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A25478 A supplement to The Morning-exercise at Cripple-Gate, or, Several more cases of conscience practically resolved by sundry ministers; Morning-exercise at Cripplegate. Supplement. Annesley, Samuel, 1620?-1696. 1676 (1676) Wing A3240; ESTC R13100 974,140 814

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management of his graces and while he is so he is as curiously jealous lest grace should warp to rob God of his glory He loves inherent grace heartily Oh saith he that my Soul were more enrich'd with it but yet while he is breathing after perfection in grace he admiringly prefers God's wise love in saving him by Christ before Salvation by inherent grace he utterly renounceth the best of his graces when pride would have them justle with Christ for the procuring of acceptation In short a Soul that is overcome with God's method of Salvation is unable to bear any thing that darkens it Would God have me to be as watchful against sin as if there were no Christ to pardon it (i) 1 Joh. 2.1 My little Children these things I write unto you that you sin not Our first care must be not to sin Oh that I could perfectly comply with God in this but alas I cannot Would God have me to rest as entirely upon Christ after my utmost attainments as that wretch who pretends to venture his Soul with him out or an ill-spent life O Lord I trust no more to my good works than he can to his bad ones for his meriting of Salvation k Let not this be mistaken as if I made no difference between good works and evil The Apostle hath taught me better Tit. 3.8 This is a faithful saying and these things I will that thou affirm constantly that they that have believed in God might be careful to maintain good works These things are good and profitable unto men and ver 14. Let us also learn to maintain good works for necessary uses that they be not unfruitful Good works they are genuine fruits though not meritorious causes of Justification as I would not ungratefully overlook any thing the Spirit hath done in me so I would not have any thing which I have almost marr'd in the Spirits doing of it to draw a curtain whereby Christ should be less look'd on 5. The most eminent degree of our love to God is Extasie and Ravishment we need not go down to the Legends of the Philistines to sharpen our incentives to the love of God I could over-match what can be said with truth of Ignatius and Xaverius with several whom many of you knew whose unparallel'd humility hid them from observation whose communion with God was often overwhelming but I forbear Take a Scripture instance of this kind of love compare but these three passages in the Song of Songs Cant. 2 5. I am sick of love This is upon Christ's first overcoming discovery of himself Cant. 5.8 I charge you O daughters of Jerusalem if you find my beloved that you tell him that I am sick of love This charge is from her spiritual languishment through earnest desire of reconciliation after some negligence and carelessness in duty Cant. 8.6 This is when she hath had the highest communion with God that an imperfect state affords when she was as it were upon the threshold of glory and then she saith love is strong as death q.d. I shall dye unless thou grant my desire or let me dye that my desire may be granted Jealousie is cruel as the grave that as the grave is never satisfyed so neither will my love without the utmost enjoyments of thy self The coals thereof are coals of fire which have a most vehement heat my love burns up my corruptions shines in holiness and mounts upwards in heavenly-mindedness many waters cannot quench it the waters of afflictions are but as Oyl to the fire If a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned She scorns all things that would force or flatter her out of her love to Christ Now if you except against this as spoken of love to Christ and not of love to God essentially to God the Father Son and Holy Ghost I readily answer we cannot see God lovely but in Christ If any will be so curious as to assert they look upon Christ himself as but a means to bring them to God it is God Essentially Father Son and Holy-Ghost when Christ shall have given up his Mediatory Kingdom (l) 1 Cor. 15.28 that must be their compleat happiness the means is not to be rested in in comparison of the end (m) Rev. 5.2 3. This may well be compar'd to a Sea of Glass slippery standing O that I could but discover what my Soul should long for viz. how to look beyond Christ to God in whom alone is my compleat happiness and then to look in some respect beyond God to Christ to give the Lamb his peculiar honour when I shall be with the Almighty and with the Lamb as in a Temple (n) Rev 21.22 23. when the glory of God and of the Lamb shall be the light whereby I shall see that God (o) 1 Tim. 6.16 who dwelleth in such light as no mortal eye can behold That will be a blessed vision indeed (p) 1 Cor. 13.10 c. when that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shall be done away We have yet but childish apprehensions of these things to what we shall have when (q) Ep. 4.13 we come to a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Now we see darkly through the glass of ordinances but then we shall see face to face Now we know but in part but then we shall know God according to our measure as God knows us and then the greatest grace will be love perfect love that will cast out all fear fear of not-attaining and fear of losing that Joy of our Lord into which we are taken But alas all I can say in this matter is rather the restless fluttering of the soul towards God than the quiet resting of the Soul in God Bradward de causa Dei l. z. c. 24. ● 627 628 629 siarsim Let me close the Paragraph with that I call a rapture of profound Bradwardine O Lord my God thou art the Good of every good Good above all good things a Good most infinitely infinite How therefore should I love thee How shall I proportionably love thee infinitely O that I could But how can I that am so very little and finite love thee infinitely and how otherwise will there be any proportion between thy loveliness and my loves my God thou art super-amiable thou infinitely exceedest all other things that are lovely Perhaps Lord I should love thee infinitely as to the Manner when I cannot as to the Act. It pertains to the manner of loving to love thee finally for thy self and no other good finally for it self but for thee who art the chiefest good and the beginning and end of all good things But perhaps I may in some sort love thee infinitely as to the Act both intensively and extensively intensively in loving thee more intensly more firmly more strongly than any finite good and when
their good Works 3. Their Light and good works are their own though by the grace of Christ And it is no injury to Christ or his Righteousness or Grace to say that they are their own 4. The splendour of Christians in their good Works must be such as may be seen of Men. 5. The Glorifying of God must be the end of our Good Works and of their appearance unto men 6. As bad as corrupted Nature is there is yet something in mankind which tendeth to the approving of the good works of Christians and to their glorifying God thereupon 7. God is glorified even by common men when they approve of the Glory of Holiness in Believers It is not only by Saints that God is glorified 8. As contrary as Holiness is to corrupted Nature there is such resplendent goodness in true Christians works which common men may glorifie God for And so somewhat in them and in Christianity which hath such agreeableness as may tend to further good 9. The Excellency and Splendour of the good works of Christians especially Teachers is a grand means ordained by God himself for the Conviction of the World and the glorifying of God But the resolving the Question What the splendour of these works must be is my present undertaken task God is not glorified by our adding to him but by our receiving from him not by our making him greater or better or happier than he is but by owning him loving him and declaring him as he is that we and others may thereby be wise and good and happy He is his