Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n eternal_a life_n lord_n 11,091 5 3.8914 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A13554 The progresse of saints to full holinesse described in sundry apostolicall aphorismes, or short precepts tending to sanctification, with a sweete and divine prayer to attaine the practise of those holy precepts / by Thomas Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1630 (1630) STC 23850; ESTC S1019 235,792 462

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

discourses their idle complements their service of pleasure and unfruitfull spending of their time now they storme against the rule and the hand that holdes it here is a rule indeede that would make them as despised as he is despised of them that calls them from their vanities Our Ministery in generall holds in judgement the Scripture as the rule and that they ought to tie themselves to this rule but when this rule would tie them to instant teaching to carefull walking as examples to the flocke to prepare the people as a pure Virgin for Christ oh it tyes them too strait their conceits and gifts call them to higher things other affaires withdraw them as for diligent preaching they leave that to the inferiour sort that have nothing else to tend and no livings to trouble them But shall the word be a rule to our judgement and not to our practise Shall it be a rule for us and for our rights and shall it not be a rule for our duty and office Let all men know and consider first what a judgement of God it is to give up men to walk after the lusts of their own hearts as is noted of the Gentiles Ephes. 2.3 Secondly the rule chargeth us to affect all things in God and for God nothing above him nothing against him nothing like him Thirdly to feare the departure from the rule as the greatest evill because that is onely simply evill 5. Some depend upon the persons of some great men whom they reverence and holde in admiration What are not such and such great men and learned men in high degrees and preferments yet they doe thus and thus they are of another judgement and practise too and if it were not right they would not doe it And so they dangerously compare themselves with wicked men digest their oathes vanity pompe But consider first what a plague it is for great men to be carried along by flatterers who rivet them in their wickednesse by applauding them As Dionisius the Tyrant had flatterers about him who like dogges would licke up his spittle and commend it to him to be as sweete as Nectar Secondly no example can make that good which the rule judgeth evill Thirdly all persons must be tryed by the rule not the rule by any person Even the Apostles must be followed so farre as they goe by rule and follow Christ no further This is the difference betweene the Papists and us they receive no Doctrine no nor the Scriptures but so farre as warranted by Fathers and Councels we receive no Fathers nor Councels but so farre as they are warranted by the Scriptures For Let God be true and every man a lyer Is this our judgement and shall we slippe from it in our practise Fourthly there is no more compendious way to lose the truth than to walke by this rule of examples If truth had gone by persons who would not have taken part with 400 false Prophets men in great favour with the King and Queene all against one poore Micaiah esteemed the Kings enemy yet he alone held the rule This was the cause that puld all the Iewes into the guilt of Christs death they admired their Rulers and Rabbies as great and learned men having the key of knowledge and so easily and freely consented to that fearfull sinne which the Sunne was ashamed to beholde Fifthly in all imitation of men we must follow the light side of the cloud not the darke side for why are the falls of Saints else recorded but to shew that all examples are defective and measurable by the rule Sixthly the onely perfect example of our rule was Iesus Christ whom we must follow we are commanded to be perfect not as Abraham Moses David c. but as our heavenly Father whose absolute perfection shineth in his Sonne who is the ingraven Image of his Fathers person Now as the best picture must needes be that which is drawne from the lively face rather than that which is drawne out of another picture so must this which wee take from Iesus Christ himselfe who was the true idea and counterpaine of our Rule here described 6. Some make Successe their rule and walke by that as they that say If my course were not good God would not blesse me as he doth and if I sinne God would not be silent or if I sinne and God be silent he either sees not or regards not or will spare me and I shall ever escape reckoning Whereas first the rule telleth us Psal. 50. These things hast thou done and I held my peace but I will reproove thee and set thy sins in order before thee And Eccles. 