gods blessing vpon them that we are daily subiect to many dangers to fall into many snares of the diuell to bee ouercome of his tentations to bee attached with Gods Iudgements and to be plunged into many perils which are daily incident vnto the life of man yea that before night wee may be strucken with sudden death as many others haue been whom we haue knowne and heard of and so be arrested and called to the barre of Gods Iudgement to plead guilty or not guilty before wee haue presented our selues at the Throne of grace to sue forth our pardon and then how fearfull is our condition if we are thus taken away in our sinnes From all which dangers we shall be secured if wee conscionably performe this daily duty of morning prayer and neuer goe about our worldly businesse till wee haue gotten our pardon to carry with vs. §. Sect. 3 That before we pray we must vse preparation and what is required vnto it Now being by these reasons perswaded to the daily practice of this duty let vs in the next place consider how we may so performe it as that Psal 108. 1. it may be acceptable vnto God and profitable for our owne saluation And vnto this many things are required before in and after our prayers Before is required preparation for as Dauid speaketh of praising God so may we of prayer in all kindes our hearts must bee prepared and so must our tongues before wee can pray And as they that meane to make any good musicke doe first set their instruments in tune so must wee before we can make any sweet melody in Gods hearing tune our hearts that they may be fit for this action And if we will not speake vnto our Prince rashly and vnaduisedly but prepare our selues by due meditation both in respect of the matter and manner of our speech how much more should Eccles 5. 1 2. we auoyd rashnesse of mouth and hastinesse of speech when as we speake to the soueraigne King of heauen and earth Now in this preparation wee must examine our sinnes that wee may afterwards humbly confesse them and craue pardon especially we are to search out those whereby we haue most displeased God and wounded our owne consciences and wherunto our corrupt nature is most inclined and also labour to finde out our speciall wants and those gifts and graces in which we are most defectiue or of which in respect of our present occasion wee most stand in need that accordingly wee may frame out suits and presse them vnto God with more efficacie and feruency of desire Secondly we must looke to our feet that is to our affections as the Wise-man exhorteth and examine Eccles 5. 1. with what disposition we come vnto prayer whether as earnest suiters that will haue no deniall or after a cold carelesse and formall manner for custome rather then conscience sake especially wee must bee carefull to banish out of our minds and hearts all worldly and wandring 1. Tim. 2. 8. thoughts carnall lusts wrath doubting maliciousnesse c and that wee be heauenly-minded and haue our hearts fraughted with holy desires hungring and thirsting after the gifts and graces which we intend to beg at Gods hands Finally we must take heed that wee doe not present our selues before God in our impenitency but if wee be guilty of any sinne Prou. 28. 9. Psal 66. 18. Esa 59. 1 2. we must bewaile it and promise amendment For our sinnes vnrepented of stand as a wall of separation betweene God and vs hindring his blessings from descending and our prayers from ascending especially wee must bewaile our want of charity and purposes of reuenge for as wee forgiue Math. 5. 23. and 6. 14. men their trespasses so will God forgiue vs. And because wee are so dull and auerse to this holy duty that by all our meditations we cannot as we ought prepare our selues vnto it therefore let vs intreat the Lord before we make any other suit vnto him that hee will prepare our mindes and hearts aright and so assist vs with his grace and holy Spirit that wee may performe this high holy duty in some such maner as may be acceptable in his sight In our prayers diuers things are required As first in respect of the obiect that we pray onely to God our Father in heauen as our Sauiour hath taught vs. Secondly in the alone mediation of Iesus Christ For as there is but one God so there is but one Mediator betweene God and 1. Tim. 2. 5. man the man Christ Iesus Thirdly seeing through our ignorance and corruption we cannot pray as wee ought therefore wee must craue the assistance of God the holy Ghost which helpeth our infirmities and maketh intercession for vs with sighes and grones which cannot be expressed In respect of Rom. 8. 26 27. Zach. 12. 10. the subiect or party that prayeth diuers things are required first in respect of his person secondly in respect of his action In respect of his person 1. that he be a faithfull and righteous man For they that draw neere vnto God must be holy as he is holy not in the perfect holinesse and righteousnesse Leuit. 19. 2. and 10. 2 3. which the Law but which the Gospell requireth that is in respect of sincerity and integrity desire resolution and indeuour For the prayer of the righteous man onely is effectuall and the Lord satisfieth their desires alone that feare him Neither can our suites be acceptable vnto God Iam. 5. 16. Psal 145. 19. Prou. 15. 9 29. before our persons are accepted according to that of Salomon The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord but the prayer of the righteous is acceptable vnto him And so Dauid saith that the eyes of the Lord are vpon Ps 34. 15 16 17 the righteous and his eares are open to their cry But the face of the Lord is against them that doe euill to cut off the remembrance of them from the earth And therfore our care must be if we would pray with hope to be heard to lift vp pure hearts and hands vnto God not in their owne naturall purity but as they are washed with the blood of Christ Besides which washing of Iustification we must labour after the spirituall washing of Regeneration that we may be cleansed by the water of the Spirit applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and Resurrection and the washing of repentance bathing our selues in the teares of hearty sorrow and contrition because by our sinnes we haue displeased our gracious God And if wee prepare our hearts
fruits we haue found of our Baptisme and whether wee haue felt the vertue of Christ Iesus his death effectuall for the mortification of our sinfull corruptions and of his Resurrection for our spirituall quickening vnto newnesse of life Lastly in respect of the party baptized wee ought to stay that we may performe vnto him such Christian duties as God requireth First to commend him vnto God by our prayers that hee may be truly regenerate ingraffed into the body of Christ as a liuely member and so made partaker of his death merits and all his benefits Secondly that we may as free-men of this Christian Corporation by our presence giue our assent to his outward admission into the Congregation And finally that we may with the rest of the people ioyne in praising and giuing thankes vnto God in his behalfe for admitting him as a new member into the communion of Saints and entertaining him for a seruant of his owne family All which duties we neglect if wee depart before the celebration of the Sacrament and as much as in vs lyeth make them vtterly voyd by our ill example for if all should doe as wee doe as euery one may thinke such liberty belongeth vnto him which he seeth taken by another there should not any at all be left to performe them The last action which is to be performed at our departing out of the Congregation or before if the custome be so is that if there be any collections for the poore we contribute towards them according to our ability and their necessity and that with a willing and cheerfull mind knowing that 2. Cor. 9. 6 7. Heb. 13. 16. Prou. 19. 17. with these sacrifices God is well pleased that what is thus giuen is lent vnto the Lord who will bountifully repay it in this world and the world to come and giuen to Christ himselfe in his poore members who of his free and meere grace will reward these workes of mercy with an heauenly and euerlasting Math. 25. 34. inheritance in his Kingdome And these are the publike duties of Gods worship and seruice which wee ought to performe in the Congregation on his Day And that not onely in the morning with which some content themselues but we must renew them or the most of them in the afternoone as Prayer hearing the Word and singing of Psalmes c. seeing God euen in the time of the Law would haue an euening as well as morning sacrifice offered vnto him and therefore will not haue his seruice more negligently performed in this greater light of the Gospell wherein he affoordeth vs more plentifull meanes of our saluation For the performance of which duties I shall not need to giue any other directions then those which I haue before set downe for the morning exercise CAP. XLII Of such duties as are to be performed on the Lords Day after our comming from the Church §. Sect. 1 That we must meditate vpon that which we haue heard ANd these are the publike duties of Gods seruice which wee are to performe on his Holy-day The priuate duties are diuers The first is that at our comming home we meditate vpon those things which we haue heard and not onely carefully recall them to our remembrance that they may be imprinted in our memories but also apply them vnto our owne vse for the sanctifying of our hearts and affections and the reforming of our liues and conuersations purposing with a full resolution that wee will put in practice whatsoeuer we haue learned both in the forsaking of those vices and sinnes which we haue heard condemned and the imbracing and performing of those vertues and Christian duties which haue beene commended vnto vs. For if we doe not thus make it our owne and as it were couer this holy seede of Gods Word in the furrowes of our hearts the deuill will steale it away as the birds doe the seede that falleth by the high way and make it altogether vnfruitfull so that after much hearing we shall still remaine children in knowledge and in the spirituall growth of grace and godlinesse and like riuen and leaking vessels retaine little or nothing of this precious liquor because it runneth out as fast as it commeth in Secondly with this Meditation we are to loyne feruent and effectuall prayer desiring Gods blessing vpon that which we haue heard whereby it may be made effectuall for his glory and our owne saluation and the gracious assistance of his holy Spirit to bring home not onely to our memories but also to our hearts consciences those things which we haue heard and learned that we may as occasion serueth fruitfully practise them in the whole course of our liues concluding these our prayers with praise and thanksgiuing vnto God for this gracious liberty in inioying his Sabbaths and in them the exercises of Religion meanes of our saluation §. Sect. 2 Of family exercises after we are come from the Church At our meales we are to spend the time in such holy and religious conferences as may be no lesse profitable for the cheering and refreshing of our soules then our corporall food for the nourishment of our bodies and in the performance of such other Christian duties tending to piety and Gods seruice as before wee prescribed for other dayes which vpon the Lords Day aboue all the rest ought to be done with greatest zeale and deuotion which being finished it is good to sing a Psalme to Gods praise and to reade one or more Chapters of the holy Scriptures After which Christian exercises wee may if time will permit conferre together of those things which we haue heard and learned at the forenoones Sermon and by causing euery one as it were to offer his shot to make vp the whole reckoning one remembring what another hath forgotten and he againe supplying that wherein the other is defectiue whereby it will come to passe that whatsoeuer any one hath gathered of these spiritual treasures shall not onely be more firmely locked vp and deepely imprinted in his owne memory but shall also serue as a common stocke for the inriching of the whole company And this being done we are then againe by Prayer and Meditation to prepare our selues for the well performing of Gods publike seruice in the euening exercise as we did in the forenoone which being finished in that holy and religious manner before prescribed and afterwards by some meditation recalled to our remembrance for our own priuate vse it will be profitable for gouernours of families to call together their children and seruants and either by strength of their memories or helpe of their Notes taken of the Sermon to repeate as neere as they can what hath beene deliuered that so the things not marked may be better obserued and that which was forgotten may be recalled and by this repetition may more surely bee ingrauen in the memory Sometimes also it will be fit and necessary to preuent negligence in the yonger sort that the
little leauen will sowre the whole lumpe or a little Coloquintida will imbitter and poyson all our seeming vertues and obedience They will on all occasions open the doore of our hearts and let in all manner of wickednesse as pledges and hostages giuen to Satan to warrant his re-entry when he pleaseth §. Sect. 2 That we must performe obedience to both Tables ioyntly and to the Gospell as well as the Law Which dangers if we would auoyd wee must resolue to yeeld obedience to all and euery part of Gods will reuealed either in the Law or Luk. 1. 74. the Gospell In respect of the Law we must obserue both Tables and performe all duties of piety righteousnesse and sobriety which God hath commanded in them And if wee would approue our selues to bee in the number of those who are the Lords redeemed wee must resolue to worship him both in holinesse and righteousnesse If wee would be reckoned among those good scholers vnto whom the grace of God hath appeared that bringeth saluation we must approue our selues to bee so by learning that whole lesson which he teacheth which is to deny vngodlines and worldly Tit. 2. 12. lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world And if we would be accepted of God we must not onely religiously feare him but Act. 10. 