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A20762 A guide to godlynesse or a Treatise of a Christian life shewing the duties wherein it consisteth, the helpes inabling & the reasons parswading vnto it ye impediments hindering ye practise of it, and the best meanes to remoue them whereunto are added diuers prayers and a treatise of carnall securitie by Iohn Douname Batcheler in Diuinitie and minister of Gods Word. Downame, John, d. 1652.; Payne, John, d. 1647?, engraver. 1622 (1622) STC 7143; ESTC S121690 1,341,545 1,134

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hearts with renewed ioyes in the holy Ghost and after that they are exhausted with our infirmities and miseries renewed faith will like afresh Rom. 14. 17. Heb. 12. 11. hand draw new supplies from God the fountaine of our ioy vntill they be replenished and ouerflow Yea it will make our ioy not like that of worldlings in the fact and not in the heart momentany and mutable like the cracking of thornes vnder a pot whilst the brushie fewell of prosperity feedeth it but constant and permanent euen in afflictions and Rom. 5. 3. Iohn 16. 22. nothing shall be able to take it from vs. It will fill our hearts daily with the comforts of the Spirit when as being daily renewed it doth afresh assure vs of our communion with God and that Christ and all his benefits doe belong vnto vs which either respect this life or the life to come §. Sect. 5 Of diuers other benefits which follow the daily renewing of our faith Fifthly the daily renewing of our faith is the most effectuall meanes of our vnfained repentance For what can bee so powerfull an argument to make vs mourne for our sinnes with bitter griefe as with the eye of faith to looke vpon him whom by our sinnes we haue pearced and through the wound in his side to see his heart so replenished with diuine loue and as it were supplying the place of that blood and water that issued out of it and what can make vs more hate sinne or to resolue to please God in all holy and righteous duties then beleeuing that the Lord being so infinitely iust and abhorring sin with such implacable hatred that he spared not his onely begotten and most dearely beloued Sonne but when he bore our sinnes caused him to beare also our griefes and sorrowes wounded him for our transgressions and bruized him with the paines of death and fearefull burthen of his wrath for our iniquities to beleeue also that he is towards vs so infinitely merciful that he gaue his Sonne to vs and for vs to suffer all these torments for a time that wee might not suffer them for euer that he wounded him for our transgressions that we might be healed by his hurts cleansed and purified from the guilt punishment and corruption of all our sinnes with the streames of his blood acquitted by his condemnation and reuiued by his death For who is so audaciously desperate as to dare by voluntarie sinning prouoke such a Iustice who is so hard-harted and vngratefull as would be inticed with the baites of worldly vanities to neglect in any thing to please so infinite a goodnesse So what can more powerfully moue vs to flee all sinne and to practise with all diligence all Christian duties of holinesse and righteousnesse then by faith not only to inioy Gods present blessings in their owne worth and excellency but as earnest pennies and first fruits pledges and pawnes of heauenly and eternall reward wherewith God of his free grace hath promised to crowne all our labours and Illi terrena sapiunt qui coelestia promissa non habent Illi breui huic vitae se totos implicent qui aeterna nesciunt c. Hieronym ad Celantiam holy indeuours whereas if there were no beliefe and expectation of reward wee should faint vnder the waight of afflictions languish in the performance of Christian duties which are so ill esteemed and accepted in the world and be wholy taken vp in the pursuite of earthly vanities because we haue entertained no better hopes For as one saith They sauour earthly things which beleeue not heauenly promises They wholy addict themselues to things that belong vnto this transitory life which apprehend not those things which are eternall They feare not to sinne who thinke that it shall haue no punishment and finally they become slaues to their vices who expect not the future rewards of vertue c. Sixthly by this daily renewing of our faith wee shall bee strengthened against all the tentations of our spirituall enemies so as they shall not be Ephe. 6. 17. able to hurt and wound vs whether these darts be cast against vs from the right hand or from the left For faith as an impenetrable Shield enableth vs to ouercome and beate back tentations arising from worldly prosperity whilst apprehending heauenly and euerlasting excellencies it maketh vs to contemne these base and momentanie vanities and the tentations which arise from crosses and afflictions by perswading vs that they are the straight way that leadeth to happinesse that they are not worthy Acts 14 22. Rom. 8. 18. 2. Cor. 4. 17. 2. Tim. 2. 12. the glory that shall be reuealed that these light and moment any afflictions worke for vs afarre more exceeding and eternall waight of glory and that if we suffer with Christ we shall also raigne with him Finally faith thus dayly renewed not onely effectually perswades vs vnto an holy resolution of leading a Christian and godly life but also powerfully enables vs to performeall the duties thereunto required with alacrity and cheerefulnesse ioy and delight for it moues vs to consecrate our selues wholy to the seruice of him who hath graciously redeemed vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies and to testifie our loue and thankefulnesse vnto him who hath done all this for vs by our new obedience It vnites vs vnto Christ and applieth vnto vs the vertue of his death by which sin is mortified and crucified in vs we vnto it to the world so that we wil no longer serue them in fulfilling worldly and carnall lusts and the vertue of his resurrection whereby we are enabled to rise from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life It giueth vnto vs with spirituall life spirituall motion it cleanseth and changeth our hearts and taking away the old it worketh in vs a new nature which is actiue and operatiue in all holy and righteous duties and diligent and cheerefull in the performance of them And whereas before we either did them not at all or but in outward shew formally and coldly and that not without much paines and difficuly it enableth vs now to performe them like naturall actions with much ease and delight so as wee can say with Dauid that the Law of God is our Psal 119. chiefe delight better vnto vs then thousands of gold and siluer and sweeter then the hony or hony-combe And with our Sauiour that it is our meate Iohn 4. 34. and drinke to doe the will of our heauenly Father And as vnnaturall motions are not without outward violence lasting no longer then it lasteth but natural are easie and permanent as the Sun shineth and the riuer runneth of their owne accord freely and without compulsion so by helpe of this new nature which faith worketh in vs our actions and motions in the waies of godlinesse are easie and pleasant which vnto corrupt nature were euen in respect of the outward act harsh and
liueth an entrance into thy Kingdome not onely by the assurance of faith and hope but also by letting him haue a liuely taste of those heauenly ioyes which thou hast prepared for him Moderate his griefes and paines that they may not hinder his soule from mounting aloft in diuine contemplations and secretly whisper vnto his heart sweet comforts by thy Spirit when as he is through weaknesse insensible of outward consolations Inflame his heart with feruent loue towards thee and his brethren yea euen his enemies for thy sake that he may bee assured that his sinnes are forgiuen of thee because thou giuest him grace to forgiue all men Strengthen him against the tentations of all his spirituall enemies and manifest thy power in his weaknesse by giuing vnto him a full and finall victory ouer them Frustrate the malice of Satan defeat his policies and confound his power that he may not preuaile against him in this last conflict Arme him against the feare of thy wrath and seuere iustice by assuring him that Christ hath appeased the one and satisfied the other Comfort him against the feare of death by perswading him that Christs death hath swallowed it in victory pulled out the sting thereof and made it harmelesse yea exceeding profitable as seruing now for a passage to glory and happinesse and by strengthening him to apply vnto himselfe these consolations by a liuely faith Weane his heart from worldly cares that they may bee no distractions to hinder him in his heauenly iourney and let the assurance and taste of immortall ioyes take away all lothnesse to leaue earthly comforts Set a guard of thy blessed Angels about him and let them serue as thy Messengers and Ministers to conuey his soule as soone as it is separated from his body into thy Kingdome that it may bee there crowned with glory and immortality Finally wee beseech thee giue vs all heere present an holy vse of these examples of our mortality that thereby our hearts being weaned from the world wee may make it our chiefe businesse to prepare our selues against the day of death and Iudgement that so wee may with ioy and comfort appeare before thee when thou shalt bee pleased to call vs to giue vnto thee an account of our Stewardship Heare vs we beseech thee in these our suits and supplications for thy Sonne and our Sauiour Iesus Christ his sake to whom with thee and thy holy Spirit be ascribed all glory and praise power and dominion both now and for euermore Amen A Prayer for Children O Almighty God and my most gracious Father in Iesus Christ I humbly confesse that I am a most wretched sinner and altogether vnworthy to bee in the Couenant of grace and saluation For I was not onely conceiued and borne in sinne and corruption whereby thy glorious Image was defaced in me but I haue added thereunto many actuall sinnes by breaking thy Commandements in thought word and deed whereby I haue deserued thy iust anger in this life and eternall death in the world to come But seeing thou hast vouchsafed to receiue me into thy Couenant of thy free mercy giuing me the signe thereof the Sacrament of Baptisme and hast sent thy Sonne Iesus Christ to dye for and by his death to redeeme the young as well as the old I beseech thee for his sake to pardon all my sinnes and to wash them all away in his most precious blood to receiue me into thy loue and fauour and to make mee thine owne child by adoption and grace Giue me thine holy Spirit to sanctifie rule and gouerne me that according to my age and small ability I may labour to serue thee Make me daily to increase in grace as I increase in yeeres inlighten my mind with the knowledge of thee and my Sauiour Christ and his truth Sow in me the seeds of faith and let it shew it selfe assoone as I am capable thereof in repentance and true obedience Make mee louing dutifull and awfull to my Parents and Gouernours and let mee learne by obeying them in my tender youth to obey thee in my riper age Giue me grace to hearken to their good admonitions and instructions and to profit and amend by their reproofes and chastisements Make me humble courteous and meeke modest and sober diligent to please in all good things and vertuous in my whole course of life that so I may increase in fauour with thee and all good men And as I beg these benefits at thy hands so I yeeld vnto thee all humble and hearty thankes and praise for all benefits both spirituall and temporall vouchsafed vnto me and namely for that it hath pleased thee to giue mee quiet rest and sleepe this night past and hast safely preserued mee from all perils and dangers to which my fraile life is daily subiect Continue O Lord thy loue and fauour towards mee for euer and especially this day take mee into thy fatherly protection preserue mee from sinne and perill and grant that being diligent and industrious in learning such good things as are taught me I may increase in knowledge and profit by instruction in such vertues and good qualities as are fit for me O Lord blesse and preserue my father and mother my brethren and sisters with all other my kindred and friends together with thy whole Church and grant that we may liue in thy fauour dye in thy faith and after death inherit the ioyes of thine euerlasting Kingdome through Iesus Christ our Lord to whom with thee and thy holy Spirit be all honour and glory both now and for euermore Amen FINIS Faults escaped in Printing Page 27. line 23. reade be in the Church p. 29. l. 12 r. internall booke p. 30. l. a fin 8. r. he hath made p. 33 l. 5. r. The will of God and l 7. r. will and most free p 28. l. 11 r. and make men p. 42. l. 12. r. Sunne p 30. l. 17. r. strong corruptions p. 52. l. 7. r. act of p. 57. l a fin 11. read end that we may p. 62. l. 23. returne to their p 66. l. 30. r. for the scanning l. 36. r. yet it neuer l. 39. r. bare act 41. Thesi p. 71. l. 3. r. strong wind l. 37. r. freed from p. 73 l. 4. r. when ceasing and l. 38. r. vpon vs. p. 74. l. 5. r. carry it quietly p. 75. l. 35. r. in a storme p. 85. in Margine l. 15. 16. r. bons viri p. 95. l. 24. r. not deuided and line 2● r. Chap. 2. Of piety which is the summe of the first Table § Sect. 1. page 125. line 17. reade dominion ouer all p. 125. l. 17. r. one lawfully and l. 33. r. not men p. 128. l. 16. r. God and vs. p. 138. in Margine l. 2. r. The manner p. 140. l. 13 r. dampe it p. 142. l 4 r in our neighbours p. 156. l. a fin 9. r. Frier like affectation p. 179. l. last r. any intercision p. 181 l. 7 r. in
they are regenerate and hold place in all our actions and indeuours Neither will God in his seruice accept of a heart diuided whereof one part is giuen vnto him and another to the world nor of a double heart one while ayming at his glory and another while at the glory of the world sinister and earthly respects Neither can we after this sort serue God and Mammon nor with an vnsettled resolution which now inclineth to Gods seruice and soone Matth. 6. 24. after to the seruice of Satan for the base wages of sinfull profits and pleasures nor with such a lame indeuour as maketh vs halt betweene gaine and godlinesse Religion and worldlinesse the praises of men and the approbation of God and a good conscience But we ought with such firme resolution goe out of the Sodome of sin that we must not cast a looke backward Luk. 17. 32. as relenting in our purpose and seeming loth to leaue it and so set our hearts and hands to the plow of Gods husbandry that we neuer giue it ouer till we bring foorth plentifull fruits of holinesse that so after we may reape the haruest of heauenly happinesse In regard of the obiect Luk. 9. 62. also they must be intire and haue respect vnto all Gods Commandements desiring Psal 119. 6. resoluing and indeuouring to please God in all things both in flying and forsaking all manner of sinne which he hath forbidden and imbracing and practising whatsoeuer duties he hath inioyned and commanded So that it is not enough if with Herod we serue God in some things and take libertie to serue the deuill the world and our owne lusts in others that wee leaue some sinnes which are lesse pleasant or profitable and retaine others which bring more profit or delight nor that wee imbrace and practise some vertues and Christian duties which are more easie and lesse costly and neglect others which are more chargeable and require greater paines and diligence And when we are commanded by God to slay all the cursed Canaanites and Amalekites of sinfull corruptions wee must not put some only to the sword and keepe others aliue to pay the tribute of pleasure or profit to our carnall lusts neither kil and mortifie the leanest of this cursed cattell which serue vs for little or no vse and let the fattest liue as best seruing to feede our fleshly appetite but wee must deuote them all vnto God as an accursed thing and desire and resolue as much as in vs lyeth not to leaue any one aliue to carry tidings to the deuill of the slaughter of the rest Yea if there be an Agag which is more potent and powerfull in vs then any other we must take our first and chiefe care how that may be subdued and killed or such an Herodias and darling sinne that our flesh more doteth on then any other of our corruptions we must with most care and circumspection yea with most hatred and detestation in respect of our part regenerate put that farthest from vs as most hurting our Christian growth and hindring our proceedings in the wayes of godlinesse According to the exhortation of the Apostle Let Heb. 12. 1. vs lay aside euery weight and the sinne that doth so easily beset vs and let vs runne with patience the race that is set before vs. As on the other side the more difficulty wee finde in any holy duty by reason of that auersenesse which we feele in our corrupt nature vnto it the more vehement must our desires resolutions and indeuours be to imbrace and practise it euen as the trauailer taketh willingly most paines in going vp the hill that lieth in his way homewards and the Water-man imployeth the more strength and indeuour in handling his Oares when as he roweth against wind and tide then when they both fauour and further him §. Sect. 5 That our desires resolutions and indeuours must aime at the meanes as well as the end Thirdly that our desires resolutions and indeuours may bee sincere and acceptable vnto God it is required that we as well ayme in them at the meanes whereby they may bee accomplished as at the end and take all occasions and vse all helpes which may inable vs to Gods seruice and with like diligence auoide all lets and impediments whereby we might be hindered in it as we desire and indeuour to performe the seruice it selfe which God requireth For where he inioyeth any duty there he no lesse requireth the meanes and opportunities which inable vs thereunto and to thinke that we can performe the dutie and neglect these helpes is to imagine that wee can liue long and eate no food or come speedily to our iourneys end and neuer trauaile in the way that leadeth vnto it As therefore it was a vaine wish of Balaam to die the death of the righteous when as he neuer tooke care to leade a righteous life so is it no lesse vaine to desire that we may leade the life of the righteous when wee doe not desire resolue and indeuour to vse the meanes that inable vs to doe it And such are the desires and resolutions of those who out of blinde deuotion indeuour to leade a godly life continuing in their ignorance and neglecting all good meanes whereby they might come to the knowledge of Gods will and so conforme their liues in obedience vnto it who thinking it enough to haue a good meaning doe tyre themselues in their owne superstition and spend all their labour in vaine offering vnto God in stead of his pure seruice which hee hath commanded their owne will-worship and humane inuentions and traditions which he hath so often in his Word forbidden and condemned But quite contrary was the course and carriage of holy Dauid in his desire and resolution to leade a godly life for as he longed and had his heart euen broken with the vehemencie of his desires to keepe Gods Satutes and Lawes so with like earnestnesse hee hungred and thirsted after the meanes which might inable him vnto it which was to come into Gods Courts the visible place of his presence to heare his holy Word read and preached vnto him As the Psal 42. 1 2. Hart saith he panteth after the water-brookes so panteth my soule after thee O God my soule thirsteth for God for the liuing God When shall I come and appeare before God And againe O God thou art my God early will I seeke Psal 63. 1 2. thee my soule thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land where no water is to see thy power and thy glory so as I haue seene thee in the Sanctuary §. Sect. 6 That they must not be lazie and idle but diligent and painfull Fourthly our desires resolutions and indeuours to leade a godly life must not be lazie and luskish idle and slothfull but exceeding industrious painfull and diligent in the vse of all good meanes whereby wee may attaine vnto it For being
