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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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rest compose our selues to sleepe in such a Christian and holy manner by prayer and meditation that euen as much as may be our imaginations and dreames may retaine some rellish and sauour of our former religious exercises Where by the way wee may note that as the Christian Sabbath is to begin at the dawning of the day because it was instituted in remembrance of Christs Resurrection who was that Sunne of righteousnes who brought light and life vnto vs by performing and finishing that great worke of our Redemption and not ouer-night like the Iewes Sabbath which was ordained to put them in mind of the worke of Creation and the rather because it was fit that there should vpon these diuers reasons be a difference betweene their Sabbath and ours so also it is to continue to the dawning of the next day as wee haue formerly shewed by Pauls example §. Sect. 2 That we must rest from our owne workes on the Lords Day And thus we see the time of the Lords Day how long it is to continue now we are to speake of the duties which ought to be performed in it And these are all comprized in these two things first in obseruing a Rest and secondly in keeping it holy or in sanctifying this Rest vnto Gods seruice The Rest consisteth in the forbearing or not doing of our owne workes but onely in cases of necessity and when the sanctification of the Lords Day requireth them as duties tending to the aduancing of Gods seruice or such workes of mercy and Christian charity as belong to this Day as the study and paines of the Minister the trauell of the people to places of diuine worship visiting and helping of the sicke and distressed confounding of contentions and making peace betweene neighbours feeding and tending of cattell and such like Where by our owne workes I vnderstand all our thoughts words and actions which simply or chiefly tend to our owne profit or pleasure As first the workes of our callings Exod. 31. 15. of all kinds whatsoeuer as all workes of husbandry euen in the time of haruest buying and selling carrying of burthens trauelling and such like Secondly all kinds of recreations which are not necessary for the preseruing of health and life and tend not to the better fitting and inabling of vs for religious duties but to sensuall and carnall delight Of which sort are walking abroad that we may take the ayre or that wee may conferre one with another or meditate on the creatures some bodily exercise in course of physicke to refresh the body and in some cases musicke not onely vocall by singing of Psalmes which is a duty of the Sabbath but also on instruments when as it is vsed not for carnall and sensuall delight but to refresh our spirits and quicken our dull and drowzie hearts and minds that they may with more cheerefulnesse returne vnto the performance of religious and holy duties in which cases there may at some times be the same vse of these recreations so they be in moderation in an holy manner and to these ends which is of physicke meates and drinkes But from all other recreations which tend onely to carnall and sensuall delight we must wholly abstaine first because the Lord expressely forbiddeth vs to doe our owne pleasure on his holy Day and contrariwise commandeth vs to call his Sabbath our delight Esa 58. 13. the holy of the Lord honourable and that we should honour him nor doing our owne wayes nor finding our owne pleasures nor speaking our owne words Secondly because they are our owne workes from all kindes whereof Gods Commandement restraineth vs that wee may bee wholly deuoted to the seruice of God and the meanes which inable vs thereunto yea they may in some sort be called more our owne workes then the workes of our callings because these are more expressely commanded and are ordinarily more necessary and more directly tend to Gods seruice then the other for it is possible to liue and serue God without these recreations but not vnlesse we walke in the duties of our callings And therefore if these bee forbidden on the Lords Day then much more the other which are of lesse vse and necessity Finally because these worldly recreations doe more dangerously and cunningly winde into our hearts steale them away from holy duties and distract vs in Gods seruice then the duties of our callings the workes and labours whereof we doe not loue for themselues but onely as they are meanes of deriuing pleasure or profit vnto vs whereas we loue these sensuall pleasures for themselues and oftentimes so dote vpon them that we neglect our worldly profit yea the seruice of God it selfe and the eternall saluation of our soules that we may inioy them §. Sect. 3 That on the Lords Day we must abstaine from carnall recreations Now if any obiect that to depriue vs of these recreations is to take away all the ioy and comfort of our liues to this I answere that it is an obiection which altogether misbeseemeth a Christian For howsoeuer Infidels and carnall worldlings may reioyce chiefly in them as hauing no greater cause of ioy and comfort yet it ought not to bee so with the faithfull who should chiefly reioyce in the Lord and in the pledges and testimonies of his loue and fauour in their Communion with him who is their Phil. 4. 4. summum bonum and chiefe happinesse and the visible signes of his gracious presence vnto which spirituall ioy Dauid exhorteth Delight thy Psal 37. 4. selfe in the Lord and he shall giue the desires of thine heart Of which he in many places propoundeth himselfe as an example for our imitation Secondly if we be spiritually and not carnally and worldly-minded we may make the Lords Day it selfe our delight as he requireth which if we Esa 58. 13 14. doe then we shall indeed finde sweete delight in the Lord. For what greater delight can there bee to a Christian then to praise God by singing of Psalmes who hath beene so good and gracious vnto vs then to heare the Word whereby God assureth vs of his fauour and of the pardon of our sinnes and receiue the Sacrament whereby it is sealed and assured vnto vs then to feast our soules at this spirituall banket and afterwards meditate on and peruse our spirituall euidences whereby the assurance of heauenly happinesse is conuayed vnto vs then to be assured that wee are redeemed out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies and restored to the glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God then to solace our selues in the sweete society of Christ our Bridegroome in his Banketing-house and to be stayed and comforted with his flagons of wine apples and kinde imbracements Cant. 2. 4 5 6. which spirituall ioyes if we rellish not what doth it but argue a carnall taste and appetite which we ought to bewaile and mortifie and not feede and cherish it with vaine sports and worldly recreations
neglect of the duties of thy seruice and our weake imperfect performances when we haue vndertaken them our profanation of thy Sabbaths and abuse of thine holy Ordinances our little profiting by those plentifull meanes of our saluation which for a long time thou hast graciously affoorded vs either for the increasing of sauing knowledge the strengthening of our faith or bringing forth fruits of new obedience our want of faith and feruency of spirit in calling vpon thy Name our want of reuerence and attention in hearing thy Word our many distractions and wandring thoughts our want of care to treasure it vp in our hearts and of conscience to make an holy vse of it in our liues and conuersations By all which and innumerable other sinnes we acknowledge good Lord that we haue iustly deserued to be depriued of all meanes of our saluation and that thou shouldest take away from vs the food of our soules and cause them to perish through Spirituall famine or that thou shouldest turne our meate into poyson and make it to become the sauour of death to our deeper condemnation which in it owne nature is the sauour of life vnto life and thine owne strong power vnto saluation But wee beseech thee good Lord for thy Sonnes sake to be gracious vnto vs in the free pardon of these and all other our sinnes and seeing hee hath fully satisfied thy Iustice by that all-sufficient sacrifice which he hath once offered vpon his Crosse be reconciled vnto vs in him and clense vs thorowly from the guilt and punishment of all our sinnes that they may not be as a wall of separation to stop from vs thy blessings nor as strong chaines to pull downe vpon vs thy iudgements and punishments either in this world or in the world to come And being thus freed from all our sinnes let vs deuote our selues wholly to thy seruice which that we may performe with greater cheerfulnesse and diligence let vs haue the comfortable assurance of this thy mercy in the remission of our sinnes sealed in our hearts by thy good Spirit witnessing vnto vs that we are thy children by adoption and grace And thereby not only seale vs vp vnto the Day of our Redemption but also sanctifie vs throughout in our bodies and soules by the mortification of the flesh and our spirituall quickening in the inner man that wee may in the whole course of our liues serue and please thee But in a more especiall manner we beseech thee good Lord to sanctifie vs that we may sanctifie this thy Sabbath and assist vs by thy grace and holy Spirit that wee may so performe the religious duties of thy seruice as that wee may bee made more holy and inabled vnto the leading of such a Christian life as may bee acceptable in thy sight Take away from vs the corruption of our natures wherby we are made backward and vntoward to the duties of thy seruice and make vs willing to sequester our selues from all worldly affaires that we may wholly be imployed in them Let vs reioyce in thy Sabbaths as being the time of our spirituall refection and the market of our soules and let vs not rest in a formall keeping of them but performe the duties required in them with all care and good conscience not onely in the outward man but with our hearts and soules in spirit and truth Free vs from carnall wearines as thinking the time long till they be past but knowing that time to be best spent which is imployed in thy seruice let vs take most comfort and contentment in it Inable vs good Lord by priuate preparation to fit our selues for thy publike seruice meditating on our wants that we may vse all good meanes whereby they may be supplyed and on our speciall sins corruptions that we may get spiritual strength against them and imploring the assistance of thy good Spirit that we may be inabled thereby to performe in an holy manner all duties which thou requirest Let vs keep an holy Rest vnto thee and abstaine not only from the ordinary workes of our callings and worldly affaires but also from all carnall pleasures and sensual delights Suffer not our thoughts to be taken vp with worldly or wicked cogitations but let our minds bee exercised in spirituall and heauenly meditations Set a watch before our mouthes that we may not on thine holy Day speak our owne words nor vtter any idle vaine worldly or wicked speeches but let our tongues speak to thy praise and be exercised in holy religious conferences tending to the mutuall edification one of another Let vs not content our selues with a meere cessation from our labours but refer this Rest to holinesse as the maine end thereof without which the outward rest is but vaine and with the externall let vs ioyne the internall rest from sin exercising our selues in repentance from dead workes Make vs carefull in vsing all good means which thou hast ordained for the sanctifying of thy Day both publikely and priuately and let vs with one hart and voyce ioyne with the rest of the Congregation in all the parts of thy seruice Inable all thy Ministers in all places and him especially to whose charge thou hast committed vs that they may break vnto vs the Bread of life and rightly diuide thy Word for our spirituall nourishment Furnish them with all gifts and graces necessary for their high calling and let them deliuer thy truth as in thy presence faithfully and powerfully truly and sincerely and so assist them with the inward working of thine holy Spirit that thy Word may be effectual for the conuersion edification and saluation of their hearers Inable vs by the same Spirit to call vpon thee with faith feruency and with all loue and thankfulnes to praise thee for all thy blessings vouchsafed vnto vs. Let vs with all due reuerence attention heare thy Word lay it vp in our harts and memories and bring forth the fruits of it in our liues and conuersations Giue vs grace also O Lord to sanctifie thy Sabbaths priuately by performing by our selues and in our owne families those priuate duties which are specially required on this thy Day Let vs meditate on thy Word after we haue heard it and apply it vnto our selues for our owne vse Let vs meditate on thy maruellous works of Creation Preseruation and Redemption but especially on the death and Resurrection of our Lord and Sauiour that they may be effectuall to mortifie our sins and to quicken vs vnto newnes of life Let vs spend our time in religious exercises and in the works of charity mercy as being those sacrifices wherein thou most delightest but especially in those spirituall duties which tend to the saluation of our owne and others soules taking care not onely to sanctifie thine holy Day our selues but as much as in vs lyeth that it may be sanctified by all those who any wayes belong to our charge Accept of our praise and thanksgiuing
also without any diminution or abatement in quantity or quality of that which we haue vowed Especially our care must bee of performing our common vowe in baptisme in renouncing all our spirituall enemies and in consecrating our selues wholy vnto Gods seruice in performing vnto him the duties of holinesse righteousnesse and sobriety all the daies of our liues §. Sect. 4 Of the sanctifying Gods Sabbath and what things are required vnto it In the fourth Commandement the Lord appointeth a speciall time wherein all the former duties both publike and priuate are principally to be performed which whosoeuer doe neglect they manifestly shew that they are destitute of the power of all true Religion The maine duty required is that wee remember to sanctifie the Sabbath In which two things are to be considered 1. that we must sanctifie the Sabbath 2. that we must remember to doe it that is be mindfull and carefull to sanctify it To the sanctification of the Sabbath two things are required First the rest Secondly the sanctifying of it The rest consisteth partly in an outward rest from bodily labours and worldly affaires and in our inward resting from the seruile workes of sinne The workes from which wee must rest are bodily labours and all worldly imploiments so farre forth as they are distractions and hinderances to the spirituall Sanctification of the Sabbath As buying and selling all manner of workes of our ordinary callings trauailing feasting of friends with meates not easily cooked and such like For all kinds of bodily labours on the Lords day are vnlawfull Math. 12. 5. except they be referred to the sanctification of the Sabbath as the meanes of it of which sort are the labours of the Minister in the duties appertaining to his ministery and of the people trauailing to the places of Gods worship Or secondly the workes of mercy which are duties of the Sabbath Hos 6. 6. as giuing of almes visiting the sicke and prisoners healing diseases and sores by applying fit medicines and salues Or lastly workes of necessity which are of importance and cannot without great inconuenience be done afterwards nor could haue beene done before For as for that necessity which ariseth from our negligence and carelesse ouersight it is sinfull and in the first word of this Commandement forbidden and condemned And among these workes of necessity we are to reckon labour in prouiding conuenient foode for our bodies tending of cattell when it is done rather in mercy which respecteth their necessity then for our owne gaine Labours of Mariners begun before the Sabbath in their Nauigation at Sea Fight in a lawfull warre against our enemies labours of seruants and subiects imposed vpon them by their gouernours as necessary and not apparantly discerned by them to be otherwise The inward and spirituall rest is our resting from sinne as at all times so especially Esa 56. 2 58. 13. on the Sabbath For these workes of darkenesse are aboue all other most seruile and slauish seeing thereby we make our selues the vassals of Satan §. Sect. 5 Of the spirituall sanctification the outward rest And this is the rest required on the Sabbath the sanctification of this rest is either by vsing the meanes or doing the workes of sanctification And this is done both publikely and priuately publikely by vsing the publike meanes of sanctification in the seruice of God And this is done First of the Ministers by publike praying in the congregation preaching and reading the Word and administration of the Sacraments Secondly the people by frequenting the assemblies in the beginning and continuing to the end of diuine seruice and being there by carrying and behauing themselues religiously diligently vprightly in calling vpon Gods name hearing the Word and in the right vse of the Sacraments The Leuit. 19. 30. 23. 2. 1. Cor. 16. 2. publike workes of sanctification are almesdeeds and collections for the poore Priuately the Sabbath is sanctified by our preparation to Gods publike seruice which chiefly consisteth in meditation and prayer and after the publike seruice by meditating on the Word heard and applying it to our owne vse and by holy conferences with others Vnto which duties respecting the publike worship we are to adde and vse these other meanes of sanctifying the remainder of the Lords day Reading of the Scriptures or other religious holy writings meditation on Gods Word Psal 92. 1. and workes especially of creation preseruation and redemption Inuocation by prayer thankesgiuing and singing of Psalmes and finally godly conferences vpon some fit subiect which best forteth to the present occasion and tendeth to the vse of edification vnto which meanes we must adde the priuate workes of sanctification which are the workes of mercy and appertaine chiefly either to the body as the giuing of alms visiting the sicke and prisoners curing diseases c. or else to the soule as teaching the ignorant reclaiming those who are seduced by errour admonishing those who faile of their duty by frailty and infirmity rebuking the scandalous and wilfull offender exhorting the backward and sluggish comforting the distressed counsailing them for the good of their soules that neede counsaile and reconciling those whom we know to be at variance But we must not only sanctify the Sabbath but also as a speciall helpe and meanes hereof we must remember to doe it that is vse all prouidence and care deuotion and diligence about these duties of sanctification Before the Sabbath we must so forecast our businesse and dispose of all our worldly affaires that wee be not distracted in performing of holy duties by hauing our mindes tongues or actions exercized and taken vp by them And on the Sabbath we must remember to sanctifie it by hauing our whole man taken vp in the seruice of God both publikely and priuately and by performing the duties required with all diligence and attention sincerity and vprightnesse Esa 58. 13. cheerefulnesse and delight CAP. IX Of the summe of the second Table §. Sect. 1 Of the duties of righteousnesse towards our neighbours WE haue spoken of the duties of piety contained in the first Table And now wee are to intreat of the duties of righteousnesse and sobriety required in the second vnder righteousnesse comprehending all duties which we owe to our neighbours and vnder sobriety all those which belong to our owne persons By righteousnesse we vnderstand a vertue or habit which ordereth the whole man to the good of our neighbours as the minde and vnderstanding to thinke the memory to remember the wil to desire the affections and passions to couet and affect the whole body to act and performe all things which we know good and profitable both for their soules bodies name and state for their temporal welfare and prosperity in this world and their euerlasting happinesse in the world to come The generall rule of which righteousnes is that we doe all that and that only vnto others Math. 5. 12. which we would
