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A84690 The spirit of bondage and adoption: largely and practically handled, with reference to the way and manner of working both those effects; and the proper cases of conscience belonging to them both. In two treatises. Whereunto is added, a discourse concerning the duty of prayer in an afflicted condition, by way of supplement in some cases relating to the second treatise. / By SImon Ford B.D. and minister of the Gospel in Reading. Ford, Simon, 1619?-1699. 1655 (1655) Wing F1503; Thomason E1553_1; ESTC R209479 312,688 666

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body to mind us that wee are men and our breath is in his hand and his onely So in our graces wee are apt to bee lifted up with high actings of grace and in such elevations wee despise our weake brethren and censure them if they walke not up even with us or if they faile especially in any grosser way wee forget against the rule that wee also may be tempted Gal. 6. 1. 2. Dependent not only upon publique ordinances where God hath promised his especial quickening p●esence and where the Saints have used to find recovering remedies under spiritual decaies but also on private communion even with weaker brethren and principally upon himself in the use of both Psal 30. 6. 3. Wathfull lest the strength and lustre and glory of our graces be lost through our default lest the Divel throw in diversions from unnecessary things to coole and abate our zeale in those that are more necessary and momentous lest the world and its allurements inveigle us into its embraces and like Sampson in Delilahs lap we lose our strength by our dalliances Lastly lest by the misemploying gracious opportunies wee suffer our graces to starve for want of that food that should sustain them our strength is maintained by watchfulnesse Rev. 3. 2. 6. Oftentimes a contemptible temptation foyls a strong grace for want of preparation managing it in a regular way drawing st●ength in from God c. Souldiers say 't is not good to despise an enemy be he never so smal and contemptible such many times do much mischiefe by being neglected 7 Many times decays may not be the abatements of the actings of grace but of our own over-actings It may be I may have had more seeming zeal formerly then now I seem to have But was not my zeal more rash heady inconsiderate more mixed with selfe c. and so heightened by its imperfections and blemishes If so to continue it so were to grow in sinne rather then grace So my faith in some of its preceding actings might possibly make too bold with God depending on him besides the rule of his word and it may be occasioned by a neglect of means c. there might be much of presumption in it Now it may be I trust God and am as zealous for him as formerly but those graces act more regularly and not with so much disorder and distemper as formerly So in repentance and godly sorrow for sinne many times worldly and selfish considerations mix with it to heighten it many times the shame and disgrace that accompanies sinne the afflictions and crosses that attend it may bee some of those things whose influence may heighten it c. 2. The habits of grace may not only stand at their former pitch their bow may not only abide in strength but may grow more radicated and be more strengthened and disposed for more operations under the most sensible decays of the actings and operations of them As many times in the winter a mans hands and feet may be benummed with cold when his stomack and intrals are most hot Now to understand this you must know 1. That there is an universal habit of grace allow me the expression which is called the new man the new creature c. And this universal habit of grace is like the habitual life and heate that is in the heart of a living body There are also special habits of such and such particular graces which symbolize with the heat and life which is in the particular members of the body 2. Now as in the natural body if the heart be strengthened in a disease though the out most members languish the patient is in a hopefull way of recovery and never the nearer death for losing the flesh off his ribs and face so if the heart of grace the main frame of grace in the soul be strengthened the decayes in some actings of particula graces matter not much 3. The increase of any one particular grace strengtheneth and so farre improveth in a sort the general habit of grace though other particular graces increase not As the addition of a bucket of water to the Thames makes the whole body and bulke of waters so much the bigger And the tree is greater by the growth of one branch A man is more gracious by the growth of humility meekness though it may be he is not more believing c. 4. There are particular habits of grace and they in themselves never decay but they may be obstructed and clogged as to their operations Indeed no gracious habit can properly be said to grow or decay but only with respect to the acts that flow from it For the nature of these divine qualities is not as that of moral habits which are gotten by acts and lost by the disuse of them these being infused of God and never to bee lost cannot decay for then were they to bee lost also all corruptiblenesse tending to corruption That Souldier that may be beaten from his first ground if the assault bee followed may be routed and utterly beaten out of the field Now that these things are so appears because do but remove the obstructions and grace in such persons will act as vigorously as ever it did Samsons strength appeared not to be abated by his binding for when he was loose hee laid the Philistines heaps upon heaps as ever hee did before 5. Thou mayst be strongest many times in that particular grace where thou thinkest thou art weakest As that part of a garrison may be best lined with men where the bulwark is lowest So the poor man that cryed out Lord help my unbelief had then a greater faith then he was aware of And the poor woman of Canaan when she dared not claim a childs portion but ranks her self with the dogges yet relying still on Christ for an answer of grace was so eminent in faith that Christ himself admires her for it Mat. 15. 28. O woman great is thy faith There is a mystery of godlinesse in this which is not easily understood but by those that have their spiritual senses exercised by frequent combats and conflicts CHAP. XLIV A Case how a Saint may in the midst of the most sensible actuall decays know whether the Habits of grace grow or no. Quest I come now to the second Question last propounded How a man may know whether he grow in grace notwithstanding his present supposed sensible Decays Answ I answer 1. In some general rules for the managery of this examination Those are 1. Take heed you enquire not too rigorously after a too suddain improvement If a man cast his grain into the ground it were unreasonable he should complain it is dead because it appears not above ground the next day or if he should walking in his field every day complain to day that it is grown nothing since yesterday because he cannot discerne it Had the man patience to look on it at convenient distances of time experience would
2 Cor. 1. 9. upon the pronouncing whereof the Law lays heavy fetters and chaines of darkenesse upon the soul that keep it shut up to the hope that afterwards by the Gospel is revealed 3. The proper impressions of this condition must needs be fearfull And thence is this Spirit said to be the Author of bondage to fear And is therefore called the Spirit of fear 2 Tim. 1. 7. This is that fear which the Author to the Hebrews 2. 15. tells us that men may be all their lives long enslaved unto til Christ deliver them A fear of Death i. e. of eternal death the wages of sinne A fear that gives a convinced sinner a tast of hell here it is the very anguish and smart of the arrows of God sticking fast in Job 6. 4. a mans spirit the very wales and furrowes which when the back of conscience is plowed up with the knotted whips of its own guilt do fester and stinke and corrupt as David Psal 38 5 expresseth it that is make the spirit of a man a burthen to it selfe and that intolerable This is the condition which the Apostle expresseth and I am to handle under the notion of the Spirit of bondage i. e. That Work of Gods Spirit whereby he convinceth and terrifieth sinners in order to conversion 4. And when he doth so in the fourth place we are said to receive him that is to be through free grace the patient and submissive subjects of this influence of his bearing the indignation of the Lord because we have sined Lam. 3. 