own glory and ours And by his own light only we must know both him and all things We are not called to bring our Candle to shew the World that there is a Sun but to perswade them into its light to open the Windows and Curtains to disperse the Clouds and to open the eyes of blinded sinners I. The way of doing this and glorifying God is in the order following 1. The first thing that our works must shew is their own goodness They can never prove the Cause good till it is clear that they are good themselves Therefore doubtless Christ here intendeth that we must abound especially in those good works which the world is capable of knowing to be good and not only in those which none but Christians themselves approve If believers and unbelievers agreed in no common principles we were not capable of preaching to unbelievers nor convincing them nor of conversing with them There are many excellent things which Nature doth approve and which both parties are agreed to be good By the advantage of these as granted principles we must convince them of the conclusions which they yet deny and not as the scandalous Christian so absurdly affect singularity as to make light of all good which is taken for good by unbelievers and to seek for eminency in nothing but what the World thinks evil There is a glory in some good works which all do honour and which manifesteth it self 2. And then the goodness of the work doth manifest the goodness of the doer Every man's work is so far his own that he is related to it and by it either as laudable or as culpable as it is Gal. 6.4 5. Let every man prove his own work and then shall he have rejoycing in himself alone and not in another for every man shall bear his own burthen God himself will judge men according to their works and so will men and so must we much do by our selves for it is the rightest judging which is likest God's This subordinate honour God grants to his servants If their works were not an honour to them as the next Agents they could be none to him in their Morality as man's acts though they might as acts in general ordered to good by his own goodness If God's Natural Works of Creation Sun and Moon and Earth c. were not praise-worthy in themselves God would not be praised for them as their Maker There are works that God is said to be dishonoured by Rom. 2.23 24. And what are they but such as are really bad and a dishonour to the Authors It is so far from being true that no praise or honour or comfort from good works is to be given to man that God himself is not like else to be honoured by them as morall good if the Actors be not honoured by them The World must first be convinced that Christians are far better than other men and the righteous more excellent than his Neighbour before they will glorifie God as the Author of their goodness In God's own Judgment Well done is the first word and Good and Faithful Servant is the second and Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord is the third Two sorts of Scandalous persons rob God of his honour in his Saints 1. Those that professing Christianity live wickedly or at least no better than other men whose lives tell the World that Christians are but such as they 2. Those that slander and belye true Believers and would hide their goodness and make them odious to the World As for them that say only that we have no righteousness in our selvet by which we can be justified I shall not differ with them if they do but grant that all shall be judged according to their works and that he that is accused as an Infidel Impenitent an Hypocrite or an Unregenerate Ungodly Person must against that accusation be justified by his own Faith Repentance Sincerity and Holiness or be unjustified for ever 3. The next thing to the Work and the Person that is hereby honoured is the Christian Religion it self with the Spirit 's operations on the Souls of Christians The outward Doctrine and Example Of Christ who teacheth his Servants to be better than the World and the inward Sanctification of the Spirit which maketh them better The Air and Food are commended which make men healthy and the Medicines are praised which cure the disease That is accounted good as a means and cause which doth good and which maketh men good If Christians were more commonly and notoriously much better than all other men the World would believe that the Gospel and the Christian Religion were the best But when scandalous Christians appear as bad or worse than Infidels the World thinks that their Religion is as bad or worse than theirs 4. The next ascent of Honour is to the Maker or Author of our Religion the World will see that he is good that maketh so good a Law and Gospel and that maketh all his true Disciples so much to excel all other men And here the first honour will be to the Holy Spirit which reneweth Souls and maketh them holy And the next will be to the Son our Saviour who giveth us both the Word and Spirit And the highest or ultimate Glory will be to God the Father who giveth us both his Son and his Spirit And thus Honour ascendeth to the Highest by these
some commands may be observed without so much as common grace as duties meerly moral but this must have a great measure of the spirit it speaks much acquaintance with God through experience of his wayes and much conformity to Christ in a well composed conversation in short it includes the highest perfection possibly attainable in this life yet let not this difficulty fright you for through Christ our sincere love though weak is accepted and our imperfect love because growing shall not be despised 8. This is the first and great command in respect of the End 8 Ratione finis All the commands of God are referr'd to this as their end and last scope which was first in the mind of the Law-giver 9. This is the first and great command in respect of the lastingness of it 9 Ratione perperuitatis Thou shalt love the Lord thy God it is not only spoken after the Hebrew (e) Futurum pro imperativo way of commanding but it notes singular perseverance Most of the other commands expire with the world as all or most of the commands of the second table but this remains and flourishes more than ever When Repentance and Mortification which now take up half our life when Faith which is now as it were Mother and Nurse to most of our Graces when Hope which now upholds weak faith in its languors when all these shall as it were dye in travail perfection of grace being then in the birth love to God shall then be more lively than ever That love which as it were passed between God and the Soul in letters and tokens shall then be perfected in a full enjoyment Our love was divided among several objects that cut the banks and weakned the stream henceforth it shall have but one current Our love is now mixt with fear fear of missing or losing what we love but that fear shall be banished There shall never be any distance never any thing to provoke jealousie never any thing to procure cloying never any thing more to be desired than is actually enjoyed Is not this then the first and great Commandment is it not our priviledge and happiness to be swallowed up in it this may suffice to evidence it to be our duty But then What abilities are requisite for the well performance of this duty and how we may obtain those abilities 3. What Abilities are requisite to the performance of this duty and how may we attain those Abilities This we must be experimentally acquainted with or all I can say will at best seem babling and therefore let me at first tell you plainly nothing on this side Regeneration can capacitate you to love God and it is God alone that giveth worketh infuseth impresseth the gracious habit of Divine Love in the Souls of his people Our love to God is nothing else but the eccho of Gods love to us Through the corruption of our Nature we hate God God implanted in our Nature an inclination to love God above all things amiable but by the fall we have an headlong inclination to depart from God and run away from him and there is in every one of us a natural impotency and inability of turning unto God The grace of love is no Flower of Nature's Garden but a Forreign p Non secundum