but to cause heart-burning and alienation of affections strife and contention that so for the present he may keepe out all profitable conferences about sanctification and the maine points of Christian Religion and at length may breake off all such meetings when as men finde by experience that little or no good commeth of them And with him ioyneth the world and worldly men to hinder these conferences not onely by offering earthly things vnto vs for the subiect of our speech but also by interrupting vs when wee haue entred into any good conference by speaking of worldly matters that so they may diuert our speech from going on in any Christian discourse Vnto both which our enemies our corrupt flesh is ready to betray vs which is soone weary of spirituall and heauenly things because it findeth no taste or sauour in them and is neuer satisfied in thinking and speaking of things worldly carnall and sensuall as best rellishing to our corrupt and fleshly appetite A second cause is because we are not mortified in our loue to the world nor haue our hearts and affections weaned from it For if they like good instruments were well in tune they would vtter by our tongues heauenly harmony but doting as they doe vpon worldly vanities it is no maruaile if out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh and if the chiefe fountaine being defiled there issue from it the polluted streames of vnprofitable discourses A third cause is our too little loue of spirituall heauenly things for if our hearts were set vpon them as our chiefe treasure we would take delight to be still talking of them If they were our chiefe comforts and cordials to cheare our hearts so as they could with delight exercise themselues with Dauid in meditating on them day and night then would they also be sweeter to our mouthes then the honey or the honey-combe Neither Psal 119. would our tongues be so vnready and barren of words when we come to speake of holy things if our hearts and affections were set vpon them for as the Diuine Philosopher among the Heathens obserued Loue maketh euen those which are rude of speech eloquent when they speake of the things beloued Lastly our great ignorance of holy and heauenly matters ioyned with a pernicious feare and shame lest by our speech wee should discouer it to our disgrace is one speciall cause which hindreth these conferences For such is the pride of mens hearts and their small esteeme of these spirituall treasures that they had rather remaine penurious then discouer their pouerty and empty of all grace by neglecting the meanes whereby they might bee replenished then that men should take any notice of their emptinesse to hide their wounds rather then to lay them open that they might bee cured and like foolish and beggerly Shop-keepers they content themselues with a vaine shew and with painted papers stuffed with straw or rags rather then they will vse any spirituall trading with others or lose the name and opinion of wealthy men by taking vp such wares as they want §. Sect. 5 That Christian and religious conferences are exceeding profitable But that wee may breake thorow all these difficulties and remoouing these causes of hindrance bring these neglected holy conferences into more vse let vs consider that they are exceeding profitable first for the increasing of our knowledge in spirituall and heauenly things when wee bring all wee know as it were to a common stocke out of which euery one may take that which best fitteth him for his particular vse and supply his defects out of others abundance they in the meane time hauing neuer the lesse And as it is a singular benefit vnto euery one of any Trade or Mystery when they haue their common Halls where they may meete together and conferre of the best courses for the managing of their affaires seeing it doth not onely much improoue their skill but also further them greatly in all good proceedings so doth it exceedingly aduantage vs in our spirituall trading both for the increasing of our knowledge and furthering of our practice when as wee often meete together and conferre of those things that belong to our Christian profession For it doth not onely improoue and better our iudgements by communicating with others in all that they know but also inflame our hearts and affections with the loue of spirituall things when as we stirre vp Gods graces mutually in one another and like coales which are heaped vp together not onely preserue the heate of the loue and zeale which is kindled in vs and would coole and die if wee were scattered from one another but also inflame those which are next vnto vs with our heate which being set on fire will also kindle those who are neere vnto them In which regard that of the Wise man is truely verified The lips of the righteous feede many but Pro. 10. 21. fooles who refuse all communion and fellowship with them die and perish for want of wisedome And as it is a singular meanes to inlighten our minds with the knowledge of the truth and to inflame our hearts with the loue of it so also to make vse of all wee know and affect by our holy practice when as by our mutuall exhortations we incourage and stirre vp one another vnto new obedience and to performe all good duties of a Christian life and helpe both our selues and others with such good counsels and directions which being obserued will make the wayes of holinesse and righteousnesse easie familiar and pleasant vnto vs. Adde heereunto the great necessity of these religious conferences and of what great moment the vse or neglect of them is for our saluation or damnation Neither are wee with the common sort to esteeme words as winde or if we doe such a winde as will bring great profit or hurt either much furthering vs towards the Hauen of happinesse or like a tempestuous storme blowing vs vpon the rockes of perdition For the Wise man saith A mans belly shall Pro. 18. 20 21. be satisfied with the fruit of his mouth and with the increase of his lips shall hee be filled Death and life are in the power of the tongue and they that loue it shall eate the fruit thereof And as he expoundeth himselfe in another place A Pro. 13. 2. man shall eate good by the fruit of his mouth namely if his tongue vttereth good things but the soule of the transgressours shall eate violence And our Sauiour hath taught vs that we shall be called to account for euery idle word Mat. 12 36 37. at the day of Iudgement and that by our words we shall be iustified and by our words we shall be condemned Finally let vs remember how faithfull in this kind the wicked are in the deuils seruice being neuer weary in vttering such speeches as are vaine and vnprofitable or hurtfull and pernicious and let this make vs ashamed of our negligence if
the Sunne and the breath of the winde hath some resemblance to the breath of life §. Sect. 3 That all those deceiue themselues who disioyne faith from a godly life Where by the way wee may perceiue that diuers sorts of men are notably deceiued and coozen themselues of their owne saluation As first carnall gospellers and prophane protestants who bragge of their faith as being strong and certaine and yet liue in all impiety and vnrighteousnesse bringing forth no fruits of their faith in good workes and the duties of a godly life Secondly ciuill worldlings and superstitious Papists who pleasing themselues with their blinde deuotion will-worship humane inuentions and some outward shewes of good workes as fastings penances almesdeeds hospitality and such like doe thinke God also pleased with them and will reward them with heauenly happinesse when as they are destitute of true faith and vtterly ignorant of God and his will making no conscience of the duties of the first Table to performe them in that manner which God hath required but eyther neglect them altogether or else doe them according to their owne meanings wills and humane inuentions and traditions Thirdly such as being touched with some inward guilt of conscience for their sinnes through some affliction or vpon the hearing of some powerfull Sermon doe somewhat grieue for their sinnes and so betake themselues at least in many things to a new course of life The which their sorrow accompanied with this reformation they thinke pleasing to God and sufficient to secure them of their saluation though they bee destitute of the sauing knowledge of God and a liuely faith in Christ and doe these duties not out of loue towards God following their assurance of his loue towards them but out of selfe-loue and seruile feare either of temporall punishments or eternall death and condemnation But let them all know that a liuely faith and a godly life are inseparable companions which neuer goe asunder for as well may we part the heate from the fire the light from the Sunne and make a good tree retaining still its nature barraine of fruit as separate true faith and a godly life one from another And therefore that the strong faith of carnall Protestants is nothing else but fruitlesse security and fond presumption that the deuotion and good workes of ciuill worldlings and ignorant Papists are blind superstition will-worship and glorious sinnes like trees that haue no roots and faire buildings that haue no foundation and that the sudden flood of sorrow raised by some tempest of conscience or storme of affliction and springeth not from the fountaine of faith is but worldly sorrow that causeth death which commonly lasteth but a while and when the causes of it are remooued doth easily giue place to the contrary extreme of worldly reioycing and carnall liberty §. Sect. 4 Of a generall faith Now the faith that is required vnto a godly life as the ground and foundation of it is either generall or speciall The generall faith is a common gift of the Spirit by which we beleeue and giue firme assent to the whole Word of God as true and certaine It is called generall because the obiect of it is generall euen the whole Word of God and euery part of it and but a common gift of the Spirit because it may be in the reprobate as well as in the elect seeing it applyeth not Christ and his benefits for our iustification For by this faith Ahab beleeuing and assenting to the truth of Gods threatnings outwardly humbled himselfe and so adiourned his punishments And the Nineuites beleeuing the truth of Gods Word in the mouth of Ionas repented as they beleeued that is after a generall and legall manner out of feare to bee attached with those heauy iudgements which were threatned and so escaped them Yet this faith is more then a doubtfull opinion seeing it firmely assenteth to the whole truth and is to be preferred before naturall knowledge and persvvasion grounded vpon the euidence of sense and reason seeing it resteth vpon the sole authority of Gods infallible truth and consequently is more firme and vndoubted 2. Pet. 1. 19. because sense and reason may be deceiued but the truth of God can neuer faile Againe though it be not a sanctifying gift of the Spirit yet it is more properly then the other a gift of the sanctifying Spirit and necessary vnto iustifying faith as being a degree leading to it as also vnto a godly life seeing it is required that not onely all wee doe be agreeable to the Scriptures but also that we beleeue and be perswaded that they are agreeable for as the Apostle teacheth vs whatsoeuer is done in doubting whether it please God or no and hath not this warrant of faith to make vs confident it is though materially a good action yet formally no better then sinne in Gods sight Rom. 14. 23. §. Sect. 5 Of iustifying faith what it is and what are the things required vnto it The speciall faith which is the maine ground of a godly life is a true liuely and iustifying faith which is a sanctifying grace infused by Gods holy Spirit whereby wee doe firmely and effectually beleeue and assent vnto the promises of the Gospell especially those which offer Christ and his benefits vnto vs and also them particularly vnto our selues with assurance that they all doe belong vnto vs and so rest wholly vpon them for our iustification and saluation whereby it appeareth that there are foure things required vnto iustifying faith First knowledge of Gods Word especially the gracious promise of Christ and all his benefits to all that will receiue him as their Sauiour and rest vpon him for their saluation For first we must know the promises before we can beleeue them according to that of the Apostle How shall they beleeue in him of whom they Rom. 10. 14 17. haue not heard namely by the preaching of the Gospell for as faith commeth by hearing so this hearing is only of the Word of God Secondly assent to the truth of the Scriptures especially the promises of the Gospell for after that our mindes are inlightened with the knowledge of Gods truth by which is reuealed vnto vs first our sinne and misery and that we cannot by our selues nor the helpe of any creature come out of it to the end that we may be humbled and despaire of our owne strength and secondly the infinite loue of God and his free mercies in Iesus Christ together with the gracious promises of the Gospell made in him whereby is offered vnto vs mercy reconciliation the forgiuenesse of our sinnes and the saluation of our soules to all that beleeue and will receiue them by the hand of faith bringing foorth the fruits thereof in hearty repentance and new obedience then doth Gods holy Spirit by his secret operation make the Ministery of the Word effectuall to worke in vs a firme assent to this truth of God respecting our saluation not
so much in respect of the cleere euidence heereof in it selfe or the forciblenesse of the arguments which are brought to conuince and perswade naturall reason as in regard of Gods authority who is most infallible in his truth infinite in his goodnesse and almighty to performe whatsoeuer he hath promised Which assent being effectuall in vs doth worke in our vnderstandings a perswasion that our sinnes though in themselues haynous yet compared with Gods infinite mercies and the all-sufficient merits of Iesus Christ are pardonable in our iudgements a precious and high esteeme of these mercies and merits aboue all worldly things In our hearts an hungring and thirsting desire to be made partakers of them for the remission of our sinnes in our wils a firme resolution to renounce all other meanes and to rest wholly vpon Gods mercies and Christs merits for our iustification and saluation And in our actions a carefull indeuour to vse all good meanes whereby we may bee more and more assured of Gods loue in Christ and among the rest in all things to please God in all our thoughts words and workes that so we may glorifie him from whom wee expect so great grace and mercy and make our calling and election sure The third thing required is an apprehension and application of the promises of the Gospell the infinite mercies of God and all-sufficient merits of Christ vnto our selues in particular which is the forme and very life of faith and maketh the things thus applyed vsefull and effectuall for our iustification and without which wee shall haue no more benefit by them then a man hath by a soueraigne salue and cordiall medicine not applyed and taken or by warme clothes which are not put on The last thing required is affiance and confidence when as knowing assenting vnto and applying Gods mercies and Christs merits vnto our selues we rest and rely wholly vpon them for our iustification and saluation §. Sect. 6 That after illuminatiō there are three degrees of faith and the maner how they are wrought in vs. So that after illumination there are three degrees of faith the first is an effectuall assent to the promises of the Gospell which worketh in our hearts an hungring desire after Christ and his benefits and in our wills a resolution to cast our selues vpon him alone for our saluation By which the Christian truly liueth but yet like a new borne babe who weakely performeth the actions of life but knoweth not that he either liueth or mooueth And so weake it is in apprehension and application that he can hardly discerne it and often calleth in question whether he hath any hold at all or no. It is strong in desiring but feeble in performing resolued by all meanes to sticke vnto Christ but yet scarce sensible of any vnion It admireth the glorious beames and brightnesse of Gods loue shining in the Word but feeleth little warmth of ioy and comfort by it in his owne heart and conscience It worketh in the weake Christian an hungring after the sincere milke of the Word that he may grow vp thereby but with little or no sense that he is nourished or any whit increased in the spirituall growth He seeketh earnestly for grace and peace but they seeme to fly from him and is still wishing for more and more but hath little comfort in feeling and fruition His desires so farre exceed the proportion which he hath receiued that it is swallowed vp of them so that nothing in appearance remaineth And like couetous men he thinketh not on what he hath but vpon what he hath not and spends a great part of that time in complaints of his wants which should be imployed in praysing God for that plenty which hee hath receiued But this faith is still in growth though they that haue it doe not see it growing for the Lord is no more ready to inlarge our hearts with hungring desires after grace then to satisfie them this being his maine end why like the Merchant hee stretcheth out these empty bags that he may replenish them with a greater portion of these hid treasures And therefore when the weake beleeuer carefully and conscionably laboureth in the vse of all good meanes for the strengthening and increasing of his faith as hearing the Word Sacraments Meditation Prayer and such like the Lord with his Spirit so blesseth them vnto him that from this first degree of faith he commeth to the second namely to a comfortable apprehension of Gods promises as belonging to himselfe to some sense and feeling of the loue of God shed abroad in his heart by the holy Ghost and to some assurance that hee in particular hath part and interest in Gods mercies and Christs merits whereby he is iustified and shall be saued And this is the second degree of faith which being but weake in the apprehension of Christ and his righteousnesse and in the sense and feeling of Gods loue is assaulted with much doubting and oftentimes shaken with grieuous tentations whereby the Christians hold seemeth for the time wholly lost and his faith in the operations of it almost quite extinguished and therefore hauing attained vnto this degree he resteth not in it as sufficient but laboureth in the vse of all good meanes whereby his faith may bee more and more strengthened and increased vntill it come to the third and last degree of perfection which is that plerophorie and fulnesse of perswasion of the remission of our sinnes of our vnion with Christ and Gods vnchangeable Rom. 8. 38 39. loue towards vs in him from which nothing in the world shall be able to diuide vs as we see in the Apostle Pauls example Vpon which followeth Christian security in the assurance of Gods protection and peace of conscience that passeth all vnderstanding which though it be assaulted yet Rom. 5. 3. is seldome impeached and impugned with any violence of tentations trouble of mind or terrours of conscience And from hence springeth inward ioy vnspeakeable and glorious out of our assurance and sweete feeling 1. Pet. 1. 8. of Gods loue and the certaine perswasion of our owne saluation whereby wee are made cheerefull and constant not onely in doing all which God commandeth but also in suffering whatsoeuer hee inflicteth §. Sect. 7 That the duties of a godly life hold a proportion with our faith whether it bee weake or strong And these are the degrees of a liuely faith without which or some one of them we cannot doe any thing pleasing vnto God or set one step forward in the way of godlinesse for faith is a cause and an inseparable companion of a godly life of which if we be destitute in the least degrees well may we be ignorantly deuout and zealously superstitious but wee shall neuer performe any one dutie in such sort as God will accept of it And according to the degree and measure of our faith such also will bee our fruits of godlinesse they holding a proportion the one with
Commandement And Iehoshaphat is commended because he sought the Lord God of his father and walked in his commandements which duties if 2. Chro. 17. 4. we ioyne together we shall be blessed according to that of the Psalmist Blessed are they that keepe his Testimonies and that seeke him with their whole heart Psal 119. 2. §. Sect. 8 That we must seeke to haue and hold Gods grace and fauour in Iesus Christ Finally to this duty of seeking God is required that we seeke to haue and to hold his face and fauour in Iesus Christ desiring nothing more in Act. 17. 28. the world then to haue the bright beames of his countenance continually shining vpon vs and to finde and feele the sweete and vitall influences of his fauour warming our hearts with ioy and comfort for in him wee liue and mooue and haue our being and if hee graciously behold vs with the benigne aspect of his mercy and loue we liue and flourish but if hee doe turne away his face we are troubled and if he but blow vpon vs with the Ps 104. 29 30. breath of his displeasure our breath will faile and dying we shall returne to our dust He is the life-giuing Planet and Sunne of all comfort and ioy who by the beames and influences of his fauour both giueth vs life and preserueth vs in our well-being And therefore as the inferiour creatures are much indammaged when in the eclipses of the Sunne they are for a short time depriued of its presence and vitall influences so cannot our soules but receiue much hurt and spirituall detriment if the beames of Gods fauour be for the shortest moment eclipsed from vs. Heereof it is that we are exhorted to seeke the Lord and his face because in him our Psal 105. 4. life and strength vertue and vigour chiefly consisteth Seeke the Lord and Hos 5. 15. Psal 106. 4. his strength seeke his face euermore And therefore no sooner was Dauid mooued to performe this duty but presently he vndertaketh it as being aboue all other things most pleasant and profitable When thou saydest Psal 27. 8. saith he Seeke yee my face my heart said vnto thee Thy face Lord will I Vers 9. seeke And hence it is that if the Lord did neuer so little estrange himselfe he doth so earnestly pray that hee would not hide his face from him and cryeth out as a man vtterly forlorne and forsaken of all hope and comfort My God my God why hast thou forsaken me why art thou so farre Psal 22. 1. from helping me and from the words of my roaring And contrariwise when he inioyed Gods face and fauour he thought himselfe much more happy then in the fruition of all earthly blessings There are many saith he that say Who will shew vs any good Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance Psal 4. 6 7. vpon vs. Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more then in the time that their corne and wine increased Now the meanes whereby we may preserue and assure vnto our selues the face fauour and louing countenance of God is daily to striue and labour after greater perfection in all spirituall graces and in the duties of his seruice as to know him more perfectly to beleeue in him more assuredly to loue him more intirely to feare him more reuerently to trust in him more firmely to hope in him more cheerefully and patiently to call vpon him more deuoutly and feruently to heare his Word more attentiuely and to performe all the duties of piety righteousnesse and sobriety more sincerely and diligently then we did the day before And if we thus labour and indeuour to please God in all things we shall be sure of his fauour and notwithstanding our manifold infirmities he will shine vpon vs with the light of his countenance and graciously accept and be well pleased with vs in the face of his Beloued and our Mat. 3. 17. onely Sauiour Iesus Christ CAP. V. Of the right manner of seeking God so as we may be sure to finde him and of the benefits which arise from it §. Sect. 1 That we must seeke God first and principally seasonably and constantly AND these are the things which are required to this duty of seeking God daily The second point propounded was the Matth. 6. 33. manner how he is to be thus sought of vs. In which respect wee are to seeke him rightly according to the direction of his Word Wherein is required first that we seeke God first and principally that is aboue all things in the world more highly esteeming him in our iudgements more often thinking on him in our meditations more feruently cleauing vnto him in our hearts wils and affections more diligently seeking his grace and fauour in all our actions then the greatest excellencies that heauen or earth can affoord vnto vs. Secondly wee must seeke him first in time and before all other things as men vse to seeke first things chiefly necessary profitable and of greatest value and excellency and when they haue any spare time things of lesse vse vtility or worth as treasures before lumber meanes of life foode apparell liberty and peace before superfluities and such things as serue onely for ornament and delight Thirdly wee must seeke him in the opportune seasonable and acceptable time when he may bee found that is whilst the day of saluation lasteth and whilst yet God offreth vnto vs his grace and fauour and still vouchsafeth vnto vs his holy Ordinances that seeking we may find him in them Yea whilst God biddeth vs seeke his face and euen assoone as the word is come out of his mouth our hearts must answere Thy face O Lord will I seeke So the Lord by his Prophet Psal 27. 8. exhorteth vs Seeke ye the Lord while he may be found and call vpon him while he is neere And the Church and people of God perswade one another Esa 55. 6. Let vs goe speedily to pray before the Lord and to seeke the Lord of hosts and Zach. 8. 21. I will goe also We must seeke the Bridegroome when hee is come into his Garden and inuiteth vs to feast with him in his spirituall delicacies And whilst he knocketh at the dore of our hearts with the finger of his Spirit and calleth vnto vs by the ministery of his Word saying Open vnto mee Cant. 5. 1 2. my sister my loue my doue my vndefiled Wee must not giue him a come-againe nor put him off with slight excuses lest he punish our sloth by withdrawing himselfe and the comforts of his Spirit from vs and because we would not open when he knocked nor answere when hee called he make vs to knocke and call and cry before he will heare vs and to seeke him with sorrow before he will be found of vs that so he may make vs afterwards to esteeme more of his gracious offers and to make more precious account of his comfortable