29 against him and laying our mouth in the dust if so be there may be hope until God shall command deliverance for us and pull us out of the horrible pit and out of the deep mire and clay and break those chains of hell and snares of death wherein we are fettered and bring us forth into a large place 5. The Subjects of this Work of the Spirit the Apostle expresseth under the pronoun Ye including the generality of believers among the Romans and in them the generality of beleevers among all Nations in all times these works being of a common nature to all the people of God there being nothing in any one Saint which renders him a more incapable subject of this work then in another and nothing in the Word elsewhere to priviledge one above another herein 6. And lastly the time of the Saints being under this work the Apostle plainly expresseth not to be then when by faith they could call God Father the influence of the Spirit of Adoption enabling them so to do delivered them out of that fearful condition whence it follows that the experience they had of this work was before their Adoption and relation to God thereby as before I have declared And so much shall suffice for this first Chapter the clearing of our Subject And this done wee will proceed to the handling of it in the following Chapters CHAP. II. Wherein the first grand Thesis or Proposition concerning this state of Bondage is explained I Shall begin with this state as a work of the Spirit of God laying this Thesis or proposition for a foundation of our following discourse That those convictions shakings and terrours The first Proposition or Thesis of conscience under which unregenerate sinners suffer bondage when the Law chargeth them home with the guilt of sinne and apprehensions of wrath are ordinarily the works of Gods blessed Spirit I say ordinarily because sometimes Satan brings or at least keeps souls and those the souls of Gods Elect too under this bondage He promiseth liberty when he tempts to sinne but brings into bondage when he accuseth for sinne And therefore we must make a distinction between the bondage which the holy Spirit and the bondage which the wicked spirit brings into or keeps under First therefore There is a bondage which admits and is mitigated by the conjunction of hope of liberty and works towards a deliverance and there is a bondage that excludes all hope and possibility in the apprehension of a sinner of ever being removed A bondage in which the chains with which the conscience is held and fettered are of the same nature with the Devils bonds of death chains of darknesse and despaire Now such as these the holy Spirit knits not except the despair be partial and bear relation only to humane helps and means of escape and such a despair is in every soul that makes out after Christ those that we speak of now Satan lays on the conscience these must needs call him Father because they are black dismal apprehensions like him Such he wrought in Kain and Judas that made the former desperately blaspheme the mercy of God the other de●perately to lay violent hands on himselfe and to those despairing terrours is a soul given up when justly excommunicated and therefore is said to be delivered 1 Cor. 5. 5. to Satan for that censure binding sinne upon a man and God having promised to ratifie that sentence in Heaven the Devill the tormentor is at hand to load such a soul with Matth. 16. 19. terrors enough if he do not contemptuously go on adding sin to sin but be any way sensible of it he endeavors to drive him to despair whence the Church is bidden upon this knowledge of Satans devices to comfort such a man and confirm comfort to him by absolution lest he be swallowed up of sorrow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 2. 8. 11. These satanical terrours have sin in them and ther●fore as such can no way be the effects of the Spirit of God Indeed the Spirit of God may cause them inchoativè by discovering to a man his sinne and misery but the improvement of these discoveries in such a measure and to such an issue is the work of Satan who in this as in things of other nature can counterfeit the very Spirit of God and so perswade a poor soul that 't is his duty to refuse comfort and despair of Salvation 2. I say these terrours when they are wrought by the Spirit of God are in unconverted sinners which makes a farther distinction between the worke of the Spirit of God and the spirit of Satan herein the Devil makes it most of his businesse to trouble converts As for unconverted wretches that are his fast enough he seldome disturbes them as a Souldier will not disturbe his own Quarters but his enemies a Magistrate will not if he be well advised harrasle his own dominions But the Spirit of God speakes terrour to the Consciences of unregenerate sinners to whom it belongs when he speaks Law he speaks to them that are under the Law Rom. 3. 19. 3. But therin is a difference also If the Spirit of God lay the conscience under terrours it is for conversion they are not penal only but medicinal also they are one sort of Gods ●ods by which he brings men within the bonds of the Covenant Ezek 20
spirits into a temper inconsistent with their gravity nay youthful l●sts if they will yet take no denyal must fight for their quarters and d●ive the new intruders out of doors Friends I appeal to your own spirits how many Parents and Masters are there in the World who if their childr●n and servants begin to entertain any rel●gion scruples though never so necessary are apt to lay to them as Pharaoh to the Isr●elites ye are idle ye are idle the●efore you are so inquisitive after those things Go the●efore now and work Exod. ●5 17. 18 And thus becomes the word of our Saviour ver●fied upon them the cares of this wo●ld and the deceitfulnesse of riches choak the seed and i● becometh unfrui●ful Mat. 13. 2● Thus a●… the nai●s which the Spirit fastens by the Master ●f ●ssemblies driven out by others Eccles 13. 11 of the World● making How many pr●f●ne sc●ffers jear out such blessed guests out of the soul of those with whom they are familiar Lastly how many idle drunk●n c●mpanions drown the blessed convictions of the Spirit of God in themselves and ot●ers together with their own estates and parts in strong liquors Oh you that have often by scurrilous scoffe broken these bonds of the consciences of others take heed when the Spirit comes to fetter your own if ever you be so happy and that is somewhat rare to those that sit in the seat of the scornfull your bonds will be made strong Is 28. 22. You that to secure your selves from those motions have many a time made the Tavern your asylum your refuge I cannot say Sanctuary thinke when God shall give your consciences a commission to keep an Assizes in your souls you will not find so easie a discharge from its Court as from a drawers bar and a Vintners reckoning You have broken the Spirits prison once and again it may be and therefore take heed when he takes you next you 'l pay for all hee 'l lay you fast enough for flinching His own iniquities shall take the wicked and he shall be holden with the cords of his own sinnes Prov 5. 22. or I am almost affraid to read the next words v. 23. yet take them for your warning it may be it will be worse with you the spirit may leave you to die without instruction c. CHAP. VI. A branch of the fourth Caution of the preceding Chapter concerning over-hastening of comfort Wherein is also a case concerning measures of conviction and humiliation NOr are those impatient souls altogether blamefree who because they long for the peace-full fruit of the lips will not stay the ripening of it but greedily devour it green who though the spirit have them in cure and the necessity of their disease require their confinement to rules of Physick yet will be ruled by their own heads and adventurously break those bonds and cast those cords from them as grievous and unnecessary They Psal 2. 3. cannot endure to serve an apprenticeship under a Spirit of bondage and then be made free in his way and time but hastily lay violent hands on Christian liberty and are very angry though perhaps they more need it if a Minister do but mention a searching convincing truth which may reduce them to their Master again I have my self visited those ignorant souls upon their death-beds who have called out for nothing but comfort comfort when they might had they seen their own need have rather cry'd for conviction conviction Nay among some persons 't is as much accounted a solaecisme in Divinity to search any ones conscience as it is in manners to be iniquisitive into his secrets But beloved take this for a certain rule those that run away from a Spirit of bondage and will set up with a stock of comforts without his leave as too many do wil quickly break and turn arrant bankerupts in the matter of their spirituall condition Hee that beleeves makes not haste Q. But Sir how long will you have us continue under a Spirit of bondage what measures of humiliation are requisite to true conversion and sound comfort how many years must wee serve ere you will allow us to set up A. Truly friends it is past my Skill to determine precisely neither is it necessary I should The Lord knowes I could wish it were in my power to heal every conscience the first houre in which it is smitten But the Lord thinks not fit to deal so with many of his Saints and therefore I say there is danger lest wee snatch comfort before it is fit for us or wee for it And this is all that I desire to caution you against in this that hath been said But that I may not leave you altogether unsatisfied in this point and especially that I may wound no broken ones I shal give you some rules to judg when God gives you a manumission from the Spirit of bondage and by that you may guesse when you are too hasty 1. In generall As soon as the soul is brought to see a through necessity of Jesus Christ and accordingly to close with him with true Faith it may take comfort For certainly to such an one Christ belongs The waters belong to every one that thirsteth and they are in a blessed condition that hunger and Isa 51. 