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A20756 The conflict betvveene the flesh and the spirit. Or the last part of The Christian warfare wherein is described the nature of these combatants, the malice and power of the flesh and fleshly lusts, with the meanes whereby we may subdue and ouercome them. By Iohn Dovvname Batchelar in Diuinitie, and preacher of Gods Word.; Christian warfare. Part 4 Downame, John, d. 1652. 1618 (1618) STC 7139; ESTC S110219 333,184 430

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conceipt we are the more easily induced by reason of ignorance and blindnesse of minde pride and selfe-loue which naturally raigns and rule in vs. For though we be wholly from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foote defiled with sinne and thereby vtterly disabled vnto any good dutie yet wee see that the most haue an opinion of their owne worth and excellencie For many boast themselues in the goodnesse of their natures as though therein they might be accepted not only of men but also of God himselfe many vaunt of their pure naturals and workes of congruitie which before grace receiued they are able to performe in the strength of their naturall abilities many doe rest in their owne ciuill iustice and honestie as though it were sufficient to iustifie them in Gods sight many blesse themselues in their legall righteousnesse as though therby they could merit heauen with some small helpe and finally many with the Angell of the Church of Laodicia doe thinke themselues rich and so increased in goods that they stand in neede of nothing when as in truth they are wretched and miserable poore blinde and Apoc. 3. 17. naked But let vs take heede of this policie as beeing most dangerous pernicious seeing it maketh men rest in themselues and vpon the weake reede of their owne righteousnesse to their vtter perdition and keepeth them from flying vnto Christ and from hungring after his righteousnes by which alone we are iustified and saued And as it keepeth vs from imbracing Christ by faith so also it hindreth our repentance and nourisheth in vs carnall securitie and hardnesse of heart for we must first see our sinnes before we can euer bewaile or turne from them and whilest we haue any opinion of our owne good natures or our legall righteousnesse wee can neuer as wee should bewaile our sinfull corruptions nor carefully vse any meanes to bee purged from them §. Sect. 2. The meanes to defeate the former policie Whereby it appeareth that no policie is more pernicious if it preuaile against vs seeing it spoileth vs of our Sauiour Christ and of all the gracious promises of life and saluation contained in the Gospell which are all made on the condition of faith approued to bee liuely and iustifying by the fruits thereof in vnfained repentance The which should moue vs to vse all our care and indeauour that wee may defeare it to which purpose wee must not looke vpon our selues as we appeare in the twilight or rather in the darke night of naturall knowledge nor yet through the false spectacles of pride and selfe-loue which will hide and disguise our vices and corruptions and make them to shew themselues in vertues colours but wee must looke vpon our selues in the glasse of the lawe and try our thoughts and words our workes and our wayes by the rule of Gods word and so shall wee plainely discouer our blemishes and difilements yea our monsterous deformities and vgly corruptions with the auersenesse of our willes to all good and the peruersenesse and crookednesse of our hearts affections For there shall wee see that our vnderstandings are so blinded that though they be wise vnto euill yet to doe good Eph. 4. 18. they haue no knowledge that our iudgements are wholly Ier. 4. 22. corrupted mistaking euill for good and good for euill right for wrong and wrong for right trueth for falshood and falshood for trueth that our imaginations are euill and that continually that our consciences are either seared through securitie or affrighted with terrours and horrours through despaire and either accusing when they should excuse or excusing when they should accuse that our memories are slippery to retaine any good thing and retentiue like brasse or yron in keeping and preseruing sinfull and wicked impressions that our willes stand in open rebellion against God nilling what he willeth and willeth what he nilleth That our hearts are auerse to all goodnesse and cleaue fast to all worldly and sinnefull vanities that our affections are wholly corrupted and disordered and all the members of our bodies are the ready instruments of sinne There shall wee finde that by reason of this corruption we are notable to thinke a good thought nor so much as will that which is good that we are altogether vnprofitable seruants yea 1 Cor. 3. 5. Phill. 2. 12. Eph 2. 1. 3. rather the slaues of sinne and Sathan the children of wrath and not onely sicke but euen starke dead in our sinnes that we haue not onely in vs vtter barrennesse of all good but the seedes of all wickednesse lurking and lying hid which sproute foorth vpon all occasions when as they receiue any warmth and moysture from the temptations of Sathan and Ier. 13. 23. the world yea would of themselues daily come to growth and ripenesse if they were not continually nipped and restrained by the common grace of Gods spirit Finally that the blacke-moore may as easily change his blackenesse and the leopard his spots as we our sinnefull condition into a better estate yea that in stead of making any satisfaction by paying the olde score we are ready to encrease our debt by adding new sins vnto the olde and so plunge our selues into more fearefull condemnation And thus may we defeate this pollicy of the flesh and comming vnto a true sight of our owne naturall vildenesse we may abhorre our selues in sackcloath and ashes and renouncing our owne righteousnesse may hunger after the all-sufficient righteousnesse of Iob. 42. Christ and applying it vnto vs by a liuely faith may find it effectuall for our iustification and saluation § Sect 3. The second pollicie that the good things in vs are much better then in truth they are Secondly as the flesh perswadeth vs that we are nothing so ill as we are in respect of our sinnefull condition so that the good things which wee seeme to haue are farre better and of much greater excellency then in truth they are and as there it lookes vpon our faults and vices though the thick fogge of ignorance which maketh them to bee scarce visible and discernable so when it beholdeth any appearance of good in vs it putteth on the spectakles of pride and selfe-loue which make them seeme to be farre greater then they are in deede euery moal-hill a great mountaine and euery small starre as large as the Sunne it selfe Thus it magnifieth to a meere worldly man the goodnesse of his nature as though this alone without any further helpe would bring him to heauen and maketh him beleeue that his common guifts are speciall endowments that Gods restrayning grace in him is sanctifying and sauing grace and his moderated and blunted vices and corruptions to bee singular vertues and great perfections Thus it perswadeth the proude iustifiarie to rest in his inhaerent righteousnesse and legall obedience for his iustification and saluation And to this ende it bleareth his eyes so as he cannot see any wants and
to perswade vs that our common sins are no sins our haynous sins small veniall WE haue spoken of some speciall and notable deceipts which the flesh vseth to allure vs to the committing of sinne and now we are briefly to consider of some other which it vseth to make vs being fallen to continue in our sinnes without repentance The first whereof is to blinde or hinder the eyes of our vnderstandings and to corrupt and delude our iudgements that we may thinke our common sinnes to be no sinnes and our great and haynous ones to be small and veniall with which deceipt we are the more easily abused if we thriue and prosper in our euill courses and haue not our eyes cleared by the sharpe waters of afflictions For when God suffereth vs to goe on in our euill wayes without checke we either thinke that he approueth or not much misliketh them or else continue securely in them and neuer call them to examination For the defeating of which pollicy the best meanes are first diligent studying and meditating in the booke of God which is that al-sufficient light whereby we may discouer these workes of darkenesse and that most vpright iudge which not onely adiudgeth what is good and euill but also in what measure and degree Secondly that we often pray vnto God that our eyes may be annointed with the eye-salue of his grace and holy spirit that being cured o● their naturall blindnesse they may be able to discerne betweene euill and good darkenesse and light Finally that we doe not liue in carnall securitie but often examine our workes and wayes by the rule and square of Gods word and especially those wherein we thriue and prosper and so wee shall perceiue plainely which are iust and straight and which are crooked and also in what measure and degree § Sect. 2. The second policie is to extenuate couer our sins with vaine excuses as first corruption of nature Secondly if it cannot perswade vs that our sinnes are no sinnes then it will extenuate and couer them with vaine excuses and make them so little light and veniall that as it will make vs beleeue wee may without daunger continue in them And first it pretendeth corruption of nature and humaine frailtie which is so great in all men that doe what they can they must needs be guiltie of many sinnes But in this wee may vanquish our flesh with it owne weapon for therefore we should not giue willing entertainement vnto any sinne because through our infirmitie and the strength of naturall corruption many will thrust in vpon vs whether we will or no therefore we should fight the more couragiously against these enemies because they are so instant to presse vpon vs. Yea in truth this should double our repentance seeing there doth not onely some streames of wickednesse flow from vs but also we haue the fountaine in our selues especially considering we were not thus by creation but through our owne default whereby we haue defaced Gods image and brought our selues into this state of corruption § Sect 3. Secondly the flesh teacheth vs to pretend custome Secondly men excuse themselues for liuing impenitently in their sinnes by pretending custome which hath taken such fast hold vpon them that they can by no meanes shake it off Thus the swearer pretendeth that he would willingly leaue vaine and blasphemous oathes but that he is so inured vnto them that he often sweareth at vnawares Thus the voluptuous man saith that he would be content to leaue his carnall delights as drinking gaming rioting whoring but that hee hath so accustomed himselfe vnto them that he cannot forsake them nor giue them euer But let such know that it is high time for them to come out of their sinnes by repentance seeing they haue brought themselues into a most miserable and fearefull condition for sinne is turned into another nature and by pleading custome holdeth them in subiection as it were by vertue of a law And Sathan who through their naturall corruption held them in the vilest and basest slauerie hath his possession confirmed by their customable seruice of him in their actuall transgressions and now the strong man holdeth the house with some shew of right hauing so long possessed it that he can pleade prescript on Of these men I would demaund if euer they meane to come out of their sinnes by vnfained repentance or no. If not what appearance of hope is there but that they must be eternally miserable in the fire of hell But if they doe as all will pretend why doe they it not presently For if custome be too strong for them already how much more vnresistable will it be when it is more and more confirmed by much practise and continuance But I am so fettered in sin by an ill custome that I cannot shake it off Yet know that though it be hard yet vpon the necessity of thy saluation it must be done and therefore in stead of breaking these cords with a Sampson like resolution let not time and vse double them and make them stronger Yea rather vntwist them by little and little if thou canst not at once breake them and by a contrary custome of piety and righteousnesse disuse thee from thy sinnes by degrees indeauouring first to set thy heart at liberty For if the heart being deliuered out of the bondage of sinne begin now to hate it then neither will the tongue delight to speake it nor the hand to act it And therefore pretend not custome seeing it is not this but our malicious wils that imbrace it and our hearts that affect it which make vs continue in our sinne without repentance neither can custome hold vs vnto any thing which is in our owne power to alter if our wils with any resolution doe breake away from it For tell me thou who pretendest this excuse if this custome should be punished in euery particular act with some forfeiture whereby thy estate would be impouerished or some punishment inflicted on the body which would bring vnto thee more damage and smart then thy sinne doth pleasure and delight wouldest thou not leaue thy sinne and hate it if not for it selfe yet for the penalty sake inflicted on thee for it And wilt thou not regard thy precious soule as well as thy corruptible body and be as carefull to auoide eternall damnation as well as some worldly losse Finally know that it will proue but a miserable excuse at the day of iudgement when God and our owne consciences shall accuse vs for our sinnes to say that we committed and could not leaue them because we were accustomed vnto them and all one as if the man-slayer should excuse his murther by telling the iudge that he could doe no otherwise because he had for a long time beene accustomed thereto by killing of many other Or as if the thiefe should excuse his theft by saying that he could not choose but doe it because his hands for a long
backsliding from our former sinceritie but forgetting that which is behinde let vs reach vnto those things which are before and presse hard towards the marke for the price of the high Phil. 3. 13. 14 calling of God in Christ Iesus For if we slacken our pace in the wayes of godlinesse and sit still though but a little while we shall grow so stiffe and sore that we shall haue little desire to goe on in our iourney And by our negligence we shall loose our sweet communion with God the light of his countenance the sense of his loue and ioy and comfort of his spirit which are our chiefe encouragements that make vs goe on in the way of godlines Of the liuely feeling whereof when we are depriued we shall either disconsolately sit downe and loose our crowne or faintly proceede with much weakenesse and wearinesse § Sect. 4. How the flesh perswadeth vs to rest in that which wee haue all ready done or suffered Another deceipt like vnto this whereby the flesh allureth vs to desist from vertuous actions is to make vs to rest in that which we haue already either done or suffered as being aboundantly sufficient for our saluation Which that we may defeate let vs consider that though it vvere true yet it is of no force to make vs leaue off or intermit our vertuous actions For what ingratitude and grosse negligence were this in a seruant who hauing done a little worke would loyter and surcease his paines because he is assured that his Lord is so bountifull that hee would not hold backe any part of his wages And how much more in vs seeing the riches of our reward is so inestimable and permanent that we haue iust cause to thinke our whole life which is but short and momentanie to bee too too little though we could attaine to the age of Methuselah if it were solye imployed in glorifying our gracious God by our faithfull seruice which if we doe not but content our selues onely with that which standeth vpon the necessitie of our saluation we plainely shew that all we haue done is but false and counterfeit obedience seeing it did spring and flow onely from foolish selfe-loue and not from the sincere loue of God Foolish I say because it shall surely be frustrate of it end or though it should not yet of that measure of glory which those who are wise will labour after for according to that measure of grace we haue receiued and obedience which we haue performed we shall haue our portion proportion in that heauenly happines But be it that thou art not so ambitious of blessednes but that the least part and lowest place will well content thee consider in the next place that in this life wee are neuer so rich in grace and the fruits of obedience that we may now giue ouer and spend vpon the stocke vnlesse wee meane to be bankerupts in goodnes for if there be not a growth there will be a decrease if not a progresse then a regresse in the wayes of godlinesse and when we neglect the seruice of God then doe we begin to serue the Diuell the world and our owne flesh Besides true sauing grace is not like the Moone sometime in the full and sometime in the waine but like the light of the morning which still increaseth till it be perfect day It is alwayes in the growth vntill we come vnto a perfect age in Christ which perfection we shall not attaine vnto till wee haue layed downe Pro. 4. 18. these bodies of flesh And that which a while groweth and Phil. 1. 6. then standeth at a stay was but a false conception and like an Embrio in the wombe which though it may delude a woman with a deceiuing hope yet this ioy will bring bitter Mat. 24. 13. sorrow without all comfort in the end Againe consider that all Gods promises are made to those alone who continue Apoc. 2. 10. 3. 21. constant in their faith and obedience to the end Hee that indureth to the end shall be saued and be faithfull vnto Eccles 11. 3. the death and I will giue thee the crowne of life and to him that ouercommeth I will grant to sit with me in my throne c. And as the tree falleth so shall it lye And therefore our former graces and good workes should not make vs slothfull and sluggish for the time to come but much more painefull and diligent in imbracing and practising them seeing if we now desist we shall surely loose all our former labour Finally what souldiour will thus foolishly reason I haue fought long and indured many brunts in the battell and now I will take my ease because I haue almost obtained the victory what traueller will sit downe in the middest of his iourney because hee hath gone farre and taken much paines seeing all his labour is lost if he come not to the end And who running in a race will giue ouer before he come to the goale excusing himselfe that he hath runne well in the beginning because he is sure to loose the garland with all his former paines Yea rather because they haue begunne well they will continue till by their constant labours they haue obtained their reward And therefore let vs not be lesse wise or industrious for the assured gayning of heauenly and euerlasting happinesse then we are for the momentany and vncertaine possession of earthly trifles but after we haue done much good let vs still hold on to doe more for blessed is the seruant not who hath done well in former times but who when his master commeth shall be found so doing Mat. 24. 46. CHAP. XVIII Of certaine aduantages which the flesh hath against vs in the spirituall Conflict §. Sect. 1. That this enemie the flesh hath great aduātages against vs because it dwelleth within vs. HAuing discouered the dangerousnes of this enemie the flesh in it owne nature it now followeth according to our order propounded that we further consider that this perill is much intended and increased in respect of diuers aduantages which it hath against vs in the spirituall Conflict And these are principally two the first is that this enemy is not farre off whereby we might haue leysure and opportunitie of fitting and preparing our selues against the Conflict before he could approch vnto vs but dwelleth with vs yea in vs. He is not onely neere at hand and as it were in the Suburbs close vnto the gate of our soules but it lodgeth euen within the walles of the Citie not in the out-parts and backe lanes but it keepeth strong possession in the chiefe forts and castle of our mindes wils our hearts and affections where our chiefe strength and Ipsi gestamus laqueum nostrum nobiscum circumferimus inimicum Bernard de Quadrages serm 5. treasure lyeth And as one saith wee beare our snare with vs and carry our enemy about vs whether so euer we goe