or speciall The generall is either the creation of all things of nothing or the gubernation of them being made by his prouidence The speciall execution of his decree respecteth either Angels or men To say heere nothing of Angels wee are to know that God hauing created the earth of nothing did make man of the earth in respect of his body and breathing into him the breath of life did create him a liuing soule that man was created according to Gods owne image in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse made Lord of all the creatures and happie in the vision and fruition of God and his fauour and of the ioyes and pleasures of Paradise That being created good and yet but mutable God left him to the freedome of his will and to be tempted of the deuill Vnto which tentation when hee had yeelded by transgressing Gods commandement in eating of the forbidden fruit he fell from this estate of happinesse into the state of sinne misery and death The which sin is imputed vnto vs who sinned in his loynes he being no priuate person but the roote of mankind and the corruption of his nature deriued vnto all his posterity by naturall propagation the which we call originall sinne whereby Gods image is defaced in vs and we disabled vnto all good and made prone vnto all euill From which originall corruption which is the fountaine of all maliciousnesse haue sprung the cursed streames of actuall transgressions whereby wee haue broken Gods whole Law and euery commandement of it in thought word and deed both by omitting the duties which are commanded and committing the sinnes which are forbidden Whereby we haue made our selues subiect to the curse of the Law and all the plagues and punishments therein threatned both temporall and eternall out of which miserable estate and condition it was altogether impossible to recouer by our owne meanes or the helpe of any or all the creatures §. Sect. 10 Of our recouery out of our misery And this was the execution of Gods decree in respect of mans creation fall and misery Vnto which we must adioyne the knowledge of our recouery out of this wretched condition To which purpose we must know that when we were thus deepely plunged into this state of death and condemnation and in respect of our selues or any meanes of our owne hopelesse and helpelesse for our recouery it pleased the Lord of his meere grace and free mercy to send his Sonne into the world to take our nature vpon him and therein to worke that great worke of our redemption The which hee did perfectly performe both by his merits and efficacie The former hee did by satisfying Gods iustice both by his actiue obedience in fulfilling the Law for vs and by his passiue obedience in suffering death in his body and the anger of God in his soule The which is a sufficient price of redemption for all that doe apply it because he that did this for vs was God and man And so as his humane nature made him capeable of these sufferings so the diuine nature which was the Altar vpon which this sacrifice was offered sanctifyed the gift and gaue vnto it infinite value and dignitie so as it became a sufficient and fit satisfaction for sinne For as sinne being nothing in it selfe but a priuation became of infinite guilt in respect of the infinite Maiesty of God offended by it so the sufferings of Christs humane nature though temporary became of infinite value in respect of the dignity of the person who suffered being God and man And as thus Christ saued vs by his merits so also by his efficacie applying the vertue of his merits vnto vs by his Spirit and Word which begetting in vs a liuely faith that bringeth foorth the fruits of vnfained repentance we performe thereby the Couenant of grace and so are made partakers of Christ and all his benefits which are therein promised For in the preaching of the Gospell this couenant is proclaimed and we are effectually called to the knowledge and participation thereof God giuing Christ vnto vs to be our Sauiour and vs to Christ to bee saued by him yea vniting vs vnto him in one mysticall body whereof hee is the Head and we his members by vertue whereof as we are partakers of him so haue we also right and interest vnto all his benefits Of which vnion the chiefe bond on Gods part is his holy Spirit and on our part a liuely and iustifying faith which is wrought in vs by the preaching of the Gospell made effectuall by the inward operation of the Spirit of God and confirmed and increased by the vse of the Sacraments which are the seales annexed to the Couenant to assure vs that God will not faile to performe all his promises And these things are the obiect of our sauing knowledge or the maine points which we are to know vnto saluation and to inable vs to walke in the way of a godly life that leadeth vnto it The which I would not heere haue touched were not this knowledge necessary heereunto or would haue handled them more fully and exactly but that I feared that they would cause this Treatise too much to swell and farre to exceed the limits which I haue proposed vnto it and also considered that there are already published many Catechismes and summes of Diuinity in which all men at their pleasure may finde these and many other the like points of our Christian Religion thorowly discussed CAP. VII Of the quantity and quality of sauing knowledge and how necessary it is to a godly life §. Sect. 1 Of the quantity of knowledge and the diuers degrees of it THe next point to bee considered in our knowledge is the quantity and measure of it the which is imperfect in the greatest perfection which in this life can be attained For as the Apostle though he had receiued aboundance of the Spirit and such reuelations as were not lawfull to bee vttered confessed of himselfe together with others We know but in part and see 1. Cor. 13. 9 12. 8. 2. through a glasse darkely and if any man thinke that hee knoweth any thing namely in perfection he knoweth nothing as he ought to know For wee 2. Cor. 5. 7. Heb. 11. 1. walke by faith and not by sight And faith is of things vnseene and not in vision and fruition Neither can wee attaine to perfect knowledge vntill we attaine vnto perfect happinesse which is not in this life but the life to come when we shall see God face to face and shall know as we are knowne not by the knowledge of faith which is but by hearing signes semblances and reuelations but of vision fruition and most firme experience For the perfection of our knowledge heere consisteth most in the knowledge and acknowledgment of our imperfection and not in the high degree of quantitie but in the sincerity and truth The which knowledge discouereth our ignorance that we may bewaile it and
estate both in respect of the time present and to come In respect of the present a good conscience will make vs beare and brooke all estates not only with patience but also with comfort and ioy in the holy Ghost If we be in prosperity and abound with Gods blessings it warranteth vnto vs the lawfull vse of them and witnesseth vnto vs that we are heires and right owners and not thieues and vsurpers that they are Gods talents which being imployed to aduantage for Luk. 19. 17. Matth. 25. 21. the glory of our great Lord and good of our fellow seruants they shall be doubled and redoubled when we are called to giue account of them that they are pledges of Gods fauour in this life and earnest-pennies of euerlasting ioy and happinesse in the life to come If we be in aduersitie and affliction a good conscience like the good Angell holding vs by the hand in this firie furnace will secure vs that wee shall not receiue any harme For it will testifie vnto vs that these curses in their owne nature are through Gods mercy turned into blessings that they are testimonies of Gods loue seeing as many as he loueth he chastizeth and signes of our Apoc. 3. 19. adoption for the Lord correcteth euery sonne that he receiueth and they are Heb 12. 6. Rom. 8. 37 38. bastards and no sonnes whom he correcteth not That they will not separate Gods loue from vs but our loue from the world That they are not poysons to kill vs but medicines to cure vs of our spirituall diseases fannes and files and fires to winnow vs from our chaffe scowre vs from our rust and purifie vs from the drosse of our corruptions Finally that whatsoeuer they seeme to flesh and blood yet they shall worke together for the best Rom. 8. 28. to them that loue God and that though they be bitter and vnpleasant for the present yet they shall bring foorth the quiet fruits of righteousnesse to Heb. 12. 11. them that are exercised thereby In respect of the time to come a good conscience doth giue vnto vs truely and according to the Scriptures this comfortable and ioyfull euidence that we shall continue euer to be holy and happy perseuering to the end in Gods grace vnto saluation not by vertue of our owne strength but through the power and promises of God For he hath assured vs that he will put his feare in our hearts that wee may Ier. 32. 40. not depart from him That though we haue many fierce Wolues to assault vs and be but silly weake Sheepe vnable to make resistance yet our Shepherd Christ being infinitely stronger then they none shall be able to pull Ioh. 10. 28. Ioh. 13. 1. Ier. 31. 3. vs out of his hand That whom God loueth he loueth with an euerlasting loue and to the end that the gifts and calling of God are without repentance and finally that though we be many wayes tryed yet the Lord will neuer suffer 1. Cor. 10. 13. vs to bee tempted aboue our power but will giue a good end and issue to all our tentations §. Sect. 3 That a good conscience maketh vs cheerfull in Gods seruice Lastly a good conscience maketh vs cheerefull and diligent in Gods Esa 30. 21. 1. Ioh. 2. 27. seruice and willing to doe all things which are pleasing in his sight So the Prophet speaking of the faithfull saith that they should heare a voyce behind them saying This is the way walke ye in it when yee turne to the right hand and when ye turne to the left That is besides their outward teaching in the Ministery of the Word they should haue an inward teacher to direct and admonish them euen the Spirit of God speaking vnto them in the heart and conscience And this is that which Dauid meaneth where he saith that his reines did teach him in the night season that is the voyce Psal 16. 7. of conscience which did shew him the wayes of God and mooued him with cheerefulnesse to walke in them The which is the maine end at which the conscience aimeth in witnessing and sealing vnto vs all the former comforts For therefore the conscience giueth vnto vs that comfortable testimonie that wee are deliuered out of the hands of all our spirituall Luk. 1. 74. enemies to the end that we should not still serue them but worship our Lord and Redeemer in holinesse and righteousnesse before him all the dayes of our liues that he hath bought vs at so deare a price that we should glorifie him 1. Cor. 6. 20. in our soule and body because they are not our owne but his who hath redeemed them that we are freed from sinne that it may no longer raigne in Rom. 6. 12 18. our mortall body but being deliuered out of this cruell tyrannie we should become the seruants of righteousnesse that our consciences are purged from Heb. 9. 14. dead workes that we may serue the liuing God that wee are reconciled vnto God by the death and sufferings of Christ that we may aboue all things esteeme our peace with him which was so dearely purchased and not bee inticed with the hire of the whole world to doe any thing displeasing vnto God or which might breake or disturbe our peace with him seeing this were to vnder-value this inestimable price as being of lesse worth then worldly vanities and to tread the precious blood of Christ vnder our filthy Heb. 10. 26 29. feete as an vnholy thing and euen to despite the Spirit of grace with which we are sanctified Therefore it witnesseth vnto vs that we are sanctified that we may be made carefull to bring foorth the fruits of sanctification to his glory that hath called vs out of darkenesse into this marueilous 1. Pet. 2. 9. light and out of the bondage of sinne and Satan into the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God That though our sanctification be imperfect and Rom. 8. 21. stained with many corruptions yet through Christ it is accepted of God to this end that we might be made more cheerefull and diligent in seruing so gracious a Lord. For what greater incouragement can there be vnto vs in the performance of all good duties then to bee assured that our labour of loue shall not be lost and that whatsoeuer we doe shall be taken in good part and richly rewarded though neuer so imperfect if we desire and indeuour to doe the best we can Finally a good conscience giueth vnto vs this comfortable testimony that we are most happy in all estates that no estate though neuer so much crossed and afflicted may discourage vs from going on in the wayes of godlinesse seeing no misery can make vs miserable but euen our afflictions themselues shall aduance our happinesse and that we shall neuer lose either grace or glory but constantly hold out in the Christian race of godlinesse and righteousnesse vntill we be crowned with the
meanes is the consideration of Gods Iudgements Psal 130. 4. executed on the wicked which are so many instructions vnto vs to feare God and auoide his displeasure that we be not partakers with them in their punishments So the Psalmist saith that the righteous seeing the destruction of the wicked should feare God and deride their folly and the Apostle Psal 52. 6. telleth vs that the former examples of Gods Iudgements were written for 1. Cor. 10. 11. our learning that they might admonish vs to take warning by their harmes lest we fall into the same euils The third meanes is the diligent reading and hearing of the Scriptures which are called The feare of God Psal 19. 9. because they worke his feare in vs. And thus the Lord inioyneth the King to haue the Law with him and to reade therein all the dayes of his life that hee Deut. 17. 19. may learne to feare the Lord his God For in them are contained many Commandements inioyning many exhortations moouing and many reasons perswading to this feare Feare the Lord with reuerence and reioyce Psal 2. 11. with trembling Let all the earth feare the Lord let all the inhabitants of the earth stand in awe of him for he spake and it was done he commanded and it stood fast O feare the Lord all ye his Saints for there is no want to them that Psal 33. 8 9. 34. 9. Isa 8. 13. Heb. 12. 28. feare him The fourth meanes is to deny our selues and our owne wisedome and when God commandeth any thing not to aske counsell of carnall reason vnto which the more we incline the more the feare of God abateth in vs as we see in the example of Eue who following sense and reason obeyed the deuils aduice and cast off the feare of God And this the Wiseman implyeth Bee not wise in thine owne eyes but feare God and Pro. 3. 7. depart from euill The fifth meanes is to meditate often on our owne infirmities and weakenesse and of the malice and might of our spirituall 1. Pet. 5. 8. Eph. 6. 11 12. Phil. 2. 12. 1. Cor. 12. 10. enemies which will make vs worke out our saluation with feare and trembling and whilest we stand to take heede of falling The sixth is to remember our end daily and continually as first the day of our death which will worke our hearts to Gods feare as the Psalmist implyeth and Psal 90. 12. secondly the day of Iudgement and end of the world which is called The 2. Cor. 5. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Pet. 3. 11 14. terrour of the Lord because it is a notable meanes to worke his feare in our hearts The last and chiefe meanes whereby all the rest are made effectuall is feruent prayer For it is no naturall faculty or habit but the gift of God which he promiseth to put in the hearts of the faithfull that they Ier. 32. 39 40. may not depart from him and is to bee obtained by faithfull and effectuall prayer As we see in the example of the Psalmist who prayeth the Lord to knit their hearts vnto him that they might feare his Name Psal 86. 11. §. Sect. 4 Of humility what it is and the causes of it The last vertue required is humility whereby knowing and acknowledging Gods power iustice maiesty goodnesse mercy and infinite perfection and our owne vilenesse and vnworthinesse imperfections and sinfull corruptions we doe renounce all glory and praise as not belonging vnto vs and ascribe it wholly vnto God vnto whom alone it rightly appertaineth So that it is the nature of humility to vilifie and abase our selues in our owne sight euen to the ground as the word importeth to cast off all opinion of our workes and worthinesse and in the sight and sense of our sinnes and corruptions to acknowledge our selues worthy of Gods most heauie punishments in this life and the life to come and contrariwise to ascribe all glory and praise vnto God alone euen of all the good we haue in vs or is done by vs from whom alone we haue it according to that of the Psalmist Not vnto vs O Lord not vnto vs but vnto thy Psal 115. 1. name giue the glory And of Daniel O Lord righteousnesse belongeth vnto Dan. 9. 7 11. thee but vnto vs confusion of faces because wee haue sinned against thee The causes of this humility are first the knowledge and acknowledgement of Gods infinitenesse in all excellency goodnesse and perfection in which he is so incomprehensibly glorious that when we come in his presence it maketh vs to vilifie and abase our selues what opinion soeuer before wee had of our owne worth and excellencie euen as the light of a Glow-worme is quite dazeled when the glorious beames of the Sunne doe shine vpon it Thus in the sight and sense of Gods glory and maiesty Ezechiel was cast to the ground Manoah concluded that hee should Ezech. 2. 1. Iudg. 13. 22. Esa 6. 5. die Esayas cryeth out Woe is me for I am vndone because I am a man of vncleane lips c. for mine eyes haue seene the King the Lord of hosts And Iob hauing seene the Lord abhorred himselfe and repented in dust and ashes Iob 42. 6. Especially if wee consider that this God mighty and glorious in himselfe is so infinitely gracious vnto vs in conferring vpon vs so innumerable benefits and aboue all that inestimable gift of his onely Sonne to worke that great worke of our Redemption The consideration whereof will make vs to humble our selues with Iacob and to confesse that we are lesse then the least of Gods mercies and to say with Dauid Who am I and my 2. Sam. 7. 18 22. house that thou hast brought me hitherto wherefore thou art great O Lord God for there is none like thee c. Secondly the knowledge and acknowledgement of our owne vilenesse and vnworthinesse both in regard of our bodies which are but dust and ashes as Abraham acknowledgeth and in respect Gen. 18. 27. of our soules which howsoeuer they were created according to Gods Image in wisedome holinesse and righteousnesse yet through the fall of our first parents and the corruption deriued from them vnto vs they are wholly defiled in all the powers and faculties of them with originall corruption and loaded with the guilt of innumerable numbers of actuall transgressions whereby we are made subiect to the wrath of God the curse of the Law the plagues and punishments of this life and eternall death and condemnation in the life to come In which regard wee haue just cause to humble our selues with the prodigall sonne and to say with him Father I haue sinned against heauen and earth and am no more Luk. 15. worthy to be called thy sonne And if there be any good thing in vs or done by vs to acknowledge with the Apostle that wee haue it of Gods free 1. Cor.