and stretch out our hands towards him If iniquity be in our Iob 11. 13 14. hand we must put it away and not let wickednesse dwell in our tabernacles For if we doe not wash and make vs cleane and put away the euill of our doings but come before him defiled in our sins then though wee spread forth our hands Esa 1. 15 16. God will hide his eyes from vs and when we make many prayers he wil not heare CAP. XIIII Of such things as are required as essentiall vnto prayer §. Sect. 1 That we must pray in truth with attention and not with wandring thoughts IN respect of the action many things are required both in regard of the substance and circumstances Of the former 1. Iohn 5. 14. Iam. 4. 3. sort are the essentials of prayer as 1. in generall that it bee according to Gods reuealed will for if wee frame not our prayers according to this rule we shall goe awry and asking amisse obtaine nothing More especially there is required that wee worship God internally with our hearts as well as externally with our bodies and that we powre forth our soules vnto him in our prayers as Hannah 1. Sam. 1. 15. Psalm 25. 1. Lam. 3. 41. did so as we may say with Dauid Vnto thee O Lord I lift vp my soule and with the afflicted Church Let vs lift vp our heart with our hands vnto God in the heauens For God is a Spirit and will be worshipped in spirit and truth Ioh. 4. 24. Prou. 23. 26. Ier. 29. 13. and aboue all other seruice he requireth the seruice of the heart seeing all other without it is but meere hypocrisie Neither can we hope to obtaine any thing at Gods hands vnlesse our prayers proceed from sincere and vpright hearts seeing he hath limited his promise of hearing only to such according to that of the Psalmist The Lord is neere vnto all that call vpon Psal 145. 18. him to all that call vpon him in truth Let vs therefore take heed when wee call vpon God that our prayer be in truth and not onely the words of the mouth but the prayer of the soule And to this end that we doe with like care auoyd praying with a lying tongue and deceitfull lips when as wee Psal 17. 1. and 119. 7. aske those things with our mouthes which wee desire not in our hearts like those hypocriticall Israelites of whom the Lord complaineth that they had spoken lies against him not crying vnto him with their heart when Hos 7. 13 14. they howled vpon their beds Secondly praying with wandring thoughts hauing when we direct our speech in prayer vnto God our mindes and hearts rouing about worldly vanities and our earthly affaires without either respect to Gods presence or the suits that we haue in hand For this is a grosse abuse of Gods Maiesty which wee are ashamed to offer to our superiours yea euen to our equals speaking vnto them and yet not minding what we say It discouereth great irreuerence and neglect of Gods glorious presence who beholding the secrets of our hearts seeth how far they and our tongues are one from another It argueth great security and hardnesse of heart when as we thus approch into his presence and offer vnto him such heartlesse sacrifices not fearing that dreadfull speech sealed and confirmed by such a terrible example that the Lord will be sanctified and glorified in them that come nigh him either in his mercies or in his Leuit. 10. 2 3. iudgements It makes prayer to bee no prayer but lip-labour and the wind of words which is not the language of the mouth but the speech of the heart It causeth vs to spend our labour in vaine when as we minde not what we say For how shall God vouchsafe to vnderstand our suits when as we our selues will take no notice of them Or how shall he giue vs his rich graces of greatest value when as wee so meanely esteeme them that we can coldly and carelesly aske them at his hands and not thinke them worthy the minding and affecting in our soules and hearts §. Sect. 2 That we must with all diligence banish out of our minds all wandring thoghts and the means hereof And yet seeing through the malice of the diuell and our owne corruption we are euen at our best apt to fall into this foule infirmity let vs with Jer. ●2 40. Psal 86. 11. all care and diligence looke to our hearts when wee performe this duty and earnestly desire the Lord to tye them fast vnto himselfe in the bonds of his feare that they may not in this holy exercise slip aside and depart from him And if wee finde our sinfull flesh so sluggish and secure so worldly and earthly-minded that it dulleth our deuotion and stealeth and carryeth euery hand while our hearts away after things impertinent if not worldly and carnall I think it a good course in our priuate prayer to repeate that againe in which wee were distracted labouring in our repetition to call our hearts backe to ioyne with our voyce seeing heereof commeth a double benefit first that wee shall haue our suites more powerfully offered vnto God when as they are propounded in this hearty manner And secondly hereby we shall tame the flesh and make it not so eager to interrupt vs in these holy duties when as the spirituall part imposeth vpon it this punishment by way of reuenge for its sloth and worldlinesse to make it to continue so much the longer at this exercise vnto which naturally it is so backward and auerse and not to feed it selfe vpon any worldly thoughts wherein it wholly delighteth till it haue first waited on the Spirit and suffered it without interruption to refresh it selfe with this heauenly breakfast Let vs meditate also on that glorious presence before whom we stand who looketh not so much to the phrase of our words and the well-running stile of our speech as to the discourse of our soules and hearts which being so full of distractions and senselesse rauings and rouings from the matter one while speaking to God and as it were with the same breath and in the middest of a sentence breaking off and speaking to the world iumbling and confusedly mingling things spirituall and carnall heauenly and earthly holy and profane how can it be but vgly and mis-shapen in his sight being like Anticke-worke consisting of monstrous compositions wherein the body of a bird and the taile of a serpent the face and fore-part of a man and the hind-part and legs of a beast or the taile of a fish are ioyned together Let vs thinke vpon the excellency profit and necessity of those gifts and graces which in our prayers wee desire of God and how infinitely they excell those worldly vanities which Satan and our owne flesh doe cast into our minds to distract vs in our suites Vnto vvhose suggestions it is no lesse folly to listen then
may I say of sports and recreations Giue them not to them who neede them not hauing no vse of refreshing before they haue laboured nor of repairing their strength before it is spent but vnto those who are wearied with paines-taking that they may more freshly returne to their labours Secondly in respect of time there is required that recreations be onely vsed in such seasons as by God are allowed and allotted vnto them And that is not on the dayes of our rest but on the dayes of our labour not on Gods Sabbaths which he hath appropriated to his seruice but vpon the weeke dayes which he hath allowed for our owne vse For if the Lord hath inhibited the workes of our callings which in themselues are in their seasons lawfull and necessary and cannot be neglected without sinne yea if he will not allow vs on his Day to speake our owne words or to Esa 58. 11 12 13. thinke our owne thoughts because hee would haue vs wholly deuoted and consecrated to the duties of his seruice then much more doth he inhibite sports and recreations which tend not at all to the sanctification of his Sabbaths and are of an inferiour nature and lesse excellency and necessity and which also in respect of their carnall delight most pleasing to the flesh are more likely to steale away our hearts and to distract vs in the performance of holy duties And therefore on this Day the recreation of our bodies ought to be their resting from all labour which is not necessary to the duties of the Sabbath and the recreation of our mindes must be in changing their obiect not imploying them in worldly cogitations but about spirituall exercises hearing the Word praying and praysing of God holy conferences and lifting them vp in heauenly meditations And the like also may be said of the Sabbaths of humiliation when wee humble our selues solemnly in the congregation or priuately by our selues in the sight and sense of our sinnes by fasting and prayer or when some iudgement and affliction is feared or inflicted either vpon our selues or the Church or some speciall members of it which wee desire to preuent or that being inflicted it should bee remooued For if it were not lawfull at those times for Gods people to delight themselues with the vse Exod. 33. 5. of their best clothes no not to refresh their bodies with their ordinary foode then much lesse is it lawfull at such times to feast and sport our selues with pleasures and recreations And this is the sinne which the Lord taxeth in the Iewes In that day saith the Prophet did the Lord of hoasts Esa 22. 12. call to weeping and to mourning and to baldnesse and to girding with sackecloth and behold ioy and gladnesse slaying oxen and killing sheepe eating flesh and drinking wine Saying Let vs eate and drinke for to morrow we shall dye And also in the Israelites who when the Church of God was afflicted and they therby called to humiliation did lye at ease pamper their bellies with full diet Amos 6. 5 6 7. chanted to the sound of the Viole and inuented vnto themselues instruments of musicke like Dauid dranke wine in bolles and anoynted themselues with the chiefe oyntments but were not grieued for the affliction of Ioseph §. Sect. 6 That we must consort our selues with good company The sixth caution is that for our recreation sake we doe not willingly consort our selues with euill company obseruing heerein the Apostles rule Eph. 5. 11. Haue no fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of darkenesse but rather reprooue them Wherein our care ought to be the greater because nothing more causeth neere familiarity and friendly acquaintance then agreement and communion in the same delights and nothing sooner breedeth likenesse of manners and conditions then when in our pleasures wee iumpe and conioyne together with one minde and affection So that as our recreations with them that truely feare God are strong bonds to tye vs vnto them in loue and forcible motiues to make vs also ioyne with them whom wee so loue in all good duties and vertuous actions so contrariwise communicating with prophane persons and carnall worldlings in our sports and pastimes causeth vs in time to proceede from liking of the pleasure to like the party that ioyneth with vs in it and from affecting of the man wee come at last to affect his manners Neither is there more danger in the time of plague for one that is sound to keepe in the same house with those that are sicke then for a true Christian to consort in pleasure with such as make no conscience of their wayes seeing as well from the one as from the other there issueth and spreadeth a secret poyson which with its contagion infecteth those that come into their company §. Sect. 7 That we must take heed that our recreations do not steale away our hearts from God Seuenthly wee must take care that in our recreations wee forget not God and that they doe not steale our hearts from him vnto worldly vanities 2. Tim. 3. 4. lest by degrees we dote so much vpon them that wee come vnder that censure of the Apostle of being louers of pleasures more then louers of God and grow like those Israelites against whom the Prophet denounced a fearefull woe who spent the day in quaffing and carousing and had the Harpe and the Viole the Tabret and the Pipe and wine at their feasts but regarded not the worke of the Lord neither considered the operation of his hands Esa 5. 12. Which if we would auoid we must often take occasion from our pleasures to thinke of the Author of them and bee ashamed that an Heathen Poet should be more forward in the fruition of his peace and pleasure to acknowledge Augustus as his God that sent them then wee to remember Virgil. Eclog. 1. Deus nobis haec otia fecit namque erit ille mihi semper Deus c. and acknowledge the bounty and goodnesse of our gracious Lord who hath multiplied his blessings vpon vs not onely seruing for necessity but also for pleasure and delight Secondly if wee would not forget God in our sports and recreations nor haue our hearts drawne away from him wee must sanctifie them to our vse by the Word and prayer Thinking before we vndertake any if it bee agreeable with Gods will reuealed in the Scriptures or at least of an indifferent nature and not forbidden And being perswaded that it is lawfull in it selfe we must before we enter vpon it make it lawfull vnto vs by hearty prayer for Gods blessing vpon it not vsing if we be in company audible words and visible gestures and actions which would sauour too much of hypocriticall ostentation but lifting vp our hearts and soules onely vnto God by short prayers and eiaculations And as wee are thus to begin them with prayer so we must end them with thankesgiuing praysing the holy Name of our
serued God by fasting and prayer but also had so trained vp her maides in the true feare of God that they were fit to beare her company By which examples wee learne that there are no distractions so great no imployments so waighty which should hinder any gouernours of families from performance of the like duties §. Sect. 2 Diuers reasons which may mooue gouernours to the performance of this duty To which end let vs consider first that euery family is a member and part of the whole body which ought to resemble it in nature and gouernment Col. 4. 15. and as it were a particular Church in which the publike duties are priuately to bee performed as the Apostle teacheth vs whereas hee saluteth Nymphas and the Church which was in his house and the Master of the family representeth the Minister and the rest of the house the people in the Congregation who are to bee gouerned and instructed by him whereof it is that the Apostle would not haue wiues and women to speake in the Church and publikely to propound their doubts in the assembly but to craue resolution of their husbands at home Secondly let vs consider that inferiours are set vnder our gouernement 1. Cor. 14. 35. not as bruite creatures but as reasonable men and therefore that not their bodies and bodily imployments alone are committed vnto our charge for gouernement and direction but their soules likewise that they may bee trayned vp by vs in all religious duties and spirituall exercises for which wee shall giue an account vnto God hovv vvee haue indeuoured to make them to thriue vnder vs in the grovvth of Christianity and fitted them for the seruice of God as vvell as hovv vvee haue taught them their Trades and in vvhat sort they should demeane themselues towards vs in our seruice So that if vvee take no further care of them then vvee doe of our beasts that is onely so to gouerne feede and order them as that they may bee fitted for earthly imployments and for the aduancing of our worldly profit when that their soules perish through our negligence their blood will bee vpon our heads and wee shall haue a fearefull account to make at the day of Iudgement Thirdly let vs consider that the family is the Seminary of the Church and Common-wealth and as a priuate schoole wherin children and seruants are fitted for the publike assemblies as it were the Vniuersities to performe when they meete together all religious duties of Gods worship and seruice And as it is a notable meanes to make Vniuersities to flourish and the Students in them to succeed and prosper in their studies when as the Masters of priuate schooles doe well fit and prepare them teach and nurture them in learning and manners before they send them thither So if Masters of priuate families would carefully traine vp all their houshold in the feare of God and in the exercises of Christian Religion all the weeke they would with more cheerefulnesse on Gods Sabbaths come vnto the publike assemblies and with much more reuerence and attention care and conscience set themselues as in Gods presence to heare his Word and call vpon his holy Name much better vnderstand what they heare and lay it vp in memorie profit farre more by the vse of Gods holy Ordinances for the conscionable practice of what they know and thriue more in their spirituall growth in one Sabbath then others can doe in many who for want of instruction in the maine principles and acquaintance with the Scriptures by priuate reading vnderstand not what they heare in the publike Ministery and not being seasoned all the weeke in any religious duties can finde no taste or rellish in them when on the Sabbath they come to performe them with the rest of the congregation Fourthly let vs know that by this exercise we shall not onely doe much good vnto those whom wee instruct but also vnto our selues seeing thereby wee doe stirre vp and increase Gods graces in our owne hearts as well as in theirs For heereby we shall mooue the Lord to impart vnto vs a larger measure of his gifts when as wee doe so freely communicate them to the vse of our brethren and to impart his will and counsels vnto vs when as with Abraham wee Gen. 18. 19. will teach them vnto our children and houshold wee shall learne much in teaching others because it will giue vs occasion to set our wits more seriously for the finding out of the truth then in our priuate studies and Meditations and much cleare our iudgements when we labour to deliuer the things that we teach plainely and distinctly which were before confusedly heaped vp together in our vnderstandings as it were in the whole lumpe Wee shall thereby much strengthen our memories whilest by teaching others the things wee know wee shall worke them into them and cause them to make a deeper impression Finally we shall inflame our hearts with the loue of good things by those meanes which we vse to worke the like affection in the hearts of others and prouoke our selues vnto a conscionable practice of what wee know by the same arguments and reasons which wee vse to perswade them vnto it And consequently in seeking to saue them we shall also thereby much further our owne saluation according to that of the Apostle to Timothy Meditate vpon these things giue thy selfe wholly to them that thy profiting may appeare to all Take heede vnto thy selfe and vnto the doctrine continue therein for in so doing thou shalt both saue thy selfe and them that heare thee Which priuiledges howsoeuer they belong more principally to the publike Ministery yet doe they in some good proportion appertaine also to those who exercise themselues in this priuate dutie of teaching their family Fifthly let vs consider that it is the best meanes to make our children and seruants faithfull and conscionable in performing their duties vnto vs when they are first made carefull and conscionable in Gods seruice For when their hearts are seasoned with the true feare of God then doe they Eph. 6. 5 6 7 8. Col. 3. 22 23 24. performe their dutie as vnto God in vs not out of seruile feare but for conscience sake not for temporall rewards but in hope and assurance of those that are heauenly and eternall not with eye-seruice as men-pleasers but with singlenesse of heart as in the sight presence of God whom they labor to please in all things seeing from him they expect the chiefest and best part of their wages and reward Which meanes if masters and parents neglect let them neuer complaine of bad seruants and vntoward children for it is iust with God that these should neglect their duties toward them when as they by neglecting their duties in trayning them vp in his feare doe cause them to neglect their duties towards him Sixthly let vs remember that if we will thus set vp Gods Kingdome in our families he will gouerne