chearefull readinesse to suffer any thing which it pleaseth God to cal him vnto for his sake vntill at last it come to that plerophory and full perswasion of Gods vnchangeable loue and our Election Rom. 8. 38. 39. 1 Ioh. 4. 18. Adoption and Saluation which was in the Apostle Paule who was fully perswaded that nothing in the world was 1. Pet. 1. 8. Rom. 5. 3. able to seperate betweene Gods loue and him And this is accompanied with such peace of conscience as passeth all vnderstanding For when we are assured that wee haue the remission of our sinnes and are quite freed from them both in respect of their guilt and punishment then the terrours and feares which did accompany them are taken away and both Sathan and our owne consciences which did continually accuse vs are put to silence so as they can no longer affright vs nor disturbe our peace From whence springeth spirituall ioy vnspeakeable and glorious whereby we reioyce not onely in the fruition of Gods benefits but also in afflictions and tribulations as the Apostle witnesseth when as we see our selues freed out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies the wrath of God the curse of the lawe death hell and condemnation and now brought into an happy and blessed estate of grace and saluation in and by Iesus Christ and and his benefits apprehended and applied by faith Which effects who so finde thus wrought in them they may be assured that they haue the spirit which is the cause and authour by which they are wrought euen as the light bringeth vs the Sunne the streames to the fountaine and the branches and fruite vnto the roote from which they flow and spring § Sect. 7 The differences betweene a iustifying faith and the faith of presumptuous ciuill worldlings Yea but hypocrites and vnregenerate men doe boast most of their faith and assurance of saluation and therefore they also may haue the spirit or else this faith is no infallible signe of it To which I answere that they haue no true faith but as it were in a dreame and dotage they delude themselues by mistaking their carnall and secure presumption for a liuely and iustifying faith But how shall we discerne the one from the other seeing they seeme to haue oftentimes as strong confidence assurance of their saluation as the best Christians I answere that though there be betweene them some seeming similitude yet there is as great difference as betweene pure gold a rotten post guilded ouer For first true faith is grounded on the Scriptures the word of God but presumption hath no ground but an idle conceipt arising cut of pride and selfe-loue True faith alwayes followeth vnfained humiliation in the sight and sense of our sinne and misery whereas the presumptuous man was neuer humbled but hath a proude conceipt of his owne righteousnesse and worthinesse Faith followeth illumination and knowledge and first we must know God and his Christ before we can truely beleeue in them but presumption riseth commonly out of ignorance and the more destitute the woldly man is of the knowledge of God and his wayes the more bold and confident hee is in his perswasion True faith is ioyned with all other graces as loue zeale of Gods glory humilitie patience and obedience manifesting it selfe by the fruites that it bringeth foorth in good workes But presumption is seuered from them all and goeth alone without any such company and attendants True faith is not discerned before sound conuersion and then it beginneth in some small and weake degrees but presumption is borne and bred with vs and in an instant commeth to its full strength which maketh the secure worldling to bragge that he hath alwayes beleeued and is so strong in faith that he neuer doubted of his saluation True faith is not attained vnto without great difficulty it being no lesse a worke to beleeue the Gospell then to fulfill the Lawe but presumption voluntarily creepeth into our hearts and the lesse paines wee take in the vse of Gods holy ordinances the more easily it entreth and the stronger it waxeth Faith is alwayes assaulted with doubting and the one being a fruite of the spirit the other of the flesh there is a great and continuall conflict betweene them but presumption is bold and confident and he who is possessed of it professeth that hee neuer doubted of his saluation neither feeleth he any conflict in him because he is wholly carnall and corruption warreth not against corruption but onely runneth out of one extreame into another for when the secure worldling being by some meanes awakened out of his lethargy ceaseth to presume then he beginneth to despaire Faith purifieth the heart and worketh by loue and is neuer seuered from vnfained repentance but presumption nourisheth and increaseth all sinfull corruptions and they who most presume are most destitute of all true loue towards God and their neighbours And howsoeuer they leaue some grosse sinnes forworldly respects yet they repent of none there being no charge in their affections but onely in their actions yea in this respect also they nourish many sins in their bosomes which they thinke most sweete and aduantageable and will by no meanes be perswaded to part with them Faith vniteth and applieth Christ vnto the beleeuer for all vses for which God gaue him that is as well for sanctification as for iustification and saluation and applieth the vertue of his precious Rom. 12. 1. blood for the taking and purging away of the pollution and corruption of sinne as well as the guilt and punishment and as it taketh hold of Christ to make him ours so it giueth and offereth our soules and bodies vnto Christ that we may become his and be wholly deuoted and dedicated to his worship and seruice but presumption onely apprehendeth Christ for the remission of sinne and the obtaining of euerlasting life and not for the mortification of sinne by vertue of his death nor spirituall quickening and renewing by power of his resurrection and so also it is onely a receiuer but no giuer it taketh all in shewe which Christ offereth but it will in loue of thankefulnesse returne nothing vnto him againe Faith finding it owne weakenes and the sharpe encounters of doubting and incredulity laboureth earnestly in the vse of all good meanes whereby it may bee more and more encreased and confirmed as hearing the word receiuing the Sacrament reacing prayer meditation and such like but presumption finding no such assaults securely neglecteth all these helpes feeling it selfe then the strongest when it is most destitute of them Finally true faith endureth in the day of fiery tryall and temptation and euen when God seemeth to frowne to withdrawe outward testimonies of his loue and in stead of them sendeth afflictions and crosses then the beleeuer with Abraham hopeth aboue hope and beleeueth against beliefe it Rom. 4. 18. Iob. 13. 15. 19. 25. pearceth through all these cloudes of
of holinesse and righteousnesse and not by fits and starts but as an holy roote and tree of Gods planting it beareth and bringeth forth ripe fruits continually in due time and season and as a liuely fountaine of grace and goodnesse it sendeth forth the pleasant streames Gal. 5. 6. Psal 1. 3. Ioh. 4. 14 7. 37. 38. of good workes and vertuous actions But the faith of temporaries worketh seldome and but by fits and onely when they haue some pange of deuotion wrought in them by the power of the Word conuincing their consciences or out of naturall passion moued with some pitifull obiect Neither are these true fruits of holinesse and righteousnes because they spring not from a liuely faith vnfained loue true obedience but from selfe loue praise of men or other worldly respects they are not ripe fruits fit to bee reaped and carried into the barne but onely greene blades semblances and shewes which wither before the time of haruest § Sect. 14. The third effect respecteth ioy 1 Pet. 1. 8. Thirdly true faith causeth peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost which is no slight nor flitting ioy but as the Apostle calleth it vnspeakeable and glorious the which in the nature of it is spirituall like the author which worketh i● and most sheweth it selfe when as wee are exercised about spirituall obiects and exercises as hearing the Word reading meditation praying holy conferences and such like But temporary faith bringeth no such peace For there is no peace saith my God to the wicked And howsoeuer s● 57. 21. they haue some ioy yet there is great difference betweene it and that which proceedeth from true faith For Mat. 13. ●● the faithfull delight in the Word as being the word not of man but of God himselfe and because they finde it his 1 Thes 2. 13. Rom. 1. 17. strong power whatsoeuer the instruments be to their sanctification and saluation But temporaries reioyce in it for nouelties sake and as it is the word of man not so much in respect of the spirituall matter as the manner how and the person by whom it is deliuered because they loue him as a friend for worldly respects or for his naturall gifts and parts because hee is learned wittie and eloquent the which ioy ceaseth and turneth oftentimes into anger and spleene when as the word commeth home to the conscience and reproueth him sharpely for his darling sinnes Secondly the faithfull man reioyceth in spirituall things the assurance of Gods loue the remission of his sinnes and his owne saluation and though hee taketh some ioy and comfort in the things of this life yet it is but small in comparison of the other But the temporarie beleeuer contrariwise taketh some small ioy in spirituall things as hauing some little taste of them but his chiefe reioycing is in things worldly and earthly which maketh him to neglect the other ioy when as they crosse one another and will not stand together Thirdly the ioy of the faithfull like the cause of it which is our faith is small at the first but increaseth by degrees vntill it come to fulnesse of ioy like that of Dauids Thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more Psal 4. 7. then in the time that their corne and their wine encreased but the ioy of temporaries is greatest at the first entrance and then decayeth by little and little till at last it be vtterly consumed come to nothing Finally the ioy of true faith is strong constant and not only continueth in the fruition of worldly prosperity but also in affliction and persecution as we see in the example of the holy Apostles who reioyced and sung Psalmes vnto God when as they were persecuted for preaching the Gospell But the ioy o● temporaries like that of the Grashoppers continueth 〈…〉 whilest the summer of prosperity lasteth but decayeth and dyeth in the winter of afflictions § Sect 15. The fourth effect respecteth confession christian apologie Rom. 1● 10. 1 Pet. 3. 15. Fourthly true faith as it inwardly in the heart beleeueth vnto righteousnesse so outwardly with the mouth it confesseth to saluation and the true Christian as he beleeueth in Iesus Christ so he is alwayes ready to render a reason of his faith and hope that is in him when the glory of God or good of his neighbours requireth it although it bee with the hazard and losse of his goods landes liberty and life And being indued with the spirit of faith he is ready to say with the Psalmist and Apostle I beleeued and therefore haue I spoken But the temporary beleeuer confesseth Psal 116. 10. 2 Cor. 4. 13. his faith when as it will stand with his worldly credit or aduantage but smothereth his profession in time of daunger and vtterly denyeth it rather then he will vndergoe any damage for it § Sect. 16 The fifth effect respecteth contentment 2 Cor. 5. 7. Rom. 1. 17. Heb. 13 5. Fiftly true faith giueth a Christian comfort and contentment in all estates for be liueth and walketh by faith and not by sense and therefore when hee wanteth friends or wealth and such like worldly helpes he resteth contented because his chiefe treasure and sufficiency is in Gods neuer fayling prouidence vpon which he chiefely relyeth according to that of the Apostle I haue learned that in whatsoeuer estate I am therewith to be content And againe Neuerthelesse Phil. 4. 12. Gal. 2. 20. I liue yet not I but Christ liueth in me and the life which I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the sonne of God who hath loued mee and giuen himselfe for mee But the temporary beleeuer liueth by sense and not by faith and trusteth in God when as hee hath in his hands the pledges and pawnes of earthly benefits but distrusteth in his promises and prouidence when as secundary helpe and inferiour meanes faile and therefore vseth vnlawfull meanes to helpe himselfe § Sect. 17. The 6 effect is the ouercoming of the world 1 Ioh. 5. 4 5. Sixtly true saith ouercommeth the world according to that of the Apostle Whosoeuer is borne of God ouercommeth the world and this is the victory that ouercommeth the world euen our faith Who is he that ouercommeth the world but hee that beleeueth that Iesus is the Sonne of God And it contemneth all earthly things as vaine and worthlesse in comparison of spirituall grace and heauenly glory But the temporary beleeuer when hee is at the best is but a meere worldling and a deuoted slaue to his worldly lustes and desires after honours riches and pleasures And therefore embraceth grace and glory so farre forth onely as they will stand with the fruition of his earthly idols but reiecteth and renounceth his part and interest in them when as they crosse and will not stand with his earthly desires § Sect. 18. The last effect reioycing to thinke of christs comming to iudgment Lastly
similitude betweene them yet there are many great and essentiall differences whereby wee may know the one from the other For the regenerate man mortifieth and forsaketh his sinnes out of loue and obedience to God but the vnregenerate out of selfe-loue for the obtaining some temporall good or the auoiding of some euill Hee renounceth all sinne and laboureth most in the mortification of those corruptions vnto which hee is naturally most inclined as wee may see in the example of Dauid who shewed his vprightnesse before God by keeping himselfe from all his iniquities by hating euery false way and esteeming all Gods precepts So that his repentance and mortification is without restraint Ioh. 6. 63. or limitation and extendeth to the subduing and rooting Tit. 3. 5. out of all sinne without exception But the other in his fained repentance renounceth onley some sinnes which Eph. 2. 1. he can best spare as being least pleasant or profitable but as for those which are most aduantageable and delightfull he keepeth them like sugar vnder his tongue and will rather part with any thing euen the first borne of his body Iob. 20. 12 Mic. 6. 6. as the Prophet speaketh yea loose his owne soule then leaue and forsake it As we see in Herode and many others The man regenerate is constant in his repentance and casteth away his sinnes with detestation like filthy rags with a purpose neuer againe to returne vnto them but the hypocrite Esa 58. 5 Heb. 12. 1. onely leaueth them for a time and then returneth vnto them againe he layeth them aside like his apparell with a purpose to resume them when hee hath fit opportunitie and there is not a through diuorce betweene him and them but onely a temporarie separation as it were by mutuall consent Hee leaueth his sinnes willingly and chearefully and because they so beset him and clinge about his necke that he cannot in such hast flie from them as he desireth therefore he is content that the Lord should pull him out of this sinfull Sodome with some violence burne away his drosse with the fire of tribulation and cut the throate of those which he hath esteemed his darling sins with the sword or razor of afflictions but the other vnwillingly forsaketh his darling sinnes and when he is dragged from them by the feare of Gods approaching iudgements he doth with Lots wise looke backe vpon them as being loath to part with them vnlesse he were constrained by meere necessitie From whence another maine difference plainely ariseth betweene them For the sound Christian by his repentance hath his minde and affections changed and whereas in the dayes of his ignorance he allowed and approued loued and liked his sinnes now hee condemneth loatheth and disliketh them so that hee is freed not onely from the outward act of sinne but also from the inward loue yea more from the corrupt affection then from the sinfull action as wee see in the example of the Apostle Paul who did the euill which hee hated and Rom. 7. 15. 23. was delighted in the law of God in the inner man when by the Law of his members he was led captiue of sinne But the vnregenerate doe onely leaue their sinnes in respect of the outward act when as in the meane while their hearts and affections doe cleaue vnto it As we see in the example of Balaam Num. 23. 20. 26 who rendereth this as the reason why hee would not curse the people of Israel not because hee loued them as being the Church of God and his peculiar and chosen people but because the Lord would not giue him leaue wherby he implyeth that hee would very gladly haue done it that by gratifying Balaacke hee might haue receiued the wages of iniquitie but was restrained by the terrours of the Almightie so as he durst not for his life presume to doe it In which respect it may be truely said that Pauls sinning through infirmitie and in some sort vnwillingly was lesse sinfull then Balaams not committing of that act of sinne in cursing the people yea then his blessing of them seeing all hee did was through feare and constraint which made him to blesse them whom hee cursed in his heart as appeareth by that his cursed counsaile which he gaue vnto Balaacke namely that he should by alluring the people to Num. 24. 14. 24. 1. 2. commit first carnall and then spirituall fornication vtterly disarme them of Gods protection and leaue them naked to their enemies And the Lord doth not so much regard the hand as the heart nor the outward action as the minde and inward affection § Sect 6. That the spirit is knowne to be in vs by his quickning of vs in the inner man Secondly as the spirit mortifieth and crucifieth the olde man with the lusts thereof so it quickeneth vs in the inner man and reneweth in vs all sanctifying and sauing graces as it maketh vs to flye all euill so to imbrace that which is good as it causeth vs to forsake our old sinful workes and corrupt conuersation so it inableth vs by our new obedience to serue the liuing God Thus our Sauiour ascribeth to the spirit this spirituall life and quickening It is saith he the spirit that quickeneth And the Apostle telleth vs that Iohn 6. 63. God according to his mercie hath saud vs by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the holy Ghost If therefore the Tit. 3. 5. Spirit of God dwelleth in vs then are we who were dead in trespasses and sinne quickened with sauing grace and raised Eph. 2. 1. and inabled vnto new obedience our vnderstanding which were darkened with ignorance are inlightened with the knowledge of Gods truth the worke of redemption and mysteries of godlinesse Our iudgements are informed so as we can discerne betweene truth and falsehood good and euill Our mindes which onely minded earthly vanities are now set not on things beneath but vpon those Col. 3. 2. Heb 9. 14. that are aboue our consciences which were loaded with dead workes doe now serue the liuing God performing that dutie for which they were created in excusing vs when we doe well and accusing vs when we doe euill Our wils which were stubborne and rebellious are now obedient plyable and subiect to the will of God Our hearts of stone are Psal 51. 17. made hearts of flesh and becomming broken and contrite are fit sacrifices which God accepteth Our corrupt affections are now sanctified and brought in order our loue of the world is changed into the loue of God spirituall and heauenly things our confidence in the creature into affiance and trust in God Our feare of men into a godly feare which restraineth vs from sinne and inciteth vs to all good duties Our carnall ioy into spirituall reioycing our corrupt anger into godly zeale which setteth it self against all the impediments of Gods glory especially our owne sinnes And finally being freed from the