9.2 The same event is to the good and the bad to him that sweareth and him that feareth an oath Many runne to witches and sorcerers and thinke it warrantable from the successe they finde some reliefe and some help and God would give no such successe if it were unlawfull Whereas it is just with God that such as runne to the Divell shall meete with the Divell to their further delusion Others runne to stage-playes and enterludes because they teach some good lessons and may edifie as well as Ministers by Sermons Oh profane mouthes who have cast away the rule which is farre from sending them to the stewes to learne chastity or to Atheists to learne religion or to learne vertue and good manners in the schoole of vices where things are expressed and acted which ought not to be named among Christians Secondly this rule telleth us that Gods patience shall not violate his justice nor forbearance is no payment hee will not beare the sword in vaine Thirdly no man easily forgets his owne name the Lord will not forget his justice but must returne to every man according to his owne workes Fourthly as thou hast thy time so surely will God have his when thy measure is heaped up and thy Epha is full although thou maist thinke with Agag the bitternesse of death is passed yet the Lords sword will come and hew thee in peeces Against all these crooked and distorted rules the Scripture shewes first that Christianity is no ranging course or a running at randome but a life led by rule Secondly this rule is expresly set downe Phil. 3.16 So farre as we are come let us proceede by one rule Thirdly there is a promise to all that walk according to this rule Gal. 6.16 As many as walk by this rule peace shall be on them mercy and on all the Israel of God that is the rule of Gods word which is to Christians as the pillar of the cloud and of the fire to the Israelites Fourthly it is evill to them that forsake this rule As a sonne left unto himselfe is the shame of his Father So the sonnes of God running their owne wayes and despising the counsells of God are a shame to their Father a reproach to their Fathers house the Church a dishonour to their profession and
and so still as that a man cannot alwayes set downe the precise time of his comming 2. For the second Whether a man once called alwayes know his calling Answ. In ordinary course a Christian knowes But in anomolons and extraordinary cases and times a good Christian may hardly or not know it at all as First in a strong fit or pang of temptation which is to the soule as a swooning to the body wherein a man lives but knowes not that he is aliue nay he will seeme to himselfe and others as quite dead So a Christian disguised by temptation may implead his owne calling and yet recover well and come to himselfe againe Secondly after some grosse or grievous sinne God leaves his owne with terrours of heart to call great things into question sinne as a boysterous storme shakes the foundations and leaves the sinner as a man in a trance or extacie stunned and senselesse for the time by some great fall Now may the Christian doubt of his calling and of Gods favour till he have made up his peace againe by repentance But yet by the cherishing of faith and graces a man may ordinarily retaine the comfortable assurance of his good estate in grace The efficient of this calling is God Hee who calleth 1. Effectuall calling depends upon his purpose and is called a calling according to purpose Rom. 8.28 for as he purposed the end so also the meanes tending to the end 2. The power is his and argues the worke onely to be his It is a worke of new creation who can create a new heart but he he calleth things that are not as if they were Who can set light in the middest of darknesse but hee that said Let there be light and it was so But effectuall calling is a translating us out of the power of darknesse into his marvelous light 1 Pet. 2.9 and the Apostle ascribes it to this power 2 Corinth 4.6 Who can fashion man to his owne image and repaire that image decayed but hee that made it at the first Surely hee onely can inspire a new life into the face of the soule by effectuall calling that quickeneth the dead Ephes. 2.1 3. The meanes is his even the voice of God in the mouth of his servants Wisdome cryeth in the streetes Prov. 28. Hee that ●eareth you heareth mee Luke 10.17 4. The answer to the meanes is his and by the worke of his mighty power Who can make a dead man heare a voice but he Iohn 5.28 The houre is that the dead shall heare the voice of the Sonne of God and live 5. The estate whence and whither we are called declares it to be from God alone To free us from the servitude of sinne death the Divell the world hell and condemnation implies a more mighty power than all these put together even that divine and mighty power that bindes the strong man and casts him out of his hold And whither are wee called even to the grace of the Gospell Galat. 1.6 to fellowshippe with Iesus Christ 1 Cor. 1.9 to an holinesse above the first Adam in innocency and to the happinesse of the second Adam in the kingdome of glory and this can onely be the worke of God 1 Pet. 1.10 The God of all grace who hath called us to his eternall glorie an excellent worke where is such a workman Hence 1. See what is effectuall calling It is a powerfull worke of God calling persons to bee what they were not of sinners to become Saints of enemies to become sonnes as Saul being called to bee a King● was changed into another man and another Spirit was put upon him So the Lord puts forth upon every convert another spirit agreeing with the condition to which he is called And hence it followes that if the Lord call so powerfully hee leaves it not in our power whether wee will come or no as the late refined Pelagianisme would perswade us Who can resist an almighty power which is put forth in effectuall calling can the creature resist the Creatour of it selfe can the dead resist and not come forth of the grave at the voice of the Sonne of God 2. We must labour to feele this power of God working in our effectuall calling not conceiting our calling to be a matter of