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A13554 The progresse of saints to full holinesse described in sundry apostolicall aphorismes, or short precepts tending to sanctification, with a sweete and divine prayer to attaine the practise of those holy precepts / by Thomas Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1630 (1630) STC 23850; ESTC S1019 235,792 462

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is used both in a strict and in a large sense In a strict sense it is used for prediction or foretelling of things to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to foretell So those holy penne-men of Scripture are called Prophets 2 Pet. 1.10 And Philips foure daughters Prophetisses Acts 21.9 In a large sense Prophecy is taken for the interpretation of the word of God and the holy Scriptures And this is a gift of the holy Spirit enabling men to expound Prophecies concerning Christ and to interpret and apply the writings of the Prophets and Apostles Thus the word is taken Rom. 12.6 Having Prophecy let us Prophecy according to the analogy of faith And Ephes. 4.11 Christ ascending into heaven gave some to be Prophets speaking of Evangelicall Ministers This latter Prophecy being here meant hath two parts preaching and prayer for every Prophet is partly the voice of God to the people and partly the peoples voice unto God God said of Abraham Gen. 20.7 Give the man his wife againe and hee will pray for thee for hee is a Prophet And both of them are joyned together 1 Cor. 11.4 Both these parts of Prophecy are here meant especially the former which hath two parts first teaching which stands in right interpreting of Scripture giving the right sense raising sound doctrines and beating downe contrary errours Secondly exhorting which is the applying of doctrines to the use of edification and consolation These were distinguished in the primative Church into seuerall offices of Doctors and Pastors because of the abundant gifts then given and the indistinct multitude of beleevers not brought into distinct congregations but now for the most part they are confounded into one For the proofe of these parts of Prophecy see 1 Cor. 14.3 He that prophecieth speaketh to men for edification for exhortation and consolation II. To despise is not onely openly to contemne preaching and publike prayers but lightly to regard or carelesly to heare the word for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies basely to account of a thing and esteeme it nothing worth and of no reckoning which indeede is all one with despising it And the Apostle intendeth when he saith Despise not that they should not onely not loath and contemne the word but honour it highly esteeme it heartily love it yea sincerely follow it So the children are said to despise the counsell of their parents when they doe not follow it For thus the phrase Not to despise is used in Scripture Psal. 51.17 A broken and a contrite heart O Lord thou wilt not despise that is highly esteeme value at a high prise and rate In such speeches by a meiosis lesse being spoken than meant Christian men and women must not onely not despise but conscionably embrace the preaching and ministery of the word 1 Cor. 14.1.3 Above all other speciall gifts desire and esteeme Prophecying Prov. 8.32 33. Heare instruction and be wise refuse it not Blessed is the man that heareth me watching daily at my gates and giving attendance at the posts of my doores One reason hereof is in the Text By faithfull preaching the Spirit and his graces and motions are quickned and cherished as by it they are begun and continued 1. The Ministery is the chariot of the Spirit whereby he rides gloriously into the hearts of the elect Acts 10.44 While Peter spake the holy Ghost fell upon them which heard his words 2. Prophecy is that which inciteth and provoketh us in our dulnesse and quickens us to the faithfull imployment of such gifts as are given us by the Spirit Eccles. 12.11 The words of the wise are like goades and nailes fastened by the masters of assemblies As goades to pricke us forward when wee grow dull and sloathfull in the practise of piety and vertue and as nailes to fasten us to the sound love and obedience of the truth when we grow either wavering weake or weary for so the Apostles by preaching confirmed the Disciples at Antioch Acts 14.22 So Ieremy calls the word of the Lord a fire shut up in his bones which warme and heates our colde and frozen hearts and quickens our graces as the two Disciples whose hearts glowed in them while Christ opened to them the Scriptures 3. Prophecy is powerfull for Edification in the knowledge of God and Iesus Christ in faith in godlinesse love zeale repentance newnesse of life and all the heavenly vertues For Exhortation which containes admonition and reprehension both which are speciall good meanes to awake and quicken us when coldnesse and carelesnesse creepe on us And for Consolation for seeing it is the portion of the Saints by many tribulations to enter into the Kingdome they have great and continuall neede of matter of comfort and strength the which being onely to be had from the conduits of comfort in the Scriptures and from the gracious promises conteined therein what a forcible argument is this to make us highly esteeme and joyfully embrace so gracious a meanes not onely of instruction but of strong consolation 2. The gift of Prophecy and faithfull preaching is that precious gift which our Lord Iesus when he left the world bestowed on his Church Eph. 4.11 For the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the Ministery for the building up of the body of Christ. Now with what safety can any man despise so great a gift of so deare a friend which hee was so carefull at his last departure to commend to his friends to so gracious a purpose and end as to gather them from under the wrath of God and from the dispersed and lost estate of the world whereas without vision or prophecy people are lost or as the word is naked exposed to Gods wrath and their owne perdition Prov. 29.18 Nay more the Lord in this one gift offers a whole mint of mercy to be divided among beleevers He offers us life of grace in it and therefore it is called the word of life and the word of grace Ioh. 6.33 the word that I speake unto you is spirit and life He offers us light of grace and glory without the shine of which glorious light of the Gospell men sit in darkenesse and shadow of death having their understanding darkned and strangers to the life of God through the ignorance that is in them Hee offers by it grace and peace with himselfe and in our owne consciences and therefore it is called a Ministery of reconciliation and the Gospell of peace whereby God through us beseecheth men to be reconciled 2 Cor. 5.19 He offereth us faith by this gift of Prophecy this being the ordinary meanes by which we attaine that precious gift of gifts Rom. 10.17 Without hearing no faith Rom. 10.8 The word of faith which wee preach Lastly he offereth us by it the end of our faith even the salvation of our soules 1 Pet. 1.9 and therefore it is called a word of salvation Acts 13.26 Now what
great and unspeakable wickednesse were it to despise so great salvation to despise the word of life of grace of light of peace of faith and the end of it which is salvation for it is the ingraffed word able to save soules Iam. 1.21 3. Manifold is the evill that overtakes a despiser of Prophecy 1. He is destitute of the Spirit who hath no being no delight to be there as the connexion of the precepts witnesseth 2. Prophecy being neglected piety is lost and men prove profane persons this was a brand of Esaus profanesse that hee cared more for a meales meate than he did for the blessing Heb. 12.16 3. Despise thou prophecy thy prayer shall be despised and all thy service is abominable Prov. 28.9 and chap. 1.28 Because I have cryed saith the Lord and yee would not heare yee shall cry and not be heard 4. It ties and fastens sinne on men yea and heapes up judgement for first it nourisheth ignorance a maine supporter of Satans kingdome secondly it resisteth faith by refusing the onely and ordinary meanes of it thirdly it barreth out repentance because this is the meanes of our regeneraration and change of heart and life fourthly it makes sinne farre more sinfull because here is a refusall of mercy and grace offered by prophecy Ioh. 15.22 If I had not come and spoken they had not sinned but now they have no cloake for their sinne Fifthly the refusall of prophecy provoketh the Lord to give up men to vile affections to worke all uncleannesse with greedinesse because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved 2 Thess. 2.10 Lastly it tyes on judgement as fast as sinne and wraps the despiser in the curse of God Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect much more despise so great salvation Consider the threatnings Acts 13.41 Beholde ye despisers and wonder and vanish away Beholde I will worke a worke in your dayes which a man would not beleeve for the terrour of it out of Habak 1.5 This serves to reproove 1. Anabaptists and Enthusiasts who pretend the Spirit and despise prophecy they have the Spirit to guide them and therefore neede no preaching 2. Those profane Atheists at home who despising the Spirit of grace and the word of grace live as without God in the world Many who have Iacobs voice professe in word better things yet prize the preaching of Christ as a thing of nought It is better to be casting up some account or reading some history or walking in the fields or visiting some friends or perhaps going to a play than to a Sermon Are these the sonnes of Abraham or the sonnes of God and not rather the profane sonnes of profane Esau What can hee tell me saith one which I know not As if thy knowledge could priviledge thee to despise Prophecy And what thinkest thou These Thessalonians had knowledge as well as thou for they were taught of God 1 Thess. 4.9 yet must not they despise Prophecy and wilt thou despise it We see not saith another but that all this preaching doth breede barrennesse as an immoderate raine and brings preaching into contempt As if the abundance of prophecying did priviledge the profane heart to despise it The Israelites made just such another reason Oh wee have nothing but Mannah Mannah and our soule is weary of this Mannah and yet by their owne confession if they loathe this Mannah they must have nothing else to live by they shall surely die and their blood be upon them Object Wee see not that this preaching doth any thing but breede contention among Preachers and hearers Answ. As if because a bad stomacke turnes wholsome meate into bad humours therefore good meate must be despised and because mans nature spider-like turnes wholsome doctrine into poyson therefore wholsome doctrine may be despised Many other allegations the Divell puts into the mindes and mouthes of men against Prophecy because he knowes by preaching his kingdome falls like lightening Luk. 10.18 But those that feare the Lord will abhorre them 3. Others are reprooved who can be content to heare the word read and thinke themselves in good case if they can reade the word or good bookes at home but despise prophecy and interpretation which what else is it but to reject Gods wisedome in his owne meanes who hath set us apart to pray men in Christs stead to be reconciled to God The conversion of men was never committed to mens owne private reading no nor to the ministery of Angels no nor Christ himselfe undertooke to convert the world by his owne industry but left his Disciples to doe greater things than himselfe Ioh. 14.12 Contemne Gods meanes and thy owne shall never succeede Besides will not any say that hee understands better by interpretation of things than by bare reading Yes any but grosse malice and wilfulnesse 4. Others will heare the word not read onely but preached and yet despise Prophecy because they despise the practise of that they heare as Herod That which a man cares not to keepe hee despiseth Blessed are they that heare the word of God and keepe it and doe it Therefore beware of despising Prophecy and of receiving the grace of God in vaine 2 Cor. 6.1 but rather heartily and sincerely embrace it Meanes 1. Labour to see the necessity of it being the power of God to salvation Rom. 1.16 and a principall ordinance of his to reveale the great mysteries of salvation which thou canst never understand without a teacher 2. Make conscience of hearing the word often 1 Pet. 2.2 As new-borne babes feeling their want would sucke every houre of the day and night Esteeme it with Mary the one thing necessary 3. Attend at the gates of wisdomes house Prov. 8.33 It was the praise of these Thessalonians that they heard the word with all readinesse Act. 17.11 and a great worke of God in Lydia chap. 16.14 The Lord opened her heart to attend to the words of the Apostles 4. Rejoyce in it as the Iaylor Act. 16.32 Hee rejoyced that hee and all the household beleeved And the wise Merchant went away rejoycing Not to delight in the word is to despise it Ierem. 6.10 Beholde the word of God is to them a reproach why they have no delight in it 5. If thou wouldest not despise Prophecy despise not Prophets This were to despise Christ himselfe for Hee that despiseth you despiseth mee Luk. 10.10 But have them in singular love for their workes sake as our spirituall fathers begetting us unto Christ. Wee see how the Prophets of the olde Testament were esteemed even of Kings themselves as Ioash though a wicked King finding Elisha ready to die fell on his face and wept and cried My father my father the horsemen of Israel and the chariots thereof 2 King 13.14 And shall not beleevers in the new Testament honour the Prophets of the new Testament who as good lampes consume themselves to give others light But
Rev. 21.6 A tast of that which is delicate makes a man long after his fill 2. By a diligent and constant using the meanes of increase A worldly man because hee loves wealth and money will take great paines for it and be laborious in the meanes Now faith purifieth Acts 15.9 therefore a godly man labours still for the increase of faith the word sanctifieth Iohn 17.17 a property of Saints is they are humbled at his feet to heare his word Deut. 33.3 see Exod. 19.5 6. 3. When we envie not grace to another but rejoyce in it and love it because it is Gods image Iohn 3.30 Hee must increase but I must decrease Moses the more grace himselfe had the more hee wished to others Num. 11.29 Enviest thou for my sake yea I would all Gods people were Prophets 4. True love of holinesse longeth and wayteth and sigheth to put off all the corruption of sinne and attaine that perfect happinesse wherein is perfection of holinesse Rom. 8.23 Wee that have received the first fruites of the Spirit sigh in our selves waiting for the adoption of sons Find in thee this affection to the first fruits here and full fruits hereafter to receive daily strength and increase and thy holinesse increaseth with thy hunger and thirst after it Never was there so happy an hunger the more hungry the more full The fourth Marke is Detestation or dislike of opposites of holinesse which as it increaseth so doth holinesse also Now this is manifest 1. In carefull avoiding things which quench shake or hinder grace and holinesse 1 Iohn 5.18 Hee that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe and the evill one toucheth him not 2. By rising into greater dislike of corruption without seeking base extenuations as to say this is a little sinne or a small sinne no every sinne will swell as a toade in his eyes 3. By crying out on the law of the members rebelling against the law of the minde Rom. 7.23 4. By complaining of secret and lesser evills which were never wont to trouble him 5. By ceasing from particular and beloved sinnes as Ephraim said to his idols Get you hence what have I to doe with you Hosea 14.8 my house is taken up already here is no roome for you 6. By the spirit of judgement and burning Esay 4.4 judging and condemning sinne The Spirit keepes an Assize in the soule pronounceth sentence against corruption and kindles a fire to burne up those bewitching evills and a fire of zeale and indignation against them Thou growest not in holinesse who growest not in the measure of hatred of evills answerable to thy former love and liking of them The fifth Marke is Disposition to good duties this is an argument of soundnesse of sanctification 1. When thou canst ever set the Lord before thee walking with God contented and glad to have him witnesse and judge of all both inward sincerity and outward innocency 2. When in all the workes of thy calling thou seekest not so much thine owne things as the things of Christ Phil. 2.21 3. When in the sober use of all Gods creatures thou art led to the contemplation of the Creatour Psal. 8.1 4. If when thou hast performed any good duty in any good measure thou rest not therein but labour more earnestly to doe it better 5. If when thou hast either omitted or slightly performed any good dutie thou be humbled and so bewailest that which is past as thou makest it up in duties behinde Now if these be the markes of proceeding in sanctification how rare is this duty 1. Where is the man that takes up this order of God that begins this worke at the spirit of the minde notwithstanding that God being a Spirit begins his chiefe worke in the Spirit and the law the rule of holinesse being spirituall especially requireth inward sanctity Ier. 4.14 O Ierusalem wash thine heart first loathe sinne inwardly and then outwardly Many will mend their lives but let their hearts alone which is all one as to cut off a waste bough and not to strike at the roote to seeke to draine a streame but not meddle with the fountaine 2. Where is the man that having changed his understanding from errour to truth changeth also his will from evill to good Here many faile who see what is good and approove it but themselves are as bad as ever they were 3. How few refine every part of their life and bring all the members within the whole rule who can say I hate all the evill which I loved and all the good which like a swine I trampled under feete offered in the meanes I now in some measure imbrace and practise I was intemperate now sober wanton and foule now chaste and pure a great swearer now I tremble at an oath and so in the rest One that is a foule monster still may reforme some things yea many things yea most but to come to through sanctification casts off many some are just not mercifull some have care of honesty not of godlinesse some are better in some company than in other few have respect to all the commandements 4. How many be there who have made some faire offers of beginning in the Spirit but have ended in the flesh They made men beleeve they had the substance of holinesse and would goe through the businesse but end in meere ceremony nay scarce that but are haters of holinesse Better it had beene for them that they had never beene inlightened never washed never purged than forget they were cleansed Now let him that filthy be filthy still and let him that is holy be holy still Rev. 22.11 The third generall thing proposed is Motives to grow up unto full sanctification I. Motive Consider that whatsoever thou castest thine eyes upon it calls upon thee to proceede in thy sanctification If thou lookest upward to God the further thou proceedest and the greater measure of sanctification thou attainest the more thou art like him and the more is he glorified Iohn 15.8 In this my Father is glorified that ye bring forth much fruite If to the Angels these holy and ministring spirits incessantly expect his charges and unweariably execute the same besides they are joyfull witnesses of thy profiting in grace and holinesse for if they rejoyce at the first peeping of holinesse in thy conversation how joyfull will they bee when it proceedeth to perfection in conversation If thou lookest round about thee to thy brethren thou must bee so farre from offending or scandalizing them that thou must be ready by all good offices to helpe them to edifie them especially by a godly and zealous example these must behold the shine of thy light both for the glorifying of God and their owne direction and encouragement at least thou must be blamelesse in the midst of a naughty generation holding out the word of life Phil. 2.14 15. If to the creatures even the whole world heaven and earth Sunne Moone and stars beasts