shamefull ouerthrow vnlesse our Christian Armour be put on and fastened vnto vs with the girdle of verity and vnlesse wee be trained vp in this Christian warfare and taught rightly to vse the sword of the Spirit the Word of God Now if vowes must be paid without delay then Psal 76. 11. how much more this which importeth vs as much as our saluation A third reason may be taken from Gods loue and fatherly care and prouidence watching ouer vs and preseruing vs from all perils and dangers in the time of our infancie and childehood vnto which as we were naturally most prone so were wee vtterly vnable to auoid them by our owne prouidence or to vse any meanes to helpe our selues Which consideration should moue vs as soone as we are come to knowledge and discretion to testifie our thankefulnesse by learning his waies that wee may walke in them and thereby glorifie him who hath so graciously preserued vs. Fourthly let vs consider that the Law was giuen not onely to the ancient and them of ripe age but also to children and young men that they might cleanse their wayes by taking heede thereunto according to Gods Psal 119. 9. Word which made Iosuah to reade it vnto them all alike And both old Iosh 8. 35. and yong shall be called to giue an account of their workes and waies at the last day according to that in the Reuelation I saw the dead great and Apoc. 20. 12. small stand before God and the bookes were opened c. and the dead were iudged out of those things which were written in those bookes according to their workes And therefore the young as well as the old must prepare themselues for their reckoning and learne both what strength the Booke of the Law hath to indite and condemne him and how by the Gospell they may trauerse this inditement and be acquitted from that dreadfull sentence of condemnation by pleading full satisfaction by Iesus Christ And therefore when his soule wallowing it selfe in carnall delights saith vnto him Reioyce Eccles 11. 9. O yong man in thy youth and let thine heart cheere thee in the dayes of thy youth and walke in the waies of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes then let him remember that for all these things God will bring him to iudgement Fifthly consider that this age aboue all others is most fit to receiue and retaine instruction and information in the wayes of the Lord as also reformation and amendment of our sinfull courses Which if it bee deferred to riper age they will be lesse able to learne the will and wayes of God to hold them in memory or to obey and walke in them For the faculties of the soule will bee more enfeebled and they distracted with earthly cares and loue of the world ambition couetousnesse voluptuousnesse they will then be more apt to content themselues with their ignorance wherin they haue bin so long nuzzled their passions will grow strong and violent and custome of sinning laying fast hold on them will pull them backe from the schoole of piety yea will make them openly to professe that they are now too old to learne by all which who seeth not how desperately they hazzard their saluation who put off instruction and neglect the meanes of it in the time of their youth And therefore let vs hearken to the Wise mans counsell and remember now our Creator in the daies of our Eccles 12. 1. youth while the euill daies come not nor the yeeres draw nigh when thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them Sixthly let vs remember that God would haue first fruits offered vnto him as a type to teach vs that the prime of our age is an oblation wherein he chiefly delighteth that our Sauiour was much pleased when little children entertained him with their applause Crying Math. 21. 15. Psal 8. 2. Hosanna to the Sonne of Dauid that God out of the mouth of babes and sucklings hath ordained strength because of his enemies that he might stil the enemie the auenger Finally that in the time of the law they were inioyned to offer vnto God the yong and lusty not the old and lame to shew that the Lord would haue the prime of our age and strength consecrated to his seruice although in the Gospell all are inuited to the marriage Supper the poore Luke 14. 21. maimed halt and blinde because so we bring with vs the wedding garment it is better in our age to come halting to the feast and through the dimnesse of our sight groping for the right way then to frame worldly excuses and absent our selues altogether §. Sect. 9 Of the great profit of this exercise of catechizing Lastly let the profit manifold benefits which accompany this dutie be an effectuall meanes to perswade vs vnto it For they only are saued who Ioh. 3. 16 17 36 Mar. 16. 16. Rom. 10. 15 17. haue faith and they faith alone who haue knowledge both which come by hearing as the Apostle teacheth vs How shall they call vpon him in whom they haue not beleeued and how shall they beleeue in him of whom they haue not heard and how shall they heare without a Preacher So then faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the Word of God And this the Apostate Iulian well knew and therefore to roote out the Church he thought it the most effectuall way to put downe Christian Schooles and Religious exercises that being depriued of all meanes of knowledge hee might leade them in their ignorance which way hee listed Secondly it is a notable meanes to free them from errours and heresies when they are grounded in the knowledge of the truth and the analogie of faith that will serue them as a touchstone and rule according to which doctrines must bee examined which whoso want may easily be led euen into fundamentall errours For as the Apostle saith there must bee heresies in the world vnto 1. Cor. 11. 19. which men naturally are more inclined then vnto the truth and therefore we must not hand ouer head hearken vnto euery spirit nor when we heare iudge of them according to our naturall reason but wee must as the Apostle Iohn exhorteth vs try them whether they be of God or no by 1. Ioh. 4. 1. bringing them to be examined by the touchstone of his Truth The which wee shall be vtterly vnable to doe if we be not acquainted with the Scriptures and haue no knowledge of the maine principles and the analogie of faith contayned in them Where by the way wee may note the cause why Popery so much increaseth amongst vs namely because for want of catechizing in many places the people remaine ignorant of the principles of Christian Religion and so vpon the alleadging of any carnall reason plausible to corrupted nature they become an easie prey to the Priests and Iesuites Thirdly It helpeth notably to the hearing of Sermons with profit
the office of an accuser then of a Iudge and lastly of a mediatour to craue pardon and sometime find out thy selfe For hee willingly erreth who knoweth not his errour and too much loueth himselfe who will haue others erre that his errour may lye hid By which exercise wee should receiue singular profit For hereby wee should preserue our soules and hearts in a thriuing estate when wee doe like wise Merchants and shopkeepers examine them and search ouer our consciences as it were our bookes of accounts to see whether wee haue gayned or lost in our spirituall trading by examining what wee haue receiued and what we haue layd out which if we would doe we should not easily be cast behind hand when as we preuent our errours and vse meanes to repaire our losses in their first beginnings nor as many are be bankrupted in our estates at vnawares for want of care to examine them Wee should sleepe much more sweetely and securely when as we haue so composed and set straight our reckonings as that wee neede not to feare though the great Iudge should before morning call vs to an account In which regard the same Author commendeth this exercize The minde saith he is daily to be called to an account Sextius vsed at the end of the day and when he retired himselfe to rest to examine his minde What euill of thine hast thou cured What vice hast thou withstood in what art thou better that anger will cease or be more moderate which knoweth that it shall not escape the censure of an vnpartiall Iudge What therefore is more excellent Quid pulchrius hac consuc●udine excutiendi totam diem c S●ne● de ira lib. 3. cap. 36. then this custome of examining euery day How sweete is that sleepe which followeth the reuiew of our selues How quiet sound and free when the minde is commended or admonished and as a watchman and secret censurer of it selfe doth iudge of it owne manners We should also preserue our hearts in their purity and soundnesse if not from all infirmities and corruptions yet at least from deepe putrifaction and the festering sores of sinne when as we cure the wounds being yet greene and cast out sinne by repeetance as soone as it is first entred not suffering it to lodge and sleep with vs no not one night We should hereby keepe our spirituall state well settled so as it would not easily be shaken or at least ouerthrowne with the assaults of the enemies of our saluation when as we constantly looke to our Christian Armour and watching ouer our hearts as our chiefe forts repaire the breaches as soone as they are made Finally wee shall preuent carnall security and hardnesse of heart when wee examine our selues daily and bee better fitted and prepared for the day of death and Iudgement when as wee keepe our accounts euen and haue our bookes of reckonings betweene God and our consciences made vp and in continuall readinesse For he may soone cleare his accounts with his Master at the yeeres end who like a faithfull and diligent Factor doth make all reckonings straight at the end of euery day §. Sect. 5 Meditations at our first lying downe Besides this examination there are also other Meditations very profitable as to call to our remembrance Gods manifold blessings and benefits bestowed vpon vs the day past respecting our soules bodies and states in that he hath preseru'd vs from innumerable euils with which many others haue beene ouertaken for continuing vnto vs still the acceptable time and day of saluation and suffering vs with so much patience to continue in this life that we may make our calling and election sure notwithstanding our manifold and grieuous sinnes for giuing vnto vs some poore desires and indeuours to doe him seruice and to accept of it in Christ though in it selfe full of wants and imperfections Especially if we haue in any measure performed the former duties of the daily exercise we must not forget to render vnto God the praise and glory due vnto him for it by the gracious assistance of whose holy Spirit we who of our selues are not able so much as to thinke a good thought haue beene inabled vnto them So likewise it is requisite that at our lying downe we call our sinnes to our remembrance the duties which wee haue omitted or corruptly performed and the vices which we haue committed and though through Gods mercy wee haue beene preserued from grosser sinnes yet wee must not thinke our selues so excused but call to minde our frailties and infirmities for which God in his righteous iudgement might condemne vs. Our sloth and backwardnesse to good duties our coldnesse wearinesse and many distractions in Gods seruice our excesse in mirth or sorrow the neglect of our Christian watch ouer our thoughts senses words and workes our idlenesse or vnprofitablenesse pride selfe-loue vniust anger sinister conceits and vniust censures of our neighbours and such like In the sight and sense whereof we must truely humble our soules before God by vnfained repentance and earnestly begge in Christs Name mercy and forgiuenesse Finally it is profitable then to remember our mortality and mutability death and Iudgement that we who now goe well to bed may shortly bee cast vpon the bed of sickenesse and we that now liue may within a while be imprisoned vnder the arrest of death yea let vs not looke vpon it as a thing farre off but approching at the threshold and ready to knocke at Luk. 12. 19 20. the doore and thinke that this very night as well as another may bee the time when God by sicknesse and death will summon vs to appeare before his Tribunall And if in respect of thy health and strength this seemeth vnlikely Cuiuis potest accidere quod cuiquam potest Sen. consider that it hath beene the case of many before thee and that which befalleth any may happen to all In which regard let vs not dare to sleepe till through Christ we are at peace with God haue made our accounts euen by pleading Christs satisfaction and full payment and haue our pardon in our hands to shew sealed to all the faithfull with his blood and to vs in particular by his holy Spirit and a liuely faith applying the fruit and benefit of his death vnto vs. And then resigning our soules and bodies into the hands of him who is a faithfull Sauiour and able to keepe safe whatsoeuer is intrusted vnto him we may with Dauid lying downe in 2. Tim. 1. 12. Psal 4. 8. peace take our rest because it is he onely that maketh vs dwell in safety §. Sect. 6 Duties to bee done in the night And first Prayer and Thanksgiuing In the night also there are other duties to bee performed for euen then we must seeke the Lord according to the example of the Church which Esa 26. 9. Cant. 3. 1. Psal 119. 55. professeth that with her soule shee desired the Lord in the night
that we know the furnishing of our soules with sanctifying and sauing graces and bringing foorth the fruits of them in the whole course of our liues the making of our calling and election sure and getting into our owne custody the assured euidences of our saluation that if we be wise wee will thinke all too little for these vses and finde none to spare for idle and vaine exercises Let vs consider that the time which is spent in the pleasures of sinne and pursuing of worldly vanities brings for the present no true profit or sound and solid comfort and ending at the best in late repentance leaueth nothing behinde it but griefe and vexation of spirit That now is the acceptable time and day of saluation which wee were best presently to take hold of if wee loue our owne soules because wee know not how soone it will bee past and withall that when it is gone it can by no possible meanes bee recouered That our momentany and vncertaine time being well spent shall bee rewarded with infinite and eternall happinesse but being idlely and vnprofitably wasted shall bring vpon vs euerlasting woe and misery Finally that in this short time heauenly happinesse is either wonne or lost which shall continue beyond all times and that damnation and hellish torments most intolerable and endlesse are either escaped or else procured and sealed vp vnto vs. §. Sect. 2 That we must not stay for occasions of Christian duties but seeke for them before they offer themselues The second rule is that we doe not stay for occasions and opportunities of performing the Christian duties of a godly life but that wee seeke for them earnestly before they offer themselues and carefully take hold of them when we haue found them Concerning the former we are with our longing desires to preuent the occasions of well-doing before they are offered and vse all our best indeuours to finde them out when they seeme to lye hid and to pursue them with all our speed when they seeme to flee from vs. Heerein imitate we the practice of worldlings who hauing set their hearts vpon earthly things doe not sluggishly stand still till they bee put into their mouthes but with all vigilancie and diligence spie out all opportunities whereby they may atchieue their ends and become rich Psal 111. 10. Pro. 1. 7. Pro. 16. 16. Pro. 8. 12. Iob 28. 15. Pro. 2. 4. and honourable in the world And seeing spirituall and heauenly wisedome which chiefly consisteth in true godlinesse is much better then riches and worldly honours according to that of the Wiseman How much better is it to get wisedome then gold and of greater price and more to be desired then precious stones or any worldly thing besides therefore we must seeke it as siluer and search for it as for hid treasures and being as Pro. 4. 7. Eccle. 12. 13. he teacheth vs the principall thing and chiefe end of all we must labour to get it with all our gettings that is make it our chiefe businesse to attaine vnto it according to the example of the wise Merchant who hauing by Matth. 13. 44. diligent search found the hid treasure neuer resteth till he hath made himselfe owner of it and gotten it sure in his owne possession Neither is it sufficient with all diligence to seeke for all opportunities of godlinesse but when we haue found them we must with all speed lay hold of them and not suffer them to slip from vs through our carelesse delayes And first when God offereth vnto vs opportunity and meanes of seruing him in the duties of a godly life calling and exhorting vs vnto them in the Ministery of his Word and incouraging to imbrace them by offering vnto vs the gracious assistance of his holy Spirit we must in this very day hearken vnto his voyce and not harden our hearts when he inuiteth vs to his Supper wee Psal 95. 7 7. Luke 14. 16. must not pretend excuses and put him off with delayes and whilest hee knocketh at the dore of our hearts by the sound of his Word and finger of his Spirit we must open vnto him that hee may come in and feast vs Apoc. 3. 20. with a banquet of his spirituall graces Whilest hee calleth vs to repentance Act. 17. 30. 2. Cor. 6. 2. and offreth vnto vs the meanes which formerly haue beene denyed let vs hearken and turne vnto him whilest the acceptable time and day of saluation lasteth For it is but a day and nor an age and when the Sunne-shine of the Gospel setteth and the night of ignorance and superstition commeth there will be no time of working Now our Bridegroome calleth and knocketh and if we open vnto him we shall solace our selues in Cant. 5. 2 3 4. our sweete communion with him and the fruition of his loue But if with the sluggish Spouse we pretend excuses and will not let him in hee will withdraw himselfe and then we may long seeke him before we shall find him Now wisedome cryeth out vnto vs in our streets and happy are we Pro. 1. 24. 25 26 27 28. if we hearken to her voyce for if wee now stop our eares to her call wee shall in the day of our affliction cry and call and not be heard as the Lord Zach. 7. 11 12. threatneth §. Sect. 3 That we must set our selues most seriously about Christian duties whē wee finde our selues best prepared and fitted for them Secondly when we finde our selues best fitted and prepared for the performing of holy and religious duties the Spirit of God disposing vs vnto them by inlarging our hearts and inflaming vs with the loue of spirituall exercises by the sweet taste and comfortable feelings which wee finde in them we are not to let slip this opportunity but entertaining these good motions and nourishing in vs these spirituall inclinations we must set our selues seriously about them As when the Lord calleth vs in the Ministery of the Word and thereby awakeneth vs out of the sleepe of sinne we must be ready to say with Samuel Speake Lord for thy seruant heareth When 1. Sam. 3. 10. the Lord boreth the eare and openeth our hearts we must with Lydia attend Act. 16. 14 15. vnto the things that are spoken imbrace them by faith and bring foorth the fruits of it in the workes of loue When he powreth vpon vs the spirit Zach. 12. 10 12 13. of grace and supplication we must retire our selues a-part into our Closets and powre forth our soules and suites before him by feruent prayer When our hearts like Dauids are with meditating vpon Gods manifold mercies and the sweete taste of his inestimable benefits duly prepared wee must not lose this opportunity by delayes but presently with him sing and Psal 108. 1. giue praise When God hath giuen vnto vs ability to performe spirituall duties whereby we may mutually further the saluation of one another and put also some
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