that is in his flesh dwelled no good thing where the flesh cannot signifie the body as it is distinguished from the soule for so it is not true which the Apostle speaketh seeing his body was not onely the habitation of his soule but also the Temple of the holy Ghost Neither was it here the Apostles purpose to distinguish betweene his soule and his body but betweene grace and naturall corruption which had ouerspread the whole man so farre forth as he remained vnregenerate as contrariwise by spirit he vnderstandeth the whole man as he is regenerate and sanctified And this is the reason why he correcteth himselfe saying in me that is in my flesh because he would not be iniurious to Gods spirit dwelling in his body which maketh him thus to explicate his speech of his flesh or part vnregenerate in which the holy spirit dwelleth not So Chrysostome telleth vs that the Apostle calleth 1 Cor. 6. 19. Chrysost in Cal. 5. Flesh not the natural body but the depraued will as when he saith you are not in the Flesh but in the Spirit And againe those who are in the flesh cannot please God What then is the flesh to be destroyed Why he who spake these things was not hee compassed with flesh c. By flesh therefore hee meaneth earthly sluggish and retchlesse thoughts So that this is not the accusation of the body but the fault of the negligent soule § Sect. 7. The seuenth Reason because the body is not absolutely euill as the flesh ●● Eighthly that which is called the flesh is in other places called the euill concupiscence the euill which encloseth vs and the law of sinne but the body is not euill absolutely for it is the good creature of God as well as the soule but respectiuely as together with the soule it is tainted defiled with corruption So Austine telleth vs that our flesh that is Aug. de ecclesiast dogmat Cap. 76. our body is good yea very good as beeing the workmanship of our onely good God and it is not euill as Sethianus Ophianus and Patricianus would haue it nor the cause of euill as Florianus hath taught nor yet compacted of euill and good as Manichaeus blasphemeth but whereas it is good by creation it is at the choise of the minde made vnto vs either good or euill not by the change of the substance but by the wages of execution With whom Chrysostome agreeth saying that the Apostle doth Chrysost in Rom. 7. Serm. 13. nor call the flesh that is the body sinne but it is the worke of God which if we wisely vse it is exceeding fit for the pursuing of vertue Neither is the body our enemy in this spirituall conflict but our friend which assisteth vs in the fight and taketh our part against the flesh with the rest of our spirituall enemies namely as it is imployed by the soule in praying fasting watching hearing the word holy conferences giuing of almes and such like religious and Christian duties So Hierome testifieth that this life to mortall men is a place Hieron ad Licinium of Combate here wee fight that elsewhere wee may be crowned and no man can goe securely among serpents and scorpions Wee are compassed about with great troupes of enemies the whole world is full of them the fraile flesh which within a while will become dust fighteth alone against many c. For as the bodie partaketh with the soule in the state of corruption so also in the state of regeneration the one beeing sanctified as well as the other For whereas the Apostle speaking to the faithfull telleth them that they were washed and sanctified hee excludeth not their body but vnderstandeth it of the whole person body and soule And this he plainely testifieth saying that the vnmarried woman careth for the things 1 Cor. 6. 11. 1 Cor. 7. 34. of the Lord that she may be holy both in body and in spirit And therefore he exhorteth the Corinthians to the washing and purging of the whole person Hauing saith he these gracious promises dearely beloued let vs cleanse our selues from 2. Cor. 7. 1. all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God So whereas he affirmeth that our bodies are temples of the holy Ghost hee implyeth that they are regenerate and sanctified for what communion can there bee betweene light and darknesse God and Belial the holy spirit and a polluted cage of vncleane spirits And therefore as our soules are not in this life perfectly regenerate but haue remaining in them many reliques of corruptions so our bodies are not quite without regeneration but are in part washed and purged by Gods holy Spirit that they may bee fit habitations for himselfe to dwell in To which purpose Hierome saith that the Apostle doth not praise the spirit and Hieron in Rom. 8. dispraise the flesh because that is good and this is euill Seeing himselfe saith that the Virgin careth for the things of the Lord that she may be holy in body and in spirit and contrariwise doth accuse the spirit saying men corrupted in their mindes c. So Chrysostome saith that Christ hath destroyed the kingdome of sinne and hath made the flesh more able and spirituall for all good duties not by changing the substance of it but by raising and inciting it hereunto For as fire beeing ioyned with yron Chrys in Ro. 8. doth make the iron like vnto fire though it remaine the same in it owne nature so the flesh of the faithfull who are indued with the holy Ghost is cha●ged by vertue of the spirit and beeing made spirituall and loftie is lifted vpon high together with the soule And as the body is thus in part sanctified so also the affections and inferiour faculties of the soule as loue hope desire hatred and the ●est and are made seruiceable to the soule for holy and religious duties and whereas whilest we were in the state of vnbeliefe they fought on the diuels side and prouoked vs to the committing of all wickednes now they forsake his campe and take part with the armie of Iesus Christ inciting vs both in our soules and bodies to the ready performance of all holy duties And as the Apostle numbreth idolatry witchcraft and heresie which are more properly belonging to the superiour faculties of the soule among the workes of the flesh so contrariwise he reckoneth loue ioy and peace among the workes of the spirit which Gal. 5. 22 are affections belonging to the inferiour part § Sect. 8. The eight reason Because the faithfull are tempted to such sinnes as properly belong to the vnderstanding and will Lastly euen the faithfull and regenerate are tempted not onely to sinnes wherwith the inferiour faculties of the soule are delighted as lust wantonnes intemperance and the like Iam. 1. 14. but also vnto such sinnes as properly belong to the vnderderstanding and will as errours heresies infidelitie doubting of
people of God subdued and led into miserable captiuitie And the experience of our own times teacheth vs that we cannot conclude that we are in Gods fauour and in the state of saluation because we thriue in the world and haue good successe in all our endeauours seeing by this reason we might inferre that the great Magor the Turke Persian and many other Infidels and Pagans were better beloued of God then Christian Princes and among Christians many prophane and carnall men then the sincere louers of Gods trueth because they more abound in these worldly blessings But of this point I shall neede to say little here seeing I haue written so much of this argument in my second part of this Christian War-fare § Sect. 5. That a ciuill life is not sure signe that we are in the state of grace and saluation And thus the flesh abuseth those who are professed worldlings Neither doth it deale lesse deceiptfully with those that make some shew of religion the which are of two sorts ciuill iusticiaries and temporarie hypocrites Concerning the former it perswadeth them that they are in good estate because they liue ciuilly and vnblameably among their neighbours in respect of notorious crimes which are punishable by the lawes of men and maketh them to blesse themselues because they are no murtherers adulterers drunkards theeues periured persons and couenant breakers but contrariwise deale honestly with all men keepe their word pay euery one their due and sometimes also giue an almes to those that are in want and misery And because in respect of their dutie towards God they are of that religion which the Prince is of and the Law requireth and are no recusants but come to the Church with the rest of their neighbours and there heare diuine seruice and the word preached and receiue the Sacrament as oft as the law inioyneth Though in the meane time they are vtterly ignorant of the true God his persons nature and attributes of Iesus Christ and his natures and offices and the great worke of redemption and in a word of all the principles of true religion And though they make no conscience of performing any duties of the first table as of Prayer hearing the Word receiuing the Sacrament sanctifying the Sabbath in spirit and in truth as God requireth but onely formally for custome and fashion sake yet their corrupt flesh maketh them beleeue that God will accept of their good meaning and superstitious deuotion and will be well satisfied with their bodily exercise and lip-labour though their hearts be farre from him yea though in the very time of his seruice they set vp idols in their hearts and haue all their cogitations wholly taken vp with their pleasures profits and other vanities of the world But that we may not be ouertaken with this deceit let vs know and remember that God will not accept of vs vnlesse with Dauid we haue respect vnto all his commandements and make Psal 119. 6. conscience of performing as well yea principally the duties of the first table as of the second that the feare of God and his true religion is the head and first beginning of sauing wisedome and that it is but a counterfet and carnall Psal 111. 10. righteousnesse such as was in the heathens which doth not spring from the roote of piety that wee cannot haue a liuely faith without sauing knowledge nor doe any good workes without faith that without faith wee cannot please Heb. 11. 4. Rom. 14. 23. God and whatsoeuer we doe without it is sinne That if our iustice arise not from godlinesse it is but meerely morall ciuilitie and if our loue of our brethren spring not from the cleere fountaine of Gods loue then it streameth from the filthy puddle of selfe-loue Let vs know that God will bee worshipped not after the commandements of men but after his owne reuealed will and that whosoeuer serue GOD principally because the princes law requireth it and not because God commandeth it hee worshippeth his King aboue his God That bodily exercise profiteth 1 Tim. 4. 8. nothing and that the Lord wil be worshipped in spirit and Ioh. 4. 24. truth that God regardeth not formall seruice which riseth rather from custome then conscience and that the religion of the soule is the soule of religion without which it is but a dead carkase That God can indure no riuals in his seruice nor no halting betweene Iehouah and Baal God and the world he cannot abide a double or diuided heart but he will either haue all or leaue all to the Diuell and the world and finally that our good meaning will be no currant payment in the day of accompt seeing it hath not Gods image and stampe vpon it but is coined in the forge of our owne braine and hath on it the print of our owne inuentions which the Lord esteemeth no better then high treason against his royall crowne and dignitie § Sect. 6. That a bare profession of the true religion is not sufficient for saluation And thus the flesh deceiueth ciuill iusticiaries the like deceit it vseth towards hypocrites with whom it dealeth diuersly according to their diuers kindes For either they are grosse hypocrites who though they make a great shew of religion yet their liues are so euill and scandalous that their hypocrisie is detected and manifest not onely vnto others but also to their owne hearts and consciences or more cunning and subtle who by their outward profession and seeming conformitie to the law deceiue not onely other men but themselues also Concerning the former the flesh deceiueth them with a vaine conceipt that the bare profession of the true religion is sufficient for their saluation without all practise and obedience that it is inough to say that they haue faith though they bee vtterly barren of all good Workes to cry Lord Lord though they neglect the will of our heauenly Father that they be hearers of the word though they be not doers of it and that they professe that they know God though in their workes they deny him being abominable disobedient and to euery good worke reprobate But this is so contrary to the whole course T● 1. 16. of the Scriptures that who so is but a little conuersant in them may plainely see yea palpably feele this deceipt neither is it possible that any should be deluded with it but those whom the god of this world hath blinded and for want of loue to the truth are giuen vp of God to bee seduced 2 Thes 2. 11. with strong delusions and to beleeue lies For there we shall Rom. 2. 13. plainely see that these conceits are crossed and contradicted in direct and expresse tearmes namely that not the hearers but the doers of the word are iustified that if we heare Iam. 1. 22. Ioh. 13. 17. Luke 11. 28. Mat 7. 21. Iam. 2. 14. 17. 26 and doe not we doe but deceiue our selues that they onely
are blessed who heare the word and keepe it that not euery one who saith Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of heauen but hee that doth the will of our Father which is in heauen that it will nought auaile vs to boast of our faith if it doe not appeare in the fruits of good workes seeing such a faith as is without workes is but a dead carkase without life or soule and therfore cannot iustifie nor saue vs. So the Lord sharpely reprehendeth and condemneth wicked men for Psal 50. 16. 22. making profession of his religion Vnto the wicked saith God What hast thou to doe to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my couenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and castest my words behinde thee c. And then concludeth Now consider this yee that forget God lest I teare you in pieces and there be none to deliuer So the Prophet Ieremie Behold ye trust in lying words that cannot profit Will yee steale murther and commit adulterie and sweare falsly and Ier. 7. 8. 9. burne incense vnto Baal and walke after other gods that yee know not and come and stand before mee in this house which is called by my name and say we are deliuered to doe all these abominations § Sect. 7. The fleshes deceipt in perswading men to rest in externall ceremonies But if this deceipt bee too grosse as hauing nothing to colour or countenance it but the slight thin vayle of a bare profession then it will perswade vs to place all religion about externall rites and ceremonies and to thinke that we haue done inough if we be strict in the obseruation of them although in the meane time we make no conscience of many Morall duties and vtterly neglect the waighty things of the Law So the Pharises of old placed Mat. 23 all their religion in some legall rites and humane traditions in externall washings sacrifices and tything mynte cummine and annise and neglected the dutie of children to their parents the pure and sincere seruice of God and the waightie points of the Law iudgement mercie and faith And the Apostle telleth vs of some in his times who placed all their religion in the obseruation of dayes Sabbaths Holy-dayes and New Moones and in their obseruance of certaine ordinances Col. 2. 16. 21. as touch not taste not handle not all which did perish with the vsing And wherein doth in these dayes the religion of the Papists chiefely consist but in the obseruation of such holidayes washings purifications fastings from certaine meates at certaine times and in vse of their rites and ceremonies which they preferre before and presse more then many Morall duties or the essentiall parts of Gods seruice with which they will much more easily dispence then with their traditions and superstitious inuentions With which deceipt if the flesh preuaile not it is readie to thrust vs into the contrary extreame and to place all religion in the opposing of these superstitious ceremonies and to spend all our time which should bee spent in attaining vnto the knowledge and practise of true godlinesse in declaiming against will-worship and humane traditions As though it were enough to be free from superstition though we be destitute also of all true religion to oppose against false worship though wee doe not practise that which is true to be zealous against ceremonies and to be key-cold in imbracing the substance truth faith mercie iudgement brotherly kindnes and the rest § Sect. 8. The meanes to defeate the former policie But that we may not be ouertaken with this deceit nor be perswaded to spend the strength of our deuotion about ceremonies things of smal moment let vs know that there is no lesse order and due proportion then iustice iudgement in the commandements of God the Lord requiring that those things which are chiefe and principall in their owne nature should haue the first and chiefe place in our obedience So the Morall duties are to be preferred before ceremoniall and among them our dutie to God before our dutie to our brethren the duties of greatest importance before the meane and the meane before the least Which order who so transpose and wil prefer the duties towards men before their dutie vnto God the ceremonies before the substance such mens religion is hypocriticall and odious in Gods sight Hence is it that the Lord condemneth Esa 11. 12. 13 the Sabbaths New Moones sacrifices and solemne assemblies of the Iewes because they put all their religion in them and neglected iudgement mercie relieuing the oppressed and iudging the fatherlesse Thus hee condemneth Esa 58. 5. their fasts and the afflicting of their soules by these bodily exercises because they were ioyned with strife and debate oppression and cruelty yea so odious is this ceremoniall seruice being seuered from the more weighty and substantiall that the Lord professeth that he that killeth Esa 66. 3. an Oxe is as if he s●●e a man he that sacrificeth a Lambe as he that cutteth of a dogges necke he that offreth an oblation as he that offereth swines blood he that burneth incense as if he blessed an idoll So he professeth I will haue mercie and not sacrifice Hos 6. 6. not because he simply reiected sacrifices which himselfe had commanded but if they were seuered from mercie or preferred before it And saith that hee spake not vnto their fathers nor commanded them in the day that hee brought them out of the land of Egypt concerning burnt offerings or Ier. 7. 22. 23. sacrifices but this thing saith hee commanded I them saying obey my voice and I will be your God and ye shall be my people and walke yee in all the wayes that I haue commanded you that it may be well vnto you Implying hereby that as these maine Morall duties were first commanded so also they should be first and chiefely practised Finally the Apostle telleth vs that true religion consisteth not in outward rites signes and sacraments but in the truth and sinceritie of the heart Circumcision saith he verily profiteth if thou be a keeper of the Law but if thou bee a breaker of the law thy Rom. 2. 25. 28 circumcision is made vncircumcision For he is not a Iew which is one outwardly neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh But he is a Iew which is one inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God CHAP. XIII Of the pollicies of the flesh towards temporarie beleeuers §. Sect. 1. That the flesh in a subtill sort deceiueth temporaries ANd thus the flesh deceiueth the grosser kinde of hypocrites But when men haue receiued such a measure of illightening that these darke fogges and mistes of ignorance are somewhat dispelled and haue their sleepie consciences somwhat awakened so that they are able and ready to tell them that all which is