eye gusht out with rivers of teares because men kept not the word Psal. 119.126 These sinfull objects every where should be the griefe of our soules and as swords piercing our hearts which we can too easily conceive pleasure in 5. Our eyes should be ever looking homewards and heavenwards and towards the end of our way as quicke travellers gaze not on things before their feet but hasten to the end of their way This is by heavenly conversation and constant expectation of our Lords returne to take our account we should long after Christ and the place of his abode there should our hearts be where our home is our house our husband our father our eldest brother even Christ himselfe is Thus to order our eyes consider first the danger of a neglected eye in Eve shee saw the fruite was good and forgot the commandement Potiphars wife cast her eye immodestly on Ioseph and said Lye with me David saw Bathsheba washing and was all inflamed It can looke to all things else but not to it selfe that thou mightest looke to it so much more And if the eye spy not nets laid for us it selfe becomes a net Ambrose Secondly an evill eye is made a signe of an evill heart Mark 7.22 out of an evill heart commeth an evill eye and if the eye be evill the body is darke Matth. 6.23 Thirdly a man that gives his heart to God will give his eye too for God calls for both Prov. 23.26 My sonne give me thy heart and let thine eyes delight in my wayes And if thou give him not both he cares for neither and if thou give him not thine eye as well as thy heart thou wilt lose thy heart quickly the adulterous woman will steale away thy heart though thou seemest to give it to God if thou watch not thine eye Fourthly know that if thou wilt not looke to thine eyes hee that made the eye must needes see thee Psal. 94.9 he sees the least unlawfull looke Lots wife cannot turne her face backward but hee sees and smites This is Salomons argument to the young man that will walke in the sight of his owne eyes that God will bring him to judgement Eccles. 11.9 if thou wilt walke after the sight of thine owne eyes doe but know that for thy quicke and nimble and unallowed lookes thou shalt come to judgement Now the directions for the eare The heart cannot possibly be kept in good state without diligent observation of the senses no more than a Citty can be defended where the ports and gates are cast open And as in the keeping of a gate of a Citty diligent care must be taken whom they let in and whom they let out So in keeping this sense we must know 1. when to shut it 2. when to open it First we must keepe shut our eare against the voice of the tempter that Satan and sinne enter not by this wicket Eve not doing this death entred into her soule and all ours Secondly wee must keepe out the entising and alluring of sinners which are as the Syrens songs Prov. 1.10 My sonne of sinners entise thee consent not And take heede of evill rotten and poysonfull communication let no evill corrupt communication passe through thine eares for evill words corrupt good manners and the want of learning this counsell is the bane of all modesty and civility in this age for this corrupteth first the heart and then the conversation it is like fire cast into a barrell of gunpowder that sets all on fire presently A Christian must neither speake filthy language nor heare it Thirdly keepe out reproaches slanderous and reviling tales whisperings against the good names of our brethren for what difference is there betweene carrying of Satan in the tongue or in the eare A good man will not slander with his tongue nor receive it into his eares David sinned in the ease of Mephibosheth by meanes of slanderous Ziba whom he should have driven away with an angry looke Fourthly wee must not heare or give heede to false doctrine errours heresies and libertine opinions contrary to truth received Deut. 13.3.8 If thy brother thy owne sonne or thy daughter or the wife that lyeth in thy bosome or thy friend which is as thine owne soule intice thee secretly saying let us serve other Gods c. thou shalt not consent unto him nor heare him neither shall thine eye pittie him nor shew mercie nor keepe him secret but thou shalt even kill him and thine hand shall be first upon him to put him to death and then the hands of all the people c. 1 Tim. 4.1.7 Beware of this itching eare which comes to Church rather to censure the Preacher than it selfe as Herod having Iohn before him sought some miracles to please his curiosity but sought not grace for his salvation and departed and left Iohn as he found him as the beasts uncleane went out of the Arke uncleane came they in and so they went out They sinne against this rule that desire novell doctrine forsake the beaten path and simplicity of received truthes and runne into new and strange conceits and confused errours troubling with the faith of men the peace of the Church and happy proceedings of the Gospell Fifthly especially beware of hearing Gods name blasphemed by oathes and cursed speeches or his religion or profession or servants dishonoured without our defence A godly heart is carefull neither to sinne himselfe nor communicate in the sinnes of others In a word in all the speeches we heare remember Iob 34.3 The eare tryeth words as the taste tryeth meates to let no words goe downe into the soule which are not wholesome else we are justly blame-worthy by neglecting this sence Secondly we must learne to know when to open the eare As 1. To heare the word of God This is called an hearing eare and an obedient eare an eare inclined to heare wisdomes sayings Prov. 4.20 Remember it is a note of him that is of God to heare his word hee heares what the Spirit saith to the Churches Iohn 8.47 hee is swift to heare Iames 1.19 2. There is a deafe eare by which men become like the idols that have eares and heare not And this being a great plague is followed with a greater the eare turned from hearing the Law Gods eare is turned from hearing his prayers his very prayer is abominable what then is his person Now would you know whether you have this hearing eare or not take it thus It is Swift Patient Wise. First swift to heare on all good occasions it knowes God hath given him two eares and on either side of the head to teach him to apprehend all occasions to gaine instruction Secondly patient in hearing our owne sinnes disgraced the coare of our owne corruptions lanced and let out our owne duties described it must be a boared eare like Christs signified by that boared eare of the Iewish servant Exod. 21.6 a painfull signe of perpetuall subjection and
glory where then is our free-will to attain salvation before our calling can we not holde our salvation after our calling unlesse God holde it for us and can wee lay holde on it before our effectuall calling Away with such Pharisaicall and proud conceits of Popery that all the glory and praise may be ascribed unto him whose faithfulnesse can and will present us spotlesse before the presence of his glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. Let us cast downe our crownes at the feete of the Lambe and put off all praise of doing any thing from our selves and confesse that unlesse the Lord should adde his last worke to the first all were lost In naturall life our selves conferre nothing to our lives or being at first and after we are it is Gods care that preserves us for man lives not by bread onely but by every word of God Neither doth mans life stand in abundance Luke 12.15 Much more in supernaturall life his worke it is to preserve us whose will is to save us Secondly it serves for a ground of consolation in that the authour of all our grace is faithfull and unchangeable hee beginneth and accomplisheth and worketh all our workes for us He not onely bestoweth a free grace upon his people but undertakes to preserve and perfect it And therefore we may 1. Rely confidently upon this faithfulnesse for all supplies roule all thy burden upon him and he will doe it Psal. 37.5 2. By prayer of faith importune his faithfulnesse not to forsake the worke of his owne hands till hee have finished it Hereby commit thy whole way unto him commend thy selfe thy soule unto him in well-doing and hee will keepe it 2 Tim. 1.18 3. Rest thy selfe undaunted in afflictions in dangers and losses seeing Gods faithfulnesse will keepe thee safe he will keepe thy salvation for thee Heaven is reserved for thy childes part no great matter what other things be lost or endangered 4. Findest thou want of strength in temptation feelest not thou the joy of thy salvation groanest thou under the burden of corruption weaknesse of faith dulnesse in duties goe to this faithfulnesse of God importune him for needfull grace say to him Oh thou that art a faithfull God thou hast called me and therefore doe thou doe it finish and perfect thine owne worke in me Thirdly for a ground of watchfulnesse and care over our selves that we may not grow either secure or idle and say If God will keepe us all is well for hee keepes his owne by meanes and keepes none who have not a care to keepe themselves Quest. What are the meanes whereby God will keepe me Answ. 1. Hee finisheth the worke begun by the word the arme of God which began it Observe the worke of the word in thee Keepe the word and it shall keepe thee attend the word for the powerfull preaching of Christ keeps the soule till the day of Christ. 2. By his holy Spirit who renewes our strength and graces therefore stirre up the Spirit that is in thee and cheare him in thy heart by listening to his motions and taking his part against thy daily corruptions 3. By the grace of faith 1 Pet. 1.5 Yee are kept through faith to salvation Therefore nourish faith quicken it encrease it walke by faith live by faith observe the growth of faith in the power of prayer and strength in good duties this is the victory that overcomes the world 4. By his daily providence guiding us to such courses and companies as by which we may not be losers in grace but gainers keepe thee in thy wayes and hee will keepe thee in them Psal. 91.11 Beware of consenting much more of delighting in sinne and sinners Fourthly a ground of thankfulnesse for graces received all which have flowed from Gods faithfulnesse Hast thou faith hope strength peace of conscience or comfortable assurance ascribe all the glory to God who hath declared his faithfulnesse in giving and encreasing and upholding the same whereas every day our weaknesse and carelesnesse would lose it every sinne might forfeit it and every assault of Satan and seducers would easily robbe us of it Prize this estate in grace make it sure a man will be sure of a good title of any thing hee holdes Rejoyce in it and in the evidences of it as well as in it selfe VERSE 25. Brethren pray for us IN these words the Apostle commendeth a duty of love toward their Ministers which must expresse it selfe in earnest prayers for them In which words 1. wee have a loving compellation Brethren to these onely the duty is directed for they onely can pray or can be heard the wicked mans prayer because he wants the Spirit wants faith is no sonne none of the brethren his prayer is abominable 2. The persons commended to their prayers For us that is Paul Silvanus Timotheus chap. 1.1 men of highest place of most excellent gifts and of rarest graces the Ministers of their faith These chosen vessels and worthy instruments request the prayers of inferiour and ordinary beleevers 3. What the things be which they must pray for in their behalfe and these are elsewhere expressed First for gifts and skill in dispensing the mysteries of the Gospell that they may speake the word as it ought to be spoken Ephes. 6.19 20. And for mee that utterance might be given that I may speake boldly as I ought to speake Did Paul need their prayers for that purpose and doe not ordinary Ministers much more Secondly for liberty and free passage of the Gospel in the mouthes of the Ministers that without let and impediment the Gospel might be preached without interruption or contradiction 2 Thess. 3.1 Brethren pray for us that the word of God may have free passage This is called sometime the opening of a doore which was shut Col. 4 3. Praying for us that God may open to us a doore of utterance Thirdly for happy successe and prosperity of their labours in the hearts of the Saints for their gathering 2 Thess. 3.1 Pray for us that the word of God may be glorified even as it is with you Now the Thessalonians had received it in power and with much assurance People must pray that by the labour of their Ministers the conversion and salvation of men may be furthered for Paul may plant and Apollos may water but unlesse God give the increase all is lost 1 Cor. 3.7 Fourthly for the daily sanctification of their persons that they may by unblameable conversation remove the lets and scandalls which might hinder their doctrine and become examples to their flocke in good life and in expression of all good workes So the Apostle Hebr. 13.18 Pray for us for we are assured that we have a good conscience in all things desiring to live honestly As this is an argument that you should pray for us being innocent and honest men so pray that wee may so continue Fifthly for the protection and safetie of their
in thy estimation doe now seeme lesse and lesse dangerous if sometimes thou couldest not be comforted in the sence of sinne and the same sinne now move thee nothing at all thou couldst not abide cursed speaking in others now thou fallest to it thy selfe thou couldst not away with idle and gracelesse companions now thou canst now hast thou quenched the spirit 2. If thou be apt to rush into sinne once conquered thy strength is abated 3. If thou be unwilling to heare any of thy sinnes reproved the spirit is quenced because he rebuketh sinne 4. If the word and rodde preserve thee not from sinne the spirit is not present in thee 5. If after sinne committed thou doest not more hate it and sorrow for it than before thou lovedst it and rejoycedst in it if thou hast not a more constant care to avoid sinne than before yea if thou hast not a greater zeale in doing good know for a certaine that some sinne in thee or other is as water cast upon the spirit Fifthly and lastly examine thy selfe concerning the worke of Gods Spirit on thy affections thus If thy love of heavenly things be abated or be more to earth than to heaven if thy joy be troubled if thy conscience be perplexed with accusations if there be in thee an excessive feare of death or the like certainly the spirit is now quenched looke well unto it Object Alas I have found my affections more fiery than now they be I have had a great measure of zeale for God much indignation against sinne fervent affection in Gods service joy in God comfort in my selfe and in good duties but now it is not so with me I could never attaine the like affections as at first what may I thinke of my selfe Answ. We must wisely distinguish of the diffusing of grace from the decaying of it In earthly marriage love will be more vehement at first because lesse diffused but afterward is rather more extended than languishing so it is in the heate of grace But how may I know it thus 1. If thou be displeased that thou canst not get thy heart to the highest pitch of delight in grace 2. If thou still hungrest after grace and a further measure as one that hath tasted hony desireth more so having tasted of the spirit doest earnestly desire a greater measure of it 3. Stickest thou to the meanes in publicke and in private and wilt not be driven off still lying at the Poole where the spirit mooveth then discourage not thy selfe but goe on comfortably this small affection toward the Lord and his grace be it but as a graine of mustard seed it shall outgrow all choke weedes and master and kill whatsoever affections would overtop it So much for the second use Thirdly seeing negative precepts include the affirmative every Christian must hence be stirred up to stirre up the gift of God that is in him and not suffer it to decay 2 Tim. 1.6 A fit lesson even for Timothy himselfe For first the Spirit is ever working something in Gods children worthy the stirring up he is no where idle but still beautifying perfecting his own dwelling 2. Every Christian hath some graces to stirre up else were there no difference betweene him and a naturall man who wants the Spirit 3. No Christian hath any grace so perfect but it needes stirring up where growth is there is no perfection 4. Without stirring the fire dies so the Spirit for which cause the Apostle useth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blow up Quest. What meanes may wee use to blow up the Spirit Answ. 1. The word of God in the publicke and private use of it First the preaching of the word as it begets so it nourisheth grace The Ministry is instituted and gifts given to men not onely to lay to foundation of our happinesse but to build us up till we meet together in a perfect body Ephes. 4.11 12 13. Naturall food strengthens the body by the daily use of it spiritual food strengthens the soule by the continuall use of it Those that say they know as much as they neede or as much as the Preacher can tell thē never truly saw their great weaknesse for let any good conscience say if it neede not the word continually David a man of singular grace yet lay fouly in his sinnes till Nathan came and stirred him saying Thou art the man Despise Prophecy and quench the Spirit where vision faileth grace perisheth Secondly the word must be privately read and conversed in for such is the excellency and power of it that it transformes the minde conversant in it unto it selfe and to be affected as the pen-men were holily and graciously Besides it begets and furthers found judgement whereas others erre not knowing the Scriptures and it stirres up good affections and gracious desires Againe the word must be meditated on in private without which hearing and reading are to little purpose Psal. 1.1 Blessed is the man that meditates in the law of the Lord continually And here is mutuall helpe for hearing and reading doe feede meditation and meditation doth fasten them Why else hath God given man a reasonable soule but to meditate upon his word and workes Or why else hath he set apart a whole day in seaven especially for meditation if it were not a notable meanes to excite grace Or why else did our Lord take all occasions from the workes of God to teach and instruct us but for our example that we should tread in his holy steppes We see the first meanes 2. The Sacraments were instituted to strengthen our faith which in it selfe is weake and to keepe in continuall memory the covenant betweene God and us with the meanes thereof yea the very preparation to them includeth a speciall meanes of stirring up our graces of repentance of renewing our faith of obedience thankfulnesse and all the meanes of growth in the covenant And much more strength doth a good heart finde in the celebration of them Therefore to forbeare them of contempt argues no member of Christ and of negligence to forbeare is to cast ones selfe into the judgement of God 3. Prayer sets all graces on worke as faith in Gods promises charity toward our brethren hope which lookes for the performance of that we pray for humility in confession of sinnes and sense of wants thankfulnesse for supplies and leave to pray and by exercise in prayer wee get the spirit of prayer Luke 11.13 Our Father will not deny his Spirit to them that aske him 4. Company or commerce with the godly doth exceedingly sharpen our graces One candle lights another and one sticke of fire kindles another A lesser sticke may kindle a billet so the strongest Christian may receive furtherance from the weakest Paul himselfe might be comforted by the Romanes chap. 1.12 And when Silas came Paul burned in the Spirit But how can one coale alone by it selfe keepe it selfe glowing Yea evill men
