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A77708 The good old way: or, Perkins improved, in a plain exposition and sound application of those depths of divinity briefly comprized in his Six principles: / by that late painful and faithful minister of the Gospel, Charles Broxolme in Darby-shire. Broxholme, Charles. 1653 (1653) Wing B5217; Thomason E1483_1; ESTC R208756 186,652 446

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as live idlely do not walk diligently in their callings Joh. 5.17 My Father worketh hitherto and I work The Lord never ceaseth from his work of Providence 3. Reproof to all such as are discontented with their outward condition and estates and so calling Gods wise Providence in question contrary to the Apostle Phil. 4.11 I have learned in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content And David Psal 39.9 I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didest it 4. To reprove all such as neglect the lawful means Civil or Holy the Lord in his ordinary course working by means or if the means fail they distrust the Lord as though he that tyed us to means were himself tyed to means and could not work by little means against means above means 5. To reprove all such as lay their sins on God because nothing comes to pass but by his Providence but hearken to the Apostle James 1.13 Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of evil neither tempteth he any man There is no sin in God neither doth he put sin into any mans heart It is true indeed the Lord could prevent sin and would if he could not gain himself glory out of it thou canst not do this or that wicked action without Gods Providence but thy sin as it is sin is of thy self and Satan thou sinning willingly and chearfully not endeavouring to serve Gods Providence but thy own vile affections 6. To reprove the evil speech of some as they that say this or that came to pass by meer chance as though any thing came to pass without a cause or without Gods Providence and so such as say this or that we will do not putting in Saint James's condition Jam. 4.15 If the Lord will not remembring that they and their actions are in Gods disposing and not in their own Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all the godly It is true they have many enemies but the Lord hath them all in a string as he saith to Sennacherib King of Assyria 2 Kin. 19.27 28. I know thy abode and thy going out and thy coming in and thy rage against me because thy rage against me and thy tumult is come up into my ears therefore I will put my hook into thy nose and my bridle in thy lips and I will turn thee back by the way by which thou camest Nay the Devils themselves the Lord hath them in Chains they cannot go a link beyond his permission as is evident in the History of Job even as he saith unto the Sea Job 38.11 Hitherto shalt thou come but no further and here shall thy proud waves be stayed And so in regard of any affliction no affliction can befal the godly but by the Providence of God and no affliction shall befal them but the Providence of God will turn it to their good insomuch as every true Believer may say with David Psal 16.8 The Lord is at my right hand I shall not be moved not moved to my hurt and as he saith Psal 23.1 The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want and verse 4. Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me And wondrous comfortable is that sentence 2 Chron. 16.9 The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him And not a little may the godly man succour his faith by his former experience of Gods Providence Psal 56.13 Thou hast delivered my soul from death wilt not thou deliver my feet from falling that I may walk before God in the light of the living And 1 Sam. 17.37 David said The Lord that delivered me out of the paw of the Lion and out of the paw of the Bear he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine And so Psal 46.1.2 God is our refuge and strength a very present help in trouble Therefore will we not fear though the Earth be removed and though the Mountains be carryed into the midst of the Sea Vse 3. To exhort every one to serve Gods Providence in the use of all good means Civil and Holy because so the Lord works ordinarily To neglect ordinary means is to tempt God and great presumption as our Saviour replies to Satan when he would have had him cast himself down from the Pinacle of the Temple Matth. 4.7 It is written thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God And yet we must take heed of trusting in the means for that is Idolatry the truth of it is it is Gods blessing that doth mainly effect a thing as Psal 127.1 Except the Lord build the house they labour in vain that build it Except the Lord keep the City the Watchman waketh but in vain And therefore when the means fail us at any time our faith must not It was an evil saying of the Israelites Psal 78.19 Can God furnish a table in the Wilderness and therefore the Spirit of God saith of them putting forth such a question that they spake against God But it was a good saying of Abraham Gen. 22.8 God will provide and if you peruse verse 14. you shall perceive that this speech of his grew to a Proverb intimating thus much that in due time and place the Lord will supply the wants and necessities of all his people And thus far touching the description of God by his works of Creation and Preservation MEMBER V. One true God Creator and Governor of all things is distinguished into the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost THat there is a distinction of Persons and this distinction in the Divine Essence is evident if so be we look into the holy Scriptures Gen. 1.26 And God said Let us make man in our image where God the Father consults with his Son and holy Spirit The like phrase we have in Gen. 11.7 Let us go down and there confound their Language And Isa 63.9 10. The Angel of his presence saved them Of whose presence Of God the Fathers and who was this Angel but the Son the second Person in Trinity But they rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit to wit the Holy Ghost Haggai 2.5 7. According to the word that I convenanted with you when ye came out of Aegypt Who was it that did covenant with the Israelites to wit God the Father So My Spirit remaineth among you to wit the Holy Ghost And The desire of all Nations shall come to wit the Sonne But this Mysterie is more clearly revealed in the New Testament as when Christ was baptized Matthew 3.16 17. And he saw to wit John the Baptist the Spirit of God descending like a Doue and lighting upon him to wit upon Christ And lo a voyce from Heaven that is to say from God the Father saying This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased But more
Jesus Christ the eternal Son of God The Son of God not by Creation as Adam and the Angels Luke 3.38 Job 1.6 Not by Adoption as all true beleevers Rom. 8.14 Not by grace of personal union as the man Christ Luke 1.35 But by Generation 1 John 4.9 In this was manifested the love of God towards us because God sent his only begotten Son into the world that we might live through him For the opening of this mysterie we propound the questions following 1. The thing generated 2. How or the manner of this generation 3. When 1. The thing it self generated to wit Christ who is to be considered two waies 1. According to his essence 2. According to his personal existence that is as he is God and as he is a Son as he is a Son and person he is not of himself but the Son of the Father by generation as he is a God and in respect of his absolute essence he is of himself neither begotten nor proceeding One essence doth not beget another but one person another the person of the Father the person of the Son and so the Son is God of God and no otherwise hath from his Father the beginning of his person but not the beginning of his essence The second question The manner of this generation Answ we must know it is ineffable Some Divines say it is begotten of the Father as the light of the Sun in the firmament by a simple emanation passing or flowing out light of