of righteousnesse and sobrietie whereby we serue him mediately in doing the duties which hee hath commanded towards our neighbours and our selues because in doing them we obey him Whereby it appeareth that there ought to bee no time nor any action of our liues exempted from Gods seruice seeing hee hath giuen vs his Law to serue for our direction at all times and in all things Finally the Word of God giueth vnto vs directions and rules according to which wee are to frame our whole liues both in respect of persons and callings as the duties of superiours and inferiours fathers and Ios 1. 8. 1. Tim. 2. 1. children magistrates and people domesticall and politicall towards God themselues and one another and also in respect of euery part of the day for the well beginning continuing and ending of it and of all states and conditions whether we be merry and cheerefull or sad and sorrowfull in sicknesse or in health in poore or rich estate prosperity or aduersity to Iam. 5. 13. 1. Thes 5. 16 17 18. 1. Cor. 10. 31. Iam. 1. 15. Luk. 9. 23. Deut. 4. 30. Psal 50. 15. shew vnto vs that there is no time or state wherein any man is left to his owne liberty to liue as he list but that continually and in all conditions euery man is bound to conforme his life in euery particular action according to Gods reuealed will To which end wee are inioyned at all times to meditate and speake of Gods Law and Commandements to haue them in our hearts to teach them vnto our children at home and abroad at our lying downe and at our rising vp and to binde them for a signe vpon our Deut. 6. 8. hands and as frontlets betweene our eyes And so the Wiseman commandeth that we binde them continually vpon our hearts and tye them about Pro. 6. 21 22. our neckes because when we goe it shall leade vs when we sleepe it shall keepe vs and when we awake it shall talke with vs the Law being such a lampe and light as is sufficient to guide and direct vs in all our wayes Psal 119. 105. §. Sect. 3 Diuers reasons proouing the necessity of the daily exercise of a godly life Secondly this daily practice of all Christian duties in the whole course of our liues and in euery particular action of them may be inforced with these reasons first because the Lord hath created and redeemed and doth continually preserue vs to this end that we should spend our whole liues in his seruice by performing the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse and not some part onely reseruing the rest for the seruice of the world and the satisfying of our carnall lusts Secondly he giueth vnto vs the continuall wages of his blessings and benefits for the present and hath promised to giue vnto vs the euerlasting reward of heauenly happinesse in the life to come not that we should doe our owne wills and workes much lesse of his professed enemies but that wee approoue our selues and our seruice vnto him in all things who hath giuen vnto vs this rich wages and chiefly respect his glory in whatsoeuer we doe either in his immediate seruice or in performing the duties which he hath commanded vs towards our neighbours and our owne persons seeing wee are bought at an high 1. Cor. 6. 20. Rom. 12. 1. price that we might no longer be our owne but his and glorifie him both in our soules and body by offering vnto him that seruice which he requireth Thirdly seeing it is the best wisedome to imploy all and euery of our actions to the best purpose and no time is so well imployed as in Gods seruice whether we respect God our chiefe Goodnesse to whose glory all Matth. 5. 16. 2. Pet. 1. 10. should tend as vnto their supreme end or our owne saluation which by this and no other meanes can be assured vnto vs and contrariwise the greatest folly to spend our liues or any part of them in vaine to no purpose or profit as all that time is which is not taken vp in Gods seruice by performing some duty of piety righteousnesse or sobriety seeing those maine ends at which we ought in all things to aime namely Gods glory in our owne saluation are not hereby aduanced and furthered but crossed and hindred Fourthly to be daily exercised in Christian duties is the best meanes to keepe our soules in good plight and state by nourishing in them all sauing graces for as it is not enough to keepe our bodies in a good case and habitude that we preserue the vigour and strength of them by seasonable and conuenient foode vnlesse wee also digest it and confirme our strength by fit exercise so for the preseruing of our soules in good state it is not sufficient that we nourish Gods graces in vs by hearing the Word and feeding on this spirituall Manna vnlesse wee daily exercise them in the performance of all Christian duties And as it is the best meanes to preserue our soules in health when they are well so also to recouer them when through surfets in sinne it declineth and is impaired whereas if we haue onely some generall purposes of liuing Christianly or performe these duties but by fits and starts wee shall easily fall into spirituall consumptions of grace and dangerous sicknesses of sinne before we be aware and when they haue by neglect and customable continuing in them taken fast hold of vs wee shall either not recouer or at least with great difficultie §. Sect. 4 The many and great dangers which follow the neglect of this daily exercise Fifthly we may bee mooued to this daily and continuall exercise by consideration of the many and great dangers which doe accompany the neglect of it first because we shall mooue the Lord to withdraw from vs his graces when as we are secure slothfull in the exercise of them For he giueth vnto vs these spirituall Talents not that we should wastefully misspend them or idlely tye them vp as it were in a napkin and cast them in a corner where they doe no good but that we should by imploying improoue them to the glory of our Master and good of our selues and our fellow-seruants which when we neglect to doe he will take them from vs and giue them vnto others who will vse them to more purpose and profit And thus Dauid growing secure and beginning through sloth to 2. Sam. 11. 2. remit something of his spirituall exercises in which he had beene formerly zealous was left vnto himselfe to fall into tentation God withdrawing the assistance of his grace and holy Spirit and so was ouertaken of foule and grosse sinnes Secondly without this daily exercise wee shall soone fall off from all power of godlinesse and grow by degrees from bad to worse till there be no prints of goodnesse remaining in vs. For our course and proceedings in piety is no naturall motion but against the current and
streame winde and tide of our corruption and therefore we must at no time intermit our labour for so we shall in short time be carried further backe then we can recouer in a great space and with much labour but we must be in continuall exercise and as it were with vnwearied diligence ply the oare vntill by death we arriue at the hauen of happinesse Our hearts like the plummets of a clocke draw vs with the waight of their corruption downeward till they pitch themselues and rest vpon earthly vanities vnlesse euery day yea many times a day we pull them vp and giue spirituall motion vnto them by these Christian exercises Thirdly sinne is so wily and deceitfull that if we cease from the duties of a Christian life and intermit the keeping of a straight watch ouer our selues and actions it will soone steale vpon vs and fortifie it selfe against all vertue and goodnesse For though at the first it seemeth content that we should but for a little space displace good duties and giue but a little way for a small while to the pleasures of it yet it will increase in strength comming to liue as it were in its old home and proper element and hardly leaue its hold or giue way to the re-entry of those vertues and Christian duties which it formerly expelled In which regard we shall be blessed if fearing Pro. 28. 14. alwayes we stand continually vpon our watch and not onely keepe our Matth. 26. 41. 2. Tim. 4. 5. Heb. 3. 13. soules strongly manned with sauing graces but take care that they may be daily trained and exercised in all Christian duties that so we may not be beguiled and hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Lastly there is no lesse danger from outward enemies the world and the deuill if we neglect the daily exercise of a godly life For the world if it once finde our hearts Dina-like straying from God will easily rauish and defile them with her filthy pleasures and when we haue beene at some time inticed to accompany her fauourites in the delights of sinne wee shall hardly get out of their imbracements nor purge our selues from that pollution Iob 1. 7. wherewith they haue tainted vs. The deuill also like a malicious enemy 1. Pet. 5 8. walketh about continually and as a roaring Lyon seeketh to deuoure vs and if he finde vs at any time cleane swept of Gods graces and garnished Matth. 12. 44. with the hellish ornaments of vices and sinne he will enter into vs and taking possession reserue vs for his owne vse And therefore it behoueth vs with like diligence to preuent his wiles and malice by keeping our soules continually furnished with Gods graces and our selues exercised in all Christian duties that so we may neuer be at leasure to admit of his tentations And seeing this euill one is ready euen whilst we sleepe to sow his tares of tentations in our hearts a ground too fruitfull for such a graine Matth. 13. 25. our care must be with like diligence to cast out this hellish seede that it take no rooting or if it haue to weede them out as soone as they haue sprouted vp and doe outwardly appeare in our words or actions §. Sect. 5 Another reason taken from our calling and profession The sixth reason to mooue vs to this daily exercise is taken from our calling and profession for wee are Citizens of heauen and pilgrims on Phil. 3. 20. Col. 3. 2. earth and therefore though our bodies are here beneath yet our conuersation should be in heauen and our minds and affections should be on things aboue our speeches should bee of those things that concerne our owne countrey and in all our actions we must indeuour to further our iourney towards our heauenly home neither must we one while goe forward and another while backward or idlely sit still we must not one part of the day goe in the right way and in another part erre and wander in the by-wayes of sinne but we must be still going forward and holding the right roade neuer turning out of it till we come to our heauenly home We are called to be Gods seruants and therefore we must not deuide our seruice betweene him and the world seeing it is fit wee doe onely his worke from whom we receiue so liberall wages neither can we serue God and Mammon which are of so contrary a disposition but whilst wee incline to the Mat. 6. ●4 one we must of necessity neglect the other as our Sauiour hath taught vs. We are called to be his Souldiers and therefore we must onely fight his battels and not spend some part of our life and strength in his seruice and some part in fighting on the deuils side by quenching the good motions of Gods Spirit and contrary to the light of our owne knowledge and consciences neglect holy duties and runne on in such courses as are displeasing vnto God We are called to be Gods labourers and therefore we must intend our businesse that it may prosper in our hand and not vndoe in one day that which we haue done in another We must not like vnskilfull husbandmen sometimes plant and soone after plucke them vp one while sow good seed another while tares nor like foolish builders pull down one day what we haue set vp in another nor like vnfaithful Watchmen one while sit in the watch Tower and soone after slothfully sleep and giue ouer our charge nor like carelesse Pilots guide the ship one day toward the wished hauen and the next through sloth and negligence let it roame whither the winde and tide will carry it till it run vpon the sands split it selfe against the rocks But we must in the whole daily course of our liues giue all diligence to make our calling and election sure by holding 2. Pet. 1. 10. a constant and continuall course in the Christian exercises of a godly life §. Sect. 6 The last reason taken from the vncertainty of our liues The last reason to mooue vs vnto the continuall and daily exercise of Christian duties is taken from the vncertainty of our liues and Mat. 24. 46. when by death wee shall bee called to Iudgement For seeing wee know not at what time our Master will come it shall bee our wisedome to keepe our accounts alwayes euen that wee may be ready at all times without feare to yeeld vp our reckonings and to carry our selues continually like wise and faithfull seruants in the exercise of holy righteous and Christian duties that so we may bee blessed when our Lord comming vpon the sudden shall finde vs so doing and because we are vncertaine when the Bridegroome will come let vs like the fiue wise Virgins Mat. 25. 1 2. haue our lampes and oyle of faith and lights of a godly life alwayes prepared that so we may enter with him into the marriage Chamber of heauenly happinesse and there eternally solace
conceite but sinners to repentance We shall make our selues fit hearers of the glad tidings of the Gospell and intitle our selues to all the gracious comforts of Gods holy Spirit according to that of the Prophet cited applied by our Sauiour The Spirit of the Lord is vpon me because he Esa 61. 1 2 3 Luke 4. 18. hath anointed me to preach the Gospell to the poore and meeke he hath sent me to binde vp and heale the broken-hearted to preach liberty and deliuerance to captiues and recouering of sight to the blinde to set at liberty them that are bruized to comfort them that mourne giuing vnto them beautie for ashes and the oyle of ioy for mourning and the garment of praise for the spirit of heauinesse Moreouer by this humiliation wee may come to the assurance of the remission of our sinnes for if we humble our selues and pray seeke Gods 2. Chro. 7. 14. face and turne from our wicked waies then will the Lord heare from heauen and will forgiue vs our sinnes and heale our plagues as wee see in the example of Manasses one of the greatest sinners that euer liued who humbling himselfe greatly before the God of his Father and seeking 2. Chro. 33. 12. and suing vnto him for pardon the Lord was intreated of him and heard his supplication Finally if wee thus dayly humble our selues the Lord hath promised to lift vs vp and exalt vs to furnish vs with all Jam. 4. 6. 1. Pet. 5. 5 6. Luke 1. 53. Matth. 5. 3 4. sauing graces to fill and replenish our emptie soules with all good things to cheare vs in our mourning with the comforts of his Spirit and to make vs blessed in the eternall fruition of his heauenly Kingdome §. Sect. 5 Of the daily confession of our sinnes and iudging our selues for them Thirdly vnto this daily renewing of our repentance is required an humble confession of our sinnes which must be of vnknowne sinnes generally Psal 19. 13. Psal 51. 4 5. of knowne sinnes particularly with the aggrauation of them by their seuerall circumstances Especially wee must acknowledge and lay opne the roote and fountaine of them our originall corruption from which they haue sprung and flowed and then the cursed fruits and filthy streames that haue issued from them but aboue all we must not forget in this our confession those speciall sinnes vnto which we are most enclined and wherewith we haue most offended and dishonoured God nor those sinnes which we haue committed lately and since the last time of renewing our repentance And withall we must iudge and condemne our selues Gen. 32. 10. Ezra 9. 6 7. Dan. 9. 4 5. as vnworthy by reason of our sinnes the least of Gods mercies and most worthy of the greatest of his iudgements and punishments comming into Gods presence as Benhadads followers before Ahab and acknowledging that if wee had our desert death and condemnation were due vnto vs. 1. King 20. 31. Psal 51. 4. 1. Cor. 11. 32. And this we must doe to iustifie the Lord when he iudgeth and to glorifie his name in giuing vnto him the praise of mercy and forgiuenesse and that thus iudging our selues we may not be condemned of the Lord. Neither are we to stay here vnder the sentence of the Law but to flee vnto the throne of grace begging mercy and forgiuenesse at the hands of God for his owne names sake for his truth sake in his couenant and gracious promises and for his Christs sake his merits satisfaction and obedience performed for vs. The fruit and benefit of which humble confession is the full assurance of the remission of all our sinnes grounded vpon the truth of Gods promises For If we confesse our sinnes hee is faithfull and iust 1. Iohn 1. 9 to forgiue vs our sinnes and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse And againe Hee that hideth his sinnes shall not prosper but hee that confesseth Pro. 28. 13. and forsaketh them shall haue mercy Both which wee see verified in the example of Dauid who whilst he concealed his sinne found the hand of God Psal 32. 3 4 5. 2 Sam. 12. 13. heauie vpon him which vexed his very bones and made him roare in sence of paine But when hee confessed and acknowledged his sinne the Lord forgaue him all his iniquities §. Sect. 4 Of our detestation and hatred of sinne Fourthly there is required heereunto an hearty hatred and detestation of all sinne To which end we must consider that it is an offence against Gods infinite Maiesty and supreme Iustice and that nothing in the world is so contrary vnto his most pure and holy nature nothing so odious and lothsome vnto him as appeareth by his most iust seuerity in punishing of it with most sharpe and grieuous punishments For though our first parents in the state of innocency were his most excellent and best beloued creatures yet for one transgression he reiected them and punished not onely them but also all their posterity with temporall punishments of all kinds and euerlasting death and condemnation both of body and soule Though the world and the creatures therein were his excellent workemanship yet when it was defiled with the sinne of man it was with all its inhabitants sauing those which were reserued in the Arke destroyed with an vniuersall deluge For sinne hee consumed Sodom and Gomorrah with fire and brimstone from heauen and reiected the whole nation of his beloued Israel from being his people Yea when our Sauiour Iesus Christ the Sonne of his loue bore our sinnes as our surety he spared him not but caused him in his body to suffer most grieuous punishments and in his soule to beare the full viols of his wrath till his Iustice by his all-sufficient sufferings was fully satisfied The which considerations must make vs daily to renew our hatred against all our sinnes which God so mortally hateth and especially those which cleaue fastest to our corrupt nature and vnto which we are most inclined because by them wee doe most often displease and dishonour our gracious God and louing Father And to proclaime continuall warre against them that we may vanquish and subdue mortifie and crucifie them and seriously to resolue with our selues that we will vpon no conditions liue any longer in them but renounce and forsake them with our vttermost indeuour how pleasant and profitable soeuer they haue formerly seemed to our carnall appetite §. Sect. 5 Of our feare and care that we be not circumuented with sinne Fifthly in consideration of our owne frailty and infirmity and the malice and subtilty of our spirituall enemies we must daily and continually feare that we be not ouertaken with the deceitfulnesse of sinne nor Pro. 28. 13. 1. Cor. 10. 12. Rom. 11. 20. caught in these snares of the deuill which ought iustly to bee so odious and lothsome vnto vs and haue our hearts taken vp with feruent and zealous desires to preserue our soules
our march in the Christian warfare and so prepared against all afflictions and troubles which like thornes and briers molest vs in our iourney that we shall not be discouraged nor faint in the way but by that inward peace which the Gospel bringeth vnto vs wee shall be confirmed and comforted in the middest of all worldly garboyles and troubles By the shield of faith wee shall repell the firy darts of Satans 1. Pet. 5. 8. tentations and resist and beate him backe when he assaulteth vs with greatest fury we shall also thereby ouercome the world on the one side 1. Ioh. 5. 4. tempting vs with the wages of earthly vanities by contemning it in comparison of heauenly happinesse of which faith assureth vs and on the other side threatning and terrifying vs with crosses and afflictions whilst it receiueth them as tokens of Gods loue and signes of our adoption and perswadeth vs that they shall worke together for the best and serue as Rom. 8. 28. meanes to further our saluation By the helmet of saluation wee are also notably strengthened in the spirituall conflict so as though Satan the old Serpent may bite and bruize our heele yet he shall not bee able to hurt our Head wee are also thereby incouraged to labour diligently after sanctification and hauing hope of inioying with Christ heauenly happinesse it is a notable meanes to mooue vs to purge and purifie our selues 1. Ioh. 3. 2. as he also is pure Finally we are incouraged to fight valiantly the Lords battels by assured hope of victory and to passe with patience and comfort throughout all worldly discouragements because we expect that after we haue trauailed thorow a little spot of foule way we shall come safely to a Palace of pleasure and to all the ioyes of our heauenly Countrey Lastly by the sword of the Spirit if we can skilfully vse it we shall be fitted for all purposes strengthened against all enemies ouercome all difficulties answere all obiections repell all tentations Yea such a glorious light commeth from this glittering weapon that it is sufficient not onely to defend vs and beate downe like that light which appeared to Saul Act 9. and his company with feare and astonishment all our enemies but to guide and direct vs in all our wayes and to make vs perfect and wise for attaining vnto saluation 2. Tim. 3. 15 17. CAP. VIII Of the fourth mayne daily duty which is to arme our selues against all sinne and to deuote our selues wholly to Gods seruice §. Sect. 1 That we must necessarily arme our selues against all sin and the reasons of it THe fourth mayne duty daily to be performed is to arme and strengthen our selues daily against sinne and deuote our soules and bodies wholly to Gods seruice in the performance of all Christian duties which may bee pleasing in his sight Concerning the former It is most necessary that wee continually arme our selues against sinne and gather daily new strength to withstand and mortifie our corruptions First because Satan like a roaring 1. Pet. 5. 8. Lyon walketh continually about seeking to deuoure vs laying at all times and in all places his nets and snares of perdition and many baites of worldly vanities and seales of euill examples to allure vs to stoope and giue ouer our heauenly flight that so he may catch and insnare vs to our destruction Secondly because the world as a strong enemy daily ioyneth with him labouring one while with her smiles and fauours her allurements and proffers of prosperity to intice vs to follow those patternes and precedents of euill which she setteth before vs and another while with frownes and threats afflictions and persecutions to thrust vs by mayne force into sinne Thirdly because we nourish continually a secret traytour in our bosomes which is daily ready to betray vs into their hands euen our owne flesh and corrupt nature which is prone to all euill and taketh delight in nothing more then in glutting it selfe with the pleasures of sinne So that no sooner doe we giue ouer fighting but we are presently foyled no sooner doe we desist rowing and tugging against the streame of our naturall corruptions but they presently carry vs downe with a swift course into some one or other sinfull action Fourthly because many are the wiles and deceits of sinne which will easily circumuent vs if wee doe not daily obserue and labour to defeate them One while they will pretend friendship and that they will doe vs good or at least that they are innocent and will not hurt vs and at another time necessity that wee cannot liue without them or if wee doe a life no better then death vncheerefull and vncomfortable Sometime they will pleade custome and prescription which entreth them into possession as it were by course of Law And if we can answere this they will offer themselues like ghests crauing but one nights lodging with promise then to be gone but afterwards when they are admitted either by force take possession or else vpon further acquaintance and better liking desire to make longer abode Lastly because the occasions of sinne daily are many as the obiects of vnlawfull pleasures which bewitch vs with their alluring tunes and of sinfull gaine and profit which like golden chaines draw vs into wicked courses and of pride and vaine-glory which easily perswade vs who are naturally ambitious to vse any meanes which may further our aduancement Vnto which wee may adde the daily occasions of vniust anger thrusting vs on to reuenge of enuy or disdaine of wantonnesse and vncleannesse of vaine vnsauoury and rotten communication through sinfull society and wicked company and innumerable such others all which will powerfully draw vs to sinne if wee be not daily armed against it In all which respects it is most necessary that wee arme our selues and make daily warre against all our sinnes especially against those which cleane fastest to our corrupt natures and vnto which we are most prone and apt to fall Of which we may take the better and surer notice if wee consider what they were which before our conuersion did most raigne and rule in vs seeing these in the state of regeneration though they be deposed from their regency yet will of all others be most hardly expelled or being in some measure driuen out yet out of their experience of their former victories will conceiue hope of repossessing their wonted hold and to this end will lurke and honer about vs that they may spie opportunity of re-entring like Crowes and other birds of prey which are beaten off a field where they haue long vsed to feede As also if we obserue what are those sinnes which our corruption most liketh and longeth after and is most ready to extenuate and excuse when we are touched and reprooued for them making them light and veniall by gilding them ouer with vaine friuolous or false pretences And finally wee may know them by our owne lamentable experience