I am Truth not Custome so Christians must frame themselves to Truth what ever the Custome be Custome we say is a tyrant but Truth must be our King and Guide and it is the part of a wise Christian to row hard against the streame of bad Customes wherof the world is full 2. For the example of great men it had beene good for Peter to have tryed the example of the Rulers in their dealing against Christ before hee had denied and forsworne him their example as little patronized him as themselves Well said Augustine Non debemus semper probare quicquid probati homines urgent sed judicium Scripturarum adhibere an illae probent We must not still approve whatsoever worthy men urge us unto but take with us the judgement of the Scriptures whether they approove it or no. 3. Suppose they be as good as great and as great as the Apostles yet must wee follow them no further than they follow Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 4. For the example of multitudes it is a good saying of the Father Wee are not to number the voices wee have on our side but to weigh them and it often comes to passe that the great part overcomes the better part And as I approove of Diogenes his wisdome who thought he should doe best when he did least what the common people did so I am sure out of the word that that course of life is most acceptable to God which is most contrary to the fashion of the world Quest. 4. What if any thing come with Authority and have the image and subscription of Cesar upon it must that be presently admitted without further question Answ. 1. Every soule must be subject to the higher powers and that for conscience sake but not without a conscience rightly enformed and guided onely so farre forth as God be not disobeyed nor his truth disparaged 2. We acknowledge with Tertullian and reverence the Emperour as one that is the second man under God and inferiour unto God onely And give unto Cesar the things that are Cesars but so as we give unto God the things that are Gods 3. It was the errour of the unbeleeving Iewes against Iason and the brethren Acts 17.7 These men doe against the decrees of Cesar saying there is another King one Iesus For wee may not doe against the decrees of Cesar yet we must say there is another King one Iesus whose decrees are of absolute authority and Cesars so farre as they crosse not his 4. No man blames his neighbour that brings a peece of money to the touch and weights though it have Cesars image and superscription upon it It is no disloyalty but wisdome and warinesse to try the Kings coyne there being so many slippes and counterfeits Thus wee see that nothing either in doctrine or manners can come so strongly armed with Civill or Ecclesiasticall Authority but it must passe the tryall before we can hold it as good and currant Now of the third generall Who must try all these things Answ. Our Apostle writeth to a whole Church and to every particular Christian in it Object What hath every Thessalonian without restraint granted him a power to censure and judge of Doctrines in all points of faith manners Is it not enough for a common man to give his consent to the Church and to beleeve as the Pastors beleeve Answ. Indeed so the Church of Rome teacheth and namely the Rhemists on 1 Ioh. 4.1 corrupting a most expresse text where the Apostle wisheth and commandeth every Christian to Try the Spirits But nothing is more plaine in Scripture than that people ought judicially to examine the Doctrine of their Pastors before they give it entertainment as afterward we shall more clearely proove But the Papists and the Rhemists on that place say Is it not absurd that every particular person by himselfe and of himselfe should take upon him to examine and controll Doctors and Doctrines I answer It were absurd if of himselfe or by himselfe onely hee should try them but for himselfe every Christian must and by such rules as God hath appointed to discerne whether a Doctrine be of God or no unto which not onely Doctrines of Pastors but of Councells Fathers and Popes are to be subjected unlesse we will take sowre for sweet and darknesse for light Hence it is that every Christian should have his senses exercised to discerne good and evill Heb. 5.14 That every man should abound with knowledge and judgement to discerne things that differ Philip. 1.10 That every man should be perswaded in his owne proper minde Rom. 14.5 And every sheepe of Christ discernes Christs voice and will not heare the voice of a stranger because he is able to try and discerne that too Iohn 20.4 5. The fourth generall remaines By what must this tryall be made Answ. Every triall is made by some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or direction We try the soundnesse of solid things by weights and the ballance of liquid things by liquid measures wee try figures by line and rule and the kindes of mettall by the touch-stone Wee must therefore finde out some weight or rule or touch-stone to try the soundnesse and kinde of Doctrines concerning faith or manners Now there can be no perfect ballance or exact rule for the tryall of all things but onely the word writted Esa. 2.3 The law out of Zion and the word from Ierusalem must be Iudge among the Nations and chap. 8.20 all appeales must be made to the law and the testimony or else there is no light to be had Christ himselfe for his doctrine stood to the judgement of Scripture Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures for they testifie of me And Paul subjected his Doctrine to the same rule Acts 28.23 And good reason For 1. The Scripture hath all in it that a sufficient rule should have It is 1. declarative 2. directive 3. explorative 1. It is of the nature of God who is the measure of all things and immediatly derived from him and so the first cause the rule of all that follow concerning Gods worship 2. It is full of direction for any thing that is to be beleeved or done as the Artificers rule directs his worke and hand 3. It is sufficient to try and proove all things when they are done as the touch-stone tries the mettall or the square tries the work squared In all which respects it is like the patterne shewed to Moses in the Mount after which he was to frame the whole Tabernacle and by which he might try it being framed That as nothing was in the Tabernacle which was not in the patterne so may nothing be with us which is not agreeable to the patterne of Scripture called the patterne of wholsome words 2. By what should causes be tryed but by the Lawes of the Body Civill where they doe arise But looke what the Law is in the Common-wealth the same is the
ruine to themselves The second use is an use of instruction If wee must try all things then must we learne to get wisdome rightly to apply the rule to every particular which is to be regulated 1 Cor. 2.13 Comparing spirituall things with spirituall for to try is nothing else but to apply the rule or touch-stone to the thing to be tryed And when I speake of wisdome I meane that spirituall wisdome whereby the spirituall man comparing spirituall things with spirituall discerneth all things This man led by the Spirit acknowledgeth Christ and followes him in all things takes faith his companion and sets in his eye Gods glory the end and scope of all things Quest. Can you helpe us to some directions or Rules by which we may be guided in this application which is the onely difficulty now to be opened in this Treatise Answ. Yes and these Rules are of two sorts 1. Generall Preparative 2. Speciall Practicall The generall or preparative Rules to application are foure 1. We must be industrious to know and be acquainted with the Scriptures in their right sence of them whether historicall and litterall or allegoricall and figurative For this is to have our Rule at hand and in our hand without which it must be with us as with the Sadduces of whom our Lord said Ye erre not knowing the Scriptures And because true Scripture is not in words and sillables but in the true sence of it wee must be carefull not to rest in the words without the true signification of them The Papists heare our Saviour saying of the Sacramentall bread This is my body and sticking to the words and applying them without the sense runne into infinite absurdities and errours on one hand and so the Lutherans on the other Against both which wee may not unfitly mention one of the two rules of Augustine in his bookes of Christian Doctrine Si praeceptiva locutio videtur flagitium aut facinus jubere aut utilitatem aut beneficentiam vetare figurata est It is not a proper but a figurative speech which seemes either to injoyne a thing unlawfull or to hinder a lawfull So this speech of our Lord Vnlesse ye eate the flesh of the Sonne of man and drinke his blood ye have not life in you seemes at the first to impose on us a kinde of cruelty therefore it is figurative So Augustine 2. If we would be fit for this tryall we must lay up and hide in our hearts such Scriptures as wee understand that they may be neare us to serve our severall uses The Prophet David professeth that hee had hid the word in his heart that he might not sinne against God And Mary was commended that shee pondered all the sayings concerning Christ and hid them in her heart A Carpenter or Mason whose worke is squared or laid by rule is never without his rule in his hand or at his backe so should it be with Christians 3. We must absolutely submit our judgement to the word of God without reasoning or disputing though it be never so difficult and dangerous unto us for what is else the use of a rule but to rule Abraham left his owne Countrey and went he knew not whither at Gods commandement Heb. 11.8 One would thinke this were folly in Abraham but that the Scripture acquits him and saith he did it by faith And in a more difficult commandement hee rose earely went three dayes journey to kill his onely sonne whom he loved and reasoned no cases but went Good Moses would weigh the word of God in his owne ballance fixing his eye rather upon the impotency and impossibility of the meanes than upon the strength of Gods word which cleaves the hardest rockes therefore he sinned in striking the Rocke when God bade him onely speake to it and for it was barred out of Canaan 4. We must ayme at an absolute conformity betweene the whole word and our whole man This Rule takes place above all mens rules and lawes which rule the outward man but this the inner man the soule and the conscience the heart and the will yea the affections and thoughts which in regard of mens lawes are free but the word captivateth every thought and brings it into subjection 2 Cor. 12.5 It rules the whole outward man also our speeches and actions even the least our lookes and behaviours our callings and conditions our sports and recreations and as David saith of the Sunne Psal. 19.6 there is nothing hid from the heate and discoverie of it so nothing in man is exempted from the rule of the word We must therefore bring our practise thereto and thinke it not enough to be a rule in it selfe unlesse it be a rule to us also And lay this for a ground in our soules that there must be a proportion betweene the rule and the thing ruled Now we come to the speciall rules for the application of this Rule And they concerne 1. Doctrines 2. Actions and Practise Rules for the Tryall of Doctrines are sixe First all Doctrines must be brought to the analogy of faith and squared thereby Rom. 12.6 Whether wee prophecie let us prophecie according to the analogy of faith By analogy of faith the Apostle meaneth the measure of faith and Doctrine which is indeede the holy Scripture the heads of which Doctrine or the summe of which faith is contained in the Creede the Decalogue and the Lords Prayer If any Doctrine agree not with these which are the key and rule of faith it is unsound and to be rejected As for example 1. The Church of Rome teacheth that the bread in the Sacrament is turned into the very body flesh blood and bone of Christ which was borne of the Virgin We hold the cleane contrary Now bring this Doctrine to the analogie of faith that teacheth that Christ was born of the Virgin true man with a true humane nature like ours in all sinne things sin onely excepted visible circumscribed palpable in one place only at once as is ours that teacheth that he ascended into heaven in that humane nature and there fitteth at the right hand of God untill his second comming and therefore cannot be really and locally in the Sacrament 2. Romish Doctrine teacheth that a man may merit by his good workes remission of sins and eternall life they establish the merit of mans workes in the matter of justification we utterly exclude them Bring we this Doctrine to the analogie of faith The ten Commandements say The Lord sheweth mercy to thousands that love him and keepe his commandements If the reward be given by mercy then not for the merit of the worke done The Lords prayer teacheth us to pray for forgivenesse of debts and therefore we are farre from meriting The same prayer teacheth us to pray for every morsell of bread Is it not madnesse to thinke wee can merit the kingdome of heaven if we cannot merit a morsell of bread The Creede
A Commandement Keepe or hold 2. A limitation That which is good For the former It is not enough lightly to examine our courses no nor yet so judicially as to finde out the truth if we goe no further as many who please themselves and feede their eyes with reading and their mindes with meere speculation but cleave to no sound opinion but are unstable and unsettled in all their wayes And therefore the Apostle knitteth to Tryall keeping or holding For what a madnesse were it to try a peece of mettall and finding it to be good golde cast it away which is the folly of many a man in the case of sound and saving Doctrine which is far more pure and precious than gold seven times tryed in the fire For the latter we must try every thing but not lay hold on every thing and not catch whatsoever comes next to hand as many are ready to keepe and holde but it is chaffe in stead of good corne and drosse in stead of golde as many curious and dainty hearers who are as men having ill stomackes which cast up wholsome and strong meate and hold nothing but fruite and trash which feede and increase the humours there already So wholsome and savoury Doctrine is rejected and a few fine sentences savouring of wit or learning fetched any where but from the Scriptures are held and nothing else in comparison Which is with the Prodigall Sonne to feede upon huskes in stead of the bread of his fathers house And therefore the Apostle limiteth us in our keeping that onely which is good Now as God is the Authour and his word the Rule of all goodnesse it followes whatsoever God appoints and his word approove that is good and nothing else Every one is bound in conscience to keepe whatsoeuer good thing he knowes approoved by the word of God For the word keepe requireth a constancy in the knowne good either of Doctrine or practise Deut. 4.6 These are the Commandements Keepe them and doe them for that is your wisedome This is the generall precept to all Gods people For particular Churches Rev. 2.25 To the Church of Thyatira hee saith That which yee have already hold fast till I come and chap. 3.3 to the Church of Sardis Remember what thou hast received and heard and hold fast and repent And for particular persons 2 Tim. 3.14 But continue thou in the things thou hast learned Tit. 1.9 Hold fast the faithfull word The like for all the sonnes and daughters of wisedome Prov. 4.4.13 Take hold of instruction and leave her not and keepe her for she is thy life 1. Satan and seducers will seeke to snatch away the truth from us This reason the Apostle seemeth to imply in the composition of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if hee had said hold against all men and all adversaries which would withhold hold with both hands all good and holy truthes concerning faith and manners Theeves and robbers will meddle with no beggars but where they have hope of a booty Satan and his agents lye most in ambush against such as embrace the truth and follow the thing that good is there is the treasure of truth the wealth of grace and a booty which Satan would faine finger He makes many on-sets to this purpose and if we keepe not our ground here called the keeping of good hee pulls us from our hold and easily surprizeth and draweth us to the contrary evill We had neede therefore so much the more watchfully to hold that which is good as our adversaries are watchfull to robbe us of all our goods And were it not that wee had such enemies without us our inward and bosome companion our owne corrupt nature is ever soliciting us and drawing us aside for were we of our selves inclinable to hold good things the Apostle might have spared a number of the like precepts to this But the Spirit of God seeing our disposition so rimie and full of holes to let good things slippe and perceiving our dulnesse and sleepinesse with whom it is as with children who being once asleepe let things slippe out of their hands which before no meanes could winne from them yea and which is worse that while wee seeme waking wee hold weakly as a thing which a man cares not whether he hold or no therefore hee supplies our need and strengthens our weaknesse and awaketh our dulnesse with this and the like exhortations Hold that which is good Which shew that it is no lesse Christian vertue and fortitude to retaine and keepe than to attaine that which is good 2. Hold and keepe all sound Doctrine because of the great utility or profit thereof for 1. It is the evidence of thy salvation and of the inheritance of the Saints How carefully doe men keepe their Evidences lock them up safe in the surest chests they have because if they lose their Evidences they may easily lose their lands So lose thou thy part of the word thou losest thy part of heaven Shall men be wise to keepe their Deedes and conveyances of lands and leases so safe as no man shall cousen or cheate them of them and whatsoever casualty comes these shall be provided for and can it be wise or safe for any to bee carelesse in keeping the word his evidence for heaven without which he hath no tenure nor assurance out of his idle conceit to one foote in heaven 2. Wholsome Doctrine is the staffe and support of a man in the way to heaven A lame man if he hold not his staffe falls downe-right and if the word directs us not in our duty and supports us in temptation wee fall quite away 3. The sound doctrine and truth of Gods word is a notable preservative in dangers so farre as it is held unto A man in perill of drowning will catch and lay fast hold on any meanes of safety and will lose his hand before hee will lose his hold Every Christian is in this world as on a dangerous sea the Church is the shippe in which is salvation represented by the Arke the anchor is faith Heb. 6.9 the mast is the crosse of Christ the prosperous winde is the Spirit of God adverse windes tossing and tumbling the Church are persecutions tryalls temptations afflictions the fraught graces good conscience hope love and the like and the haven is heaven Now lose the doctrine of faith and shipwracke is presently made 1 Tim. 1.19 good conscience and all is lost But hold the doctrine of faith sound and entire by the hand of faith and all is safe 3. There is but one right rule and way to attaine salvation even the truth which the Truth himselfe hath purchased at a deare rate For the word of life and the holy Gospell was not easily purchased but by the precious blood of Iesus Christ and should wee lightly esteeme so deare and precious a purchase this will evince that it was never purchased for us For the