bona naturalia sed secundum dona grat●ita Aquin. plant We may possibly do something for the meerly rational inflaming of our hearts with love to God e. g. God may be represented as most amiable we may be convinced of the unsatisfyingness of the Creature we may understand something of the worth of our Souls and what a folly it is to expect that any thing but God can fill them and yet this will be at the utmost but like a solid proof of the truth of the Christian Religion which may Non-plus our cavils but not make us Christians This may make love to God appear a rational duty but it will not of it self beget in us this spiritual Grace It is the immediate work of God to make us love him I do not mean immediate in opposition to the use of means but immediate in regard of the necessary efficacy of his Spirit beyond what all means in the world without his powerful influence can amount unto 'T is the Lord alone that can direct our hearts into the love of God q 2. Thes 3.5 Exoplat a Leo quod non ambigit posse praestari Ambros God is pleased in a wonderful and unexpressible manner to draw up the heart in love to him God makes use of Exhortations and Counsels and Reproofs but though he works by them and with them he works above them and beyond them r Deut. 30.6 19 20. The Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart and the heart of thy seed to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul that thou may'st live And again I call heaven and earth to record this day against thee that I have set before thee life and death blessing and cursing therefore chuse life that both thou and thy seed may live that thou may'st love the Lord thy God and that thou may'st obey his voice and that thou may'st cleave unto him for he is thy life and the length of thy dayes He is thy life i. e. effectively and that by love saith Aquinas it is reported s Sales of the love of God p. 63. that it often happens among Partridges that one steals away anothers eggs but the young one that is hatcht under the wing of a stranger at her true Mothers first call who laid the egg whence she was hatch'd she renders her self to her true Mother and puts her self into her Covey 'T is thus with our hearts though we are born and bred up among terrene and base things under the wing of corrupted Nature yet at and not before God's first quickning call we receive an inclination to love him and upon his drawing t Cant. 1.4 we run after him God works a principle of love in us and we love God by that habit of love he hath implanted hence the Act of love is formally and properly attributed to man as the particular cause u Psal 18.1 116.1 V●●tius I will love thee O Lord my strength and I love the Lord because he hath heard my voice the Soul works together with God in his powerful working the Will being Acted of God Acteth It is a known saying of w Non ideo bene currit vt rotunda sit sed quia rotunda est Augustine The wheel doth not run that it may be round but because 't is round The Spirit of God enables us to love God but 't is we that love God with a created love 't is we that acquiesce in God in a gracious manner What God doth in the Soul doth not hurt the liberty of the will but strengthens it insweetly and powerfully drawing it into
the Grace of God and whar by the receiving of it in vain And this shall serve for explaining the Exhortation the first part Receive not the Grace of God in vain The second part to be opened is that which contains the reasons of this Exhortation Sect. 4 and they are these two 1. The First is the reason of the Apostles giving this Exhortation or caution against the receiving of the Grace of God in vain namely because we are saith he workers together We read it workers together with him but in the greek 'tis only workers together not with him And there are several expositions given of this expression workers together Calvin thinks that this working together doth intend the working together with the doctrine delivered by the Apostle As if the Apostle intended that it was his duty not only to deliver the Truths and the Doctrines of the gospel but to work together with those Truths and Doctrines by way of urging and exhorting or by urging those Doctrines with Exhortations to make them effectual and therefore saith he Non satis est docere nisi urgeas It is not enough Doctrinally to inform people what is the Truth but we must Vrge it upon them with motives inducements and perswasions that may make the Doctrine embraced And the Syriack seems to favour this Exposition which renders the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working together promoventes hoc negotium as if the work of Doctrinal information were to be promoted by arguments and incitements to the imbracing of the Truth Others conceive that this working together is to be referred to the common mutual endeavours of Ministers who are to be fellow-helpers one with another as if the Apostle had said All we Ministers working together to further our Master's work in the conversion and Salvation of your Souls beseech you c. Chrysostome refers this working together to the mutual endeavours of Ministers and People as if Paul had said We Apostles work together with you to whom we preach in this work of your receiving the grace of God by our exhortations to incite you to comply with the duties propounded in the gospel Our English interpreters by putting in these words with him understand the Apostle to intend a working together with God and indeed Ministers are called Labourers with God 1 Cor. 3.9 I see no reason why we should reject this exposition if we take it with these two cautions 1. First Ministers in this working with God must be looked upon so to use their abilities as not implanted in them hy nature but bestowed on them by grace that so they may be made apt and fit instruments by the grace of God to work Therefore the Apostle saith 2 Cor 3.6 Who also hath made us able Ministers of the New Testament And so in 1 Cor. 15.10 By the grace of God saith he I am what I am and I laboured more abundantly than they all yet not I but the gace of God which was in me His power and ability to work he attributes merely to the grace of God And all our sufficiency is of God 2. Secondly If you take this to be the meaning of it that we are fellow-workers with God you must understand that what is the main and principal in this work which is the bestowing of spiritual life and growth must be lookt upon as only the work of God and to come from him and that therein man had no share at all nor is a co-worker with God in it And as Beza well notes on 1 Cor. 3.9 we must alwaies observe carefully a difference between causes Subordinate and causes Co-ordinate Ministers are to be considered as purely in subordination to God and as those whom God is pleased to make use of in the way of his appointment not in the way of effectual concurrence with God as if they could communicate any power or strength to the working of Grace by the preaching of the word Subordinate causes Ministers are to not Co-ordinate causes with God in the great work of producing of our Salvation which God only hath in his own hand both as to the internal working of grace in the Soul and the Eternal bestowing of glory upon us in the life to come There is the first reason opened that is the reason why the Apostle doth here give them his exhortation namely We are workers together with God The second is the reason why the Apostle doth put them upon this great Sect. 5 duty of not receiving the Grace of God in vain And that is taken from that text in Isa 49.8 where there is this promise made unto Christ I have heard thee in a time accepted and in the day of salvation have I succoured thee These are the words of the promise that God the Father maketh unto Christ as Mediator which is that in his discharging of the great work of saving his Church God the Father will answer and succour him as the Head of the Church and shew it by granting him a day and a time for the bestowing of efficacious Grace upon his Members by making the means of Grace effectual for their Salvation which time is here called an accepted time and a Day of Salvation because this time