1. thirst after righteousnesse And to whomsoever Matt. 5. 6 Christ belongs immediatly comfort belongs as he that hath right to an inheritance hath right to all the incomes of it Gods Ministers are bound not to defer comfort one minute from a soul concerning whom they have but sufficient grounds in charity to believe in Christ Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith the Lord Is 40. 1. And Heb. 6. 17 18. the H. Ghost tells us that God intends comfort to all that fly for refuge to lay hold on the hope set before them 2. As soon as I am within any promises reach and compasse so soon belongs comfort to mee And that depends on the former Obj. But will not any troubled soul cry out for Christ and lay hold upon Christ in extremity A dying man will never dispute with himself whether he shall send for a Physician a condemned man upon the gallows whether he shall accept of a pardon and a drowning man whether he shall scramble up a rock if it be within his reach And is every such soul fit for comfort 2. A. I answer therefore more particularly 1. I ought not to refuse comfort when I find my soul weary of the bonds and fetters of sin as much or more then of the fetters of trouble and anguish for sinne Beloved when the chains of corruption are as grievous as pangs of conscience when I hate Satan as a tempter as much as I hate him as a troubler when I groan as much to be delivered from the body of death as from the weight of wrath then I am ripe for comfort But Rom. 7. 24 when I hear my heart cry louder Oh
work is called conviction and because the Spirit convinceth in a rational way all its acts of that nature are comprized in this Syllogism Every one that is in a state of sinne is in a state of wrath But thou sinner art in a state of sinne Therefore thou art in a state of wrath In this master-syllogism there are many others included but they are all in effect comments on or proofs of the particular tearms and propositions of this Sometimes it varies thus Every unjustified person every unbeliever every one in a state of nature every unregenerate person and lower every swearer sabboth breaker c. living in and allowing himself in such sins c. is under the curse or is a condemned person or is in a state of damnation c. But thou A. B. art such a person ergo thou art a condemned person c. But to be more plain and particular This work includes these several and distinct convictions 1. Conviction of Law The Charge 2. Conviction of fact or case The Indictment Evidence 3. Conviction of state The Sentence As also 4ly The proper consequents of these 1. Conviction of Law is no more then the illumination of the understanding in the truth of common Principles and Rules of Scripture which determine in general the state and condition of such as fal under them such as these Eph. 2. 3. By Nature all are the children of wrath Rom. 5. 18. By the offence of one death came on all men Gal. 3. 10. As many as are under the Law are under the curse Jo. 3. 18. He that believeth not is condemned already Jo. 3. 3. Except a man be born again c. Gal. 3 10. Cursed be every one that continueth not in every thing c. Rom. 1. 31. Those that do such things are worthy of death Neither fornicators nor idolaters c. 1 Cor. 6. 9. These and the like common truths when we give a fixed and firm consent unto this makes up the first part of the Spirits conviction of bondage because it is the Spirit of God that leads us into all truth Jo. 16. 13. and so into convincing truth This is the major of the former syllogisme and may be planted in nature or believed barely by an historical belief and may not affect or if it doe 't is but in general except it be farther backt by 2. Conviction of Fact This makes up the minor of the former syllogisme And this is a particular application of the Law to the person As if he should say Thou art the man of whom this Law speaks This fact thou hast done Psal 70. 21. and this sin thou art guilty of livest in this omission of duty this or that notorious actual commission thou art clearly chargeable withal This indictment conscience is called in to witnesse and this witnesse because it is sometimes asleep and sometimes blind and sometimes dead and sometimes bribed the Spirit enlightens and quickens and disengageth and makes it speak out to the case in hand This is that prick in the heart that Peter by the home-application of their sin to their consciences gave those Converts Acts 2. 37. He tells them ye have taken and slain and crucified that Jesus who is Lord and Christ and their hearts by a confessing guilty application say we are the men This is a cord that will hold it will bring the soul under some acknowledgments which it would not grant before but it is not yet a Spirit of bondage till the third conviction of state And this is the conclusion of the former syllogisme and the sentence in the Spirits legal processes against any soul And this results from the two former This is the work of the Judge the enlightened conscience in its judicial capacity This is attended with a large formality of circumstances As in every sentence the matter and manner of the suffering is expressed as to return to jayl and be carryed thence to the place of execution and there to be hanged or pressed or burnt or drawn and quartered c. So here the Spirit doth not barely say to the soul thou art a condemned creature but he enlightens the mind to understand in the most frightful appearances the nature of its misery He represents a curse hunting and power seizing and wrath rending a poor soul shews hell open and heaven shut the Devil tormenting and God deriding eternal life in eternal death without light tormenting heat yet gnashing of the teeth for cold a lake of fire and brimstone nay a running stream which the breath of the Lord for ever kindles Isay 30. 33. And assures the soul all this and inexpressibly more will be his portion to eternity if he continue on this side Christ the City of refuge 4. The consequents of all these must needs be 1. Soul-confounding horror This was the Jaylors case Acts 16. 29. He came in trembling to Paul and Silas This sentence works like the hand-writing upon Belshazar looseth the joynts of the loines and makes the knees smite against each other Dan. 5. 6. Or Habbakuks voice c. 3. 16. it makes the belly tremble and the lips to quiver and rottennesse enter into the bones c. And no wonder for it is the justice and wrath of an infinite eternal and Almighty God that he hath to encounter and can thy heart endure or thine hands be strong in the days that God shall deal with thee Ezek. 22. 14. This was it that made Christ himself sweat like drops of bloud Luke 22. 44. 2. Soul-distressing anguish By which the mind vexeth and feeds upon its own sad condition thus bound fast by horrour It is perpetually vexed with the representations of its misery it can take no comfort in the World that is not hereby imbittered As a condemned man eats and drinks and sleeps not for thinking upon the execution or if he do he finds no relish in those contents if he sleepe he can nothing but dream of the Gallowes and the hangman if he talk and converse with friends he is scarce present where he is scarce thinks what he saith Thus a soul under this binding sentence with David eats ashes like bread or rather bread like ashes mingles his drink with weeping Ps 102. 9. his life abhors bread and his soul dainty meat tasts no sweetnesse in any comforts they are all as Job saith like the white of an egge Job 6. 6. His words are swallowed up Job 6. 2. He sleeps it may be but he is scared with visions and terrified with dreams Job 7. 14. Speak to the man in this case of any diversions and you do but labour to dig a channel to let out the sea present him any of his formerly welcomest refreshments Prov. 26. 1. you are but like snow in summer and rain in harvest speak the most encouraging words to him that may be if you cannot speak a pardon he is in the case of the Israelites in