35. also worke righteousnesse as the Apostle Peter speaketh For if wee seeme to make conscience of the first Table and neglect the second our obedience will make vs no better then glorious Hypocrites or if wee will obserue the duties of the second and not regard the first wee shall bee no better then ciuill worldlings and honest Infidels Againe wee must obserue this vniuersall obedience as in respect of the parts of the Law and duties of both Tables so also of the degrees desiring to keepe with all care and good conscience the small Commandements as well as the greater not thinking any duty so small that we may wittingly and willingly neglect it nor any sinne so slight and veniall that wee may commit it For small neglects will make way for greater and lesser sins being wilfully entertained will open the doore of our hearts to let in greater It is true that there ought to be a proportion obserued and as duties are of greatest excellency and necessity so they must haue priority and precedency and as sinnes are more hainous and grieuous so they must be resisted and forsaken with greatest zeale and indeuour But yet true and sincere obedience dispenceth with no degree of sinne or the neglect of the least duties in their due place and time and though it respecteth chiefly the waighty things of the Law yet it doth not voluntarily omit the least duties Though it chiefly abhorreth whoredome sacriledge and periury yet it yeeldeth not to wanton dalliance petty thefts and idle oathes And thus also if our obedience be sound and sincere then haue we also respect to the Commandements of the Gospell as well as the Law and in them make like conscience of the one as well as of the other desiring and indeuoring with no lesse care to repent vnfainedly of our sinnes then to beleeue in Christ and apply the promises of grace and saluation and no lesse striuing to be freed from sinne in respect of the corruption by vertue of Christs death and to rise againe vnto newnesse of life by the power of his Resurrection then to be deliuered from the gilt and punishment of it and to rise at the latter Day vnto glory and happinesse For if wee diuide these we shall doe neither aright If wee beleeue onely and doe not repent we are but carnall Gospellers and presumptuous worldlings and if our sorrow for sinne be neuer so great yet if we haue not faith in Christ this griefe is to be grieued for seeing it is the fore-runner of despaire and 2. Cor. 7. 10. a worldly sorrow which bringeth death So that though wee should bewaile our sinnes neuer so much and euen melt and be wholly resolued into teares yet should we perish in our infidelity seeing it is not our teares but the precious blood of Christ applyed by faith which purgeth and purifieth our soules and bodies from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes §. Sect. 3 Reasons perswading to vniuersall obedience 1. Because God requireth it The reasons which may moue vs to yeeld this vniuersall obedience to the whole reuealed will of God are diuers first because God commandeth Deut. 11. 32. it Neither doth he require that wee should keepe his Law in some things and breake it in others or in most things and neglect it in some few seeing no Prince will accept from his subiect such obedience but all and euery of his Commandements without exception Hee bindeth vs strictly to obserue all his Statutes and Iudgements which hee setteth before vs that whatsoeuer he commandeth vs we obserue to doe it neither adding thereto and 12 32. and 32. 46. and 28. 14. nor diminishing from it that we set our hearts to obey all the Words of his Law turning not therefrom to the right hand nor to the left So our Sauiour Christ inioyneth his Disciples to preach vnto all nations teaching them to obserue all Math. 28. 20. things whatsoeuer he commanded The which the Apostle obserued in his owne practice keeping in all things a good conscience before God and liuing Heb. 13. 18. honestly before men And vnto this totall obedience to all Gods Law doth he restraine all his promises If saith he thou wilt hearken diligently vnto Deut. 28. 1. the voyce of the Lord thy God to obserue and to doe all his Commandements then I will aduance thee and all my blessings shall come vpon thee c. Whereas that which is but in part can expect no reward but rather deserued punishment For as it is in this case betweene the Prince and his subiect so also betweene God and vs. Though a man obserue the whole Law of his Soueraigne and committeth onely one hainous and capitall crime his obedience is not rewarded seeing therein hee doth but his duty but for his offence he is iustly punished §. Sect. 4 That our obedience cannot be sincere vnlesse it bee vniuersall Secondly if our obedience be not vniuersall to the whole will of God it cannot be sincere and vpright for if in the integrity of our hearts wee yeelded obedience to any of Gods Commandements out of our loue towards him and because he requireth our obedience vnto them then would we vpon the same ground and reason obey all the rest seeing hee is the Authour of all alike and by the same diuine authority bindeth vs to one as well as to another And vpon this reason the Apostle Iames doubteth not to affirme that he who breaketh any one Commandement is guilty of Iam. 2. 10 11. all though he keepeth all the rest for he that said Doe not commit adultery said also Doe not
kill Now if thou commit no adultery yet if thou kill thou art become a transgressour of the Law For there is a chaine of vertues and vices whereby they are so fast and inseparably linked together that he who imbraceth and practiseth any one vertue and Christian duty out of his loue and obedience to God imbraceth and performeth all the rest hee that willingly liueth in the neglect of any one duty or maketh no conscience of committing any knowne sinne neglecteth all and is prepared to commit any wickednesse In which regard it may truly bee said that the vnregenerate man breaketh all Gods Commandements euen those which hee seemeth to keepe and that the sound Christian obserueth all euen those which he seemeth to breake For howsoeuer the one doth not actually transgresse euery Commandement yet there is in him an habit of sinne and a naturall disposition and readinesse to breake all when opportunity serueth and when hee is tempted thereunto with the alluring baits of worldly vanities And though the other doe not actually keepe the whole Law but faileth in many particulars yet there is in him an habit of holinesse and righteousnesse and a disposition and desire resolution and indeuour to obserue all for with the Apostle they consent vnto the whole Rom. 7. Law that it is holy and good and being in their hearts delighted in it they striue to keepe one Commandement as well as another and when they faile of their purpose doe heartily bewaile their imperfections It is true that a wicked man may not onely forsake many sinnes but may also in some sort loath and detest them but this is not out of his loue towards God or because he hateth or forbiddeth them but caused by some common restraining grace or done out of some corrupt passion and disposition not because he hateth sinne but because some contrary vice being predominant in him doth draw him vnto another extreme And thus the couetous man hateth prodigality and the prodigall couetousnesse the presumptuous man melancholike despaire and the despairing sinner bold presumption the coward bloody quarrell and the desperate backster Plerique metu peccare cessant non innocentia profectò tales timidi non innocentes dicendi sunt Seneca cowardize Yea thus may a man outwardly shun all sinnes which make him liable to legall penalties out of selfe-loue that hee may gaine rewards or escape punishments not out of loue to vertue and innocency but feare of running into danger §. Sect. 5 That without totall obedience we cannot attaine to heauenly happinesse Finally vnlesse we performe totall obedience in the desire purpose and indeuour of our heart vnto the whole Law of God wee can neither attaine vnto heauenly happinesse nor escape hellish death and condemnation though we imbrace and practise many vertues and duties and flee from many vices and sinnes For as a Mill-stone will keepe vs from mounting aloft as well as a Mountaine and the one as well as the other would cause vs to sinke into the bottome of the Sea if it were fastened vnto vs so if any one sinne haue taken such fast hold of our hearts that we will by no meanes be moued to leaue it the waight thereof will bee sufficient to keepe vs from ascending vnto heauenly happinesse and to drench and drowne vs in the sea of perdition So the Apostle saith that he that liueth not in all or many sinnes but in any one shall neuer enter into the Kingdome of heauen Neither fornicators nor idolaters nor adulterers nor effeminate c. shall inherit the Kingdome of God And the Apostle Iohn saith that 1. Cor. 6. 9 10. Apoc. 22. 15. euery sort of sinners as sorcerers and whoremongers and murtherers and idolaters and lyers shall be excluded from this place of blessednesse So that as for the losse of corporall life it is not necessary that the body should be wounded in euery place but a mortall wound in any of the vitall parts is sufficient to let in death and giue it seisure of the whole man so is it in this case And as particular sinnes depriue vs of happinesse so they plunge vs into death and destruction as appeareth by that distinct enumeration which the Prophet maketh of particulars If saith hee hee Ezek. 18. 10 13. beget a sonne that is a robber a shedder of blood and doth the like to any of these things and that neglecteth any of the duties there mentioned hee shall not liue but surely dye And the Apostle Iohn saith that sinners of euery kind shall Apoc. 21. 8. haue their portion in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death Now if any will say that if for any one duty wilfully neglected or sinne committed they shall lose the ioyes of heauen and be cast into hell torments then it were as good to bee outragiously wicked and to liue in all manner of sinne let one of the Ancients make answere to such an obiection This saith he is the speech of an vngratefull and reprobate Ingrati serui est his sermo c. Chrysost in Eph. cap. 2. serm 4. seruant yet let not such an one let the reines loose to all impiety for his owne profit For though all impenitent sinners are excluded out of heauen and throwne into hell yet all in hell doe not suffer equall torments but some greater and some lesse according to the quality and number of their sinnes CAP. V. Of the properties of Christian and holy duties which respect their causes efficient and finall §. Sect. 1 That all duties should spring from the loue of God AND these are the properties which respect the duties themselues The properties which concerne the manner of doing them are diuers and respect either the causes that mooue vs to performe them or our disposition in doing them The causes are either efficient or finall The efficient cause mouing vs to performe all the duties of a godly life ought to be the loue of God which is the fountaine of true obedience and should bee so powerfull in vs that we should thereby be moued to serue like children our heauenly Father though there were no reward promised to our seruice which is the motiue that induceth mercenaries and seruants rather then children to doe their duty For howsoeuer we may in our obedience haue an eye with Moses to the recompence of reward yet the chiefe argument Heb. 11. 25. that preuaileth with vs ought to be not the loue of our selues and out of it the desire of our owne saluation but the loue of God who is the chiefe Goodnesse whose glory is much to bee preferred before our owne good Neither is it enough that the loue of God accompany our actions and that they be done in and with it as running together as it were in the same streame but also that it be the fountaine from which all our obedience doth spring and flow Consider we therefore when wee vndertake the
preseruing and nourishing of all our other parts §. Sect. 2 That the ministery of the Word is a chiefe meanes of our spirituall life The first meanes of a godly life is the ministery of the Word the which is the ordinary meanes of begetting vs to the life of godlinesse and of beginning in vs all spirituall and sauing graces by which as inward causes we outwardly mooue in all Christian and holy duties Of raising vs from the death of sinne and cleansing and purging vs from the guilt and corruption of it and also of so quickening and reuiuing vs that we are inabled to performe the actions of holinesse and to bring forth the fruits of a godly conuersation Thus the Apostle calleth it Gods Rom. 1. 16. strong power whereby hee pulleth vs out of the state of death into the the state of life and saluation and the Apostle Peter The immortall and incorruptible seed which begetteth vs vnto God liuing and abiding in vs for 1. Pet. 1. 23. euer And hence it is that the Ministers of the Word are called our spirituall 1. Cor. 4. 15. fathers who beget vs vnto God because being dispensers of the Word of grace they are instruments and meanes of our Regeneration Thus our Sauior saith that the houre was comming yea euen then was that Joh. 5. 25. the dead should heare his voyce and liue that is those which were dead in trespasses and sinnes should be quickened and haue their part in the first Resurrection by vertue of his Word preached for at this death and Resurrection that whole discourse aimeth And as we haue first our spirituall life from the ministery of the Word so also our cleansing and sanctification from the corruption and filth of sinne whereby we are wholly disabled vnto all holy duties of a godly life For so our Sauiour telleth his Disciples that they were cleane through his Word which hee had spoken vnto Ioh. 15. 3. them By which meanes he desireth his Father in his holy Prayer to sanctifie them more and more Sanctifie them with thy truth thy Word is truth Ioh. 17. 17. So the Apostle saith that our Sauiour gaue himselfe for his Church that hee Ephes 5. 26. might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word and implyeth elsewhere that we cannot ordinarily haue faith by which the iust man liueth but by the preaching and hearing of the Word How can they Rom. 1. 17. beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard and how shall they heare without a Preacher And after expressely affirmeth That faith commeth by hearing and 10. 14 17. and hearing by the Word of God And in another place he intimateth that we cannot put off the old man and being renewed in the spirit of our minds Ephes 4. 21 22. put on the new which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse vnlesse we haue first heard Christ and been taught by him in the ministery of his Word But here we must take heed that we doe not attribute our new birth and spirituall cleansing vnto the Word preached as hauing in it any inherent power to giue life and grace in it owne nature or as it is by man preached vnto vs for then all that heare it would be quickened vnto holinesse and new obedience whereas common and wofull experience teacheth vs that after the Gospell hath been long preached in diuers places the greatest number remaine vnregenerate and dead in their sinnes nor yet as vnto a principall and chiefe cause of reuiuing vs for this were to make an Idol of it by attributing vnto it Gods prerogatiues and peculiar Math. 23. 9. actions who alone is able to regenerate vs as hee onely could first create vs. But we are to attribute this vertue of giuing spirituall life to the Word preached not as comming from man but as it is the Word of God and his holy ordinance which hee hath instituted and sanctified to this vse of giuing spirituall life and the begetting and increasing of his graces in vs. By vertue of which ordination and the blessing of God vpon it the Word receiueth all its power and vigour to quicken and preserue our spirituall life euen as by the ordinance of God and his blessing wee receiue our naturall life by generation and the preseruation of it by food and clothing which in themselues exceed not other creatures in their vertue for these vses but onely so far forth as God by his blessing inableth them vnto them The which if he withdraw our meate will not nourish Math. 11. 21. Luk. 12. 47. vs but rather become our bane and poyson and the Word preached will be so farre from being a Word of life and saluation that it will become the sauour of death vnto death to our deepe condemnation In which regard 2. Cor. 2. 16. wee must not rest in the preaching and hearing of the Word as in the deed done for the begetting of Gods graces and beginning in vs the life of godlinesse for thus it is onely the Spirit that quickeneth making the Ioh. 6. 63. same Word and at the same time effectuall vnto some for these ends by an inward secret and powerfull operation which for want hereof is heard of others without any profit but vse it as Gods ordinance vnto which his blessing is promised and doth so ordinarily accompany it in the harts of all those that vse it in obedience to God and desire to profit by it for the former ends that we may as well hope for spirituall life by feeding on this food as for the preseruing of naturall life by meate and drinke seeing both alike are Gods ordinance and by his power he is effectuall in the one as well as the other And so contrariwise the neglect of this meanes when God giueth it doth take away all hope of the spirituall life of grace seeing we tempt the Lord in refusing the meanes and despising his ordinance like those who pretending that they rest vpon Gods sole power and promise for the preseruing of their liues should vtterly refuse to eate or drinke Againe whereas I say that the preaching of the Word is the ordinary meanes of life and grace when the Lord granteth it vnto vs we are to beware that we doe not limit Gods power vnto it as though hee could not any other way quicken sanctifie and saue vs. For he is able without all meanes to doe all these by the sole and secret worke of his holy Spirit being such an All-sufficient workman in himselfe that he needeth not the helpe of any instruments as we see in his sanctifying and sauing of elect Infants dying whilest they are vncapable of outward meanes for euen in them these two goe together seeing the rule is generall that without holinesse no man shall see the Lord. And hee is able to sanctifie other Heb. 12. 14. meanes for these vses as he ordinarily doth where