and this day is the time and the day of God's free favour in which he will so accept of sinners as to shew his Gracious good will unto them in accepting of them to life and in working by his Son Jesus Christ Salvation and deliverance for them Now this is a very forcible Argument and reason against the receiving of the Grace of God in vain namely because there was such a rich treasure and measure of saving and efficacious Grace in the time of the Gospel to be dispensed to the Church therefore they should labour to have their share in it and not receive the Gospel of Grace vainly and unprofitably as they would approve themselves to be the Members of Christ and those for whom Christ hath prayed unto the Father that they might have saving Grace bestowed upon them And this shall serve for opening the second part of this text namely the reason of the Apostle's laying down this exhortation both in regard of himself because he was a worker with God and in regard of the Corinthians it was because God the Father had made a promise to Christ the Head of the Church that Grace should be bestowed saving effectual Grace not Grace in vain but Grace bringing Salvation should be afforded in an accepted time and in a day of Salvation by the Administration of the Gospel The third part which is that which I intend to insist upon is the Apostle's Sect. 6 accommodation or his application of the fore-going reason taken out of Isa 49.8 unto the present state and time of the Corinthians by giving them this qui●kning Counsel that since the present season of Grace which they enjoyed now was the accepted time and the day of Salvation promised unto Christ for his
holy of the Lord twice in this 13. verse and this not in reference only to the seventh day but in reference to the first day of the week which this Evangelical Prophet had then by divine revelation in his eye How much more doth it concern us who are reserved to this glorious Administration under the Gospel to own the Divine right of the Evangelical Sabbath Surely it is the voice of the glorious Trinity that calls it my holy day God the Father by Creation God the Son by Redemption and God the Holy Ghost by Sanctification sending down a rich and plentiful effusion of Gifts and Graces upon the Apostles for the enabling them to go forth and convert the Gentiles by the preaching of the Gospel To deny God his own right is Sacriledge and Atheism We learn from hence that we must give God the whole Entire day my day saith God a few hours or the forenoon vvill not serve Gods turn but he challengeth the whole time as his own peculiar There is a great dispute amongst Divines when the Sabbath begins and when it ends the text determineth the controversie saith God all is mine The vvhole 24 hours is Sabbath look how many hours vve reckon to our days so many hours vve must reckon to Gods days also if vve vvill be ingenuous Obj. But vvho is able to spend the vvhole 24 hours in religious duties without any intermission Answ None neither is it required for neither do we our selves on our days spend the whole 24 hours in the imployments of our particular places and callings but vve allow our selves a sleeping time and a time for preparing our food and a time for eating and drinking and other refreshments of nature both for our selves and our relations and so doth God also provided always 1. That vve be not overlavish and prodigal in our indulgences to the flesh and the concernments of the outward man that vve exceed not our limits of Christian sobriety and moderation 2. Provided that we do not those things with common spirits we must eat and drink and sleep as part of the Sabbath-work with heavenly minds and Sabbath affections The occasional Sabbaths amongst the Jews gave them a greater latitude no more time of those days being counted holy than was spent in the publique service of the day which continued but from nine of the clock in the morning when the morning sacrifice was to be offered and ended at three of the clock in the afternoon at evening sacrifice But the weekly Sabbath was holy in the whole extent of it not indeed by constitution but by institution and consecration God blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it i. e. set it apart for divine and holy uses of which more infra In our sanctifying of the Sabbath Rule or Note we must have an equal respect to the negative prohibition as to the affirmative injunction i. e. to what is forbidden as well as what is commanded è contra And this is a rule which holds in the exposition of all the Commandments of the Law and of the Gospel Cease to do evil and learn to do good The negative and affirmative precept have such a mutual relation one to another that one doth infer the other and take away one and you destroy the other It is impossible to do what is commanded without due care of avoiding what is prohibited neither can that man rationally pretend to keep the Sabbath that lieth a bed all day because he doth not work not he that followeth his servile labour because possibly he may perform some religious duties What God hath joined together let no man put asunder Carnal sports and pleasures are as great a profanation of the Sabbath as the most servile labour and drudgery in the world Dicing and carding do as much violate the Law of the Sabbath as digging and carting playing as much as ploughing dancing and morrice-games as much as working in the smiths-forge Bowling and shooting as well as hewing of wood and drawing of water The reasons are clear for 1. Sports and pleasures are as expresly forbidden as bodily labour in our ordinary vocation for he that said thou shalt do no manner of work said also thou shalt not find thine own pleasures c. 2. Sports and pleasures are as inconsistent with a Sabbath frame of spirit as the grossest labour in our calling yea I 'le undertake that a man in his particular calling may more easily get good thoughts of God and of eternal life c. than a person that is drench't and immers't in vain delights and sports In such cases men are usually so intent upon their sports and pastimes that it is not easie to edge in a good serious thought in the midst of sensual delights Tota in toto tota in quâli●et parte A man in his carnal pleasures is like the soul in the body All in all and all in every part of their pleasing vanities pleasures do fox and intoxicate the brain when as labour is apt to make them serious and considerate 3. Reason Pleasures are as great diversions from the duty of a Sabbath as labours It is conceived Adam should have had a Sabbath in Paradise had he persisted in innocence why not because his dressing of the garden would have wearied him for weariness is the fruit of sin but his dressing of the garden would have been a diversion from attending his Creator in the Ordinances of a Sabbath 4. Carnal pleasures leave a defilement on the spirits and so do totally unfit the soul for communion with God That Character lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God how fully doth it agree to such kind of profaners of the Sabbath Pleasures draw off the mind from God and justly cause God to withdraw from the soul how totally doth this indispose to Sabbath work In heaven they cease not day and night saying holy holy holy c. Oh Christians never think of reconciling carnal pleasure and Communion with God together it is impossible 7th Obs Not speaking thine own words The Sabbath is polluted by words as well as by works Christ will judge men in the great day for their words and by them will he either justifie thee for sanctifying the Sabbath or condemn thee for profaning of it I am afraid it is the great controversie God hath with this nation not only profane but even professors are all guilty of not sanctifying the name and Day of God in their talk and discourses upon the Sabbath Day If Jesus Christ should join himself to our Tables Luke 24.15 16 17. or lesser companies as he did with the two Disciples going to Emaus and ask us what manner of communications are these which ye have one with another how might the question fill our faces with paleness and strike us speechless Alass who can tell what day it is by mens discourses and conferences one with another how vain foolish unprofitable and unsavory is most