opinion or imagination of things absent but labour to finde the same power in our selves which raised Christ from the dead First by acknowledging the voice of Christ in the Ministery Cant. 2.8 It is the voice of my beloved Secondly by answering the call as Samuel Speake Lord thy servant heareth Acts 9. Lord what wouldest thou have mee to doe Acts 26.19 I was not disobedient to the voice Thirdly by daily separation from the corrupt and profane of the world thou hopest for heaven but hast no calling to it that cannot be got out of earth that traducest men and cannot away with this strict company Fourthly by conjunction with the body of Christ not as wennes or wooden legges but as quickened members 3. Despaire not of others though farre runne on in their evill their conversion is but a call of God it is as easie for him to create new hearts and regenerate them as for us to call a man by his name he can quickly call that which is not as if it were which the Apostle applieth to the conversion of the whole body of the Gentiles who lay in a wofull ruinous condition 4. For our selves be thankfull that the Lord hath vouchsafed to call us out of our naturall estate to an estate of grace and glory For a man to give an hand to the maimed an eye to the blind were thank-worthy but to give the hand and eye of faith to a sinner yea to give life to the dead is another manner of worke See how the Apostle Peter 1.1.4 breakes out into the praise of God for this blessing above all other All rivers runne into the sea and all blessing to the full sea of blessing if wee must blesse him for the least temporall blessing much more for spirituall and eternall blessings for blessing us in our soules blessing us in his Sonne and in the blessings of the Gospell here is a rich grace on Gods part an undeserved grace on our part who were found when we sought him not a durable grace seeing his gifts and calling is without repentance the same power upholdes the worke that set it up Rom. 11.29 From effectuall calling a Christian may certainly conclude his owne salvation Rom. 8.29 Whom hee calleth he justifieth and whom hee justifieth he glorifieth And from calling we may rise to election as the Apostle implies 1 Cor. 1.26 27. and here in the text He hath called you and he will doe it And why 1. Because of the nature of this calling What is it but a drawing of men out of the state of sinne and death into the state of grace and eternall life Coloss. 1.13 Who hath delivered us from the power of darknesse and translated us into the kingdome of his deare Sonne from kingdome to kingdome from an eternall state of death to an eternall state of life and
glory 2. Gods eternall love is hidden with himselfe till effectuall calling discover it And hence it seemes to be called a calling according to purpose not onely as flowing from it but also declaring that whosoever are thus called God purposeth eternall good to them and they may know it shall be made good to them because this purpose is infallible and immutable 3. Effectuall calling is a giving of man by God to Christ to save Ioh. 6.37 Every one that the Father giveth unto me commeth unto me and him I cast not out If then thou knowest thou art once given to Christ thou knowest thy salvation For this calling of God is without repentance Rom. 11.29 this gift is never cast away 4. A man naturally ariseth from the effect to the cause from the fruite to the roote from the streame to the fountaine then in like sort may a man conclude of Gods eternall love by effectuall calling which is a fruite of that roote a streame of that fountaine of predestination to eternall life And whereas wise men may by likely meanes judge of the end much more may a Christian by the infallible meanes judge of the certaine end God leading him by this meanes to the principall end which nothing can frustrate seeing all things fall out to the best to them that are thus called according to purpose Rom. 8.28 5. As in the Law he that had first fruites might expect the harvest so he that is effectually called hath begun his salvation already hee hath begun the heavenly●heavenly●life upon earth Iohn 3.36 He that beleeveth hath eternall life and is translated from death to life And as the earnest penny confirmes the whole bargaine amongst men so the earnest of the Spirit gives us assurance of full holinesse and full happinesse because he that hath begun a worke of grace in us will performe and finish it to the day of Christ Phil. 1.6 And this reproves not Papists onely who deny that a man may be sure of his salvation without extraordinary revelation but even Protestants who resolve never to trouble themselves about it they will leave all to God and will not enter into his councell but rest in a good opinion and ungrounded hope in which if it happen well they have well But what a folly is this For first What man in any outward title or tenure will content himselfe with uncertainties if he may be certaine of a good estate we would hold him a man distracted that would offer to claime and hold house and land without evidences and conveyances Is any man richer because he dreames he is rich So to dreame of the wealth of grace enricheth none Secondly What is the use of the whole Gospell but to be Gods embassage certifying us of his free grace in electing and saving us what other use than to bring us peace of conscience through justification of faith and what peace without assurance 1 Iohn 5.13 These things have I written unto you that beleeve that