consciences from dead works and their naturall impurity the sanctity of our memories whereby they become faithfull Registers of good things the freedome of our willes in chusing good and refusing of euill the suppling softening and sanctifying of our hearts the rectifying right ordering purging and and renewing of our affections as loue hatred confidence hope feare despaire ioy sorrow anger zeale and the rest The sanctity of our bodies and outward actions appearing in our new obedience and good workes The integrity sincerity alacrity and constancy of them the parts of this obedience which are the denying of our selues and the profession of Christ How we are to deny our selues namely by resigning vp our selues wholly vnto God to be not onely his seruants but also his souldiers in the Christian warfare where we may take occasion to meditate of that due preparation which is required to this warfare and of the Christian armour and of the conflict it selfe consisting in the manifold tentations of our spirituall enemies and our resistance and of our standing and falling in it How we are also to deny our selues in taking vp our crosse and following of Christ bearing with patience whatsoeuer afflictions hee imposeth and of the meanes whereby we may attaine vnto it In respect of our profession of Christ we are to meditate how we are to carry our selues towards Christ himselfe and how towards his members How wee are to professe Christ at all times by inuocation and calling vpon God in his name and mediation And here we haue much profitable matter of meditation concerning prayer both in respect of the doctrine and vse of it of which I haue before spoken and the particular practice of it in the Lords Prayer of which we may profitably meditate proceeding from one petition to another The profession of Christ in time of danger which is either the profession of the mouth by Christian apologie or of the fact by suffering persecution and martyrdome of which we may meditate and the meanes whereby we may be prepared and strengthened vnto them The profession of Christ respecting his members is our edifying them by instruction admonition exhortation consolation and good example or our helping and relieuing them by the workes of mercy and almes-deedes whereon we may profitably meditate and of the motiues and meanes whereby we may be stirred vp and inabled to performe them And finally our perseuerance in grace and in all these Christian duties euen to the very end of our liues which is the consummation of all the rest is necessary to be thought vpon our certainty of it and by what meanes wee may come to this assurance And thus wee must meditate on the degrees of Gods executing the Decree of our election in this life In respect of the life to come hee executeth it by our glorification of which we may meditate as it is begun or perfected It is begun at the death of the Elect whereby their soules being separated from their bodies are receiued into the ioyes of heauen The which our death is an excellent subiect of meditation as of the nature of it to the elect the certainty of it and vncertainty of the time of our preparation to it and meanes whereby we may be armed against the feare of it §. Sect. 8 Of the meanes of executing the Decree of reprobation Contrariwise there is much matter of meditation afforded from the proper meanes of Gods executing the Decree of reprobation in the wicked as both from the foundation of it the fall of Adam and the hatred and wrath of God following vpon it and also from the degrees of executing this Decree in the wicked and vnfaithfull which are proper to those which are either called or not called or common to them both The former are either hypocrites or openly prophane The degrees proper to these are an vneffectuall calling and their relapse from it into their former wickednesse Here we may meditate of the degrees of this calling which are inward illumination of the minde in the knowledge of the truth worldly and carnall penitence and sorrow arising from terrour and feare or sense and feeling of punishment temporary faith taste of heauenly gifts and externall reformation of life Where wee may consider how farre a reprobate may goe in Christianity and what reall and substantiall differences we can obserue betweene those shewes of graces which are in them and the truth of them in our selues that wee may be the better assured of our sincerity and vprightnesse before God The degrees of relapse in those which are thus vneffectually called are first that they are deceiued with sin and the fraud of their owne deceitfull hearts from whence their hearts become hardened and from thence stubbornly peruerse and so through incredulity not assenting to the truth of Gods Word they breake out to open prophanenesse which is in the end accompanied with despaire and finall Apostacie Vpon all which wee may meditate that wee may make our owne calling and election sure by withstanding the first degrees of Apostacie watching ouer our selues as the Apostle warneth vs that we be not hardned and drawne away by the deceitfulnesse of sinne that there be not found in vs an euill heart of vnbeliefe Heb. 3. 12 13. in departing from the liuing God The degrees of executing this Decree in those which are not called who for the most part are ignorantly superstitious Idolaters Pagans and Atheists are the holding and detayning of the truth in iniustice naturall ignorance and vanity of mind hardnesse Rom. 1. 20 21 c. of heart a reprobate minde and committing of sinne with greedinesse And the degrees common to both are their pollution with all sinne and wickednesse in their liues and their entrance into condemnation at their death when as their soules being separated from their bodies are cast in the torments of hell and pursued with the wrath of God On all which we may meditate that we may take occasion to magnifie Gods Iustice towards them in their deserued punishments and his free grace and vndeserued loue towards vs who being in the same masse and lumpe of corruption are separated from them and made vessels of honour that Gods grace and mercy might be magnified in our saluation §. Sect. 9 Of the eternall execution of Gods Decree at the end of the world c. Of the eternall execution of Gods Decree wee may likewise meditate which shall be at the end of the world and is either generall respecting 2. Pet. 3. 11 12 13 14. the whole world as the destruction of it with flaming fire which consideration the Apostle Peter maketh a strong motiue vnto godlinesse that we may be found of God in peace without spot and blamelesse and the renouation and perpetuall conseruation of it or else the speciall execution of it in the inhabitants of the world which shall be at the generall Iudgement and the eternall retribution which followeth it And heere we may profitably
next vnto faith vpon Luk. 24. 37. which hee would haue them to preach in his Name A duty that belongs vnto all and is neuer vnseasonable alwayes necessary An Euangelicall grace and chiefe fruit of faith in which it liueth without which it is dead So that as faith is the life of our soules by applying Christ vnto vs in whom we liue so repentance in respect of our sense and feeling which can no otherwise iudge of the hidden roote but by the outward fruit is the life of this life As faith is the onely condition of the Couenant of grace which assureth vs of all good things temporall and eternall so repentance as a counter-bond assureth vnto vs this assurance by a sensible infallibility outward euidence perswadeth vs that we performe this condition of beleeuing in Christ and apprehending all the promises by faith vnfained Now that thou mayest O my soule proceed in some order what is this repentance but an Euangelicall and sauing grace of God wrought in thine heart by his holy Spirit applying by faith as by his instrument Christ and all his benefits which inflaming thine heart with feruent loue doth make thee looke vpon him whom thou hast pearced to bewaile thy sinnes as the chiefe causes of his death to hate and forsake them and to turne vnto God offering vnto thee grace and pardon by amendment of life and bringing foorth the fruits of new obedience So that it is a grace and free gift and no naturall endowment which commeth by inheritance or else procured by thine owne purchase It is the gift of God who giueth vnto thee all good things It is a gift of his free grace preuenting thee when thou didst neuer so much as thinke of it by putting into thy mind the profit and necessity of it and into thy heart some desire of receiuing it preparing and fitting thee for it by the preaching of the Law working humiliation contrition and legall sorrow and fitting thy mind and will that they might consent and obey the motions of the Spirit outward in the Word and inward in the heart and conscience working it first in thee by changing the mind and heart and turning them from sinne vnto holinesse and righteousnesse co-working with thee that thou mayest continue renew and increase in the practice of it and perfecting thy repentance in the parts and degrees of it which himselfe begun It is hee that calleth vs to repentance and inableth vs to repent He striketh our stony hearts and maketh them to relent by sound contrition before these rocks will yeeld any waters of true repentance It is he that powreth the Spirit Ezek. 11. 29. 36. 26. Zach. 12. 10. Act. 5. 31 11. 18. 2. Tim. 2. 25. of grace vpon the house of Iudah before they can lament for their wickednesse and that giueth repentance to the house of Israel and with it remission of sinnes Thou canst not turne vnto him O my soule before hee first turne vnto thee nor weepe bitterly with Peter till hee thaw thy frozen heart by reflecting vpon thee the beames of his gracious countenance Yea when he turneth thou canst not turne till hee turning his face turne also thine heart as it is running away with feare and neuer looking backe that thou mayest behold his gracious countenance promising nothing but good and his stretched out Arme to receiue thee vnto grace and fauour Surely saith the Church after I was turned I repented and after that Ier. 31. 19. Lam. 5. 21. I was instructed I smote vpon my thigh No man can sorrow for his sinnes nor resolue to forsake them but hee that hateth them nor any hate them but they who loue God nor any loue him whose hearts hee first inflameth not by sheading abroad his loue in them by the holy Ghost which hee giueth vnto Rom. 5. 5. 1. Joh. 4. 19. vs. Neither doth he worke alone but together with his Sonne and holy Spirit For it is the blood of this Lambe of God which worketh our adamantine hearts to this relenting softnesse and the water which issued out of his pierced side which being beheld with the eye of faith doth draw out of our eyes the brinish waters of repentant teares And therefore because he is the Author of our repentance both as hee procured it by the meritorious vertue of his death and worketh it by his blood-shed applyed by faith he inioyneth his Apostles to preach repentance in his Name Finally Luk. 24. 47. it is the oyle of the holy Spirit which suppleth and softneth our hard and stony hearts It is this diuine fire which warming our cold hearts with the flame of Gods loue and the hot blood that issued from our Sauiour causeth them to send vp into our heads these salt yet sweet waters of vnfained repentance which distill by our eyes and in trickling teares drop from our cheekes This winde of the Spirit must blow vpon vs yea must blow into vs before wee can returne vnto God one sigh to expresse our sorrow for our sinnes And therefore O my soule seeing God is the principall cause of thy repentance rob him of no part of his due but ascribe vnto him the whole glory of his owne worke Which though hee could effect by his sole immediate power yet hee is pleased to vse in it many subordinate causes meanes and instruments by which he worketh this grace in thee As ministeriall and helping causes namely the Ministers of the Word who in this worke are co-labourers with Christ sent by him to open mens eyes and to turne them from darkenesse to light and from Act. 26. 18. the power of Satan vnto God that they may receiue forgiuenesse of sinnes and inheritance among them that are sanctified by faith in Christ in which respect they are called spirituall fathers begetting them to God by the seed of the 1. Cor. 4. 15. Word So likewise instrumentall causes which are inward precedent and immediate as sauing knowledge shewing the way to repentance a liuely faith vnfained loue and true feare of God both in respect of his mercies and iudgements especially the last and generall Iudgement at Act. 17. 30. the end of the world or else outward which either lead and draw or else mooue and perswade vs to repentance Of the former sort are many instruments and meanes to bring vs to it As the Ministery of the Word and first the preaching of the Law which prepareth vs for it and of the Esa 55. 7. Gospel which worketh it in vs by assuring vs that if wee will turne to the Lord he will haue mercy vpon vs and forgiue vs our sinnes So also crosses Psal 119. 71. Luk. 13. 1 2 3. Rom. 2. 4. and afflictions either vpon our selues or others Gods blessings and benefits either promised or bestowed The moouing and perswading causes are innumerable as the loue of God towards vs his patience and long suffering his truth in his
examine our selues how wee haue performed or broken our vowes and promises made vnto God and principally our promise in Baptisme how we haue shaken off the seruice of sinne Satan and the world and deuoted our selues wholly to the seruice of God How wee haue profited in mortification and what corruptions wee haue subdued and weakened which formerly were potent and strong in vs how wee haue mastered and abated our pride anger ambition couetousnesse voluptuousnesse impatiencie euill concupiscence and the rest of our corrupt affections and vnruly passions How we haue profited in newnesse of life both inwardly in our minds and hearts and outwardly in our words and actions how wee haue ruled that vnruly member our tongues and haue made them instruments of Gods glory and of the edification of our neighbours and our selues How we haue growne in Gods graces waxing daily stronger in our faith and assurance of his loue and our saluation more feruent in our loue and zeale more firme in our affiance and how we haue renewed and increased our sorrow for sinne our hatred of our corruptions especially of our beloued sinnes and how we haue in our indeuours and actions answered our resolutions of seruing God in newnesse of life How we haue furnished our selues with all the parts of our Christian Armour and kept it fast buckled vnto vs in the whole time of our warfare How wee haue kept our spirituall watch and how wee haue resisted or beene ouercome with the tentations of our spirituall enemies How we haue performed the generall duties of Christianity and the speciall duties of our callings and how we haue obserued or neglected the duties of our daily exercise as they haue before beene described vnto vs. How wee haue profited by Gods Iudgements vpon our selues or others for the mortification of our sins and weaning our hearts from the loue of the world and how his mercies and blessings his patience and long-suffering haue beene auaileable with vs to leade vs vnto repentance and to make vs diligent and cheerefull in his seruice Whether wee haue beene made more carefull by our former falls to looke better to our footing and whether the remembrance of our lost time hath not made vs double our diligence that wee may redeeme it by performing vnto God more faithfull seruice for the time to come Whether we are daily carefull to renew our Couenant with God and to preserue our selues from sliding backe in the breach of our promises Whether we decay not in our first loue but nourish it and all other sauing graces in their first feruency yea increase in them daily more and more Finally whether wee are prepared to beare afflictions and to meete death with a cheerefull and willing heart and whether our accounts bee in that readinesse that we doe with comfort and ioy expect and wish for the comming of our Sauiour Christ vnto Iudgement §. Sect. 3 That we are chiefly to examine our selues in respect of our sinnes and first our original corruption But the chiefe things wherin we must most often and seriously examine our selues are our sinnes and the miseries and punishments which attend vpon them And first our originall corruption whereby we haue defaced Gods Image in vs and defiled all the powers and faculties of our soules and bodies whereby being vtterly disabled vnto all good duties of Gods seruice they are prone vnto all euill and to performe seruice vnto sinne and Satan So that there is naturally no sound place in vs but from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foot nothing but wounds and bruizes and Esa 1. 6. putrifying sores Nor any sinne and wickednesse how abominable so euer the seeds whereof doe not remaine in vs wanting nothing but the tentations of the deuill the world and our owne flesh to make them sprowt vp and come to their full growth as oft as we get fit opportunity Neither is this the case of some alone but of all without exception one as well as another being ready to commit any outragious wickednes Dauid as well as Cain Lot as the Sodomites Peter as well as Iudas Or if they doe not it is not from the benefit of nature which is equally corrupt in all all being alike the children of wrath and dead in their sinnes but from the Spirit Eph. 2. 1 3. of God which either sanctifieth and changeth the nature of the Elect or restraineth the wicked by giuing them some common and Morall gifts for the good of humane society which otherwise could not stand if they were let loose to their naturall impiety Of which restraint if they be once freed and left to themselues they burst out with Nero Hazael Iudas 2. King 8. 13. and many others into such outragious wickednesse as in the time of the Spirits restraint their owne iudgements who are best acquainted with their owne hearts would haue thought that their natures could not possibly be inclined to such abominations Heere then is matter enough for our triall and examination to be exercised about if wee will rake in this noysome sinke of all vncleannesse and rip these old sores to the bottome Which though it be vnpleasant to corrupted nature because being ful of selfe-loue it fleeth the sight of its owne deformities and being willing to flatter it selfe with a false opinion of some natiue beauty doth abhorre the discouery of its vgly filthinesse and with the Elephant wilfully muddeth the cleere waters which would giue it a view how monstrously it is mis-shapen yet is it a consideration most necessary seeing this is the roote and fountaine of all our other sinnes whereof wee should most seriously repent bewayling and reforming this inbred corruption which if wee neglect and spend all our time about our actuall sinnes it is all one as if we should bee still chopping at the branches and let the roote liue and grow or be wholly taken vp in clensing of the streames and neuer take care for the purging of the fountaine which being polluted defiles them with its filthinesse §. Sect. 4 Secondly we must examine our selues concerning our actuall transgressions according to the Law Secondly in this examination we must call ourselues to an account for our actuall sinnes which we our selues haue committed against Gods Maiesty by breaking his Law and all and euery of his Commandements in thought word and deed The rule of which examination by which we are to come to our triall is the Law of God it selfe which by our sinnes we haue transgressed for as the Apostle saith By the Law commeth the knowledge of sinne being that straight rule which best discouereth the crookednesse of our actions and wherein and how many wayes we haue swarued from it In which course the best manner of proceeding is that we begin where God beginneth and so proceed with him from one Commandement to another examining our selues how often and many wayes we haue offended against euery one of them both by neglecting the
Couenant of Grace God doth not stand vpon strict termes with vs exacting legall and perfect performance but onely Euangelicall sincerity and truth and that we desire and indeuour to keepe our promise as much as we are able And seeing also because our strength is but small the Lord hath graciously promised the assistance of his holy Spirit to strengthen vs in our good indeuours and inable vs to performe what he requireth and we haue vndertaken in some such manner as may be acceptable in his sight Now what stronger motiue can there be vnto the duties of a godly life consisting in a liuely faith and vnfained repentance then to consider that wee are tyed hereunto by this couenant which is the maine ground of all our good the remission of our sinnes grace and glory which if wee make voyd by our impenitency and infidelity wee can haue no part in Gods mercies and gracious promises nor in Iesus Christ and all his benefits Especially considering that if we but resolue and indeuour to please God in these holy duties both wee and our seruice shall bee accepted in Iesus Christ our imperfections being couered with his perfect obedience and our corruptions washed away with his blood which if we neglect to performe and liue stil in our infidelity and impenitency without any serious desire or constant indeuour to know God or to feare and serue him whatsoeuer profession and shew we make to the contrary yet most certaine it is that we are not yet in this Couenant nor shall as long as we continue in this state haue any part in the benefits promised seeing the Lord who cannot faile of his word hath in this couenant assured vs that he will not Ier. 31 33 34 35. and 32. 40. onely bestow his blessings but will also fit and inable all his Elect with whom onely he maketh it to performe what he require that their hands that he will inlighten them with the knowledge of himself his will and write his Law in their hearts thereby working in them these resolutions and indeuours to obserue and keepe it that he will be their God and they his people and that he will knit them so vnto him as that they shall neuer depart from him and therefore so long as wee finde no such things wrought in vs we can haue no assurance that as yet we haue any part in this Couenant or in any of the benefits therein promised CAP. XXXVIII Of two other reasons mouing vs to a godly life the one taken from our effectuall Calling the other from our free Iustification by faith §. Sect. 1 That the benefit of our effectuall Calling should moue vs to serue God in the duties of a godly life THe sixth benefit is our effectual Calling whereby the Lord vouchsafeth by the preaching of the Gospell to make knowne vnto vs his good will and pleasure concerning the eternall saluation of our soules in and for Iesus Christ and by the inward operation of his holy Spirit working with the outward ministery to beget in vs a true and liuely faith whereby wee apply vnto our selues Christ Iesus and all his benefits For in the ministery of the Word God not onely offereth vnto vs Christ to be our Sauiour and Redeemer but also prepareth and fitteth vs to receiue him giuing vnto vs a true sight of our sinne and misery by which our hearts are humbled and broken and working in them an earnest hungring and thirsting after Christ and his righteousnesse that by him wee may be recouered out of our wretched estate and attaine vnto life and saluation by his merits and obedience The which feruent desires he graciously satisfieth by working faith in vs grounded vpon his infinite mercies the all-sufficient merits of Christ and his free and indefinite promises whereby we apply him vnto vs with all his benefits So that in this benefit of our effectuall Calling three things chiefly concurre first the sauing hearing of the Word whereby our eares and hearts are opened and our minds inlightened with the knowledge of the great worke of Redemption wrought by Christ Secondly the donation of God the Father whereby he offereth and giueth Christ vnto vs to bee our Sauiour and vs vnto Christ to be saued and redeemed by him Thirdly incision into Christ and vnion with him he becomming our Head and wee his members the bond whereof on his part is his holy Spirit and on our part a true and liuely faith All which affoord vnto vs strong motiues to perswade vs vnto all duties of a godly life For first what an incomparable benefit is this that the Lord passing by innumerable others who either neuer heard the sound of the Gospell or hearing haue made no benefit by it wanting the inward assistance of his holy Spirit hee should both grant vnto vs this light and also open our eyes that we should behold it and that he should hereby chuse and call vs out of the corrupt masse of mankinde which stil lyeth dead in sinne and make vs true members of his Church giuing Christ vnto vs and vs vnto Christ and vniting vs vnto him as liuely members of his body that we might be partakers of him and all his benefits And how should this affect our hearts and prouoke vs to make a right vse of such inestimable blessings which is the end why God hath bestowed them For why hath he inlightened our eyes more then others but that by the benefit of this light we should walke in the wayes of holinesse Iob. 12. 35. and righteousnesse and so glorifie him in our saluation Wherefore hath he called and culled vs out of the world but that wee should walke worthy of this high calling and renouncing the world and worldly lusts deuote our selues wholly to his seruice Why hath hee giuen Christ vnto vs and vs vnto Christ but that hee might saue vs from our sinnes not onely in respect of their guilt and punishment but also from their corruption and that he raigning in vs by his grace and holy Spirit might depose sinne and Satan from their regency and suffer them no longer to rule and raigne in our mortall bodies Why hath he vnited vs vnto Christ by his Spirit but that wee should bee led and ruled by it and not by our owne lusts and that we should submit our selues as becommeth members to his gouernment seeing it were a thing monstrous in the body for any inferiour part to rebell against the Head and to withdraw it it selfe from its regiment and iurisdiction and vtterly vnsutable that so holy an Head should haue any members delighting in wickednesse and drawing it as much as they are able into the fellowship and communion 1. Cor. 6. 15. of the same sinnes And that this is the maine end of our calling that we should glorifie God by seruing him in holinesse and righteousnesse it is cleere and euident by the Scriptures For the Apostle telleth vs that God hath not called vs