13. 18. contrariwise in all our contracts we must carefully shunne and auoyd all guile and deceit all hollow and double dealing tending to the vndermining Micah 7. 2. and circumuenting of our neighbours So the Apostle exhorteth that no man goe beyond or defraud his brother in any matter because the Lord 1. Thes 4. 6. is the auenger of all such for as the Psalmist saith he abhorreth the deceitfull Psal 5. 6. and blood thirstie man More especially we must in all our dealings obserue truth in all our words and not onely speake it from our lips but also from Zach. 8. 16. Psal 15. 2. our hearts hating auoyding all subtill equiuocations and mentall reseruations as tending to circumuent and deceiue those with whom we deale Secondly fidelity in all our promises performing them although it be to Vers 4. our owne hindrance vnlesse he to whom they are made doth release vs of them Thirdly iustice in all our actions giuing euery man his due and dealing with others as we would haue them to deale with vs. Fourthly charity and compassion in remitting our right in whole or in part when as the bargaine prooueth hard and to the great losse and hinderance of our poore neighbours who are not able to beare it And lastly patience and contentednesse when we sustaine any damage and detriment or be otherwise crossed or ouer-reached in any of our contracts either purposely by those with whom we deale or by some casualty or accident which could not bee foreseene Contrariwise in all our contracts we must auoyd lying and that which is equall vnto it equiuocation For the getting of treasures by Pro. 21. 6. a lying tongue is a vanity tossed to and fro of them that seeke death And againe Wealth gotten by vanity shall be diminished but he that gathereth by labour Pro. 13. 11. shall increase yea though a man could by lying get the whole world what would this profit him seeing thereby hee shall lose his owne soule For liars shall not onely be excluded out of the Kingdome of heauen but also haue their portion in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the Apoc. 22. 15. 21. 8. second death With like care wee must auoid in our dealings all perfidiousnesse and breach of promise although it tend to our great aduantage seeing God will not blesse goods gotten by breach of couenants and though we should thriue by such courses our worldly gaine will in no sort recompence our spirituall losse We must shun also all kinde of vniustice in our contracts seeing though it bring in present gaine yet no profit in the end For the treasures of wickednesse profit nothing but righteousnesse deliuereth Pro. 10. 2. from death Likewise we must auoyd all vncharitablenesse raysing our gaine out of our neighbours losse but as fellow-members of the same body we must aduance as much as in vs lieth our mutuall profit and in some equality thriue together Finally we must not through impatiency murmure and repine fret and fume when wee meete with any crosses or losses in our contracts but be content sometime to lose as well as gaine and to this end we must not haue our eyes too much fastened vpon secondary causes and inferiour meanes which perhaps are exceeding crosse and faulty but lift them aboue the earth and fixe them vpon the most wise prouidence of our good and gracious God who gouerneth all things which seeme most contingent and casuall and so disposeth of them as is most for his owne glory and the spirituall good and euerlasting saluation of all those that loue and depend vpon him §. Sect. 4 That we must sell only things saleable More especially there are diuers duties required of vs in our buying and selling As first that the seller be the true and lawfull owner of that hee selleth or his deputy appointed by him and that the buyer doe not for priuate gaine buy any thing from any man whom he thinketh not to haue any right to sell it In which respect they grieuously offend who buy or sell stolne goods if they know of it and they who sacrilegiously sell and buy the liuings of the Church and such things as are freely consecrated to the seruice of God Secondly the seller ought to sell and the buyer to buy such things onely as are vendible and may iustly bee bought and sold In which regard they offend who sell or buy the gifts of the Spirit as Simon Magus or holy things which belong to God and those who sell and buy Iustice or iniustice by bribery giuen or taken either to fill their owne purses Amos 2. 6. Esa 5. 23. Esa 1. 23. or to peruert right They also who sell and buy truth and lyes as false witnesses and they that hire them to giue false testimony But they most of all who for corruptible things sell their soules vnto sinne as Achab did which Christ redeemed with his most precious blood Thirdly wee ought to sell onely such things as are fit for sale or knowing them to bee otherwise to acquaint the buyer with it and so to pitch a lower price according to their lesser value Otherwise wee are not to sell things falsified in respect of their substance and such as are mixt and corrupt for such as are pure and good which is a common fault among Merchants and Tradesmen in these dayes who for their greater gaine adulterate their wares and iumble and intermingle things of a different degree in goodnesse selling them all at the best rates Fourthly we are bound to sell those things only which are some way profitable for the Church and Common-wealth either for necessary vse or for ornament and delight Neither ought wee to benefit our selues by such things as are vnprofitable vnto others and much lesse by such as are in their owne nature hurtfull and pernicious vncharitably raising our owne gaine out of our neighbours losse As those that sell popish pardons and bookes to ignorant people who are likely to be seduced by them such also as further them in their superstition and idolatrie obscene pictures and bookes full of ribaldry and all prophanenesse fit for nothing but to poison and corrupt such as see and reade them §. Sect. 5 That we must set and sell our wares at an equall price Fifthly we ought in selling and buying to set our wares at an equall price the best rule whereof for the most part is the ordinarie price of the market which valueth things not simply in their owne worth but with consideration of all circumstances as scarcity plenty time and place and not according to the price wee gaue lesse or more nor onely respecting whether we gayne much or little whether we get nothing or lose thereby For as of necessity through the change of prices we must sometimes lose so it is alike necessary that we should gain at another time to repaire these losses and maintaine our state And
haue so increased and improoued them for the glory of our Master and good of our fellow seruants as that we may with cheerefulnesse present our selues before God when he calleth vs to a reckoning Finally in our greatest plenty of earthly things let vs call to minde our spirituall wants and how defectiue wee are in sanctifying and sauing graces especially in our thankfulnesse vnto God for these temporall benefits and so our plentie in the one will not so much exalt vs as our defects in the other which are much more excellent and necessary will humble and abase vs. Fifthly when wee inioy prosperity let vs beware of security and hardnesse of heart which is an ordinary effect that doth accompany it For men are apt to flatter themselues in the assurance of Gods loue when he causeth them to prosper in their courses and giueth vnto them these outward signes of his fauour and so to liue in their sinnes with impenitencie and hardnesse of heart promising vnto themselues impunity and that all shall goe well with them for the time to come Thus Dauid saith because the wicked mans wayes prospered Therefore Gods iudgements were high aboue out of his sight presuming that he Psal 10 6. Eccl. 8. 11. should neuer bee mooued nor come into any danger Yea he himselfe as he confesseth was thus ouertaken with security presuming in his prosperity that he should neuer be mooued Which that wee may auoyd let vs consider that Psal 30. 6. temporall blessings are no infallible signes of Gods loue seeing as the Wise man speaketh they happen to all alike and are more often and liberally Eccl. 9. 1. bestowed vpon Gods enemies who haue their portion in this life then vpon his owne children for whom he reserueth the euerlasting and heauenly inheritance that there is a vicissitude and change of all these estates and nothing remaineth certaine vnder the Sunne that the longer God deferreth the more seuerely he will punish when hee commeth and the greater our blessings are the greater shall be our plagues if we abuse them to security and impenitencie Sixthly let vs take heede when we are in prosperity that we doe not abuse it to licentiousnesse and carnall liberty vnto which men in this state are most prone as the Histories of all times and daily experience teacheth For who seeth not that they who abound in wealth and worldly honours doe for the most part giue themselues ouer to all voluptuous and sensuall delights as though God had sent them into the world and had put into their hands such large wages of earthly blessings that they should spend them and their precious time in Hunting and Hawking carding and dycing courting dancing and reuelling drinking feasting and such like carnall pleasures yea who doth not perceiue that they often abuse them to iniury and oppression reuenge and all kinds of vniustice when they haue to deale with their inferiours abusing their power and authority vnto tyranny which they thinke neuer sufficiently manifested and magnified till they haue borne downe and troden vnder foote all that standeth in their way right and reason law conscience and common honestie which abuses that we may shunne let vs remember often the maine ends why God hath giuen vs these worldly benefits aboue others namely that we might be better inabled and become more forward to glorifie him to doe more good vnto our brethren and abound in the workes of mercy and Christian charity and that wee might haue better meanes to serue him with cheerefulnesse and thereby to further our owne saluation Of which ends if we faile God will either take these gifts from vs because wee mis-spend them in vaine or else let vs still keepe them for a further and greater iudgement Let vs thinke in our greatnesse that there is a greater then wee who will one day call vs to a reckoning and fearefully reuenge vpon vs the iniuries of the oppressed and the shamefull abuse of our power and authority to vniustice and cruelty Seuenthly let vs beware that our prosperity be not an occasion vnto vs of the contempt and neglect of spirituall and heauenly things which ordinarily happeneth vnto those vvho in their iudgements too much esteeme and in their hearts immoderately affect these temporall blessings as vve see in the example of those vvho vvere inuited to the Kings Supper Demas Luk. 14 18. Iudas and many others To vvhich purpose let vs often meditate on the excellency profit and necessity of Gods sauing graces and the ineffable felicity of our heauenly inheritance and how much these exceed the other Let vs also often consider of the dignity of our soules and hovv 3. Epist of Iohn vers 2. much they exceede in excellency our corruptible bodies that vvee may take more care to haue them thriue in spirituall grace and to reioyce in their assurance of future glory then to glut our bodies vvith sensuall delights or to vvaxe rich and grovv great in our earthly possessions Let vs remember that the time vvill come that our spirituall grace vvhich worldlings so much contemne will stand vs in more stead and bring vnto our soules more sound comfort then all the wealth of the world or Monarchy of the whole earth and therefore that it is most extreme and sottish folly so farre to affect those flitting and fading vanities as to neglect in the meane time these spirituall excellencies §. Sect. 5 That in our prosperity we must beware of being slothfull in Gods seruice and that worldly things doe not become thorns and snares vnto vs. Eighthly let it be our care in the time of our prosperity that wee doe not grow more sluggish and slothfull in Gods seruice in Prayer hearing the Word Reading Meditation for the more we are taken vp with our earthly imployments the lesse we minde these holy duties and religious exercises as we see in the experience of many who haue beene forward in them in their sickenesse pouerty and meane estates and wholly neglect them or coldly carelesly and formally performe them when they inioy health wealth and worldly preferments Yea Gods good Children oftentimes are heerewith ouertaken hauing a great dampe cast ouer their zeale and deuotion by these worldly mists as we see in good Martha her Luk. 10. 41 42. selfe who by her worldly businesse was made more cold and carelesse in attending vnto Christ Which that wee may auoyd let vs consider that when we abound with all worldly blessings we stand more in need of spirituall helpes to keepe vs vpright in our wayes and from falling into those sinnes to which this prosperous state exposeth vs. And that these earthly benefits being Gods present wages whereby he incourageth vs to doe him more diligent and faithfull seruice it is a shamefull abuse of his bounty to bee made thereby more slothfull and negligent Ninthly let vs take heed in our prosperity that these worldly things through our ouermuch affecting them doe not become thornes to
them after a formall cold and carelesse manner nor can we without this earnest indeuour and studious diligence attaine vnto eternall and heauenly blessednesse For this rich reward is not giuen to idle loyterers but Math. 20. 1. to painfull labourers in Gods Vineyard nor to those slothful seruants who hide their Masters Talent in a napkin doing with it neither good nor euill Mat. 25. 21 26. but vnto those who by their spirituall trading haue increased it to his aduantage The Kingdome of God falleth not as it were by lot to the Math. 11. 12. lazie but suffreth violence and is taken by an holy force and so strait is and 7. 12 13. the gate that leadeth into it and the way so narrow afflicted and troublesome that we cannot possesse it by sitting at our ease but must striue to enter with all diligence and indeuour as our Sauiour exhorteth §. Sect. 5 The last reason taken from the vnwearied diligence of worldlings in pursuing of earthly things Lastly the vnwearied diligence of carnall worldlings in seruing of the world and their owne lusts for the contemptible hire of earthly vanities may effectually moue vs to vse the like or greater in the seruice of our Master For howsoeuer they after their worke is done are not sure of their wages or though it bee put into their hands are not sure to hold it or though they doe finde it vaine and of no worth alwayes vnprofitable and oftentimes hurtfull and pernicious yet with what diligence doe they yeeld their seruice with what affection doe they dote on this golden strumpet and with what zeale and deuotion doe they commit idolatry with this painted Idoll For they are content to rise early and goe late to bed to consume their spirits with carking care and their bodies with restlesse labours both by land and sea to spend their strength and to hazard vnto innumerable dangers their health and life yea the euerlasting saluation of their soules that they may obtaine riches pleasures and preferments and fill their hearts with these windy vanities which may puffe them vp but neuer satisfie them and therefore how much more doth this diligence become vs in the seruice of God by performing vnto him all Christian duties seeing our wages as much exceedeth theirs as heauen earth euerlasting excellencies momentany vanities the which also are certaine both in payment and possession So also the double diligence of Idolaters in seruing their Idols and the care and cost which is spent in their seruice may make vs ashamed to bee lesse industrious and painfull in the seruice of the true God For they are ready to breake their sleepe and rise early with the Israelites to doe them seruice and to offer their oblations Deut. 32. 6. to part with their chiefest ornaments as their iewels and eare-rings their siluer and their gold for the making and decking of their Images to launce and cut themselues with Baals priests before their Idols to doe voluntary penance and to goe on pilgrimage to stocks and stones to consume their strength with watching that they may performe their superstitious orizons and to torment and whip their bodies before their Crosse and Crucifix to strip themselues of all their meanes to vow voluntary pouerty and with Iezabel to spare for no cost in maintaining their idolatrous priests who draw them on and helpe them forward in their idolatry And shall we be lesse diligent in the seruice of our good God from whose blessing and free gift wee haue all things which wee presently inioy or yet doe hope for in the life to come Or shall wee thinke any paines or care or cost too great in performing those duties which assure vs of saluation when as they thinke nothing too much which they doe or can doe to nourish their doubtfull and wauering their false and deceiuing hopes of their future happinesse Yea the diligence of desperate sinners in the seruice of the diuell by committing of all manner of wickednesse may make vs blush for shame to neglect Gods seruice in the duties of holinesse For they breake their braines in plotting of mischiefes and spend their strength and hazard their health and life in effecting them For as the Wise man speaketh They sleepe not except they haue done mischiefe Prou. 4. 16. and their sleepe is taken away vnlesse they cause some to fall and wickednesse and violence more cheereth their hearts then their bread and wine They serue the diuell oftentimes for nothing and not seldome euen to worldly losse wasting their strength in wanton pleasures impairing their health with costly gluttony and loathed carowses only in a brauery and hazarding their life by needlesse quarrels and bloody murthers besides the inward torments of minde heart and conscience which their vnruly passions vaine hopes and false feares friuolous anger and lustfull loue fretting enuy and reuengefull malice doe bring vpon them By all which courses though they haue no wages for their worke yet as the Prophet speaketh they are willing euen to weary themselues to commit iniquity Ier. 9. 5. And shall they be thus diligent in seruing the diuell that mortally hateth them and shall wee bee negligent in Gods seruice who hath so dearely loued vs Shall they thinke the greatest paines too little in taking these wicked courses which doe but seale vp vnto them their certaine destruction and shall wee thinke any paines too great in performing such holy duties as will assure vs of eternall saluation Finally let the diuels diligence in dishonouring God and seeking to depriue vs of grace and glory that he may plunge vs into euerlasting perdition make vs studious and industrious in seeking to glorifie God in our saluation For as himselfe witnesseth He compasseth the earth continually to and fro to spy out all aduantages Iob 1. 7. against vs first drawing vs to sinne and then accusing vs for it and as the Apostle Peter testifieth He walketh about as a roring Lion seeking 1. Pet. 5. 8. whom he may deuoure And shal not we vse like or greater diligence in preseruing our selues out of his danger in keeping our soules and bodies holy and vndefiled that being vnblameable they may not bee damnified by his accusations and in imploying our time in such holy and Christian duties as will inrich our hearts with all sauing graces strengthen vs to withstand all Satans tentations confirme our assurance and further vs in the fruition of heauenly happinesse CAP. VIII Of constancie in the duties of godlinesse without remission or intermission §. Sect. 1 That all those which are sincere are also constant in the duties of a godly life THe last propertie of those Christian duties which appertaine to a godly life is constancy in performing them of Psal 119. 112. which there are two branches continuance without remission or intermission and perseuerance without Apostasie or defection both which Dauid conioyneth in his practice of obedience I haue saith he inclined