yee may know you have eternall life So as the end of all Scripture is not onely to know that there is an eternall life but that beleevers have it Thirdly Why are wee commanded to give all diligence to make our election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 if it be either needelesse or impossible When Christ commands us to rejoyce that our names are written in the booke of life doth he not imply that a man may know it and convince us that the want of this joy is by our owne default Fourthly a man neglecting or despising this comfortable assurance perverts the whole Ministery Doest thou pray for remission of sinnes and not beleeve it thy prayer is a dead carcasse Doest thou professe in the Creed thou beleevest remission of thy sinnes and by not caring to beleeve it give the lie to thy profession Doth the word preached command thee to beleeve in the Lord Iesus Christ and that thy Redeemer liveth who loved thee and gave himselfe for thee and wilt thou sticke in an idle conceit as if it were needlesse to wade into this deepe Are the Sacraments but as seales set to blankes without this assurance and is it yet needlesse Doth the Apostle say that hee that knowes not that Iesus Christ is in him is a reprobate and is it an idle or a needlesse thing to prove it 2 Cor. 13.5 Quest. But where may I come to this assurance Answ. We send not men to poare upon the doctrine of predestination nor to soare up to heaven to pry into Gods councell But thus Looke downe into thy selfe examine if thou beest effectually called see what God hath done in thee and so maist thou judge what he will further doe in thee and for thee This is indeede an hard taske and requires all diligence which the Apostle Peter calls for unto it For 1. Satan seeks to plucke from us this comfort of our lives both before our calling causing us either to shut our eare from the voice or by picking and pulling the seede out of the heart by carnall distractions and objections And after our calling perswading men all is deceitfull or vaine God is not at peace with them nor they with him 2. Most men rest in generall outward calling which is ineffectuall 3. But chiefly the likenesse of outward ineffectuall calling unto it makes it harder to be discerned Quest. Wherein is the likenesse betweene effectuall and ineffectuall calling Answ. First by ineffectuall calling a man may come to the feast and sit downe at Gods table as the unworthy guest did may seeme one of the friends of Christ may make shew of answer to the call in respect of outward profession and conformity to the doctrine when the heart answers not nor resolves to answer Deut. 5. The people came to Moses and said Whatsoever the Lord commandeth that will wee doe But the Lord said Oh that there were such an heart in them If the call were denied or fairely excused and put off as some of the guests did this were more discernable But many come in among true worshippers and bring in lampes and some oyle and are the more hardly discerned Because as the same Sunne earth raine roote moisture brings up the chaffe as doth the wheat so the same meanes of word and Sacraments nourish the hypocrite which doth the sound hearted Christian. Secondly by ineffectuall calling a man may come to a great measure of knowledge of the word to consent to the truth of it may preach it yea soundly handle it for the conversion and saving of others may preach it in the name of Christ that is for his glory and by his grace Many of those that preached in the name of Christ shall come in the last day and challenge acquaintance of him to whom he shall say I never knew you
have become better for good mens company Saul himselfe among the Prophets will prophecie And shall the wicked in their companies abet and further one another in evill and shal not good men in good 5. Observe the first motions of Gods Spirit and the ayme of God in his wayes with us and follow them For the first the prodigall sonne is a good example he had a motion and good inspiration he remembred the estate that he was in and the estate that he had beene in and the estate of his fathers house and in no case suffers this motion to die but followes it surely I will starve here no longer but resolves to goe to his father and goes Many kill good motions in the rise of them many follow them to purposes and resolutions but there they die few follow them to practise So in Gods wayes with our selves If he make our estates prosperous and advance us in the world above others what is his ayme but that we should be eminent instruments of his glory Many purpose when they come into great places of Magistracy or any preferment to doe much good every way but they suffer this purpose to die and never follow their resolution unto execution So what is the ayme of God in crosses and tryalls but to excite and exercise our graces which while we suffer to lie still God takes us in hand and mooves us and shakes us by the north winde of afflictions to blow our ashes and dust from us Therefore in every trouble let us follow this ayme of God and make account that every of them is the Lords bellowes to blow up our graces so shall our afflictions yea our sinnes themselves bee as the smithes water on coales to heate us the more 6. Let us exercise diligently our generall calling of Christians In our selves let us practise piety and keepe on worke the grace received for the Lord recompenceth the practise of grace with the increase of grace No man used his talent but with gaine And to