greatest hatred and detestation which thou hast formerly imbraced with greatest loue seeing by them thou hast most dishonoured and displeased thy God and wounded thine owne conscience The other part of thy conuersion is that thou turne vnto the Lord that thou maist serue and please him in newnesse of life according to that of the Prophet O Israel if ye returne returne vnto me saith the Lord for it is not enough that thou cease to be the seruant of sinne vnlesse thou become a seruant of righteousnesse nor to be vnblameable before men vnlesse thou be holy before God nor to abstaine from euill vnlesse thou doest good nor to keepe thy selfe from mis-spending thy Lords Talent vnlesse thou doest by vse increase it to thy Masters aduantage And as in thy returning there is a change in the obiect from not some but all euill not to some onely but all good so if it be sound and sincere it is also to bee plainly discerned in the subiect or person that returneth and in the change of all his faculties and actions And therefore if thou truly repentest O my soule there is a change in thy mind from the darknesse of ignorance to the light of knowledge from errour to truth in thy conscience from dead workes to purity in thy will refusing that euill which formerly it imbraced and imbracing that good which in time past it reiected in thy heart from hardnesse to tendernesse from security and impenitency to true repentance from the loue of sinne to the loue of God and all goodnesse for Gods sake from lothing of spirituall things to hating of carnall and so in the rest of thy affections and passions If thy repentance be sincere Ephes 4. 23 24. it beginneth inwardly in thee my soule and proceedeth to the outward parts it beginneth in feruent desires proceedeth in good resolutions and earnest indeuours and sheweth both in our holy and righteous actions throughout the whole course of our liues and conuersations And howsoeuer it is imperfect in respect of degrees seeing we can neuer sufficiently whilest we liue heere bewaile and forsake our sinnes nor serue the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse in any such perfection as the Law requireth yet if thou doest truly repent O my soule there is a perfection of integrity whereby thou labourest to serue and please thy God in renouncing all sinne and imbracing all righteousnesse and in the purifying of all thy powers and faculties outward and inward from corruption to holinesse And these are the parts of thy repentance O my soule containing in them the matter and forme §. Sect. 4 The final causes subiect and properties of repentance the contraries vnto it and comparisons which illustrate it The finall causes and ends of it are first that God may be glorified in the acknowledgement of thy sinnes and may be iustified in his righteousnesse when he iudgeth and magnified in his mercies when being guilty of sinne and condemned in thy selfe yea by thy selfe hee pardoneth all thy sinnes and iustifieth thee in the righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ Secondly when out of the same grace and goodnesse hee freeth thee from not onely the guilt but also from the punishment of all thy sinnes his iustice being satisfied by Christs sufferings and obedience Thirdly that being freed from sinne and become the seruant of righteousnesse thou shouldest glorifie and please God in the whole course of thy life by mortifying thy sinnes and studying to serue him in thy new obedience Finally that thou maist hereby be assured of Gods fauour in this life and of euerlasting happinesse in the life to come and haue the peace and comfort of both in thine owne conscience The effects and fruites of thy repentance are the inward purity and sanctity of thee my soule from the pollution of sinne in all thy powers and faculties and thy exercise of these inward graces in the duties of piety towards God of righteousnesse and charity towards thy neighbours and of temperance sobriety towards thy selfe and an hearty desire and earnest indeuor to please thy God in all things both in thought word and deed by conforming them in obedience vnto all his Commandements The subiect or person to whom it onely belongeth is the elect and faithfull the repentance of all others being like that of Cain Esau Ahab Iudas and all hypocrites false and counterfeit The subiect in which this grace is exercised is the whole man and all the powers and parts both of his soule and body but principally it keepeth its court of residence and sheweth it chiefe vertue and power in thee my soule and aboue all other thy faculties in the change of thy mind and will thine heart and affections The obiect of thy repentance is sinne and that compleat righteousnesse required in Gods Law that being the thing from which thou fleest this that vnto which thou aspirest that it which thou labourest to mortifie and kill this that vnto which thou indeuourest to bee more and more quickened and reuiued The properties and qualities of it thou hast before seene in the seuerall parts The contraries vnto it generally considered are impenitency carnall security hardnesse of heart worldlinesse and prophanesse In the parts of it the contraries to humiliation and sorrow for sinne are pride out of an opinion of our owne righteousnesse for Christ came not to call such Pharisaicall Iusticiaries but sinners to repentance and an hard heart and seared conscience which cannot repent and on the other hand worldly sorrow for carnall respects which causeth death and hopelesse sorrow which being voyd of faith endeth in despaire and so plungeth those which so repent with Cain and Iudas into hellish condemnation Now to what wilt thou compare this grace of God O my soule It exceedeth all legall vertues in profit and necessity especially to vs who are imperfect in them and is exceeded of none but of faith and loue the fountaine of this streame and roots from which it springeth which if thou ioynest together and entertainest them like louing friends to liue and lodge in thee no misery my soule can make thee miserable no curse of the Law can hinder thy blessednesse no imperfection of other vertues or duties can keepe thee from the fruition of eternall happinesse whereas without these all other blessings are accursed vnto thee all shewes of other graces false counterfeit and vtterly vnprofitable To what then mayest thou compare this excellent grace and gift of the Spirit It is like the waters of Iordan which will purge thee from the filthy leprosie of all thy sinnes not by it owne inherent vertue but by the power of Gods Word and promise who hath assured all that truly repent of the remission of their sinnes and as it is a fruit and infallible signe of faith which assureth thee that thou truly beleeuest and art therefore purged from all thy sinnes in the precious blood of Christ It is like the precious balme of Gilead which is fit
vnto vncleannesse but vnto holinesse that the grace of 1. Thes 4. 7. Tit. 2. 11 12. God which bringeth saluation appearing or shining vnto vs in the ministery of the Gospell teacheth vs to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world which lesson if we learne not we had been better to haue sate still in darknesse seeing our knowledge will but aggrauate our sinne and increase our condemnation according to that of the Apostle To him that knoweth to doe good and doth it not to him it is sinne and that of our Sauiour The seruant that knoweth his Ioh. 9. 31. Jam. 4. 17. Luk. 12. 47. Masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes Finally our Sauiour telleth vs that if we be grafted in him we must bring forth fruit seeing euery branch that beareth not fruit he taketh away and casteth forth as a branch that is dead and withered and men gather them and cast them into the Ioh. 15. 2 6. fire and they are burned And therefore if wee would haue any assurance that we are effectually called that Christ is ours and we his and that being vnited vnto him as liuely members of his body we haue right vnto him and all his benefits let vs as the Apostle exhorteth walke worthy the vocation Ephes 4. 1. 2. Pet. 1. 10. wherewith we are called and as the Apostle Peter perswadeth Let vs make our Calling and Election sure by adding one vertue vnto another and bringing forth the fruits of them all in a godly and Christian life §. Sect. 2 The second reason taken from our Iustification and the fruits which follow it Finally the benefit of our Iustification with all the fruits that doe follow it are so many strong motiues to incite vs vnto the duties of a godly life for God in our Iustification of his free grace imputing vnto vs the death and obedience of Iesus Christ hath forgiuen vs all our sinnes and pronounced vs iust and righteous in his righteousnesse By which inestimable benefit he hath bound vs to serue and glorifie him in all holy duties who hath done so great things for vs. For seeing there is no euill like the euill of sinne no tyranny and bondage alike miserable therefore when God of his free grace hath freed vs from it wee must with all care flee sinne and take heed that wee doe not againe come into this thraldome And seeing he hath forgiuen vs so great a debt let this make vs Luk. 7. 47. loue him much and expresse our loue by seruing and pleasing him in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse The which vse the Apostle maketh of this benefit namely that being dead vnto sinne that is freed from Rom. 6. 10 12 18. the power and tyranny of it and aliue vnto God we should not let sinne any longer raigne in our mortall bodies that we should obey it in the lusts thereof but that we should yeeld our selues vnto God as those that are aliue from the dead and our members as instruments of righteousnesse vnto God and that being made free from sinne we should become the seruants of righteousnesse Which if we doe not we can haue no assurance that wee are redeemed by Christ and iustified seeing the same vertue and power of Christs death and Resurrection which taketh away the guilt and punishment of our sinnes in Ephes 5. 25 26. 1. Pet. 2. 24. our Iustification is as effectuall to sanctifie vs in the killing and crucifying of our corruptions and our spirituall quickening to holinesse and newnesse of life in our sanctification and as well did there issue out of his pierced side the water of ablution to cleanse vs from the pollution of sinne as the blood of Redemption to free vs from the guilt and punishment The fruits also which follow our Iustification doe effectually perswade vs to serue God in all the duties of a godly life For seeing wee are reconciled vnto God by the death of Christ our care must bee to walke in such a course as may preserue vs in his loue for Christ hath as the Apostle speaketh reconciled vs in the body of his flesh through death to present Col. 1. 21 22. vs holy vnblameable and vnreprooueable in his sight We haue receiued the Spirit of Adoption crying in our hearts Abba Father that it may be also Rom. 8. 15. in vs the Spirit of Sanctification and inable vs to please God in al things as it beseemeth his children And in whomsoeuer this Spirit is them it regenerateth raising them from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse Ephes 3. 12. So our free accesse to the Throne of grace should make vs take heed of sinne which will be as a wall of separation betweene God and vs and to liue in such holinesse of life as may still preserue our confidence in making our suits knowne vnto God The loue of God shed abroad in Rom. 5. 5. our hearts by the holy Ghost will inflame them with loue towards him and make vs carefull to approue it by liuing according to his will The peace of God following our Iustification by faith and passing all vnderstanding Rom. 5. 1. must make vs diligent in shunning those things which might disturbe it and imbracing and practising such vertues and holy duties as will preserue it Our spirituall ioy and reioycing in God will make vs auoyd all knowne sinnes which would interrupt our ioy and turne it into Rom. 5. 3. sorrow and to please the Lord in all things that his face and fauour may make vs still glad Our hope of heauenly happinesse will also much incourage vs in the worke of our sanctification for as many as haue this 1. Ioh. 3. 2 3. hope that they shall be like Christ in glory purge themselues as he also is pure as the Apostle teacheth vs. In a word there is no benefit accompanying grace and saluation which may not serue as an effectuall reason to moue vs to the practice of all holy duties both out of thankefulnesse towards God for such inestimable gifts and for the better assuring our selues that we haue receiued them seeing God hauing giuen them all vnto vs for this end we haue no reason to perswade our selues that wee haue any interest in them vnlesse they further vs to it and stirre vs vp in some measure to glorifie God in all the duties of an holy life And therefore if wee haue any loue towards God wrought in vs by so many rich mercies or any true loue towards our selues which is chiefely shewed in seeking the assurance of such inestimable benefits let vs aboue all things labour and indeuour to serue and pleased God by bringing forth the fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse in the whole course of our liues and conuersations CAP. XXXIX Other motiues arising from those duties which we owe vnto God and our neighbours §.