against the teacher which is an usuall bait of Satan to make all good things carelesly rejected Micaiah for this was turned out of dores as no fit Counsellor for King Ahab So the itching eare which is still desirous of novelties as the young man having heard the olde commandements would still heare more new And a tediousnesse in hearing the same things often which the Apostle calls a safe thing The latter are 1. Hardnesse of heart cast as much seede as you will among stones and cover them therewith no fruite followes for the stones hinder the rooting as we see in Pharaoh Mollifie the heart throughly and the word wil abide in it 2. Cares of the world which are as thornes to choake it All seede sowne among thornes getteth no strength but perisheth The Pharisies mocked Christ in his doctrine because they were covetous Luke 16.14.3 Voluptuous living makes men heare onely for fashion and to be like those widdowes which are ever learning but never come to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 3. or at least not to joyne vertue to their knowledge as the intemperate patient that heares the physitian but will not follow him II. Provide and furnish the soule with helpes to hold that which is good These helpes respect 1. Intention 2. Attention 3. Retention First the Intention must must bee cleane and sincere we must not heare for envie as the Pharisies and Iewes in Paules time nor for newes as the Athenians nor for gaine or curiosity as Felix but to receive as babes the sincere milke of the word to grow in grace thereby 1 Pet. 2.2 This intention shall be the better furthered by premeditation of the force use and efficacy of the word that it is the power of God to salvation the incorrupt seede the word of life the instrument of faith the sword of the spirit the bread and water that preserveth eternall life Secondly Attention must be used Acts 8.6 the people of Samaria gave heede to the things that Philip spake This attention is a keeping of the heart and affections to the word deliuered Acts 16.14 when Paul preached Lydia attended and the Lord opened her heart When Christ preached all the peoples eyes were fastened upon him Luke 4. Attention is the doore by which the word enters It is much furthered by a due estimation of the word Thy word saith David is wonderfull therefore my soule keepeth it Men will attend to their learned counsell when their free-hold is in question so here conceive aright of the word as a matter of life and death a matter that concernes thy inheritance in heaven thou wilt carefully attend it Thirdly Retention must follow In the body there are two nutritive powers one Attractive to draw meate into the stomacke the other Retentive to hold it there till it be turned into nourishment so in the soule And if the former draw too little the latter holds little and so the body pines and if the former draw too much that the body is not able to hold it the body pines still So here the soule must be still drawing but it must also forcibly holde it till the soule be refreshed Now this Retentive faculty is strengthened by 4. meanes 1. Meditation cleane beasts chew the cud Deut. 11 2. Consider the workes of the Lord Psal. 1.1 Meditate in his Law both day and night The acts of God must be in the mouthes of them that feare him Psal. 149. and 39.3 while David mused his heart was warmed Phil. 4.8 whatsoever things are honest just and pure thinke on those things men have therefore evill thoughts because they nourish not the good 2. Conference which is a whetting of holy lessons both on our selves and others Deut. 11. the Iewes are commanded to conferre of the word early and late Acts 17. The Bereans are commended for comparing the Apostles doctrine with Scripture 3. A full purpose of heart to practise good things Psal. 119.106 I have sworne to keepe thy law and 50.16 Why takest thou my word into thy mouth and hatest to be reformed 4. Fervent and constant prayer which is the key of knowledge gets the hearing eare and the soft heart it is a key to open the coffers of God out of which we may take those treasures which are not from our selves but from above our reach III. Chuse sure and safe places to hold good things in First in memory we must remember good things we heare Deut. 4.9 Take heed to thy selfe and keepe thy soule diligently that thou forget not the things thine eyes have seene Psal. 119.16 I will not forget thy word and ver 93. I will never forget thy precepts because by them thou hast quickened me Secondly keep them in the faith of thy heart else all is unprofitable Heb. 4.2 for that onely gives them rooting in our hearts Col. 2.7 Prov. 4.21 Keepe them in the midst of thy heart then shall they be as alight in the lanthorne shining through every part of thy life This was the coffer that Abraham locked up the promises of God in and held them fast without reasoning though it was difficult and seemed impossible Rom. 4.20 and David Psal. 119.11 I have hid thy word in my heart Thirdly keepe it in the affections of thy soule love earnestly the word of God and all good things for the things that wee like not or affect not we care not for keeping The great commandement is to love the Lord with all thy heart And every Christian ought to appeale to the Lord himselfe as Peter to Christ Lord thou knowest that I love thee Iohn 21.16 And the tryall of our love to him is to keepe his commandements chap. 14.15 Fourthly keepe them in the practise of thy life and whole conversation 1. By professing good things as Christ himselfe professed a good profession before Pontius Pilate 2. By promoting all good causes to thy utmost power 3. By maintaining and defending all good things and causes 4. By suffering for good things and every way giving testimony and setting seale to them if neede be with thy dearest heart blood IV. If we would hold good things let us furnish and arme our selves against theeves and robbers 1. Our owne carelesnesse Many times we care not to understand the things of God vanity of minde worldly lusts and desire of riches partly take up the roome partly choake good things so as they are neither received nor held But if we understand not let us not be ashamed to enquire and seeke out till wee doe understand 2. Satans slynesse who steales the word and good purposes out of mens mens hearts strangely even while they looke on and consent Doe as Abraham who drave away the birds that troubled him in sacrificing Gen. 15.11 so doe thou drive away these ravenous birds that are sent by Satan 3. Temptation and persecution Much ground keeps the seede till the heate of persecution comes and in persecution falls away and
with the broth and much lesse the uncleane meate hee knowes the broth is uncleane too the least sinne is infectious and contagious The difference then is this One loves the appearance of good more than goodnesse it selfe the other hates for the evils sake the very appearance of it 5. The fruite of this dutie commends it to our care 1. It commends our feare and zeale for God which riseth up against all sinne As by nature we hate all serpents yea the picture of an ugly viper so grace raiseth up the spirit against sinne indifferently and all resemblance of it 2. It is excellent for the satisfying of a mans owne conscience for suppose a thing be never so good yet if it appeare to me evill I sinne in doing it and must avoide it because it appeares to me so 3. It commends our charity which respects the conscience of our brother and is as loth he should fall by our hand as by himselfe 4. It is the honour of our profession and the glory of the Gospel when men cannot justly challenge us with appearances of evill for wicked mouthes are stopt and we adorne the holy profession of God which must needes suffer in us if wee avoid not shew of evill both for the safety of our good name and a good conscience We must be so far from loving liking any evil as we must utterly dislike it be disparate and separate from it whether in Doctrine or manners I. In Doctrines which have but a shew of evill we must abstaine and reject them as carefully as manifest false Doctrines for wee may easily suppe up poyson and heresies if wee can digest Doctrines which carry some shew of evill in them As for example Nestorius a wicked hereticke and as Evagrius calls him officina blasphemiae a very shoppe of blasphemy did not distinguish but separate the two natures of Christ and made one Christ not of two natures but of two distinct persons one the Sonne of God by which person all his egregious and miraculous workes were performed the other the sonne of Mary by which without the Sonne of God he wrought all those actions of infirmity as eating drinking sleeping weeping and the union of natures being dissolved for one Christ he gives us two but neither profitable for us Hee holds that wee are saved by the flesh not of the Sonne of God but of the Sonne of man and that the flesh not of the Sonne of God but of the Sonne of man is vivificall and quickening Now this negative makes it apparantly false from which we must not onely abstaine but also from such speeches as although they may have a right interpretation yet carry a shew of evill v●gr It is a true speech that we are saved by the blood of the Sonne of man but we must abstaine from it because of the cognation of it with Nestorius his heresie and say plainly by the blood of God as the Apostle speakes Acts 20.28 or of Christ God and man we are saved To say we are saved by workes may be truly explained but better to abstaine from it because it hath an appearance of Popish merit To call Evangelicall Ministers Priests may be truly expounded but it were better to avoid such phrases of speech because of the shew of Popish Sacrifice and Priesthood The words of heretickes saith one are to be feared and say the Rhemists if we will keepe the faith of our fathers wee must keepe the words of our fathers so say we of the faith of the Scriptures II. In practise and behaviour we must shunne such things as carry evill shewes The Iewes in their course of life must not onely not goe into uncleane houses but must not come neere them and Christians are commanded not to touch any uncleane thing Therefore all such are here to be reproved as think all Christianity stands in this if they doe no unlawfull things and so runne headlong never looking quàm malè colorata sunt what evill shewes they carry Magistrates who whatsoever they see president for in their predecessours venterously undertake it and so referre their authority to private use forgetting themselves to be publike men Ministers seeking their owne not Christs they may be idle non-residents cast up their calling and turne excepting their habit meere secular Paul refused lawfull maintenance at Corinth to avoid suspition of mercenary and covetous affection in preaching Christians in private converse must shew dislike of all appearance of evill First avoid all filthinesse and suspition of it as is said of Cesars wife such as are minced oathes adulterous lookes needlesse company with profane ones Secondly put no coulours upon sinne to digest it easier Object I may company with such and such persons to winne them Answ. Thou art liker to lose thy selfe by hazard of infection if without calling thou frequentest loose company 2. Thou art liker to lose than to winn them by intimate familiarity which is fitter to harden them Thirdly thou art in way to lose thy owne reputation as being a favourer of them and their courses Object But I may weare this and that fashion of apparrell my heart is humble and I detest pride Answ. If it were so thou wouldest avoid the shew of evill in overcostlinesse and excesse of attyre a lowly heart and a lowly habit goe together Object But we may straine at gnats and small things are not to be stucke at Answ. Little sinnes have great consequents Secondly they commonly draw greater after them Thirdly many little sinnes proove ponderous and pernitious Fourthly none are little if the shew of them be not little as our text implyeth III. Let us see this 1. In respect of Idolaters 2 In respect of profane persōs First Wee must avoid all conformity with Idolaters In service In Ceremony In neere society First In service To be present at idolatrous service is an appearance yea a kinde of approbation of idolatry And where all idolatry is forbidden all shew and appearance of it is forbidden also Besides wee must shew in our appearance our hatred of the very appearance of evill Quest. May not a man be at idolatrous service and keepe his heart to God Answ. No 1. God is but one man is but one and there is but one faith and God requires the body as well as the soule because they are both his 2. It is a deniall of Christ a dissembling of religion a betraying of truth where we ought to professe it an approbation of idolatry an hardening of the enemy by presence and silence 3. The very practise condemneth it selfe The man holds consent of heart evill then be must hold appearance of consent evill too 4. It is a reconciling of abhorring natures light and darknes God and Belial the Temple of God and the Temple of idols An impossible disioyning of the soule and body as if the one could be in heaven and the other in hell Origen said he could
to grow up in holinesse as plants and children naturally grow so also doe the children of God being planted in his courts To helpe us herein we will somewhat at large consider three things 1. Meanes of obtaining a full measure of holinesse 2. Markes of one that hath attained it 3. Motives to provoke us thereunto The meanes are five I. Meditation and sound consideration concerning 1. God 2. thy selfe 3. grace it selfe First in God thinke 1. of his will 1 Thess. 4.3 This is the will of God even your sanctification We ought to follow God if he should call us through hell it selfe much more in the sweete practise of sanctification which hath a happy fruite 2. Of his promises 2 Cor. 7.1 Seeing we have these promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow up unto full holinesse All the promises are made to the practisers of holinesse Matth. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart 3. Of his glory which thou oughtest by all thy endeavour to promote being the end of thy life and of thy selfe but herein especially is our heavenly Father glorified when our light shines before men Matth. 5.16 Secondly in thy selfe consider these things 1. In thy creation thou receivedst a soule a body faculties and sences with parts and members from him and in him thou now livest movest and hast thy being and canst thou doe him too much service in them Doth any man build an house but he will looke to dwell in it Doth any plant an orchard or vineyard and not looke for usefull fruites to himselfe Thy selfe art Gods house thy soule Gods garden and doth not hee expect not onely fruite of holinesse but much fruite 2. In thy redemption the end of which was not onely to deliver thee from the condemnation of sinne but from thy vaine conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 redemption is not onely from the guilt and punishment but from the service and corruption of sinne and sanctification is an inseperable companion of justification 3. In thy life and present estate thou art a Christian and professest Christian religion which onely prescribes the rule of holy life whereby thou must walke thou must life like a Christian that hast communion with Christ that walkest in the light as hee is in the light 1 Iohn 1.5 that hast the Spirit of Christ which perfecteth daily his owne worke and beautifieth his owne dwelling 4. In thy death and future estate remember thou must die and onely holinesse of heart and life shall attend thy soule when all things else shall leave it and without holinesse thou shalt never see God Heb. 12.14 If death shall leave thee unholy the last judgement shall so find thee So therefore live now as thou maist ever live hereafter Thirdly meditate on the grace and worke of holinesse it selfe 1. what a difficult worke it is and therefore thou must goe seriously about it oh the worke of mortification is a painefull work a man cannot die without paine no more can the olde man sinne hath a strong heart and is loath to die and therefore as to die is no dallying matter so he that meanes to dally in this businesse shall never happily proceede in the degrees of holinesse 2. What an excellent worke it is for hereby we shall be daily partakers of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.3 which is not in respect of the nature and essence of God which is incommunicable but in respect of the most excellent and precious qualities and gifts bestowed by the Spirit of God on those that are regenerate wherein we shall be like unto our heavenly Father and grow up to the similitude of Iesus Christ till he shall be all in all unto us II. Meanes of growing to a full measure of holinesse is in our Text Prayer First for the grace it selfe Psal. 51.10 Create in me a cleane heart O God and renew a right spirit within me Secondly for the increase of the grace Phil. 1.9 And this I pray that yee may abound yet more and more in knowledge and judgement verse 11. being filled with the fruites of righteousnesse 1 Thess. 3.13 The Lord make your hearts stable and unblameable in holinesse Thirdly for continuance and confirmation in grace as in the Text. Ephes. 3.14 I bow the knee that yee may be strengthened by the Spirit in the inner man Psal. 51.12 Oh stablish me with thy free Spirit Let it be thy daily prayer as Davids Psal. 86.11 O Lord knit my heart unto thee let thy good Spirit leade mee even to the land of the living Fourthly for a blessing on the meanes of grace Psal. 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonders of thy Law III. Meanes An holy use of the word and Sacraments For the word in generall Iohn 15.3 Now you are cleane by the word which I have spoken unto you and chap. 17.17 Father sanctifie them in thy truth thy word is truth Rom. 1.15 by preaching the Gospell the righteousnesse of God is revealed from faith to faith Now there be in the word foure things which specially helpe forward our sanctification 1. The commandements and precepts Psal. 119.4 Thou hast commanded that wee should keepe thy precepts diligently These let us see what wee ought to ayme at and how farre we are off from our duty 2. The promises and comforts of it Psal. 19.11 In keeping of them there is great reward Revel 20.6 Blessed and happy is hee that hath part in the first resurrection on such the second death hath no power 3. The threats and denunciations of judgement that are in it Revel 22.15 Without shall be dogges and enchanters and whoremongers and murtherers and idolaters and whosoever loveth or maketh lyes 2 Pet. 3.11 Seeing all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in holy conversation and godlinesse 4. The examples that are in it Heb. 12.1 Seeing we are compassed with such a cloud of witnesses let us cast off every thing that presseth downe and the sinne that hangeth fast on us Examples of holy men will make us trust in God Psal. 22.4 Our forefathers trusted in thee and thou didst deliver them this confirmeth our confidence Godly women must shew the holy and hidden man of the heart as Sarah did 1 Pet. 3.5 Observe in the reading or hearing of the word these particulars for the decay of corruption and the increase of sanctification The Sacraments or visible words helpe forward sanctification because by baptisme we are borne into the Church and notably it both representeth and sealeth our mortification and quickning Rom. 6.4 and by the Lords Supper wee are fed and nourished in the grace of the covenant in faith love and comfortable assurance IV. Meanes Godly company That man goes apace in the grace of sanctification who is a companion as David of all them that feare God Psal. 119.63 Now godly company furthereth sanctification 3 wayes 1.
