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A49513 Principle[s] of faith & good conscience digested into a catecheticall form: together with an appendix: 1. Unfolding the termes of practicall divinity. 2. Shewing some markes of Gods children. 3. Some generall rules and principles of holy life. By W. Lyford, Batchelour of Divinity, and minister of Gods Word at Sherborne in Dorsetshire. Lyford, William, 1598-1653. 1655 (1655) Wing L3555; ESTC R216824 122,930 334

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a carnall man sinne is pleasing and duty a burthen the duties of the Law being brought and pressed on the soule doe shew how hollow and rotten we are which otherwise we should never have mistrusted by our selves Ro. 7.9 9 10 13. Rom. 8.7 Q. What fourth worke of the Law bringeth a sinner to Christ A. It worketh wrath that is it laies the curse upon us it proclaims the judgement of God against us for every sin It curseth every disobedience it tels every soule of us thou art a domned creature c. Ro. 1.18 Rom. 4.15 2 Cor. 3.7 9. The Law is full of rigour 1. It accepts of no obedience but what is every way full and perfect 2. The Law admits of no excuses It accepts of none of our sorrows 3. The Law regards not what we can doe but what we should doe All that be under the Law must doe it or dye This is the case of all that be out of Christ the Law curseth them Q. How fiftly doth the Law drive us unto Christ A. When we see that we are shut up and cannot winde our selves out of Gods wrathfull hands the soul even drowned with sorrow and feare is constrained to goe to Christ upon the invitation of the Gospell The soule does hereupon consult and advise with it selfe what to doe to be saved and so at length resolves to goe to Christ this is one use of the Morall Law viz. to make us see 1. How vile we are 2. How weak we are 3. How wicked we are what enemies to God and goodnesse 4. How cursed we are 5. And so to consult within our selves and to resolve to goe to Christ as that prodigall did Luk. 15.17 18. and those Lepers 2 King 7.3 4. Thus the Law and the Gospell worke together for our salvation it is not in me to save you saith the Law therefore seeke further It is in me to save you saith the Gospell therefore rest in me Act. 2.37 Mat. 11.28 Rom. 8.15 And so the soule is converted and drawn unto Christ by the Gospell being driven from the Law by the Law it selfe CAP. XXVIII Of the second end and use of the Morall Law Q. WEE have seene the first maine use of the Morall Law What is the second A. To be a perpetuall rule of obedience and holinesse Second Use of the Morall Law and it is therefore called the Morall Law Mat. 19.17 Rom. 2.25 Rom. 7.12 Heb. 8.10 1 Tim. 1.5 8. Jam. 2.10 11. The Law shewes us what is good and what is bad Q. Our obedience is but in part here What be the properties of that obedience which God will accept of his servants True obedience what A. 1. It must be a free a loving submitting of the b inward and outward man to the c whole will of God with an intention d and desire to please and approve our selves to him in every thing we doe This is the nature of true obedience a the ground and rule of obedience is the will of God b the creature obeying is the inward and outward man c the manner is free without compulsion d the end and aime of all is to please God not men or our selves and by these properties true obedience is differenced from meer civill honesty restraining grace in hypocrites a Mat. 15.9 Esa 1.12 b Rom. 6.13 17. c Psal 40.8 119.6 80. Mat. 5.20 Jam. 2.10 d H. s 7.14 Zach. 7.5 6 Rom. 14.6 Joh. 5.30 John 7.18 Esay 10.7 Mat. 6.6 Q. Is there any worthinesse in our works to procure to us Gods favour A. None at all our best works done before we be regenerate are utterly corrupt and cannot please God The evill tree cannot bring forth good fruit Joh. 3.6 Rom. 8.8 Mat. 7.18 Phil. 3.8 Q. But what say you of the workes we performe after regeneration A. Though God in mercy for Christs sake doe accept of our endeavours to please him yet our very best workes are stained with many imperfections And therefore have need of forgivenesse c. Luk. 17.10 Rom. 7.21 Esa 64.6 Tit. 3.5 Mat. 20.10 14. When the Scripture speaks of rewarding our workes Mat. 10.42 and Mat. 6.6 It is a reward of Grace not of Debt Neh. 13.22 Remember me and spare me The rewards of God must needs be full of Grace seeing he promiseth to reward Begging and praying and a cup of cold water which is of little worth Q. It seems then that God doth receive us into his favour without any consideration of our works of his meer mercy in Christ alone imputing his righteousnesse unto us and not our frailties A. It is most true for we are saved by faith in Christ without the works of the Law Rom. 3.28 Rom. 11.6 Q. But doth justification by faith make men despisers of good duties contained in Gods Law A. By no means for faith is the very life and root of all good works And the reason why many doe not performe works of obedience is because they have not faith Heb. 11.7 8 17 25 27. Iam. 2.22 Luk. 17.3 5. Esay 7.4 12. 