colour but changeth as the things are changed which lye next vnto it Secondly it hindreth our growth in grace and maketh all the good meanes which we vse to this purpose vnprofitable vnto vs. It disableth vs in our spirituall race from comming to the goale and getting the garland and causeth vs to be preuented with their speed who set out long after vs. It maketh vs vnfit for all good duties and not only more backward vnto them by our intermission but also more vnable to performe when we doe vndertake them For when we haue for a time neglected prayer meditation hearing the Word and such like spirituall exercises our deceitfull hearts after they are broken loose out of the bonds of Gods feare and haue tasted the carnall sweetnesse of this slothfull liberty are hardly recalled recouered and not without much paines reduced into order nor well settled and composed to religious duties It hindreth vs in our spirituall iourney towards our heauenly home and whereas those who are constant in their trauell and ridde continually some part of the way come seasonably and surely to their iourneys end though they seeme to goe a slow pace these who goe on by fits and spurts tire themselues in the mid way and though sometimes they seeme to goe a gallop yet their many intermissions and often stayes make them to bee benighted and to giue ouer their trauell before they come to their iournies end Finally it greatly indangereth vs vnto finall apostasie for leauing those good duties vndone which our consciences approuing call vpon vs to performe and by this negligence running into tentation it is iust with God to leaue vs in it and to withdraw his grace which onely giueth vnto vs both will and ability for the well performing of any good duty Wherof it commeth to passe that many who intend at the first but to play the truants and to intermit their studies for a time that they may take their liberty and pleasure and then to come vnto Christs schoole againe are afterward partly so possessed with feare and shame of their Masters presence and partly so bewitched with their carnall delights that they runne quite away and neuer returne And when they haue thus farre giuen place to the diuels tentations and the sluggish sloth of their sinfull flesh that they intermit all spiritual exercises as prayer hearing the Word reading meditation that they may the more thorowly intend their worldly profits or delights yet with a purpose to returne vnto them againe when these things are dispatched they are more and more insnared in Satans nets of perdition into which they haue cast themselues and the longer they forbeare the lesse appetite they haue to religious duties Lastly this vnconstancy maketh vs farre worse in the seruice of God then the sonnes of Belial are in the seruice of the diuell and of the world For they for the vncertaine and base wages of earthly trifles are constant in those workes of darkenesse wherein they imploy them toyling themselues and spending their strength in their seruile drudgery night and day though it bee to the euerlasting damnation both of their bodies and soules whereas these who professe themselues the seruants of God serue him negligently by fits and starts one while taking a little paines in spirituall exercises and another while intermitting their labours and spending their time in sloth and idlenesse although he incourageth them to doe him faithfull and constant seruice with the present pay of all temporall blessings and with the assured hope of future happinesse §. Sect. 3 Of the meanes whereby we may be inabled to serue God constantly in the duties of a godly life And these are the reasons which may moue vs to constancy in the duties of Gods seruice In the next place let vs consider of some meanes which may inable vs vnto it The first meanes is often and seriously to consider of Gods manifold mercies and rich rewards both in this life and the life to come which he hath faithfully promised vnto all those who doe him diligent and constant seruice For in this world nothing shall be wanting to those that serue and feare him for if he prouideth so liberally euen for strangers and enemies then will he much more for those of his owne family and not suffer them to want any thing which is good He wil shine vpon them with the bright beames of his face and fauour and glad their hearts with the ioy of his countenance Hee will preserue them from all dangers and mightily defend them from the malice and power of all their enemies He will watch ouer them with his prouidence to doe them good and will haue them alwayes at his finding who hath all things in heauen and erth to bestow vpon thē He will inrich them with the chiefe treasures of his spirituall graces and hereafter giue them the possession and fruition of heauenly happinesse So that though wee should not intermit our paines in the duties of his seruice for the space of an houre in the whole course of our liues yet may we say of our doings as the Apostle of our suffrings The seruice of this present life is not worthy the glory Rom. 8. 18. which shall be reuealed for that is short and momentany weake and imperfect but shall be rewarded with a farre more excellent and eternall waight of glory The second meanes of constancy is to take notice and to haue a Second meanes true sense of our frailty and infirmity our naturall mutability and vnconstancy our dulnesse and wearinesse in all good duties that so wee may keepe a narrow watch ouer our selues and not giue way to our spirituall sloth when it creepeth vpon vs and moueth vs to intermit the duties of a godly life We must not be proud and presumptuous of our strength as though it were in our power to leaue and resume our worke when wee please but be humbled in the sight and sence of our backwardnesse and wearinesse in holy duties and as the Apostle exhorteth wee must not bee Rom. 11. 20. 1. Cor. 10. 12. Phil. 2. 12. Prou. 28. 14. high minded but feare whilest we seeme to stand we must take heed of falling and worke out our saluation with feare and trembling For blessed is hee which thus seareth alwayes seeing it will make him carefull to keepe his spirituall watch that he doe not neglect or intermit any good duty which may strengthen his faith in the assurance of his saluation The third meanes is Third meanes that we indeuour to worke our hearts to the loue not only of God which will make all our labours light which wee take in seruing him whom our soules loue but also of the spirituall duties themselues by meditating often vpon their excellency profit and necessity aboue all worldly imployments For what the soule loueth in that it resteth with vnwearied delight and so pleaseth it selfe in the fruition of it that it admitteth no
into act when wee haue had fit occasion Our worldlinesse and earthly mindednesse which haue made vs by affecting transitory trifles to neglect spirituall and heauenly excellencies and neglecting Gods seruice to serue Satan in hope of receiuing this base wages and rewards of iniquity Our little profiting by the long inioying and vsing of the light of the Gospell and plentifull meanes of our saluation for the inriching of our selues with Gods spirituall and sauing graces knowledge faith affiance loue zeale patience or the fruitfull exercizing of them in the duties of a godly life which hath come to passe by our irreuerent slothfull and sluggish vsing of the meanes nor bringing vnto them any faith zeale feruency of spirit or a good conscience Our want of Christian valour and resolution in the Christian warfare and our often yeelding vnto the tentations of Satan the world and our own flesh Finally our abuse of prosperity and temporary blessings which being giuen vs of God as present wages in our hands to make vs more cheerfull in his seruice we haue abused as meanes and occasions to make vs more sinfull more forgetfull of God and negligent and cold in his seruice more proud worldly and vnconscionable in all our courses And when we haue called to our remembrance these and such other sinnes whereby we haue been hindred in the wayes of godlinesse and haue vnfainedly lamented and bewailed them with bitter griefe and resolued amendment for the time to come then are we also to renew and strengthen our faith by applying afresh vnto vs the gracious promises of the Gospell which are made in Christ vnto all repentant sinners The which often renewing of our couenant with God will be a notable meanes of strengthening vs vnto all the duties of a godly life seeing this couenant of grace is the ground and foundation of them God hauing promised therein that hee will take away from vs our stony hearts and giue vs hearts of flesh and that hee Ezek. 11. 19 20. and 36. 26. will put a new spirit within vs that we may walke in his statutes and keepe his ordinances and doe them That he will giue vs one heart and one way that wee Ier. 31. 33. and 32. 40. may feare him for euer and put his Law in our inward parts and write it in our hearts that we shall not depart from him And as thus on Gods part wee are strengthened vnto all good duties by his Spirit which hee promiseth and giueth vnto vs so also on our part this renewing of our faith inabling vs hereunto for the more we are assured of the remission of our sinnes and of all Gods benefits both spirituall in this life and heauenly in the life to come the more we loue him who hath so loued vs and of his infinite bounty hath multiplied vpon vs such inestimable blessings and Nehem. 10. 29. the more wee loue him the more loth wee are to doe any thing which may displease him and the more forward and willing to glorifie him and to performe all good duties acceptable in his sight §. Sect. 6 That we must take more care to approue our wayes to God and our owne consciences then vnto men The second rule is that we chiefly labour to approoue all our workes and wayes to God and our owne consciences rather then vnto men the testimony whereof is much more to be esteemed then publike fame and humane censures For fame being but a breath of the often deceiued multitude may also deceiue vs by giuing a false testimony either on the worser or better part but our cōsciences which are priuy euen to our secret actions and inward intentions in doing them will not easily bee corrupted to giue in false euidence especially in those who are sanctified and regenerate Humane and vulgar censures are often false and friuolous ridiculous and impious applauding that which God condemneth and condemning that which he commendeth and commonly that best pleaseth the multitude which displeaseth him They call him honourable not who honoureth God and is honoured of him who is a sonne of God brother of Christ and heire of heauen but who is innobled by the vertues of his parents or who hath bought glorious titles as it were a slaue in the market or as the Centurion his freedome with a great summe They call him rich and happy who is poore beggerly naked and vtterly destitute of the riches of Gods graces because he hath some worldly pelfe which euery day may be taken from him or he from it And hee of the world is esteemed valorous and magnanimous who is so impotent in ruling his passions that he cannot beare the least iniury without taking reuenge and contrariwise he base and cowardly who dissembleth wrongs and according to Christs Commandement doth readily forgiue them leauing vengeance to God vnto whō alone it belongeth Though nothing is more contrary to true fortitude or the magnanimous constancy of a sound and well-settled minde then with euery wind of words to bee moued out of a right state and with other mens folly to become furious and frantique But a good conscience giueth in true euidence as witnessing with God or that which he witnesseth not out of a blind opinion mis-led by passion but according to the booke of holy Scriptures with which this booke of conscience commonly agreeth And therefore if wee would leade a godly life and constantly performe those Christian duties which are pleasing vnto God let vs lightly regard the censure of the multitude who ordinarily outface and discountenance vertue and piety and commend and magnifie vice and wickednesse iustifie those whom God condemneth and condemne those that hee iustifieth accounting their false praises a great dishonour and their scornes and disgraces for innocency and piety our praise and glory seeing he cannot be but honourable whom God honoureth nor want glory whom Christ his Saints and holy Angels approue and applaud And contrariwise let vs highly esteeme in all our actions the testimony of our owne conscience which will restraine vs from secret sinnes as well as from open and notorious and mooue and incite vs to all Christian duties euen in our secret closets when there is none by to censure our actions And as no wise man in running of a race is much moued with the speeches of the standers by which hee assuredly knoweth to be false and friuolous thinking euer the better of himselfe when he is cast behind all the rest of the company because they commend his speed or the worse when he hath outstripped them and is neere the goale because they discommend him for his slownesse so neither must we be lifted vp with a good conceit of our selues when others commend vs for our swiftnesse in the spirituall race if our owne consciences tell vs that wee are slow and behind all the rest with whom wee contend for the Garland nor yet deiected and discouraged when they dispraise vs if we are priuie vnto
who were worthily reiected in Adam both for the guilt of his sinne and the corruption of our nature which we haue deriued from him Now this benefit of Christ giuen vs of God to bee the foundation of our election and saluation may be vnto vs a most forcible argument to make vs loue God aboue all things who hath so loued vs that hee hath not spared to giue his onely begotten and dearely beloued Sonne vnto vs and for vs euen vnto the death that wee by him might attaine vnto eternall life and happinesse and also to expresse this loue by labouring and indeuouring to serue and please him in all the duties of a godly life For what should withdraw our hearts from God which he hath tyed vnto him by such a bond of loue that was much stronger then death it selfe why should any hire intice vs to neglect his seruice and to serue Satan the world and our owne lusts by committing any knowne sinne vnlesse it be of equall value to that gift that God hath giuen to vs and for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquity and appropriate vs vnto himselfe for his own seruice But ten thousand worlds cannot match this gift and why then should we lose the benefit of it by neglecting the seruice of God and hiring our selues to worke wickednesse for the base hire of worldly vanities §. Sect. 2 That the work of redemption should mooue vs to serue our Redeemer in all duties of a godly life Againe as Christ our Sauiour giuen vnto vs by God his Father so also the great worke of Redemption wrought by him may serue as a most powerfull argument to mooue vs vnto the diligent performance of all the duties which belong to a godly life For though the worke of our Creation and preseruation are inestimable benefits yet this much exceedeth them being farre aboue all humane conceit and so vnspeakeable that it can neuer be sufficiently expressed and magnified by the tongue of men and Angels Yet let vs take as we are able some slender view of it and with rauishing wonder admire and adore the rest which we are not able to comprehend And consider first what wee were who were thus redeemed Rom. 5. 8 10. to wit mortall men dust and ashes weake and of no strength strangers sinners yea enemies vnto God and our owne saluation Secondly from what we were redeemed namely out of the greatest and most desperate misery which could possibly bee incident vnto any creature For Christ hath deliuered vs from the wrath of God the curse of the Law and all the fearefull plagues therein threatned temporall and eternall from the miserable bondage and captiuity of sinne and Satan from death hell and euerlasting condemnation both of body and soule and that when we were so desperately and vnrecouerably plunged into these fearefull miseries that wee were vtterly vnable to helpe our selues yea when all the power of men and Angels was altogether vnsufficient to doe vs any good Thirdly consider who redeemed such poore sinfull wretches out of this wofull plight euen the glorious Sonne of God equall to his Father in power and Maiesty hee vouchsafed to pitty vs in our misery and to take vpon him our deliuerance Fourthly consider the meanes which he vsed to effect this great worke of our Redemption namely by humbling himselfe in taking vpon him our nature and vniting it in a substantiall and inseparable vnion vnto his Diuine nature that so he might in our stead doe and suffer whatsoeuer was necessary for our saluation Fifthly consider the manner of effecting this great worke or the meanes which hee vsed that he might redeeme vs namely by offering himselfe vnto God his Father as a sacrifice for our sinnes and an all-sufficient price for our Redemption and to suffer in his body and soule all those punishments which were due vnto vs for our sinnes As all the miseries of his life pouerty and meane birth flight from his enemies the tentations of the deuill hunger wearinesse the persecutions scornes reproches and slanders of the world and wicked men And those especially which he indured a little before his death for he was betrayed by his owne Apostle and forsaken by the rest apprehended by his enemies and by them most iniuriously and barbarously abused and haled from one Iudgement seat to another falsly accused wrongfully condemned blindfolded buffeted rayled at spit vpon scorned and mocked whipped crowned with thornes and crucified and so suffered for vs that cruell ignominious and accursed death of the Crosse and his Fathers wrath due to our sinnes which made him to sweate drops of Blood and vnder the waight of this intolerable burthen to complaine as a man forlorne and forsaken of God All which he willingly meekely and patiently suffered for vs that he might redeeme vs out of the hands of all our enemies and purchase vs vnto himselfe Psal 100. 2. as his owne peculiar people So that wee are now his by a treble right for he hath made vs and therefore we are his euen his home-borne seruants who owe vnto him our birth and being hee preserueth vs and giueth vnto vs all the good things which we inioy and so we are his hired seruants who owe vnto him all loue and duty for the rich wages of his bounteous benefits and finally he hath redeemed vs out of the hands of our mortall enemies by giuing for vs not siluer or gold or any corruptible 1. Pet. 1. 17 18. thing but himselfe and his owne precious Blood as a price to satisfie his Fathers iustice for our sinnes and therefore we are no more our owne but 1. Cor. 6. 20. his by the Law of Redemption What then remaineth but that we yeeld vnto our Sauiour his owne right which hee hath so dearely bought and seeing he hath giuen a price for vs which is of ten thousand yea infinite times more value then his purchase O let vs not defraud him of his bargaine but deuote our bodies and soules wholly to him that we may glorifie him by our seruice and be sorry that we haue no more to giue vnto him Wee owed our selues vnto him before by right of creation but by our sinnes robbed him of his due by selling our selues ouer to Satan as his slaues for the base hire of worldly vanities and now hee hath againe made vs his owne by giuing himselfe as the price of our Redemption and therefore let vs not againe depriue him of his right and defraud him of his seruice which if we vngratefully doe there remaineth no further sacrifice Heb. 10. 26. for sinne He hath giuen himselfe for vs and shall we thinke it too much to giue our selues to him He came not to be serued but to serue and to giue Mat. 20. 28. his life a ransome for many and shall the seruant detract his seruice when his Lord and Master his King and Soueraigne hath abased himselfe to doe seruice for him Hee hath