an hard matter to get out of this subject because I know there is nothing in this Gospel-surfeited age which damns more souls then a presumptuous and heady confidence of ignorant and besotted men that run away with a few shredds and odd ends of Gospell and build a general perswasion upon them that they are the persons to whom they belong and yet they never had any such work wrought upon them as may give any judicious Minister or Christian any grounds of hope that they are within a thousand leagues of the borders of the Kingdome of God CHAP. XVIII Some support to souls under this Spirit and satisfaction in a double case of Conscience HEnce also we may draw support to persons that are in this condition 'T is some comfort to a patient that he is in a way of recovery though he be not assured that he shall recover yet when he apprehends such symptomes upon himselfe as usually go before recovery in others how much are his spirits refreshed with this 'T is the comfort of a Traveller when he knows he is in the way to his journies end after long wandring in a wildernesse whereby he is encouraged to proceed though perhaps it be a very difficult passage rocky dirty uncomfortable every way in it self though his horse be dull or set hard in his pace the weather bad yet saith he I am in the way to my journies end and I may if I carefully observe directions attain it at last and this hope puts spirits into him whenever the difficulties that I have spoken of discourage him Now who ever thou art that art in a like condition though the way which the Spirit of bondage conducts thee in be attended with many difficulties discouragements yet cheer up thou art in an hopefull way to thy journeys end 'T is the way in which thou mayst arrive at the joyful liberty of the Spirit of Adoption Q. But I am before told that I may yet misse of the end and what comfort then can therebe in such a way wherein I may miscarry after I have gone through abundance of difficulties A. I answer True thou mayst yet there is much comfort or support rather Fr 1. Though thou mayst fall yet thou mayst not In thy former condition it was not so with thee The way thou wast in there was nothing in it but certain destruction that way led directly without all peradventure to the chambers of death Prov. 7. 2. 7. thou wast without hope Eph. 2. 12. Now this valley of Achor or trouble is the opening of a door of hope unto thee Hos 2. 15. 2. Thou art under the conduct of one whose discovery if thou wilt follow thou art assured not to fall away 'T is thy own fault if thou do so The Spirit that hath led thee so farre is an unerriug guide a faithfull conductor never any one miscarried that once came into this way but for neglect of his counsell and turning aside into by ways of his own Prov. 1. 32. 'T is the turning away of the simple that destroys them See also v. 33. 3. This fear is a good prognostick of thy successe therein A man that is suspicious asks many questions of all he meets and takes notice of their directions and thereby is preserved from mistakes Certainly fear of erring is a great preservative against it As on the otherside there is no more fearfull symptome of a dangerous Apostacy then self-confidenc● This had like to have undon Peter no wonder therefore if the Apostle Paul direct those that labour for salvation Mat. 26 33. to do it with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. And Solomon pronounceth a blessing on him that feareth always This fear is one great security against evil Prov. 14. 16. The wise Prov. 28. 14. man feareth and departs from evil 4. If thou continue in this self suspecting fear and follow God in the use of all his own ordinances if thou shouldest miscarry at last it would be a singular case Gods usual dealing with persons under such a work is otherwise I dare say very few if any that pursue their convictions so ever miscarry 5. There are some conjectural symptomes of a saving conviction whiles one is under it Qu. But what are those A. I answer over and above that fear before spoken of which indeed if it drive not from but rather spur on to duty is the better as I but now shewed likewise there may be a probable judgment made to another and possibly to thy selfe of the issue from these following notes I. If the sinnes a man is convinced of be not only actual but also and principally 1. Original when he sees not onely his actions damnable but his nature even before he had a being condemned when he complains not only or principally of such particular sins but alike or more feelingly complains under the body of death that he is possest withall For this man is most likely to be seriously converted from sinne who doth not onely aym at the branches or shrowds but lays the Axe of repentance at the very root To another who is convinced onely of the evill of one or two master sinnes though they may make a stir in the conscience for a while and that may drive the man to a wall so that he sees he must kill them or they will kill him and thereupon the man reformes and is taken notice of for a renewed man sinne will come in at a posterne door as fast as he drives it out at the great gate nay all his labour will be no other then Hercules his was about the many heads of Hydra as the Poets fancy they multiplying upon him as fast as he cuts them off It being proper to sinne when dealt with single crescere per damnum to gain by losing and grow by being cut down One particular sinne may destroy another For There is scarce a lust in a man but as it is contrary to grace so is it opposite to some other lust so that what Covetousness loseth commonly Prodigality gains and so vice versâ But if Original sin by such convictions be assaulted such a man goes a compendious way to a through Conversion he begins at the right end Indeed conviction of some actual sin usually begins this work but leaves it never it till it strike Original too 2. Not only open and scandalous but secret and of those especially Spiritual sins Many a man may be grieviously terrified under the guilt of such or such a notorious sin and forsake it and yet may not be really converted shame of the world disadvantage in point of estate or possibly the downright blowes of a powerful Ministry will not let him enjoy that quietly But when a mans conviction is deepest for undiscerned sins secret inward sins spiritual sins such as formality hypocrisie hardnesse of heart c. this is a good signe this conviction is likely to end in effectual conversion Because the grief and
Spiritual pride may undo a convinced soul It may make a man take that for the end which is but the way nay but the first step in the way Trouble of conscience for sin is a rare thing in the world and where it is wrought in the soul to any large measure especially it puts a great difference between man and man this difference a soul may apprehend too soon so as to be puffed up with the experience of such a work on his spirit Suppose of a crew of profane persons the conscience of one may bee troubled for his lewd courses and this trouble sticks close and drives him from his loose companions and to resolve upon a new course of life Now is Satan apt to strike in and blow up the heart with the thoughts of this work and the man by comparing himself with what he was and what his Associates still are is apt to think Sure now I am in a good condition for I have been troubled for my sins and forsaken my former wayes and therefore I am savingly converted and therefore I have ground to take comfort and apply Promises to my selfe and entertain no more doubts of my condition Here let me at least allude to Matth 12. 43 44 45. The unclean spirit may in some notorious lust or other be cast out and he is rest lesse till he have again recovered his possession and therefore waiteth a time till it be swept and garnished till a barren profession of Religion be taken up and pride make such persons carry it high this furnisheth a lodging for the Divel then he returnes but in another disguise such an unclean dirty spirit must never think to be harboured again in a garnished house therefore he may perhaps wipe his shooes at the door and under a pretence of holinesse or light may get a firmer possession An erroneous Divel in such a proud heart may get possession when a scandalous Divel cannot though afterwards he open the door to more scandalous and unclean then himself Neither doth such a frame of spirit only give advantage to Satan but it also puts a man into a condition incapable of further grace from God seeing he every where annexeth the Promises of grace to those whom he hath throughly humbled Psal 25. 9. Isai 4. 