onely vpon the proppe of worldly prosperitie which being pulled away sinketh and fayleth and whilest this faire greene blade which springeth out of the stonie ground is moystened with the dewe of temporall benefits it sprouteth vp and flowrisheth but no sooner doeth the sunne of affliction and persecution arise but presently it withereth and fadeth Lastly true faith is alwayes a liuing and fruitfull faith and is continually exercised in good workes and Christian duties and in loue and obedience towards God but the faith of hypocrites is dead barren and fruitelesse or if it beare any fruits at all yet haue they no respect to God but are done out of pride or selfe-loue for feare of punishments or hope of rewards But more of this afterwards §. Sect. 4. The difference betweene true and false repentance Thus also the hypocrite hath some kinde of repentance the which the flesh commendeth vnto him as greeing well enough with it selfe and that to this ende that he may content himselfe with it and neuer labour after sound repentance Which deceipt that we may preuent we are to learne and obserue the many differences betweene this counterfaite and false repentance and that which is sound and sincere For true repentance springeth from a liuely faith assuring vs of Gods loue which causeth vs to bewaile our Zach. 12. 10 Luk. 15. 18. sinnes because by them wee haue displeased our gratious God who so loueth vs and whom we so loue but the sorrow of hypocrites riseth from infidelitie and selfe-loue which maketh vs mourne because by our sinnes wee haue made our selues obnoxious to punishments Godly sorrow ariseth from a true hatred of sinne which being odious vnto vs as an vgly serpent or grieuous as an heauy burthen doth cause vs to sorrow and mourne because we cannot be ridde of it nor shake it off but worldly sorrowe from our loue of sinne because wee are loath to leaue it and yet must needes for feare of further punishment Godly sorrowe driueth the sinner to God with Dauid and maketh him to humble himselfe acknowledge his sinne and aske pardon But the sorrowe of hypocrites driueth men from God maketh them to deny their sinne or to excuse and and minse it Godly sorrowe worketh a change and alteration to amendment of life but the hypocrite though he hangeth downe his head like a bulrush for a day and blubbreth his cheekes with teares yet either hee leaueth not his sinne at all or onely as he leaueth and putteth of his clothes with a purpose to resume and put them on the next day Godly sorrowe doeth chiefely respect the sinne whereby the Christian hath offended God but the sorrow of hypocrites looketh chiefely to the punishment whereby they haue displeased themselues Finally the sorrowe of the faithfull is constant and continual from the first day of conuersion to the ende of their liues but the sorrow of hypocrites is but by flashes and spurts and commonly ceaseth when they are freed from their smart and paine § Sct. 5. The differences betweene the obedience of the faithfull and of hypocrites The like differences also wee may obserue in the other part of repentance which is amendment of life and newe obedience For the obedience of the faithfull springeth from their faith and loue of God but the obedience of hypocrites from selfe-loue and carnall respects the faithfull propound vnto all their good workes the glory of God as their chiefe ende but the hypocrite propoundeth to himselfe chiefely his own good and that in worldly and carnall repects The true beleeuer performeth totall obedience in respect of the subiect with all the powers and parts of his soule and body but the hypocrite contenteth himselfe with bodily exercise which is without the power of godlinesse and doeth not worship God in spirit and trueth nor with a willing and chearefull heart but contradicting the Rom. 7. Apostles speech he may say the euill which I loue that doe I not but the good which I hate that doe I. So also the faithfull Christian performeth totall obedience in respect of Psal 119. 6. the obiect and hauing regard vnto all Gods Commandements he fleeth from all sinne and embraceth all holy duties yea aboue all sinnes hateth those most which cleaue fastest vnto him and laboureth most to bring his heart to the loue of those duties to which naturally he is most backward But the hypocrite seeming to make conscience of one table neglecteth the other or if hee forsaketh many sinnes and doeth many duties yet he hath some darling sinnes which he holdeth as sweete vnder his tongue which hee will by no Iob. 20. 12. meanes part with and some duties there are so contrary to his corrupt nature that there is no arguments that can bee vsed which can moue him to practise them Finally the obedience of the faithfull is constant and permanent and the longer it continueth the more it groweth and encreaseth but the obedience of hypocrites is vnconstant and by fits onely and flashes and commonly like a naughtie iade hee is most free and forward in the beginning of the iourney but quite tyred before he come neere vnto the end § Sect 6. The fleshes deceipt in mouing vs to leaue of from doing good duties that wee may auoide hypocrisy And thus we may defeate the policies of the flesh wherby it draweth vs to hypocrisie wherewith if it cannot preuaile with vs it will labour to draw vs into the contrary extreame and because hypocrisie is odious vnto vs it will moue vs more to disguise and bide our profession of religion to refraine from all good speeches which might glorifie God and edifie our brethren to conforme our selues to their fashions which beare vs company in outward shew though in heart we be farre vnlike them and to neglect all good actions and holy duties as meditation fasting prayer giuing of almes or to doe them in great secrecie and ●s it were by stealth for feare lest men taking notice of them should thinke vs too glorious in our outward shew and condemne vs of hypocrisie The which conceipt so ouerswayeth with diuers who are otherwise good Christians that they are ashamed and ready to b●ush when they are taken at vnawares in doing religious duties as though they were guiltie of some great fault And so much the rather because the most godly Christians hauing the reliques of hypocrisie as of all other sinnes remaining in them are guilty to themselues of this corruption as finding it often to preuaile with them and therefore labour with so much the more diligence to auoide all semblance and appearance of it With which deceipt that we may not be ouertaken let vs consider that we ought not so to auoide the shew of hypocrisie as that wee doe in truth shun Christian apologie and profession whereby God is to bee glorified and our neighbours edified that we fall into the sinne of hypocrisie indeede whilest we thus labour to flie the
appearance of it for it is hypocrisie to seeme that we are not and disguising and dissembling our religious and honest hearts vnder the outward shew of a carnall conuersation to appeare worldlings when in truth wee are sincere though weake Christians as Iacob though to a better end tooke vpon him the habite of Esau whose prophanenesse hee hated Let vs know that we dishonour God when we hide and dissemble his gifts and graces in vs and wrong our neighbours who might walke in our light if wee did not couer it as it were vnder a bushell and that they in some degree are ashamed of Christ and his truth who dare not before worldlings either professe it in their words or practise it in their workes Let vs remember that our Sauiour requireth not onely that we should haue the light of holinesse in our selues but that we should also let it shine before men that Mat. 5. 8. they seeing our good workes may glorifie our Father which is in heauen onely hee condemneth these outward shewes of good workes when as thereby we doe not seeke Gods glorie but our owne And the Apostle chargeth Christians to haue their conuersation honest among the Gentiles that whereas 1 Pet 2. 11. they spake against them as euill doers they might by their good workes which they should behold glorifie God in the day of Psal 119 46. visitation That Dauid professed his loue to Gods commandements before Princes and was not ashamed and that Daniel would not smother for a few daies his practicall profession of religious duties though it were to the extreame hazard of his life Let vs consider that one speciall dutie of Christianitie which we owe vnto our neighbours is that wee shine before them by our holy example which is required in the sixt commandement as a meanes of preseruing the life of their soules and therefore that we are guiltie of spirituall murther if we neglect it Finally seeing carnall worldlings are not ashamed to professe their seruice and allegeance to their maister Sathan but with all boldnesse vtter blasphemous oathes ribald words and rotten speeches which corrupt the hearers and audaciously performe all sinfull actions which are without the compasse of mens law not caring who heare or see them let it be our shame to be ashamed of the seruice of our great Lord and Master who is so infinitely good in himselfe and gracious towards vs but let vs with all confidence and courage performe all holy Christian duties which wee owe vnto him though wee liue in the middest of an adulterous and sinfull generation lest being ashamed before such of Christ Mark 8. 38. and his words hee be ashamed of vs when he commeth in the glory of his Father with his holy Angels CHAP. XIIII Of the policies of the flesh in alluring and perswading vs to sinne § Sect 1. The first pollicie to perswade vs that sin is no sin WE haue spoken briefely of the deceipts of the flesh which respect our persons and estates and now we are to speake of the other which concerne certaine duties which God requireth the which are of two sorts the first respect the withstanding subduing and mortifying of our sinnes the other the exercise and practise of vertuous actions Concerning sinne God requireth two things of vs the first that we should not commit or fall into it the second that being fallen wee should not securely liue and lye in it but rise out of it by vnfained repentance Against both which the flesh opposeth vsing many policies and deceipts first to draw vs to the committing of sinne and hauing committed it to continue in it without repentance To the former purpose it vseth diuers deceipts As first it putteth vpon the foule face of sin a faire vizard dresseth this filthy strumpet in the habite of vertue it adorneth it with borrowed ornaments and beautifieth it with false colours in titling wicked vices with vertuous names ●s though it would commend nothing vnto vs but what God himselfe commandeth Thus that wee may imbrace and liue in it the flesh graceth superstition with the name of deuotion doubting and infidelitie with the name of humilitie securitie and presumption it calleth faith and affiance in God Choller and vniust anger zeale for Gods glory lust it tearmeth loue drunkennesse good fellowship prodigalitie bounty and munificence and base niggardlinesse and couetousnesse good husbandry and frugalitie And hauing thus marshalled and raunged these foule vices in the ranke of vertues and beautified them with these false and borrowed colours it doth further authorize them by testimonies of Scriptures and not onely offreth them to our choise as things indifferent or tollerable but presseth them vpon vs as profitable and necessarie Which policie of the flesh if we would defeate wee must first labour to be illightened with the knowledge of Gods truth and with the inward illumination of Gods Spirit that so wee may discerne betweene vertue and vice good and euill which are easily confounded and mistaken the one for the other in the darke night of ignorance and through the naturall blindnesse of our mindes Secondly we must not take nor imbrace any thing suddenly and rashly which Sathan or our owne corrupt flesh commendeth vnto vs but examine and try all things by the light of Gods Word and the touchstone of truth which will plainely discouer vnto vs what is to be imbraced and what auoided what to bee treasured vp in our hearts as pure gold and good treasure and what to be reiected as drosse and base metall Finally wee must labour to purge our hearts from pride and selfe-loue which aboue all other things corrupt our iudgements making those things to seeme louely which wee loue and worthy our choise because we haue chosen them And contrariwise we must adorne our selues with humilitie denying our owne wils and carnall lusts make the will of God reuealed in the Scriptures to be the rule of our wils and the guide of our affections § Sect. 2. The ●ec●nd policie to tell v● that the sinne is but small which it perswadeth vs to committ In the second place if the flesh cannot perswade vs that our sinnes are no sinnes but rather vertues then it will intice vs to commit them vnder this colour that they are but small sinnes telling vs that wee cannot be Saints on earth and pure from all sinne but must of necessitie bee subiect to many infirmities and frailties that in many things wee sinne all and that there is no man so iust on earth that sinneth not that the righteous fall seuen times a day and therefore that it is too much precisenes to stand so strictly on euery triffle and finally that the best of Gods children which euer liued haue had their imperfections as Abraham his lie Ioseph his vaine oath Moses his vnbeliefe Peter his dissimulation c. and that these are so veniall in their own nature that either God will not punish them at all
a shamefull retraite To this ende it is ready to tell vs that we must leaue all our delights which so much content vs and exercise our selues in such duties as are quite against the haire and through the contrarietie which is betweene them and our nature so displeasant and distastfull to our appetite that we shall not liue one merry day after wee haue taken vpon vs this mopish and melancholicke profession Yea and for the better countenancing of this deceipt it is ready to abuse Gods infallible trueth and to set before vs the afflictions of the Saints their mournings and lamentations the pouertie and reproaches in prisonments banishments and cruell death assuring vs as the trueth is that if we follow them in the same courses we shal meete with the same crosses seeing it is expressely saide that all who will liue godly in Christ Iesus 2 Tim. 3 12. must suffer persecution Now that we may be armed against this subtill incounter let vs knowe that the chiefe strength of it lyeth in laying open and amplifying the discouragements which might hinder vs in our Christian course and in the concealing and hyding of those helpes and comforts which might be encouragements to our good proceedings For though the worke of repentance bee vnto vs hard and difficult yet seeing it is not onely an act done by vs but chiefely and principally a grace and gift of God who is ready to bestow it freely vpon al who desire to haue it and doe endeauour to embrace and practise it the difficultie should bring with it no discouragement seeing God is alsufficient to effect his owne worke and by the power of his word and spirit to make that easie and delightfull which is naturally impossible and vnpleasant Againe let vs knowe that in repentance there is a change not onely of our actions but also of our hearts and mindes whereby it commeth to passe that those sinnefull delights which were formerly most sweete to our carnall appetites are now most bitter and loathsome to the part regenerate and those godly and religious exercises which were to the flesh and naturall man most distastfull and tedious are now to the man regenerate most pleasant and comfortable as wee may see in Dauid who esteemed Gods word and holy ordinances aboue all maner of riches and found Psal 19. 119 them sweeter to his tast then the hony or the hony combe and in Iob who professeth that hee esteemed the word of God much more then his necessary foode And therefore though new Iob. 23. 12. obedience be irk some and painfull to those who are vnregenerate yet not to those who are sanctified changed and renewed in the spirit of their mindes Euen as wee see those paines and serious studies which were so tedious and contrary to our disposition whilest we were children are sweete and delightfull when we are come to yeeres of discretion Furthermore let vs consider that though it bee a most toylesome labour vnto vs to runne in the Christian race being considered in our selues because wee are stiffe and benummed and sore and lame in all our ioynts through the fetters and boults of sinne which haue long hanged vpon vs yet being strengthened by the spirit and being made partakers of this spirituall annoynting we are made able nimble and actiue to run in the wayes of God according to that of the spouse Drawe me and we will runne after thee and of the Prophet I will runne the way of thy Cant. 1. 4. Psal 1 19. 32. Phil. 4. 13. Commaundements when thou shalt inlarge my heart and that also of the Apostle I can doe all things through Christ which strengtheneth me Finally let vs knowe that as wee haue in the way of Christianity many crosses so also many comforts as for example for the present we loose the applause of worldlings and lye open to obloquie and reproach but for recompence we haue the approbation of God and our owne consciences wee haue warres with men but peace with God we loose carnal reioycing in the pleasures of sin but instead thereof we haue spiritull reioycing in the assurance of Gods loue the remission of our sins and the saluation of our soules we are stripped of worldly wealth but we are inriched with spirituall treasures Gods sanctifying gifts and graces and gloriously decked both with inward sinceritie and the rich roabes of an holy conuersation we forgoe carnall securitie which within a while would bring vs into horrour and despaire in the sight of our sins and that horrible vengeance which is due vnto them but we haue in exchange spirituall securitie whereby we quietly rest vpon Gods promises and prouidence in the middest Psal 23. 4. of all daungers and can with Dauid walke through the vale of the shadowe of death and yet feare no euill And thus our worldly losses are euen in this life infinitly recompenced with our spirituall gaines and how much more when we come to the fruition of our future and heauenly 2 Tim. 2. 12. Rom. 8. 18. hopes for if we suffer with Christ we shall raigne with him and these present sufferings are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be reuealed in vs for they are light and 2 Cor. 4. 17. momentary but they shall cause vnto vs a farre most excellent and an eternall waight of glory And therefore let vs not so remember the crosse as that we forget the crowne nor so looke to the foulenesse of the way as that we doe not regard the gloriousnesse of our pallace vnto which wee are trauayling but let vs consider that by mount Caluarie we shall come vnto mount Sion the Citie of the Saints and that by our many tribulations wee shall enter into the kingdome of Act. 14. 22. heauen And so shall we with Moses preferre afflictions with the people of God before the enioying of sinfull pleasures which last but for a season and esteeme the reproach of Christ greater Heb. 11. 25. 26. riches then the treasures of this worldly Egypt hauing respect to the recompence of reward Yea so shal we be like vnto Iesus Heb. 12. 2. Christ the author and finisher of our faith who for the ioy that was set before him endured the crosse despising the shame and is now set downe at the right hand of the throne of God where we also shall sit with him if we follow his example § Sect. 3. The third policy is to perswade vs to deferre the doing of holy Christians duties But if the flesh cannot perswade vs vtterly to neglect good duties because wee discerne that they are necessarie for our saluation then it will moue vs to deferre them for a time telling vs hereafter they will bee more seasonable and that we also shall haue better leysure to performe them For the defeating of which policie let vs know that there is no time alike seasonable for the exercise of a godly life vnto the
reade some good booke that so they may neglect to ioyne with the rest of Gods people with vnanimitie and vniformitie in the publique seruice of God thus it moueth men to prefer the outward rest of the Sabbath before the workes of necessitie or mercy which God requireth as speciall parts of the sanctification of it as helping the distressed visiting the sicke indeauouring to preuent some great and emminent daunger either to our neighbours or our selues the which was the sinne of the hypocriticall Pharises which our Sauiour so sharpely reprehendeth teaching them and vs that the Lord preferred mercy before sacrifice and such was Martha Mat. 9. 13. her sinne in neglecting Christs Sermon the foode of her soule that she might minister vnto him foode for his body For the preuenting of which deceipt we must labour to haue our iudgements rightly informed out of Gods word Luke 10. ●0 not onely in the knowledge of that which is good and to be embraced of vs but also in what degree of goodnesse euery Christian duty is that euery thing in due order may be esteemed chosen and practised by vs the highest degrees before the meane and the meane before that which is inferiour vnto it The duties which we owe vnto God in the same ranke and degree before those which wee owe to our neighbour the ende dutie and seruice it selfe before the meanes whereby we are enabled thereunto As for example the obedience and seasonable practise of the things we knowe before hearing and reading which are the meanes of knowledge when as of necessitie the one must giue place to the other And the loue and true seruice of God before the loue which we owe to our neighbours when as they will not stand to geather And finally honest recreations which are the meanes whereby we may be the better Dut. 13. 1. 2. fitted for the workes of our callings must giue places vnto duties them selues which they inable vs vnto § Sect 6. The sixt policie is to moue vs to performe good duties vnseasonably Like vnto this is an other deceipt of the flesh whereby it moueth vs to doe that good which wee resolue to doe vnseasonably and to our great hinderance in our course of godlines as when to distract vs in prayer it putteth into our mindes good meditations and profitable instructions which we haue formerly heard and learned or to hinder vs from hearing the word it causeth vs to thinke of some dutie or worke of mercy which is not pertinent to the present purpose or to keepe vs from sanctifying the Sabbaoth and consecrating it wholly as an holy rest vnto God it moueth vs to thinke vpon the duties of our particular callings and of prouiding for our children and familes Now the meanes to frustrate this pollicy is wisely to discerne it and to obserue and set a watch ouer our hearts that they may seriously and onely intend the well performing of those duties about which we are employed that so wee may doe them with all our might for as the prouerbe is hee that huntetb after two hares at once shall catch neither and as nature intendeth not many things at once so neither doeth grace because the vertue and powers either of body or minde being distracted by diuers obiects doe like the riuer diuided into many streames but weakely performe their functions and operations and being vnited are much more strong and actiue And not vnlike to the former is that other deceipt wherby it moueth vs to neglect the doing of some present good vpon the pretence of doing some other and greater good afterwards whereby it not onely defeateth our present good purpose but commonly doth also wirhdraw vs from doing that future good for the performance whereof the other was neglected And thus when wee are purposed to pray vnto God it perswadeth vs to delayes vnder this colour that we may afterwards performe this duty more effectually when wee are not so dull and heauy so troubled with distractions nor so assaulted with temptations And thus generally it diswadeth vs from performing any seruice vnto God pretending that wee may haue afterwards better meanes and fitter opportunitie and so may doe it in such manner as may bee more acceptable vnto God And thus also it moueth vs to neglect the workes of mercy all our life long pretending that we may doe them much more amply and liberally by our last will which taketh not effect till after death For the defeating of which pollicy let vs knowe that we cannot performe seruice vnto God till hee calleth and enableth vs by his spirit thereunto and that we are called when the Lord offers meanes and opportunitie which if we neglect we knowe not whether hee will afterwards honour vs so much as to appoint vs to these holy seruices which we haue carelesly causlesly omitted Let vs remember that the time present is ours therfore at our pleasure to be vsed for al good purposes but the time to come is out of our reach and we knowe not whether we shall catch hold of it yea or no. That it is better to doe a certaine good though not so great and excellent then to neglect it in hope of doing that which is vncertaine though in it owne nature more eminent and commendable Finally consider that if we vse well the time present for doing God that seruice which we are able he will with the inlarging of our desires inlarge also our meanes and opportunity of doing greater good in the time to come CHAP. XVII Of he pollicies which the flesh vseth to inturrupt vs in the doing of good duties and to alienate our hearts from them § Sect. 1. How the flesh interroseth when we are exercised in doing good duties ANd thus the flesh hindereth vs from the performance of all good duties In the performance of them it dealeth also no lesse deceiptfully and that either to inturrupt and distract vs that wee may doe them onely formally and to no purpose or else so to corrupt and poyson our best graces and most vertuous actions that they may become vnprofitable yea hurtfull vnto vs. For the former when we endeauour to seeke the Lord in his holy ordinances and set our selues to performe the pious duties of his seruice if it cannot by the former deceipts wholly hinder vs from doing of them it will like Dauids false friend accompany vs to the house of God as though it likewise were delighted in these holy exercises but to no other ende but that it may frustrate and defeate our holy desires For when we labour to heare Gods word to call vpon his name or singe his praises this sinne that hangeth on vs and presseth vs downe doeth either make vs dull and drowsie lumpish and heauy so that we cannot attend these holy exercises with any chearefulnesse and alacritie of spirit but offer vnto God dead and carrion-like sacrifices which hauing no heart nor life in them are loathsome vnto