tentations that they shall not be able to doe vs any hurt For whereas those who liue in their sinnes and neglect the duties of a godly life doe giue vnto him all aduantage against them and by leauing off the brest-plate of Righteousnesse doe lie open to his poysonous darts so as he may easily perswade them that they are subiect to Gods wrath and the curse of the Law seeing they continue in their sinnes that they are not ingrafted into Christ seeing they bring forth no fruits of holinesse and righteousnesse that they are out of Gods fauour seeing they haue no care to please him by performing such duties as are acceptable in his sight and finally that they are not the children of God because they are nothing like him nor reformed according to his image nor heires of heauenly happinesse seeing they haue not purged themselues as it becommeth those who haue this hope Contrariwise when we keepe this brestplate of Righteousnesse fast buckled vnto vs wee may without danger repell all his fiery darts seeing we are assured that we are in Gods fauour whilest wee labour in all things to please him that wee are in Christ seeing without him wee could doe nothing that we are Gods children seeing we resemble him Ioh. 15. 5. in holinesse and righteousnesse and labour after perfection as he is perfect That we are freed from the curse of the Law and the guilt and punishment of all our sinnes seeing we feele the vertue of Christs death effectuall in vs for the mortifying and subduing of our corruptions And finally that maugre all the malice of our spirituall enemies we shall attaine vnto heauenly happinesse seeing our mercifull God hath graciously promised that he will reward our temporary seruice with this inestimable and eternall wages and crowne his owne graces in vs and the fruits which wee haue brought forth of them in the Christian duties of a godly life with endlesse ioy and immortalitie §. Sect. 5 That by a godly life we are prepared against the day of death The fourth benefit of a godly life is that thereby wee are continually prepared against the day of death so that the manifold euils Heb. 9. 27. which accompany it cannot hurt vs nor the dreadfull terrours thereof daunt and dismay vs. For howsoeuer it is appointed that all must die and this sentence like the lawes of the Medes and Persians is irreuocable yet to those that walke in the waies of godlinesse the nature of death is quite changed and the sting thereof taken away For of the last and greatest euil it is made vnto them a preparatiue to the chiefest good of an enemy it is become a friend of a Sargeant to arrest vs and imprison vs in hell it is become a ioyfull messenger sent of God to deliuer vs out of all worldly miseries and to bring vs into the ioyes of heauen In which regard the Wise man saith that howsoeuer Pro. 14. 32. the wicked is driuen away in his wickednesse yet the righteous hath hope in his death And that riches profit not in the day of wrath but righteousnesse deliuereth Chap. 11. 4. from death that is from the sting of death and all the euils that doe accompany it And the Spirit of God pronounceth them Blessed Apoc. 14. 13. that die in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Namely that they may be crowned with ioy and immortality The which if it were well weighed might iustly not onely free the faithfull from the immoderate feare of death but also make it appeare precious in their eyes as it is in the sight of God and moue them Psal 116. 15. Phil. 1. 21 23. August in 1. Epist Ioan. with the Apostle to desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ seeing that is best of all and as one saith not to die patiently but to liue with patience and to die with ioy For who reioyceth not when after a wearisome pilgrimage hee approcheth neere vnto his owne Country when after a dangerous passage wherein hee hath beene tossed and turmoiled with aduerse windes and tempestuous stormes hee is ready to arriue safely in the long expected hauen when after his dayes labour hee commeth to receiue liberall wages and when after a dangerous and doubtful fight hauing conquered all his enemies hee is to be presented by the holy Angels before his Soueraigne King that hee may receiue the Crowne of victory And howsoeuer death hath many terrours which doe accompany it yet to those that haue serued God in the duties of a godly life they need not seeme terrible seeing against euery blow they haue their ward against euery poyson their soueraigne antidote They must leaue the world but they must goe to heauen forgoe their riches but for them enioy heauenly treasures bee depriued of momentanie delights but that they may attaine vnto euerlasting ioyes lose the comfort of all their friends but in lieu of it shall haue the sweete society of the Saints and Angels yea the fruition of God himselfe and his Christ and holy Spirit whom to enioy is to bee perfectly happy Yea but it is a grieuous sight to behold our friends mourning for our departure but this is recompenced with the hope of our happie meeting and the present ioyes of our heauenly entertaynement by the rest of our friends that are gone before vs. Yea but death is a straight and paynefull passage but it bringeth vs to a spacious and glorious Palace In our bodies wee are afflicted with many griefes of sicknesse but these are eased with the inward peace of conscience and comfort of the Spirit Wee are in euery part of our bodies racked with paine but they are onely the throwes that goe before our heauenly birth whereby we are borne to euerlasting and immortall glory Our bodies must be buried and corrupt in the earth but being sowne in corruption they shall arise incorruptible and our mortall shall 1. Cor. 15. 42 43 put on immortality our weaknesse strength and our basenesse glory Finally if liuing in Gods feare wee dye in his fauour wee may bee strongly armed against all the terrours of death and expect it at all times with a ioyfull countenance §. Sect. 6 That by leading of a godly life we are assured to be freed from iudgement condemnation Lastly by leading of a godly life wee may be assured that wee shall bee freed from Iudgement and condemnation in the world to come For if we liue here in the feare of God our sinnes shall not come into Iudgement because they are already iudged in Christ who hath satisfied Gods Iustice for them and payed our debt to the vttermost farthing If wee haue beene carefull here to play the good Stewards and dayly keeping our reckonings straight receiue our acquittance and discharge before wee sleepe sealed with the blood of Christ applied vnto vs by a liuely and renewed faith wee shall haue nothing to account for
withhold from them that walke vprightly And the Apostle Peter testifieth that God according to his diuine power hath giuen vnto vs that is all the faithfull who serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all things that pertaine vnto life and godlinesse through the knowledge of him who hath called vs to glory and vertue whereby are giuen vnto vs exceeding great and precious promises c. Now these blessings and benefits which God hath promised as the gracious rewards of a godly conuersation are either temporall and of this life or eternall and of the life to come Those of this life are either corporall concerning the body and outward estate or spirituall respecting chiefly the good of the soule by inriching it with all sanctifying and sauing graces The benefits of the former kinde are promised to all those who serue the Lord and carefully obserue all his Commandements although not absolutely but conditionally so farre foorth as the corporall blessings will best stand with Gods glory and our spirituall and eternall good Thus the Lord promiseth in the Law that hee will giue vnto those who obserue and keepe it all the Deut. 28. blessings of this life respecting either their persons or states As that hee will blesse them in themselues and also in their children and posterity Leuit. 26. that he will giue them health of body and a long life and good dayes Psal 34. 12. prosperity and plenty of all good things strength of body and gifts of the minde as wisedome fortitude and the rest that he will blesse them in the field and in the house at home in the city and abroad by giuing them victory ouer all their enemies and causing them to be had in honour and high esteeme amongst all the nations which dwelt about them All which his gifts are vnto those that feare God double blessings because he not onely giueth the things themselues but also the right vse of them whereby they become truely profitable Secondly because he maketh his gifts sufficient in what proportion soeuer they are for their preseruation and comfort and by giuing contentment with them causeth them to satisfie their desires whereas worldly men are insatiable like the graue and hell which neuer say Enough Thirdly because hee doth measure out vnto them such a proportion of worldly blessings as is most fit for their spirituall estate that they may bee more mindfull of him and haue their faith hope affiance humility and other sauing graces exercised and increased and doth not suffer them to abound in such superfluous excesse as would bee rather an heauy burthen vnto them then a benefit a meanes to quench his graces in them and to distract them in all religious duties a snare to intangle them in worldly cares and to withdraw their hearts from him and to fasten them vpon the world an occasion to make them forget him and like pampered horses to kicke against him that feedeth them to weaken their affiance and to make them trust in themselues and their owne prouisions to puffe them vp in pride towards him and insolencie towards their neighbours as though they excelled them as much in true worth as they exceed them in worldly wealth The which is a singular benefit to the faithfull that seeing they cannot through naturall corruption measure their appetite the Lord like a carefull and skilfull Physician should stint and diet them letting them haue so much not as they desire but as they are well able to disgest seeing a greater quantity would but surcharge their stomakes and cause a surfet turning all the superfluity into crudities and the hurtfull humours of vice and sinne as pride couetousnesse loue of the world and such like which would much hazzard and impaire their spirituall health And thus the Lord promiseth corporall blessings vnto them that serue him not simply and absolutely but so as they may be truly beneficiall not because he would haue them so mercenary as to serue him chiefly for worldly wages as the deuill charged Iob for hee respecteth onely that filiall obedience which ariseth out of a Iob 1. 9. liuely faith and vnfained loue but seeing we are so sensuall that we haue things present in great esteeme and neglect future blessings much more precious and permanent therefore the Lord graciously condescending vnto our weakenesse and infirmities doth also promise and giue vnto vs corporall benefits as it were temporary wages that receiuing besides our future hopes this present pay we might the rather be incouraged to performe vnto him diligent seruice Thus the Lord perswadeth vs not to forget his Law but to apply our hearts to keepe his Commandements because Pro. 3. 2. length of dayes long life and peace they shall adde vnto vs. Thus wisedome mooueth all to imbrace her not onely for her spirituall excellencies but Pro. 8. 18. also because riches and honour are with her and those which seldome meete Iob 22. 24 25. durable riches and righteousnesse vnlesse these promises are rather to bee taken in a spirituall sense And our Sauiour Christ perswadeth vs to forsake the world and our selues by this argument because no man that leaueth Mar. 10. 29 30. house or brethren or sisters c. for his sake and the Gospels but they shall receiue an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters c. and in the world to come eternall life The Apostle also vseth this reason to perswade vnto Christian beneficence not only because they should reape a plentifull haruest of their seed so sowne in heauen but also because God 2. Cor. 9. 6 8. was able to returne vnto them such sufficient plenty of temporall blessings that they might still abound vnto euery good worke So that Gods earthly and corporall benefits which he hath promised to those that serue him may serue as strong though not the strongest reasons to make vs diligent in all Christian duties For howsoeuer carnall and worldly men are to be condemned who stand most affected to temporary rewards enquiring who will shew them any good and what profit there is in seruing the Almighty Mal. 3. 14. when any man perswadeth them vnto it yet Gods owne children though they are chiefly to regard spirituall grace and heauenly glory may haue in performance of their duty some respect to earthly benefits and incourage themselues in Gods seruice in hope to receiue such a proportion of them as will stand with their spirituall good and eternall saluation to which end God hath promised them §. Sect. 3 That by a godly life Gods sauing graces are much increased in vs. The second sort of the benefits of this life are Gods spirituall graces all which are much increased by a godly life And first heereby our faith is much confirmed and increased by our frequent performing the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse For as often Acts doe confirme and increase an habit and both our bodily strength and all faculties of
sinnes whereby the conscience would be defiled And so hauing nothing to lay to our charge or to accuse vs of before God sauing humane frailties and infirmities for which we haue as it were a pardon of course sealed by the blood of Christ the conscience becommeth peaceable and speaketh nothing but good and ioyfull things vnto vs testifying the remission of our sinnes our reconciliation with God and that we and our workes are accepted of him So that if with vprightnesse of heart we will serue the true Melchisedech in the duties of a godly life he will be vnto vs not onely a King Heb. 7. 2. of righteousnesse but also a King of peace For dying for our sinnes and rising againe to iustifie vs he hath at his departure left this rich legacy to all his true Disciples Peace I leaue with you may peace I giue vnto you The Ioh. 14. 27. and 16. 33. which is not to be esteemed a gift of small value seeing as the Apostle telleth vs it passeth all vnderstanding being one of those fruits wherein Phil. 4. 7. the Kingdome of heauen and our euerlasting happinesse is begun in vs in this life for as he saith The Kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but Rom. 14. 27. righteousnesse and peace and ioy in the holy Ghost The which may effectually mooue vs to all Christian and holy duties of a godly life seeing these first fruits of heauenly ioy are incomparably of more value then a whole haruest of all earthly happinesse euen in their present worth as bringing with them more sound comfort and contentment more durable and lasting ioy and also because they are sure euidences and earnest-pennies of our heauenly Inheritance and full fruition of euerlasting blessednesse §. Sect. 7 That a godly life causeth constancy and perseuerance vnto the end The fifth benefit which we shal receiue by a godly life is that if we once with a firme resolution earnest indeuour set our selues to serue please God we shall continue in this estate notwithstanding our manifold infirmities and corruptions which make vs daily prone to fall into sinne For they who are once receiued into couenant with God haue not onely the gracious promise of the remission of their sinnes but also haue the meanes offered vnto them yea wrought in them by God of vnfained repentance whereby turning vnto him from their sinnes and renewing their faith which is the condition of the couenant in the assurance that they are all pardoned in Christ they may with peace and comfort proceed againe in their course of godlinesse as if they had neuer failed in it nor gone astray Neither doth the Lord onely as a gracious Father prouide fit nourishment for his children to preserue them in their health and strength but like a skilfull and wise Physician soueraigne medicines to recouer them when they are sicke and weake and not onely affoordeth vnto them meanes to keepe them whole and sound but the precious Balme of Gilead the blood of Christ applyed by faith and the salue of all sores of sinne vnfained repentance to heale them when in the spirituall conflict they are hurt and wounded The which he proudeth for them and as it were putteth it into their hands by his earnest exhortations O Israel turne vnto the Lord thy God for thou hast falne by thine iniquity Take Hos 14. 1 2. vnto you words and turne to the Lord Say vnto him Take away all iniquity and receiue vs graciously And againe As I liue saith the Lord God I haue Ezek. 33. 11. no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turne from his way and liue Turne ye turne ye from your euill wayes for why will ye dye yee house Ier. 8. 5 6. of Israel Yea he is displeased with them and sharply reprooueth them if they neglect this medicine when he offereth it vnto them that they may be cured Why is this people slidden backe by a perpetual backsliding they hold Ier. 31. 20. fast deceit they refuse to returne no man repented him of his wickednesse saying What haue I done c And if thus they are not moued to returne his bowels are troubled and yearne with compassion as the Prophet speaketh and he is sorry that they sorrow not as wee see in the example of our Sauiour Christ who wept ouer Ierusalem because they would not make vse Luk. 19. 41. of the acceptable Day whilest it lasted that they might repent and so escape Gods imminent Iudgements Yea he doth not so leaue them but effectually worketh in the hearts of his faithfull and chosen Ones this repentance Act. 5. 31. which he requireth for he giueth repentance to the house of Israel Ezek. 36. 26. Zach. 12. 10. he taketh away their stony hearts and giueth them hearts of flesh hee powreth the Spirit of grace vpon the house of Iudah and causeth them to bewaile their sinnes The which may be vnto vs a singular incouragement in our Christian course when as wee are assured that notwithstanding our many frailties and infirmities wee shall not be cast off and though we haue many foiles and fals yet we shall not lie still and perish in our sinnes seeing the Lord giueth vnto all his that feare and serue him the grace of vnfained repentance so as they rise againe and recouer their former estate of holinesse and withall his wonted grace and fauour as though they had neuer sinned and with it their wonted peace of conscience and ioy in the Holy Ghost §. Sect. 8 Of the benefits which a godly life bringeth at the houre of death And these are the benefits which accompany a godly life whilest we continue in the world the benefits which it bringeth when by death we are to depart out of it are also great and inestimable For when all worldly blessings faile and like miserable comforters leaue and forsake vs when being in greatest agony and distresse wee stand in most neede of helpe then the consolations which it bringeth doe exceedingly cheere and refresh vs. For the good Spirit of God which hath ruled and guided vs throughout the whole course of our liues doth not leaue and forsake vs at the houre of death but then especially doth accompany and assist vs and the more our afflictions and griefes abound the more it causeth our consolations to abound also For it sealeth in our hearts and consciences the assurance of the pardon and remission of all our sinnes and saith vnto vs as sometimes Christ to the sicke of the palsie Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are Matth. 9. 2. forgiuen thee It incourageth vs against the feare of death by assuring vs that it hath lost its sting and therefore though like a serpent it still hisse yet it is not able to doe vs any hurt It causeth the beames of Gods loue to shine cleerely in our hearts by which they are so warmed and cheered that the
occurrent The which ioy far exceedeth all the ioyes of the world For they satisfy not but leaue the soule empty so that the ioy of one pleasure doth but stirre vp the appetite to hunger after another which if it should not be inioyed leaues nothing but sorrow behind whereas this as our Sauiour speaketh is a full ioy in the fruition of God partly in sense and feeling according Iohn 15. 11. to that of the Psalmist O taste and see that the Lord is good Psal 34. 8. and partly in the assurance of faith which maketh vs reioyce in expectation of full fruition Worldly ioy is short and momentany like the crackling of thornes vnder a pot which causeth a suddaine blaze as suddenly Eccles 7. 6. goeth out but the ioy of the Spirit is lasting and permanent and Iohn 16. 22. no man as our Sauiour saith can take it from vs. That consists in eating and drinking and the inioying of such company as are like our selues but this in the soules fruition of her beloued Spouse whose loue is Cant. 1. 2. better then wine seeing his fauours are so full of rauishing delight that the heart is not able to containe them as we see in the example of the Spouse in the Canticles who being brought by her Bridegroome into his banketing house was so filled that she euen surfeted of his delicacies which forced her to cry out Stay me with flaggons Comfort me with Cant. 2. 4 5. apples for I am sicke of loue Of which sweete and gracious entertainment of the faithfull soule the Psalmist also speaketh They shall bee abundantly Psal 36. 8. satisfied with the fatnesse of thy House and thou shat make them drinke of the riuer of thy pleasures Finally the ioy of worldlings accompanieth their prosperitie but when the euill day commeth it leaueth and forsaketh them and is turned into sorrow and griefe of heart but the godly reioyce euen in their tribulation affliction in their assurance of Gods loue and because they know that they shall worke together for their good these light and momentany afflictions causing vnto them a farre Rom. 5. 3. Rom. 8. 28. 2. Cor. 4. 17. Iam. 1. 2. most excellent and an eternall waight of glory They account it all ioy as the Apostle Iames speaketh when they fall into diuers tentations knowing that the tryall of their faith worketh patience And when they are persecuted for righteousnesse sake they being blessed in their sufferings reioyce Matth. 5 10 11 and are exceeding glad because their reward is great in heauen And thus the Apostle saith that the Thessalonions receiued the Word in much affliction 1. Thes 1. 6. and with ioy in the holy Ghost And that the Hebrewes tooke ioyfully the spoyling of their goods knowing themselues that they had in heauen a better and induring substance The which ioy is a supernaturall gift and fruit of the sanctifying Spirit which all cannot attaine vnto but the faithfull only and therefore the Apostle prayeth for the Romans that Rom. 15. 13. the God of hope would fil them with all ioy and peace in beleeuing that they might abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost It is a priuiledge wherin wicked men haue no portion but is peculiar to the godly in whom the Kingdome of God is begunne in this life which none inioy but they Matth. 6. 33. which seeke also his righteousnesse seeing it consisteth not onely in peace Rom. 14. 17. and ioy in the holy Ghost but also in righteousnesse as the Apostle speaketh and therefore seeing those things cannot bee separated which God hath conioyned we must labour after righteousnes if we would be partakers of this ioy vnto which if we doe attaine we shall assuredly be filled with it For if the Apostle reioyced in it as in his Crowne Phil. 4. 1. 1. Thes 19. 20. and ioy when he had beene a meanes of conuerting others and bringing them into the way of truth and righteousnesse and if the Apostle Iohn reioyced so greatly that he professeth he had no greater ioy in any outward Ioh. Epist 2 4. and Epist 3. 3 4. thing then when he saw his children walking in this way then what inestimable ioy must this needs cause vnto vs when our selues by walking in the way of holinesse and righteousnesse doe attaine vnto the assurance of our owne happinesse §. Sect. 5 The last speciall priuiledge is Christian liberty The last speciall priuiledge peculiar vnto the godly which the Spirit bringeth is Christian liberty whereby being freed out of the hands of all Luk. 1. 74. our spirituall enemies we serue the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse without feare and so attaine vnto the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God seeing his seruice is perfect freedome and haue power and dominion ouer all the creatures so as wee may vse them to all purposes both for necessity and comfort hauing full right and interest in them by our adoption The which priuiledge also is a fruit of the Spirit according to that of the Apostle Where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty And is deriued vnto 2. Cor. 3. 17. vs when as the holy Ghost by a liuely faith applyeth vnto vs the vertue and efficacy of Christ Iesus his death and satisfaction whereby this liberty was first purchased for vs in which respect our Sauiour also challengeth vnto himselfe this power and prerogatiue of setting vs at liberty as being our alone Redeemer who hath deliuered vs out of the hands of all our spirituall enemies If saith he the Sonne shall make you free you shal be free Ioh. 8. 36. indeed We were subiect to the wrath of God but our Sauiour hath freed Gal. 3. 13. vs from it and by satisfying his Iustice hath reconciled vs vnto him We were vnder the curse of the Law but hee hath freed vs by being made a curse for vs. Wee were the wretched slaues of Satan and in the state of death and condemnation but hee by his death hath destroyed him that had Heb. 2. 14 15. the power of death that is the deuill that he might deliuer them who through the feare of death were all their life time subiect to bondage Wee were seruants to the world and the vassals of the earthly Mammon but Christ hath ouercome the world both for himselfe and all his Elect Ioh. 16. 33. and so set vs at liberty out of this thraldome Wee were the seruants of sinne which made vs slaues to all other enemies and obeyed it in the wicked lusts thereof for as our Sauiour saith Hee that committeth sinne Joh. 8. 34. is the seruant of sinne For his seruants wee are whom wee obey whether of sinne vnto death or of obedience vnto righteousnesse And though with the Rom. 6. 16. Iewes wee were ready to boast of our freedome and as it were out of our store to promise liberty vnto