6 He giveth grace to the humble 7. Indiscreet handling by godly Ministers and friends As many a child that comes to the birth is spoiled by the indiscretion of the Midwife Now here are two miscarriages to be avoided A birth may be endangered by over-slacking or overhastning 1 An over-rigorous exacting of such and such 1. preparatory measures in all as in some or 2. such measures of preparation to grace as cannot be attained unto before grace 3. and of such dispositions to the least measure of grace as presuppose growth in grace So when I find a soul humbled and broken under the guilt of sin and the work by all likelihood is serious but failing in some formalities of what is ordinary and usual in others for here I must not think to fit every foot with one shooe if I should hide the Gospel which only converts as to the formal act of conversion from such a soul till I see conviction of sin bring a sinner to attempt self destruction c. because it brings some so far or till it shew it selfe in a floud of tears as in others or till it heighten his troubles into a kind of distraction as in others here I go besides the rule on this side Or should I require in that sorrow for sin a freedome from all self-respect a single aiming at Gods glory absolutely divided from a mans own good should I require that those breakings of heart which I discerne be derived from meer love to God and Christ c. tempers which must needs attend the discovery and enjoyment of Christ and that not only in truth and reality but in sense and evidence and such as all persons who are arrived to a great measure of the Spirit of Adoption do not find or at least very weakly in themselves here I should not only be indiscreet in expecting and requiring that from the Law which is not to be found but in the Gospel but occasion the damping and cooling if not utter quenching those blessed affections through despair of ever causing the stream to ascend so high and so furnish Satan and mans cowardly sloathful heart with matter en●ugh of temptation to Apostacy This is a great evil to detain a soul long in the passage from death to life Hos 13. 13. 2 An over hasty and inconsiderate application of comfort before the soul give evidence that it is truly and soundly humbled And this is overhastening the birth which occasions many distortions weaknesses and defects in the person so born into the new world and divers times exposeth the soul to eternal undoing seeing there are very few if any over early and abortive children but are still-born Here is to be considered that all Promises that concerne the Application of Comfort to us are conditional and we are not to administer it but only to capable Subjects So as I have shewed before Christ tyes his yoak and rest together and feeling and removing the weight of sin are in the same place conjoyned Mat. 11. 28 29 30. And the comfortable indwelling of the presence of God in any soul is conditioned with an humble contrite and trembling frame of spirit Isai 66. 2 And blessed are the Mourners for they shall be comforted Mat. 5. 4. Now certainly ere God will speak he will not onely find shewes of these tempers but realities and therefore a Minister who is Gods Deputy in dealing with such persons should labour to come neer him herein for how can Ministers keep to their commission if they loose where God binds 'T is true they are not bound to an infallibility of concluding that such a work is true but only to judg by the effects but when they have sufficient evidence to sway their judgement concerning the real conversion of any soul then to speak comfort is a duty Isai 40. 1. till then 't is a sin The way then how to deal with such persons is this We must search whether the trouble be real or counterfeit sleight or deep fowl or clean inflamed or not and accordingly either widen the wound more to make it capable of admitting a Tent or apply a lenitive plaister to allay the fire of it or a drawing one to fetch out the corruption or lastly an healing to close the Orifice And indeed whiles the trouble is meerly legal and from a Spirit of Bondage the main care and skil of a Minister or friend as to such a one ought to be to find out the mean between these two extremes the heightning the trouble so as to render the soul too superstitiously fearful to close with Christ and lightning or asswaging it so as to undo the soul by a lusory and unsound
of Gods love 't is certaine the Holy spirit is not the Author of this because the promise of peace belongs to none of this stamp Matth. 11. 28. Isa 57. 15 16. Matth. 5. 3 4. 8. c. Undoubtedly this assurance is from the spirit of errour a false light to lead into a bogg 2. That ordinarily hee thus testifies either in or after waiting upon God in some duty or other as in praying meditation hearing receiving the Sacraments By which testimony God seals to the dutifull attendance upon him in such waies Isa 57. 19. and 56. 7. Or 3. In such great and grievous temptations and darknesse of spirit wherein a man by the cunning of Satan hath so intangled all those evidences of grace and sanctification which hee might draw assurance from with sophistical evasions that they will not fasten any thing of comfort upon him Then when a man cannot untie those knots by which Satan hath entangled his spirit somtimes the spirit of God by such a sudden irradiation puts a soule upon an inartificial and illogicall way of solution enabling him to hold to his claime of Christ by a kind of resolute confidence though hee bee not able to prove it sound at present or answer Satans sophistry to the contrary as Alexander when hee could not untie the Gordian knot hewed it asunder with his sword And as that holy Martyr that answered all the Romish Doctours Sophistry by a fixed resolution of dying for Christ though shee could not dispute for him Now wee must take notice withall 4. That such testimonies of the Spirit do beget but an actual assurance during the present exigency or in order to some present designe that God is working thereby These are extraordinary dainties that God will not have us feed constantly upon A gleam Rutherf ubi suprà of light as one calls it in a dark night when a man cannot coast the Country and diseern his way by those marks which direct him at other times perhaps lightning from a thunder-cloud that comes just in the moment when a man is stepping into a pit that would swallow him up or to discover a cottage which he may turne into till the storme bee over c. Now a Traveller wil not depend alwaies upon such a guide but if hee can will learne out such way-marks for his constant direction as may bee standing assurances to him that hee is in the way and rather choose to travel by day when hee may see them distinctly Thus though Gods Spirit divers times takes this course to shine peace into our hearts upon unusual occasions immediately viz after extraordinary seeking God in duty under the immediate violence of some desperate temptation in which cases God hath sometimes condescended even to a kind of miracle as when he preserved the glasse from breaking which the troubled and almost despairing Gentlewoman threw against the ground making its breaking to pieces and her owne Mrs. Honymood damnation a like certaine or at the houre of death especially Martyrdome yet to take these for ordinary presidents and look for them constantly without endeavouring by standing evidences to make out an habitual assurance to our soules of our calling and election is a bold and presumptuous tempting of God And therefore 5 It is a fearful error of the Antinomians which teacheth us to reject the graces of sanctification from being grounds of our assurance whiles they tell us that they are all deceiving evidences because that were to light a candle to the sun they mean to the immediate testimony of the Spirit For certainly the testimony of the Spirit cannot bee without the indwelling of the Spirit and is accompanied alwaies with the leading of the Spirit See the connexion of these two in vers 14. 15 of this chapter compared Rom. 8. 14 15 compared And wee know that hee dwelleth in us and we in him because wee have received of his Spirit 1 John 4. 13. And John 14. 16 17 Christ promiseth them the Comforter but how shall wee know him might they say seeing the world as you tel us knows him not He shal saith our Savior dwel in you The in-dwelling therfore of the Spirit is an evidence of the truth and reality of the assurance that we have from the Spirit Hence are all those marks and signes that the Scripture every where holds out called fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22. so that though the Spirit testifie immediately yet it submits the trial of his own testimony to his works Nor is this any dishonour to the Spirit to be tryed by his works seeing our Saviour Christ was content to submit the trial of his Godhead to the evidences of his works John 14. 11. But more of this in the second way of the Spirits testimonie which is II. Mediately and that is twofold 1 Without Argumentation 2 With Argumentation but both from the Word 1 Without Argumentation The Spirit sometimes applies the word to the soule and enables the soule to close with it for comfort in some particular promise of Scripture wherein God speaks so patt to its case that it takes that word as a message from heaven and rests in it upon the very first apprehension of it And such is the peace that a soul gets from those promises that either expresse not any condition or else such a condition as the soul presently apprehends it self under as suppose thou art burthened for some sin hast prayed earnestly for pardon against it suppose it a sin of backsliding and whiles thou art praying for pardon or waiting upon God in his word a secret whisper of the Spirit casts into thy heart Hos 4 14. I will heale thy backslidings and love thee freely or suppose that Matth. 11. 28. Come to mee all yee that are heavy laden and I wil give you rest c. This is a direct testimony and must be understood under the former limitations of immediate evidence 2. With Argumentation when he testifies the truth of thy sonship by grace when he applies conditional promises and upon search enables thee to apply the conditions of them This is the usuall way for getting habitual assurance a reflected testimony from our owne graces which are the love-tokens of Christ to us and discover that love even when as to present influence hee is absent from us And thus doth the Spirit properly witnesse with our spirits as followes in the next verse In the other two hee witnesseth Rom. 8. 16. to our spirits in this properly with our spirits And there is as much difference between these as between the assurance that Jacob had of his Son Joseps life from the Word of his sonnes and from the Chariots that hee had sent for him Gen. 45. 26 27 28 when they only told him so hee was indeed overjoyed but was also even in a fainting condition through the strugling of fear with joy as the disciples at Christs resurrection Luk. 24. 41. But when he saw the wagons