the day of Christ Neglect thy selfe for the present and give thy selfe lost for ever sowe now to the flesh and reape corruption 3. The order First the inside spirit and soule and then the body First wash the inside saith our Saviour get faith which is a purifier apprehending Christs righteousnesse for 1. Can wee draw a cleane thing from that which is uncleane Iob 14.4 or sweete fruite from a bitter roote 2. Satan lyeth closest here as a serpent in thickets 3. It is the most compendious way to damme a streame in the fountaine to quench the fire in the sparke else if it live within it will kindle and flame on tinder or tow where the disease begins there must begin the remedie 4. God lookes out of what treasurie good things come if not out of the good treasury of the heart if not from a pure heart if not from faith all is sinne hence the workes of unregenerate men as good in shew and beautifull are rejected because they flow not from a pure fountaine and mites with the heart put to them weigh downe many glorious workes 5. Distinguish thy selfe from the hypocrite he washeth the outside Pilate washeth his hands not his heart as if sinne stucke onely in the fingers ends the harlot wipes her mouth and it was not shee But wee are to know that the Lord is as well angry with intentions and inward impurity as with outward enormities And therefore let us labour to keepe first our spirits and soules and then our bodies unblameable Here we will somewhat largely consider certaine directions for each of them I. Directions for the Spirit First Labour to have a right spirit renewed within thee Psal. 51.10 Now to a right spirit there goe five things 1. Illumination even an heavenly light to discerne and judge aright of things that it may preferre heavenly things before things of earth and out of sound judgement forecast and provide for them first and principally David joynes it with creating a new heart for this is not in nature but a worke of new creating grace The Agent is God alone who gives light to the blinde who takes away the vaile and makes the scales fall from Paules eyes in his conversion The companion is sound conversion 2 Cor. 3.16 the turning of the heart to the Lord and the remooving of the vaile joyned and the signe of it is a base estimation of the world with the profits pleasures and preferments of it the pursuing of which makes most men so blame-worthy in the day of Christ. 2. Poverty of spirit which stands in the sense sorrow shame and hatred of sinne and cannot stand with selfe-wisdome or high-mindednesse or a proud spirit puft up with conceites whom God resists but a contrite spirit is acceptable and the poore in spirit are blessed and blamelesse Matth. 5.3 3. Purity of spirit which is attained by daily bringing in and increasing of the graces of the Spirit as faith love of God sincerity charity mercy meeknesse c. these fruites of the Spirit argue cleannesse of spirit though it were formerly never so foule and blame-worthy Col. 3.12 Decke the minde with graces 4. Spirituall worship Rom. 1.9 Whom I serve in my spirit not bodily formally hypocritically coldly but with my whole heart in sincerity and fervency This fervency is a motion of Gods Spirit inflaming the spirit of the beleever with great love of God and hatred of whatsoever hee hateth And where this spirituall worship stands up in the Spirit downe must Dagon goe and all the idols that men have set up in their hearts downe goes the externall and carnall worship of civill men who what ever they pretend respect not in their spirit the worship and service of God but their owne pleasures ends and praise and that in their most slightly duties 5. The testimony of the Spirit that thou art the child of God Rom. 8.16 This testimony is sure when the Spirit of God renewes our spirits and upon firme and unfailing grounds makes us able to call God Father working sound tranquillity in our conscience through our union with Christ boldnesse and confidence towards God fervent love of God constant obedience with other fruites not common or competent to hypocrites This testimony sealeth up our acceptance yea the inheritance of children The spirit that wants any of these is not a right or renewed spirit Secondly labour as Saint Paul did Acts 24.16 for a good conscience before God and before men To a good conscience are required foure things 1. Clearenesse 2. Clearing 3. Peace 4. Watchfulnesse 1. It must be a cleare or pure conscience 2 Tim. 1.3 This is when the conscience is cleared or purged from naturall impurities which the Apostle calls dead workes This purity is not native as it was in the first Adam but acquisite and obtained by the second Adam for the materiall and meritorious cause of the goodnesse of conscience is the blood of Iesus Christ who by the obedience of his death hath freed us from all guilt and punishment of sinne reconciled us to God and become our peace whereby this and all other faculties are purged through faith in his blood Heb. 9.14 How much more shall the blood of Christ purge our consciences from dead workes The companions of this purity of conscience are two First a frameing of conscience to the rule of the word which is a torch-light for the direction of it for the conscience being the eye of the soule must be lightsome not erronious blinde or doubtfull Secondly a studie to preserve the purity and himselfe unspotted before God and man and no man hath purity of conscience that wanteth this care 2. It must be a clearing conscience taking the Masters part against all accusers It selfe is not blamelesse unlesse it can justly pronounce the Master blamelesse And this is First when it beares witnesse concerning our sinnes 1. That there is no sinne we have committed but we have repented the same 2. There is none committed but wee hate it wee purpose against it and keepe a watch that it be never committed any more Secondly when it witnesseth concerning our persons that we are now righteous and justified by faith in Iesus Christ of uncleane blackmores we are washed and made white in his blood and sonnes of God who of an enemy is become a friend and Father to us Thirdly when it witnesseth concerning our graces that as by the former wee are freed from the guilt of sinne so we are now freed from the power of sinne and are no more servants of unrighteousnesse but now our conscience tells us we are in part sanctified that the evill wee doe wee hate and love the good wee doe not and that in the inner man we delight in the Law of God Fourthly when it witnesseth concerning our course and actions that now they are wrought according to God by the warrant of his word and because he hath commanded so to
and holy things adde prayer to keepe them in temper 2 Chron. 18.29 Fourthly The memory must be made and kept unblameable And that is two wayes 1. When we keepe in fresh memory our sinnes and declinings so farre as to be humbled for them A corrupt memory is the corruption of the whole man Deut. 9.7 Remember and forget not how thou provokedst the Lord to anger in the wildernesse The memory is Gods register and officer and though now there be none in office yet in the day of Christ it will bring forth the records which seemed to be lost a prelude and taste whereof wee see in such as are distressed in conscience 2. When we keepe good lessons in our memory Rev. 3.3 Remember how thou hast received and heard and hold fast and repent II. Directions to keepe the soule unblamable Every man may holde himselfe bound in conscience and charged by God with the safe custody of his owne soule under God Deut. 4.9 Take heede to thy selfe and keepe thy soule diligently A man would be loath to forfeit a joynt of his body by heedlesnesse how carefully doe men looke to their eyes heads hands and every member and the least part of the body and yet more carefully to the whole body and this nature teacheth every man But is not the soule that better part that calls for so much more care and circumspection and this grace teacheth us to keepe our soule above all for if a man lose his soule what recompence shall he give for it Now because that in the soule is included 1. the heart 2. the will 3. our affections all these faculties in the soule must be kept safe as the soule it selfe and layes upon us a necessity to watch them narrowly First for the keeping of thy heart the precept is ●eep thy heart with al diligence for thence issueth life or death the chiefe part of the body is heart the fountaine of life and the chiefe care is to keepe that sound so the soule the heart desires and choyces are to be chiefly intended for thence are the issues of life or death And indeed according to the well tending or neglect hereof the constant course of holinesse is either furthered or hindered Besides nature in the framing of mans body begins with the heart and the liver and other inward vitalls and comes last to the face and other outward parts teaching us the method in grace where to begin our frame keepe the heart well and unblameable and all will be well And for this end observe some rules Fist therefore if thou wilt keepe thy heart unblameable thou must keepe it humble it must be an humble and contrite heart that God will not reject and a broken heart is a sacrifice of Gods delight the soundnesse of the heart is the through breaking of it the plow of the law must rend up the fallowes of our hearts and fit it for seede this must helpe both the rotting and rooting of the weedes Ier. 4.4 This is called a melted heart in Iosiah for as golde can never be approoved and purified before it be melted no more can the heart till it be a melted heart It is called the circumcision of the heart with circumcision not made with hands Col. 2.11 wherein the foreskinne of the heart is removed sinfull flesh and beloved lusts are wounded the party put to paine and made sore as the Sichemites in parting with a peece of his owne flesh This exercise of painefull mortification of sinne is the entrance into possession of a good heart and the grounds of all soundnesse in religion whereas they onely prove unsound and rumous in religion who never were soundly humbled nor traded in selfe-deniall as that building when the foolish builder would not be at paine to diggge deepe whereby to lay a firme and sure foundation Secondly then see thy heart be not onely an humble heart but a cleane heart Blessed are the pure in heart Matth. 5. striving after inward purity as well as outward For these an hypocrite can resist an hypocrite can wash the outside and may seeme to others to be pure and blamelesse But an heart desirous to free it selfe from blame deadly hates naturall pollutions filthinesse of heart vile thoughts and lusts and because it cannot be cleane without faith which is an inward purifier it labours for the increase of faith in the meanes to apprehend Christs merits and holinesse And because the word is a meanes of purifying and cleansing the heart as Psal. 119.9 and Christ saith they are all cleane by the word he will shew himselfe in embracing the word in heeding of it and framing himselfe according to the rules of it and apply his heart unto it And because a fusty vessell is not fit for sweete waters he will still and still be cleansing his heart that it may be capable of the word And because by nature the heart is foule and doth every day contract some filthinesse wash it with the blood of Christ and get neare unto Christ to have part in his holinesse and get the beesome of the Law to sweepe it daily and by the exercise of repentance and mortification daily part with the uncleannesse of flesh and spirit Thirdly see it be a single and sincere heart called a true heart Heb. 10.22 Let us draw neere to God with a true heart void of guile of deceit of dissimulation with such an heart as Nathaniels was commended by Christ a true Israelite in whom was no guile This is the heart of Gods delight 1 Chron. 29.17 Now you shall know the singlenesse of it 1. By this it is not one heart in one estate in one company and another in another but the same in sicknesse and health on the Saboth and on the weeke day the same in tryall as in peace but if there be any difference a single heart will be better in a bad age and most carefull among a most carelesse generation true grace is like light it shines brightest in the darkest roome and like fire hottest in the coldest and sharpest weather 2. You shall know a good heart by this it cares rather to bee good than seeme so it is more carefull to have grace than seeme to have it it doth not onely abstaine from evill but abhorre it Rom. 12.9 True godlinesse and soundnesse of heart consists in the power of godlinesse it doth not onely forbeare the sinne it loved but loathes it as the sicke stomack-doth loathe that meate most that it once surfeited on and what once cast up it ever hateth it 3 It will be religious alone and if it cannot get company it will be singular ● good heart will walke to heaven alone if it cannot get company it would rather have company but if it cannot it will rather goe alone to heaven than any where else with company Ioshuah saith I will goe my way if you will not goe with me I will not goe
shew all love to their persons still All which discovers a great deale of corruption in our affections First Many hate sinnes in another and not the same sinnes in themselves and this is the hatred of the person and not of the sinne Secondly many seeme to hate evill but not out of love to goodnesse some say they hate Popery but are farre from the love of the truth they dislike grosse profanesse drunkennesse adultery but have no affection to true godlinesse hatred of evill is joyned with cleaving to good Thirdly many hate most where God most loves as persons for grace sake and two sorts of men are the butts of the hatred of this age 1. Zealous and godly Ministers because their life and doctrine reproove evill mens workes Ahab hateth Eliah Hast thou found mee O mine enemy the more they love the lesse they are loved for a Minister to hate mens sinnes or to speake the truth doth it deserve such hatred If we should love mens sinnes wee should hate their persons and if we hate not our brothers evill we could not wish his good 2. A generation of men who are so precise they will not sweare nor be drunke nor game away their time they are Iewishly strict in keeping the Saboth so zealous as they cannot abide the sent of Popery they repeate sermons pray in their families cleave to the Scripture in all things so curious and nice they will touch nothing that is uncleane But are these hated of God Nay are they not in singular favour with him 2. Are not their workes objected against them the workes of God imposed by God upon all Christians upon paine of damnation as to hate swearing to be strict in the Saboth to detest Popery to be frequent hearers of the word to set up Gods worship in the family to cleave to the Scriptures and get out of the way of evill men In this way which they call heresie must we worship God 3. All this zeale against zeale is kindled not with a coale from the Altar but fired with a flame from hell Iohn 15.19 Because I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you 4. How generall is the hatred of grace by gracelesse men that pinch and reproach good affections zeale they call distemper sorrow for sinne is but melancholy and next to madnesse love of the word is but precisenesse and more than needes love of good men but faction and partiality hatred of every evill worke but singularity holinesse a kinde of heresie purity hollownesse and all that is nought How unlike is the world to God and Christ who commended shewes of goodnesse in the young man never quenched smoking flaxe but kindled it and enflamed it and whosoever hateth grace in another first hates it in himselfe 5. How generally doe we love and cherish in our selves what the Lord hateth First hath hee not specially manifested his hatred against an outward forme of religion severed from the power and life of it Esay 1.14 My soule hateth your feasts and new Moones his owne institutions because they were severed from faith truth and inward holinesse But how generall is the profession of religion without power prayer of words not of spirit hearing without conscience of doing washing the outside when all is foule within Secondly how great indignation hath he testified against people unfaithfull in the covenant as a jealous husband hates the wife of his bosome that playeth false with him Ier. 12.8 yet how universall is our unfaithfulnesse to God the contempt of grace the slighting of the meanes the Apostacy and turning backe of the kingdome from God So as we see how our affections are swerved from the rule and what great neede we have to be stirred up to a more carefull watch over our affections Consider therefore and see the mischiefe of disordered affections First how powerfully they draw us from Christian duties as how they interrupt prayers which was the Apostles argument betweene man and wife an heart troubled with passions cannot be familiar with God nor behold his face no more than a man can see his owne face in a troubled water Consider how they hinder the powerfull working of the word 1 Pet. 2.1 Therefore lay aside all malice envie c. and then receive the word A full vessell can receive no liquor sweete water in a fusty vessell is but lost seede cast among thornes commeth to nought how they unsettle the heart in grace pulling it off from confidence in God love of the truth from exercise of grace from the joyes and consolations of the Spirit For as no man can see the beames of the Sunne when the heavens are covered with clouds so cannot the soule discerne the shining beames of Gods love when it is clouded with passion Secondly how potent are unruly affections to draw us from our duty so suddenly and violently doe they carry us into many sinnes how suddenly are great professours snatched into the love of the world and so become Apostates as Iudas and Demas How doth the love of the world draw on a number of sinnes and drowne men in lusts and perdition How suddenly was David snatched into foulest sinnes not watching his affections How was Peter pulled from his purposes and promises by inordinate selfe-love to the deniall of his Master Acquaint thy selfe with the difficulty of guiding the affections aright for though the common errour thinke it the easiest thing in the world yet the whole power of nature cannot reach it for what a divine wisdome is required holily to temper the affections and keepe them even To temper faith and feare that they enterfeare not to mingle love and hatred that they entrench not one another to holde the ballance even betweene Moses zeale and Moses meeknesse to contend for faith and not be contentious to be couragious and bolde and yet suspitious and alwayes fearefull to be christianly patient and not stoically insensible The same Spirit must afford this wisdome that appeared in the shape of a dove and of fire Consider the necessity of this care and carriage of our affections 1. In beholding the numbers of occasions which daily thrust in upon us to thrust them besides their right objects and enthrall us in pride unjust anger envie wantonnesse carnall love feare c. And were there no such outward occasions who feeles not the spirit in him lust after envie and after the world and after all forbidden fruites so as all care is too little wisely to watch and prevent the continuall disorder of the whole man by his affections 2. What great necessity is it that wise Christians difference themselves from common men it is a great weaknesse to corrupt our affections by the provocations of wicked men to shoote in their bowe to doe as they doe But the godly must be different from them not feare with their feare nor joy with their joy nor kindle anger by theirs nor curse when they