at the Day of Iudgement If wee haue beene faithfull and diligent in our Masters seruice wee shall haue nothing to doe then but to receiue with ioy our reward and wages If wee walke not after the flesh but after Rom. 8. 1. the Spirit wee are in Iesus Christ and there is no condemnation due vnto vs for hee was condemned that wee might bee acquitted and suffered the punishment of our sinnes that Gods Iustice being satisfied and wrath appeased wee might bee freed from hell and death If wee bee partakers of the first Resurrection from the death Apoc. 20. 6. of sinne to the life of righteousnesse the second death shall haue no power ouer vs. Now what stronger motiues can there bee vnto a godly life then to bee thereby assured of deliuerance from these greatest euils For how terrible a thing is it to fall into the hands Heb. 10. 31. of the euer-liuing God and to bee called to account before his Iudgement Seate who searcheth the heart and reines and will call vs to a reckoning for euery idle word Whose iustice is so perfect and his examination so strict that though wee were as Matth. 12. 33. iust as Iob yet wee should not bee able to answere one of a thousand Iob 9. 2 3. Though wee were as holy as Dauid yet had wee neede to pray with him Enter not into Iudgement with thy Seruant O Lord for Psal 143. 2. in thy sight shall no man liuing bee iustified How fearefull and intolerable endlesse and easelesse are those hellish torments which they must indure who are not in this life acquitted from them And consequently how inestimable is this benefit and worthy to bee valued more then ten thousand worlds to bee fully assured that wee haue through Christ escaped this seuere Iudgement hellish condemnation and euerlasting torments with the deuill and his angels which assurance wee can no otherwise attaine vnto then by seruing God in the duties of a godly life and bringing forth the fruits of our faith in repentance and new obedience But I shall not neede to presse these points any further although much more might bee said of them as being most effectuall motiues to perswade vs to flee all sinne and to practise all Christian duties in the whole course of our liues seeing they are much beaten vpon and largely handled by many others there beeing scarce any that omit them who write of and perswade vnto Christian resolution CAP. XLII Other reasons taken from those singular priuiledges which are peculiar vnto those who serue God in the duties of a godly life §. Sect. 1 The first priuiledge is that the image of God is repayred in vs. ANd so much concerning the priuatiue benefits which accompany a godly life The positiue benefits which we receiue by it are manifold For first hereby the image of God is repayred in vs and wee are made like vnto him seeing this image chiefely consisteth in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse whereby knowing God and his will we are transformed in all holy obedience vnto it So the Apostle saith that we haue put on the New man which is renued in knowledge after the image Col. 3. 10. of him that created vs. And exhorteth vs to bee renewed in the Spirit of Ephe. 4. 23 24. our mindes and to put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse So that if we be renewed in wisedome and knowledge in holinesse and righteousnesse we shall become like vnto God hauing his image through Christ renewed in vs after which wee were created but had it defaced in vs by the fall of Adam And this argument the Scriptures doe often vse to perswade vs vnto an holy and righteous life So the Lord himselfe presseth this reason to his people For I am the Lord your God ye shall therefore sanctifie your selues and Leuit. 11. 44. Leuit. 19. 2. 20. 7. yee shall bee holy for I am holy And againe Yee shall sanctifie your selues and be ye holy for I am the Lord your God And our Sauiour Christ exhorteth vs to bee therefore perfect that as children of our heauenly Father Matth. 5. 45 48 wee may resemble him in perfection So the Apostle would haue vs to approue our selues to be the sonnes of God by being blamelesse harmelesse Phil. 2 15. without rebuke in the midst of a crooked peruerse nation And the Apostle Iohn teacheth vs how we may approue our selues to haue fellowship 1. Iohn 1. 6 7. with God namely by walking in the light as he is in the light And Eph. 5. 1. finally the Apostle Peter perswadeth vs to an holy life by the same reason As he that hath called you is holy so bee yee holy in all manner of 1. Pet. 1. 15 16. conuersation because it is written Be ye holy for I am holy Neither in truth can any thing bee more effectuall to perswade vs to an holy life then this argument if it bee well waighed For the neerer wee come to this most absolute and perfect patterne the more we shall bee restored to that state of excellency and perfection in which we were created the more wee resemble him who is the chiefe Goodnesse and blessednesse the more wee shall exceede in goodnesse and glory in holinesse and happinesse the which alwaies accompany one another The more like we are vnto God the more communion we shall haue with him the more hee will loue vs and delight in vs as a Father ordinarily best loueth that childe that most resembleth him in fauour and nature though oftentimes out of meere selfe-loue because hee seemeth to liue in him and not for any excellencie that is in those parts and qualities which hee loueth in him And if generally likenesse causeth loue when there is no worth in the thing beloued how much more will God infinitely loue vs when as by our likenesse we shall be made most louely and that for his owne sake with a pure and perfect loue because his Image is stamped in vs and he after a sort liueth in vs and we in him his holinesse and righteousnesse being manifested in our godly life and conuersation §. Sect. 2 The second priuiledge is that by a godly life we haue title interest in all Gods promises and first of temporall blessings Secondly by a godly life wee haue interest vnto all Gods promises whereby he hath assured vs of all his blessings and benefits both temporall 1. Tim. 4. 8. Psal 34. 9 10. Psal 84. 11. 2. Pet. 1. 3 4. and eternall according to that of the Apostle Godlinesse is profitable vnto all things hauing the promise of the life that now is and that which is to come So the Psalmist saith that they which seeke and feare the Lord shall not want any good thing For the Lord God is a sunne and shield he will giue grace and glory and no good thing will hee
others like those of whom the Apostle Peter speaketh yet were wee like them our selues seruants of 2. Pet. 2. 19. corruption For of whom a man is ouercome of the same hee is brought in bondage Finally wee were slaues to our owne sinfull lusts vile affections and turbulent passions as wrath pride ambition couetousnesse and voluptuousnesse which were the most cruell Lords that euer tyrannized ouer any seeing they kept such a narrow watch ouer vs that they gaue vs not so much as a breathing time of liberty but forced vs to drudge night and day not only in the sight of others but when wee were retyred into the most secret corners because they held in miserable bondage our soules as well as our bodies our iudgements wills and affections so as wee liked and pleased our selues in our thraldome and had no desire to come out of it But our Sauiour hath freed vs from these enemies also by mortifying our sinnes and crucifying our corruptions by vertue of his death applyed vnto vs by his holy Spirit And lastly we had no right to any of the creatures hauing by sinne lost our dominion ouer them but our Sauiour and his holy Spirit by giuing vs the liberties and priuiledges of sonnes hath restored vs to our right so that they are all become good and pure vnto vs being sanctified by the Word and 1. Tim. 4. 4 5. Tit. 1. 15. prayer But this royall priuiledge of Christian liberty belongeth not to all but onely to the faithfull who desire to serue and please God in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse Neither can wee euer attaine vnto any assurance that wee haue right and title vnto it till wee feele it effectuall in vs for our sanctification For all those who are by Christ freed from Gods wrath and reconciled vnto him haue heereby a desire wrought in them to serue and please him and will not willingly for any worldly hire prouoke his displeasure They that are freed from the curse of the Law by the Crosse of Christ will crucifie their owne lusts and not runne such a course as will againe make them accursed They that are deliuered out of the hands of their spirituall enemies doe worship and serue Luk. 1. 74. their Lord and Sauiour in holinesse and righteousnesse and being redeemed Tit. 2. 14. that they may be his peculiar people they become zealous of good workes They that are freed from sinne in respect of the guilt and punishment are also in some measure freed from the corruption of it so as it doeth not Rom. 6. 12. raigne and rule in their mortall bodies that they should obey it in the lusts thereof but being freed from sinne they become the seruants of righteousnesse The Vers 19. which should bee a forcible argument to mooue vs vnto the duties of a godly life seeing heereby wee may be assured of this royall priuiledge of Christian liberty according to that of our Sauiour If yee continue in my Ioh. 8. 31 32. Word then are ye my Disciples indeed and ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free Whereas if wee neglect them and still liue in sinne yeelding obedience vnto our owne carnall lusts wee lose the benefit and comfort of this priuiledge and haue iust cause to feare that as yet wee remaine in that miserable bondage of the deuill the world and our owne lusts CAP. XLV Of foure other mayne priuiledges wherewith God crowneth the godly both in this life and the life to come §. Sect. 1 The sixth mayne priuiledge is that God bestoweth vpon the godly the spirit of prayer and supplication THe sixth mayne priuiledge which God vouchsafeth to the godly is that he bestoweth vpon them the Spirit of prayer Zach. 12. 10. Rom. 8. 26 27. and supplication and both heareth and granteth all the suites which they make vnto him For hee powreth vpon the house of Dauid and the inhabitants of Ierusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication as he hath promised and whereas naturally we know not how to pray nor what to pray for as we ought the Spirit helpeth our infirmities and maketh intercession for vs with gronings which cannot be vttered And hee that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the minde of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God Yea he not onely by his Spirit teacheth vs how to pray and what to aske but hath also bound himselfe by his gracious and free promises that hee will heare all our suites made in the name of his Sonne and indited by his Spirit according to that of our Sauiour Aske and you shall haue seeke and you shall Mat. 7 7. Iob. 16. 23. 1. Ioh. 5. 14 15. Psal 50. 15. finde knocke and it shall bee opened vnto you And againe Verily verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye shall aske the Father in my Name hee will giue it you Now what an high and holy priuiledge is this to haue alwayes free accesse vnto God in all our wants and necessities who is alone able to helpe vs and will also doe it because of his promise To haue a deare and able friend into whose bosome wee may with boldnesse and comfort powre out all our complaints who is ready to pitty and ease vs To haue a key alwayes in our keeping which through Christ will open vnto vs the treasury of Gods graces where wee may relieue our wants and store our selues with all things needfull for his glory and our owne spirituall good and euerlasting saluation Finally to conuerse with the supreme and glorious King of heauen and earth in a familiar manner and to talke with him as a man talketh with his friend For as the Lord speaketh to the Israelites What nation is so great who hath God so nigh vnto them as the Lord Deut. 4. 7. our God is in all things that we call vpon him for But this priuiledge is peculiar vnto them who serue the Lord by obseruing his will according to that of our Sauiour If ye abide in me and my words abide in you aske what Iob. 15. 7. you will and it shall be done vnto you and not vnto wicked men who turne Pro. 15. 8. away their eare from hearing the Law and neglect the duties of Gods seruice whose sacrifices and prayers are abominable as before I haue shewed 28. 9. and shall not bee heard or granted of God as hee telleth the rebellious Iewes When you spread foorth your hands I will hide mine eyes from you yea Psa 1. 15. Pro. 1. 28. Zach. 7. 11 12 13. when you make many prayers I will not heare And therefore let this also effectually mooue vs to serue the Lord in the duties of a godly life that wee may be partakers of this rich and royall priuiledge hauing not onely the Spirit of God as our Counseller to draw all our suites and Petitions in such manner and forme as
their heads and made themselues merry with his lamentable crie and pittifull complaint My God my God Matth. ●7 27. to 4● Luk. 23. 31. Matth. 10. 24 25. why hast thou forsaken me Now if they haue done these things to a greene tree fruitfull in all grace and goodnesse what will they doe to a drie and barraine If they haue thus scoffed and derided our Lord and Master let vs not who are his poore and vnworthy seruants thinke much to be thus vsed If he haue suffred all these taunts and scornes for our sakes why should wee thinke it much to suffer with patience and ioy the like or greater if it were possible for his sake and the Gospels Yea if he haue meekely borne our sinnes and sorrowes and shed his precious blood and indured the heauie wrath of God due vnto vs that he might saue and deliuer vs out of the hands of all our enemies how vngratefull are we for all his loue if wee will not for his sake indure a taunt a spitefull scorne or reprochfull name but chuse rather to neglect the duties of his seruice and to runne with wicked worldlings vnto the same excesse of riot So oft therefore as the scoffes of prophane men discourage and dis-hearten vs in Christian duties let vs animate and strengthen our resolutions in them by looking with the eye of faith vpon our Sauiour Christ hanging naked vpon the Crosse and dying a shamefull death for our sinnes contemning this disgrace and swallowing vp this shame with the infinitenesse of his loue Let vs be content to accompany him in despising these despites that we may also accompany him in glory and happinesse according to that of the Apostle Let vs runne with patience the race which is set before Heb. 12. 2 3. vs looking vnto Iesus the Author and finisher of our faith who for the ioy that was set before him indured the Crosse despised the shame and is set downe at the right hand of the Throne of God For consider him that indured such contradiction of sinners against himselfe lest wee bee weary and faint in our minds §. Sect. 4 Of the necessity of Christian Apology and profession of the truth Secondly let vs consider that this Christian apology in the profession of the truth and practice of all holy and Christian duties is a matter of Luk. 9. 23. vrgent necessity which as neerly concerneth vs as the euerlasting saluation of our soules For they that will be Christs Disciples must take vp their crosse daily and follow him and bee contented for his sake and the Gospels to forsake kindred and friends houses lands and life it selfe if they be called thereunto Now how shall we with patience and constancy indure for Christs sake wounds and stabs if wee shrinke for words and scoffes How shall wee euer hope to suffer rackes and gibbets fire and sword for the profession of the truth and the practice of Christian duties if we be daunted with euery small disgrace and discouraged in them with reprochfull names and scornefull taunts Let vs thinke with our selues that if we cannot indure causelesse shame before men which is accompanyed with true glory how shall we be able to beare that euerlasting shame and confusion of face when as Christ shall be ashamed to acknowledge Math. 10. 33. Mark 8. 38. vs for his before his Father his holy Saints and blessed Angels because we haue been ashamed of him and his truth Now that wee may performe this duty which is so necessary with cheerfulnesse and delight and contemne the derisions and scornings of gracelesse men when they scoffe at vs for the performance of Christian duties blushing for shame that we should be thus ashamed let vs consider that when wee are most derided of the wicked world for the conscionable performance of any Christian duties we are then most approued of God and therefore when they seeke to daunt vs with their scoffes and to driue vs from our Christian hold with gibes and reproches let vs oppose this as a shield of strength against them saying vnto our soules My defence is Psal 7. 10. of God who saueth the vpright in heart Let vs comfort and cheere our selues with the peaceable testimony of a good conscience and our inward ioy in well-doing and with the applause of the holy Angels who looke vpon vs and the approbation and praise of all that feare God Let vs remember that they are pronounced blessed by our Sauiour who are Mat. 5. 10 11. Luk. 6. 22. thus abused for righteousnesse sake and that they shall raigne with him in his glory who haue suffered with him in these disgraces that then for Esa 61. 7. their shame they shall receiue double honour and for confusion they shall reioyce in their portion and euerlasting ioy shall be vnto them In which respect the Apostle Peter exhorteth vs to reioyce in as much as we are partakers of Christs 1. Pet. 4. 14. sufferings that when his glory shall be reuealed we may be glad also with exceeding ioy And therefore let no scoffes and scornes discourage vs but let vs with the Apostle approoue our selues in all things by honour and dishonour 2. Cor. 6. 8. euill report and good report and accompany our Sauiour Christ bearing his Heb. 13. 13 14. reproch that we may accompany him in glory for we haue heere no abiding City but we seeke one to come as the Apostle speaketh CAP. VII Of worldly persecutions and how we may be strengthened against them §. Sect. 1 Of the worlds cruelty in persecuting the godly WE haue shewed in the former Chapters what impediments the world and wicked men cast in the way to hinder our profession and practice of the true Religion which respect their iudgment and affections their words and outward gestures and now we are to intreat of those which respect their works and actions And these are their contumelious and malicious handling of them and the bitter persecutions which they raise against them that they may either hinder them wholly from proceeding in the course of Christianity or at least cause them to goe on with much discouragement and discomfort The which contumelies and persecutions are great and manifold as the pursuing of them with all malice and extremity from place to place apprehending them as malefactours haling them before their Iudgment seats false accusations vniust condemnations imprisonments and banishments fire and sword tortures punishments executed and inflicted in the most exquisite manner which wit and malice can deuise and impose And this malicious rage of wicked men the Prophet Esay in liuely manner expresseth The act of violence saith hee is in Esa 59. 6 7 8. their hands Their feet run to euill and they make haste to shead innocent blood their thoughts are thoughts of iniquity wasting and destruction are in their paths The way of peace they know not and there is no iudgement in their goings Neither doth