long and after a few minutes more be spent it may be this night this hour the foot of death may tread me into the earth I carry a Jewel in this earthly Cabinet that is more worth then all the world If Satan lay hands on it I am infinitely miserable to all eternity and whether if I dye this night the divels may not come to fetch away my soul I know not O if I could dye into another world once and have hopes to live again and recover my condition if it proved worse then my expectation I might adventure one of those lives upon an uncertainty but when as I must dye into eternity that my Sun must set and never rise again that what is said of a war is more true of death that in it non licet bis errare that though the tree that is cut down through the sent of water may grow again yet when a man dyes he cannot live again in this world Job 14 9 10. 14 but must measure out either wo or happinesse by the minutes of eternity O what is it worth to have the Spirit of God testifie that we are his children new born to the Inheritance of the Saints in light O how precious a mercy is it to have the zeal and earnest of that Spirit to assure it beyond Question 2. I am assured of this also that without the witnesse of the Spirit you cannot so fully have your hearts untyed from wordly encombrances It is true indeed that a soul that hears of the excellency of Christ and the glory of those things that are within the Vail may be convinced by the Spirit of God to adventure all that he hath for them but 't is still with fear lest he should miscarry in the losse of both As a Merchant that is fully assured that there is Merchandise in the Indies that is more precious then those English Commodities that he adventures for it may be drawn to put his whole estate in hazard that he may make a voyage thither but still there are misgiving and distracting cares attend this adventure O saith he I have put all I have into such a bottom indeed if it return safe I may be a hundredfold gainer but sea and Pirates may rob me of all my hopes and then I am lost both in my present estate and future expectations So a man to whom the Gospel is preached upon the presenting Christ as infinitely precious to the soul may be brought to deny himself and forsake all to follow Christ out of hopes to enjoy him but 't is with much fear True saith he if I get Christ I am an infinite gainer But if Satan cheat me or if Christ will not entertain me then I am of all men most miserable I have lost all my comforts my portion of this life and eternity too And therefore till the soul be sure of Christ it ever casts an eye backward as Lots wife on Sodom though Grace check those fears and keeps the soul on in its course yet still I say it meets with many temptations to think upon its adventure especially if Christ frown a while and to wish that it were to do again and many sad str●glings of spirit it hath with these temptations 'T is an hard thing for a poor soul to adventure all the world and have nothing in hand for it but only to expect its returnes hereafter What sayes the worldling A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush and that Cardinal Give me my part in Paris and take who will my part in Paradise And as some say now as well as in the Apostles time Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall dye 1 Cor. 15. 32 and after death we know not where we shall fare better But a man that gets the witnesse of the Spirit is like one that adventures for a present Commodity a Commodity in hand a thousand times beyond his price or hath the earnest of his bargain put into his hand is certainly assured of the faithful delivery of the whole at an appointed time He never looks back upon his bargain so as to be tempted to repent it but rather as rejoycing that for so little he hath gotten so much See how the Apostle triumphs in this Phil. 3. 7 8. and 2 Cor. 4. 17. and those Saints Heb. 11. 9 26 35 and 10. 34. 3 I am assured also that you cannot be assured of your state of Adoption but by the Spirit of God The Arguments from which carnal men draw their evidences for Gods love how weak how fallacious are they God l●ts me thrive saith one therefore he loves me Ah fool so doth the Grazier fat his beast for the day of slaughter My conscience never troubles me saith another O mad man 't were thy happinesse if it did No more doth the man in a Lethargy complain of pain and yet he is the nearer to death for it But I live under the Gospel and go to Church c. Thou shalt lye the deeper in hell for that if it prevail not with thee to conversion But I pay every one his due So did many millions that are now in hel Heathens and Pharisees But God is merciful and I hope will have mercy on me at the last Though he be so he hath damned many millions in hell already that had as much confidence in his mercy as thou But I am not such or such a sinner So said the Pharisee Luke 18. 11. and yet was unjustified The Angels sinned but once and that it is likely in thought and are in hel and many thousands are there that have sinned far lesse then thou But Christ hath dyed for all men and so I have a share in his bloud O desperate Delusion Doth not Scripture say He laid down his life for his sheep and are all his sheep are not the most of men goats and shall be set at his left hand Might not all the damned in hel have hoped for heaven upon that ground as well as thou And are they not disappointed But I have gifts more then ordinary I can pray and expound Scripture and convert and build up others And yet thou maist be like sounding brass or a tinkling Cymbal 1 Cor. 13. 1 2. Those that are converted they seek Assurance in unlikely wayes too till they receive the Spirit of Adoption One resolutely chears up his heart and as it were enforceth himselfe to take comfort and to be at peace in the assurance of his good condition without following God in Duties and Ordinances for it Another begins to idolize his Duties c. and now sure saith he my estate is good for I hear attentively pray affectionately shed tears over my sins abundantly c. Another reasons himself into this perswasion fetching from the Word such and such grounds which he perswades himself suites his condition and thence concludes all wel And you shall see hereafter how fallible these are 3
the Doctrines of Faith c. which he had acquainted them withal from their first vocation but it includes even those Doctrines of comfort which precede in the number of those Truthes they being part of what Christ had told them 2 The Court of Conscience It will be needful having once verified the evidence by the test of the Word to lay it up against a day of tryal Divine Truths must be laid up in the heart for Direction and divine Experiences for Consolation in an evil day This Courts Recorder is Memory and its Records in such a day are of especial use and importance Records of Gods dealing with others formerly see Psalm 119. 52. I remembred thy judgments of old and have comforted my self i. e. Those judgements by which thou hast caused thy people to triumph over their enemies in former times So also of our own experiences see both together Psal 77. 5 6 The holy man had been utterly at a losse had it not been for this Recorder and yet it seemes he had been too to blame in the laying up his evidence so that it cost much search before he could find it I communed with my heart and my spirit made diligent search the Septuagint reads 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my spirit digged as we do for hidden treasure that must have much rubbish removed ere we can come at it But their sense is grounded upon a different reading of the word in the Hebrew Others read Scopabam I swept it seems by his carelesse keeping he had suffered his evidences to be thrown in●… dusty corner among waste papers and he was fain to sweep for them ere he could find them but however when he found them he made excellent use of them for by them he recovers strength to check his present unbelief I have considered the dayes of old ver 5. and I call to remembrance my song ver 6. I will remember the years of the right hand of the Most High ver 10. and I will remember the works of the Lord c. v. 11. And these remembrances prove a great strengthning to his Faith in that hour of temptation David hath some Psalms to bring to remembrance Psalm 38 and 70. And Christ hath left Ordinances for this end The Word 2 Pet. 1. 