the mind are not onely preserued but also much improoued by continuall exercise so vertuous actions and workes of piety and righteousnesse being the exercises of our faith doe tend much to the strengthening of it whereas contrariwise by the neglect of these duties it is much weakened and by the contrary vices and acts of sinne exceedingly shaken and grieuously wounded In which regard the Apostle ioyneth the holding of faith and a 1. Tim. 1. 19. 1. Cor. 15. 58. good conscience because the one will not stay without the other being such louing twins as cannot be diuided but liue and die together More especially the duties of a godly life doe confirme our faith in the assurance of our election not as causes for the election of God is free of grace and Rom. 11. 6. Eph. 1. 4. not of workes but as the effects and fruits of it and as the end vnto which wee are elected for wee are not chosen because wee were holy but to the end that wee might bee holy as the Apostle sheweth Thus the Apostle Peter exhorting vs to make our calling and election sure 2. Pet. 1. 10. prescribeth this as the onely meanes the ioyning of one vertue and Christian duty with another telling vs that if wee doe these things wee shall neuer fall The Psalmist likewise setting downe the markes and signes whereby wee may know whether God hath chosen vs to dwell in his holy mountaine maketh this the first chiefe to walke vprightly and work righteousnesse Psal 15. 2. 24. 4. and to haue cleane hands and a pure heart Secondly hereby our faith is perswaded of Gods grace and loue in Christ For by keeping of Gods Commandements we are assured that we loue God according to that of the Apostle Iohn Whoso keepeth his Word in him verily is the loue of God perfected 1. Ioh. 3. 6. 1. Ioh. 4. 19. and consequently that he loueth vs seeing we loue him because he loued vs first our loue being but a sparke of that diuine and infinite flame Thirdly of our effectuall calling this being the meanes which the Apostle prescribeth to make it sure For heereby we know that the grace of God 2. Pet. 1. 10. Tit. 2. 11 12. bringing saluation hath shined vnto vs when as we are taught thereby to deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and to liue soberly righteously and godly in this present world that wee haue in a sauing manner heard Gods Word when hauing receiued it into honest hearts wee haue brought foorth fruits Luk. 8. 15. with patience That wee are ingrafted into Christ the true Vine when Ioh. 15. wee bring foorth the ripe Grapes of holinesse and righteousnesse That wee are trees of righteousnesse of Gods owne planting when like the tree planted by the riuers of waters wee bring foorth fruit in due season That wee are good men when out of the good treasure of our heart Psal 1. 2. Mat. 7. 17 18 20 we bring foorth that which is good That wee are of God and the Sheepe of Christ when we heare Gods Word and follow him And that wee are truely Luk. 6. 45. a kinne to Christ when wee doe the will of his Father which is in heauen Ioh. 8. 47. Mat. 12. 50. Fourthly by a godly life and the workes of piety and righteousnesse our faith is assured of it selfe that it is liuely and vnfained for as our good workes doe shew it vnto others so also they approoue it vnto our selues as being the fruits of this tree and the very breath of this body without which it is but a dead stocke and rotten carkasse For as the Apostle Iames Iam. 2. 17 26. telleth vs Faith if it haue no workes is dead being alone And as the body without the spirit is dead so faith without workes is dead also Fifthly our faith is heereby assured of our iustification and of all the fruits and benefits that doe accompany it As that we are freed from our sinnes both in respect of their guilt and punishment by the death and resurrection of Iesus Christ when as by the vertue and power of them we feele our selues deliuered from the corruption of them so as they doe not rule and raigne in vs as in former times and quickned in the inner man vnto holinesse and newnesse of life That we are reconciled vnto God when as we feele an earnest desire and constant indeuour wrought in vs of pleasing him in all things That we are his children by adoption and grace when we liue as it becommeth his children and resemble our heauenly Father in holinesse and righteousnesse That we are sanctified by his Spirit when as wee bring forth the fruits of our sanctification in a godly and Christian life That we haue vnfainedly repented of our sinnes when as wee bring forth fruits worthy amendment and doe daily exercise our selues in good workes Finally that we are Citizens of heauen and heires of euerlasting happinesse when as we haue our conuersation there setting our hearts and affections on things aboue and not on things beneath and when hauing Phil. 3. 20. Col. 3. 2. Joh. 3. 2 3. this hope that we shall be made like vnto Christ we haue purged our selues as he also is pure §. Sect. 4 That a godly life strengthneth and increaseth our hope and confidence in God The second spirituall benefit of a godly life is that it strengtheneth and increaseth our hope and confidence in God grounded vpon this assurance Psal 34. 15. that hee will preserue all those that feare and serue him from all euill all perils and dangers and the malice and might of all their enemies and that he will prouide for them all things necessary seeing he who is so bountifull euen to his enemies will not let his owne children want any thing that is good who haue a desire to serue and please him So that they which feare the Lord haue great cause to trust in the Lord as the Psalmist Psal 115. 11. exhorteth because he is their helpe and shield And this made the three Children so confident that they cared not for the rage of the Tyrant nor for the fiery Furnace though seuenfold hotter then ordinary because they had serued God with a good conscience and thereby were assured that the God whom they serued was both able and willing to deliuer them Dan. 3. 17. This made Daniel to serue God constantly whom hee had formerly serued notwithstanding the cruell edict of the King because he well knew that the God whom he serued was able to deliuer him from the Lions as Dan. 6. 16. Darius also acknowledged From which confidence there arise diuers other singular benefits as inward ioy and comfort in all estates seeing in this confidence we haue cast all our care vpon God patience in all troubles seeing we trust assuredly in God for helpe and deliuerance in that time which shall be most seasonable both for his glory
paines and care they take about their fraile and mortall bodies and for the preseruing of their flitting and fading health and strength and the prolonging of their vncertaine and momentany life What paines they take in tricking and trimming decking and adorning clothing and beautifying nourishing and feeding pampering and pleasing physicking and dyeting their corruptible carcases though they are assured that by all their care and cost they can but for a short time adiourne diseases and infirmities and for a small and vncertaine while procure a repriuall from approching death Finally consider that there is much more toyle and difficulty in the waies of vice and sinne then in the way of vertue and godlinesse although carnall loue so sweeteneth it to a corrupt appetite that it is either not discerned or not much abhorred For example what rackes and torments are in couetousnesse and ambition and what comfort and sweetnesse in contentation and submission of our estates to the will of God What pangs and pulls of an euill conscience accompany vice and sinne and what peace and quietnesse ioy and delight haue wee in the conscience of our innocency and well-doing Vnto what stormes and tempests doth pride expose vs from all which we are secured by lowlinesse and humility What vexation and griefe is there in malice enuie anger and desire of reuenge and what ioy and sweet delight to be found in brotherly loue reioycing in one anothers good peaceablenesse passing by and pardoning of offences and making friends of enemies by our kind vsage and sweet conuersation What trouble and discontent in discord contention and wrangling suits of Law and what sweetnesse and contentment in amity friendship mutuall agreement and euen in departing from some part of our right that we may thereby purchase Iewels of farre greater price peace and loue Finally what anxiety and vexation is there in carking care about worldly things and what ioy and pleasure in the life of faith whereby we securely rely vpon Gods promises and prouidence and goe boldly vnto him as vnto our gracious Father when we are in any want with confidence that it shall be supplyed in that manner and measure as will best stand with his glory and our owne good In all which respects and innumerable others as wicked worldlings after all their labours about worldly vanities and the vaine and vnfruitfull works of darkenesse haue iust cause to complaine with those in the Booke of Wisedome Wee haue wearied our selues in the way of wickednesse and destruction yea wee Wisd 5. 7 8. haue gone thorow desarts where there lay no way but as for the way of the Lord we haue not knowne it what hath pride profited vs or what good hath riches with our vaunting brought vs All these things are passed away as a shaddow and as a Poast that hasted by So on the other side the faithfull who haue spent their time and strength in the duties of a godly life haue iust cause to comfort themselues in their happy choyce when leauing the world and the pleasures of sinne and imbracing the loue and feare of God they haue deuoted themselues wholly to Gods seruice seeing they may with Augustine reioyce in God and praise him saying Let my heart praise thee and let my tongue and all my bones say O Lord who is like vnto thee c Confess l. 9. c. 1. How sweet and pleasant is it now become to want the sweetnesse of worldly vanities That which I feared to lose what ioy is it to haue lost For thou O most true and supreme sweetnesse didst cast them out of me thou didst cast them out and didst enter in their stead who art sweeter then pleasure but not to flesh and blood cleerer and brighter then all light but to the inner man onely and then all honour much more high and honourable but not to those who are exalted in themselues Now was my mind free from the biting and eating cares of ambition couetousnesse voluptuousnesse and from scratching the itching scab of lust and did freely talke with thee my beauty riches saluation and my Lord and God And after a painefull warfare they may with the Apostle make that comfortable conclusion when death approcheth I haue fought a good fight I haue finished 2. Tim. 4. 8. my course I haue kept the faith Hencefoorth there is laid vp for me a Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall giue vnto me at that day And therefore let not those seeming difficulties any longer discourage vs from resoluing to serue God in the duties of a godly life seeing thereby we shun and escape much greater difficulties in the wayes of sin then we shall euer find in the way of a Christian and holy conuersation CAP. XV. That a godly life is not harsh and vnpleasant mopish and melancholike but aboue all others most cheerefull and pleasant sweet and delightfull §. Sect. 1 That though a godly life were sad and sorrowfull yet this should not discourage from it A Third obiection which the flesh maketh against a godly life to discourage and hinder vs from entring into or proceeding in it is that it is harsh and vnpleasant mopish and melancholike depriuing vs of all ioy and delight which is the very life of our life and which being taken from vs it becommeth irkesome and tedious The which obiection of the flesh the deuill and the world labour all they may with their vtmost policy and skill to confirme and strengthen and knowing that men naturally are affected with nothing more then with pleasure and ioy and doe shunne aboue all things sorrow and sadnesse they vse all their Art to blinde and delude vs by offering to our view all the pleasures of carnall and corrupt courses and hiding from vs the griefes and mischiefes which alwayes attend vpon them and like a bitter tang or lothsome after-taste doe vtterly spoile these sinfull and fleshly delicacies And contrariwise they offer to our consideration all the sorrow and smart losses and worldly inconueniences which they must vndergoe who resolue to please God in the strict and constant performance of the duties belonging to a godly life concealing in the meane while the manifold comforts which doe accompany them and the inestimable ioyes and euerlasting happinesse vnto which they attaine that continue in them vnto the end For the answering of which obiection wee are first to know that though there were as much sadnesse and as little ioy for the present time in the godly life as is pretended by our spirituall enemies yet this should not discourage vs from chusing and imbracing it seeing both the pleasures and paines solace and sorrowes of this life are but short and momentany whereas both the ioyes and griefes which shall immediately succeed them are endlesse and euerlasting In which regard wee are to account that mirth miserable which ends in perpetuall mourning and that sorrow and sadnesse sweet and comfortable which is attended with eternall and