others let us exercise friendly admonition exhortation reprehension and loving chastisement of such as are under our charge For first every Christian is a debter to every one and all gifts are given for the body Secondly the nature of grace is as fire which will fasten and kindle where ever it can find matter Thirdly the recompence shall be much increase as the meale in the barrell and the oyle in the cruse the more spent the more increased The speciall calling also feedes all graces and calls for the practise of them as of piety and justice patience and charity and the rest yea is indeed a schoole of all vertues 7. Propound wee still to our selves an higher pitch and a further degree of grace than as yet we have attained consider how farre wee are short of perfection Thus did Paul stirre up himselfe Phil. 3.13 I forget those things which are behinde and reach forth to those things which are before c. Men are never rich enough they think have never money enough so long as any are before them this makes them bestirre themselves to gather still But a little grace is enough yea a small measure is thought excesse and too much The Pharisy lookes to such as in his conceit are behinde him and then hee is not such a one or such a one But we must set before us the best examples and to imitate the best things in the best men and not onely men but the Apostle propounds to the Church the example of Christ that unerring patterne Heb. 12.2 Now to stirre us up both to avoid the meanes of quenching the Spirit and to use the meanes of quickning the Spirit 1. Let us consider that we must be countable for all our graces and all the meanes of grace our Master is an hard man and in the day of account will not call onely for his owne but for the whole tale and number and the evill servant that brought the owne talent but not the number was condemned Therefore neglect no meanes of well-doing 2. Cherish the Spirit and his graces for the blessings hee brings with him even all the fruites of the Spirit illumination consolation holinesse happinesse If while the Arke was in Obed-Edoms house he was blessed for it which was but a signe of Gods presence how much more blessed shall that heart be that entertaines himselfe Cheare the Spirit in thy heart and he will cheare thee 3. Whosoever will vexe the Spirit the Spirit will vexe him If the hypocrite quench him and grieve him he utterly departs and leaves and gives over that party unto death 1 Sam. 16.14 The good Spirit went and the evill Spirit came upon Saul and the Divell entred into Iudas Of them that by Apostasie so farre provoke the Lord it is most true Their latter end is worse than their beginning better for them they had beene heathens yea dogges better for them that the Spirit had never given them the least common grace better they had never knowne the way of truth and righteousnesse 2 Pet. 2.20 And if the godly quench him by security or any sinne hee will hide himselfe till they know what they have done Object What matter he will come againe if I be Gods no great harme if he goe for a while Answ. 1. Thou maist deceive thy selfe in thy reckoning and thinke he dwells in thee as one of the elect when he is in thee but in some common graces and then he goes quite away at length and never comes any more And likely it is that thou art such an one in whom this deceit discovers it selfe who canst be content he absent himselfe when as David prayed Lord take not thy holy Spirit from mee Psal. 51.11 2. Suppose he will come againe to thee that art the Lords yet hee will not come againe so freely but thou shalt know to thy cost what thou hadst and what thou hast lost and shalt shed teares and sigh and cry and learne how to prise him before he come againe See Cant. 5.2.6 3. Perhaps hee will neuer come with that abundant blessing as hee did before and thou shalt never attaine thy first love thy first joy and the comfort thou once hadst yea thou maist passe all thy daies in griefe to see how much thou wantest of thy selfe and to consider of thy decayes Therfore deceive not thy selfe watch thy heart to receive and entertaine the good Spirit whilest thou hast him lest he depart in displeasure and thou be left to lament thy losse VERSE 20. Despise not Prophecie THe Coherence of these words with the former is this The Spirit of God and his graces are continued and cherished in the hearts of beleevers by the meanes of Prophecy therfore if you would not have the Spirit quenched you must not despise Prophecy To finde out the meaning hereof consider these two things 1. What Prophecy is 2. What it is Not to despise it I. Prophecy in Scripture
Spirit renewes us onely within and not without doth he make us beleeve as Christians and not live as Christians doth the sappe and juice of a tree onely quicken it within and not cause it produce fruites outwardly Thou hast not received the Spirit of Christ if it be not unto thee life unto righteousnesse Rom. 8.10 that is make thee lively and active in all the wayes of godlinesse Faith is not as a light under a bushell therefore shew mee thy faith by thy workes Grace is as a light in a cleare lanterne which from within enlighteneth without Now the rather must we labour for renovation without as well as within 1. Because flesh and blood unrenewed shall not enter into heaven 2. The disorder of the outward man and members argue a sinfull and disordered soule seeing the body is but a servant of the soule and doth nothing but by the Masters direction and appointment an