12 13. and Sacraments Do this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 22. 19. in remembrance of me And there is the same use of the communion of Saints which is the special means of keeping fresh one anothers experiences by conference and communication Therefore it will be a very good course to charge memory to record carefully all the visits and smiles and embraces of Gods Spirit together with all the passages which may confirm the truth of them afterwards As we do in Evidences concerning a temporal estate we record the Sealing dayes and the Witnesses and the considerations of the conveyance So in this case bid memory put down At such a time in such a place upon such a Prayer Sermon when I was in such an exigency and there was but an haires breadth between me and despair such a sad cloud was scattered the Spirit of God by such a Promise gave me as much comfort and joy as my heart could hold and I then set to my seal that God is true by believing Joh 2. 33 And I was confirmed in the reality of these experiences by a following assistance against such corruptions or strength against such temptations or power more then ordinary to walk in wayes of spiritual communion with God c. This course being carefully taken it cannot be imagined how great an awe it will cast upon a mans jealous and suspicious heart that it will scarce dare to entertain a doubt against an Evidence so clear and so carefully recorded Except Satan can imbezel the Records or corrupt them by the concurrence of our treacherous memories in some considerable passages 't is in vain he knows to commence a fresh sute against the soul The soul in such cases will as the Psalmist have recourse to those Records and clear his Title against such disturbances Psal 77. suprà CHAP. XXVII The Means to strengthen these Evidences IN the second place 2 Strengthen your Evidences daily 1 By strengthning Ordinances 1 The Word heard read meditated upon all these in their proper place and time are to be used with care David alwayes keeps up a fainting Assurance with a word My soul melteth for heavinesse strengthen thou me according to thy word Psal 119. 28. This is my comfort in my affliction for thy Word hath quickned me Psal 50. Vphold thou me according to thy Word c. Psal 116. Promises are the food of Faith Cordials of Hope the crutches of Patience the principal feathers in the wing of Prayer Threatnings caution us against those courses as will weaken Assurance Precepts direct us in such wayes as will continue and improve it Examples are so many ruled cases as they say in Law which may adde light to a man when there is need to search records as before said The whole Word is the fewel that maintains the fire of Assurance and Meditation blowes up the coals 2 Prayer And this applies the Word it is a souls perpetual plea against all litigious molestations If Satan or a mans own heart at any time call his Evidences into question away flyes Prayer to God and pleads Promises and Examples holy Presidents and stops the mouth of Temptation this way 'T is that way of continual intercourse with God that brings a man dayly returnes of holy familiarities which cannot but nourish a constant perswasion of his unchangeable Love as mutual Letters maintaine a good intelligence among friends 3 Sacraments As they are remembrancers of the death of Christ and Ordinances appointed for the Sealing of the benefits thereof to the soul by particular applicatory signes and tokens must needs be means not only to give as hath been shewne before but also to confirm and continue it And upon this account 't is no wonder if Christ in the Institution of the Lords Supper require a frequent attendance upon that Ordinance 1 Cor. 11. 25. As oft as ye drink it implies frequent drinking it All our faith is grounded upon the death and satisfaction of Christ and the frequent reduction of those grounds of faith to our consideration must needs strengthen it habits of the mind are strengthned by a frequent repetition of those actions by which they were first begotten and produced Now though gracious habits are not gotten in the strength of natural or moral powers as natural or moral habits are yet they are produced as I before have shewed by a supernatural power in a natural method and order And therefore though no grounds apprehended by the understanding can of themselves beget faith yet a divine power never produceth them but by the representation of some grounds And therefore the representation of the death of Christ as it is held forth by God in all its
that God he took him for that there was error personae in the Match 7 Beware of that which I have often before warned you of vain unprofitable Erroneous or ungodly company This will not only damp convictions I have shewed you so much before but comfort also Ordinarily our spirits by sympathy become much-what of the temper and alloy with those with whom we converse 'T is a difficult thing for a mans spirit to continue free from impressions of sadnesse that converseth with a mourning company And 't is no lesse difficult for a soul to be seriously affected though he have never so important businesse in hand when the persons he is most familiarly conversant with are all set as wee say upon a merry pin 1 Vain and unprofitable company have not weight enough in them to add any balast to a spirit under the full sails of gracious Assurance nay they substract and withdraw that which it hath before within it self and then it is no wonder if it be overturned whiles the heavenly gale that fills those sailes for want of a serious care to manage it leaves the soul to a blast of frothy carnal delight which will soon over-set it 2 Erroneous and for in this case we may very well put them together ungodly company on the other side will make it their businesse to bore holes in the vessel it self to corrupt a mans principles and let in upon him such a floud of brackish and unsavoury waters both opinions and practices as will so marre all the precious lading of the soule that the Spirit in just discontent will refuse to fill its sailes any more it being not worth the labour to bring that vessel to harbour which is laden with meer trash and rotten Commodities Erroneous company will endeavour to break the chain of Truth in which Assurance hangs One Truth lost loseth it In a word The holy Spirit of God will not partake in the scandal of such an Association If I be never so much an acquaintance or intimate friend to a man yet I will not accompany him into all Societies which possibly he may bee engaged unto If he will converse with me I expect that he should do it either in a way of privacy or if in a more communicative way yet in such company only as may sute my genius or disposition my quality and reputation or else there I will leave him and if I see hee intends to make a consolidation of acquaintance and converse between me and such as I cannot comfortably converse withall I will break off familiarity with him altogether And surely I cannot expect that the Spirit of Grace truth and holynesse should serve me otherwise if I abase him so far in my esteeme as to endeavour to draw him into Partnership with me in the Society of empty erroneous and wicked men No question but such an affront will cause him to withdraw CHAP. XXIX A fourth and fifth Direction concerning the use of our Evidences 4. BE much in the Actings of Love and Thankfulness 1 Love Coolings of affection on our part towards God God cannot bear It were an unnatural monstrous ingratitude at such a time to flag in our love when we are under the fullest and most enlarged enjoyments of his love to us Then if ever when Gods countenance shines upon us will it make our faces reflect the same smiling beams of love upon him again Surely such enjoyments act much beneath themselves if they produce not a love stronger then death it self If the Saints of God use to love God and 't is their duty so to do even then when he breaketh them in the place of Dragons and covereth them with the shadow Psal 44. 19. of death if when he will not vouchsafe them one smile upon their souls will not speak one good word to their aking hearts but all they see from him is ghastly frowns and all they fear from him is chiding and thunder How much more may we think it reasonable and just they should do so when he spreads his own banner of love over them when he brings them into the Banquetting Cant. 2. 4. house when he layes his left hand under their heads and his right hand embraceth them Cant. 8. 3. 1. 