rewards How coldly carelesly how dully drowzily how irreuerently and negligently do I performe them How soone am I weary of these holy exercises and desire to returne to my worldly imployments How little sweetnesse doth my aguish taste feele in thy loue though it be better then wine and in feeding vpon thy spirituall delicacies in thy banqueting-house thy Word and Sacraments How little delight haue I had in thy Sanctuary and Sabbaths and how haue I consecrated the least part of them as an holy Rest vnto thee and misspent the greatest part in thinking mine owne thoughts in thinking mine owne words and doing mine owne workes How much and often haue I abused thine holy ordinances through my worldlinesse and prophanenesse and after that I haue long inioyed them how little haue I profited by them Mine heart is still full of grosse infidelity which is the cause that I am not much raised and comforted with thy sweet promises nor deiected and humbled with thy terrible threatnings It is full of impenitency being vnapt to mourne for sinnes past or to resolue vpon amendment for the time to come It is full of carnall security making mee to apprehend no danger when as I walke in the middest of pernicious snares which are in euery place laid in my way by my spirituall enemies and to put the euill day farre from me when as pulling it on with my sins it approcheth neere and is ready to seaze vpon me It is much hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne custome in sinning depriuing mee of the sense of it There is much spirituall pride that lyeth lurking in it which maketh me ready to arrogate the good things I haue not to ouerweene those I haue and to attribute the praise of both vnto my selfe and so to rob thee of the glory of thine owne gifts Hypocrisie also still hangeth vpon me being ready like a slie thiefe to steale in when I open the doore of mine heart to let in any grace or religious duty I am still tainted and poysoned with carnall selfe-loue which maketh mee oftentimes to incurre spirituall hurt and damage whilest I labour ouer-eagerly after worldly good and earthly aduantage Yea as hereby I am made apt to neglect my soule for the seeming and present good of my body defrauding it of all dues that belong vnto it so likewise the duties of righteousnesse and loue which I owe to my neighbours when as they are in my partiall affection ouer-ballanced with some worldly profit pleasure or preferment O that my head were a fountaine of teares that I might wash my defiled body and soule in the floods of vnfained sorrow O that I could mourne for my sinnes as a man mourneth for his onely sonne and be sorry for them as a man is sorry for the death of his first-borne O that I could looke vpon him whom I haue pierced with bitter griefe and be thorowly displeased with my selfe because I haue by my sinnes so much displeased thee who hast been euer vnto me so gracious a God and so louing a Father O that thou wouldest come downe and strike my rocky heart that out of it might flow wholesome streames of repentance But alas the filthy staines and deepe dye of my sinnes cannot bee washed cleane with these waters It is onely that Fountaine which thou hast opened to the house of Dauid and the inhabitants of Ierusalem for sinne and for vncleannesse that is sufficient to purge me from my ingrained filthinesse It is those bloody streames alone which so plentifully flowed out of my crucified Sauiour that can clense me from all my sins And therefore O Lord for thy mercies sake and for thy Christs sake wash my leprous body and soule in the streames of this thy Iordan Yea Lord seeing they are so deepely stained with the double double dye of imputed and inherent originall and actuall sinnes that no slight and ordinary washing can purifie and restore them to their created cleannesse multiply thy washings drench and diue me thorowly in the streames of this liuing Fountaine that being cleansed from my Scarlet and Crimson sinnes both in respect of their guilt and punishment I may become as white as Snow and that no spot remaining of spirituall defilement I may be iustified when thou iudgest and stand righteous in thy sight And together with the staine of sinne take away also the sting of conscience and worke in it sound and secure peace by perswading me by the infallible testimony of thy Spirit that my sinnes are remitted I reconciled through the death and satisfaction of thy Sonne and that of the child of wrath and heire of perdition I am now become thine owne child by adoption and grace And to this end let me finde and feele it in mee not only the Spirit of Adoption perswading me of thy fatherly loue and sealing me vp vnto the Day of my Redemption but also the Spirit of Sanctification mortifying in me all my sinfull corruptions by applying vnto mee the vertue of Christs death and quickening mee in the inner man vnto holinesse and newnesse of life by the power and efficacy of his Resurrection Let me put off concerning the former conuersation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts and being renewed in the spirit of my minde let me put on the new man which after thine owne glorious Image is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse Let me continually keepe a narrow watch ouer my selfe that I bee not againe intangled in the snares of the diuell nor circumuented and mis-led through the deceitfulnesse of my corrupt flesh but being freed from sinne let me now become the seruant of righteousnesse Let mee make conscience of all my wayes and shunne not onely open and notorious but also secret sinnes yea all the occasions of euill and hate euen the garment which is spotted of the flesh Let mee put on daily the whole armour of God that being weake in my selfe I may bee strong in thee and in the power of thy might and bee inabled to withstand the wiles of the diuell and resist all tentations in the euill Day praying alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto with all perseuerance Weane mine heart and affections more and more from the loue of the world and earthly vanities and being a pilgrim on earth let my conuersation be in heauen from whence I expect a Sauiour and Redeemer Begin and worke in me all spirituall gifts and sauing graces which yet are wanting and daily increase and confirme those that are begun and let me daily bring foorth the fruits of them all throughout my whole life and conuersation in new obedience labouring to performe vnto thee faithfull seruice in all my thoughts words and deeds Let me delight in the wayes of thy Commandements and performe all the duties of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety with all cheerfulnesse and inward ioy Let me daily seeke thy face and fauour aboue all
want of them wee want also this assurance how can wee haue any roome in our hearts for securitie to lodge in seeing they are wholly taken vp with feares and doubtings or at least with carnall securitie which keeps all quiet because it shuts our eyes and benummeth all our senses so as we cannot see nor feele our danger Finally these vertues and spirituall graces are our Christian armour which being buckled vnto vs is of high proofe to preserue vs in safetie against all assaults of enemies that would disturbe our peace but if they be wanting then like the Israelites Exod. 32. 25. we are naked dis-armed of Gods assistance dis-furnished of all munition and weapons wherby we might make any resistance against the encounters of our spirituall enemies and so an easie prey to be seazed on and led captiue by them §. 5 The fift means is to labour to be indued with those peciall sauing graces which are the causes of first knowledge and remembrance of God and his Attributes Secondly A liuely Faith More especially if we would vse the meanes whereby wee may in ioy this Christian securitie wee must labour to know acknowledge and remember Gods sauing Attributes as he exerciseth them towards vs for our good as his Wisedome Power All-sufficiencie Mercy Goodnesse Truth and the Rest For these are the foundation and ground of this securitie vpon which it is built and resteth of which if we are ignorant or forgetfull it is no more possible for this Fort of securitie to be erected in vs then to set vp a goodly building without a foundation or to make it durable if it be seated without other support vpon the Moores or Sands In the second place let vs labour after a liuely and iustifying Faith which is the condition of the Couenant vpon which alone all our safetie and securitie resteth and relyeth the alone instrument which vniteth vs vnto Christ and the only hand by which we receiue all Gods promises and the fruits and benefits which doe accompanie them Finally that impenetrable shield which repelleth all the fierie darts of Satan and maketh vs vndanted and without feare when wee are encountred with his tentations And therefore if we be indued with Faith there is cause enough why we should be secure seeing we are in Couenant with God and by vertue thereof vnder his protection the members of Christ who is so armed with power that all the malice of the Deuill and power of Hell are not able to vanquish or doe vs any hurt and haue all our vitall parts couered with a shield of proofe which cannot be pierced with all the Darts of Satans tentations Thirdly let vs vse all good meanes to Thirdly Affiance in God haue our hearts comforted and confirmed with firme affiance and confidence in God which is a fruit of the former grace wherewith if we be indued the Lord will be the Rocke of our refuge our Sanctuarie Psal 18. 1 2. 144. 2. and Castle of strength vnto which if we flee in the time of danger we may inioy safetie and securitie For the God in whom wee trust is able to supply all our wants to preserue vs in the day of danger and to defeate and bring to nought all the plots and practises of all our enemies and if we make him our hope and confidence he will be our strength and tower and he will so watch ouer vs with his prouidence that we may sleepe securely vnder the shadow of his wings Fourthly Fourthly Loue of God let vs seeke with all earnestnesse to haue our hearts inflamed with that heauenly fire of Gods loue which being but a reflection or little sparke of his diuine loue towards vs will be an euident signe to assure vs of it And this loue of God in vs and towards vs will worke in vs spirituall securitie in the assurance of Gods protection who so loueth vs and whom we so loue and this filiall affection when we finde and feele it in vs will cast out all seruile feare and make vs bold and confident in the sense and apprehension of his fauour towards vs knowing that hee who so deerely loueth vs is all-sufficient in wisedome and power to turne all things to our good and to make all our afflictions and tentations our Enemies power and our owne weaknesse to become helpes and furtherances to our saluation Fiftly if wee would Fiftly The feare of God haue this spirituall securitie we must by all meanes cleanse our hearts from carnall securitie and nourish in them the true feare of God For as well may we accord Light and Darknesse Fire and Water Good and Euill as spirituall securitie with that which is carnall Whereas contrariwise the true feare of God dwelling in vs will banish all other feares and make vs secure in those gracious Promises which the Lord hath made vnto all that feare him as namely that there shall bee nothing Psal 34. 9. 145. 19. wanting vnto them and that hee will fulfull the desire of them that feare him and will heare their crie and saue them So that if they be not short in desiring safetie and securitie the Lord will not be slow to grant it or though they should be wanting vnto themselues in this regard yet the Lord will not be wanting vnto them seeing he is both willing and able to doe exceeding abundantly aboue that wee can either Eph. 3. 20. aske or thinke Sixtly if we desire this securitie we must labour that Sixtly Christian righteousnesse wee may be alwayes found clothed with the garment of righteousnesse both the imputed righteousnesse of Christ applied by faith which doth perfectly free vs from all danger and bring with it peace Rom. 5. 1. of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost and inherent righteousnesse and holinesse wrought in vs by vertue of Christs death and resurrection whereby wee are entitled vnto all the promises of Gods grace and protection made vnto the righteous and among the rest vnto them especially which concerne our safetie and securitie of which I haue before spoken Seuenthly which is like vnto the former wee Seuenthly New obedience must studie and indeauour to performe vnto God in lieu of thankfulnesse for all his benefits new obedience not that of the Law which is impossible but Euangelicall which is the obedience of faith when hauing respect vnto all Gods Commandements wee labour to walke in them with sincere and vpright hearts and with constancie and perseuerance Psal 119. 6. vnto the end And if wee thus seeke out this old and good Ier. 6. 16. way it will bring vs to this rest of spirituall securitie which we labour after If we take this sweet and easie yoke of Euangelicall obedience and hating all Pharisaicall pride learne of Christ to bee meeke and lowly in heart we haue his gratious promise for it that wee shall find Matt. 11. 28 29. this rest for our soules If we
haue in the first place our hearts purged and purified from the filth of sinne For naturally our hearts are full of all vncleanenesse fountaines of maliciousnes and sinkes of sinne spiritually blind and foolish but vnto all impiety witty sharp-sighted and as the Prophet speaketh wicked and despightfull aboue all things auerse vnto all Ier. 17. 9. good and prone to all euill dead and dull to Gods seruice and full of life and vigour to the seruice of the diuell the world and our owne carnall concupiscence Finally they swarme with all noysome lusts as pride hypocrisie couetousnesse voluptuousnesse ambition malice enuie disdaine worldly loue and all manner of carnall corruption And therefore it is most necessary that our hearts be first cleansed and purged before wee can offer vnto God any acceptable seruice for what can issue out of these sinks and puddles of corruption but all manner of sinfull impiety and what streames of Gods seruice so pure in themselues which will not bee polluted if they runne thorow these dennes and ditches of all abominations Now this purging of the heart consisteth in the mortification of the flesh and its sinfull lusts and in spirituall renewing vnto holinesse and new obedience whereby we begin to hate all that euill which we formerly loued and to loue that good which we formerly hated to loath the tyranny of sinne and Satan vnto which with all willingnesse we subiected our selues in time past and to imbrace the true seruice of God in all sincerity which before we eyther neglected or performed after a formall cold and careles manner And finally haue our hearts and affections weaned from the loue of the world and earthly vanities vpon which in the dayes of our ignorance wee wholy doted as on our chiefe delight and treasure because we now see that they are vncertaine momentany and mutable worthlesse and vnprofitable yea to those that set their hearts vpon them hurtfull and pernicious And contrariwise adhere and cleaue vnto the Lord with all our soules as being all-sufficient and infinite in all perfection chusing him for our portion and inheritance our rocke and refuge and farre preferring him before all earthly treasures and delights And thus the Lord when he called Abraham out of Vr of the Chaldeans to bee his seruant withdraweth his heart from the loue of worldly things as being insufficient to preserue him from euill or to furnish him with any true good by promising that he himselfe would be his shield and exceeding great reward And thus he perswadeth him vnto vprightnesse of Gen. 15. 1. heart and to walke before him in holinesse of life because if hee would chuse him for his portion he should finde him almighty and all-sufficient and therefore able to preserue him from all danger and to relieue and Gen. 17. 1. supply all his wants though for his profession and practice of Gods true Religion he should be abandoned of all worldly helpes exposed to the malice of many and mighty enemies And thus Moses contemned the world and refusing the pleasures of Egypt and the honours of Pharaohs Court adhered vnto God and his pure Religion chusing rather to suffer Heb. 11. 25. affliction with his people then to inoy the pleasures of sinne for a season So Dauid being in his heart and affections like a weaned child and lothing the worlds brests from which he had formerly sucked the sweet milk of earthly Psal 131. 2. vanities with so much delight doth with all his heart and soule cleaue vnto the Lord chusing him for his portion and inheritance and esteeming him as his sole treasure The Lord saith he is the portion of mine inheritance Psal 16. 5 6. and of my cup thou maintainest my lot The lines are falne vnto me in pleasant places yea I haue a goodly heritage And when he was forsaken of all worldly helpes in the day of trouble hee was not like worldlings as a man forlorne and desperate but he cryed vnto the Lord and said Thou Psal 142. 5. 119. 57. art my refuge and my portion in the land of the liuing So elsewhere he professeth that all his ioy and comfort was in the Lord and the assurance of his loue the which was better and greater then was incident to worldlings in all their posterity There be many saith he that say Who will shew Psal 4. 5 6 7. vs any good Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs. Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more then in the time that their corne and their wine increased And thus the Church in the Lamentation was not in her greatest misery left hopelesse and helpelesse but cleauing to the Lord with her heart shee cryeth out The Lord is my portion saith my soule therefore Lam. 3. 24. will I hope in him §. Sect. 6 Of the causes of the hearts purity And these are the things wherein this purity of heart doth consist The principall efficient which worketh it in vs is the whole Trinity the Father Sonne and holy Spirit God the Father beginneth this sanctification and holinesse in our hearts by taking away their hardnesse and making them soft and tender and by giuing vnto vs his Spirit to purify them from the filth of corruption and to quicken them in the life of grace according to that promise I will giue them one heart and I will put a new spirit Ezech. 11. 19. 36. 26. within you and I will take the stony heart out of their bodies and will giue them an heart of flesh And againe After those daies saith the Lord I will put my Ier. 31. 33. Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts And therefore if we would haue this grace we must with the Apostle haue our recourse to God praying for our selues as he did for the Thessalonians The very God of peace sanctifie you wholy and I pray God your whole spirit and soule and 1. Thes 5. 23. body be preserued blamelesse vnto the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ God the Sonne purifieth our hearts by shedding his precious blood that it might be a Lauer of regeneration wherein our polluted hearts might be cleansed For so deepely are they engrayned in the skarlet dye of sinne that nothing else will take away their spots and staines and bring them vnto snowy whitenesse It is onely his Crosse that crucifieth these carnall corruptions and the vertue of his death that killeth and mortifieth sin in vs. And this is that Fountaine which the Lord promiseth should be opened Zach. 13. 1. to the house of Dauid and Hierusalem for sinne and for vncleanenesse in which if our hearts be not washed they will remaine in their naturall filthinesse God the holy Ghost purifieth our hearts by vniting them to Christ by dipping and washing them in this Fountaine of his blood and so maketh Ioh. 3. 5. the death and merits of our Sauiour which are sufficient
in themselues effectuall vnto vs for our purification For as the Poole of Bethesda had Ioh. 5. by the mouing of the Angell vertue in it to cure diseases but yet did good to none but those only which were put into it so though the blood of Christ be sufficient to cure the heart of the leprosie of sinne and to make it cleane yet it is of no efficacie vnto any sauing those who are by the holy Spirit dipped and washed in it seeing like the poore lame cripple wee are naturally impotent and cannot make any vse of these meanes of our recouery vnles we be assisted by the holy Spirit The instrumentall cause of this purificatiō is a liuely faith wrought in vs by the Spirit to this end the which we may apply vnto our selues Christ his death and precious bloodshed for our spirituall purging from sinne which is perfected in our iustification in respect of the guilt and punishment and begun in our sanctification by purifying our hearts from their natural corruptions Act. 15. 9. In which respect faith is said to purifie our hearts not materially or formally by any vertue inherent in it selfe but instrumentally by applying vnto vs the vertue of Christs death and bloodshed And vntill we haue this faith wrought in vs by the Spirit whereby we are assured of the riches of Gods grace in this life and glory and happinesse in the life to come our hearts remaine it their naturall filthinesse and are full of all carnall and worldly lusts neither is it possible that they should be perswaded to contemne the baites of worldly vanities and to tread vnder-foot the pleasures of sinne with which they are naturally so much delighted till they haue an offer of better things from God and haue some assurance that vpon their renouncing of the world and fleshly lusts and seeking after these richer gifts they shall most certainely attaine vnto them according to that of the Apostle Blessed be God and the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ 1. Pet. 1. 4. who according to his abundant mercy hath begotten vs againe vnto a liuely hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance incorruptible and vndefiled and that fadeth not away reserued in heauen for you And this purged Moses heart from the loue of the world and made him willing to suffer afflictions with the people of God because with the eye of faith he looked vpon the recompence of reward And this caused the Saints of God Heb. 11. 25. to content themselues to dwel in tabernacles not to regard any earthly mansions because they looked for a City which hath foundations whose builder Heb. 11. 9 10. and maker is God the holy Martyrs to indure with patience ioy most cruell persecution not accepting deliuerance because by faith they were perswaded that they should obtaine a better resurrection Of which comforts of Heb. 11. 33. fayth wee haue great neede to be thereby supported vnder the Crosse and perswaded vnto the contempt of the world seeing Iesus the Author and finisher of our faith who was free from all worldly lusts and carnall corruption was by his heauenly hopes incouraged in his earthly sufferings for as the Apostle testifieth He for the ioy that was set before him endured the crosses despising the shame and is set downe at the right hand of the Heb. 12. 2. Throne of God CAP. XI Of the signes of a pure heart and the meanes whereby we may both obtaine and preserue it §. Sect. 1 Of the inward signes of a pure heart ANd these are the causes of a pure heart The signes whereby we may know whether our hearts bee thus purified or no are either inward or outward The inward signes are first the loue of holinesse and purity for as when our hearts are defiled with naturall corruption we loath sanctitie and loue and delight in impure lusts and the pleasures of sinne so when our hearts are purified by faith they are chiefly pleased with those things which please God and louing purity and piety they delight in the exercises of holinesse and righteousnesse And therefore when we loue purity and holinesse it is an euident signe that our hearts are pure and holy seeing the cause of loue is likenesse and where there is no similitude there can be no loue The second signe is hatred of sinne which vpon the same ground we naturally loue especially of those sinnes vnto which our corrupted nature is most inclined because they most molest and trouble vs and polluting the heart with their defilements hinder most our progresse in sanctification and holinesse And thus Paul when his heart was purified abhorred all corruption and delighted in Gods Law hating that sin most which he did most commit because like a Rebell it warred against the law Rom. 7. 15. of his minde and made him captiue to the law of sinne The third signe is our carefull auoyding all meanes and occasions of spirituall pollution for as he that hath filthy hands careth not to handle filthy things but when they are washed cleane will not willingly touch that which will defile them so an impure heart shunneth not the occasions and meanes of impurity because they cannot make it worse then it is in it owne nature in the quality though they may increase the pollution in respect of the degree yea rather being like filthy hogges naturally inclined vnto filthinesse they seeke the occasions of more vncleannesse and purposely wallow themselues in the sinke and puddle of sinne as often as they haue opportunity of satisfying their carnall lusts More especially he that hath a pure heart delighteth in the company of those who are pure and holy by whose Christian conuersation his purity and sanctification may be more and more increased and cannot indure the society of the wicked no not when like filthy dogs they fawne vpon him because he knoweth that the leprosie of sinne is of an infectious and spreading nature that he who toucheth pitch shall be defiled with it and that worldly men most defile when they most fawne and doe vs least hurt when they are farthest from vs. §. Sect. 2 Of the outward signes of a pure heart The outward signes of a pure heart are the fruits of sanctification and holinesse for the tree is knowne by the fruits and the fountaine by the Mat. 7. 17 18. streames that flow from it whether they be good or euill for a good tree cannot bring foorth euill fruit nor an euill tree good fruit as our Sauiour hath taught vs. If therefore the fruits we beare be pure and holy it is an euident signe that our hearts be purified and sanctified if the streames be cleere and sweete such also is the fountaine from which they spring and if the coyne wee outwardly spend and vse in our Christian trading one with another be currant of pure metall and the right stamp then is the treasury of our
his owne good the preseruation of his life the welfare and health of his body the chastity of himselfe and his wife the prosperity of his estate and his owne credit and good name so ought we vvith like loue to seeke by all meanes the good and preseruation of our neighbours in euery of these and all other respects The speciall and spirituall loue vvhereby a man loueth himselfe causeth him chiefly to seeke the inriching of his soule vvith all sanctifying grace and to further by all meanes his euerlasting saluation and vvith such loue also vve must loue our neighbours doing them all the good vve can both in respect of their bodies and states but principally in seeking their spirituall good and the eternall saluation of their bodies and soules §. Sect. 10 That we must loue our neighbors as Christ hath loued vs. But because our loue of our selues by reason of our naturall corruption is whilst we continue in this life weake and imperfect and therfore no fit rule for our loue towards our neighbours to be squared by therefore our Sauiour hath propounded vnto vs a much more perfect patterne for our imitation euen that most admirable and diuine loue wherewith hee hath loued vs This is my Commandement that ye loue one another as I haue loued Ioh. 15. 12. you As therefore Christ hath loued vs first before we loued him or any waies deserued his loue and hereby moued vs to loue him againe so 1. Ioh. 4. 19. ought wee to preuent one another with our loue and thereby prouoke them to returne vnto vs the like dutie Secondly as Christ loued all his Rom. 5. 8. elect freely without any respect of merit yea when we were strangers sinners and enemies not because of any goodnesse in vs but that by his Loue he might bring vs to good so ought our loue to be free and not mercinary so farre foorth as it may redound to our owne profit but we must loue strangers that thereby we may make them our familiar acquaintance Our enemies that we may make them our friends and euen those that are now euill and sinners that we may bring them to grace and goodnesse Thirdly as Christ loued all the elect without respect of persons both old and young rich and poore base and noble wise and simple so ought we to loue all sorts and conditions of men in whom we finde already or may hope to finde heereafter the signes and markes of Gods election Fourthly as Christ loued vs perfectly in respect of the manner with a sincere and ardent loue and not in tongue and profession onely but in deed and truth so as no waters of affliction nor death it selfe could Cant. 8 6. drowne or dampe so ought we striue to loue one another and to be ready according to his example when iust occasion is offered to seale and approoue 1. Iohn 3. 16. our loue towards them euen with the shedding of our blood Fifthly as Christ loued vs who were in him elected of his Father in a speciall and peculiar manner aboue all others and out of this loue hath giuen himselfe for vs according to that of the Apostle Who hath loued me Gal. 2. 20. and giuen himselfe for mee so ought we to loue all with a generall and common loue but Gods elect with a peculiar and speciall loue aboue the rest and be ready as the Apostle speaketh to doe good vnto all but especially Gal. 6. 10. vnto those who are of the household of faith Lastly as Christ loueth vs with a constant loue and to the end and will not reiect vs for our frailties and infirmities because in his loue he respecteth not his owne profit but our saluation So ought our loue to be constant towards our neighbours and not to languish and faint vpon slight occasions respecting herein not our owne profit but their benefit and aboue all the euerlasting saluation of their bodies and soules CAP. X. Of the reasons which may moue vs to imbrace charity §. Sect. 1 Of the excellency of charity ANd thus haue I shewed what is that charity both towards our selues and our neighbours which is required in the second Table In the next place I will set downe some reasons which may moue vs to imbrace it all which will reduce vnto these their heads the excellency vtility and necessity of it The excellency of this charity herein appeareth in that our Sauiour Christ maketh it the summe of all other duties and vertues required in the second Mat. 22. 