light saith one of the Creed But take we notice of the holy Ghosts metaphor John 1.1 In the beginning was the Word so the second person in Trinity is called As the speech is in the mind and the mind in the speech so is God the Son of God the Father Qu. 3 The time of this generation Ans Before all worlds The second person in Trinity is the Son of God the Father eternal by generation according to the Chatechism and to this purpose see Prov. 8.22 and 23. The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way before his works of old I was set up from everlasting Which place we are to understand of the second person in Trinity In this generation there is priority of order but not of time the Father and the Son being coeternall Now we come to the Uses Vse 1. To terrifie such prophane persons as despise Christs word and ordinances and such likewise as by their blasphemous oathes tear and rent him in pieces as much as lies in them Wel let all such know that Jesus Christ is not only the Son of man but likewise the Son of God and so able to crush them to be revenged upon them therfore let such remember the Prophets counsell Psal 2.12 Kiss the Son that is every way submit unto him lest he be angry and ye perish from the way when his wrath is kindled but a little Vse 2. For the great comfort of all true beleevers Hence it is that they poor miserable creatures are become the Sons and Daughters of God by Adoption according unto that John 1.12 As many as received him to them gave he power to become the Sons of God even to them that beleeve on his Name This is no little priviledg The world little esteems of such persons but Saint John gives the reason 1 John 3.1 Because the world knows them not But notwithstanding let the true beleever rejoyce in this that he being sometimes the vassal and slave of Satan is now become the Son of God by Adoption in and through this his naturall Son Thus farre touching the first Member of the third Principle Now we come to the second member of the third Principle MEMBER II. Being made Man Which Member we commend unto you in this Doctrine Doct. There was a time when the eternal Son of God was made man John 1.14 The Word that is to say the Son of God the second person in Trinity was made flesh and dwelt among us And Rom. 1.3 concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh And Gal. 4.4 When the fulness of time was come God sent forth his Son made of a woman And so 1 Tim. 3.16 Without controversie great is the mysterie of godlinesse God was manifest in the flesh And lastly Heb. 2.16 Verily he took not on him the nature of Angels but he took on him the seed of Abraham But that we may the better see into so deep a mystery we intend to answer the questions following 1. How the Son of God the second Person in Trinity could take upon him our nature and not the Father and the Holy Ghost they all being one Essence 2. How far forth the Son of God was made man 3. How the two natures Divine and Humane were united 4. How they remaine distinguished 5. Why it was necessary the Redeemer of mankind should be man why it was necessary he should be God and why it was necessary he should be both God and man Quest 1. How the Son of God the second person in Trinity could take upon him mans nature and not the Father and the Holy Ghost they all being one Essence Ans The God-head is to be considered of in a twofold respect 1. In regard of Essence 2. In regard of Person The Essence is but one the Persons three A Person is a distinct subsistance of the whole Godhead now although the Essence the whole Essence be in every Person why yet the Persons do distinctly and real differ each from other in their peculiar manner of subsisting and so might the Son and the Son only takes upon him mans nature and not the Father nor the Holy Ghost Quest 2. How far forth the Son of God took upon him mans nature Ans 1. He took upon him the Essence of man a reasonable soul and an humane body 2. He took unto him the Properties of mans nature in his body length breadth thickness c. In his soul the faculties of Understanding Will Affection 3. He took unto him the Infirmities of mans nature not sinful or personal but meer infirmities as to be hungry thirsty weary sad angry Obj. But how could the Son of God take upon him our nature and be free from sin our nature being so sinful An. 1. Because he was not begotten by the mixture of man and woman 2. Because he was conceived by the Holy Ghost Now we come to the third Question Quest 3. How the two Natures Divine and Humane were united Ans We must not think that the Godhead is changed into the manhood or the manhood into the Godhead but the second Person of the Godhead did assume or take into the Unity of his Person the Manhood that is to say the whole nature of man soul and body The manhood of Christ not subsisting of it self as another man it being a Nature only and not a Person There is one thing and another thing in Christ but not
And both these as durable as the Church to continue as long as a Church upon earth These questions of Sacraments in general being answered we shall come more clearly to speak of either Sacrament particularly But before that we intend some Application of what hath been delivered Vse 1. For Repnehension To reprove the Papists 1. For corrupting and adulterating the true Sacraments as Baptism with their Cream Spittle and divers other inventions And the Sacrament of the Supper they turning it into a Sacrifice Propitiatory for the quick and the dead 2. To reprove them for their false Coin they having devised five Sacraments of their own as Orders Marriagid Confirmation Vnction Penance And thus in the case of Sacraments they adde and adulterate a woful Religion they must needs erre much as touching the Covenant when they are so left to themselves in regard of the Seales Vse 2. For information 1. To inform us touching the great goodness and bounty of G d towards his Church and people not onely to afford them his Word but likewise his Sacraments all means for their Spiritual good all means for their being and wee being in grace 2. To inform us touching the necessity of faith If so be we would receive any good by Sacraments it being that and that onely which discerns and laies hold upon the thing signified It is not the eye and hand of the body that can see and apply Christ they can but extend to the sign that which is Spiritual must be Spiritually received Alas the wicked and unbelievers do but receive the outward Elements and to their further condemnations Vse 3. For examination In Sacraments as the Lord swears to us so we to him he to be our God for all good unto us and we unto him to be his dutiful and obedient people But how is the Covenant kept on our part Where is our living by faith our growing in mortification in self-denial Where is our courage for Gods truth our zeal for his glory our love to his Saints Try we try we how far we have broken our Covenant be we ashamed of it bewail we it and labour we amendment Alas the most they rest in the thing done in a bare formality little stir up themselves to make good their promise ratified by solemn oath nay are not earnest with the Lord to enable them this way Thus much touching Sacraments in general We come now to speak of the two Sacraments particularly And first of Baptism and going along with the Catechism in this form of Doctrine Doct. The Sacrament of Baptism is a good outward means for the increase of faith The Point is proved by these Scriptures Matth. 