exercises for the increasing of his graces in vs notwithstanding that God in so many places reiects these heartlesse sacrifices lip-labour and hypocriticall Esa 49. 13. formalities and being a Spirit doth require of vs such a seruice as is performed Mat. 15. 8. in Spirit and truth Thus they thinke that God is serued in an acceptable Ioh. 4. 24. manner when they repeate the Lords Prayer though they doe not vnderstand any one Petition in it and when they rehearse the Beliefe and the ten Commandements which they also vse in stead of Prayer not vnderstanding aright any one article of their faith nor any precept of the Decalogue and that they haue by this repetition blessed themselues sufficiently for the day following though a little child who is destitute of all sauing knowledge is able to performe this taske as well as they That they may liue in their sinnes without repentance vnto old age or the day of sickenesse and death and that God is so gracious that he will forgiue all their sinnes if before they depart this life they haue but leasure to say Lord haue mercy vpon me though the Scriptures teach vs that he who turneth Pro. 28. 9. 15. 8. 1. 24. 28. Zach. 7. 11 12. away his eare from hearing the Law his prayers are abominable that God abhorreth euen the very sacrifices of the wicked and that those who stop their eares when God calleth shall not be heard when they call and cry vnto him Finally they suppose that they can repent when they list though it be a free grace of God which must be accepted when he offereth it and cannot be reasonably expected if it be refused and reiected when he tendreth it vnto vs. In respect of the Christian life it selfe and the graces and duties required vnto it they doe all delude themselues with a false and erroneous iudgement For they cannot perswade themselues that the godly life is best and most blessed nor that there is such necessity of it as Preachers would beare them in hand but that they may take heere their full swindge in pleasure and set their hearts vpon riches and other worldly vanities and yet bee assured of heauenly happinesse as well as those who are most scrupulous and precise though the Scriptures tell vs that wee cannot serue God and Mammon that if wee loue the world the loue Matth. 6. 24. 1. Ioh. 2. 15. of the Father is not in vs because the loue of the one is enmity against the other that without holinesse we cannot see God and that the way to Iam. 4. 4. Heb. 12. 14. Matth. 7. 12. heauen is narrow and the gate so straight that without much striuing wee cannot enter into it Thus they imagine that they neede not to take such paines in hearing many Sermons seeing the Preacher can tell them no more then they know already namely that they must loue God aboue all things and their neighbours as themselues that the best faile in this and that wee are all sinners and must be saued onely by Iesus Christ Though the Scriptures truely preached are not onely the spirituall seed to beget vs but the food also to nourish vs the strong power of God to saluation to all that beleeue and the sword Rom. 1. 16. of the Spirit to defend our selues and beate backe our enemies Our heauenly Schoole-master to teach vs the way and the meanes also whereby wee may be enabled to walke in it and finally our guide to direct and leade vs by the hand and our comforter to support vs when wee are ready to faint in our iourney That it is sufficient if wee leade a ciuill life and be no heynous malefactours as murtherers theeues adulterers and such like and that wee are good Christians if wee doe no man harme if wee doe no good though he who hid his talent in the earth and did not increase it was cast into outer darkenesse Diues tormented in hell because he releeued not Lazarus And though our Sauiour professeth that hee will reiect at the day of Iudgement not onely oppressours theeues and mutherers but those also who haue not fed the hungry and clothed the naked Thus they thinke that they haue abundantly discharged their dutie if they haue for worldly ends had some respect to some duties of the second Table as keeping their word and dealing iustly and giuing now and then an almes howsoeuer they haue wholy neglected the duties of the first Table and haue made no conscience of Gods seruice and Sabbaths though piety be the ground and foundation of all obedience without which Iustice and morall honesty haue no true subsistance That they neede not to labour after the knowledge of God and his will because they are vnlettered and vnlearned though without knowledge of the maine principles of Religion there can be no Faith and without Faith no Saluation That they haue good hearts towards God though their speeches be filthy and prophane and their actions wicked and mischieuous notwithstanding that our Sauiour hath told vs that Matth. 7. 18. 15 18 19. the tree is knowne by its fruit and that such as the fountaine is such also are the streames that flow from it That wee are all sinners and full of infirmities and humane frailties and therefore they must be excused when wittingly and wilfully they fall into grieuous sinnes though the Apostle telleth vs that he who thus sinneth is not borne of God but 1. Iob. 3. 8 9. that he is of the deuill if with full swinge of will he doe him seruice That they are in Christ and therefore haue escaped condemnation though the Apostle saith that all who are in him walke not after the Rom. 8. 1. 2. Cor. 5. 17. flesh but after the Spirit and that all who haue put on Christ are become new creatures and being ingrafted into this Vine doe bring forth fruits in Iob. 15. 2. him Thus they erroneously alleadge that because Christ came to Matth. 9. 13. 11. 28. saue sinners therefore though they continue still in sinne they may haue their part in this saluation whereas this comfort onely belongeth vnto repentant sinners who labour and grone vnder their sinnes as vnder an heauie burthen and being weary of it doe flee vnto Christ for ease Thus they abuse Gods eternall decree of predestination concluding that because he hath decreed and ordained all men either to life and saluation or to death and destruction and his counsell must stand being immutable and vnchangeable therefore it is no matter how they liue for if they be ordained to life they shall be saued liue how they list or if to destruction they cannot attaine to saluation though they take neuer so much care and paines in Gods seruice The which their conceit is quite contrarie to the Scriptures which teach vs that God hath in his decree of predestination included the meanes with the end so that it is
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
things and reioyce in nothing so much as in the assurance of thy loue and when the light of thy countenance shineth vpon mee Remooue out of my way all lets and impediments which might hinder me in my Christian course or so assist mee with thy grace that I may ouercome them Stablish me with thy free Spirit that I may not onely begin well but also continue in all grace and goodnesse vnto the very end of my life and let me be stedfast vnmoueable and alwayes abounding in the worke of the Lord. And with these my prayers and supplications I doe also ioyne my praises and thankesgiuing lauding and magnifying thy great and glorious Name for thine inestimable loue and the fruits and testimonies thereof shewed vnto me euen from before all beginnings vnto this present day For that thou hast of thy free grace chosen mee to life and saluation created mee after thine owne similitude and likenesse in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse redeemed me at so deare a price out of the miserable bondage of my spirituall enemies effectually called mee by the sound of the Gospell to the knowledge of thy truth vnited me vnto Christ by thy Spirit and a liuely faith and made me partaker of all his benefits for my iustification by his righteousnesse and obedience and for some degrees of sanctification begun in mee whereby thou hast subdued the power of sinne that though it dwelleth yet it doth not raigne in me and hast wrought in me some desire resolution and indeuour to serue and please thee For that thou hast watched ouer me with thy prouidence in the whole course of my life and namely this night past and hast thereby preserued mee from all perils from the terrours of the night and the malice of mine enemies and hast refreshed me with quiet rest and now raised me vp in the strength thereof to doe thee seruice O Lord inlarge my heart that I may duly consider of thy manifold and rich mercies and bee thorowly inflamed with the apprehension of thy loue What am I my God that thou shouldest be thus gracious vnto mee who am altogether lesse then the least of thy mercies yea worthy of thy greatest punishments O that I could loue and praise thee according to thy bounty and goodnesse And being so poore that I haue nothing to repay and thou so rich that thou neither needest nor requirest any thing else O that I could euer remaine a gratefull debter hauing mine heart filled with thankfulnesse and my mouth with thankesgiuing And now Lord I further beseech thee to continue still my God and guide to direct leade and vphold mee in all the wayes of holinesse and righteousnesse Take mee into thy gracious protection this day and euer and watch so ouer mee with thy all-ruling prouidence that I may be preserued safe from all enemies worldly and spirituall and from those manifold dangers which incompasse mee on euery side Giue mee grace so to spend this day that some glory may redound vnto thee by my seruice some profit and benefit vnto those with whom I liue and some further assurance vnto my selfe from the increase of sauing graces discerned in mee and spirituall strength in all good duties of my saluation and eternall happinesse Order and gouerne all my thoughts that they may be religious and honest my speeches that they may bee wise and seasoned with grace and all my workes and actions for the well performing both of the generall duties of Christianity and the speciall duties of my calling blessing so all my labours that I may be cheered and comforted in them by my prosperous successe in all my good indeuours Supply vnto mee all temporall blessings and the necessary comforts of this life and let mee liue at thy finding and receiue whatsoeuer I inioy as the gifts of thine owne hand and pledges of thy loue that I may returne the praise which is due vnto thee for them and vse them as helpes to further mee in all duties of thy seruice Finally I beseech thee good Lord to vouchsafe these and all other benefits not onely vnto mee but also to thy whole Church and euery particular member thereof especially to this in which I liue Multiply thy fauours vpon our Soueraigne Lord the King our noble Prince the Prince Electour Palatine and the Lady Elizabeth his wife with their issue vpon the honourable Lords of the Priuie Councell the Magistrates and Ministers of thy Word and Sacraments the afflicted members of Iesus Christ my friends and benefactours kindred and acquaintance and especially vpon this whole family giuing vnto vs all grace that wee may keepe the vnity of the Spirit in the bond of peace and so ioyne together with our hearts and minds in all duties of thy seruice as that we may ioyntly inherit that eternall happinesse of thy Kingdome through Iesus Christ our Lord to whom with thee and thine holy Spirit bee rendred all glory and praise might Maiesty and Dominion both now and euermore Amen Another priuate Prayer for the Morning O Almighty and eternall God our most gracious and louing Father in Iesus Christ I thy poore sinfull seruant being in my selfe vtterly vnworthy to appeare in thy glorious presence doe yet in the Name and mediation of Iesus Christ offer vnto thee my prayers and supplications in obedience to thy Commandements and in some assurance of thy gracious promises rendring vnto thee from the bottome of mine heart all humble and hearty thankes for thy manifold mercies and abundant blessings multiplied vpon mee both in respect of spirituall and heauenly priuiledges which concerne my euerlasting saluation and of temporall and earthly benefits appertaining to the good of this life and my present estate in this place of my Pilgrimage For that thou hast freely loued mee from all eternity and of thy meere grace hast chosen mee vnto life and glory without any respect of my workes or worthinesse For creating mee according to thine owne Image and redeeming me out of the estate of sinne and death For calling mee effectually by thy Word and Spirit and making mee a seruant of thine owne family and a member of Iesus Christ whereby thou hast giuen mee iust title vnto him and all his benefits For making with mee the Couenant of grace adopting mee in him to bee thy child vnto a liuely hope of my heauenly inheritance For iustifying mee in his righteousnesse imputed vnto mee and applyed by a liuely faith and sanctifying mee with thy Spirit giuing mee some power ouer my corruptions and some desire and indeuour to serue and please thee in the duties of a godly life For watching ouer mee with thy prouidence euer since I had my being and birth shielding mee from dangers deliuering mee out of manifold euils and prouiding for mee all things necessary both for my soule and body For preseruing mee this night past from all perils giuing vnto mee quiet rest and bringing mee in safety to see the light adding yet another day to
this day and euer preserue me with thy prouidence from all dangers vphold me with thy Spirit that I fall not into sinne Direct me with thy Wisdome and strengthen me with thy power in all my thoughts words and workes that they may be acceptable in thy sight Blesse and assist me in the generall duties of Christianity and in the speciall duties of my calling that they may haue good successe and wholy tend to the aduancement of thy glorie the edification of my brethren and mine owne spirituall and euerlasting good Blesse thy whole Church and euery member thereof especially this in which I liue with all the Magistrates Ministers and people this Family and all to whom I am bound in any speciall bond of dutie beseeching thee to giue vnto vs all according to our seuerall necessities all those gifts and graces which thou in thy wisdome knowest needfull euen for Iesus Christ his sake to whom with thee and thy holy Spirit I ascribe all glorie and prayse power and dominion both now and for euermore Amen A Prayer for the Family in the Morning O Lord our God who by thine infinite wisdome and power hast created all things in heauen and earth and by thy gracious and all-ruling prouidence dost continually sustaine and preserue them wee thine humble and vnworthy seruants doe here in the mediation of Iesus Christ prostrate our selues before the Throne of Grace acknowledging that vnto thee belongeth all glory and prayse but vnto vs shame and confusion of face for whereas thou diddest create vs according to thine owne Image in wisdome holinesse and righteousnesse we haue falne in the loynes of our first parents from this blessed estate by transgressing of thy Commandement and thereby haue defaced thy glorious Image in vs depriued our selues of all happinesse and become liable vnto death of body and soule Yea wee haue deriued from our first parents not onely the guilt of their sinne but also the corruption of their nature which hath so ouerspred all the powers and parts of our soules and bodies that they are vtterly impotent and insufficient to performe any duties of thy seruice for which end they were created but most forward and cheerefull in the seruice of sinne and Satan From which roote of originall sinne wee haue brought forth those cursed fruits of actuall transgressions which we haue multiplyed against thy Maiesty by breaking all and euery of thy Commandements in thought word and deed euen from the beginning of our dayes to this present time Many haue beene our secret sinnes of which thou alone and our owne consciences haue beene witnesses and many haue wee committed in the view of the world to the dishonour of thy blessed Name and slander of our Christian profession Many haue beene our sinnes of ignorance the which vnto vs are vnexcusable because thou hast reueiled thy selfe and thy will so clearely vnto vs and many likewise haue beene our sinnes against knowledge and conscience and the good motions of thy holy Spirit Oftentimes haue wee sinned through frailty being surprized vpon the sudden with the violent and subtill tentations of our spirituall enemies and oftentimes wilfully aduisedly and deliberately after many vowes and promises of repentance and amendement We haue sinned against thee before our conuersion when as Satans throne being set vp in our hearts wee performed vnto him in all things cheerefull obedience and suffred sinne to raigne and rule in vs without any gainesaying or resistance and since wee haue beene called to the knowledge of thy Truth though wee haue submitted our selues as subiects of thy Kingdome to be gouerned by thy Word and Spirit yet haue we much failed in yeelding that obedience which is due vnto thee being so led captiue by our corruptions that wee could neither doe the good we would nor leaue vndone the euill we would not and though by thy holy Spirit wee haue cast Satan out of his Throne and vanquished the flesh with the lusts thereof so as they could not reigne ouer vs as in former times yet these enemies of our saluation doe still fight against our soules and being not quite cast out are as thornes in our sides and as prickes in our eyes disturbing continually our peace wounding our consciences and leading vs captiue vnto sinne And hereof it is that wee haue so often and vpon such slight occasions vtterly neglected the duties of thy seruice and when we haue set our selues about them haue done them so coldly and carelesly and discouered therin so many wants and weakenesses imperfections and corruptions that if thou shouldest deale with vs according to thy righteous Iudgement euen the best duties that euer we performed could not escape vnpunished O Lord our God make vs truely apprehensiue of our sinne and misery that we may humble our selues vnder thy mighty hand and turne vnto thee by vnfained repentance and not onely bewaile our sins past with vnfained sorrow but amend our liues for the time to come and so accept of vs in thy Best-beloued and whilest we are returning vnto thee meete vs in the way and like a tender Father imbrace vs in the armes of thy mercie Doe away all our sinnes and blot out all our iniquities and so wash and purge our defiled soules and bodies in the precious blood of thine innocent Sonne from the guilt and punishment of all our sins that they may neuer be layd to our charge neither in this world nor in the world to come Yea Lord let vs not only haue the benefit of thy grace in thy free pardon but also the comfort and peace of it by hauing it sealed through the inward testimony of thy Spirit in our hearts and consciences and for our better assurance let vs finde and feele the power and efficacie of Christs death and Resurrection thereby applied vnto vs as effectuall for our Sanctification as for our Iustification and for our freedome from the corruption of sinne that it may haue no longer dominion ouer vs and spirituall renuing vnto newnesse of life as well as from the guilt and punishment It is enough Lord and too much that Satan and sinne haue thus farre preuayled not onely for the bringing of vs into the state of death and condemnation but also for the condemning and crucifying of the Lord of life the nayling of his innocent body to the Crosse and the shedding of his precious blood Now Lord reward them as they haue deserued and pay them double into their bosome Breake the head of the old Serpent that though he hisse against vs with his tentations yet he may not hurt vs nayle our body of sinne vnto the Crosse of Christ and by vertue of his death crucifie our flesh and the lusts thereof that they may no longer haue dominion ouer vs but may like slaues be held in perpetuall subiection to our spirituall part Yea subdue the power of sin in all the faculties and parts of our soules and bodies Mortifie the corruption of our mindes and
for all thy blessings and benefits both spirituall and temporall which thou hast multiplyed vpon vs and continue them vnto vs this day and euer preseruing vs from all perils and furnishing vs with all necessaries that we may be the fitter with all cheerfulnesse to doe thee seruice And vouchsafe all these blessings which wee haue craued for our selues with all other things which in thy wisdome thou seest needful vnto euery true member of thy Church c. euen for Iesus Christ his sake to whom with thee thine holy Spirit we ascribe all praise and glory power and dominion both now and for euermore Amen A Prayer for the Euening of the Lords Day O Eternall God who art glorious in Maiesty and power and of infinite goodnesse and mercy vnto all those who are reconciled vnto thee in thy Sonne wee thine vnworthy seruants hauing nothing else to returne vnto thee for the innumerable testimonies of thy loue which with a bountifull hand thou hast multiplyed vpon vs doe here offer vnto thee the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiuing for all thy blessings and benefits which either respect our soules or bodies this life or the life to come More especially wee laud and magnifie thy great and glorious Name for that thou hast loued vs from all eternity and of thy meere grace without any respect of our worthinesse hast made vs vessels of grace by thy free election created vs according to thine owne Image redeemed vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies by giuing thy dearely beloued Sonne to dye for vs when as we were strangers and enemies for calling vs by thy Word and Spirit to the sauing knowledge and effectuall participation of him and all his benefits for our iustification by his obedience our sanctification by thy Spirit and for that assurance which thou hast giuen vs of a better life in the world to come For all temporall benefits as health wealth peace plenty preseruation from dangers and protection from all our enemies both worldly and spirituall And especially wee praise and glorifie thee for vouchsafing vnto vs in such a gracious manner the meanes of our saluation for our blessed opportunities and liberties with peace and safety in sanctifying thy Sabbaths publikely and priuately by hearing thy Word and calling vpon thy Name and performing other duties of thy seruice that thereby we may glorifie thee and make our owne calling and election sure and for giuing vnto vs hearts wherein by thy Spirit thou hast wrought some poore desires and indeuours to make vse of these thy benefits for the inriching of our soules with all spirituall graces as at other times heretofore so namely this day past O that our soules could be rauished with the sweet apprehension of such inestimable blessings O that we could exceed all others in loue and thankfulnesse as farre as wee exceed them in these high and holy priuiledges and were able to expresse them in our carefull and conscionable indeuours to glorifie and please thee in all things who hast been so gracious and good vnto vs But alas how vnworthy haue we made our selues of the least of these thy benefits by our manifold and grieuous sinnes both our originall corruption which hauing ouer-spred all the powers and parts of our soules and bodies hath vtterly disabled them vnto all duties of thy seruice and our manifold actuall transgressions which in number and waight exceed all things but thy mercies which are aboue all thy workes and the merits and satisfaction of thy Sonne which are of infinite worth and value More especially we humbly acknowledge our fearfull abuse of those great priuiledges and meanes of our saluation which for a long time thou hast graciously granted vnto vs. For not onely haue we in the dayes of our ignorance vtterly neglected all duties of thy seruice spending our whole strength in the miserable slauery of sinne and Satan and prophaned and mis-spent thy Sabbaths in pleasing our carnall lusts and performing the workes of darknesse in greater measure and worse manner then any other dayes besides but euen since wee haue been called to the knowledge of thy truth and haue consecrated our selues to thy seruice wee haue either vpon slight occasions neglected those holy duties of thy publike and priuate worship or performed them with many wants and weaknesses discouering vnto thee who searchest the heart many imperfections and great corruptions For we haue not remembred thy Sabbaths nor with feruent desires longed after thine holy Day We haue not delighted in them nor consecrated them vnto thee as an holy Rest but though the spirit hath been willing yet the flesh hath been weake and soone tyred with spirituall exercises We haue been much defectiue in our zeale and deuotion and haue been too too cold and formall in religious duties and haue not performed them with that care and conscience nor haue serued thee with our hearts and soules in spirit and truth in that degree which thou requirest but externally and with the outward man hauing in the meane while our minds and hearts carried away with many distractions and worldly imaginations Our cogitations haue not bin takē wholly vp with spirituall and heauenly things but we haue suffered them to roue wander after earthly trifles Our tongues haue not in that measure as they ought been exercised in setting forth thy praise nor in such holy and religious conferences as tend to the edification one of another but we haue spoken our own words on thine holy Day and many of our speeches haue been idle and vaine worldly and vnsauoury We haue not as we ought priuately prepared and fitted our selues for thy publike seruice by prayer and meditation by renewing our faith and repentance but haue come into thy glorious presence without due feare and reuerence hauing our hearts clogged and choked with many corruptions which haue disabled them to the duties of thy seruice and haue made them like vnfallowed and vnweeded grounds vnfit to receiue the seed of thy Word We haue not called vpon thy Name with faith and feruency of spirit nor giuen thankes vnto thee for all thy benefits with such cheerfulnes as became vs. We haue not with due reuerence and attention heard thy holy Word nor laid it vp in our memories nor applyed it to our hearts and consciences nor made an holy vse of it by putting it in practice in our liues and conuersations We haue not meditated as we ought on thy Word which we haue heard nor on thy maruellous works of Creation Preseruation Redemption nor diligently read and studied in thy holy Book nor exercised our selues in the works of mercy and Christian charity towards our brethren in that manner and measure which thou requirest especially in those spirituall duties which tend to the mutuall edification of one another In which and many other kinds as we haue often offended heretofore so we cannot excuse our selues of many imperfections and corruptions which wee haue shewed