vvill have mercy on you Do you not think that these glad tidings did wonderfully affect their hearts Do you not think that this grace and kindness in their sad condition at the first manifesting of it did strongly oblige them to yield obedience to what God should reveal to them to be his Will Or do you think that neither the sense of their before desperate condition when they saw no way of help or hope nor the sense of this grace and mercy did stir them up to hearken to the commands that God would give them Is it likely that they did not go together and praise God for such love as this Do but consider what they did enjoy before they fell and what their fears were after and then how much must this first tidings of mercy needs affect their hearts and engage them to obedience 3. That our first Parents had religious Worship in their Family appears by the religious education of their Children Do you think that when they had undone their children and yet God had discovered a way of salvation to them that they did not timely tell their children of this Had they exposed their childrens souls to Hell and to damnation and yet not tell them and teach them God's gracious dealings with them by which it might be prevented Do you think that they did not pray with them that themselves and theirs might be indeed partakers of this mercy Is it likely that Adam and Eve did not acquaint their children how God did make them in a blessed condition and how they lost it and how God himself had been with them after they had so offended and made known a way of salvation to them Would not their natural affection to their children and the sense of God's mercy put them on to instruct them in these things and praise God with them for his love and pray for the certain fruits and benefits of it Obj. This might make it probable Vnde ha●uerunt Cain Abel quod sacrificiis Deum honorarent à patre suo qui eos instituit Fag Lyra. Ex Dei instinctu aut verbo primi parentes obtulerunt Oleast Constat cultum aliquem externum Majestati divinae fuisse institutum à patre Adamo de eo fuisse instructos Cainem Ab●lem Rivet Cain obtulit non fide sed pro consuetudine paternae institutionis Musculus Deus d cuit Adam cultum divinum quo ejus benevolentiam recuperaret quam per peccatum amiserat ipsumque docuisse filios suos dare Deo decimas primitias but there is nothing in Scripture from whence you can conclude it Ans But there is The express mention of Cain's and Abel's offering doth plainly prove that they were thus brought up in the worship of God Cain though he had no grace yet did make a prof●ssion of Religion And that they were instructed in the things before expressed is the Judgment of learned men who conclude that Adam receiv'd instructions from God and Cain and Abel from their Father Adam And Abel's Sacrifice being accepted doth fully prove that he did understand the fall and recovering grace by Messias then to come for was God pleased with the Sacrifice it self and for it self that Abel did bring There never was any thing in them to reconcile God to Sinners but they were types and shadows of good things to come and they pointed unto Christ Abel then must understand this Besides Abel did offer by faith in whom in Christ to come then he was instructed in the Doctrine of Redemption by Christ and this doth suppose a lost estate Moreover it is said Heb. 11.4 That by this faith Abel obtained a testimony that he was righteous What By the Works he did By the Sacrifice it self that he off●red Is any Sinner justified from the condemning sentence of the Law by Works of his own No but Abel vvas justified by faith in Christ signified by the Sacrifice which he did offer for vvithout a Mediator there is no peace vvith God no pardon from God no justification before God no acceptance vvith him for any sinful man There were then religious duties in Adam's Family and that by God's command and appointment Obj. But this was offering of Sacrifice what is this to Prayer or to us when the way of Sacrificing is abolished Ans 1. Do you think they did Sacrifice and not pray when they did so Poné●que manum c. quo protestebatur se dignum qui pro peccato jugularetur Oleast in loc Quae lex instituit oblationem sacrificiorum eadem praecipit quoque orationes Deo fieri quia absque orationibus illa peragi nequeunt Hoornbeck Socin confu tom 2. p 431. The offerer laid his two hands between the horns of the Sacrifice and confessed his sin over a sin-Offering in this wise I have sinned I have done Perversly I have rebelled and done thus and thus but I return by repentance before thee and let this be my expiation Lightfoot Temp. Service c. 8. Did they not confess their sin when Sacrifice was off●red and acknowledg that they deserved to dye for their sins and this was signified by a man's laying his hand upon the head of the burnt-Offering Lev. 1.4 Prayer then usually accompanying Sacrificing Heb. 10.3 the one doth infer the other Luke 1.10 And the whole multitude of the people were praying without at the time of incense If such Sacrifices are ended yet there are Sacrifices for Christians to offer up to God your selves your hearts your prayers and praises Rom. 12.1 Heb. 13.15 And there are the same moral grounds and reasons why you should serve God in your Families in the way prescribed by God since the coming of Christ as there was why they should serve God in their Families in the way of Worship appointed by God before the coming of Christ Ans 2. And this was not practised only in Adam's Family but by godly Families after too So Enoch walked with God Gen. 5.24 and Noah Gen. 6.9 vvhich implies their universal sincere obedience at home as well as abroad and that this implies their worshipping God in their Families I think for this reason because if a man be never so great a Professor abroad if he totally and constantly neglect God's worship at home nay if it be not constantly done except in some cases that might fall out he shall not be accounted to be one that walketh with God I judg that man cannot be said to walk with God that in his house with his Family doth not Kneel before him Besides Abraham's duty was comprehended in this phrase Walk before me Gen. 15.1 but Abraham in his walk took his Houshold along with him Gen. 18.19 He will command his children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord the vvay in vvhich his houshold should walk and by the way of the Lord is often understood the worship of God One place more I would have considered for
Question proposed to me to answer at this time is this What are the Duties of Masters and Servants and how both must eye their Master which is in heaven Before I come to the direct answer to this Question I shall make way to it by laying down a preliminary consideration or two First That God did in infinite wisdom make all things though of a far different nature Some beings he made more excellent and indowed them with noble faculties fitted for communion with himself and some of these he hath placed in a higher and some in a lower orb and yet all making the glory of infinite wisdom shine more clearly He sets one creature higher and another lower one to rule and the other to be ruled And of the same kind he advanceth one above another and yet with no injustice or wrong to any but for the mutual help one of another the beauty and harmony of the whole Vniverse and the more visible displaying of his own unsearchable wisdom Psal 104.24 Gen. 1.31 If all the Stars were Suns how intolerable would their heat and light be if the whole body were eyes how much of its use and excellency would it lose What a Chaos and heap of confusion would the Woald be without government and how can government be without superiority and inferiority It was not without good reason that the Philosopher said Hierocles in Py. Car. That there was a method of perfect wisdom in the making of all things and it was not by chance that they are what they are but the contrivance of the most excellent counsel Who could have mended what God hath made What could be better ordered than what infinite Goodness hath done Ar. Epist