28.19 Mark 16.16 Acts 8.37 10.47 and Acts 18.8 Reas 1. Taken from the nature of Sacraments in general they are not onely signes but seales the Lords greatest means for the confirmation and increase of his peoples faith he in them as it were taking oath for their full security Heb. 6.17 18. So the Lord is pleased to condescend to our weakness and our belief as for the support and encrease of our faith he doth not onely afford us his Promise but Oath not onely his Covenant but Seales Reas 2. Taken from the Sacrament that Baptism succeeds to wit Circumcision Circumcision was a good outward means to confirm and encrease faith Rom. 4.11 and then can Baptism be of less use and efficacy Before we come to the use of the Doctrine we intend to answer divers questions concerning Baptism 1. What Baptism is 2. The ends of it 3. The parts of it 4. The necessity of it And 5. The efficacy of it Quest 1. What Baptism is Answ It is the first Sacrament of the Gospel whereby we are washed with water in the Name of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost to signifie and seal our ingrafting into Christ our communion with Christ our new obedience and admission into the visible Church Somewhat to open this description 1. We say It is the first Sacrament of the Gospel because it is to precede the Lords Supper The sons and daughters of men are first to be baptized before they approach or should be admitted to the Lords Supper that is no unbaptized person should adventure or ought to be admitted to the Lords Table 2. We say Whereby we are washed with water for so the word Baptism signifies a dipping in water or sprinkling with water 3. We say In the Name of the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost this being the very form of Baptism that must be observed And for the meaning of these words In the Name of the Father of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost it is as much as to say as that the Party baptized is consecrated to the worship and service of the Trinity 4. We say To signifie and seal our ingrafting into Christ Gal. 3.27 5. To signifie and seal our communion with Christ That is to say to signifie and seal that we are made partakers of Christ and his benefits Acts 2.38 Rom. 6.3 6. To signifie and seal our new obedience Mat. 3.7 8. 1 Pet. 3.21 7. Lastly we say to signifie and seal our admission into the visible Church As this was one end of Circumcision so likewise it is of Baptism which succeeds Circumcision Thus Saul was admitted into the visible Church Acts 9.18 The Jailor and his Family Acts 16.33 Quest 2. What are the ends of Baptism Answ There be divers ends of Baptism 1. That this and that Party might be admitted Members of the visible Church John 4.1 as though Baptism were an outward mark of a Disciple and a means of admitting into the visible Church 2. That it might be a pledge unto us of our ingrafting into Christ the remission of our sinnes and Regeneration Galatians 3.27 Acts 22.16 and Titus 3.5 3. That it might be a testification of our duty towards God and a binding of us to perform obedience unto him and therefore Mark 1.4 it is called the Baptism of repentance or of amendment of life And Luke 3.7 8 12. 4. That so we might be put in mind of afflictions our supportation in them and deliverance out of them we being dipped in the water or sprinkled with water but not drowned afflictions as we may see Matth. 20.22 are sometimes termed by the name of Baptism 5. That it might signifie the unity of the Church and might be a means of the same 1 Cor. 12. ●3 Ephe● 4.5 ●uest 3. What are the parts of Baptism Answ They are either outward or inward The outward is the sign and the word The sign is the element of Water and the Sacramental action on the Ministers part and on the Receivers part the Sacramentall action on the Ministers part is not only his washing of the Party with water but likewise his putting the Party into the water or towards the water his continuing the Party in the water or towards the water and his taking the Party out of the water
expresly in that form of Baptism which our Saviour enjoynes Matth. 28.19 Go ye and teach all Nations Baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost And so 1 John 5.7 There are three that hear Record in Heaven the Father the Word that is to say the Son and the Holy Ghost And 2 Cor. 13.14 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God to wit God the Father and the communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all Now that you may the better conceive of so great a Mysterie these questions following are to be answered 1. How the Divine Essence and the Persons in the Divine Essence do differ 2. What the Person of the Father is what the Person of the Son is and what the Person of the Holy Ghost is 3. How these three Persons are united 4. How they are distinguished 5. Why it is necessary the Church should be acquainted with this Doctrine And Lastly the Uses Quest 1. How the Divine Essence and the Persons in the Divine Essence do differ Answ The difference is not real but formal we must not conceive the Divine Essence to be one thing and the Persons to be another thing for that were not to make a Trinity but a Quaternity not to make three but four There is another and another in the Godhead but not another thing and another thing That there is another and another in the Godhead John 5.32 There is another that beareth witness of me saith our Saviour to wit the Father And John 14.16 17. And I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter even the Spirit of truth but not another thing and another thing for this were to divide the Godhead and to make three Gods the Godhead being undivided and there being but one God as 1 Cor. 8.4 There is none other God but one the Divine Essence is one and common to all the three Persons the Persons are three several Subsistences or manners of being in that one Essence It is true the Father is God the Son is God and the Holy Ghost is God and all Eternal Omnipotent c But yet there are not three Gods three Eternals three Omnipotents because the Essence the whole Essence the Godhead the whole Godhead is in every one of the three Persons Colos 2.9 In him to wit in the Son dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily that is Personally in the Person of the Son which is true of the other two Persons And this is the Mysterie of Mysteries that the Essence or Godhead should be in every Person and yet not divided that the whole Essence or Godhead should be in every Person and yet not three Gods but one God Now we come to the second question Quest 2. What the Person of the Father is what the Person of the Son is and what the Person of the Holy Ghost is Answ The Father is the first person the Son is the second and the Holy Ghost is the third The Father is not the first person in regard of time or Dignity but in regard of Order all the persons being as Co-Essential so Co-Eternal and Co-Equal The Order of the persons observed there is no Priority or Posteriority no Superiority or Inferiority among them the Father is the person not begotten nor proceeding but from everlasting begetting the Son and sending forth the Holy Ghost The Son is the person not Created but begotten from everlasting of the Father and with the Father sending forth the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost is the person not made nor created nor begotten but proceeding from the Father and the Sonne by an Eternal spiration Now here we must observe that the Essence doth not beget another Essence for every one of the persons hath the Essence from himself but one person doth beget another the person of the Father the person of the Sonne 2. That there is this difference betwixt the Sonne and the Holy Ghost The Sonne is begotten of the Father onely the Holy Ghost proceeds both from the Father and the Sonne 3. These phrases begetting begotten proceeding must in no case be understood in any carnal way but altogether in a Spiritual manner Quest 3. How these three persons are united Answ The union of the persons is that by which each one is in the rest and with the rest by reason of the unity of the Essence or Godhead as John 14.10 Believest thou not that I am in the Father and the Father in me saith our Saviour to Philip They are all one in nature that is Co-Essential and Con-Substantial as 1 John 5.7 There are three that bear record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one to wit in Nature and Essence That which we said before is true the Father is God the Sonne is God and the Holy Ghost is God yet there are not three Gods but one God onely because there is but one Divine Essence but one God and no more in Nature Quest 4. How the three persons are distinguished Answ Not Essentially for every one of them hath the whole Essence or Godhead and yet really And here observe The difference betwixt the Essence and the persons is but formal the difference betwixt the persons themselves is real as the Father is the Father and not the Son or the Holy Ghost The Son is the Son and not the Father nor the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost is the Holy Ghost and not the Father nor the Son Now the persons of the Godhead are distinguished two wayes 1. By their External actions 2. By their Internal Their External actions are such as they work in and toward the creatures as in the work of Creation and Preservation c As touching any of these works or actions the Father worketh of himself by the Sonne and the Holy Ghost the Sonne from the Father by the Holy Ghost the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son The Father is the Original or Fountain of actions effecting by the Son and the Holy Ghost the proper working of the Son is to execute actions from the Father by the Holy Ghost the proper working of the Holy Ghost is from the Father and the Son to finish actions And here observe the reason why in Scripture so many things are attributed and refered to the Father Because he is as the Original and Fountain of the other persons so likewise of their operations 2. The persons of the Godhead are distinguished by their Internal actions and these are such as they exercise one towards another As the incommunicable property of the Father is to beget the incommunicable property of the Son is to be begotten and the incommunicable property of the Holy Ghost is to proceed And thus in some measure we see into this great Mysterie the Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity Quest 5 Why it is necessary the Church should be acquainted with this Doctrine Answ
them from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God intimating that being in the estate of nature they were the slaves of the Divel under his dominion and so Col. 1.13 Who hath delivered us from the power of darkness that is to say from the power of Satan as though he and the Collossians had been under Satans dominion so long as they were in the estate of nature And 2 Tim. 2.26 And that they may recover themselves speaking of the unregenerate out of the snare of the Divel who are taken captive by him at his will And do but see one place more Ephes 2.1 2. And you hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sins wherein in times past ye walked according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the air the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience that is to say as the Master of the Shop in his Shop commanding and ruling therein The Truth of this Point may be maintained by divers Arguments Reas 1. Every man and so every woman is either Gods servant or the Divels slave but the unregenerate are not Gods servants It is true they owe God service and obedience but they have no mind no will unto it as our Saviour tells the Jewes Matth. 23.37 O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent unto thee How often would I have gathered thy children together even as a hen gathereth her chicken under wings and ye would not And so the Apostle Rom. 6.20 When ye were the servants of sin ye were free from righteousness that is when ye were in the estate of nature there was not the least desire or motion in you to holy obedience And do but try those that are in the estate of nature even with the outward Service of God as Prayer reading of the Word hearing of Sermons conversing with the Godly sanctifying of the Sabbath O how irksome and burdensome are these things unto them you seem to kill them when you put these things upon them They cannot they will not hold to these Religious courses constantly they will find some way or other to shift themselves from those as they hold them intollerable burdens And thus we see the unregenerate are not Gods servants and therefore it followes that they are the Divels slaves Reas 2. Every one in the estate of corrupt nature is the servant of sin and so must needs be the slave of the Divel These two are subordinate the one to the other sin being the Divels baud or Broker preferring men and women to his service Now that every unregenerate person is the servant of sin do but see what our Saviour saith Joh. 8.34 Verily verily I say unto you whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin that is to say committeth sin as the unregenerate goes on in the practice of sin impenitently and so the Apostle Rom. 6.17 But God be thanked ye were the servants of sin meaning when they were in the estate of nature but when he writ this Epistle taking notice of a change wrought in them he thanketh God And so ver 20. When ye were the servants of sin which as though the Apostle should say you were when you were in the estate of nature Thus we see the unregenerate are the servants of sin and so consequently the slaves of the Divel Reas 5. The unregenerate although they owe no service to the Divel why yet they willingly and readily subject themselves unto him and obey him John 8.44 Ye are of your father the Divel and the lusts of your father ye will do saith our Saviour to the Jews And hence it is that he calls Satan the Prince of this world John 12.31 and 16.11 And so the Apostle Paul Ephes 6.12 The ruler of the darkness of this world to wit of the unregenerate And 2 Cor. 4.4 The god of this world And it is a wonder to behold and observe how chearfully the unregenerate serve the Divel yea many times when great difficulty nay visible danger is in the way If he command the Drunkard he riseth early in the morning to follow after drunkenness If he command the Adulterer he watcheth his opportunities although never so inconvenient unto the health of his body If he command the Covetous person he will accomplish his worldly project or else it shall cost him his life Who riseth so early as the Drunkard and sits up so late Who walks so many dark nights as the Adulterer Who endures so many Tempests as the Pirat Who adventures on so many dangers as Theeves and Robbers Thus we see the unregenerate are the Divels slaves because of their willing obedience and subjection to him Reas 4. That the unregenerate are the slaves of the Divel is evident by their reward in this life and the life to come In this life besides many outward judgements upon them divers times terrors of conscience and fear of hell fire as the unregenerate are described Heb. 2.15 to be such as through the fear of death that is to say death eternal are all their life time subject to bondage And in the life to come to condemnation Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death to wit eternal And so of Satan He will promise great matters to men and women but he is a Deluder and a Lyar. He told our first Parents obeying him they should become as gods but in their woful experience they found the clean contrary And so he suggested to our Saviour Matth. 4.8 9. that if he would fall down and worship him what he would do for him but had our Saviour trusted him he had been deceived The truth of it is he deceives all that trust him Witness his principal slaves Witches and Wizards unto whom he promiseth much Wealth and Riches but where is the Wealth of such when they dye Thus we see by the woful reward of the unregenerate in this life and the life to come that they are the slaves of the Divel Reas 5. That the unregenerate are the slaves of the Divel is plain because the Lord as the punishment of sin hath given them over unto his dominion and government even as he gave the rebellious Israelites often into the hands of cruel Tyrants We all in Adams loynes making choice of this Master rather chusing to obey Satan then God was it not just with the Lord to give us up unto his Regiment And so the Unregenerate continually delighting more in the service of Satan then in the service of God is it not just with God to leave them in his hands to be slaves to him whose service they so delight in It is true Satan hath no power but what Gods permits But how just is it with God to give up such unto his dominion as are Rebels to his Majesty Now for the further illustration of this point we come to answer some objections 2 To shew the greatnesse and