of the fruits of this hatred from which diuers impediments doe arise that hinder many in the wayes of godlinesse And these are either internall in the minde and iudgement or externall in the words and actions of the former sort there are two notable hinderances and discouragements The first is the false iudgement and erroneous opinion of wicked worldlings shewed in their hard and harsh bitter and vncharitable censures of the godly whereby they condemne their persons and all the good graces of God in them with all the vertuous actions which are done by them as euill and faultie Their feruencie of deuotion in religious exercises they iudge to be grosse hypocrisie their wisdome and Christian prudence they repute wilinesse and subtilty their simplicity folly their zeale 2. King 9. 11. madnesse their patience Stoicall apathy and stupidity their frugalitie niggardly auarice their bounty lauish wastfulnesse their Christian forbearance and long-suffring pusillanimity and base cowardize their seuerity cruelty their resolute and absolute obedience to Gods Law they condemne as no better then rebellion against Princes and Magistrates their contempt of the world and earthly vanities is reputed by them cynicall and melancholike sottishnesse and folly In a word if wee set our selues seriously to please God nothing that wee can doe will please the world but all is taken at the worst and euen our best vertues will be branded and blemished by their vniust and vncharitable censures as blameworthy and vicious But that this may not discourage vs in our Christian courses let vs consider that this hath beene euer the portion of all Gods children to be condemned by his enemies Thus the Prophets were censured to be opposites to Princes and States the Apostles to be seditious Matth. 11. 18. persons and brochers of nouelties Iohn the Baptists abstinence Matth. 26. 8. and austerity was counted deuillish Maries loue and bounty reputed needlesse and lauish wastefulnesse Yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe escaped not these false and vniust censures but had his best actions blemished with the malicious censures of wicked men His miracles done by the vertue of his diuine nature were deemed to be done by the power of Beel-zebub the prince of the deuils For his benigne sociablenesse he was iudged a boone-companion and a friend to Publicanes and sinners and all his gracious words wrested and misconstrued vnto the worst sense which wit and malice could giue vnto them And therfore if we will walke in their steps we must looke for the like measure which both our fellow seruants and our great Lord and Master haue found before vs. Againe let vs remember that we stand or fall to our owne Master and as it will doe vs little good to be approued of the world when he condemneth vs so as little hurt to be condemned of the world when God and our consciences doe approue and iustifie vs. Finally let vs know to our comfort that the day will come when all these vniust censures and sentences pronounced by the mouthes of malicious men shall be wholy reuersed and all the sorrow and griefe caused by them swallowed vp with rauishing ioy when we shall heare that last sentence of approbation pronounced by our Lord and Sauiour Well done good and faithfull seruant c. applauded Matth. 25. 23. by the acclamation of all the Saints and Angels §. Sect. 5 Of worldly contempt vnto which the godly are liable The other impediment whereby the world laboureth to discourage all that in the sincerity of their hearts feare and serue God is to Mal. 3. 17. haue them aboue all other men in greatest contempt and basest esteeme For whom God prizeth as his choysest Iewels the world vilifieth as abiects and the refuse of all things whom the Lord honoureth with the glorious titles and priuiledges of his owne children and heires apparant to his heauenly Kingdome the world despiseth as men vnworthy to liue in any humane society And no sooner are they admitted into that holy and happy communion with God and fellowship of his Saints but presently worldly and wicked men shunne them as vnworthy their company For as the vniust man is an abomination Pro. 29. 27. to the iust so he that is vpright in his way is abomination to the wicked And this was that stumbling blocke which being cast into the way hindred many of the Rulers from following Christ and from imbracing and professing that truth of which their consciences were conuinced because they feared lest hereby they should impeach their reputation and expose themselues to the contempt of their consorts louing the praise of men more then the praise of God This kept the parents Ioh. 12. 43. Joh. 9. 23. of the blinde man from confessing Christ and iustifying his miracle because the Iewes had decreed that if any man did confesse that Iesus was Christ he should be put out of their Synagogue and banished from their societies and publique assemblies Which impediment if we would remoue wee must learne to esteeme basely of the worlds estimate and neither to thinke better of our selues when it honoureth vs nor worse when it vilifieth and despiseth vs. To which purpose let vs consider that when wee are for righteousnesse sake most contemned in the eyes of the world wee are most magnified in the eyes of God and contrariwise when we haue most the applause of men in our euill courses we are esteemed of God most vile and abiect according to that of our Sauiour That which is highly esteemed amongst Luk. 16. 15. men is abominable in the sight of God Let vs remember that we cannot immoderately affect the applause of men and maintaine faith and a good conscience For as our Sauiour demandeth How can yee beleeue Ioh. 5. 44. which receiue honour one of another and seel not the honour that commeth from God onely That we can neuer hold out constantly in our course of Christianity vnlesse we can with the Apostle esteeme it a very small 1. Cor. 4. 3. thing to be iudged of mans iudgement and can be content with him by honour and dishonour euill report and good report to goe forward in the duties 2. Cor. 6. 8. of a godly life which if wee performe with neuer so much diligence zeale yet if therein we doe not ayme chiefely to please God more then men we shall not be the seruants of Christ but of the world Gal. 1. 10. seeing we will be willing to lay aside our profession and holy practice when the world censureth and condemneth them Let vs know that it will little auaile vs at the day of death or iudgement to haue had the approbation and applause of men when as God and our owne consciences shal condemne vs nor be any cause of griefe at that day when we call to minde that for the pleasing and honouring God in all Christian duties we haue displeased the world and brought our selues into contempt with men when as the
our persecutions we may well suffer with greater patience and comfort if we consider that they are not punishments for our sinnes from all which Christ hath fully freed vs but the trials of our faith which being approued shall be crowned with euerlasting ioy and happinesse In which regard we haue cause greatly to reioyce as the Apostle Peter speaketh 1. Pet. 1. 6 7. though now for a season if need be we are in heauinesse through manifold tentations that the triall of our faith being much more precious then the gold that perisheth though it be tryed with fire might be found vnto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ So the Apostle Iames My Iam. 1. 2 12. brethren count it all ioy when ye fall into diuers tentations of which hee afterwards rendreth this reason Because blessed is the man that indureth tentation for when he is tryed he shall receiue the Crowne of life which the Lord hath promised to them that loue him And indeed what a wonderfull priuiledge is this and what great cause doth it minister vnto vs of comfort and reioycing when we consider that the Lord hath vouchsafed vnto vs this great honour to suffer afflictions for his owne glory and the furthering and assuring of our saluation when as he might haue iustly inflicted them and farre greater vpon vs for our sinnes and to the burthen of our sufferings haue deseruedly added the vncomfortable waight of shame and infamie All which blessed priuiledges we shall lose and run into the contrary mischiefes and euen hellish condemnation if we shrinke from our profession and holy practice for feare of persecution and refuse to suffer for his sake who hath suffered so much for vs. For he that loueth his life shall Ioh. 12. 25. lose it and hee that hateth his life in this world shall keepe it vnto life eternall And againe If any man come to me saith our Sauiour and hate not his father Luk. 14. 26 27. and mother and wife and children and brethren and sisters and his owne life also namely when they come in comparison with Christ and when the loue of both cannot stand together hee cannot be my Disciple And whosoeuer doth not heare his crosse and come vnto me cannot be my Disciple §. Sect. 3 That our Sauiour hath foretold these persecutions Secondly let vs consider that our Sauiour Christ hath long agoe foretold that whosoeuer wil be his Disciples must suffer in this world troubles and persecutions and that those who will attaine vnto heauenly happinesse must trauaile vnto it by that afflicted way which himselfe and all his seruants haue gone before them If any man saith he will come after mee Luk. 9. 23 24 25 let him deny himselfe and take vp his Crosse daily and follow me For whosoeuer Mat. 16. 24 25. will saue his life shall lose it and whosoeuer will lose his life for my sake shall saue it Now what is a man aduantaged if he gaine the whole world and lose himselfe or be cast away So the Apostles first offered the Crosse vnto them who Act. 14. 22. would afterwards weare the Crowne and haue told vs before-hand that by many tribulations we must enter into the Kingdome of God And that whosoeuer 2. Tim. 3. 12. Luk. 14. 27 28 c. will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution And therefore our Sauiour Christ seriously aduiseth vs that before we take vpon vs the profession of Christianity we first sit downe and cast vp our accounts examining our selues whether we can be content to suffer with him that wee may afterwards raigne with him and to indure afflictions and persecutions in this world that wee may eternally triumph with him in glory and happinesse in the world to come Now what more faire dealing could be vsed then to tell vs before-hand what we must trust to and before hee entertaine vs into his seruice to acquaint vs thorowly with our worke which he requireth of vs before we can receiue our wages which wee expect from him If indeed hee had allured vs to serue him by promising that we should inioy pleasures riches and honours in the world and that for his sake wee should bee well accepted and fauoured of all men wee should haue had great cause of discouragement when wee should come so farre short of our hopes and finde nothing in the world but crosses and afflictions paines for pleasures pouerty for riches and for glory shame and disgrace for then seeing his promises faile in things that concerne this life we had cause to doubt of those that respect the life to come But now contrariwise seeing he hath foretold that we must in this world suffer troubles and persecutions and be hated of all men for his Name sake and that afterwards when by our patient suffering we haue approued our saith and loue towards him he will crowne these his graces in vs with ioy and happinesse in the life to come our afflictions and persecutions should not daunt and dismay vs yea rather wee should reioyce in them as the infallible signes of our future hopes for hauing found Christs Word verified in the first part of his predictions respecting our afflictions and persecutions we may vndoubtedly expect that we shall finde it also true in that part which concerneth our crowne of victory and heauenly ioyes which after our momentany sufferings we shall euerlastingly possesse according to the gracious promises which he hath made vnto vs. §. Sect. 4 That worldly persecutions cannot greatly hurt vs. Thirdly let vs incourage our selues against these persecutions because they cannot greatly hurt vs for first they are either light and easie if they be long and tedious or short and momentany if they be sharpe and grieuous For God hath graciously so composed and framed our natures that their frailty and weakenesse cannot hold out to beare any heauy burthens and hath made them mortall and of such short continuance that their afflictions and grieuances must needs be short and momentany Secondly the greatest persecutions which rage and malice can raise against vs can but reach vnto the body and onely extend to the time of this life but cannot at all hurt the soule nor hinder our happinesse in the life to come In which respect our Sauiour incourageth vs against these persecutions Feare not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soule but Mat. 10. 28. rather feare him who is able to destroy both body and soule in hell Thirdly these persecutions cannot much hurt vs because our gracious God keepeth and preserueth vs so as we cannot faint and fall and pulleth out their sting so as they shall neuer be able to giue vnto vs any mortall wounds And therefore as the Apostle Peter exhorteth Let them that suffer according 1. Pet. 4. 19. to the will of God commit the keeping of their soules to him in well-doing as vnto a faithfull
place of paines labour and reserueth his Sabbath of rest for the world to come after wee haue finished our worke Heere we must worke in his Vineyard and the night of death must come before wee shall bee called to receiue our wages Heere wee must keepe our markes and there inioy the riches which wee haue gotten by our spirituall trading Heere wee must fight the Lords battels being couered with sweat and blood and there wee shall obtaine the Crowne of victory Finally heere wee must trauaile like poore Pilgrims and then take our ease when we haue finished our iourney and are come safe to our heauenly home Fourthly let vs call to minde the labours of the Saints which haue gone in this way before vs and especially of our Sauiour Christ himselfe who trauailed for our sakes not onely vnto wearinesse and sweat but euen vnto blood and not foolishly imagine that wee may take our ease and yet come timely and safely to the end of our hopes seeing our Sauiour hath told vs that the Kingdome of heauen suffereth violence Mat. 11. 21. and the violent take it by force and that wee must striue to enter into the Luk. 13. 24. straight gate with all earnestnesse and constancie because many shall seeke to enter and shall not bee able Lastly let vs consider the punishments denounced against those who idly sit still and refuse to trauell in the wayes of godlinesse For it casteth them into a deepe sleepe whereby all the operations of Gods graces are hindred yea it emptieth the sluggard of them all like him who wanting meate is famished with hunger According to that of Salomon Sloathfulnesse casteth into a deepe sleepe and Pro. 19. 15. the idle soule shall suffer hunger And as it depriueth him of all grace in this life so also of glory and happinesse in the life to come for hee onely must haue the wages who hath laboured in Christs Vineyard And contrariwise plungeth him into euerlasting death and destruction For the sloathfull and vnprofitable seruant must bee cast into outer Mat. 25. 26 30. darkenesse where shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth And therefore if nothing else will mooue vs yet at least let vs take some paines in Gods seruice which being small and momentany shall bee euerlastingly rewarded that wee may escape the endlesse paines of hell For if wee cannot for a little while indure the kindly heate of the Sunne how shall wee bee able to suffer the skorching and tormenting flames of hell fire If wee are impatient of a little sweate and labour in the duties of Christianity and of our callings let vs thinke with our selues how much more intolerable the endlesse torments of the damned will bee vnto vs. §. Sect. 8 Of wearinesse in well doing and how it hindreth vs in all Christian duties And first that which proceedeth from an ill disposition of the body The last impediment which hindreth vs in the duties of a godly life is wearinesse in well-doing which proceedeth from a twofold cause The first outward which is the ill disposition of the body to the performance of Christian duties proceeding either from externall causes as hunger thirst heate cold excessiue labour in worldly imployments and such like or from inward infirmities and diseases which make the body faint and feeble weake and vnable to take any paines in the duties of a godly life For seeing the soule vseth the body as its organ and instrument for the performing of all outward actions and seeing there is such sympathie and familiarity betweene them that they mourne and reioyce together hereof it must needs follow that when the body is indisposed to the duties of Gods seruice the soule is thereby vnfitted for them when the body is feeble and faint the faculties of the soule cannot be strong and vigorous in their actions and operations When the body is weary and full of paine it must needs affect the mind and much distract it in all good duties And finally when the toole and instrument is blunt and dull vnfit and vntoward the most cunning Artificer must needs be hindred and much faile in his curious workemanship For the remoouing of which impediment wee must vse our best indeuour that wee may haue a sound minde in a sound body and to vse all good meanes of diet and Physicke for the preseruing or recouering of our health and to auoid intemperance insobriety and excessiue labour about worldly imployments Yea wee must auoyd immoderation and excesse euen in the exercises of mortification as fasting watching and the rest For as luxuriousnesse delicacie and sloth doe weaken the body for want of exercise and intemperance and insobriety doe make it feeble and vnfit for any imployment so likewise the contrary extremes and ouer-rough and rigorous handling of it doe exhaust and consume the spirits and make it so weake and faint that it is ready to sinke vnder euery burthen And therefore wee must carefully obserue the meane and auoyd both extremes especially that vnto which our corrupt nature inclineth and carryeth vs whether it bee to sensuality which pampereth the body with excesse or will-worship Col. 2. 23. and superstition in not sparing of it which is not much lesse dangerous then the other although it bee nothing so common and ordinary For as if we would make speedy iourneys our Horse must neither be pampered nor starued seeing by the one he is made either resty or out of breath and by the other so enfeebled that hee will not be able to beare vs so is it with our bodies which carry our soules and therfore they must be vsed with like prudence and prouidence §. Sect. 9 Of wearinesse in well-doing arising from the auersenesse of our wils vnto good duties The second cause is internall which is the ill disposition of the minde and will being auerse vnto all good duties and vertuous actions and prone vnto all euill delighting in worldly vanities and pleasures of sinne and dis-affecting and lothing spirituall exercises as being wearisome and tedious difficult and troublesome to our corrupted nature The which is a notable impediment to our well proceeding in the wayes of godlinesse for either this vnwillingnesse causeth such wearinesse that it will make vs either not to enter into the Christian course or soone desist and returne againe into our former wayes of wickednes sensual delights or else it will make vs vnsettled and vnconstant in all good duties doing them onely by fits and flashes when the good mood of deuotion commeth vpon vs and neglecting them when other things which better please vs come in the way or finally it quencheth our zeale and feruour of loue vnto the duties of Gods seruice so that wee performe them weakely and wearily coldly and formally with much dulnesse and spirituall deadnesse The which impediments if wee would auoyd wee must labour and striue against this wearinesse and faintnesse in well-doing and indeuour all wee may to take