1 Pet. 3.5 The more faith Faith answers all objections it removeth carnall reasoning and so brings the heart to obey in all things the more obedience Gal. 5.6 Q. The Law being the rule of obedience we ought to be carefull to know it and to lead our lives by it A. Yes For both he that knows it not and he that obeyes it not shall be beaten with many stripes Luk. 12.47 48. Q. How many Commandments be there A. Ten Ten words Deut. 4.13 Q. What sorts of duties doth the Law of God containe A. Two sorts 1. Duties that immediatly concern Gods Glory and Worship in the foure first precepts 2. And duties that more immediately respect our Neighbours good in the six last Mar. 12.29 30 31 33. Mat. 22.37 40. Thus are the Ten Commandments divided Q. What motives are there to stir us up to the keeping of this Law in all the points of it A. Two 1. Because God is the Law-giver God spake every one of those words and where God hath a voyce to speake we ought to have an eare to heare and an heart to obey God sets his stamp upon them all Iam. 4.12 Heb. 2.2 Rom 7.12 The law is holy just and good Q. Why secondly must we carry an awfull regard to this Law A. Because he is Jehovah our God our maker our deliverer and therefore may justly challenge obedience at his creatures hands Love and feare ought to keep us in obedience Mal. 1.6 Es 5.4 Deut. 10.12 Jer. 2.9 13 19. Mic. 6.3 Esay 43.23 24. Deut. 7.6 11. Deut. 26.17 19. the strongest and sweetest bond of obedience is that relation between God and us CAP. XXIX Q. THe first Table of the Law of God containes foure Commandments What is the summe and substance of it A. The first Table of the Law teacheth and requireth 1. That I cleave unto God with my heart 2. That I worship him with my
accidentall outward change of the Actions as of the Sow that is washed Pet. 2.22 But it is a change of the very frame and disposition of the heart the very nature is changed he is made a new Creatures Ezek. 36.25 26. A new heart will I give you c. A Swine that is washed is a swine still and his nature is to wallow in the mire But a sanctified person of a swine is made a sheep and he hates to wallow in the mire Q. Wherein Secondly doth sanctification excell morall honesty A. In the root or seed of graces The graces of sanctification have a root within us even the spirit of life which is in Jesus Christ Rom. 8.2 1 Pet. 1.23 24. 1 Ioh. 3.9 His seed remaineth in him and our graces are the fruits that spring up of that seed and root Ioh. 15.16 But the seeming graces of unregenerate and meerly civilized people they have no such root but they are like the Corne upon the House top which makes a faire shew yet it hath neither root by seed nor fruit in the eare Psa 129.6 7. Luk. 8.13 Q. Wherein thirdly does Sanctification excell morall Honesty A. The true convert does receive the word in power and in the Holy Ghost he gives the word a divine power and authority over his conscience and over his actings He receives the word with an honest heart even with patience though it crosse and cast downe his contentments and particular interests you will not dare to resist any Truth that you heare if you have true grace in you 1 Thes 1.5 Luk. 8.15 Ps 119.161 Q. Wherein fourtly doth Sanctification goe beyond morall Honesty A. In the motives to obedience The sanctified person whatsoever he does he doth it out of duty pressing the conscience out of love inclining the Affection This is the true ground and motive of sound obedience to doe a duty out of a pure Conscience of Love and faith unfained this is acceptable in Gods sigh 1 Tim. 1.5 Eph. 6.7 1 Ioh. 5.2 whereas the Hypocrite hath ever an eye to himselfe Self-ends and selfe respects doe usually keep up the course of his duties Vse Hereof it followes that they are not truly sanctified which cannot give the word a