terra mala et mali consectatrix c. of our sinnefull corruption doe remaine in it which continually fight against the renewed graces of the spirit they labouring to expell and thrust them out and the other to keepe their possession and continue in them So Nazianzan There is in me saith he a double minde the one being good followeth that which is good the other being euill followeth Nazianzen de calamit animae suae Tom. 2. Pag. 934. also euill That chearefully and willingly obeyeth Christ and desireth the light this contrariwise is deuoted to flesh and blood and is ready to entertaine Beliall drawing vs to darkenesse Whereof it commeth to passe that this is delighted in earthly things and in the flitting and fraile profits of this life as though they were the chiefe good and loueth riotous feastings hatred gluttony and the filthinesse and willy deceipts of the workes of darkenesse and goeth the broade way being compassed about with such a darke cloude of folly that it faineth vnto it selfe pleasure out of it owne destruction But the spirituall minde reioyceth in heauenly things which we enioy through hope placeth all confidence of life and saluation in God alone esteemeth worldly profits subiect to innumerable casualties as vile and contemptible smoke loueth honest labours pouerty and landable cares and taketh the narrowe way that leadeth to life § Sect. 2. The conflict betweene the flesh and spirit in the vnderstanding Now this conflict in the minde betweene the flesh and the spirit may bee diuersly considred in respect of the diuers faculties which belong vnto it And first the vnderstanding being in part regenerate and sanctified and in part vnregenerate and corrupted partly inlightened with spirituall and sauing knowledge and partly obscured with the reliques of ignorance and not onely so but also much defiled and depraued there is a continuall conflict maintained in it betweene sanctified knowledge and spirituall wisedome on the one side and carnall curiositie palpable ignorance and that wisedome of the flesh which is worldly and diuellish on the other side For first carnall curiositie neglecting those things which are profitable necessary and reuealed to this ende that wee should knowe them laboureth after nice and ydle speculations and curious questions which as they are vselesse and vaine so also abstruse and secrete or else diueth into Gods hidden counselles which hee hath forbidden vs to search and pry into But sauing knowledge not onely leaueth secrete things as belonging to the Deut. 29 29. Lord our God but also represseth and mortifieth as much as may be that vaine curiositie and restraining vs from going about to vnderstand aboue that which is meete to vnderstand it vnderstandeth in sobrietie according as God hath Rom 12. 3. dealt to euery man the measure of faith It apprehendeth things reuealed as belonging vnto vs and aymeth more at the vse and fruite in practise then at the theorie and speculation and to haue feeling and experience of a little rather then a bare conceipt and abilitie to discourse of much And yet it resteth not in a small measure yea in trueth not in the greatest proportion but still it laboureth after spirituall growth and encreaseth daily more and more vntill it come to perfection in Iesus Christ Secondly this sauing knowledge continually combatteth with the contrary extreame palpable ignorance for our vnderstandings are but partly inlightened with the knowledge of Gods trueth and the reliques of ignorance doe in part remaine So the Apostle saith that we knowe but in part and see but as through a glasse 1 Cor. 13. 12 darkely and yet we stand not at a stay but labour to attaine vnto that perfection of knowledge whereby we shall know as wee are knowen And this is the cause of this conflict whilest ignorance striuing to keepe it place in the vnderstanding rayseth thick mists and darke fogs to obscure the light of trueth to put out or dazle the eyes of the mind and on the other side sauing knowledge doeth endeauour with the sunneshine of trueth shining clearely in Gods word to dispell and scatter these mistie fogges by little and little vntill it shine foorth brightly vnto perfect day § Sect. 3. The conflict betweene spirituall and carnall wisdome Iam. 3. 15. Finally spirituall and renewed wisedome fighteth with that wisedome of the world which is earthly sensuall and diuellish as the Apostle calleth it the one b●ing so wholly taken vp and exercised in spirituall and heauenly things which it seeth knowerh and esteemeth as most excellent and therefore contemning worldly vanities as drosse and dung yea losse in comparison of them it litle looketh after them where of it commeth to passe that it hath litle pollicy either to get and compasse or to possesse and keepe them the other being wholly deuouted to earthly things and transitory trifles looketh onely downeward and not being able to discerne the glorious beautie of those diuine excellencies no more then those eyes which hauing long pored in the darke can behold the bright beames of the Sunne but are rather made more blinde then any way illightened with them it is onely delighted in beholding those things whose beautie is subiect to the senses and naturall reason about which being continually exercised it groweth very wise and quicksighted in discerning them and very pollitique in plotting and vsing in all meanes both for the getting and keeping of them And as these two vse contrary Organs and instruments the one a spirituall the other a carnall eye so also contrary meanes and lights to discerne their contrary obiects For the spirituall eye is best enabled to see diuine and spirituall things by the cleate light of Gods trueth shining in his word and the inward illumination of his spirit which maketh it better able to discerne those things which are spiritual and heauenly but the carnall eye like the eyes of battes and owles not being able to endure this sunne-like brightnesse discerneth best of the excellency of worldly things in the night of ignorance and then it is most cleare sighted to hunt after them and most willy and pollitique to catch and hold them And thus it is saide of meere naturall men that the eyes of their mindes doe only serue them to act cunningly the workes of darkenesse because they best sute with the darkenesse of their vnderstanding according to that of the Prophet My people is foolish they haue not knowne me they haue foolish children and haue none Ier. 4. 22 vnderstanding they are wise to doe euill but to doe good they haue no knowledge So the Apostle telleth vs that they that are after the flesh doe minde or sauour the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit where by sauouring or minding he meaneth vnderstanding approuing and magnifying these things The which as it is true of diuers persons and subiects so of the diuers part regenerate and vnregenerate in the same
loue our owne saluation for though these doe potentially belong to all the faithful yet they cannot actually be applied vnto them so long as they liue and lye securely in some knowne sins without repentance especially those promises which concerne temporary benefites which are present pledges and pawnes of Gods loue and fauour But against these also faith preuaileth when as it purifieth our hearts bringing vs to a sight and sence of our sinnes to a loathing and detestation of them and to a constant resolution and earnest endeauour to labour and forsake them for the time to come and so againe afresh applyeth the promises vnto vs as hauing now iust interrest and right vnto them § Sect 3. That the conflict betweene the Flesh and the Spirit is most turbulent and sensible in the afeections and sensuall appetite And thus haue we seene the conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit in the superiour faculties the like may be obserued in the inferiour seated in the heart as the affections passions and sensuall appetite the which though they bee no more corrupted then the other yet the corruption in them is much more sensible and though the conflict be no more daungerous yet is it much more turbulent and violent For as the poyson in the braine is as mortall and pernitious as any other and not resting there alone but diffusing it selfe into all the parts of the body doeth benum and dead them but that which is receiued into the stomach is much more raging and painefull sending vp poysonous vapours into the head wherewith it is annoied and mortally affected so the poyson of corruption hauing tainted the vnderstanding faculties doeth from thence descend to the heart and affections infecting them with their malignitie but that which is infused into them doeth cause a more raging and violent disease which is more sensible and grieuous and becommeth more dangerous to the soule sicke in sinne because these inferiour faculties being corrupted doe worke also vpon the will and vnderstanding striking vp their poyson backe againe vnto them with redoubled violence For as the outward obiects moue and affect the senses and they the heart and affections so they being thus moued doe moue the will and the will draweth also the iudgement and vnderstanding But though these sensuall faculties are more grossely poysoned and therefore seeme more desperately incurable yet the spirit of God working also vpon these parts doeth purge them from their contagious humours and comforteth the heart with such spirituall cordials and strengtheneth it with such heauenly antidotes that spirituall health is in some measure recouered but for as much as in this life the poyson of corruption is not wholly expelled so they are not fully perfected there is a continuall conflict betweene health and sicknesse the antidotes and the poyson the heart and affections as they are renewed and sanctified and as they remaine corrupted and vnregenerate For the hard stone in the heart striueth with the soft flesh rebellion with obedience corrup●on with grace and whilest the spirit draweth the heart vnto God and spirituall and heauenly things that it may inseparably cleaue and adhaere vnto them the flesh pulleth it backe and withdraweth it from them and laboureth to keepe it still fixed and fasted vpon earthly and worldly vanities §. Sect. 4. of the conflict betweene the affections and passions And from the same cause springeth that continuall conflict which is betweene the affections and passions wherein sometimes the same affections deuided as it were betweene grace and corruption doe fight and striue against themselues and sometimes being crosse matched doe mutually oppose and encounter other affections and passions which are contrary and opposite vnto them the former combate being exercised in contrary the latter about the same subiects Thus the loue of God and of spirituall and heauenly things is assaulted with selfe loue loue of the world and hatred of those Diuines excellencies Affiance in God his prouidence and promises with confidence in the creatures and diffidence in the all-sufficient creatour zeale of Gods glory with carnall blinde zeale coldnesse and lukewarmenesse the feare of God which is ingenuous and filiall with feare of men and that feare of God which is slauish and seruile Hope in God with earthly hopes and also with presumption and despaire sorrow for sinne with worldly sorrowe which causeth death also with wretchlesnesse and carnall securitie ioy in the holy Ghost and spirituall reioycing in God with carnal ioy in the pleasures of sinne and desperate griefe for worldly losses Alacritie and chearefulnesse in Gods seruice with carnall chearefulnesse in pursuing our sensuall and sinnefull lustes and also with lumpish heauinesse dulnesse deadnesse of heart and carnall wearinesse In which conflict though the spirit receiue many foyles through the raging violence of these wilde and rebellious passions and is oftentimes so wounded that in outward appearance there seemeth to be no life remaining yet it proueth to be but a daungerous sownde out of which recouering with redoubled valure it reneweth the conflict and getteth the victory Though it seeme but a small sparke remaining of a great fire almost extinguished with a flood of passions and so couered vnder the ashes of corruptions that it scarce appeareth yet when the spirit of God doeth blowe vpon it it encreaseth in strength to a great flame and finally though whilest the storme lasteth like a shippe in a mighty tempest it is so hidde vnder the waues of sinfull passions that scarce any shew or semblance of grace remaineth yet the good spirit of God asswaging the tempest and becalming these rough and raging Seas like the shippe which seemed lately suncke they re appeare shew themselues in their former beautie and being helped on with that diuine breath they carry vs forward in all Christian courses as it were vnderfull sayles with a prosperous winde and tide CHAP. VII Of the effects which this Conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit produceth in vs. § Sect. 1. That the man regenerate cannot with full consent of will chuse or refuse either good or euill WEe haue seene the manner of the conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit in our seuerall parts and faculties now let vs briefly consider of the effects which it produceth in vs. And these are either in the will and desires or in the workes and actions Concerning the former from this conflict betweene the flesh and the spirit arising from the imperfection of our regeneration this effect is wrought and caused in the man regenerate that hee cannot with his whole will and full consent either choose and embrace or refuse and reiect either good or euill because being partly regenerate and partly vnregenerate his will is deuided and accordingly doeth at the same time refuse and choose both the euill and the good For when the will as it is regenerate would doe that which is good or auoide and shun that which is euill that part
which remaineth vnregenerate struggleth and hindereth and when this would embrace the euil or refuse the good the regenerate part resisteth and opposeth And this is that Law which the Apostle saith he found in himselfe namely that when hee would doe good euill was present with him and that when he delighted in the lawe of God after the inner man bee saw another laws in his Rom. 7. 21. 23. members warring against the lawe of his minde and bringing him into the captiuity of the law of sinne which was in his members From whence ariseth a notable differēce betwene the sinnes of the regenerate and the vnregenerate which though they be all one in respect of the act and deede done yet not in respect of the agent and maner of doing For the regenerate man cannot commit a knowne sinne with full consent of will but there is a reluctation resisting against the flesh not onely in his conscience but also in his heart will and affection For being spirituall and regenerate in all the faculties of his soule the chiefe and principall part of his will adhaereth to the lawe of righteousnesse desiring in all things to yeelde obedience vnto it And consequently it resisteth the motions of the flesh nilling that which it willeth And if through frailty and weakenesse it be ouercome it hateth and detesteth that sinne with which it is taken captiue and maketh the Christian to be much displeased with himselfe because he hath committed it Hee consenteth to the lawe of God that it is holy and good and i● more delighted in it then in the bewitching pleasures of sinne An example whereof we haue in Dauid who though by his flesh he was drawne not onely in his wil to embrace but also in his actions to practise some grieuous sins yet he truely saith of himselfe that in his heart he hated euery false Psal 119. 10● 118. way and that he would haue respect to Gods statutes continually But the vnregenerate man though he sometime feeleth some panges of conscience checking him for his sins so as he cannot securely sleep in them without disturbance yet he liketh and loueth them with all his heart hee willingly obeyeth his sinnefull lustes hee pleaseth and delighteth himselfe in them neither doeth any thing trouble him but the feare of a guilty conscience apprehending and expecting deserued punishment so that he inuerteth the Apostles speech and is ready to say the euill I loue that doe I not but the good I hate that doe I. § Sect. 2. The regenerate man cannot at all times doe the euill which the flesh chuseth Gen. 39. 9. The effects which arise from this conflict in the actions and workes of the man regenerate are diuers first that he cannot doe the euill at all times which the flesh chuseth and imbraceth and this Ioseph intimateth in his deniall of the wicked suite which his mistresse made vnto him How can I doe this great wickednesse and sinne against God And what restrained him surely the feare of God and his holy spirit which would not suffer him to fall into so great a wickednesse Secondly that he cannot commit sinne as the wicked doe with full consent of will for sinne being deposed from it regency cannot raigne and rule in the whole man as in times past but is confined vnto a part alone and so farre foorth as we are regenerate we cannot sinne According to that of the Apostle Hee that committeth sinne 1. Ioh. 3. 9. is of the diuell whosoeuer is borne of God doeth not commit sinne for his seede that is regeneration or the seede of the spirit remaineth in him and hee cannot sinne because hee is borne of God Thirdly that hee cannot walke in the way of sinners but propoundeth vnto himselfe to worship and serue the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse in which course though sometime he slippeth and falleth and sometime erreth out of the right way for a little space yet the spirit of God dwelling in him and conuicting him of his sinnes and shewing vnto him the digressions and errors of his life exciteth him to rise againe after his falles and to returne into his olde and right way by renewing his repentance Whereby it appeareth that they who liue and continue in knowne sinnes and make a daily practise of committing wickednesse haue not the worke of regeneration so much as begunne in them though they make neuer so glorious a profession and like Herode doe many things praise-worthy in the sight of men § Sect 3. By reason of this conflict he cannot doe the good he would Gal. 5. 17. Rom. 7. 15. 18. Heb. 12. 1. Secondly by reason of this conflict the man regenerate cannot doe the good he would nor yeeld that perfect obedience to Gods lawe which it requireth and he desireth So the Apostle out of his owne experience saith that the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh so that we cannot doe the things that we would And againe what I would that doe I not but what I hate that doe I. To will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not For when he would runne the Christian race the sinne that compasseth him doeth clinge about his necke and either maketh him for wearinesse to sit downe or to runne forward slowly and with great difficultie It giueth him such blowes and wounds that hee is often foyled and falleth in his course and when he recouereth himselfe and riseth by repentance though he laboureth and much desireth to redeeme his lost time with his suture hast and swiftnesse yet after his wrastling and combate he goeth on his iourney but haltingly yea and is often times so dazled and blinded with the deceites of the flesh that hee erreth and goeth astray and oftentimes is haled with violence into the by-wayes of sinne and wickednesse Whereof it is that our best obedience is imperfect euen after wee are regenerate and our best actions so stained and defiled by our sinfull flesh that were not their imperfections couered with Christs perfect obedience and their pollutions washed away in his blood they would neuer ble acceptable in the sight of God for though they spring from the pure fountaine of Gods spirit yet running through the filthy puddle of our sinfull flesh they are hereby defiled and loose their natiue beautie and puritie It is true that the flesh in this conflict doeth not wholly hinder and withdrawe the regenerate man from performing of his duty nor alienate his mind and heart from the flesh cannot wholly hinder the spirit from good actions yet it interrupteth it in them study and embracing of godlinesse and righteousnesse but yet it still endeauoureth to doe it and though it cannot make him to stand still or turne backe againe yet like a heauy burthen it presseth him downe and hindereth him in his iourney though it cannot make him desist running the Christian race yet it casteth many