l. 2 c. 7. Anton. ex Palat. l. 7. Ec. 3.11 and who but a fool would desire that things should be otherwise than Wisdom it self hath determined Oh! what cause hath every one to adore God in every thing who hath made every thing beautiful in its place and season What cause have all to sit down content and thankful in that place where God hath fixed them how unreasonable and blasphemous are the repinings of some that are ready to quarrel with their Maker and to impeach him as guilty of partiality cruelty and injustice that hath not advanced them to a higher richer and more honourable condition then they are in Shall the thing formed say unto him that formed it why hast thou made me thus What diabolical pride and arrogance is this for the Creature to accuse and condemn his Creator Shall folly it self indict wisdom must God come to his Creatures Barr must he give thee an account of his actings art thou able to bear his pleadings and canst thou without sinking into nothing stand before his glory what obligation didst thou lay upon God to bring thee out of nothing into something did he stand in any need of thy being what was there in thee that should commend thee to God to advance thee above a toad or a dog I could here expatiate were it not a little besides my design To conclude I think it would be far better for us all to learn of that excellent Moralist who said Epictetus That though he was lame and almost blind and none of the richest yet because he was partaker of Reason he had cause to magnifie the distinguishing goodness of his Maker and could wish that all men would more adore and admire God and as for his part it should be his work while he had a being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ar. Epist. l. 1. c. 16. and he did call all to joyn in consort to his praise who hath made all things in so excellent an order and harmony Did we all consider what God is and what we are methinks it should effectually silence discontent and leave no room for any thing but love praise and gratitude O! would to God there were a little of that order harmony and wisdom in our actions that is in God's and that we could act like them that study to imitate their Maker O! that with Paul we could learn still to be content in whatsoever condition we are in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id l. 2. c. 14. and if we have spoken or thought any thing derogatory to the infinite Wisdom to repent and abhor our selves in dust and ashes and turn our murmurings against God that it is no better with us into admiration that we are not worse every state on this side eternal misery is advancement above what we deserve and a mercy we can never be thankful enough for Secondly As God did in infinite wisdom make every thing and placed every thing in that sphear that was most fit for it so it is the highest excellency of the creature to shine in his orb and be regular in his motion I mean It is every one's duty and excellency to fill up that place and relation that God hath set him in with duty The whole World is a great Army and God is the General of this Army and he appoints every one their station and rank and in keeping of it exactly is security honour and reward God makes one a King another a Subject one a Master another a Servant one rich another poor and he is really most excellent that is so in the faithful discharge of the state and relation he is in A good Servant is far better than a bad Master a good Subject than a wicked Prince he that is not relatively good is not really good He that breaks his rank to get a higher and safe place may be likelier to meet with destruction than promotion Adam's loss of Paradise and the Angel's loss of Heaven are sufficient demonstrations of this truth The World is a Stage saith the Stoick and in it every one hath his part to act and it 's our commendation and wisdom to act our part well whether it be a Prince or a Beggar a Father or a Child a Master or a Servant Psal 101.2 This was holy David's care and resolution He would behave himself wisely in a perfect way and how shall that be done better than by walking before God in his house with a perfect heart What was Abraham commended for more than his faithfulness and was this the least act of his faithfulness to instruct bis Family and teach them the fear of God Joshua was a man of great gallantry and resolution but I am ready to think he never acted both more bravely Josh 24.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epict. than when he said As for me and my house we will serve the Lord. Socrates laughed at them for fools that endeavoured to perswade him to leave instructing the youth God saith he hath set me in this station and how can I leave it O how few Christians exceed this Heathen nay who almost comes near him if he lived as well as he spake It 's too true a proof that there is but little
duty and not to despise the cause of his hand-maid What then said he should I do when God shall rise up and when he visiteth what shall I answer him Let death when he comes find you doing the best work Ar. Epict. l. 3. c. 15. Antoninus l. 2. n. 2. and faithful in your place I shall conclude this with the advice of that gallant Emperour Let it be thy earnest care constantly to perform every thing thou art about with justice to every one which you may well do if you go about every act as your last I am now come to the last thing which I promised to do and that is to shew What is the Duty of Servants and that I shall perform in the same method as I did before 1. By giving them some cautionary Directions 2. Some positive Directions and pressing these with some Motives and give them some Helps for the better performance of their Duty 1. I shall give Servants some cautionary Directions First Let Servants take heed of pride This was the sin of the Angels this made them Devils this was the sin of our first Parents 1 Tim. 3.6 this made them rebellious to God A humble heart is ready for any work or state that God in his providence calls him to any thing but sin will down with a humble man Remember pride unfits for the service of God and man makes one think himself fitter to command than to be commanded that makes one go on heavily with their work impatient of reproof ready to answer again malepert saucy ready to commit other sins to gratifie their pride A proud Servant will scorn to be catechized called to an account or be kept under those bounds that reason and Religion set Humility doth no body any harm brings no dishonour or inconveniency but is as good a security to reputation comfort and profit as any thing I know Secondly Take heed of disobedience to the lawful commands of your Master Think not that your arrogance bigness and parentage will bear you out It may be you think scorn that your Master should correct you and you say in your mind that you will give him as good as he brings know this that if you have a Master that may be low-spirited weak or poor and it may be such a one that is loth to deal with you as Law and Religion gives him leave yet are you too strong for God Is he afraid of your swelling and big looks Will he count you innocent Is not your rebellion and disobedience to your Master disobedience and rebellion against God And can his purity suffer long or his justice bear such imp●●●●y always without some signification of his displeasure Must the great ones of the world that break his Laws feel his power and shall such a despicable wretch as thou go unpunished Remember what is said of disobedience to the lawful commands of Magistrates holds here Whosoever resisteth shall receive to himself damnation Rom 13.2 Thirdly Take heed of negligence idleness carelesness By this you rob your Master of what in honesty you should and might have got for him by this you secretly waste your Master and answer not that trust that is put in you and is justly expected from you by this you give just occasion of displeasure to your Master by this you break your promise made to your Master and provoke God highly Mat. 5 26. Remember what a sentence the wicked slothful Servant must shortly hear Fourthly Take heed of mere eye-service Is the eye of God nothing to you