grievousnesse of this slavery and Lastly to the Uses Object 1. But may some men say the debaucht and prophane person the common swearer drunkard gamester those by their very way and course do seem to be the slaves of the divel but your civill honest men and women such as live neighbourly are outwardly well governed but yet are not religious care not much for hearing of Sermons do not labor after holy knowledg have not a good word for those that are forward in profession do you hold those likewise to be the slaves of the Divel An. Yes It is true they are not in that measure the slaves of the divel as the former but being in the estate of nature sin is altogether unmortified in them where sin is altogether unmortified there Satan reigns This is a truth the more liberty any man takes to sin the more he is the slave of the divel But yet this is a truth likewise that Satan hath the meer Civillist sure enough because although sin may sleep in him why yet it is not mortified in him The Scribes and pharisees who were civil men our Saviour Mat. 23.15 stiles them no better then the children of hell he might have as well called them the slaves of the Divell And so Simon Magnus the sin of covetousnesse being unmortified in him the Apostle Peter tels him Acts 8.23 That he was in the gall of bitternesse and in the bond of iniquity and why in the bond of iniquity because he was bound to the sin of cove●ousnesse as by a chain and so to the Divell this sin being unmortified in him he was the slave of the Divell Object 2. But may some man say divers that in likelihood are in the estate of nature are many times frolick and merry and who so jovial as they Answ It is true and yet sometimes these persons have horrible pangs and gripes of conscience and the reason they are so merry and joviall is because they are not sensible of this bondage neither how deeply they are drowned in this slavery A man on dry ground being alive feels a small waight that is laid on him but being dead in the bottome of the water is not sensible although never so great waight be laid upon him So it is with a meer naturall man spiritually dead Object 3. But the regenerate themselves whil'st they are in this world have sin in them and where sin is Satan is are not they likewise the slaves of the Divel Answ Not although the regenerate have sin remaining in them why yet it doth not raign in them and where sin raigns not Satan raigns not There is a great difference between one being in a house and ruling in a house between one usurping as a tyrant and ruling as a king willingly submitted unto The Apostle Peter speaking of the regenerate 1 Pet. 2.9 But ye are a chosen generation a royall Priesthood an holy nation a peculiar people They are no longer the slaves of Satan but the servants of God nay the children of God by adoption These Objections being answered we come in some measure to point at the greatnesse and grievousness of this slavery the miserablenesse of it You have heard of the bondage of Christians under the Turks and Infidels of the slavery of the Gibeointes who were censured by Joshuah to be hewers of wood and drawers of water Josh 9.23 But especially of the great slavery of the Israelites under Pharaoh in Egypt but this bondage of the unregenerate under Satan is a great deal worse For first that bondage was of the body only but this is the bondage of the whole man body and soul Secondly In that bondage men were served but in this the Divel who is the basest Lord and who commands the basest things Thirdly In that bondage the greatest harm was temporal but in this eternal even damnation in hell for ever Fourthly In that bondage they had a sense of their thraldome and desired liberty but in this men do not perceive themselves to be bound but think themselves to be free and despise liberty Lastly in all outward bondage there may be probability of help as by running away or by intreaty or by ransome or by the death of those that hold us in bondage but in this bondage men and women lie still as it were bound hand and foot not able not willing to help themselves except the Lord from heaven come and vindicate them out of the paws of the Lion by his Word and Spirit unbind them and set them free Now we come to the Uses Vse 1. To inform us touching a great error which is in many They seem to admire at the condition of such as live out of the danger of mans Law have enough to pay every man his own so as they feare not to be cast in prison are able to make their part good in any sute or quarrel may go whither they list as their humor serves from Ale-house to Ale-house from Bawdy-house to Bawdy-house have mony enough in their purses to defray so as they need not go upon the score O they take such to be the only free persons in the world and only to live at their own command and thus they judg looking upon the outward appearance in the mean time not considering that those persons aforesaid being in the estate of nature they are all this while the slaves of the Divel Certain it is there be many that feed daintily are clothed richly live idly take their fill of all worldly pleasures in all licenciousnesse and yet are arrant slaves as any that serves in a Gally It is a good saying of one of the Ancients a good man though he serves yet is he free a wicked man though he reigns yet he is a servant Those that are not the servants of God how many lords have they the world the flesh and the Divel the world their servant their flesh their fellow the Divel their enemy There is no vassallage like unto this besides the woful reward in this life and the life to come And if you would have these slaves of the Divel painted out unto you by some signes First an arguing for sin and a defending of their evil waies Secondly An hating and disliking of those that reprove them for their sins Thirdly A loving of those that sooth them and flatter them in their evil waies Fourthly A maintaining and upholding of sinne in others Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all the Regenerate They are not the slaves of the Divel they were indeed but now they are not but the servants of God And this they may know by resisting of Satans suggestions by denying of obedience unto his temptations by mortifying that which is his Broker and Baud to wit sin and corruption by the daily renewing of our repentance and so by their great rejoycing in taking notice of any to come from under his slavery O what an easie service is this in comparison of
following 1. Why this Jesus is said to be annointed 2. With what 3. His Office of Mediatorship what it is in the three parts of it 4. The benefits the Elect have by it Lastly The Duties intimated The first Question is Why this Jesus is said to be anointed Answ In ancient time two things were intimated by this Anointing 1. That God did appoint such a person to such an Office 2. That he would fit and qualifie him for the same In both these respects Jesus is said to be anointed 1. He was set apart of God the Father to the Office of Mediatorship for although this be a common action of the whole Trinity yet because the Father is the first Person in order and hath the beginning of the action it is especially ascribed unto him according to that Joh. 6.27 Him hath God the Father sealed 2. He was fitted and qualified with gifts accordingly John 3.34 God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him that is to say God giveth the Spirit unto him that is unto this Jesus in an abundant measure For this we must know that although both natures were set apart to the Office of Mediatorship why yet the Humane nature only was qualified with gifts because nothing could be added to the Divine I say this qualification must be understood of the humane nature and not of the Divine for the reason aforesaid and although the humane nature was iqualified with pifts in an abundant measure why yet not in an infinite measure for that were to confound the two Natures Quest 