and at the same time was willing to die that he might yeelde obedience to his fathers will and perfect the worke of our redemption and yet as one saith Vtrobique Christus neutrobique peccatum Christ in both but sinne in neither § Sect. 2. That this conflict is not in the vnregenerate Secondly this conflict is not at all in those who are vnregenerate and vnsanctified for in these one of the combatants which is the spirit is wanting they are wholy ruled by the flesh vnder their chiefe cōmander Sathan whose kingdom is not deuided in the carnall man but he quietly raigneth without any resistance and possesseth all in peace Neither is there in him any power of opposition for he is not onely sicke but starke dead in trespasses and sinnes and Eph. 2. 1. there is not any sparke of spirituall life and grace which is wholly from the spirit according to that of the Apostle to be carnally minded is death but to bee spiritually minded is 2. Cor. 4. 4. Eph. 2. 2. life and peace Sathans throne is set vp in them and hee raigneth not onely like a King but also like a God in the children of vnbeliefe hauing not onely their bodies and outward man but euen their hearts soules their wils and affections at his commaund so as they are neither able nor willing to make any resistance but yeeld vnto him chearful obedience The flesh as Sathans Vice-roy also ruleth in them and they willingly obey it in the lustes thereof It raigneth in their mortall bodies as the Apostle speaketh yea in the most excellent parts of their soules the minde Rom. 6. 12. and vnderstanding for their wisedome is earthly carnall Iam. 3. 15. and diuellish standing in direct emnitie against God being in the flesh they doe only mind the things of the flesh Rom. 8. 7 and therefore the Apostle ioyneth both these together as Eph. 2. 3. being all one fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the minde And as they are wholly flesh so all their actions are fleshly Ioh. 3. 6. and carnall for as our Sauiour saith that which i● borne of Rom. 7. 5. the flesh is flesh and as the Apostle telleth vs when wee were in the flesh the motions of sinnes which were by the lawe did Rom. 6 17. 19. worke in our members to bring forth fruite vnto death and being the seruants of sinne they yeelded their members as seruants to vncleannesse and to iniquitie vnto iniquitie And therefore in those who are meerely naturall and vnregenerate there can be no such conflict because they are onely flesh and no spirit neither can it rightly be saide as Augustine affirmeth August Contra Iulian pelagian l. 6. cap. 11. Tit. 7. Col. 1136. that the spirit of any man can lust against his flesh vnlesse the spirit of Christ doe dwell in him § Sect. 3. That the conflict that is in the regenerate that which is in the vnregenerate differ much and first in their grounds causes from which they arise Howbeit we are to knowe that there is euen in the carnall man another fight and skirmish which hauing some seeming shewe and similitude of the spirituall conflict is by worldly and ciuill men mistaken for it in which respect it wil not be amisse to distinguish them one from another First then they differ in their ground and cause from which they arise for whereas as hath beene shewed the spirituall conflict ariseth from the grace of regeneration and sanctification whereby the gifts and graces of Gods spirit being infused into all our powers and faculties doe make warre against our carnall corruptions and fleshly lusts the conflict which is in the vnregenerate ariseth from those reliques of Gods image defaced in vs opposing the image of Sathan and our sinnefull corruption For the minde retaineth some small sparkes of the light of nature and certaine common notions which receiue some litle strength and luster from the view and study in the booke of the creatures and yet a larger increase of illumination from the word of God which illighteneth the minde euen of a meere naturall man with speculatiue and litterall knowledge whereby hee is in some sortenabled to discerne betweene good and euill trueth and falsehood right and wrong With which light of the vnderstanding the conscience being directed it retaineth also a power to excuse vs when we doe well and to accuse condemne terrifie and torment vs when we doe euill So the Apostle saith that the Gentiles who had not the lawe did shewe the worke of the lawe Rom. 2 15. written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witnes and their thoughts the meane while accusing or else excusing one another The will likewise retaineth a kinde of freedome not onely about things materially euill but also such as are natural ciuill meerely morall though herein also it be very weake corrupt and defectiue And these reliques are common to all men and in some are much encreased and rise to a farre higher pitch and degree by the common guifts of the spirit and meere ciuill graces which in a farre greater measure are conferred vpon some men then vpon others But there being mingled in all these faculties a sea of corruption with some small droppes of those created reliques ioyned with a world of wickednesse in the inferiour and sensuall faculties of the soule and many of these carnal corruptions being in their speciall kindes contrary one to another although they generally agree in being all sinfull and euill from hence ariseth this warre and discord betweene them like vnto theeues and robbers who all agree together in robbing and spoyling of a true man but fall out among themselues when they come to deuide the prey Thus the vnderstanding by the light of nature or common grace discerning in particular actions what is good to be embraced and what is euil to be shunned informeth the conscience accordingly and leaueth it to it● censure and determination either to approue vs for the doing of good forsaking of euil or to condemne vs for the doing of euill and neglecting of good Vpon which censure sometimes the will is excited and moued to embrace that which the conscience alloweth to refuse that which it condemneth sometime being transported by it owne sinnefull corruption and sometime ouerswayed with the violence of the inferiour will carnall appetite and vnruly passions it harkeneth vnto them and stoppeth the eares to reason and conscience For example the vnderstanding discerning that it is grounded on reason and equirie that we should serue God who created vs doeth continually preserue vs according to that of the Apostle For we are his Eph. 2. 10. workmāship created in Christ Iesus vnto good works which God hath before ordained that we should walke in them propoundeth this to the conscience that by the law of creation we are all bound to serue him the which
man regenerate with more care and diligence to obserue his owne heart and more conscionably to watch ouer all his wayes that hee giue no aduantage to his sinfull flesh It causeth him studiously to affect and earnestly to endeauour in the vse of all good meanes whereby the spirituall part may be more and more strengthened and the flesh with all carnall lustes may be mortified and subdued that so it may not rebell and gather strength to preuaile against it as wee see in the example of the Apostle But the conflict of conscience 1 Cor. 9. 27 is commonly ioyned with secure retchlesnesse whereby the vnregenerate man doeth car lesly neglct the causes and occasions of this bitter conflict vntill he be ouertaken with them and onely auoideth the punishment and not the sinne which causeth it o● the sinne onely when hee is sensible of the punishment it worketh in him no care to mortifie his sinnes vnlesse it bee onely in outward fact and that alone for seruile feare of paine and smart and not in loue and obedience vnto God yea still he loueth them as his dearest darlings and when he dare not giue them place and entertainment in his workes and actions as it were in his outward roomes he secretly lodgeth them in his heart as in his secrete closet or priuate chamber It doeth not make him vse any meanes to subdue his flesh and mortifie his corruptions yea rather it bringeth him into a sluggish despaire which maketh him to cry out that there is a Lyon in the streete to starue his soule because hee will not take paines to plucke his hand out of his bosome and put it to his mouth to stop his eares against all good counsel and to harden his heart against all instruction 〈…〉 exhortation whereby he is taught the way wh 〈…〉 may come out of his misery or is incited and stirred vp to walke in it complaining that all these meanes are vnto him vselesse and bootelesse seeing he is already irrecouerably plunged into a desperate condition Or else if he vse at all the meanes of his recouery it is onely inhypocrisie not with a desire to profite by them but onely to stop the cry of conscience vpon this perswasion that God will bee contented with this formall seruice notwithstanding that he still goeth on in his wicked courses § Sect. 8. The first difference is in the subiect matter or occasion The fift difference is the subiect matter or occasion about which these conflicts are made by these diuers enemies For the Flesh and the Spirit doe in all things oppose against one another the spirit the flesh in all that is euill the flesh the spirit in all that is good For there is no good action which the spirituall man performeth but the flesh interposing hindreth and interrupteth him as in prayer hearing the word receiuing the sacrament sanctification of the Sabbath the workes of iustice and mercie temperance and sobrietie sometime wholly withdrawing him from them and sometime distracting and disabling him in them which maketh him to complaine with the Apostle To will is present with me but I finde not how to performe that which is good For I finde a law that when I would doe good euill is present Rom. 7. 18 21. with me the which is to be vnderstood not only of particular actions but also of our whole life and conuersatition And contrariwise there is no euill knowne to the spirit and done by the flesh wherein the spirit doth not crosse and oppose it no not those sinnes which by carnall men are thought sleight and veniall either hindering and restraining the regenerate man that hee may not fall into it or mouing him being fallen to rise againe by vnfained repentance But the conflict of conscience extendeth not to the whole course of life but onely to some particular actions and yeelding vnto the will and affections in lesser common and ordinarie sinnes it onely con 〈…〉 h with them about the committing of such sinnes as 〈…〉 ●nd outragious and especially those which are against the second Table not so much regarding or restraining them in those which are committed against the first § Sect. 9 The last differēce is in respect of time The last difference betweene these diuers conflicts is in respect of time for the combate betweene the flesh and the spirit beginneth at the time of our regeneration conuersion and not before and being begunne it is constant and continuall to the very end of our liues though it may haue some intermissions in respect of our sense and feeling as when the spirit through the thicke vapour of corruption raised by the flesh is cast into a slumber or by some mighty blowe wounding the conscience astonishing the senses and hardening the heart is as it were cast into a sowne and hath no signes of spirituall life remaining in it out of which it alwayes recouereth being excited and reenlyued by Gods quickening spirit But the combate of conscience doth begin oftentimes long before conuersion euen as soone as we haue the vse of reason and vnderstanding receiuing common notions from the light of nature but it is neither constant and continuall but onely by panges and fits vpon the occasion of some grieuous sinne already acted or about to be committed nor yet alwayes permanent and lasting to the end of life seeing oftentimes by customable sinning the conscience becommeth so deadded and seared that it taketh no notice of sin nor opposeth against the will and affections but as it were casteth the reines in their necke neuer at all checking or curbing them in but suffering them to runne on in an headlong course vnto the committing of all manner of wickednesse CHAP. IX That the Conflict of Conscience is not in all that are vnregenerate nor in them onely § Sect. 1 That no comfort arisetth out of the conflict of conscience AND thus we haue shewed the many differences betweene the combate of the flesh and spirit and of the conscience and affections Whereby it is plaine that as the former giueth vnto vs comfortable assurance of our regeneration adoption and saluation so there can no such hope arise from the other For as we see it may be and most commonly is in the wicked and reprobate it hath no reference to God nor springeth from faith loue filiall feare and obedience but from carnall selfe-loue and seruile feare of iudgement and punishment not from any dislike of sinne the which the wicked in the hottest of this conflict doe loue with all their heart but onely because they desire to auoide the punishment like vnto children whose teeth water when they se● l●●●rous meates but yet dare not touch them for feare of the rod. An example whereof we haue in Balaam who with all is heart would haue sinned in cursing Gods people that hee might haue gained the reward of vnrighteousnesse but yet durst not doe it for Balaacs kingdome because he was affraid to
apply not or misapply they either apply all vnto others or apply falsely vnto themselues arrogating all the promises of life and saluation though they doe not all belong vnto them Fourthly the knowledge of the regenerate drawes them neerer vnto God and vnites them more firmely vnto him in loue true obedience first in loue of God and of that truth which he hath reuealed vnto them for when he hath made knowne vnto them not onely his infinitenesse in all perfection but also his goodnesse and mercy towards them then this flame of Gods loue kindleth in their cold hearts the fire of loue towards God againe which maketh them to thinke nothing too much or enough which they can doe or suffer for his sake whereby they are moued to make an holy vse of all they knowe both for the auoyding of all which God hateth whom they so loue and the embracing and practising of all which he loueth and and requireth But the knowledge of the vnregenerate is a light onely without hea●e which driueth them further from God and alienateth their hearts from him because they cannot apply to their owne vse his sauing attributes but rather are terrified with his wisedome power and iustice whereby he is able and willing to punish and take vengeance on all sinners Neither doeth it stirre them vp to any obedience vnlesse it be for seruile feare but rather enableth them to rebell and disobey more securely whilest by their great learning their subtill shifts and nice destinctions they can more cunningly vntwist the cords of Gods Commaundements which should bind them to their dutie and so winde themselues and slip their neckes out of the yoke of Gods Lawe that it cannot hold them and whilest thereby they are enabled to defend their sins with their subtill sophistry and to preserue themselues from iust censures their names from deserued shame to stoppe the crye of their consciences that they may not checke and accuse them for their sinnes Finally the knowledge of the regenerate bringeth them to true humilitie and the better and more clearely they conceiue of Gods goodnesse power and glorious maiestie and of their owne misery sins and imperfections the more they abase themselues and become vile in their owne sight as we see in the example of Abraham who when he most neerely and familiarly conuersed with God had the meanest conceipt of himselfe acknowledging that he was but dust and ashes in Dauid who hauing attained vnto a greater measure of spirituall Gen. 18. 27. knowledge then his teachers confesseth that hee was but a worme and no man in Iob who hauing come vnto psal 22. 6. a more cleare knowledge of God by seeing him with Iob. 42. 5. 6. his eyes abhorred himselfe in dust and ashes and in Agar who being inlightened with a large measure of heauenly Pro. 30. 2. wisedome professeth that hee was more brutish then any man and had not the vnderstanding of a man But contrariwise the knowledge of the vnregenerate puffeth them vp with pride according to that of the Apostle knowledge puffeth 1 Cor. 8. 1. vp loue edifieth and causeth them to vilefie and contemne others in comparison of themselues as wee see in the example of the Pharisees who despised all them who confessed the trueth concerning our Sauiour Christ as ignorant and simple ideots But this people who knowe not the law Ioh. 7. 48. 49 are cursed And the reason is because their knowledge is onely speculatiue confused and generall and doeth not bring them to any sense and feeling of their sinne and misery or to a liuely and experimentall apprehension of Gods sauing attributes § Sect. 6 The second effect of the spirit is to prepare our heartes for faith then to worke it in vs. A second effect of the spirit whereby we may be assured that it dwelleth in vs is the preparing of our hearts to receiue the grace of a liuely and iustifying faith and the effectuall working of it in vs being thus prepared It prepareth them first by enlightening our mindes and by sh●wing vnto vs our sinne and misery by the lawe of God and that in respect of our selues wee are brought into a damnable and desperate condition out of which wee cannot recouer by any meanes of our owne nor by all the helpe of men and Angels And when her by it hath throughly humbled vs and made vs despaire of all our owne abilities then it reuealeth vnto vs the infinite mercies of God his free grace and eternall loue in his sonne and the al-sufficient merits of Christ together with the sweete promises of the Gospell made in him offring grace and mercy for the forgiuenesse of sinne and the saluation of our soules to all that will receiue them by the hand of faith and will turne vnto God by vnfained repentance vnto which truth of God reuealed in the ministery of the Word the holy spirit by a secrete operation worketh an assent as being most infallible seeing it proceedeth from him who is trueth it selfe and cannot lye which assent being effectuall worketh in our vnderstandings a perswasirn that our sinnes though many and haynous are yet pardonable and in our iudgements a most precious esteeme of Gods mercies and Christs merits from and by which alone we receiue remission In our hearts also this effectuall assent worketh an earnest and constant desire that they may be pardoned and to this ende an hungring and thirsting after Christ and his righteousnesse in our willes a firme resolution to rest vpon Christ alone for iustification and saluation and in our actions a conscionable endeauour in the vse of all good meanes whereby we may be more and more assured that we shall haue our part in the mercies of God and the merits of Christ And these are the first degrees of iustifying faith which who so want are destitute of it the which being wrought in vs the Lord blesseth the meanes of saluation which the beleeuer conscionably vseth with a desire to profit by them as the word Sacraments Prayer and the rest for the encreasing of these first degrees in vs vntil they growe from a graine of mustardseede to a great tree from an assent to an apprehension and application of the promises with some assurance that Gods mercy and Christs merits belong vnto vs. Vnto which degree the most Christians who labour after it doe attaine if death preuent them not and hinder them from comming from their spirituall infancy to their riper age in Christ Now this faith being come to application of Christ and the promises and some assurance that they belong to the beleeuer it groweth daily in the carefull and diligent Christian to more strength by his often feeling and experience of Gods loue by his acquaintance with him in his holy ordinances by testifying and approuing of his loue towards God againe in his continuall fruits of new obedience the exercises of a Christian life in good workes and by his