in the Canticles I sleepe but my heart waketh or like Cant. 5. 2. vnto the sleepe or rather disease in sleepe which Physicians call Ephialtes wherein they feele this waight of carnall securitie lying heauy vpon their hearts and striue with all their might to shake it off but are notable till God assist them by his Spirit and throughly awaken them by his Word For the faithfull in this securitie doe carefully and conscionably vse the meanes whereby they may be freed from it as the diligent hearing of the Word Meditation Prayer and such like and are much grieued in themselues that they performe these duties with so much dulnesse and drowsinesse and that they so little profit by them And this was the case of Dauid who being somwhat awakned by Nathan doth flye vnto God by Prayer desiring to bee awakned more throughly and to be more and more quickned by Gods Spirit and to recouer the operations and feelings of it which were so much abated in him Create saith he in me a cleane heart O God and Psal 51. 10. renew a right Spirit within me Cast me not away from thy Presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me Restore vnto me the ioy of thy saluation and vphold me with thy free Spirit And againe My soule cleaueth vnto Psal 119. 25. 88. the dust quicken thou me according to thy Word Quicken mee after thy louing kindnesse so shall I keepe the testimonie of thy mouth So the Church complayneth vnto God of this securitie and hardnesse of heart O Lord why hast thou made vs to erre from thy Wayes and Esa 63. 17. hardned our heart from thy feare Returne for thy seruants sake the Tribes of thine Inheritance §. 6 Of the causes of carnall securitie in the faithfull First prosperitie worldly or spirituall Now the causes of this carnall securitie in the Faithfull are principally these First their abuse of worldly prosperitie and temporall benefits with which God hath blessed them when as being in themselues common gifts which hee bestoweth as often and in as great plentie vpon the wicked as the godly they notwithstanding esteeme them as speciall Testimonies and Pledges of his loue and so out of this false ground conclude that hee will watch ouer them with his Prouidence and keepe them still in this flourishing estate safe and sure from all afflictions and troubles which mooueth the Lord that hee may waken them out of this securitie in which they were more apt to rest vpon his gifts then vpon the Giuer or at least vpon the Giuer for the gifts sake to depriue them of this prosperitie in which they trust and to hide his Face from them in respect of those earthly pledges of his loue As wee see in the example of Dauid I said saith he in my Psal 30. 6. prosperitie I shall neuer be moued thou Lord of thy fauour hast made my Mountayne to stand so strong that is Thou hast so established my Kingdome euen as Mount Sion the seate thereof which cannot be remoued But thou diddest hide thy Face and I was troubled In which securitie 2. San. 24. Dauid was when he numbred the people trusting ouer-much in the arme of Flesh and multitude of his Subiects but was awakened out of this sleepe by the message of the Prophet and that grieuous plague whereby so many of them were destroyed Yea sometime this carnall securitie in them is caused through their spirituall prosperitie and the ioyfull feelings of Gods fauour in the pledges of sauing graces which maketh them to thinke these comforts will alwayes last and that in the strength of them they shall hold out in the profession and practise of true godlinesse vnto the end and so rest more vpon the Springs or Streames of these sanctifying Graces then vpon God himselfe who is the Fountayne of them Which moueth the Lord to stop the course by spirituall desertions as it were at the head of the Riuer and to giue them ouer to their owne strength without any flow of fresh supply whereupon these streames in their sense and feeling are soone wasted with the scorching heate of tentations so as they returne to their naturall drynesse And to this securitie new Conuerts are most subiect who like fresh-water Souldiers thinke that they haue wholly conquered all their spirituall Enemies because they haue gotten the better of them in some light skirmishes and that they are sure and firme for euer falling because they haue such feelings of Gods assistance and the ioy and comfort that doth accompany it whereas in truth God tendring their child-hood and weaknesse doth hold them vp in their wayes because hee would not at their first venturing to goe haue them discouraged by their falls and knowing that like vntryed Souldiers they are faint-hearted and easily discouraged from fighting in the spirituall warfare he giues them victorie in some small skirmishes that they may be heartned to indure constantly and couragiously in sorer conflicts The which they misse-construing and attributing too much vnto their owne strength and valour the Lord to driue them from this ill-grounded securitie doth leaue them to themselues and suffereth them to fall and to bee ouertaken with some danger vpon which they become oftentimes in the sight and sense of their weaknesse as cowardly and fearefull as they were before confident and couragious and vncomfortably complaine as men forlorne and forsaken of all hope And this an ancient Father well obserued Some saith hee thinke the sweetnesse of their imitation Quidam dulcedin●m incheationis putant sublimi●a●em confirmationis ideò cum tentatio s●quitur derelictos se à Deo putant Greg. in Moral lib. 24. cap. 7. the height of their confirmation and therefore when a tentation followeth they iudge that they are vtterly forsaken of God And againe For the most part euery one newly conuerted herein slippeth and fayleth that whilest hee is entertayned with the sweet sense of some gifts of grace for his initiation or entrance into the course of Christianitie hee thinketh that hee hath attayned vnto the confirmation of perfection and esteemeth it the consummation of full measure not knowing that they are but the allurements of inchoation whereof it commeth to passe that whilest he is touched and shaken with the tempest of some tentation he suspecteth himselfe to bee despised of God and in the high way to vtter destruction whereas if hee would not giue too much credit to the comforts of his first entrance he would in his prosperitie prepare his mind to indure aduersitie and would afterwards so much the more firmely resist Vices comming to incounter him by how much hee had more wisely foreseene them §. 7 The second cause is spirituall pride Another cause of carnall securitie in the faithfull much like vnto the former is spirituall Pride whereby they ouer-weene their owne abilities and the measure and strength of their gifts and graces receiued And so leauing their onely sure dependancy
knocketh they may open vnto him immediately Blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall find watching c. And this know that if the good man of the house had knowne what houre the Thiefe would come he would haue watched and not haue suffered his house to be broken thorow Be therefore readie also for the Sonne of Man commeth at an houre when ye thinke not And elsewhere Take you heed watch and pray for Mark 13. 35 36. ye know not when the time is c. least comming suddenly he find you sleeping By all which wee see the necessitie of an holy and religious feare stirring vs to watchfulnesse and the extreme danger of carnall securitie For if that bee not without much hazard and perill and ought to bee carefully shunned of vs whereof our Sauiour giueth vs once warning then how jeaperdous and full of extreme danger is this carnall securitie and with how great care to bee auoyded of vs of which Christ giueth vs so many warnings as of nothing else more oft and earnestly in so many and such great varietie of Parables Examples and Admonitions And withall thus much is implyed hereby that as this sinne of securitie is great and dangerous so we are naturally most prone to be ouer-taken by it which moueth our Sauiour to vse so many and effectuall meanes to preserue vs from it or to awaken vs out of it if wee bee alreadie fallen into this spirituall Lethargie §. 4 That Christs holy Apostles haue giuen vs many warnings to take heed of carnall securitie With like care and earnestnesse doe Christs holy Apostles admonish and warne vs to take heede of this dangerous and pernicious Rom. 13. 11 12. sinne of carnall securitie The Apostle Paul telleth vs that now it is high time to awake out of sleepe because now our saluation is neerer then when wee beleeued that is then at our first conuersion when as wee begun to beleeue And therefore as Runners for a prize make most speed when they come neerest vnto the Goale so should we be most carefull in shaking off all securitie and sloth and in running swiftly in the Race of godlinesse when we approch to the Goale of blessednes and exhorteth vs that seeing the Night is farre spent and the Day is at Eph. 5. 14 15. hand we doe therefore cast off the works of darknesse and put on the Armour of light And againe Awake thou that sleepest and arise from 1. Thes 5. 6. the dead and Christ shall giue thee light See that yee walke circumspectly not as fooles but as wise redeeming the time because the dayes are euill And elsewhere Let vs not sleepe as doe others but let vs watch and be sober c. And because we are alwayes in danger he would haue vs to be at no time retchlesse and secure but seeing we haue innumerable enemies euer readie to assault vs he exhorteth vs to haue continually the whole Armour of God fast buckled vnto vs that we may be able Eph. 6. 11 to stand against the wiles of the Deuill So the Apostle Peter vpon the same ground exhorteth vs to shake off carnall securitie and to stand still vpon our guard with all care and watchfulnesse Bee sober saith he be vigilant because your aduersarie the Deuill as a roring Lion walketh 1. Pet. 5. 8 9. about seeking whom he may deuoure whom resist steadfast in the Faith §. 5 That carnall securitie is a most dangerous sicknesse of the soule But that wee may bee moued to abhor this sinne of carnall securitie with greater hatred let vs further consider that it is a most fearefull and pernicious vice which hath in it all relations of ill being not only in it selfe exceeding euil but also the cause of many grieuous euils In it selfe it is a disease of the soule most dangerous and desperate vnlesse it be cured by vnfayned repentance for there is no disease more pernicious to the spirituall Patient sicke in sinne then the stone in heart or if you will an heart of stone no stone so hard and hardly broken For though the voyce of the Lord bee so powerfull and full of Maiestie that it breaketh the Cedars shaketh the earth and maketh it to tremble yea renteth the Rocks turning them into a standing water Psal 29. 4 5. 114. 8. Num. 20. 11. and the Flint it selfe into a Fountaine of waters as the Psalmist speaketh yet it moueth not the secure and stonie heart nor resolueth it into the teares of repentance and therefore we reade that when the Word of God by the Prophet was so mightie that it claue insunder the stonie Altar yet the more hard and stonie heart of Ieroboam was not at all 1. King 13. affected and pierced with it but notwithstanding all Gods terrible Threatnings he goeth on securely in his sinne It is as the Prophet calleth it that Spirit of deepe sleepe which closeth vp mens eyes and depriueth them of the spirituall vse of their senses and vnderstanding making the Vision and Word of the Lord as the words of a Booke which is Esa 29. 9 10 11. sealed so as Gods Ministers may complayne of such as hee doth in the same place that they are drunken but not with wine they stagger but not with strong drinke Neither is it an ordinarie sleepe but that dangerous Lethargie of the soule which maketh men as vnfit to all holy duties and spirituall exercises as death it selfe makes them vnapt and vnable to performe any naturall or morall actions It is the Deuils cradle in which he lulleth men asleepe so as he may do with them what he pleaseth that deadly stinging Viper which bringeth them into the deepe slumber of death and destruction and that Cart of Hell which in the darke night of Ignorance carrieth quietly and without noyse huge multitudes into the Pit of euerlasting death Finally it is that Circes that Syren that Witch which transformeth men into bruit beasts and depriueth them not onely of all grace but euen of naturall reason and vnderstanding It is a seeming peace more Nimia securitas mentis tempestas est Gregor in Moral dangerous then any warre and in outward appearance a quiet calme but in truth the most perillous tempest in which many millions of soules doe suffer shipwracke and sinke into the gulfe of endlesse perdition §. 6 That carnall securitie is a disease hardly cured And as this securitie is a dangerous and grieuous disease so in this respect it is the more pernicious because it is hardly cured and that in a double respect first because insensible diseases are in themselues most desperate as the Lethargie dead palsie apoplexie And euen in acute sicknesses as Feauers and burning Agues we account the patient most hopelesse and helplesse when as he is past feeling of his sicknesse Thus also the wounded members are most hardly cured when by much effusion of blood and spirits they are become stiffe
with a liuely hope and still waite vpon thee when thou seemest to defer thy helpe Let vs haue a sensible feeling of thy loue shed abroad in our hearts by thy holy Spirit that being inflamed thereby wee may loue thee againe with all our soules and strength and all others in and for thee Let this fire of holy loue shew and approue it selfe by the flame and heate of godly zeale in seeking thy glory in and aboue all things feruently yet wisely and discreetly opposing whatsoeuer hindreth it and furthering all the meanes whereby it is furthered Worke thy feare in our hearts and let vs stand in awe of thee not onely for thy Iudgements but also for thy mercies abhorring nothing more then thy displeasure who hast euer beene vnto vs so gracious and good a Father Giue vs grace to yeeld vnto thee all sonne-like and true obedience both by doing that which thou enioynest and suffring that which thou imposest Adorne vs with meekenesse and humility and let vs be base in our owne eyes that wee may be precious in thy sight Replenish our hearts with Spirituall ioy in the assurance of thy loue and our saluation that nothing may dant or dampe it and stablish vs with thy free Spirit that we may neuer fall from thee but may perseuere in the profession and practice of true godlinesse till death summoneth vs to Iudgement Let vs be iust towards all and mercifull towards the poore and afflicted still abounding in all good workes and make vs temperate sober and thankefull in the vse of all thy blessings that they may further and not hinder vs in all Christian duties And as we implore thy goodnesse for those things which we want so with thankfull hearts and voyces we prayse magnifie thy great and glorious Name for all thy mercies and fauours vouchsafed vnto vs respecting either this life or the life to come And namely for preseruing our liues and blessing our labors for releeuing our wants and defending vs from danger this day past We beseech thee vnto the multitude of thy other graces adde this with the rest that we may make right vse of them for the stirring vp of our thankfulnes and inflaming of our hearts with thy loue O Lord be still gracious vnto vs and now receiue our bodies and soules into thy hand this night that they may be safe in thy keeping from all euill both of sinne and punishment and as we cease from the workes of our callings so much more let vs rest from all workes of darkenesse with a full purpose neuer againe to vndertake them Giue vs comfortable and quiet sleepe that our spirits being thereby refreshed and our strength renewed wee may be the fitter to serue thee in the generall duties of Christianity and the speciall duties of our callings Let not our sleepe breake off our spirituall watch but let vs still be in readinesse for the glorious appearing of Iesus Christ When we wake let vs wake with thee lifting vp our hearts and soules in holy and heauenly Meditations and praysing thee for all thy goodnesse Together with vs blesse thy whole Church this in which we liue our soueraigne Lord and King our Noble Prince the Prince and Princesse Palatine the Councell Magistrates and Ministers those which are afflicted and thy whole people beseeching thee in our seuerall places to giue vs whatsoeuer thou knowest needfull for vs for Iesus Christs sake to whom with thee and thy holy Spirit wee ascribe all glory and prayse both now and euermore Amen A Prayer for the Lords Day in the Morning O Lord our God glorious in Maiesty omnipotent in power infinite in all goodnesse perfection and our most gracious Father in Iesus Christ who hast created all things of nothing for thine own glory and man especially for thine own seruice the which he is bound to performe both by the right of creation wherin thou hast vouchsafed vnto him his being of Redemption whereby thou hast giuen vnto him his wel-being by restoring him to that estate of blessednes which he had lost by his sins But yet in a more especiall maner ought this seruice to be performed on thine owne peculiar Day which thou hast appropriated to thy worship consecrated to an holy rest both by thy commandement and also thine owne example We thine vnprofitable seruants and vtterly vnworthy of these high and holy priuiledges doe here present our selues before thee desiring and in some poore measure indeuouring to sanctifie this Day of rest and to glorifie thee by performing as we are able such duties of thy seruice as thou requirest Howbeit we must needs acknowledge to thy glory our own shame that we haue vtterly disabled our selues vnto them by our manifold grieuous sins For through our naturall corruption thy Sabbaths which should be our delight are become tedious vnpleasant thy seruice which should be our meat and drinke and euen the very life of our life and ioy of our hearts is become so lothsome and distastfull to our carnall appetite that either we vtterly neglect it or else performe it after a cold and carelesse manner with much dulnesse drowzines and irksome wearinesse Our wisdome is enmity against thee our vnderstandings dull in conceiuing spirituall things our thoughts imaginations so wholy carried away with earthly vanities that when they should be wholy intent vnto spirituall exercises they roue and wander after worldly trifles Our consciences are so loaded with dead works the guilt of our sins that they weaken our faith in applying thy promises and depriue vs of that confidence and comfort which we should otherwise haue in our praying and hearing Our memories are like riuen vessels which suffer the precious liquor of thy Word to run out without vse or profit Our wils are so stubborne and rebellious that we cannot submit to thine holy Ordinances but resist both the outward ministry of thy Word and the inward motions of thy holy Spirit Our hearts are so hardned with the deceitfulnesse of sin that they are not easily mollified with thy sweet promises and gracious benefits nor terrified and broken with thy threatnings and righteous Iudgements Our affections are so wholy corrupted and disordred that they are wholy set vpon worldly things and little loue and delight in thee and thy sauing truth in thy seruice and Sabbaths doe wee feele in our dead hearts in comparison of that feruour of affection which we sensibly perceiue in the pleasures of sinne and worldly delights And with this corruption of our sinfull soules our bodies likewise are so tainted and infected that they are altogether indisposed vnto thy seruice and exceeding dead and lumpish in the performance of all holy and Religious duties From which totall corruption of our natures haue issued and sprung those innumerable numbers of actuall transgressions whereby we haue broken thy whole Law and euery Commandement thereof in thought word and deed But especially we acknowledge our fearefull