2 when he kisseth them with the kisses of his mouth and paves all those Chariots of Ordinances and Duties wherein he conveyes himself to them and them to himselfe with love And Cant. 3. 10. therefore if at such a time your love kindle not beyond the ordinary proportion you cannot but provoke him to with-draw in displeasure See what one cold entertainment of a visiting Christ cost the Church Cant. 5. I opened to my Beloved but my Beloved had with-drawne himself and was gone His love was hot in the visit but hers was too cold that gave him such an entertainment and therefore when she opened at last he was gone v. 6. And then when the Scene was changed and the visit fell out to be on her part he served her in the same fashion he would not be within She sought him but she found him not 2 Thankfulnesse I cannot imagine if a soul were to wish a good thing on this side heaven and have it what it could desire like spiritual Assurance of Gods love It is as near of kin to heaven it self as possibly can be It is a kind of beatifical vision proportioned to the capacity of a mortal creature And certainly the more we are admitted to the life of heaven in happiness the more near we ought to come to the life of heaven in thankfulness Because an heavenly life is a life of the greatest fruit ion therefore it is a life of greatest thankfulness To receive extraordinary mercies with an ordinary spirit a spirit not warmed into extraordinary sensibleness of it and thankfulness for it is among the greatest provocations of God the giver of them that can be Discoveries of Gods love have used to non-plus the utmost abilities of a thankful heart Psal 116. 11 12. What shall I render saith David to the Lord for all his benefits towards me And then is thankfulnesse greatest when like the peace of God which occasions it it passeth all understanding 5 Let love and thankfulness carry you on with delight in all the wayes of Duty and obedience The truth is this is the proper use of divine discoveries Why doth the father smile upon and make much of his child is it not that he may be thereby encouraged to dutifulness and obedience Why doth the Sun shine upon the earth except to make it fruitful Upon these termes the Church is engaged to run after Christ Cant. 1. 2. 3 4. If Christ draw with Ointments and kisses the fragrant allurements and temptations of his love 't is an addition of strength and agility to a poor crippled soul Now if Christ find that you receive his favours but reject his commands that his countenance is delightful and his
quatenus in eā Deus nebiscum operum respectu paciscitur I m●et withal in this Argument affirming divers things concerning the condition of the Jewes under the Law for which he is deservedly taxed by Peter Martyr As that The Jews received not the Spirit That what is here called the Spirit of Bondage was their Law so termed because it was a Spiritual Law That the Adoption attributed to them Rom 9. was a meere titular honour That they called not God Fatherin prayer c. And Oecuminius and Oso●ius follow him But surely if these holy men understand these things concerning the believing Jews they undertake to affirm that concerning them which besides the expresse Testimony of divers Scriptures against it such as Ps 51 11 12 Pro. 1 23. Ps 89 26. Is 63. 16. c. excludes them al out of heaven therefore I in charity conceive that they rather understand the body of the Jewish Church concerning whom these things may with a moderate candid interpretatiō be allowed to be spoken with respect to the major part who though professed believers yet were real unbelievers Calvin and the modern writers though they follow these Ancients in the in●erpretation of this place concerning the Jewes and their Law yet moderate the language they use If the Law saith he Calvin be looked upon in it self it cannot but binde men under bondage and fear of death seeing it promiseth no good but under conditions and pronounceth a curse of death upon every one that doth not keep them Gal. 3. 10. And therefore saith he the Apostle here speaks of the Law barely as a Covenant of works and so considered And Si lex in se consideretur nihil quàm miserae scrvi●uti addicto● mortis quoque borrore constringere homines potest quia nihil boni promittit nisi sub conditione mortem quoque edicit in omnes transgressores Calv. in locum A●d non habuerunt sporitum laetitiae libertatis à lege sed ad evangelium confugerunt Id●m Instit Gratia adoptionis erat obscuriùs adumbrata paucioribus concessa Gualth in locum the Jews received no spirit of J●y and liberty from the Law But what of that they had was from th● Gospel intermixed therewith And Gualther explains it farther thus He speaks not of a distinction between the persons of the godly under both Testaments but of the different ministery of both The grace of adoption was them more obscurely shadowed out and granted to a few onely in comparison with the times of Gospel ministration Thus they But by the leave of so many learned and godly men I shall take liberty in part to follow a different Interpretation For this reas●n Because the Apostle here speaks not of the Spirit of Bondage and Adoption as received by the Jews but by Gentile Romās who were never under that pedagogy and yet they were under this Spirit of Bondage once as well as now under the Spirit of Adoption Yet shall I not scruple to take so much of their interpretation as concernes the nature of the work wrought which fills the conscience with horrour of death as Calvin before speaks But whereas he takes the Spirit here spoken of only for the Instrumental caus● the Law I cannot go with him there but interpret it concerning the efficient cause or at least the instrumental cause as it is in the hand of the efficient the Law in the hands of the Spirit But it may still be a question what Spirit it is that useth the Law in this work Augustine before mentioned interprets it of the evil spirit the Devil under whom men in the time of their unregeneracie are in bondage sutably to the Apostles other expression Eph. 2. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the spirit that works in the children of disobedience This Spirit indeed is a Spirit of bondage keeping soules in the basest slavery taking them prisoners like Turkish gally-slaves and chaining them to his oars that they may do his will 2 Tim. 2. 26. But sure this wicked spirit is not here meant for in the Apostles phrase the spirit of bondage is said to be a received spirit Now the power of Satan in the hearts of unregenerate men is by reason of original corruption connatural to them and so cannot-properly be said to be received Besides the same word being used in relation to this Spirit which is affirmed concerning the Spirit of Adoption seeing the receiving of the latter is to be understood by way of gift and peculiar grace from God I think the former must be interpreted so too Now the domineering power of Satan is no gift received from God from whom comes down none but good and perfect gifts Ja. 1. 17. This Spirit therefore that works the bondage and thereby the fear we speak of we De uno eodemq●… Spiritu loquens diversa●i effect a tribuit Gualth in locum have found out at last to be a Spirit received as a gift of grace from God and that can be no other then the Holy Spirit of God He it is that creates trouble in the hearts of Gods Elect in order to conversion as well as peace after it And as he is called afterwards a Spirit of Adoption because he is the efficient cause of the enjoyment and sense of that priviledge so here the Spirit of Bondage because by the Law he reduceth the souls of Gods Elect in order to regeneration under bondage and fear 2. This then being the Spirit from whose efficiency ariseth this effect the effect must be such as is sutable to the cause The holy Spirit of God cannot be supposed to bring any soul into an unholy bondage And therefore the condition of servitude here spoken of is not such a servitude as we before mentioned a bondage or servitude under the command of sinne but a bondage or servitude under the guilt of sinne not a bondage to sin but a bondage for sin and a bondage that is the beginning of liberty from sin That bondage is a voluntary bondage a bondage which men are no way sensible of nay they are so farre from being sensible of it unto fear as the Apostle here speaks that they count it the greatest liberty and lie under it in the greatest security But this bondage is naturally involuntary such as a mans heart is by nature irreconcileably averse to and is therefore wrought in the conscience by the mighty convictions of the Spirit of God over-powring it by an irresistible and effectual illumination and binding it with the chaines and fetters of that light under a deep and serious conviction of the sinfulnesse and misery of its own condition It is in a word when a soul lies under the arrest of the Spirit arming the Law to seize upon it and dragg it before the Judgment seat of God in the Conscience to receive its sentence according to its desert a sentence of death within it selfe in the same Apostles expression though in another sense