best wines when they taste them but leaue and let them goe when as they heare how deare they are prized §. Sect. 10 The third difference betweene them is in their properties Thirdly iustifying and temporarie faith doe differ one from another in their properties and qualities For true faith is heartie and vnfained and therefore is called by the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faith that is not fained and if there be any hypocrisie lurking in the heart it is an enemie vnto 2. Tim. 1. 1. 5. it and laboureth to purge and roote it out but the faith of temporaries is hypocriticall and purposely affecteth and delighteth in disguizing and dissimulation Againe true faith is constant and couragious to indure the fiery triall It will come vnto God and catch hold on him for mercie when hee frowneth and seemeth angry It applyeth the promises when they seeme voide and hopelesse and waiteth Esa 28. 26. Habac. 2. 3. Gods leysure when hee deferreth to performe them For hee that beleeueth as the Prophet speaketh shall not make hast It cleaueth vnto the Lord when he seemeth to reiect and shake vs off and will not leaue the profession and practise of his truth when it is beaten from it by afflictions and persecutions But temporarie faith though it make a glorious and golden shew in the time of prosperity yet it becommeth drosse in the fierie tryall and though it commeth ioyfully to God when he inuiteth with benefits yet it will cowardly runne away when hee threatneth or correcteth It springeth and sprouteth when it is watetered with the showers of prosperitie but withereth and sadeth when the hot sunne of persecution ariseth and though the temporarie bee ready to receiue all good from God yet he is not patient with Iob of receiuing euill also § Sect 11. The fourth difference in respect of their concomitants Fourthly iustifying faith differeth from the faith of temporaries in respect of the companions which doe accompapanie them For true faith is ioyned alwayes with a great conflict betweene it doubting which maketh the poore Christian to cry out with the father of the possessed child I beleeue Lord help mine vnbeliefe and with the Apostles Saue Mark 9. 24 Mat. 8. 25. vs Lord we perish Neither doth it obtaine the victorie ouer vnbeliefe and get quiet possession of our hearts without much struggling striuing and painefull labouring in the vse of all good meanes whereby it may strengthen it selfe and weaken its enemie But the faith of temporaries is easily attained without any great opposition or long labour for no sooner doth he heare the Word but presently he receiueth it with ioy and as soone as the seede is cast Mat. 13. 20. into the stonie ground it forthwith springeth and sheweth it selfe in the greene blade of a glorious profession It reioyceth before it grieueth and comfort commeth before mourning It is exalted before there was any humiliation and triumpheth in victorie without any conflict And the reason is because the temporary beleeuer is not much crossed in his presumptuous conceipt by Sathan or his owne flesh who are content to let him flatter himselfe with a shaddow and semblance of faith which is without vse or fruit that resting in this he may neuer labour after such a faith as is sound and substantiall knowing well enough that it will nothing profit him seeing within a while his inlightning will turne to greater darknes his beleeuing to desperate denying or deepe despairing his washing and cleansing to greater pollution and defiling and that hee may at pleasure make his re-entrance with seuen spirits worse then himselfe and so make the last end of this man worse Heb. 6. 4. 5. 6. Mat. 12. 44. 45. 2 Pet. 2. 20. then his beginning Againe true faith is ioyned with all other sanctifying and sauing graces for from this fire of faith riseth the flame of loue and zeale from this holy roote springeth the fruit of all new and true obedience From this fountaine floweth affiance in God feare hope humilitie and the rest all which as they are the effects of faith in respect of their birth and being so are they companions props and stayes of it after they are wrought in vs. But especially the most knowne and apparant companion of a liuely faith is a good conscience For he that assuredly apprehendeth Gods loue in Christ maketh conscience of all his workes and wayes carefully doing those things which may please him who hath so loued him and whom hee so loueth and flying those things which may offend him 1 Tim. 1. 5. 3 9. Whereof it is that the Apostle ioyneth them together The end saith he of the commandement is charitie out of a pure Heb. 10. 23. heart and good conscience and faith vnfained And againe Let vs draw neere with a true heart in full assurance of faith hauing our hearts sprinckled from an euill conscience and our bodies washed with pure water But the temporarie as he hath onely a seeming faith so hath hee also but counterfeit and seeming graces he hath no true loue of God and his brethren but such as springeth from selfe loue and loue of the world no affiance in God longer then he vnderproppeth it with secundarie meanes and sensible helpes no hope longer then the promises are ioyned with present performance no feare of God but seruile and slauish no zeale but like that of Iehu such as will further his worldly ends neither doth hee make conscience of imbracing and practising all duties commaunded but some onely which best fit or least crosse his carnall affections nor of mortifying and forsaking all manner of sinne but of such onely as bring least pleasure or profit and that little which he doth is not performed in loue and obedience towards God but out of pride and vaine-glorie selfe-loue seruile feare or worldly respects § Sect 12. The fift differēce in their effects 1 True faith purifieth the heart Lastly iustifying faith differeth from that which is temporarie in their fruits and effects For true faith purifyeth the heart from all manner of sinne especially those inward and secret corruptions which are knowne onely to God and a mans owne conscience and not onely bindeth the hands to the good behauiour but reneweth and changeth the affections of the heart causing it to hate mortally those vices which it formerly loued and to resist and subdue them in their birth and first beginnings But the faith of temporaries doth not purifie the heart but onely seemingly reformeth the outward actions or if it purgeth it from any sinnes it is from such as are contrarie to naturall appetite or from those which are lesse pleasing and profitable and not from those wherevnto nature chiefely inclineth and wherein the corrupt heart doth especially delight § Sect. 13 The 2 effect wher in they differ is in respect of their operation Secondly iustifying faith worketh by loue and is fruitfull in the duties
For as wee are not so to pamper it as that it should become a fit slaue for the flesh so we are not so to afflict and weaken it as that it should be made vnfit for the seruice of God So the same authour saith that sometimes whilest wee doe immoderately Gregor moral lib. 30. chap. 14. withstand our naturall desires we thereby increase the miseries of necessitie And therefore there is a certaine kinde of art of continency and temperance to be learned so as wee may not kill the body but the corruptions of the flesh For oftentimes whilest it is restrained more then is fit it is weakened and disabled for the exercise of good workes and so a man is made vnfit for praying and preaching and such like duties whilest with vndiscreete Saepe vero dum ●●●llo hostem insequimur etiam ciuem quē diligim●s tru●idam●s et saepe dum quasi conciui parcimus ad praelium hostem ●●●rimus Greg moral lib. 80. cap. 14. hast he would at once cheake the inticements to vice For wee haue our bodies giuen vs as helpers of our spirituall intentions and as in them dwell ●he prouocations to lust and wantonnesse so they also are the instruments of well-doing But oftentimes whilest in them we pursue an hated enemy we doe vnawares kill a beloued friend and whilest wee spare a friend we nourish an enemy to fight against vs. § Sect 8. That we must take from the flesh the weapons and armour whereby it most preuaileth The last rule is that we spoyle our enemy the flesh of it armour munition and weapons wherewith it fighteth against vs imitating herein the pollicy of the Philistins who would not suffer their enemes to haue any swords or speares nor yet any smethy to forge them in or smith to make them and so shall wee get an easie conquest when as our enemy being disarmed and left naked hath neither meanes to defend himselfe nor offend vs. Now these weapons are those fiery lustes and those darts and speares of temptations wherewith the flesh encountreth vs and forceth vs as much as in it lyeth to commit sinne either in our thoughts words or actions of which we are to depriue the flesh by taking away the matter whereof they are made and all occasions and meanes of them as neare as wee can Or if we cannot preuent their making yet if it bee possible wee are to wring these weapons out of our enemies hand and to turne the point and edge of them against himselfe by taking occasion from these temptations to the committing of sinne of performing some holy duty contrary vnto it As when it encountreth vs with wicked thoughts to take occasion thereby of exercising our selues in diuine and spirituall meditations when it prouoketh vs to corrupt and sinnefull speach which either tend to Gods dishonour to the disgrace of our neighbour or wounding of our owne soules that wee take occasion by this temptation to vtter some godly and whole some discourse tending to Gods glory and the edification of the hearers And finally when it tempteth vs to any euill actions to take occasion thereby of being more forward vnto all religious duties and more zealous of good workes Or if wee haue not power enough then to pull these weapons out of our enemies hand then must wee vse all diligence and good meanes whereby we may breake the point and blunt the edge of them that they may not pearce wound vs or at least so to arme our selues with the Christian ar 〈…〉 r especially the shield of Faith and sword of the Spirit that by the one wee may be are of these fiery darts and cruell blowes of temptations and by the other beate backe our enemies and put him to flight And being all wayes thus well appointed let vs continually stand vpon our fence watching with a quicke and vigilant eye on which side or part our enemy striketh at vs whether on the right side with temptations of prosperitie or on the left side with temptations of aduersitie and affliction whether it assaulteth our head with errours and heresies or our hearts with vnlawfull lustes our eares with rotten and corrupt speeches or our eyes with wanton and wicked obiects that as soone as we obserue to what part the blowe is intended we may instantly cast the shield of faith betweene it and vs and according to the example of our Sauiour fighting with the diuell make a contrary thrust or blowe against our enemy and so not onely defend our selues but also offend him by wounding foyling or putting him to flight And all these are required by the Apostle in our 1 Pet. 5. 8. 9. conflict against our spirituall enemies As first that wee should be sober pining and famishing them by withdrawing all prouision of foode whereby they should be nourished then that hauing on the whole Christian armour wee should keepe watch and ward that wee be not surprised on the sudden nor receiue any wounds for want of vigilancy and lastly that wee should resist them stedfast in the Iam. 4. 7. faith which if wee doe they will not stand to it but betake themselues to a shamefull flight CHAP. XVI Of other meanes whereby the flesh may bee subdued and ouercome § Sect. 1 We must keepe a narrow watch ouer our selues and ouer our enemies NOw hauing thus farre proceeded in the withdrawing of all meanes whereby the flesh is nourished and strengthened we must not rest heere but in the next place vse all good meanes whereby it may bee subdued and ouercome And first of all we must keepe a narrowe and diligent watch ouer our selues and ouer our enemie not onely to preuent all occasions whereby it may circumuent and surprise vs at vnawares but also that we may take the fittest opportunities and best aduantages for the killing and crucifying of all our fleshly lustes And this carefull watch is most necessary for in this life wee get not a full conquest ouer the flesh but after we haue gotten the better in many conflicts haue put it to shamefull flight wounded weakened it and brought it in subiection as a captiue and bondslaue yet still it is plotting and practising new treasons For the atchiuing whereof it hath great aduantages for it not onely lyeth about our Citie walles but euen in euery secrete corner of our streetes and no sooner doe our forraigne enemies the diuell and the world beseidge and assault vs but presently this lurkling traitor is ready to open the gates of our soules and letting them in to ioyne with them to worke our ouerthrowe In which regard who would not appoint a continuall centinell and keepe a very narrow watch who would giue any place to carnall securitie and carelesly sleepe in the middest of these daungers who can walke securely among serpents and scorpions and rest quietly in his bed when the enuious man watcheth about his house with a purpose to fire and burne it Heere in
good and Luk. 8. 45. an euill man out of the euill treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is euill For out of the abundance of his heart his mouth speaketh And againe Those things which proceede out of the mouth come forth the heart and they defile the Mat. 15. 18. 19. man For out of the heart proceede euill thoughts murders adultiries fornications thefts false witnesse blasphemies And Mat 15. 18. 19. therefore it neerely concerneth vs at all times in all places and vpon all occasions in our ●●rth and in our mourning in our prosperity and in our affliction when we are alone and when we are in company in our abstinence and in our eating and drinking in our painefull labours and in our honest recreations in our dealings which wee haue with God as hearing reading meditating praying receiuing the sacrament and in our commerce and affayres vvith men talking walking buying selling in those actions which we performe abroad and those which are done by vs in secret in our owne houses and priuate chambers that wee keepe a narrow watch ouer our hearts that they bee vpright with God honest iust and mercifull towards our neighbours pure and holy sober and temperate towards our solues least they be surprised and ouertaken with the tentations of the Diuell the would and our owne flesh and being corrupted and misted doe defile and mis-guide all other powers and parts And seeing our owne watchfulnes is not sufficient because they are so wilye and subtile that we cannot knowe them and so stubborne and rebellious that wee cannot rule them let vs continually pray vnto the Lord who alone searcheth the heart and reines and ruleth and turneth euen the hearts of Kings like the riuers of waters that hee will keepe a straite watch ouer them and taking them into his hand will rule and guide them so as they may bee alwayes subiect vnto his will that so with themselues they may bring all our other faculties into this sauing subiection that hee will cause them to loue that which hee loueth to loath that which hee hateth and to flee that which hee forbiddeth and to doe Psal 141 3. that which hee commandeth Let vs earnestly desire him with the Prophet Dauid that hee will apply our hearts vnto his testimonies and not to couetousnesse that our hearts may Psal 119. 36. bee found in his statutes that so wee may not bee ashamed that he will create in vs cleane hearts and renew a right spirit Psal 51 10. within vs and because they are naturally flitting and remouing that he will knit them fast vnto him that we may alwaies psal 86. 11. feare his name § Sect. 6. That we must keepe this watch in our spirituall armour And thus you see what is the Christian watch ouer our enemy the flesh Now we are further to consider that wee are not to watch vnweaponed and disarmed but as wee are to haue our compleate armour on our heads and backes so especially the shield of fait and sword of the spirit in our hands that we may be ready to assault the flesh and the lusts thereof as soone as euer they appeare and approach towards vs sometimes beating them downe wounding and killing them with the terrible threatings of the law and somtime piereing throsting them through or beating them backe and putting them to flight with the sweet promises of the Gospel encouraging vs to a godly life the remembrance of Gods loue in Christ what our sweet Sauior hath done and suffered to free vs from our sins Yea we must not onely in some generall manner vse this sword of the spirit against the flesh and our sinfull corruption as it were in the whole lumpe but we must draw it out and fight with it against euery particular lust when it setteth vpon vs. As when it withdraweth vs from the seruice of God to the seruice of Sathan and the world let vs withstand the tentation by remembring that wee are bound by Gods law to worship and serus him and no other and that wee are purposely redeemed Exod. 20. 3. Deut 6. 13. Mat. 4. 10. Luc. 1. 74. by him that we should worship and serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our liues When it moueth vs to neglect good workes let vs remember that wee are Gods workmanship created vnto them that hee hath therefore parged vt and made vs his peculiar people that we might be zealous of good workes When it perswadeth vs to deferre our repentance let vs remember that we are commanded Eph. 2. 10. to remember our Creator in the dayes of our youth and that euen to day we must hearken vnto Gods voice and not harden Eccle. 12. 1. our hearts When as worldly lustes doe set vpon vs let vs remember that the amitie of the world is enmitie with God Psal 95. 7. 8. and that whosoeuer maketh himselfe a friend to the world doth Iam. 4. 4. in the very act make God his enemy that we must not loue the world nor the things of the world for if any man loue the world Ioh. 2. 15. the loue of the father is not in him When the lusts of pride do 1 Pet. 5. 5. assault vs let vs call to minde that God resisteth the proud but giueth his grace to the humble that a mans pride shall Pro. 29. 23. 18. 12. bring him low but honour shall vphold the humble in spirit that the heart of a man is haughty before destruction and before honour is humilitie So when the lusts of couetousnesse doe 1 Tim. 6. 6. 10. fight against our soules let vs beate them backe and foyle them by the sword of the Spirit calling to minde that Godlinesse with contentment is the greatest gaine and that the loue of money is the roote of all euill That we haue an expresse charge from God to haue our conuersation without couetousnesse Heb. 13. 5. and that we should be content with such things as we haue hauing this gracious promise from him that he wil neuer leaue vs nor forsake vs if we still depend vpon him And thus must wee with the sword of the Spirit giue euery other speciall lust speciall blowes and vvounds that they may bee foyled and get no strength to preuaile against vs. Yea not onely are wee thus our selues to drawe out this spirituall sword but also in the publique ministerie of the Gospell wee are to lay open and naked all our sinnefull lusts to those powerfull blowes and thrusts which Gods Ministers by the Word shall make against them suffering meekely the vvord of exhortation admonition and reproofe and by diligent application Esek 16. 63 bringing it home to our owne hearts and consciences for the vvounding and killing of all our sinnefull corruptions CHAP. XVII Of two other rules to bee obserued of those who would subdue the flesh § Sect. 1. The third