2 With what was this Jesus annointed Ans Not with Ceremonious oyl typically as the Prophets Priests and Kings in the old Testament but with the gifts of the holy Ghost as Acts 10.38 God annointed Jesus of Nazareth with the holy Ghost and with power Quest 3 His office of mediatorship what it is in the three parts of it Prophetical Priestly and Kingly Answ First of the first his Prophetical office is that whereby he instructeth and teacheth his Church as in his own person when in our nature he lived in the world why so by his instruments before his assuming our nature and since his ascension unto the end of the world That he is the Prophet of the Church do but see Act. 3.22 23. where the Apostle Peter speaking of Christ saith For Moses truly said unto the fathers A Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren like unto me him shall you hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you And it shall come to pass that every soul that wil not hear that prophet shall be destroyed from among the people And hence is he called the wisdome of God 1 Cor. 1.24 Nay saith the Apostle Paul Colos 2.5 In him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledg 2. His P●iestly office That he is a Priest the Psalmist declareth speaking of him Psal 110.4 Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchized●k His Priesthood contains two things First His satisfaction made to his Father for the elect by his obedience even to the death of the Cross Secondly his intercession at his Fathers right hand he ever living to present the ment of his obedience to his Father and to will an application of it to his elect Touching the former part of his Priestly office to wit his satisfaction do but see Heb. 9.26 Now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrificing of himself and verse twenty eight Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many to wit of the Elect all the Elect Touching the other part of his Priestly office his intercession see Heb. 7.25 He is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him seeing he ever lives to make intercession for them Rom. 8.34 Heb. 9.24 3. We come to the Kingly office of Christ That he is a King see Psal 2.6 David there speaking of him saith yet have I set my King upon my holy hill of Zion His Kingly office is either Universall or speciall Universal and so all creatures are under his dominion Ephes 1.21 22. Special and so he effectually cals the Elect confirms the graces in them protects them from their enemies in this world as he sees the best for them glorifies them at the length and in the end confounds and destroys all his and their enemies Quest 4 What are the benefits the Elect have by this annointing Answ Hence it is the Elect become Christians and Christians indeed that they are spirituall Prophets Priests and Kings Men and women no sooner truely beleeve are no sooner effectually called but they receive of this annointing and so become Christians Spirituall Prophets Priests and Kings to this purpose see 1 John 2.27 The annointing which ye received of him abideth in you and teacheth you all things So then the regenerate are spirituall Prophets and they are likewise spiritual Priests and Kings see Rev. 1.6 who hath made us kings and priests unto God his Father The last question What are the duties intimated An. 1 Seeing this Jesus is the Christ is the annointed he should be sweet and savory unto us Cant. 13. Because of the savor of thy good ointments thy name is as ointment poured forth therefore do the virgins love thee Nothing should be so desired of us so affected by us as Christ 2. We should labour more and more for holy knowledg and so demonstrate our selves to partake of Christ propheticall office Many exhortations this way Provt 19.2 without knowledg the mind is nogood John 5.39 Search the Scriptures Colos 3.16 Let the word of Christ dwel in you richly in all wisedome And how the Apostle reproves the Hebrews for their bad proficiency this way Heb. 5.12 c. 3. We should demonstrate our selves to be spirituall Priests and so to partake of Christs Priestly office by spirituall Sacrifices as first by being frequent in prayer and praise as the Apostle exhorts Heb. 13.15 By him therefore let us offer the Sacrifice of praise to God continually 2. By resigning up our selves wholly unto God in the way of new obedience as the same Apostle exhorts Rom. 12.1 I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God 4. We should demonstrate our selves to be spirituall Kings and so to partake of Christs Kingly office and this by continual warring with our spiritual enemies especially labouring to subdue our own sinfull passions and affections see what Solomon saith this way Prov. 25.28 He that hath no rule over his own spirit is like a City that is broken down and without wals And Prov. 16.32 He that is slow to anger is better then the mighty and he that ruleth his spirit then he that taketh a City Thus much touching the second title Christ we come to the third The Son of God illustrate by this epethite eternall
Christ is received and partaked of for that flows from the Principle of grace and so works more freely and absolutely But in this the soul is onely a Patient this is a saving work but not a sanctifying work but yet alwayes sanctification followes upon the same Now we come to the second question Quest 2. Whether every man and woman that hath this Contrite and Humble spirit shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ Yes because this is the lost soul which Christ came to seek and to save for of this soul we must understand our Saviour when he saith Luke 19.20 The Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost And this is the bruised reed which in no case he will break Matth. 12.20 And do but see Psal 51.17 A broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise not the broken and contrite heart aforesaid And Isaiah 57.15 Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity whose Name is HOLY I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones And so Matth. 5.3.4 Our Saviour saith Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of heaven And Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted It is the contrite and humble ones which our Saviour here intends Thus we see distinctly and plainly that every man and woman that hath the contrite and humble spirit aforesaid shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Quest 3. Whether this contrition and humiliation be wrought in the like measure in all that are made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ No and for the Causes and Reasons following 1. Some have committed more gross and heinous sins then others and therefore have cause and need to be more terrified and humbled then others 2. The Lord intends to bestow a greater measure of grace upon some then upon others to do greater works by them then by others and therefore prepares them accordingly by contrition and humiliation 3. Some have been Religiously educated from their Child-hood whereby as they were kept from gross sins so corruption was subdued in them gently and secretly by little and little without any great measure of contrition and humiliation grace and comfort being instilled into them almost insensibly 4. Some by natural constitution and temper of body are more fearful and sensible of anguish then others 5. Some after the Wound have the Medicine sooner revealed and applyed to them then others Now we proceed to the Uses Vse 1. To acquaint us that there is but a few comparatively that partake of Christ and his benefits and this will be evident if so be we weigh the particulars which the contrition and humiliation aforesaid contains As first a true and distinct sight of sin many see their sins in a general slight and confused way but where is the man that sees sin to be the greatest evil even separating from the greatest good to wit God himself Isaiah 59.2 nay that so far as he gives way unto it so far he joynes with the Divel and fights against God that sees into the vile and loathsom nature of sin And where is the man that sees himself