39. Table so that if we haue charity we haue all morall vertues if that bee wanting we are destitute of them all Yea the Apostles not without the direction of his holy Spirit doe seeme to goe further making this charity the epitome and summe of the whole Law He that loueth another saith Rom. 13. 8. Paul hath fulfilled the Law If ye fulfill the royall Law saith Iames according to the Scripture thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe ye doe well Where either by a Synecdoche of the whole for the part we are as some doe to vnderstand the second Table onely or because true obedience to it doth necessarily inferre our obedience to the first in that it is an inseparable fruit and vndoubted signe of it it may not vnfitly comprehend our totall obedience to the whole Law Secondly in that the Apostle preferreth 1. Cor. 12. 31. 13. 13. it before those chiefe and fundamentall vertues Faith and Hope and that both because if we consider them meerely in themselues it is of a more excellent nature and also in respect of the extent both of latitude and time for whereas they respect our selues only and our owne saluation this extendeth to the good and saluation of many others and whereas they continue onely for this life charity attaineth to its greatest perfection in the life to come and shall euer remaine as a principall part of our euerlasting ioyes And thus also the Apostle Peter commendeth charity vnto vs aboue all other duties Aboue all things saith he haue feruent 1. Pet. 4. 8. charity among your selues for charity shall couer the multitude of sinnes Finally the Apostle sheweth the excellencie of charity whereas hee exhorteth vs aboue all things to put on Charity as being the bond of perfectnesse or the most perfect bond seeing wee are thereby vnited vnto Christ our Col. 3. 14. Head and as fellow-members one with another For howsoeuer we are thus vnited first and principally by the Spirit of God and a liuely faith yet this bond of vnion is perfected and made more firme and strong by this grace of charity which transforming and changing vs into the very nature of the things beloued doth cause vs to become one with them and so inseparably vnited that nothing in the world no not death Cant. 8. 6. it selfe is of sufficient force to pull vs asunder §. Sect. 2 Of the profit of charity in
respect of our neighbours Secondly charity is to be imbraced of vs as the most profitable vertue both to others and our selues To others because it maketh vs willing and 1. Cor. 13. 4. ready to performe all Christian duties of holinesse and righteousnesse which we desire of others to be done vnto vs for it suffereth with all patience and long-suffering all wrongs and iniuries and seeketh to gaine them who are thus iniurious by all duties of loue It is so kind that being prouoked it seeketh not reuenge but laboureth to ouercome euill with goodnesse It enuieth not the prosperity of those that are aboue vs but causeth vs to reioyce with them in all their happinesse It is not puffed vp with pride nor vaunteth it selfe aboue those who are inferiour vnto vs either in vertues or in those rewards with which God in this life crowneth them It doth not behaue it selfe vnseemely but obserueth a iust decorum and a Verse 5. modest and sober course in all conditions It seeketh not her owne but ioyntly aduanceth our neighbours good in many things departing from her owne right when greater benefit may redound to others it is not easily prouoked to vniust anger but beareth with many faults for their better reformation in consideration of humane frailty and infirmity It thinketh no euill nor intendeth hurt vnto any neither is it suspicious to take any thing in the worst part which may admit of a more fauourable interpretation It reioyceth not in iniquity nor sporteth it selfe in other mens falls and infirmities Verse 6. but rather in the sense of humane frailty it lamenteth their sinnes and desireth their repentance and reformation that they may bee saued And contrariwise it reioyceth when as they approoue their profession of truth in their practice of righteousnesse It beareth all things with meekenesse Verse 7 8. and patience and reuengeth not iniuries but leaueth vengeance to God vnto whom it belongeth It beleeueth all things credible and easily admitteth all iust apologies and excuses which tend to the manifesting of innocency in others or at least lesse faultinesse It hopeth all things and when there is no apparance of good in our righteousnesse expecteth their reformation and amendment and despaireth not of their future repentance Finally it indureth all things and couereth a multitude of euils and is not wearied in well-doing but continueth constant in doing and suffering all things which may any waies tend to the good of our neighbours §. Sect. 3 Of the profit of charity in respect of our selues And as it is profitable to all others so most of all vnto our selues For it replenisheth our hearts with all sound ioy and true comfort as it is an infallible signe of all good in vs and belonging vnto vs of all grace in this life and glory and happinesse in the life to come For hereby wee are assured that God loueth vs and hath sent his holy Spirit to dwell in vs If we loue one another saith the Apostle God dwelleth in vs and his loue 1. Ioh. 4. 12 13. Gal. 5. 22. 1. Iohn 4. 7. is perfect in vs. Hereby we know that we dwell in him and hee in vs because he hath giuen vs of his Spirit It is an vndoubted signe which assureth vs of our regeneration and new-birth Let vs loue one another for loue is of God and euery one that loueth is borne of God Of our illumination by the Spirit and of sauing knowledge for euery one that loueth is borne of God and knoweth God as it followeth in the same place And againe He that 1. Iohn 2. 10. loueth his brother abideth in the light and there is no occasion of stumbling in him It assureth vs of faith for faith worketh by loue as the Apostle Gal. 5. 6. speaketh and that by it we are truly iustified before God for if we bee so charitable as to forgiue men their trespasses then hath the Lord promised Mat. 6. 14. that he will forgiue vs our trespasses So also it is an infallible note of our adoption for in this the children of God are manifest and the children of the 1. Iohn 3. 10. diuell whosoeuer doth not righteousnesse is not of God neither he that loueth not his brother and assureth vs that we are the true Disciples of Iesus Christ if in this we follow his example and doe his will For this is his Commandement Iohn 15. 12. that we loue oue another as he hath loued vs. And by this shall all men Iohn 13. 35. know that we are his Disciples if we haue loue one to another It is an vndoubted signe of all other graces dwelling in vs and principally of our loue of God for euery one who loueth him that begate loueth him also that is begotten 1. Iohn 5. 1. 1. Iohn 4. 20. of him And if any man say I loue God and hateth his brother he is a lyer for he that loueth not his brother whom hee hath seene how can he loue God whom hee hath not seene And of the truth of our Religion for if wee loue 1. Iohn 3. 18 19. Iam. 1. 27. not onely in word and tongue but in deede and truth we may hereby know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before God It expelleth all seruile feare and bringeth peace of conscience for there is no feare in loue but perfect loue casteth out feare Yea it is a notable meanes also of outward 1. Iohn 4. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gregor Nazian Pro. 10. 12. 1. Pet. 4 8. 1. Iohn 3. 14. 4. 17. peace with men whilst it beareth with infirmities passeth by offences and couereth a multitude of sinnes Finally it assureth vs of euerlasting happinesse for we know that we haue passed from death to life because we loue the brethren §. Sect. 4 Of the necessity of charity Lastly the necessity of charity may mooue vs to imbrace it For without charity humane society cannot subsist and stand seeing it is the maine bond whereby they are combined and knit together Neither is it alone a chiefe motiue to make men entertaine mutuall fellowship and entercourse one with another but also a principall meanes to make them to continue with delight and comfort in this societie For charity couereth a Pro. 10. 12. multitude of sinnes and causeth vs to passe by many frailties and infirmities and either not to see and take notice of them or by extenuating and excusing them to make them pardonable and easie to bee disgested Whereas if charity be wanting there will easily creepe in iealousies suspitions sinister interpretations iniuries both offered and reuenged deadly hatred and implacable contentions for as the Wiseman saith Hatred stirreth vp strifes from whence must needes follow diuisions and Pro. 10. 12. vtter breaking vp of all society For if two cannot walke together vnlesse they Amos 3. 3. be agreed as the Prophet speaketh with what bond can
daily more and more all our sinfull corruptions and to quicken vs vnto holinesse and new obedience when vpon any occasion wee apply vnto vs the death and Resurrection of Christ signed and sealed vnto vs and for our perpetuall vse in our Baptisme and doe reuiew our spirituall euidences and the great Charter of Gods Couenant wherein he hath not onely giuen Christ vnto vs and all his benefits but also hath promised and assured vs that he will giue his holy Spirit to continue with vs vnto the end of the world who will apply vnto vs the efficacie of Christs death and resurrection not onely for the pardon of our sinnes in respect of their guilt and punishment but also for the washing away daily of the pollution of it and subduing of the flesh and the lusts thereof and for our continuall quickning and further growth in all duties of holinesse and righteousnesse §. Sect. 5 Thirdly as it is our restipulation in the Couenant of grace Thirdly it is a meanes to helpe vs forward in all duties of godlinesse as it is our restipulation in the Couenant of grace whereby hauing receiued from God the promise of the remission of our sinnes grace and glory we for our part promise vnto God againe that wee will receiue Christ and all his benefits by a true and liuely faith bringing foorth the fruits thereof in vnfained repentance and amendment of life and that vtterly renouncing Satan the world and our owne sinfull flesh with the lusts thereof we will wholly dedicate and consecrate our selues or soules and bodies to the seruice of him who is our Creatour and Redeemer The which our vow and Couenant made vnto God is a powerfull bond to restraine vs from all sinne and to tye vs vnto the performance of all duties of Gods seruice seeing if we doe not performe the condition of the Couenant betweene him and vs we can haue no true ioy and comfort in our liues because we can haue no assurance that we haue any right and interest vnto any of Gods gracious promises made vnto vs in Iesus Christ So often therefore as we haue occasion to call to our remembrance our vow and promise made vnto God in baptisme and especially when wee are present at the celebration of this holy Sacrament and heare it againe repeated and made in the name of infants admitted vnto it if wee conscionably labour to make a right vse of our Baptisme it will put vs in mind of our Couenant then made with God and renew our desires resolution and indeuour of performing that seruice in the duties of a Christian life which we haue vowed and promised vnto him lest wee should be found Couenant-breakers and dalliers with God who will not bee mocked thereby deluding our selues of all blessings and benefits respecting this life and the life to come which in the Couenant of grace are promised vnto vs. Where by the way we may obserue that those who withdraw themselues and depart out of the assembly when the Sacrament of Baptisme is administred doe not only thereby sinne against God the Church and the party baptized as I haue before shewed but also are very iniurious vnto themselues in that they lose a good opportunity of calling to minde and renewing their Couenant with God and depriue themselues of one speciall helpe whereby they might bee inabled to performe the duties of a godly life §. Sect. 6 That the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is a powerfull meanes to further vs in Christian duties first because thereby our Communion with Christ is confirmed and secondly our faith strengthened Ioh. 6. 54 56. So likewise the Supper of the Lord rightly celebrated and vsed is a powerfull meanes to inable and helpe vs forward in the performance of all Christian duties First because thereby our vnion and Communion with Christ is more and more strengthened and confirmed seeing God doth offer and giue and we take and apply vnto our selues by the hand of faith vnder the visible signes of Bread and Wine Christ and all his benefits his Body crucified and his Blood shed that they may nourish our soules vnto euerlasting life according to that of our Sauiour He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him and againe He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternall life and I will raise him vp at the last day Now the more that this our vnion with Christ is strengthened and confirmed the more powerfully doe we performe all Christian duties seeing from him all grace is communicated vnto vs and all vertue and quickning life whereby we are inabled to bring foorth the fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse Secondly it strengtheneth vs vnto all good duties as it is a speciall meanes for the strengthening and increasing of our faith which was the chiefe end for which it was ordained For seeing the Lord hath not onely committed his Couenant to writing but for the further ratification of it hath annexed vnto it his seales the Sacraments there is now no place left to doubting seeing it is impossible that the Lord who is Truth it selfe and his promises Yea and Amen should faile 2. Cor. 1. 20. in any of them being thus established and confirmed In which regard the Apostle calleth the Sacraments the seales of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4. 11. because as seales amongst men are annexed to writings to giue them security and better assurance of the performing of Couenants agreed on betweene them so the Lord hath instituted his Sacraments and annexed them to his Couenant not to confirme it which is so infallible that it needes no confirmation but to strengthen our feeble and weake faith which needes all helpes and meanes to keepe it from wauering Now the more our faith is confirmed the more rich wee grow in all sauing graces seeing it is the fountaine from which they flow and the more we abound in all holy duties and fruits of new obedience seeing it is the roote from which they spring §. Sect. 7 Thirdly because it is the spirituall food and nourishment of our soules Thirdly because the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is the spirituall food of our soules whereby they are nourished and strengthened in life Ioh. 6. 55. and grace vnto eternall saluation euen as our bodies are nourished with corporall food and thereby strengthened and inabled for all actions and imployments So our Sauiour saith My flesh is meate indeed and my blood is drinke indeed not to feed the body but to comfort the soule to preserue our spirituall life and to strengthen vs vnto all duties of holinesse and righteousnesse And as the bodily life languisheth and strength decayeth if we refuse our corporall nourishment so the vigour and life of our soules cannot continue if we feed not vpon Christ by faith according to that vehement asseueration of our Sauiour Verily verily I say vnto you Ioh. 6. 53. except ye eate the flesh