the directions the Scripture doth afford us which be of two sorts and both of them within that in Iob 31. that because the eye is a most swift messenger unto the soule and most slippery as Iob make a covenant with thine eyes not to behold vanity And because all thy watching is too little for so quicke a member pray the Lord that he would turne away thine eye from beholding vanity Psal. 119.37 Wherein is this watch I. To pull away thine eyes from unallowed objects First beware of an hypocriticall deceitfull eye as in Prov. 6.12 there is one that twinkleth with his eye this is an eye quick-sighted to deceive his brother See thine eye be single as Christ teacheth that is such an eye as may discerne to doe that thou doest that it be just 2. by just meanes 3. doe it with all thy heart uprightly 4. within compasse of thy calling and if thou canst get this single eye the whole body will be likewise single II. There is a lustfull or an adulterous eye 2 Pet. 2.19 we reade of unchast persons that have eyes full of adultery First there be them that have eyes full of spirituall adultery gazing upon Popish pictures and images which they hang up in their houses as alluring harlots corrupters of the heart which is an opening of the doore to idolatry and a signe of a man willing to be deceived But the eyes of the Church are as doves eyes Cant. 1.14 chast and pure not gazing upon idolatrous pictures Secondly corporall adultery that delight in lascivious pictures filthy portraitures of naked men and women in whole or such parts as may incite the corruption of heart and feede it with contemplative adultery we neede bring no oyle to this flame the more lamentable it is that the Divell hath got such pictures into request in this wanton and unclean age for where can a man goe where he may looke off them which a manifest signe of adulterous eyes 2. Such are their eyes who are adulterous living pictures that so attire and disguise themselves to lay open their nakednes beyond all modestie to ensnare the eyes senses of others say not thou thinkest no hurt in it except thou be sure others thinke no hurt by it 3. Such are their eyes that reade lascivious and wanton bookes teachers of adultery and lewdnesse that frequent stage-playes with their beastly acts and actions wherein all gates and walls are cast open to the Divell beware of this eye by which death and poyson enters into the heart III. There is a covetous eye which is not satisfied with riches Eccles. 4.8 neither doth hee say for whom doe I thus labour this eye defraudes the soule of pleasure and is an evill sicknesse As Ahabs who was discontented with a kingdome for want of Naboths vineyard There be three things that never say enough the horse-leach the fire and the grave and adde the fourth a covetous eye which as Iobs Elephant Iob 40. thinkes hee can swallow the whole flood Iordan Let a covetous man have but a moate of dust or earth in his eye what trouble is it to him yet he thinkes to thrust a whole Country could he get it into his eye and see never the worse Take heed of this covetous eye there is no greater an enemy to faith and contentation or any good exercise than it is IV. There is an envious eye Matth. 20.15 Is thine eye evill because mine is good such an eye as Satan cast upon the happinesse of man when hee was fallen from his owne Take heede of this sore eye that cannot abide the light Basil saith that whereas many evills are in it yet onely one good thing goes with it it is the greatest plague to him that hath it V. There is a sleepy a dull and a negligent eye not open or quicke to behold with fruite and profit the noble workes and actions of God whereas God hath made the eye of a round figure and of quicke motion that it might easily move it selfe any way or every way in viewing the workes of God in beholding the afflictions of his people and the necessities of his brethren The second thing wherein we must be carefull in watching the eye is to labour to holde and fixe the eyes upon allowed and profitable objects As 1. God made our eyes to looke upward and hath given mans eye one muscle which the beasts eye wants that it should not fixe it selfe as theirs upon the earth yea hath compassed the eyes with browes and lids to fence them from dust and earth that though we looke sometimes on the earth yet the least dust or earth should not get into them Psal. 123.2 to shew that our eyes should be lifted up unto him and in seeing his creatures behold himselfe 〈◊〉 ●hem Esay 40.26 Lift up your eyes aloft and behold who created all these things the invisible things of God his power divinity and eternity were made visible to the very Gentiles by things created Rom. 1.20 And shall Christians onely looke on these things as they to make our selves inexcusable shall we looke upon the Sunne and not on him that made it 2. Let us fixe our eyes on the workes of God in and for his Church for the strengthening of our faith and confidence as Iohn 2.23 they that saw the workes of Christ Many of them beleeved in his name seeing the workes he did For the Lord doth nothing for or against his Church but according to his truth revealed in the word the Lord doth no worke in his Church either of judgement or of mercy but they are as it were the very commentaries of the Scriptures and therefore all the workes of God that wee can behold in or for his Church doe notably stirre up our faith in him 3. God hath allowed us our eyes to behold our brethren to behold their graces to see their good example to affect embrace and encourage them to imitate them to glorifie God for them thus our eyes should imitate the eyes of God which are upō the just to affect protect reward them Yea we must holde our eyes upon our brethrens misery to pitty releeve them we must not turne our eyes from our owne flesh as the unmercifull Priest and Levite did from the wounded man who were condemned by the pittifull Samaritan 4. Our eyes we●● given us not onely to be organes of sight but to be fountaines of teares in beholding both our owne sinne and misery and the sinne and wretchednesse of our brethren The Iewes eye beholding the brazen Serpent was a watery and mournefull eye because hee was stung by the Serpent so ours much more whose sting and paine is mortall and inward And can we beholde any creature and not see in it the expresse prints and markes of our owne sinne which still must adde to our griefe And for others Good Lot was vexed daily to see the uncleane conversation of the Sodomites and Davids
are never pluckt away therefore never cease to be sheepe 2. To these sheepe are promised eternall life therefore so long shall they be sheepe even for all eternity 3. The Fathers power is above all temptations therefore suffers nothing to make them of sheepe no sheepe for then they might be plucked away 4. Though themselves would fling out of the fold being foolish and straying yet have a good shepheard and by him are preserved in grace to salvation 5. Even this prayer in the Text is a prayer of faith and therefore the Thessalonians must persevere A prayer of faith argues both the presence of the Spirit whose voice the Lord cannot but heare and the voice of a childe whom the father will not repell Quest. But if the Thessalonians shall persevere till the comming of Christ why doth the Apostle pray so earnestly it seemes very needlesse nay rather such earnest petitions seeme to make their case very hazardous and imply they may fall away Answ. Prayers for perseverance imply not any possibility of falling away but plainely shew which the Apostle aimes at here that assurance of perseverance makes no godly man secure or profane but implieth a condition of unblameable walking and preserving himselfe unspotted of the world 2. They teach us to depend on God for the last grace as well as the first and give him the praise as well of our perseverance as our entrance into grace for he gives his Spirit into our hearts that we should not depart from him Contrary to the doctrine of the Church of Rome which teacheth that God gives us the first grace by which wee become good but wee merit a second grace by which of good we become better 3. All such prayers as this teach us to joyne the end and the meanes together as God doth It is not in vaine to pray not to fall away though the elect cannot fall away First because it is an obedience to Gods commandement Secondly a testimony that we depend on his strength and promise for perseverance Thirdly that wee looke to attaine the gift in in Gods owne meanes of conveying them of which prayer is one of the chiefe Would wee not want grace wee must not be wanting in prayer They are farre wide that conceive prayer and perseverance repugnant for they are subordinate and assistant one to another Object We finde the Saints praying that the Lord would not take his holy Spirit from them that he would create a new Spirit in them Sol. Not because the Spirit is either quite taken away or quite gone But First because he is taken from them not in respect of his existence but of his operation for he is not so powerfully working Secondly not in respect of the saving gift but of the measure degree and comfort of it Thirdly the Spirit where once he is is not quite gone in respect of himselfe but in their sense and apprehension Now this is no good argument They feele him not therefore hee is not there no more than a man in a swoone can be concluded dead because he discernes not his life Fourthly and lastly by prayer wee retaine the Spirit and the renewing grace of the Spirit both in respect of sense and existence prayer being Gods meanes to keepe the Spirit from departing from us 4. This and all such prayers for perseverance being prayers of faith are therefore so much more earnest because wee know that God will grant us the grace prayed for Hee will never pray that beleeves not that God will grant his prayer But the Saints therefore pray because they beleeve to speede Eliah 1 King 18.42 knew it would raine and tolde Ahab so yet hee goes and prayes for it Christ knew his Father would glorifie him yet he prayes he would so doe hee well knew none of his Disciples should perish but Iudas yet he prayeth to that purpose And this is not in vaine but a performance of worship to God a possessing of grace in a right title and tenure and a sweetning of the mercy which wee have gotten by prayer and prevailing with God The Apostle implies in Christs comming that Christ is now absent from us that is in respect of his body hee is not present in earth neither circumscriptive nor diffinitive nor repletive for then he could not come to us if hee were with us already True it is that Christ is spiritually present with his Church to the end of the world according to his promise of his spirit and grace Christ is also sacramentally present 1. Ratione signi hee is represented in the signe 2. Ratione objecti for he is the present object of our faith whereby wee behold and partake him being present in the word of promise But corporally he is not present neither in the Supper nor any place where the Supper is celebrated nor in the bread 1. Because Christ professed when hee was to ascend that hee was to leave the world and goe to the Father Ioh. 16. but the bread is in the world therefore Christ now ascended is not in it 2. Hee expresly denies that hee should be with us on earth after his ascension Matth. 26. The poore yee have alwayes with you but mee not alwayes If they fly to their old shift of invisible conversation or quoad statum humilitatis that is in respect of his humility Christ spake without any such limitation Mee yee shall not have alwayes 3. Our high Priest is gone with his body into the heavenly Sanctuary and if hee be not there hee ceaseth to be our high Priest Heb. 8.4 If they say he is on earth but not visibly what should an invisible high Priest do in earth where all Priests were ever visible 4. Even the bread in which they say he is present corporally is a signe and argument of his corporall absence because it must be received in memory of him Now memory is of a thing absent and therein we declare the Lords death till this his comming 1 Cor. 11. And here we may note also that Christ will come againe according to his body Acts 1.11 and Hebr. 9.28 He shall come the second time to the salvation of them that waite for him hee comes but twice corporally once to merit salvation and againe to perfect it 1. Then let us waite for this comming as a loving spouse longs for her husbands returne out of a farre Countrey 2. Love this comming of Christ when the glory of Christ shall breake out as the Sunne in his strength which is now clouded and vailed First by his bodily absence Secondly by the affliction and poverty of his Church Thirdly by the insolency and pride of his enemies But then his glory shall appeare and shall be glorious in himselfe and all the Saints 2. Because the innocency of the Saints shall then be cleared to the faces of the wicked and their labours shall be recompenced with invisible reward 3. Prepare
for this comming and first hence the Apostle moveth all men every where to repent because God hath appointed a day to judge the world Acts 17.31 Secondly perswadeth men to holinesse 2 Cor. 5.11 2 Pet. 3.11 considering the terrours of the Lord what manner of men ought we to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse Foolish men now dreame of too much strictnesse and holinesse because they consider not this day of Christs second comming A third note is in the Apostles argument That onely an unblameable holinesse will bestead us at that day and therfore we must preserve our selves unblameable till that comming of Christ all things else leave us at that day Riches honours pleasures then forsake us they are neither true nor ours saith Bernard Onely a good conscience and study of holinesse and practise of holy duties goe along with us to meete Christ in his second comming then will a little holinesse obedience faith and feare of God more comfort us than all the word and glory of it can afford Christians must not onely labour for full holinesse but for finall that is They must not be content with any measure of grace never so great unlesse they persevere in grace untill the comming of Christ. Iohn 15.4 Abide in mee he● saith not onely Come unto me as Mat. 11.29 bu● Abide in mee Revel 22.11 Let him that is holy b● holy still and Revel 2.25 Hold fast that thou hast till I come and be faithfull unto the death and I will give thee a crowne of life verse 10. Matth. 