to be guilty of Adams fall himself to be stained and polluted universally with natural corruption himself to be guilty of such and such actual sins sins of Omission and sins of Commission that turns his sins upside down considers them in the circumstances of them Psal 119.59 2. The second particular the contrition and humiliation aforesaid contains is unfained and sound sorrow for sin Psal 94.16 17. Alas the most sin is their meat and their drink their very delight they storm and grieve because they cannot sin as they would are sorry and angry they have such a Minister as will reprove them for their sins that they may not go on in sin without any controul or if they have any sorrow in them at any time it is onely because of the punishment that attends sin Many that mourn for this and that outward cross and calamity present and imminent but do not at al mourn for sin the cause of it but a few whose hearts are rightly pricked for their sins Acts 2.37 And so for the other particulars Where is the man that finds sin a load and burden upon his conscience that doth humbly and heartily confess his sins that importunately cryes to heaven for mercy and that truly dislikes sin even to a sinful thought The particulars aforesaid being perpended it will appear that there is but a few that have contrite and humble spirits and so consequently but a few that partake of Christ and his benefits Vse 2. For the comfort and consolation of all such as have contrite and humble spirits they all they shall partake of Christ and his benefits such all such are they whom Christ came to seek and to save Psal 51.17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Isa 57.15 And Matth. 11.28 Come unto me saith Christ all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest The Lord doth not deal with the burdened conscience as Satan and his Instruments Satan Revel 12.4 when the woman was ready to be delivered of her Child was ready to devour her Child and so are his Instruments Now we hope say they you have followed Preachers gone to Sermons long enough no no Psal 147.3 He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds to wit the Lord Isaiah 61.1 And to this purpose it is a wondrous thing to observe how the Lord sustains and bears up the wounded soul by a secret hope of mercy as we may see in the King of Niniveh Jonah 3.9 9. Who can tell if God will turn and repent and turn away from his fierce anger that we perish not But for this hope the bruised heart would break and but for this hope the means of recovery and raising up would not be endeavored This hope keeps from despair and provokes to the use of holy means It is true saith the wounded soul I am in a miserable case but if there be any hope I will cry to heaven for mercy I will depend upon the Ministry of the word constantly I will creep into the company of those that make profession of Religion in a special manner who can tell but that the Lord may shew mercy to my poor soul May some man say this is very comfortable that every contrite and humble spirit shall certainly pertake of Christ and his benefits But how may I know that my heart is truly contrite and humble Signes 1. If thou judgest sin to be the greatest evil and the favour of God to be the greatest good 2. If thou hadst rather hear of mercy to thy
poor soul then of an earthly Kingdome to be bestowed upon thee 3. If thou thinkest those that have true Peace of conscience and Joy in the Holy Ghost to be the happiest people under the sun 4. If thou tremble at the Word and honour the very feet of those Instruments that bring glad tydings of peace to such as thy self to wit to wounded consciences 5. If thou send up strong and uncessant cryes to God for the assurance of his favour in and through Christ 6. If thou dost pity and compassionate all such as have broken and bruised hearts Vse 3. To exhort all such as for the present have not contrite and humble spirits to labour and endeavour for that disposition Motives 1. The contrary disposition to wit hardness of heart and impenitency is a great sin and a grievous judgement A great sin Rom. 2.5 But thou after thy hard and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath A grievous judgement Exod. 9.12 And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh See John 12.40 Now there be two kinds of hardness of heart 1. Sensible that which is perceived and felt and this may be in the godly as Isa 63.17 Oh Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy wayes and heardened our hearts from thy fear 2. Insensible that which is not perceived and felt and this indeed is a great sin and plague 2. The second Motive The sooner we labour after this disposition the more easily in likelyhood we shall attain unto it when a heart hath been long hardened with the deceitfulness of sin it will not easily become a contrite and humble heart and therefore Psalm 95.7.8 To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts So Joel 2.12 13. Besides it may be hereafter we shall not enjoy the like means this way we do for the present 3. Without this contrite and humble spirit according to the Doctrine we cannot partake of Christ and his benefits this is the Messenger that Christ ever sends before him unto those of years for we do not now speak of Infants and wo be unto us if we do not partake of Christ and his benefits it had been good for us we had never been born 4. Whosoever hath this contrite and humble spirit shall certainly partake of Christ and his benefits Now this may greatly induce us to labour for this disposition when the issue undoubtedly shall be so good and so happy Suppose this business be difficult and tedious why yet such an issue must needs put us on in it These are the Motives Now we proceed to the Means of a contrite and humble spirit Means 1. Prayer to God in the best manner we can it is he that must bruise our hard and stony hearts Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh to wit a contrite and humble heart 2. Because the Lord doth many times make use of afflictions and judgements for the bruising of mens hearts when he sends any great affliction upon us let us not stand out against him but joyn with him when he goes a bout to humble us let us labour to humble our selves as Saul afterwards called Paul Acts 9.6 trembling and astonished said Lord what wilt thou have me to do When the hand of God is upon us let us not stand murmuring and repining but fall to examination of our Spiritual estates and cases as the Wise-man adviseth us Eccles 7.14 In the day of adversity consider 3. Constant dependance upon the Ministry of the Word Jer. 23.29 Is not my word like as a fire saith the Lord and like a hammer that breaketh the Rocks in pieces Now we are to know that the Law hath a stroke in this work and so the Gospel 1. The Law by revealing of sin and the woful consequents of it and so the Spirit of God co-operating there is caused a servile fear and trembling a kind of contrition and humiliation which the Apostle Rom. 8.15 cals the spirit of bondage causing fear when the Spirit of God puts an edge upon the Law puts a sword into the hand of the Law to prick and wound the heart and to restrain it in the wayes of sin for fear of punishment Many a man and woman hears the Law opened and the threatnings of it thundringly denounced but stir not are little moved but when once the Lord by his Spirit puts an edge upon the Law then the stoutest heart trembles and quakes Now that the Law may have a kindly work upon us 1. By the Law let us labour for a distinct knowledge of sin 2. Rightly to understand what the Curse is which the Law threatneth unto sin and sinners 3. Examine our selves how guilty we are of that which the Law threatens the Curse unto to wit sin 4. Finding our selves guilty to labour our hearts to a deep contrition and humiliation Now as we have heard before as the Law hath a stroke in this work why so the Gospel more and more melting the heart by discovering Christ whom the sinner hath pierced by his sins and by supporting the heart by a secret hope of mercy and possibility of help in and through Christ even as Jonah Chap. 2. verse 4. Then I said I am cast out of thy sight yet I will look again toward thy holy Temple Or as the Prodigal Son Luke 15.17 18. And when he came to himself he said How many hired servants of my fathers house have bread enough and to spare and I perish with hunger I will arise and go to my father and will say unto him father I have sinned against heaven and before thee c. Now after the Law hath humbled us and the Gospel conveyed this glimpse of hope into our hearts it must be nourished and cherished 1. By considering of the Lords Infinite and Almighty Power how he is able more and more to bruise our souls to make us more and more capable of Christ and so to bring Christ nearer unto us that we may partake of him and his benefits Luke 1.37 With God nothing shall be unpossible And Matth. 