divine preheminence in their souls to reforme their hearts and lives Ezek. 33.30 32. Neither are they Truly converted that can Hate one sin and allow another Es 58.3 Rom. 2.22 Not they which outwardly are washed but are not inwardly changed renewed Nor lastly they which have some outward shews of goodnes without a seed of Grace in their hearts seeing all the good they doe and all the evill they forbeare does proceed from restraining Grace and outward respects moving and setting them on worke all this does not amount to saving Grace Observe this for a Truth such Christians as have no better Principles of acting and performances then morall Education can furnish them with Also such as content themselves with a Negative goodnesse as to say I am no Papist nor Thiefe nor Whoremonger c. Also they that can stay in such duties of the first and second Table as may preserve the credit and esteem of Moderate well bred civill honest men in the places where they live yet are not equally careful and conscionable of the duties of Piety and Religion but remaine all this while unacquainted with the grounds of Faith and pure worship of God and so the good things they doe they doe them without knowledge and conscience of or respect unto their injunction in the word of God All such persons are as yet but strangers to the life of Grace they have not as yet exceeded what a Pharisee or a Heathen may doe Of Restraining and Renewing Grace Q. Shew farther for conclusion some differences betweene Restraining Grace and Renewing Grace 15. Mar. for all Gods children are renewed in the spirit of their minds The triall Eph. 4.23 A. 1. Restraining grace if it be only restraining hath painfulnesse in it and an inward discontent as the Bridle that keeps them in Gods word is as Cords Bonds to them Ps 2.3 Mark 6.20 Herod feared Iohn c. But now the heart truly renewed desireth to be restrained Iob. 34.32 That which I see not Teach thou me Ps 19.13 Ps 119.32 Q. How Secondly may restraining Grace be known from Renewing Grace A. Men Meerly restrained will stretch their liberty as farre as they can and when Meanes of restraint be removed they will grow loose and licentious as Joash did when Jehoiada was dead 2 King 12.2 with the 2 Cron 24.17 18. But the heart that 's renewed and truely sanctified will not doe all that he may he will rather doe lesse he will deny himselfe some things which he might doe especially if it be not expedient for time place 1 Cor 10.23 1 Cor 6.12 Q. What 's a third difference between restraining and renewing grace A. Men meerly restrained doe abstaine from evill for feare of Wrath or feare of Laws and shame in the world or perhaps one sin keeps in another as the ambitious person will avoid Drunkennesse because men of a debaucht life are not fit for high places So the presence of a Godly grave man does stop the mouth of a vain swearer c. But the heart that is renewed eschews evill because it is displeasing unto God He will oppose and resist sin out of an inward Principle of Grace and hatred of sin the spirit of God in them lusteth against the flesh c. Gal. 5.17 Generall Rules of Holy life and Conversation 1. EVery Christian may and ought to be assured of his own Salvation 2 Pet. 1.5 7. 2 Cor. 13.5 2. No man can be assured thereof but by the word of God working spirituall and supernaturall effects and changes in the understanding in the Heart and affections By the which change our effectuall vocation future salvation is witnessed and sealed to our consciences Gal. 6.7 8 15. 1 Joh. 1.6 7. 3. It is not enough for a Christian to be Baptized to be bred up in the true Religion to come to Church to cry Lord Lord and to live civilly unlesse thou have a sound Faith which worketh by love unlesse thou be a New Creature Outward Profession will not serve the turne nor stead thee to salvation unlesse thou finde inwardly those effects which the word Sacraments expresse outwardly Rom. 2.25 28. Gal. 5.6 Jer. 9.26 4 Repentance doth not stand only in an outward forbearance of sin but there must be also an inward loathing hatred of sin together with a striving against the corruptions of our hearts there must be a new frame of heart and soul making us to doe all things 1. By new Principles of obedience viz. Faith and Love 2. By new Rules viz. the word of God 3d for new Ends namely how God may be honoured and our own finall and externall peace procured 5. A Christian must look to find in himselfe some