10.22 Hee that continueth to the end shall be saved 1. This is the way of the just which is as the light that shineth more and more untill perfect day Prov. 4.18 Looke as the Sunne rising is brighter and brighter and still dispelleth mists and darknesse before it till it come to high noone which is the perfect pitch of the day so where the Sunne of righteousnesse riseth in the heart there is a daily profiting and proceeding in the knowledge and feare of God a walking from strength to strength from faith to faith till they attaine the highest pitch of grace in this life and that talnesse in Christ which shall be most absolutely confirmed and perfected in that brightest and highest light and life of glory to come But the hypocrite is not so he hath some light some little oile in his lampe but onely enough to make a flash or sodaine blaze but not enough to carry him into the wedding chamber sometimes hee will wash and repent but hee soone forgetteth that hee was washed sometimes hee will have good words in his mouth some good actions now and then in his hand and seeme very good but all his righteousnesse is as the morning dew 2. Perseverance is a gift never divorced from faith though sometimes it may be disturbed by fits yet at length it shall set the crowne on the head of true piety for truth of grace is blessed with continuance because 1. Of the promise Isay 40.31 They that waite on the Lord shall renew their strength as the Eagle they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not be faint 2. Of faith which apprehendeth that living water of which whosoever drinketh he shall never thirst more because there is such a fountaine in him springing up to eternall life Iohn 4.4 3. Of the faithfull who be as trees planted by the rivers of water and their moisture is indeficient their leaves fall not off This was signified by the good ground Luke 8. distinguished from all the other three that it brings fruit with patience when the best fruits of all the other came at last to nothing And this grace differenceth between such as formerly nothing else in shew did distinguish for let an hypocrite set forth never so faire and hold a place of profession and forwardnesse among the people of God yet at the last hee shall prove like the unhappy passenger that hath seemed to saile prosperously all his voyage and no danger threatned him yet at the length suffers shipwracke and is cast away at the mouth of the very haven 3. Because perseverance approoveth the soundnesse of our calling and gifts given us and so affordeth us the comfort of our present estate in grace It is well said of one In principio delectatio but in fine probatio Which telleth us that a man at the first may rejoyce in the light for a season and in the taste of the word and the powers of the life to come may be very sweete but all the proofe and tryall is at the end the end shewes who bee called according to meanes and who are called of purpose What one said of true vertue wee may apply of true piety Verae pietatis est non caepisse sed fecisse nec fecisse sed perfecisse Whereas of hypocrites may be said that to the Galathians Yee did runne well who letted you And what comfort is there of temporary faith which giveth over when there is most neede of it What use of that illumination that leaveth us in darknesse at the last What were the foolish Virgins better for that oyle and light which failed them before they came to the wedding chamber 4. Because Satan lieth in waite especially for our perseverance his chiefe scope and delight is to sport himselfe in the apostacy both of the wicked and the godly Sometimes the wicked hypocrite goes about the businesse as he that hath resolved and cast the accounts to walke in the way of holinesse and may hold on a long time in the externall profession and some outward reformation but at length wanting soundnesse a small thing turneth him aside he sets faire out of Sodome with Lot but lookes backe with his wife they set faire out of Moab with Orpah but goe not forward with Ruth to Iudah Now the Divell as a passenger seeing a foundation laid and walls reared and there the building to stand at a stay laugheth and scorneth saying This man begun to build but could not finish But you said the Divell triumpheth also in the apostacy of the godly now I thought they had never fallen away They indeede wholly and finally fall not off as the former but many are their falls and backslidings through their negligence by which they lose many graces and many degrees of such as they keepe even such as perhaps are never restored while they live and often bring the terrours of God into their soules and goe to their grave with incurable temporary affliction and doth not this rejoyce Satan to see the Saints in the suddes and to passe their dayes heavily and uncheerfully and as ever in darknesse in comparison of the former light of joy in themselves and of comfort example and direction unto others while they stood valiantly against the forces of the Divell 2. So much the more fiercely Satan assaults this grace because he knowes that onely perseverance overcommeth himselfe and
pleasures of it too well Demas forsooke the truth to embrace the present world Iudas by the same corrupt affection fell from the Apostleship Ioh. 12.41 Many chiefe Rulers beleeved Christ but durst not confesse him because of the Pharises for they loved the praise of men more than God Oh that we did not so cleerely see the strength of this lett in these dayes wherein so many baulke the way of holinesse and fall backe almost to open profanesse because they neither see many men nor great men yeeld approbation or countenance to such strict courses 2. Shunne lewd society and familiarity with profane persons if we would not fall from our owne stedfastnesse 2 Pet. 3.17 18. there is not more strength in any infectious pestilencious ayre to poyson the body than in this poysoned ayre to kill the soule Society with gracelesse men is a very blasting of grace fire is not more apt to burne than we to learne their wayes 4. The labour and paines of holinesse and mortification makes many weary of the good way but consider it is not in vaine to serve the Lord and there is profit in walking humbly before him thy paines shall be abundantly recompenced a small measure of holinesse with an upheaped measure of happinesse Every man will be contented to swallow much paines for a little earthly profit and is the state of heaven worth no labour 5. Persecutions drive many away much seed which comes up faire when the sunne of persecution ariseth withereth away But against this wisdome must cast the costs and prepare to defray the charges of this great building and the same Sunne that dries and burnes up the shallow seede shall set and ripen ours Many heare holinesse reviled and spoyled of her vaile and value they heare this sect every where spoken against and would as farre forget themselves as Peter to heare that voice Thou art one of them and perhaps renounce Christ and profession and all for if even the very Disciples of Christ and all they leave him and fly when afflictions comes neare Matth. 26.56 what marvell if they that want soundnesse shrinke in the wetting 1. But here remember and looke upon Christ Heb. 12.2 who endured such speaking against of sinners not for himselfe but for thee lest thou be weary 2. Hee that is now ashamed of Christ Christ will one day be ashamed of him and then he that will no● beare the reproach of a blast of words for him shall be filled with an everlasting reproach before men and Angells 3. Sound judgement esteemes it the greatest honour to be highly dishonoured for Christ and his causes Matth. 5.12 Blessed are yee when men revile you and speake all manner of evill against you for my sake rejoyce and be glad great is your reward in heaven Object I could better endure mens words but I shall also sustaine great losse if I should be so precise I should lose my custome trading and profits Answ. Wilt thou receive a religion and not know it to be truth or knowest it to be so and wilt not be ready to confesse and professe it according to thy place and calling even in the middest of the different conceits of men 2. The Saints knowing this to be truth did for it joyfully suffer the spoyling of their goods 3. Put together in the ballance the losse of the world and the losse of thy soule and consider whether is fitter to save if thou cāst not save both For the losse of the world is an abundant recompence promised by a sure pay-master but what recompence is there for the losse of the soule Matth. 16.26 Nay if thou shouldest venture and give thy life for thy profession if God call for it it is no lesse than thou oughtest who oughtest to strive unto blood Hebr. 12.4 and yet this greatest losse were the greatest gaine Thus to lose thy life is to save it and to save it in this case were to lose it III. Procure to our selves and exercise the helpes of perseverance and keepe them neere us as our continuall companions And for this end First let the word of God be deepely rooted in our hearts for this is a speciall preservative from declining Psal. 119.102 I declined not from thy statutes for thou didst teach me Now the word sundry wayes keepes us As first by inlightening us to see our way both to chuse the right way and decline the wrong Psal. 119.105 Thy law is a light and lanthorne to our paths Secondly by comforting and incouraging us in the good way Rom. 15.4 Through consolation of the Scripture wee receive our hope Thirdly by preventing sinne in us Psal. 119.11 I have hid thy word in my heart that I might not sinne Fourthly by keeping out of sin and redressing our way Psal. 119.9 Secondly labour to preserve in thee a love of grace and holinesse let thy scope be in all the meanes of holinesse to gaine not knowledge and illumination onely but sound affection also to grow up in this as well as in that For first as a tree low and deepe rooted is stablished and continued in fruitfulnesse so when faith and grace is deepely rooted in the affection of the heart there will be perseverance Secondly it is not good words good actions or good knowledge that holdes out but good affections will Thirdly what other is the cause of so generall backsliding in the world which is the proper punishment of not receiving the truth in the love of it 2 Thess. 2.11 Thirdly feare God This is a wellspring of life to make us escape the snares of death Prov. 14.27 and 19.23 Anchora mentis pondus timoris Feare holds the heart steady as the anchor the shippe and joyne thy selfe to such as feare God delight in such as excell in vertue and grace these are able to encourage strengthen direct uphold raise and comfort thee in thy difficulties wearinesse and weaknesse and set thee forward not by their gifts onely but by their example Fourthly be instant in prayer for perseverance so our Text teacheth for it is the Lord that both beginneth and finisheth his owne worke hee not onely sets us in the way but leades us in the way and at length brings us into Canaan Fifthly looke still to the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ as a good servant hold thy selfe in expectation of the appearing so the Text Luke 12.36 Blessed is that servant whom the Master shall finde so doing Doest thou expect him from heaven and is not thy conversation there doest thou expect his comming in glory and meetest not him in grace lookest thou for him as thy head and wilt thou not as a member holde an happy union and fellowship with him expectest thou thence a Saviour and continuest thou not unto the end seeing onely such shall be saved Matth. 10.22 Now the motives to the meanes of perseverance First this is a true signe of a true friend of God who loves at all
our callings both generall and speciall Be faithfull in thy profession of godlinesse lurke not as an hypocrite among the Saints carry no treacherous purpose to save thy selfe by denying or betraying the truth give it thy heart hand and tongue and life if it require it beware of a politique profession never let thy practise disagree from thy profession Consider Christ professed a good profession before Pilate and sealed it with his life and death 1 Tim. 5.13 and wilt thou so nourish any secret fraud in thy heart contrary to thy profession and Paul telleth Timothy hee had made a good profession and a faithfull before many witnesses And this is a most necessary doctrine we know not how soone we may be called to it therefore learne it betimes that we may be like our heavenly Father in faithfulnesse not onely in times of prosperity but in times of tryall for a Christian man is that indeede which he is in tryall let us shew our selves to bee that wee seeme to be Then in thy speciall calling be faithfull Christ was a faithfull high Priest in things concerning God Heb. 2.17 and Moses was faithfull in all the house of God as a servant Heb. 3.5 So it is required of every Minister or dispenser of the secrets of God that hee be faithfull 1 Cor. 4.1 the steward of Gods house must be faithfull to his Lord and to his family It is not great pompous titles that commends a Minister but his faithfulnesse Prov. 13.17 A faithfull Messenger is health And in thy private calling deale faithfully with all men and in all things both great and small so doth God who is not the rule onely but the witnesse and judge 1 Thess. 4.6 Let no man defraud his brother God is the avenger of all such things 4. In friendship be faithfull God is most faithfull to his friends in prosperity in adversity in life in death Be faithfull especially in the fellowship of the Gospell specially aiming at holinesse as the Lord doth and to draw thy friend along to heaven with thee and helpe him out of sinne else a sorry friend art thou But how farre we from this among whom it is so hard to finde a faithfull friend who in civill things will sticke to a man in adversity Where is to be found the friendship of David and Ionathan Among Heathens we reade of a Daman and Pithias of a Pylades and Orestes of an Euryalus and Nysus of an Achates who was a faithfull friend to Aeneas and would not leave him in danger But few such are to be found among Christians among whom faithfull friendship is degenerated into pollicy and flattery The Heathens could say that they used not fire or water oftner than friendship would Christians could say so of faithfull friendship and yet they seeme to pull the Sunne out of heaven who would take faithfulnes from friendship in the lives of men Would to God that Christians had not forgotten these naturall principles We all professe our selves to be of the family of Christ would it were with us as in that that but one of twelve were unfaithfull to God and their friend But wee see the contrary too too often 5. In communicating to thy brethren be faithfull lay out thy Lords talent faithfully as a wife and faithfull servant whom the Lord may make ruler over his house Luk. 12.42 Hast thou much many talents be faithfull in much and thou shalt finde much faithfulnesse in the Lord. Hast thou little be faithfull in that little and thy Lord shall make thee ruler over much when it shall be said Well done good and faithfull servant c. Matth. 25.23 Oh that men would remember the doome against the evill servant Matth. 25.30 Cast the unprofitable servant into utter darknesse Why was he judged so severely 1. Because an hypocrite comes among the good servants and receives some talents 2. Having his talent hee hideth it in the earth earth eates him up and buries him alive 3. He is unprofitable hinders his Lord and makes him a loser and doth no good to others all which makes the sentence as just as severe and certaine 2. This faithfulnesse of God is the ground of all true religion and hereupon must the whole frame and all parts of it be laid This appeares in five instances 1. In all the doctrine of faith 2. In all the practise of faith 3. In all the prayers of faith 4. In all profession of faith 5. In all perseverance in faith First we must ground all the doctrine of faith all the articles of faith all our judgement and opinion in matters of faith upon this faithfulnesse of God and this by holding fast in them all the faithfull word Titus 1.9 for that onely is the true religion which is wholly grounded upon his word who is unchangeable in truth and faithfulnesse How could we beleeve all the Articles of faith which are unconceivable and impossible to reason if we ground them not upon Gods faithfulnesse in his word How should we conceive that the heavens and earth were created of nothing that the Sonne of God should become man should be borne of a Virgin should by dying overcome death by descending into hell should deliver from hell How should wee beleeve that our bodies cloathed with corruption and wrapped in deaths garments should rise againe to eternall life which Article the Sadduces mocke at if wee should not apprehend them as the word of him that is faithfull and true Contrary hereto the maine pillars of Popery are set upon the unfaithfull words of men of Fathers Councels Traditions Popes Whereas Rom. 3.4 Let God be true and every man a lyer Be he Father or holy Father further than hee speakes according to the faithfull word Nay if an Angel from heaven speake otherwise let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 Nay the Popish Church is so farre from acknowledging this faithfulnesse of God in the Scripture as it never found a greater resister or opposite among the sects and opposite heresies in the world For bring in either Iewes or Turkes or any kinde of heretickes more vilifying Gods faithfulnesse in the Scripture and Papists shall not be the worst But did ever any of them accuse the Scripture to be a nose of waxe the authority of it to be no better than Esops Fables without the Churches determination to be a leaden and a Lesbian rule to be a seed-plot of heresies and they to be heretickes that stand to the voice of the Scriptures Doe not they call the Bible the booke of heretickes doe they not burne the Scriptures as sometime did wicked Asa Antiochus Maximinus Have they not burned Christian men for having them Let any such furious heretickes against Gods faithfull word be brought in if they can But certainly Papists must carry the bell above all other in the world for standing opposite to the faithfulnesse of God in the Scripture and be the most hereticall as who shut the doore against the