3.9 God is able of stones to raise up children unto Abraham 2. The freeness of Gods mercy must be considered of he requires nothing of thee to procure this mercy but shewes mercy because he will shew mercy Suppose thou hast never so many exceptions to thy self why yet thou belonging unto him and his mercy being a free mercy he will proceed with thee until he hath made thee capable of Christ and bestowed Christ upon thee and his benefits Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh And Isaiah 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake 3. For supporting of this hope consider we of the riches of Gods mercy unto the proper objects of mercy Contrite and Humble men
because she seems her husband being untowardly weak to prevent his doing of it 2 She doing it in anger And 3 With contempt of Circumcision But that it is unlawful for women to baptize is evident 1 Cor. 14.34 the Apostle not permitting a woman to teach ministerially And if not to teach why then not to baptize baptizing being a Ministerial action as well as preaching Therefore such women as have been guilty this way have great cause to humble themselves 3 To reprove the most parents few of them endeavouring to present their children to baptism as they ought 1 N●t considering and bewailing it that they have been instruments to convey sin and death to their children 2. Not examining themselves whether they be in the Covenant or no and so their children infolded and comprehended Gen. 17.7 Acts 2.39 4 Not earnest with the Lord by Prayer to remember his Covenant with them and theirs and to make it good to them and theirs 4. Not stirring up their faith to apprehend the Promise for themselves and children 5 Not rejoicing to see their children admitted into the visible Church nay to see their ingrafting into Christ confirmed sealed by Baptism Alas the most Parents make a meer complement and matter of form of it and when it is over suffer their children elder and younger to run riot never urging them with the Covenant on their part 4. To reprove such persons as when Baptism is to be administred without any extraordinary occasion depart the Congregation before not staying until the Ordinance be solemnized As though they were unwilling to be put in mind of Gods Covenant with themselves in Baptism the great benefits sealed unto them in the same or rather as though they had no mind to be remembred of their own Covenant made with God in Baptism as desirous to make good the same nay hereby demonstrating themselves to have no voice in admitting others into the visible Church or seeming by their careless departure not to value their priviledge Nay hereby denying to do that office for others which others have done for them to wit to help in prayer for the party or parties to be baptized 5. To reprove divers of Gods people too seldom calling to mind their Baptism the Solemn Covenant in that Ordinance ratified and confirmed betwixt God and themselves And this is one reason why they are so weakly assured of Gods favour and of sins remission why their corruptions are so strong and unmortified why their Graces are so weak and out of exercise why they have no more power and might against all their Spiritual enemies why after a fall they are so long in recovering and raising up again not speedily considering that Baptism although but once administred extends to all sins past present and to come 6. To reprove the most Baptized persons having the badge of Christians but living like Infidels the mark of God in their foreheads but the mark of the Divel in their lives and conversations never seriously consider the solemn Oath they took to God in Baptism there swearing that they would renounce the flesh the world and the Divel how they there consecrated themselves to God but live as though they had then consecrated themselves to the Divel Christians in name but the Divels slaves in deed living in all manner of disobedience and impiety having taken Gods Press-money but living to fight against Him his Ministers his People his Ordinances his Laws But let those forsworn runagates know that a woful Strappado attends them in this life and in the life to come So much for this Use of Reprehension Vse 3. For Tryal and Examination Whether we be inwardly baptized or no whether we find the efficacy and power of Baptism in some measure or no If we do not it is not the outward Baptism that will serve the turne It was the manner of the Jews to stand much upon outward priviledges Jer. 7.4 Mat. 3.9 Rom. 2.25 and so we divers of us stand much upon our outward Baptism but if we be not inwardly baptized we are no better in Gods esteem and account then Turks and Infidels and if we live and die without inward Baptism our outward Baptism shall but aggravate our condemnations Outward Baptism it is true is the Seal of Regeneration but the Word is the seed of it therefore try and examine we what work the Ministry of Gods Word hath had in our hearts whether by this immortal seed we be begotten to God or no 1 Cor. 4.15 Ephes 1.13 1 Pet. 1.23 Observe we what effect the Ministry of the Word hath had in us what new light hath it brought into our minds what new quality into our wills what change hath it wrought in our affections and conversations Especially examine we our affections First What love is there in us to God Do we so love him as we must needs be often chattering unto him calling him Father affectionately Gal. 4.6 2. What love to Gods word and the Messengers of it Job 23.12 1 Pet. 2.2 Acts 16.15 Gal. 4.15 Many that stand much upon their outward Baptism have no affection to the Word and the conscionable Ministers of it they cry out There was never good world since there was so much preaching But where is the power and efficacy of the baptism of such 3 What love to the People of God 1 John 3.14 But many a baptized person of all people cannot endure them Well do we observe the renewing and change aforesaid to be wrought in us then we are baptized with the Holy Ghost Can we demonstrate our true Conversion by the Word then the Seal is properly ours The more lively we feel the new Creature in us the more we find the power and efficacy of baptism Vse 4 For Exhortation 1. Te exhort Parents in presenting their children to baptism to examine themselves whether they themselves ever came into the Covenant by an actual faith or no If they have not let them labour for faith by a constant dependance upon the Ministry of the word To present a child for the Seal of Regeneration and themselves to be in the estate of nature alas what comfort can it afford unto them A man to bring his child for the Seal of that which himself hath not nay which he hath no affection unto Is it not an uncomfortable piece of business But ●f the parents be come into the Covenant by an actual faith why then let them make use of their faith in this business First By calling to remembrance the free and gracious Covenant which God hath made with them and theirs Gen. 17 7 Acts 2.39 that although their child or children by natural generation be lumps of sin and under wrath yet in regard of Gods Covenant and free acceptation they are beloved holy and blessed 2 By being earnest with the Lord to make this Ordinance effectual to their child in his own good time 3 By apprehending and fastning upon the Promise for them