necessity of their body naturall life as some small refreshings in their Inne that they may afterwards with more strength cheerefulnesse proceed in their iourney But the prime and principall ioyes which rauish their soules with inward delight are secret vnknowne to all sauing those who haue tasted of them So that they may say to worldlings of their ioyes when they obiect vnto them their sadnesse want of mirth as our Sauiour of his meat We haue ioyes which you know not of seeing our ioy is to doe the will of our heauenly Father For it is that hidden Manna which our Sauiour giueth them to eat like Ioh. 4. 34. Apoc. 2. 17. that new name written in the white stone which no man knoweth sauing he that receiueth it It is a beauty which cannot be beheld with carnall eyes and a sweetnesse which is not rellished by a common prophane taste seeing it is of an holy spirituall nature so that when Christians are so afflicted in their outward estate that they seeme vnto naturall men to haue no cause at all of reioycing they may notwithstanding say with the Apostle We haue wherof we may glory through Iesus Christ in those things Rom. 15. 17. which pertaine to God §. Sect. 4 Of the diuers obiects of our spirituall ioy Now the obiects of this Spirituall ioy are diuers the chief and principall is God himselfe his Christ and holy Spirit for he being the summum bonum the supreme ioy and chiefe blessednes the fruition of him and his grace and the bright beames of his face and fauor shining vpon vs must needs be the matter cause of supreme and vnspeakable ioy And this is that ioy and reioycing in the Lord which is in the Scriptures not only permitted to the faithfull restrained vnto them alone as their peculiar and proper right but enioyned required as being a duty which we owe vnto God the performance wherof maketh them happy blessed Let not saith the Lord the wise man glory in his wisdome Ier. 9. 24. nor the mighty man in his might nor the rich man in his riches But let him that glorieth glory in this that he vnderstandeth and knoweth me c. So the Psalmist exhorteth to this ioy Reioyce in the Lord O yee righteous for praise is Psal 33. 1. comely for the vpright Of which he propoundeth himselfe for an example My soule shal be ioyfull in the Lord it shall reioyce in his saluation And the Psal 35. 9. Apostle likewise Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord. And againe 2. Cor. 10. 17. Phil. 4. 4. Reioyce in the Lord alway and againe I say reioyce In which himselfe tooke such abundant comfort and contentment that he resteth in it alone and renounceth all other ioyes God forbid that I should glory in any thing sauing Gal 6. 14. in the Crosse of Iesus Christ by whom the world is crucified vnto me and I vnto the world And if we thus reioyce in the Lord we shall not only be blessed and happie in our worke but also in our wages and reward which is promised vnto all those who make him their chiefest ioy according to that of the Psalmist Delight thy selfe in the Lord and he shall giue thee Psal 37. 4. the desires of thine heart So the Lord promiseth to the faithfull that they should delight themselues in him and hee would cause them to ride Esa 58. 14. vpon the high places of the earth and feede them with the heritage of Iacob c. And as the Faithfull doe thus reioyce in God himselfe so also in his Word and workes For when they finde sweetenesse and comfort in the spirituall Manna and food of their soules then they feede vpon it with ioy and delight So Dauid I haue reioyced in the way of thy Testimonies as much as in all riches Thy Testimonies are my delight Psal 119. 14 24 103 111 162. and my councellors Thy Testimonies haue I taken as an heritage for euer for they are the reioycing of mine heart How sweet are thy words vnto my taste yea sweeter then hony vnto my mouth I reioyce at thy Word as one that findeth great spoyle So also they reioyce in Gods workes of creation and gouernement admiring Gods infinite wisedome power and goodnesse that shineth in them Especially in that great worke of our Redemption by Iesus Christ and in the application thereof vnto themselues by the inward and effectuall working of Gods Word and holy Spirit Thus also doe they reioyce in the life of fayth and in the fruits thereof their sanctification and new obedience and in the testimony of a good conscience according to that of the Apostle Our reioycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and 2. Cor. 1. 12. godly sincerity not with fleshly wisedome but by the grace of God wee haue had our conuersation in the world Yea the faithfull with holy and heauenly mindes doe reioyce in earthly and temporary blessings in their houses and lands wiues and children meates and drinkes pastimes and recreations For to this end God hath giuen them neither is there as the Wise man speaketh in them any other good but for Eccles 3. 12 13. a man to reioyce in their fruition and to doe good in his life and that euery man should eate and drinke and inioy the fruit of his labour it is the gift of God And againe Behold that which I haue seene It is good and comely for one to eate and to drinke and to inioy the good of all his Eccles 5. 18 19. labour that hee taketh vnder the Sunne all the dayes of his life which God giueth him for it is his portion Euery man also to whom God hath giuen riches and wealth and hath giuen him power to eate thereof and to take his portion and to reioyce in his labour this is the gift of God §. Sect. 5 That the Christians chiefest ioy is Spirituall and wherein it exceedeth all other ioyes So that no lawfull ioy either spirituall or temporall inward or outward is wanting vnto the righteous who desire to please God But yet their chiefe and principall ioy in which they exceede all others is spirituall in the assurance of Gods loue and their owne saluation and that both in respect of the excellency perpetuity and propriety of it For first it excelleth all other ioyes being of a spirituall and diuine nature and as it were a short prelude to that heauenly and harmonious ioy of which wee shall haue the full and euerlasting fruition in the life to come For so the Apostle teacheth vs that the Kingdome of God that Rom. 14. 17. is the first beginnings of it in this world consisteth not in meates and drinkes but in righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost and they who haue here tasted these first beginnings of this heauenly ioy shall haue the perfect fruition
our temporary and momentany seruice with the eternall wages of heauenly happinesse how vngratefull are we if wee think that the short time of our liues is too much to be spēt in his seruice who will reward our soone ending workes with euerlasting wages Let vs consider that seeing the seruice of God is of greatest worth and excellency most profitable and onely necessary it is therefore ridiculous folly not to giue it precedency and the first place but to preferre before it euery base trifle yea things not only of no value but also such as are hurtfull and pernicious as the seruice of Satan the world and our owne lusts for the contemptible wages of earthly vanities Let vs remember that wee haue onely the time present for our imployment for the time past is irreuocable and the time to come vncertaine which if we promise vnto our selues we incroach vpon Gods right seeing he hath giuen vnto vs no promise of it and sinne presumptuously by taking vpon vs to dispose of that which is onely in the hand of God That now is the acceptable time and day 2. Cor. 6. 2. of saluation and we doe not know whether it will last till to morrow which if it be once past can neuer be recouered And therefore whilest it is called Psal 95. 7 8. to day let vs hearken vnto his voyce calling vs to repentance and inuiting vs to serue him and not harden our hearts Let vs seeke the Lord whilest hee Esa 55. 6 7. may be found and call vpon him whilest he is nigh for if he depart in displeasure wee may long seeke him with the Spouse in the Canticles ere wee Cant. 5. shall finde him Let vs consider that the leading of a godly life is necessary to saluation for that time which remaineth after our calling For as the Apostle saith Without holinesse no man shall see the Lord. And what Heb. 12. 14. madnesse then is it to cast a thing of such moment vpon all vncertainties for it is vncertaine whether thou shalt liue one day longer if thou liuest vncertaine whether thou shalt haue the meanes whereby thou maist bee inabled for Gods seruice and vncertaine if thou hast them whether God will giue thee will to vse them or power to profit by them for the obtaining of spirituall life and strength whereby thou maist be inabled to serue him seeing hee may iustly refuse to bee serued by thee in thy decrepit age when thou hast no strength to serue the diuell the world and thine owne lusts because thou hast refused to doe it in thy flourishing youth and chiefe strength To which purpose one saith When the wicked man will he cannot because when he could hee Cum vult improbu● homo non potest quia quādo potuit noluit Ideo per malum velle perd●dit honum posse August in Epist. Iohan. Serm. 36. Chrysan 2 Cor. 11. Homil. 22. would not and so by an ill will hee loseth the power of well-doing But thou wilt obiect as he of whom Chrysostome speaketh That God hath giuen many this priuiledge to confesse him in old age To which I answere with him What then will hee therefore giue it thee Thou wilt say Perhaps he will Why saist thou perhaps Doth it but sometime happen Consider that the matter in deliberation is the saluation or damnation of thy soule And therefore thinke with thy selfe of the contrary and say But what if God will not giue it Doest thou yet say And what if he will giue it God grant he may But sure for all that to lay hold on the time present is both more certaine and more profitable For if thou now beginnest thou art sure to get all that thou desirest whether God grant or deny the former priuiledge whereas if thou delayest euen for this oftentimes thou shalt not receiue it When thou goest to the warres thou doest not say There is no need for mee to dispose of mine estate perhaps I shall returne Neither doest thou say when thou doest deliberate of marriage I will chuse a poore wife for many in so doing haue growne rich beyond all hope And going about to build an house thou doest not say I will lay a rotten foundation for many houses haue stood though their foundations haue been weake And yet when thou hast to deale about the saluation of thy soule thou layest hold on things more rotten and puttest all vpon vncertainties saying It often happeneth it sometimes commeth to passe It is indeed vncertaine wilt thou say but I trust to Gods mercy for he is gracious This I know and acknowledge but know this also that this mercifull God hath suddenly taken away when they least expected it such as thou art who haue posted him off with vaine delayes And what though much time bee granted thee how art thou sure that thou shalt amend and become better c For how doest thou thinke that God will then assist thee seeing thou hast so often refused his helpe when he hath graciously offered it or how canst thou hope of any ability without it Now thou canst not walke in the wayes of godlinesse and how wilt thou be able to doe it hereafter when thou art more inthralled vnto Satan more loaded with the intolerable waight of thy multiplyed sinnes more clogged and hampered fettered and hindred with the strong chaines of thy corruptions which are growne habituall and haue doubled their force with long custome Finally when as thou art more impotent to shake them off and mortifie them by reason of the infirmities of old age Yet say thou couldest then serue God in all Christian duties yet how much time in the meane while hast thou mis-spent not onely without gaine but to thy incomparable losse which if it had been imployed in Gods seruice would haue added much inestimable riches to the euerlasting recompence of heauenly rewards And therefore when as God requireth at our hands that present seruice which is due vnto him let vs not put him off like banquerupts and ill debters with words and promises that wee will pay all hereafter seeing the longer we liue the more we spend on the stocke and lesse able we shall be to make satisfaction But seeing he requireth present and constant seruice not because hee needeth it but that hee may take occasion thereby of crowning our workes with richer rewards let vs not bee so great enemies to our owne preferment as by deferring and scanting our worke to cause the Lord to abate our wages but laying aside euery waight Heb. 12. 1. and the sinne which doth so easily beset vs let vs as the Apostle exhorteth runne with patience the race which is set before vs. §. Sect. 8 The Conclusion of the whole Treatise And thus haue I through the gracious assistance of Gods holy Spirit finished this long worke for which his blessed Name be praised and magnified And haue not onely described the godly life in all the parts
the face p 183. l. a fin 4. r. stopped from him p. 188. l. 9 r. whole rayes p. 189. l. 4. r. our selues p. 197. l 27. 28. r. tentations p. 200 l. a fin 4 r. and stales of p 203. l. the last r. good guidance p 267. l a fin 6. r. misbeseeming p. 28● l. 2. r. diffention of p. 214. l 21. r. to be preferred p. 350. l. 35. r with naming p. 373. l 31 r. no more p. 374 l. a fin 4. r. yet by this p. ●83 l. 36. r. compounding of contentions p. 429 l. ● r. could not make p 433. l. 25. r. furious anger p 438. l. 22. r. constancie is p. 454. l. 11 12. r. faith inableth vs. p 468. l. 10 in Marg r. leiunare vigilare p. 469. l 24. in Marg. r. Ad fariam p. 493. l. 1. r. sealed vnto vs. p 496. l. 1● ● our soules p. 497. l. a fin 5 r. mulation and. p. 498. l. 22. r. gratefulnesse p. 499. l. 8. r. disburse p. 506 l 1. r. when as thereby p. 544 l. 2 r. to purge out p. 552. l a fin 4. r. at all times p. 568. l. a fin 8 r. also profitable p. 608. l. a fin 3. 2. r. that is contained p. 614 l. 32. r. of examination p. 616. l. 9. r. of examination p. 643. l. a fin 3. r by disgesting p 644. l. 1. r. For as there p. 714. l. 7. r. often actes and l. 13. r. acts of sinnes and l. 29. r. faith is assured of p 716. l. 31. r. cleansing p. 727. l. 40. r. owne proprieties p. 729 l. 38. 39 c. reads vs for them our for their and we for they p. 749. l. 27. r. will soone p. 804. l. 10. r. comfortable vse p. 812. l. 4. r. our market p 821. l 1. r. not worthy p. 841. l. 9. r. their intrusion p. 848. l. 11. r. most deiected p. 855. l. 4. r. seruice and liue as p. 878. l. 2. r. getting and l. 25. r. Is it not A TREATISE OF SECVRITIE Diuided into two Bookes THE FORMER INTREATING OF CARNALL SECVRITIE AND HARDNES OF HEART Wherein the Nature Originall and Causes of it are displayed and described the Kinds of it distinguished and the Differences betweene them expressed the Signes whereby it may be knowne shewed with the Preseruatiues and Remedies whereby we may be kept from falling into this dangerous disease or recouered if we be alreadie fallen THE LATTER INTREATING OF SPIRITVALL AND CHRISTIAN SECVRITIE Wherein is shewed what it is the Causes and Effects of it and the Meanes whereby it may be obtayned and preserued Published as an Antidote against the dangerous Securitie of these last Times By IOHN DOWNAME Batchelar in Diuinitie and Preacher of GODS Word ZEPH. 1. 12. And it shall come to passe at that time that I will search Ierusalem with Candles and punish the men that are setled on their lees that say in their heart The Lord will not doe good neither will doe euill LONDON Printed by WILLIAM STANSBY 1622. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE Sir Henrie Mountagu KNIGHT Baron of KIMBOLTON Viscount MANDEVILLE Lord President of his MAIESTIES most Honorable Priuie Counsell And to the truely Noble and Vertuous Lady the Lady MARGARET his Wife J. D. wisheth all temporall happines with the confluence of all spirituall Graces in this life and eternall blessednesse in the life to come Right Honorable and my most honored Lord and Lady AS long peace and prosperitie are the common causes of carnal securitie and hardnesse of heart so these the vsuall forerunners of fearefull punishments seeing in this desperate Disease which we may fitly call the stone in the heart more gentle Medicines will not effect the cure For when mens hearts are come to brassy or flinty hardnesse nothing will melt them without some extraordinary worke of the Spirit but the fiery furnace of Affliction nothing will bruise and breake them but the heauy hammer of Gods dreadfull iudgements And this is manifest in the examples of all Ages which are left vnto vs in the Scriptures to giue vs warning As of the old world Sodome and her bordering Cities and of the Israelites Gods owne best beloued people all which as they were lulled asleepe in the Cradle of carnall Security with the pleasing and bewitching tunes of peace and pleasure so were they alwayes when they least suspected it surprised vpon the suddaine in their lethargie of sinne with some remarkable plagues and punishments And therefore considering with my selfe that our long peace plenty and prosperity hath infected the most that liue in our land with deepe security and retchlesse carelesnesse and caused them to dreame that this Sun-shine will neuer set I could not chuse but suspect and daily expect the neer approching of the other and that the darke night of affliction and calamity will ere long surprize vs vnlesse the loude cries of Gods Ministers doe speedily awaken vs out of our lethargie and moue vs to meet the Lord and preuent his iudgements by turning vnto him in vnfayned repentance In which regard being appoynted and called by God to bee one of his though least worthy watchmen whose office requireth that we should not only our selues keep the spirituall watch but also as much as in vs lyeth awaken others I thought it my duty by giuing warning of these approaching dangers to rowze vp as many as I could out of this sleepe or rather lethargie of securitie And because my voyce were farre too weake though I could as the Lord requireth lift it vp as a Trumpet to be heard of all the people of this Land I haue indeuoured to conuay the sound thereof as it were by these paper Pipes euen vnto the most remote places and to those especially where the liuely voyce of Gods faithfull watchmen is rarely heard either because the meanes of their maintenance by sacriledge and Church-robbery or symonicall fraud is taken away or because dumbe or idle and sleeping watchmen doe hold their places without any care to performe their duty as neither keeping the watch themselues nor being either able or willing to keepe others waking The which my labours I haue made bold to dedicate vnto your Honors To you my Lord I confesse not without some presumption as not being hitherto known vnto you yet herein not vnexcusable in that it proceedeth from a desire to shew how much I honor you for your profession and protection of Gods true and sincere Religion in that Honourable place vnto which God hath called you your loue to Learning and fouour towards the Learned But to you Noble Ladie in whose notice and vndeserued respect I haue beene more happie I haue deuoted this poore part and mite of my worthlesse Workes that liuing in these Paper Monuments as it were in my longest lasting posterity I may euen after death hath imposed silence still testifie vnto the world mine humble loue and vnfayned thankefulnesse for your manifold and great fauours vouchsafed vnto me and how
left to doubting Finally that our Sauiour Christ continually maketh intercession for vs pleading the all-sufficiency of his merits and satisfaction for our iustification and saluation So that though we sinne yet this is our comfort that we haue an Aduocate 1. Ioh. 2. 1 2. with the Father to pleade our cause euen Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes §. Sect. 6 That pride is a singular impediment to a godly life Besides these there are diuers other carnall corruptions which are notable impediments vnto a godly life The first wherof is naturall pride whereby we haue an high conceit of our selues and of euery shadow and shew of grace in vs and imagine that we haue so much already that wee need not to labour after more nor to vse any meanes for inriching of our selues with those graces whereof we stand in need An example whereof we haue in the Pharises who thought they saw when as they were blind Ioh. 9. 31. and therefore neglected the light of truth when as the Sunne of righteousnesse did shine vnto them In the Laodiceans who thought that they were rich and had need of nothing when as they were poore and miserable Apoc. 3. 17. blind and naked In the young Iusticiary who thought hee had done all Math. 19. 20. that God required of him and attained vnto perfection when as yet hee had done nothing but still remained the slaue of sinne loaded with corruptions and imperfections And in the Corinthians who proudly conceited that they were rich and raigned as Kings not needing any helpe from the blessed Apostle when as still their lusts raigned in them The which aboue all other corrupt affections hindreth vs from proceeding in the wayes of godlinesse First because God denyeth to giue his graces to such as being proudly conceited of themselues doe not acknowledge that they stand in need of them and consequently would neuer be thankfull for them For he exalteth the humble and pulleth downe the proud he filleth the hungry with good things and sendeth the full empty away Secondly Luk. 1. 52 53. because they thinking that they haue enough already neuer labour after more but neglect all good meanes which God hath ordained for the begetting and increasing of all his graces in vs and hauing scarce set one foot forward in the course of Christianity yet conceiting that they haue almost attained vnto the Goale of perfection that they haue far outstripped all others they stand still as though there were no need of further proceeding Now if we would remooue this impediment wee must mortifie our carnall pride and labour after true humility that hauing a sight of our sinne and misery we may not content our selues but labour to come out of this wretched estate Wee must striue to see and feele our wants and weaknesses that so we may vse all good meanes wherby they may be supplied and we strengthened and the imperfections of our best actions that so we may labour after more perfection Wee must acknowledge our selues wounded and sicke with sinne that Christ may heale and cure vs weake in grace that he may strengthen vs naked that Apoc. 3. 18. he may clothe vs poore that he may inrich vs blind that hee may giue vs sight and lost in our selues that he may saue vs. The second is vniust anger frowardnesse and peeuishnesse which for the time take away the vse of reason and much more the power of Religion making vs vnfit to pray reade or heare the Word of God or to performe any other Christian duty either vnto God our neighbour or our own person and for the time so stifleth and hindereth the operations of Gods Spirit and the holy motions of his Diuine graces dwelling in vs that scarce any semblance or shew of them will appeare either to others or our selues as wee see in the example of holy Dauid who in his cooler thoughts and well tempred affections made some scruple of cutting Sauls garment but being inraged 1. Sam. 25. with fury resolueth on the death not onely of Nabal who had offended him but of his whole family who were innocent and rather on his side then against him For the remoouing of which impediment it is necessary that we doe not giue way vnto this vnruly passion according to the Apostles admonition but that we subdue and keepe it vnder not suffering the Sunne to goe downe on our wrath vsing all good meanes to mortifie Eph. 4. 26. these carnall passions and to attaine vnto the contrary grace of meekenesse and gentlenesse of which I haue written at large in my Treatise of Anger §. Sect. 7 That sloth and lazinesse is a great impediment to a godly life The third corrupt affection is sloth and lazinesse which maketh men loth to take paines in performing the duties of Gods seruice as watchfulnesse Prayer hearing the Word Meditation and the rest For many hauing proceeded thus farre as to approoue these things in their iudgements and haue some desires and faint resolutions to put them in practice yet when they finde that they cannot be done without some paines being of an idle and sluggish disposition they are presently discouraged and hauing found the treasure which is sufficient to make them rich chuse rather to remaine in their spirituall beggery then they will spend any sweat in digging for it Needs then must this be a great impediment to the duties of a godly life when as men are so luskish and lazie that they flie that labour which is required vnto them Needs must such sluggards liue in pouerty seeing it is onely the hand of the diligent that maketh rich And Pro. 22. 13. farre off are they from atchieuing any excellent worke who sit idly still pretending excuses of danger and difficulty and that there is a Lyon without ready to slay them if they goe out into the street which impediment if wee would remooue let vs consider that howsoeuer such men please themselues with idle desires yet they wil nothing profit them vnlesse they shake off their sluggishnesse and vse all diligence in their spirituall businesse So Salomon saith that the soule of the sluggard desireth and hath nothing Pro. 13. 4. but the soule of the diligent shall be made fat Yea such desires if wee rest in them doe hurt rather then helpe vs according to that of Salomon The desire of the slothful killeth him for his hands refuse to labour Secondly let Pro. 21. 25. vs consider that by this sloth we doe not only not get any spiritual riches but also that wee consume that we already seeme to haue For as our Sauiour speaketh in another case He that gathereth not scattereth abroad Mat. 12. 30. in which respect Salomon maketh that man which is slothfull in his worke 〈…〉 er to him that is a great waster Thirdly let vs consider that the Lord Pro. 18. 9. hath appoin 〈…〉 this world to be a