the face p 183. l. a fin 4. r. stopped from him p. 188. l. 9 r. whole rayes p. 189. l. 4. r. our selues p. 197. l 27. 28. r. tentations p. 200 l. a fin 4 r. and stales of p 203. l. the last r. good guidance p 267. l a fin 6. r. misbeseeming p. 28● l. 2. r. diffention of p. 214. l 21. r. to be preferred p. 350. l. 35. r with naming p. 373. l 31 r. no more p. 374 l. a fin 4. r. yet by this p. ●83 l. 36. r. compounding of contentions p. 429 l. ● r. could not make p 433. l. 25. r. furious anger p 438. l. 22. r. constancie is p. 454. l. 11 12. r. faith inableth vs. p 468. l. 10 in Marg r. leiunare vigilare p. 469. l 24. in Marg. r. Ad fariam p. 493. l. 1. r. sealed vnto vs. p 496. l. 1● ● our soules p. 497. l. a fin 5 r. mulation and. p. 498. l. 22. r. gratefulnesse p. 499. l. 8. r. disburse p. 506 l 1. r. when as thereby p. 544 l. 2 r. to purge out p. 552. l a fin 4. r. at all times p. 568. l. a fin 8 r. also profitable p. 608. l. a fin 3. 2. r. that is contained p. 614 l. 32. r. of examination p. 616. l. 9. r. of examination p. 643. l. a fin 3. r by disgesting p 644. l. 1. r. For as there p. 714. l. 7. r. often actes and l. 13. r. acts of sinnes and l. 29. r. faith is assured of p 716. l. 31. r. cleansing p. 727. l. 40. r. owne proprieties p. 729 l. 38. 39 c. reads vs for them our for their and we for they p. 749. l. 27. r. will soone p. 804. l. 10. r. comfortable vse p. 812. l. 4. r. our market p 821. l 1. r. not worthy p. 841. l. 9. r. their intrusion p. 848. l. 11. r. most deiected p. 855. l. 4. r. seruice and liue as p. 878. l. 2. r. getting and l. 25. r. Is it not A TREATISE OF SECVRITIE Diuided into two Bookes THE FORMER INTREATING OF CARNALL SECVRITIE AND HARDNES OF HEART Wherein the Nature Originall and Causes of it are displayed and described the Kinds of it distinguished and the Differences betweene them expressed the Signes whereby it may be knowne shewed with the Preseruatiues and Remedies whereby we may be kept from falling into this dangerous disease or recouered if we be alreadie fallen THE LATTER INTREATING OF SPIRITVALL AND CHRISTIAN SECVRITIE Wherein is shewed what it is the Causes and Effects of it and the Meanes whereby it may be obtayned and preserued Published as an Antidote against the dangerous Securitie of these last Times By IOHN DOWNAME Batchelar in Diuinitie and Preacher of GODS Word ZEPH. 1. 12. And it shall come to passe at that time that I will search Ierusalem with Candles and punish the men that are setled on their lees that say in their heart The Lord will not doe good neither will doe euill LONDON Printed by WILLIAM STANSBY 1622. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE Sir Henrie Mountagu KNIGHT Baron of KIMBOLTON Viscount MANDEVILLE Lord President of his MAIESTIES most Honorable Priuie Counsell And to the truely Noble and Vertuous Lady the Lady MARGARET his Wife J. D. wisheth all temporall happines with the confluence of all spirituall Graces in this life and eternall blessednesse in the life to come Right Honorable and my most honored Lord and Lady AS long peace and prosperitie are the common causes of carnal securitie and hardnesse of heart so these the vsuall forerunners of fearefull punishments seeing in this desperate Disease which we may fitly call the stone in the heart more gentle Medicines will not effect the cure For when mens hearts are come to brassy or flinty hardnesse nothing will melt them without some extraordinary worke of the Spirit but the fiery furnace of Affliction nothing will bruise and breake them but the heauy hammer of Gods dreadfull iudgements And this is manifest in the examples of all Ages which are left vnto vs in the Scriptures to giue vs warning As of the old world Sodome and her bordering Cities and of the Israelites Gods owne best beloued people all which as they were lulled asleepe in the Cradle of carnall Security with the pleasing and bewitching tunes of peace and pleasure so were they alwayes when they least suspected it surprised vpon the suddaine in their lethargie of sinne with some remarkable plagues and punishments And therefore considering with my selfe that our long peace plenty and prosperity hath infected the most that liue in our land with deepe security and retchlesse carelesnesse and caused them to dreame that this Sun-shine will neuer set I could not chuse but suspect and daily expect the neer approching of the other and that the darke night of affliction and calamity will ere long surprize vs vnlesse the loude cries of Gods Ministers doe speedily awaken vs out of our lethargie and moue vs to meet the Lord and preuent his iudgements by turning vnto him in vnfayned repentance In which regard being appoynted and called by God to bee one of his though least worthy watchmen whose office requireth that we should not only our selues keep the spirituall watch but also as much as in vs lyeth awaken others I thought it my duty by giuing warning of these approaching dangers to rowze vp as many as I could out of this sleepe or rather lethargie of securitie And because my voyce were farre too weake though I could as the Lord requireth lift it vp as a Trumpet to be heard of all the people of this Land I haue indeuoured to conuay the sound thereof as it were by these paper Pipes euen vnto the most remote places and to those especially where the liuely voyce of Gods faithfull watchmen is rarely heard either because the meanes of their maintenance by sacriledge and Church-robbery or symonicall fraud is taken away or because dumbe or idle and sleeping watchmen doe hold their places without any care to performe their duty as neither keeping the watch themselues nor being either able or willing to keepe others waking The which my labours I haue made bold to dedicate vnto your Honors To you my Lord I confesse not without some presumption as not being hitherto known vnto you yet herein not vnexcusable in that it proceedeth from a desire to shew how much I honor you for your profession and protection of Gods true and sincere Religion in that Honourable place vnto which God hath called you your loue to Learning and fouour towards the Learned But to you Noble Ladie in whose notice and vndeserued respect I haue beene more happie I haue deuoted this poore part and mite of my worthlesse Workes that liuing in these Paper Monuments as it were in my longest lasting posterity I may euen after death hath imposed silence still testifie vnto the world mine humble loue and vnfayned thankefulnesse for your manifold and great fauours vouchsafed vnto me and how
much I honor you for those singular vertues and graces wherewith God hath inriched you especially your piety towards him and loue of his truth much approoued as by many other fruits so especially by your loue to his Ministers and Ambassadors The which were ample matter for a larger discourse to incourage others of your ranke to imitation did not your modesty and humility attending and adorning all the rest admonish mee that such praises of you vnto you will bee thought vnnecessary if not vnpleasing and distastfull The Lord infinitely rich in all goodnesse and perfection more and more multiply all Christian Vertues and sauing Graces in you both in the light and lustre whereof you shall be euer more truly honorable in the sight of God and all those that feare him then in the highest dignities and noblest aduancements that the world can yeeld vnto you Your Honors most obliged in all Christian duetie and humble seruice IOHN DOWNAME Faults escaped in the Treatise of Securitie Pag. 6. l. 3. r. his mercies p. 64. l. 9. r. idle spectator p. 65. l. 22. r. opinion of our p. 66. l. 6. r. against them in p. 68. l. 22. r. by inuring p. 70. l. 28. r. let vs watch p 83. l. 13. r. in the vse p. 89. l. 16. r. for a spurt p. 92. l. 8. r. peace and securitie And l. 20. r. God infinite THE CONTENTS OF THE FIRST BOOKE Jntreating of Carnall Securitie CHAP. I. Of Securitie in generall and more especially of Securitie in the state of Innocencie and of that which is in vs after the fall § 1. THat God the supreame Goodnesse turneth all euen euill it selfe into good Pag. 1. § 2. That it is the nature of sinne and corruption to turne all into euill pag. 2. § 3. That fleshly corruption abuseth prosperitie to the begetting in vs of carnall Securitie pag. 3. § 4. The motiue inducing to the writing of this Treatise pag. 3. § 5. That it is necessary to distinguish securitie into seuerall kinds pag. 3. § 6. Of Securitie in the state of Innocency pag. 4. § 7. Of Securitie in the state of corruption and the originall of it pag. 4. CHAP. II. Of carnall Securitie and what it is § 1. OF the generall parts of this Treatise pag. 6. § 2. Carnall Securitie defined pag. 6. § 3. Testimonies of Scripture shewing what it is pag. 7. § 4. Examples of carnall Securitie pag. 7. CHAP. III. Of the manifold causes of carnall Securitie § 1. THe first cause ignorance of God and his sauing Attributes pag. 8. § 2. The second cause want of consideration of that we know pag. 9. § 3. The third cause Selfe-confidence pag. 9. § 4. The fourth cause abuse of worldly prosperitie pag. 10 § 5. The fift cause is customable sinning pag. 11. § 6. The sixt cause is the present impunitie of sinners pag. 12. § 7. The seuenth cause presumption on Gods mercy pag. 13. § 8. The eight cause the neglect or contempt of the meanes of grace and saluation pag. 14. § 9. The ninth cause hearing the Word without Faith pag. 14. § 10. The tenth cause not applying the Word preached pag. 15. § 11. The eleuenth cause the mis-applying of the promises of the Gospell pag. 16. § 12. The twelfth cause a flattering Ministerie pag. 16. CHAP. IIII. Of the diuers kinds of carnall Securitie § 1. OF naturall securitie which is in all men pag. 18. § 2. Of carnall securitie which is affected and voluntarie pag. 19. § 3. Of carnall securitie which is in the vnregenerate pag. 19. § 4. Of that which remayneth in the Regenerate and how it groweth vpon them pag. 20. § 5. Of insensible and sensible securitie in the faithfull pag. 22. § 6. Of the causes of carnall securitie in the faithfull first prosperitie worldly or spirituall pag. 23. § 7. The second cause is spirituall pride pag. 24. CHAP. V. Of the differences betweene the carnall securitie of the Vnregenerate and Regenerate § 1. THat the carnall securitie of the Vnregenerate and Regenerate are in many things alike pag 25. § 2. Of the differences betweene the carnall securitie of the Vnregenerate and Regenerate in the highest degree pag. 16. § 3. Of the differences betweene the carnall securitie which is ordinarily in the faithfull and wicked and first in respect of their causes pag. 27. § 4. The second difference in their effects pag. 28. § 5. Another difference in their effects pag. 30. § 6. That they differ in respect of the subiect pag. 30. § 7. That they differ in their properties pag. 30. § 8. That they differ in their time of continuance pag. 32. CHAP. VI. Of the signes of carnall securitie arising from the causes of it § 1. THat the causes of carnall securitie doe argue and shew the effect pag. 32. § 2. The first signe of carnall securitie is ignorance of God and his Attributes pag. 33. § 3. The second signe is when wee are forgetfull of God his attributes pag. 33. § 4. The third signe pride and selfe-confidence pag. 34. § 5. The fourth signe abuse of prosperitie pag. 34. § 6. The fift signe customable sinning pag. 35. § 7. The sixt signe abuse of Gods patience and impenitency pag. 36. § 8. The seuenth signe presumption on Gods mercy pag. 36. § 9. The eight signe contempt of the meanes of saluation pag. 36. § 10. The ninth signe hearing the Word without Faith pag. 38. § 11. The tenth signe not applying of the Word pag. 39. § 12. The eleuenth signe mis-applying of the Promises pag. 39. § 13. The twelfth signe is to delight in aflattering Ministerie pag. 39. CHAP. VII Of eight other signes of carnall securitie arising from the effects and other arguments § 1. THe first signe is not to profit by afflictions on others pag. 40. § 2. Secondly such as are inflicted on our selues pag. 41. § 3. The second signe is to haue no desire to keepe Gods Commandements pag. 43. § 4. Secondly when we yeeld obedience but by fits pag. 43. § 5. Thirdly when we doe not yeeld obedience to the whole Law but some parts onely pag. 44. § 6. Fourthly when our obedience ariseth not from spirituall causes nor is directed to right ends pag. 44. § 7. The third signe delaying of Repentance pag. 45. § 8. The fourth signe is Hypocrisie pag. 46. § 9. The fift is to feare Man more then God pag. 46. § 10. The sixt signe immoderate feare in time of danger pag 47. § 11. The seuenth signe is to run from God and to rest on inferiour meanes in danger and affliction pag. 47. § 12. The eight signe is contempt of Gods Ministers pag. 48. CHAP. VIII Of such reasons as may mooue vs to abhor carnall securitie and to vse all meanes either to preuent it or to bee freed from it § 1. THat it is necessarie to haue our hearts wrought vnto the hatred of this Vice pag. 49. § 2. That Christ hath giuen vs speciall warning