truth according to Chrysostomes rule Haereticorum haereticissimi qui claudunt januas veritati Chrysost. Secondly on this ground wee must lay all our practise and obedience of faith Both in respect of the object of faith and the manner of mans o-obedience 1. For the object We must therefore beleeve the whole word of God contained in the Law and Gospell because it is of the nature of God himselfe immediatly flowing from that eternall truth and faithfulnesse conceived in the minde of God who is unchangeable This is the argument of the Scripture Because by faith we give him the honour of truth and we set our seale to God that he is faithfull Ioh. 3.33 And thus he also honours us to give witnesse to his faithfulnesse and contrary not mingling the word with faith we make him a lyer namely so farre as wee can because we beleeve not the record that the Father witnesseth of his Sonne and this is the ground why we must beleeve the Scripture to be the word of God because wee doe beleeve it to be true and faithfull as he is faithfull 2. For the act because Satan himselfe beleeves historically the Scripture and acknowledgeth Gods faithfulnesse in it we must specially apply the parts of the word to our selves First the promises all which because he is faithfull he will performe to a thousand generations not onely beleeving them true in themselves but even to us else wee deprive our selves of them seeing he promiseth nothing to unbeleevers Yea not onely beleeving and applying them but on the same faithfulnesse of God grounding the hope and expectation of all those promises which thy faith hath already apprehended For what is it else but this faithfulnesse in God that makes our hope never leave us ashamed Where had Sarah strength to conceive and bring forth a sonne being past age but because shee counted him faithfull that had promised Hebr. 11.11 That is she knew that whatsoever God had promised he would faithfully performe and Heb. 10.23 Let us keepe fast the profession of our hope for faithfull is he that hath promised Secondly we must also beleeve his threats for though he use sometimes lenity and patience to vessels of wrath yet his faithfulnesse suffers not the least jote of them to be unaccomplished Zeph. 3.5 The just Lord is in the middest of her early even early will he bring forth judgement and will not faile Hath the faithfull Lord covenanted wrath with the sinner Hearest thou his word let fly plagues as thicke as haile against the transgressours and thinkest thou to escape Was his faithfulnesse never yet impeached and shall it be so for thee Hearest thou that a large booke of curses comes flying into the house of the swearer and darest thou sweare and into the house of the thiefe and darest thou be unjust Surely if God have not lost all his faithfulnesse thou shalt certainly finde it this is the act of faith 3. For the manner of obedience of faith when the eye of the soule is once lifted up to behold this faithfulnesse of God it will bestirre it selfe with diligence in well-doing By this argument the Apostle inciteth the Iewes Hebr. 6.10 God is not unfaithfull to forget the labour of your love and Matth. 10.42 The giving of a cup of colde water hath promise of a recompence and his faithfulnesse will make it good No just Prince can forget the faithfull service of his subject Ahashuerosh at length remembred Mordecai his good service much more will our God who is faithfull Eccles. 9.15 Wee reade of a poore man who by his wisdome delivered the Citty but hee was forgotten in that Citty But God because hee is faithfull is never so forgetfull of him that doth good in the world Vpon this ground we must lay all our prayers of faith so our Apostle here in the Text for Gods faithfulnesse onely gives us confidence of obtaining our suites Our owne unfaithfulnesse in the Covenant might choake us in our suites and stoppe our mouthes and cover our faces with shame But it is Gods faithfulnesse that undershores us seeing his promise hath bound him to be found of all them that seeke him truly Therefore Daniel 9.16 in the name of the Church having disclaimed all their owne righteousnesse bindeth God from all his displeasure Lord according to all thy righteousnesse let thy wrath be turned away from thy Citty and Sanctuary This will answer all the objections wee can make against our owne prayers Object I am unworthy to pray or be heard and my prayer is as unworthy as my selfe Answ. True but Gods faithfulnesse gives worthinesse to both Object But my sinnes hinder good things they are a partition wall and stoppe my prayers Answ. Begge remission of sinnes beholde hee is faithfull and just to forgive thee 1 Iohn 1.9 Object I have no comfort of my prayer nor deserve any Answ. Cast thy selfe on this faithfulnesse of God trust thy selfe with him Commend thy selfe unto him as to a faithfull Creatour 1 Pet. 4.19 Object But I see no meanes or way of escape or deliverance Answ. Pray as David Psal. 31.1 Deliver me oh Lord according to thy righteousnesse that is that faithfulnesse whereby thou defendest thine owne children according to thy promise Object But I see nothing but present death on every side and am even cast on my death-bed creeping into the grave Answ. Now behold this faithfulnesse and be safe it will make thee in peace and silence to commit thy selfe wholly to him in life and death Psal. 31.5 Into thy hand I commit my spirit for thou hast redeemed me oh Lord God of truth Vpon the same ground lay a sound profession of faith Sound profession stands in two things 1. A constant profession of truth 2. Pure and upright conversation To uphold both these behold Gods faithfulnesse Is God so faithfull in his word and promises let us then boldly confesse and constantly embrace his faithfull word 1. Because it is of the nature of God truth and faithfulnesse it selfe Why should wee be ashamed to holde out this faithfull word as many Politicians be what neede a man be ashamed of the truth Remember what Truth hath said Hee that is ashamed of me in my sayings before men I will be ashamed of him before my Father and his holy Angels 2. How dare men fall off from the truth of the Gospell to Popery or profanesse after the knowledge of it what change is in the truth that they should change their mindes and turne from it Have not we a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles 2 Pet. 1.19 which is as immutable and unchangeable as God himselfe is 3. How venterously doe men goe on in their sinne notwithstanding the light of the word checking their consciences reprooving their wayes as if some part of the faithfulnesse of it should be abated to them Is it not an eternall word that endureth for ever as God doth of which not one jot can
persons for their workes sake against persecuters and enemies 2 Thess. 3.1 Pray for us that wee may be delivered from unreasonable men from absurd wicked men which in all corners rage against Gods standart-bearers men of corrupt mindes resisting the truth and thus Philemon 22. the Apostle trusted by their prayers to be given to them out of bands as Peter was delivered out of the lyons mouth miraculously by the strength of the prayers of the Church made for him Acts 12.5 and Rom. 15.30 31. Strive with mee by prayers that I may be delivered from the disobedient in Iudea Whence observe that men of greatest gifts and graces that are in highest favour with God have neede of the prayers of the weaker and meaner Christians Paul rapt into the third heaven and filled with unutterable mysteries contemnes not but craves and earnestly beggs the prayers of the simple Christians Rom. 15.30 he intreates them earnestly even for the Lord Iesus his sake and for the love of the Spirit to strive with him by prayers to God Because men of greatest parts are farre from perfection in gifts or graces Paul saw hee had not yet attained but may receive a daily increase and therefore stands in neede of the prayers of others for increase and further degrees of the graces he hath Even they are men subject to the same passions and infirmities with others Acts 14.15 The more grace and gifts they have the more are they in danger to be puffed up and forget themselves Yea themselves being as fraile as others their prayers are often weake and faint and neede many hands lifted up for them to strengthen them even Moses needes Aaron and Hur to susteine him in lifting up his hands for even his hands may grow heavie Men of greatest gifts are in the greatest fight faire markes for Satan Satan will be sure to stand at Iehoshuahs right hand Zach. 3.1 and will winnow Peter as wheate Luke 22.31 He knowes if he can cast downe one of these hee falls not alone but many are like to fall and that God is more dishonoured and the Gospell more disgraced by one of these than many others and therefore these have most neede to be supported by the prayers of the Saints This meetes with men of great and high spirits because of the greatnesse of their parts they thinke themselves all-sufficient in themselves rapt into their owne admiration They have a notable gift of prayer themselves and what neede they crave the prayers and assistance of others But suppose thou hadst the sufficiency of an Apostle nay wert rapt into the third heaven as Paul was Hadst thou one drop of the grace of humility as he had thou wouldest descend and out of sense of thy wants begge the prayers of the meanest Christians and that not coldly or formally but with earnestnesse and vehemency as hee did It teacheth not to despise the meanest Christians seeing the meanest may be usefull and thou maist receive a blessing by him sometime by counsell or comfort or example at least by his prayers To incourage poore Christians to pray seeing here were we see God is no accepter of persons He will heare as well the Thessalonians for Paul and Silvanus and Timothy as them for the Thessalonians he gives as soone to the meanest as to the greatest these are as welcome to him as they for he casts none in the teeth Object I am unworthy to pray for my selfe or others Answ. Thou prayest not in thy owne worthines but in the merit and intercession of Christ which belongeth to the poorest brother as well as the richest Object I am unable to pray I want gifts Answ. 1. Prayer receiveth not vertue or answer from excellency of gifts but from Gods promise and from faith and affection in our selves Not the words but affections and sighes which may be in men meanly gifted are regarded of God 2. Thou seest here the Lord so farre from refusing thee as that hee commends the greatest matters to thy prayers even to pray for those that in respect of gifts can better pray for thee Bring thou so much the more faith more sense of want more thirst after grace and thou bringest better gifts to prayer than hee that bringeth more words Rhetoricke forme and fluence of speech And here observe The duty of all Christians is to pray for their Ministers yea for all their Ministers Pray for us for Silvanus and Timotheus as well as for Paul for Paul envies not to them a roome in the prayers of the Saints So a number of places afore alledged doe prove And many reasons presse the duty upon the people First howsoever the Ministery is Gods ordinance effectuall by his power and Ministers as starres in his right hand safe by his providence and protection yet he hath made it the duty of people to pray for their Ministers as a recompence of their care and paines and labour in the worke of their salvation and as a part of the honour that people owe them as fathers by vertue of the fifth commandement and in way of returne of prayers for prayers So the Apostle had earnestly prayed for them in the former verse and now earnestly beggs prayers for them So Ministers are the peoples mouth to God they stand in the gappe and breach for them they by prayers procure blessings on their people it is equall and just the people should by their prayers procure blessing on them Secondly If we be bound to pray for all Saints and private men much more for our Pastors and Fathers in Christ by whom the Lord offers and conveyes his best and most lasting blessings upon us whom hee hath separated as one of a thousand to declare to man his righteousnesse to be lights to them that sit in darknesse guides to the blinde and patternes to the flocke Ministers by whom the Lord conveyes his saving graces into the hearts of the Saints Thirdly People neglecting this dutie lay themselves under the guilt of many sinnes 1. In that every man being bound to respect the glory of God in the furtherance of his pure worship which cannot be done but by an able and gracious Ministery they sinne against dutie that by their prayers strengthen not their Ministers 2. Every Christian is bound to be an helpe to the truth 3 Iohn they plainly detract this helpe that withhold their prayers from their Pastours their teachers and maintainers of truth 3. Every Christian ought to be compassionate to the soules of their brethren and by all meanes promote the salvation of men And therefore out of compassion of millions of soules who stand in neede of powerfull preaching and without vision are like to perish ought to pray that God would mightily worke with the word in the mouthes of his Ministers to make it powerfull to rescue people out of the snare of the Divell 4. All those people make themselves guilty of the troubles falls
distressed consciences 107 Sound doctrine must be strongly held for 3 reasons 127 Doctrine of faith all grounded on Gods faithfulnesse 343 E. Eare to be shut 5 rules 288 Hearing eare knowne by 3 notes 291 Elias sinned not in calling for fire from heaven but the Disciples did two differences 116 Eye must be watched in 5 things 282 Why we must carefully order our eyes 4 reasons 287 Examples of Scripture warrant not our marriage with IIdolaters 3 reas 162 Examples to uphold our perseverance 4. 330 F. No fall so wofull as to fall from grace 16 False rules of triall of things 6. 73 Ancient Fathers avoided all conformity with heretickes in their externall ceremonies Instances 160 Fantasticall and forreigne fashions of apparell condemned 5 Arguments 122 Faithfull is God 4 wayes 334 Faithfulnesse in the Creator and creature differ in 4 things Ibid. Faithfulnesse required in our promises 339 In our callings 340. In our friendship 341. In communicating our talents 342 Faithfulnesse of God preserveth to salvation all that are effectually called 4 reasons 385 Fearfull is the condition of that man that repines at a powerfull and faithfull Ministry 3 reasons 406 Fire of the Spirit how quenched 3 Fire of grace violently smothered how 22 Folly of those that neglect the assurance of their owne salvation 4 reasons 365 Forefathers way no sure rule of tryall 5 reasons 77 Foure excellent fruits in avoiding petty evills 152 Sweet fruits of well guiding our affections 6. 270 G. Gifts of the Spirit to be observed in our selves for 4 reasons 26 Gifts of God which and how without repentance 390 Godly by the inhabitation of the Spirit both honoured and comforted 9 Godly must be carefull not to quench the Spirit 5 reasons 14 God called the God of peace 3 reas 175 Godlinesse makes no man unpeaceable or turbulent 188 Godly company a meanes of growth in holinesse 3 wayes 213 God to be glorified in our bodies how 273 God must be glorified in our bodies 3 reasons 274 God is most faithfull 4 reasons 336 Glory of Christ now vailed 3 wayes 310 True goodnesse groweth from good to better and so is best at last 227 No good must be held but after tryall 132 Good things must be carefully held and kept for 5 reasons 125 Good actions spoyled in undue circumstances 113 Graces of the Spirit compared to fire in 5 things 3 Grace quenched in what degrees 5 Graces of some kindes not wholly extinct 4 Grace as fire suffered to die of it selfe 3 wayes 20 Grace in others must be excited 3 reasons 37 Grieve the Spirit 4 wayes 25 Growth in holinesse rare 4 proofes 220 Grounds on which the prayers of people for their Ministers must be raised 3. 401 H. Hand to be ordered 5 rules 292 The heart must be kept pure for the pure Spirit of God 10 For keeping the heart 5 generall rules 247 The heart how bounded within Gods limits 3 directions 252 We must hate where the Lord hateth 4 instances 261 Hatred of evill knowne by the practise of the contrary vertue 165 Helpes of perseverance 5. 327 Wee must hold onely that which is good and all that is good 132 Humility in lowest degree pretended by seducers 64 I. Iesuiticall confusion of phrases hath beene the confusion of the world 95 No Iewells to be so carefully kept as our soul●s and spirits 2 reas 232 and 4 reasons more 235 Image of God must be gotten not onely into our nature but into our conversation 277 Implicit popish faith refu●ed 69 No imperfection hinders Gods faithfulnesse 4 Instances 337 Illumination is not sanctification 4 reas 205 In all indifferent things 〈◊〉 are to avoid all appearance of evill and scandall with 4 limitations 149 Indifferent things to be forborne for edification with 4 cautions 117 The inside to be washed first for 5 reasons 236 Invocation of Saints departed derogateth from the glory of God 97 L. Lawes humane imperfect rules of life for 4 reasons 81 Lots of perseverance to be removed 5. 324 Losse of worldly things no losse to losse of spirituall graces 143 Love our neighbor as our selves with what conditions 116 We must love most where God most loveth 4 instances 260 M. Man by nature more prone to any evill than to the least good 3 reasons 67 Manifold mischiefes which overtake the despisers of Prophecy 5 instances 45 Man of God 1 Kings 13.6 praying in an Idolatrous Temple no warrant for us 4 reasons 157 Marriage with Idolaters unlawfull 4 reasons 161 Marks of effectuall calling reduced to 3 generall heads 370 Meanes of quenching the Spirit 3. 20 Meanes to blow up the Spirit 7. 33 Meanes to embrace Prophecy 5. 48 Meanes of holding that which is good 4. 137 Meanes of maintaining sound peace of conscience 5. 185 Meanes of attaining a full measure of holinesse 209 Meanes to keepe the tongue blamelesse 4. 298 Meanes of perseverance in generall 3. 322 Meanes by which God keepeth his owne 4. 394 Meditations helping the increase of holinesse 1. Concerning God 3 2. Concerning our selves 4 3. Concerning holines it self 209 Meditations to stablish us against persecutions 326 Members must be weapons of righteousnesse how and why 275 Memory how to be kept unblameable in 2 things 245 Men of greatest grace neede the prayers of weaker Christians 3 reasons 398 Merits humane against analogy of faith 91 Merit an ambitious word in reference to man not found in Scripture 100 Ministers must not onely preach but pray for their people 3 reasons 172 Ministery powerfull must be conscionably embraced for 3 reasons 42 Mischiefe of disordered affections 266 Motions of the Spirit much different in the godly and wicked 4 instances 18 Motions of the Spirit to be observed 36 Motives to stirre up the Spirit 4. 33 Motives to carefull use of meanes of quickening the Spirit 3. 38 Motives to full sanctification 6. 221 Motives to perseverance 5. 329 Motives to finde in our selves the sure signes of effectuall calling 4. 383 Monasticall life refuted by 6 reasons 93 Multitude of voices not to be numbred but weighed 56 N. Naamans practise no warrant for us to be present at Idolatrous service for three reasons 158 Name of a Christian hath in it many motives to grow up to full holinesse 226 Necessary duties must be done though all the world be offended 148 Necessity of increasing in holinesse 4 reas 203 Necessity of carefull keeping our selves drawne from our selves in 4 things 233 Necessity of well guiding our thoughts 4 reasons 245 Necessity of well ordering our affections 2 reas 268 O. Obedience of faith all grounded upon Gods faithfulnesse 344 Right objects of our affections in which they must be most vehement and intense 258 Choyse objects for the eye 5. 284 Objections against perseverance answered 304 Objections from infirmities of our prayers answered 400 Outward man must be kept blamelesse 3 reasons 300 P. All peace must be from the God of peace 3 reas 179 No peace to be affected but