and his warnings insignificant Col. 3.12 Doth not he in plain words forbid this O how many such Servants be there that when their Master is by are very diligent but when his back is turned then how lazy how wanton how careless Would you be served thus your selves if you were Masters Doth God take no notice at all and if he do how do you think he liketh such doings Is it a small matter to make light of his presence and if it be so you shall shortly find to your cost that his eye was more than your Master 's upon you and if you will not believe his knowledg observation and eye his hand shall shortly give you such a demonstration of both as you shall not be able to slight Fifthly Take heed of Lying By a lye you deny God's knowledg you make one fault two you make your self an enemy to humane society that is a sin which is hateful to every honest man and abominable to the Lord the lyar shall be shut out of Heaven Prov. 6.17 Rev. 21.8 and have his portion in that Lake that burns for ever I spare to speak how it spoils a man's credit and feeds jealousies in a Master and maketh him scarce believe you when you speak truth O! little do Servants think what folly they are guilty of by covering their faults with a lye Little do they think how dear that sin must cost them either here by deep repentance or hereafter by intolerable torments Sixthly Take heed of purloining or imbezeling any part of your Master's goods for your own use Tit. 2.10 Luke 16.6 Meddle with nothing but what is your own and is allowed you you would be loth any one should call you a Thief I pray then take care of that which will make you deserve such a name do not consent to any that are in the least guilty in that kind be not partners with a Thief and make not your self an accessory to another's wickedness by concealing any unfaithfulness of that nature in your fellow-servants after you have roundly warned them your self eat not of the junkets that sensuality wantonness and theft hath provided If you would know what such doings tend to in a word I may tell you they pamper lust many times end in uncleanness murder a prison a halter and if that were all it were not so bad in comparison by this you wrong God and man fear your conscience and make way for a world of other sins and bring speedy and sure damnation except a thorow repentance prevent it Seventhly Take heed of bad companions have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness but rather reprove them O how many hopeful youths are blasted by wicked company I am not ignorant of the high pretences of love that such may have and what excuses they may palliate their wickedness with but please none to displease God never count him your friend nor one that will do you a kindness that would lead you to sin the devil damnation Eighthly Take heed of disclosing your Master's secrets do not speak any thing that may wound his reputation make no mention of his faults without you are called to it lawfully and then not without deep regret and trouble upon the account of God's honour and his soul Some Servants make nothing of prating against their Masters and Mistresses behind their backs little considering that this is a sin
the Devil's work in stealing the Seed of the Word of God out of Mens hearts and making it unfruitful These practices beget in men a mean esteem and contempt of God's Word when they see how little good it doth to others and how little power it hath with you that profess it Before I come to the Application two Questions are to be Answered 1. May I not speak evil of another Person when it is true Quest 1. A Man may be faulty in so doing The real secret faults of your Neighbour as I told you you ought not unnecessarily to publish And suppose there be no untruth nor injustice in it yet there is uncharitableness and unkindness in it and that is a sin Thou wouldst not have all Truth said concerning thy self nor all thy real faults publickly traduced Out of thy own mouth will God Judg thee O thou wicked Servant Yea thy own Tongue and Conscience shall another day condemn thee 2. You may speak evil of another Person when necessity requires it It may be necessary sometimes for his good and so you may speak evil of him unto those that can help it as a man may acquaint Parents with the miscarriages of their Children in order to their amendment Thus Gen. 27.2 Joseph brought to his Father the evil Report of his Brethren Sometimes this may be necessary for the caution of others as if I see a man ready to enter into intimate Friendship and Acquaintance with a Person whom I know to be highly vicious and dangerous I may in such a case caution him against it For certainly if Charity commands me when my Neighbour's Ox is ready to fall into a Pit to do my endeavour ro prevent it much more am I obliged to prevent the ruine of my Brother's Soul when I see him so near destruction But for a man to do this unnecessarily and unprofitably this is the sin I have been speaking of 3. If you will speak evil of other Persons do it in the right method Christ hath given us an Excellent Rule Mat. 18.15 16. If thy Brother shall trespass against thee go and tell him his fault between him and thee alone if he shall hear thee thou hast gained thy Brother But if he will not hear thee take two or three more and if he will not hear them tell it to the Church But if Men will be preposterous and will not follow Christ's Order but instead of private admonishing will publish men's faults to others herein they make themselves Transgressors 4. In doubtful cases silence is the safest way It is rarely men's duty to speak evil of Men and when it is not their duty to speak it is not their sin to be silent It is seldom that any suffer by my silence or concealment of his fault but great hazards are run and many Persons commonly are made sufferers by my publication Now as Charity commands me to pass the most favourable judgment so Wisdom obligeth me to chuse the safest course Quest 2 But what if that Man I speak against be an Enemy to God and his People May not I in that case speak evil of him Doth not that Zeal I ow to God engage me to speak evil of such a man as far as I can with truth This I believe is that which induceth many well meaning Persons to this sinful practice of detracting from divers worthy Persons Ministers and others as supposing them to be Enemies to God and to his ways and so they think their reproaching and censuring of such Persons is nothing but zeal for God For Answer to this consider 1. There is abundance of sinful Zeal in the World and in the Church Therefore the Apostle gives us a Caution Gal. 4.18 It is good to be zealously affected in a good thing Otherwise we know it was from Zeal that Paul persecuted the Church Phil. 3.6 Zeal indeed is an Excellent grace in it self but nothing more frequently both pretended where it is not and where Envy Interest or Malice lye at the bottom and abused where it is 2. True Zeal hath an equal respect to all God's commands and especially to those that are most plain and most considerable It is at least doubtful whether the man thou traducest be an Enemy to God and his ways sure I am it is so with some Ministers and Christians that are highly censured and reproached by those that differ from them and it were great Impudence to deny it But this is a certain truth and evident duty Thou shalt not take up an evil reproach against thy Neighbour 3. Consider how easie a mistake is in this case and how dangerous Peradventure he whom thou callest an Enemy to God will upon enquiry be found a Friend of God and his ways But what dost thou mean by the ways of God Possibly thy own ways or party that thou art engaged in take heed of that If you would Judg aright you must distinguish between the circumstantials and the essentials of the ways of God Suppose a man be an Enemy to thy Party and thy way and manner of Religious Worship and Government yea let us suppose that thine is indeed the way of God wherein yet thou maist be mistaken if now this man be an able and zealous Assertor of the substantial and fundamental truths of God and ways of Holiness and this be attended with an Holy and exemplary Life who dare say that this