an exercise of mortification and as an helpe for the increasing of our repentance and for our better fitting and inabling to call vpon God more earnestly by feruent prayers wherof it is that these are vsually ioyned together in the Scriptures Fast and pray the one being the end the other the meanes in abling vs therevnto Much lesse must wee vse those carnall weapons of whippes to torment our body which onely offend in yeelding themselues as instruments to our sinfull soules or of popish pennances and pilgrimages which are the meere inuentions of men and haue no warrant out of the Word of God and beeing carnall weapons doe as ill fit the spirit as the armour of Saul did fit Dauid and therefore doe but cumber and hinder it in the spirituall warfare Yea like Achilles launce doe cure the flesh in stead of killing it and make it more strong and full of courage by filling it with spirituall pride and a glorious opinion of our owne merits and well deseruing §. Sect 4. We must not remitt any thinge of our first zeale in holy duties The third meanes of weakening the spirit which we are to auoide is to remit any thing of our former zeale in the duties of Gods seruice and to giue way vnto any declination in grace and Christian duties For we may much more firmely stand in the highest pitch of our sinceritie as it were on the top of the mountaine then in our declinations discent from that measure of perfection vnto which wee had attained as it were on the side of the hill wee may more easily preserue the health and strength of the spirit whilest it is in the best plight then recouer it when it is impeached and in some degrees of declination Wee may liue much more comfortably and plentifully when our stocke is whole and dayly increasing then when it decayeth and is in some part spent and wasted wee may better defend our selues against our spirituall enemies when as wee are in our compleate armour then when we haue put off some pieces of it And wee shall much more easily discourage them and weaken their sury by taking away all hope of victory when wee haue remitted nothing of our Christian valour and fortitude but stand couragiously vpon hostile tearmes and at open defiance with them and when wee keepe them out from entring into our borders then when we growe to ● parley and yeeld a little to their conditions or when we haue suffered them to i●●ade some part of our countrey and haue receiued some foyles in the spirituall conflict Againe the more resolutely we stand in the strength of grace receiued the more willing the Lord is to assist vs in fighting his battailes the more carefull wee are to increase his spirituall talents the more ready hee is to re-double them whereas it is iust with our great commander to leaue vs to our selues to deliuer vs into the hands of our enemies when we begin cowardly to leaue his standard and somewhat to incline to the enemies part by our remisnesse in fighting or faintnesse in yeelding it is a righteous thing with our Lord and Master when we waste his rich talents and spend ryotously some part of the stock to take that which remaineth from vs and giue it to another who wil be more carefull and faithfull in imploying of it Finally that we may not decline no not in the least degrees let vs consider that it is most dangerous for who can be assured if he begin once to slip that he can preserue himselfe from catching a fall or that hauing begun to runne downe the hill he can stay himselfe before he come to the bottome And therefore if wee would stand surely let vs stand in our sinceritie if wee would not weaken the spirit nor haue the gifts thereof to perish in vs let vs preserue them euen in their least degrees from vvasting and consuming § Sect. 5. That we must auoyde fleshly sloth and negligence The last meanes of weakening the spirit which wee are to take heede of is fleshly sloth and negligence when as hauing receiued Gods graces and gifts of the Spirit wee doe not imploy and exercise them in holy and Christian duties to the glory of him that gaue them and the edification of our neighbours for whose sake also wee haue receiued them For as the strength of the body is much weakened and impayred when as wee liue in sloth and idlenesse and neuer imploy it in any good exercise so is it also with our spirituall strength Our knowledge must be then exercised in the holy practise of that wee know our faith in good workes our loue towards God and our neighbours in performing all duties which wee owe vnto them our zeale in aduancing all meanes of Gods glory and in remouing all impediments wherby it is hindred and impeached And if we thus imploy Gods spirituall graces which are his talents committed vnto vs then will our Lord and Master increase and multiply them and we shall haue abundance but if with the slothfull and vnprofitable seruant wee hide them in a napkin neuer imploying our graces receiued to the glory of our Master nor the good of our fellowes in the same family he wil take these talents from vs and cast vs into outer darknes Finally though it were possible that we could abound in the graces of the spirit yet if we did not vse them for our owne defence and discomforting and indamaging of our enemies wee should be neuer the neerer the obtaining victory If wee haue the sword of the spirit and neuer smite with it nor draw it out but suffer it to rust in the scabbard if wee haue all the seuerall parts of the Christian Armour and neuer put it on and girt it to vs but suffer it as it were to hang rusting vpon the walles without vse if we haue powder and good peeces of Ordnance but neuer charge nor discharge them against the enemy wee shall neuer ouercome and put them to flight but notwithstanding our furniture and munition we shal be vanquished in the first assault and become an easie prey vnto them but if hauing these warlike preparations we doe imploy them in the spirituall Warfare with all care and diligence we shall be sure to obtaine the victory CHAP. XX. Of the meanes for the comforting choaring and strengthening of the spirit vnto the Conflict § Sect. 1. Earnest and longing desires after spirituall strēgth THE second thing required is that wee vse all meanes for the comforting and cheering the strengthening and inabling of the spirit vnto this spirituall Conflict And first wee must earnestly desire to haue the spirit more strengthened and the gifts and graces thereof inlarged and and multiplyed in vs For as we haue Gods promise that if wanting the spitit we doe desire and pray for it he will giue him vnto vs so also when hauing it we desire to haue it and Luk. 11. 13.
direction It much cheareth and delighteth this heauenly counsellour when as wee hearken to his counsels and be aduised by him in all our courses whereas there can be no comfort to any Prince in his gouernment when as his subiects vpon euery occasion stand out in open rebellion and continually resist him in all his lawfull Commaundements and who would not refuse it as an irksome office to be still aduising a man of such a refractory spirit as will either neuer followe his counsaile or make it vnseasonable and vnprofitable by vnnecessary delayes If therefore we would comfort and cherish the spirit let vs willingly entertaine the good motions which it putteth into our minds and speedily put them in practise and execution As for example when as fit oportunitie being offered it moueth vs to call vpon God by prayer either to begge the graces which wee want or to giue him thankes for benefits receiued we are not to tread this motion vnder foote by vtter neglect nor yet to coole or quench it by casting vpon it the cold water of delaies but wee must presently nourish the motion and not deferre to put it in execution when it moueth vs to attend vnto the hearing of the word either on the Lords day when as we are bound to meete in the holy assemblies or on the weeke day when as our necessary imployments in the workes of our callings will giue vs reasonable opportunitie we are to take hold of the occasion offred and not deferre it by causelesse delaies And when God presenteth vs with an obiect of misery and his spirit moueth vs to take the present occasion of doing a worke of mercy as by giuing an almes to the needy visiting the sicke and such as are in prison helping the impotent and comforting the comfor●les and afflicted wee must not neglect these workes of charitie nor put them off to another time but as willingly and chearefully apprehend the present opportunitie as the husbandman doeth the season of sowing the Merchant of trading and the Marriner of hoysing vp sayles when as hee hath gotten a good gale of winde seeing otherwise God may iustly punish our negligence by neuer granting vs againe such seasonable occasions §. Sect 4. The fourth meanes is serious care to maintaine our peace with God and the peace of conscience The fourth meanes of cherishing and strengthening of the spirit is to bee carefull of maintaining our peace with God and our assurance of his loue and fauour the which is best done by preseruing peace in our owne consciences and by keeping them cleare of knowne voluntary sinnes whereby the anger of our heauenly Father is prouoked against vs and we exposed to his heauy iudgements For if God bee offended how shall his spirit bee well pleased with vs how shall hee be willing to renewe our strength and to send vnto vs fresh supplies of his graces to aide and assist vs against our spirituall enemies or how shall the created spirit dwelling in vs with courage and comfort fight against the diuell the world and the flesh when as it is depriued of the light of Gods countenance and hath its peace interrupted with him yea when it apprehendeth his wrathfull displeasure and as it was with Iob and Dauid conceiueth that God hath not onely forsaken him but is also become his enemie how shall the streames of Gods graces continue running when as they are stopped and cut off from the spring and fountaine or how should our strength hold out when the God of our strength doeth withdrawe himselfe from vs If therefore we would haue the spirit in vs strong and uigorous let vs preserue as much as in vs lieth our intercourse with God and vse all good meanes to strengthen our faith in the assurance of his loue and our reconciliation and peace with him for if God be with it the spirit will be so couragious and magnanimous that it will not care who opposeth against it Yea our care must bee not onely to strengthen our faith in this assurance that God who hath chosen vs will neuer leaue vs and that hauing begun the good worke of regeneration he will neuer giue it ouer till he hath fully finished it because hee is vnchangeable in his loue and his gifts and calling are without repentance but if wee would haue the spirit strong and vigorous wee most not neglect the feelings of faith nor the sensible comforts of Gods loue warming and comforting our hearts but wee must labour to finde the vertue and efficacy of his grace working in vs and haue the experimentall apprehension of the comforts of his spirit Wee must endeauour to haue not onely Gods graces habitually but to feele their seuerall actions and operations working our hearts to all good duties For though the sunshine of Gods fauour once shining vpon vs can neuer vtterly faile yet the beames thereof may by the interposition of our sins bee ecclypsed from vs for a time though the fountaine of his grace towards vs can neuer be dried vp yet the streames thereof may bee so stopped that wee can by present apprehension feele little comfort by it And though our faith which is the life of our spirit cannot be lost of those who euer had it yet when the life of our life the comfortable seelings of faith our communion with God peace of conscience ioy in the holy Ghost are taken away or for a time suspended and hid from vs we are exceedingly weakened in the spirituall part and haue litle comfort or courage in maintaining the fight against our spirituall enemies Now these feelings of faith and comforts of the spirit are best obtained and kept when as wee preserue our Communion fellowship and familiar acquaintance with God in the conscionable and frequent vse of his holy ordinances the hearing of his word Prayer the vse of the Sacraments keeping company with him in his holy assemblies where he is present by his spirit when as with the spouse in the Canticles we reioice in his cōpany and with Dauid bee rauished with ioy and delight when as wee meete him in his holy Temple and when as with them Psal 84. 1. psal 42. 1. 2. wee mourne and grieue for his absence and when he with draweth himselfe doe seeke his face and fauour and aboue all things desire and long after his comfortable presence When as wee labour daily in the mortification of our sins which doe make a seperation betweene our God and vs and doe exercise our selues in all holy duties of his seruice thereby glorifying his holy name and edifying our neighbours by our good example Which if wee doe then shall the beames of Gods fauour and the streames of his graces haue a cleare passage vnto vs with which our spirituall part shall be so cheared cherished and encreased in strength that we shall easily withstand all the malice and fury of our spirituall enemies and obtaine an happy victory in our Christian warfare
§ Sect 5. The 5 meanes is to preserue our selues pure and cleane from all pellution The fifth meanes to nourish and cherish the spirit in vs is to preserue our bodies and soules which are his temples in their cleannesse and puritie from all pollution of sinne and wickednesse for as a good ayre and sweete habitation doeth much refresh and strengthen our naturall and vitall spirits and preserue our bodies in health so no lesse doeth it comfort our comforter and cheare and cherish the spirit of God in vs if wee prouide for him a holesome and pleasant lodging cleansed and purged from all noisome filth of sinfull impuritie and sweetned and adorned with the incense and odours of our prayers and the flowers and fruits of our good workes and holy obedience § Sect. 6 The 6 meanes is to keepe the spirit and the graces thereof in continuall exercise The sixth meanes to preserue and strenthen the spirit and to increase in vs the graces and giftes thereof is to keepe them in continuall exercise and to cause these habits to shew themselues in their functions and operations For no more necessary is breathing and mouing for the preseruing the life of our bodies then fruitfull working and holy walking in all Christian duties is for the preseruing and cherishing the life of the spirit according to that of the Apostle If wee liue in the spirit let vs also walke in the Gal. 5. 25. spirit And as in naturall things the causes are preserued by producing their effects and habits and qualities confirmed and strengthened by their functions and operations so is it also in the spirit and spirituall graces We finde by experience that the sight is bettred by seeing and much weakened when it is depriued of fit obiects The habituall memory is much strengthened by the practical and made feeble and vnfaithfull when as it hath no exercise or imployment the vnderstanding becommeth more intelligent by minding and conceiuing and i● much impaired when it is not vsed the strength of the arme hand legge and the whole body is much strengthened and increased by action and exercise and decaieth and is greatly enfeebled by sloth and idlenesse And thus it is also with the spirit and spirituall graces let vs vse them and we shall haue them let these rootes of holinesse bring forth their boughes and branches their leaues of profession and their fruits of practise and they will liue and prosper spread inwardly and spring and sproute outwardly but if wee hinder them from bearing their leaues and rootes and bee still cutting and lopping of their boughes and branches they will in a while dye and perish Let this fire of the spirit haue fit vent to send out its flames of holy and righteous actions and it will still liue burne and blaze but if once wee beginne to stop this vent it will presently dye and turne to cold embers Let faith exercise it selfe in apprehending the promises in waiting for the performance in fighting against doubting and in bearing the fruits of good workes and from a graine of mustardseede it will growe to a great tree from smoking flaxe to a burning flame and from a feeble assent to a firme and full perswasion So let loue be exercised in doing and suffring for Gods sake in performing vnto him all holy seruice and Christian duties and in the workes of mercy and charitie towards our neighbours and of a litle sparke it will increase to a great fire let the shoulders of patience be inured to bearing of the Crosse and suffering afflictions in putting vp wrongs and ouercomming euill with good though they bee weake and tender at the first they will in a litle while become hard strong and so it is in all other graces by exercise they are increased by sloth and ease they are weakned and wasted And therefore Dauid no sooner thinketh of receiuing grace and strength from God then he resolueth to exercise them to the vttermost I will runne saith he the way of thy Commaundements when thou shalt inlarge my heart And againe teach me O Lord the way of thy Psal 119. 32. 33. 34. statutes and I will keepe them vnto the end Giue mee vnderstanding and I shall keepe thy lawe yea I shall obserue it with my whole heart § Sect. 7 The last meanes is frequent and feruent prayer The last principall meanes of strengthening and cherishing the spirit is earnest and effectual prayer vnto God that he will strengthen our weaknesse and quicken our dulnesse and support our faintnesse by continuall renewing his spirit in vs and sending fresh supplies of his sauing graces to re-enforce and refresh our decaied bands that by these new aides wee may be enabled to stand in the day of battell and to get the victory ouer all our spirituall enemies for it is this holy fire descended from heauen which kindleth this spirituall fire in vs whereby wee offer incense sacrifices and oblations acceptable vnto God the smoake whereof driueth away the enemies of our saluation His eternall spirit is the liuing fountaine of these cleare cristalline waters whereby our thirsty soules are refreshed in the spirituall conflict and our hands and eyes all other parts when they are wearied and tired doe receiue renewed Psal 144. 1. strength It is he that teacheth our hands to warre and our fingers to fight and giueth vnto vs full and finall victory ouer all our enemies and the crowne of victory euerlasting glory And therfore when we see the battell hot against vs 1 King 22. and ourselues weary and weake to make resistance let vs imitate the good King Iehosaphat and crie aloude vnto the Lord to succour and strengthen vs when wee see our graces spent and our spirituall strength wasted and weakened in making resistance let vs call vnto him for fresh aides and renewed strength whereby wee may bee enabled to hold o●t and ouercome § Sect. 8. The conclusion of the booke And thus haue I through Gods mighty and most mercifull assistance finished also this last part of the Christian Warfare a worke so much the more difficult because the flesh which is the enemy against whom I intend it holdeth a strong party in my selfe darkening my vnderstanding that I might not discouer its slights and subtilties malice and might nor discerne the best meanes for the defeating of its pollicies and subduing of it power The Lord make me euer truely thankefull vnto his holy Maiesty for this mercie and giue me grace alwayes to esteeme it as one of his his chiefest benefits in this life that hee hath vsed mee the weakest and vnworthiest of many hundreds of my brethren as his poore instrument in so good an imployment and stirre vp in his good time some other of his choysest and chiefest Worthies for the further perfecting of that which I in my mediocritie haue begun hitting the marke at which I haue but aymed and training exactly the Christian Souldiour in the feates of spirituall armes whom I as I was able haue but in some little measure acquainted with the knowledge of the Christian Warfare And the Lord giue his grace vnto vs all both strongest weakest that we may not onely instruct others in this spirituall art of fighting against the enemies of our saluation but that wee our selues muy put on the spirituall armour and fight continually with courage and resolution vnder the standard of the Lord of Hoasts and because we are vnskilfull and knowe not how to fight and exceeding weake and feeble in our strength and vnable to stand in the incounter and beare the brunt of the battell that hee will teach our hands or rather our hearts to warre and our fingers or rather our affections to fight and that hee will continually renew our strength and send vs dayly fresh supplyes of his spirituall and sauing graces whereby wee may be enabled vvith constancy and perseuerance to maintaine the fight vntill hauing gotten a full and finall victory wee be like conquerours crowned with glory and immortalitie the which he vouchsafe vnto vs euen for his Christs sake the Sonne of his loue and the author continuer and finisher of our saluation to whom with the blessed Father and holy Spirit be ascribed of vs and his whole Church all praise and glory power and dominion from this time forth and for euermore Amen FINIS