man is an enemy to God and his ways O my Soul come not into the secrets of such Persons 4. You must not go out of God's way to meet with God's Enemies If any man be really an Enemy of God and of his Truths and ways I do not perswade you to comply with him or by sinful silence to betray the cause of God only let me entreat you to do God's work in God's way you may apply your selves to him and endeavour to convince him you may speak or write against his Doctrine provided you do it with modesty and moderation and not with that virulence and venom wherewith too many Books are now leavened But for this way of Detraction and Reproach it is a dishonourable and disingenuous way it is a sinful and disorderly way it is an unprofitable and ineffectual way and no way suitable either to the Nature of God whom you serve or to the Rule and Example of our Blessed Saviour or to the great principle of Love and Charity or to that end which you are to aim at in all things the honour of God and the good of other men Now I come to the Application Lamentation for the gross neglect of this Duty or the frequent Commission Vse 1 of this sin What Tears are sufficient to bewail it How thick do Censures and Reproaches fly in all places at all Tables in all Conventions And this were the more tolerable if it were only the fault of ungodly Men of Strangers and Enemies to Religion For so saith the Proverb Wickedness proceedeth from
chastenings of the Lord. 2. Inconsiderateness of the end of the Divine discipline is a great degree of contempt The evils that God inflicts are as real a part of his providence as the blessings he bestows as in the course of nature the darkness of the night is by his order as well as the light of the day therefore they are alwayes sent for some wise and holy design Sometime though more rarely they are only for tryal to exercise the Faith humility patience of eminent Saints for otherwise God would lose in a great measure the honour and renown and his favourites the reward of those graces afflictions being the sphere of their activity But for the most part they are castigatory to bring us to a sight and sense of our state to render sin more evident and odious to us They are fully exprest by pouring from vessel to vessel that d●scovers the dregs and sediment and makes it offensive that before was concealed The least affliction even to the godly is usually an application of the physician of spirits for some growing distemper every corrosive is for some proud flesh that must be taken away In short they are deliberate dispensations to cause men to reflect upon their works and wayes and break off their sins by sincere obedience Therefore we are commanded to bear the voice of the rod and who hath appointed it 'T is a preacher of repentance Micah 6.9 to lead us to the knowledg and consideration of our selves The distress of Joseph's brethren was to revive their memory of his sorrows caused by their cruelty now when men disregard the embassy of the rod are unconvincible notwithstanding its lively lessons when they neither look up to him that strikes nor within to the cause that provokes his displeasure when they are careless to reform their wayes and to comply with his only will as if afflictions were only common accidents of this mutable state the effects of rash fortune or blind fate without design and judgment and not sent for their amendment this is a prodigious despiseing of God's hand For this reason the Scripture compares men to the most inobservant creatures to the wild asse's colt Job 11.12 Psal 58.4 Hos 7.11 the deaf adder to the silly dove without heart and the advantage is on the beasts side for their inconsideration proceeds merely from the incapacity of matter of which they are wholly compos'd to perform reflex acts but man's incogitancy is in sole fault of his spirit that wilfully neglects his duty The Prophet charges this guilt upon the Jews Lord when thy hand is lifted up they will not see Isa 26.11 2. Insensibility of heart is an eminent degree of despising the Lord's chastenings A pensive feeling of judgments is very congruous whether we consider them in genere Physico or Morali either materially as afflictive to nature or as the signs of divine displeasure for the affections were planted in the humane nature by the hand of God himself and are duly exercised in proportion to the quality of their objects And when grace comes it softens the breast and gives a quick and tender sense of God's frown An eminent instance we have in David though of heroical courage yet in his sad ascent to mount Olivet 2 Sam. 15.30 he went up weeping with his head covered and his feet bare to testifie his humble and submissive sense of God's anger against him Now when men are insensible of judgments either considered as natural or penal evils if when they suffer the loss of relations or other troubles they presently fly to the comforts of the Heathens that we are all mortal and what can't be help't must be endured without the sense humanity requires that calm is like that of the dead sea a real curse or suppose natural affection works a little yet there is no apprehension and concernment for God's displeasure which should be infinitely more affecting than any outward trouble how sharp soever no serious deep humiliation under his hand no yielding up our selves to his management this most justly provokes him Of this temper were those described by Jeremiah Jer. 5 3● Thou hast stricken them but they have not grieved thou hast consumed them but they refused to receive correction 2. The causes of this despiseing of God's chastenings are 1. A contracted stupidity of soul proceeding from a course in sin There is a natural stubborness and contumacy in the heart against God a vicious quality derived from rebellious Adam we are all hewn out of the rock and dig'd out of the quary and this is one of the worst effects of sin and a great part of its deceitfulness that by stealth it encreaseth the natural hardness Heb. 3.13 Zech. 7.12 by degrees it creeps on like a gangrene and causes an indolency The practice of sin makes the heart like an adamant the hardest of stones that exceeds that of rocks For hence proceeds such unteachableness of the mind that when God speaks and strikes yet sinners will not be convinc't that briars and thorns are only effectual to teach them and such untractableness in the will that when the sinner is stormed by affliction and some light breaks into the understanding yet it refuseth to obey God's call 2. Carnal diversions are another cause of slighting God's hand Luke 21.34 The pleasures and cares of the world as they render men inapprehensive of judgments to come so regardless of those that are present Some whenever they feel the smart of a cross use all the arts of oblivion to lose the sense of it The affliction instead of a leading them to repentance leads them to vain conversations to Comedies and other sinful delights to drive away sorrow Others although they do not venture upon forbidden things to relieve their melancholy yet when God by short and sensible admonitions calls upon them they have presently recourse to temporal comforts which although lawful and innocent in themselves yet are as unproper at that time as the taking of a cordial when a vomit begins to work for whereas chastisements are sent to awaken and affect us by considering our sins in their bitter fruits this unseasonable application of sensual comforts wholly defeats God's design For nothing so much hinders serious consideration as a voluptuous indulging the senses in things pleasing like opiate medicines they stupifie the conscience and benum the heart 'T is Solomon's expression I said of laughter it is mad for as distraction breaks the connexion of the thoughts so mirth shuffles our most serious thoughts into disorder and causes men to pass over their troubles without reflexion and remorse And as the pleasures so the business of the world causes a s●pine Security under judgments We have an amazing instance of it in Hiel the Bethelite 1 Kings 16. who laid the foundation of his city in the death of his first-born and set up the gates of it in his youngest son yet he was so