evill eye issueth from an evill minde and a corrupt tongue moveth according to the abundance of the heart 3. No outward deformity is comparable to this of sinne in the members which makes the body to God indeed vile and contemptible as a dead and loathsome corpes is to man Fourthly to keepe the outward man blamelesse beware of all unchastity and impurity of body and on the contrary watch unto chastity and civill honesty 1 Cor. 6.13 The body is not for fornication but for Christ the Lord and the Lord for the body That is the body is ordained for the Lords use and ought to be imployed to his glory And the Lord for the body to redeeme and sanctifie the body as well as the soule and consequently to rule the body and command that as well as the soule being the Lord of the body as well as of the soule And the same Apostle saith the body is a member of Christ as well as the soule Shall I take a member of Christ and make it a member of an harlot verse 15 Can any thing be more opprobrious unto Christ than to transforme him into an harlot Can any thing derogate more from his glory and majesty or be more contrary to his most holy nature Againe Christs body was Gods Temple Ioh. 2.21 Destroy this Temple because the Deity dwelt in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bodily and of this Temple Salomons Temple was but a type So thy body is Christs Temple in which he dwells by his Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 virtually Now the light of nature teacheth to preserve Temples pure and cleane but grace much more to preserve spirituall Temples cleane and holy And therefore as Christ when he went into his Fathers Temple made a whip and whipped out buyers and sellers and money-changers who had made his house a denne of theeves so doe thou in Christs Temple which is thine owne body beate it downe and overthrow the wanton and stragling corruptions of it whip out those roving lusts which make the house of Christ as a denne of harlots and filthinesse Coloss. 3.5 Mortifie your earthly members fornication uncleannesse and all inordinate affections Eph. 5.3 But fornication and all uncleannesse let it not once be named as becommeth Saints The fifth Rule Magnifie Christ in thy body both by life and death this was the Apostles care Phil. 1.20 As alwayes so now Christ shall be magnified in my body Thy body is mortall fraile fading yea a vile body Col. 3.21 yet in this body Christ will and must be magnified Quest. How Answ. 1. By keeping the heavenly treasure of the knowledge of God and the attendant graces in these earthly vessels as Paul 2 Cor. 4.7 We have this treasure in earthen vessels that the excellency of the power might be of God 2. By holding out the word of life and carrying the name of Christ in an holy undaunted and constant confession and profession in the place where thou livest as Paul did through the world 3. By expressing in this frail body not the doctrine only but the life of Iesus Christ conforming thy selfe to his blessed example in humility holinesse charity piety patience and other vertues that all men may see and say surely this man is a member of Christ he lives the life of Christ he resembles the patterne 4. In this weake body of thine carry about the mortification of Christ Iesus 2 Cor. 4.10 suffer afflictions for the name of Christ and beare in thy body as Paul did the markes of the Lord Iesus Gal. 6.17 fulfill in thy body the rest of the sufferings of Christ carry the badge of a true Disciple yea if God call thee offer up thy body and life a thankfull sacrifice not in life onely but unto death if thereby thou maist magnifie Iesus Christ. Thus did the faithfull Saints and Martyrs offering themselves the sweetest sacrifice of all others Yea our Lord himselfe comming into the world Heb. 10.5 said Burnt offerings thou wouldest not have that is now after the comming of Christ but a body hast thou given me that in this my body I might offer that expiatory sacrifice of all which the other were but shadowes Even so say thou Burnt offerings God calls not for but he hath given me a body to offer unto him and give up unto him in life and death in way not of a Propitiatory but of an Eucharisticall sacrifice of praise thereby to magnifie his name 5. Thou magnifiest him in thy body when thou magnifiest him in his body as when thou admirest the graces of his servants honourest his members delightest in them that excell in vertue helpest and releevest the poore Saints all which he taketh as done to himselfe These are the generall Rules now of the speciall for speciall parts To keepe the severall parts of the body blamelesse the word is plentifull in severall precepts but especially injoynes a strait watch over the senses which are the windowes of the soule But that the discourse may not swell beyond a reasonable proportion I will onely cull out 1. two principall senses and 2. two principall organes and members of the body and give some short rules concerning them and in them we shall see it is no easie thing to keep the body blamelesse neither in them nor in the rest which I must be silent in The two senses are the sight and hearing the senses of discipline and the other two members are the hand and tongue the which being well ordered by the word much blame would be cut off from the lives of men which they now stand guilty of First for the eye to keepe it unblamable We must watch it well for you must know that of all the sciences there is none so quicke a messenger to the heart and soule as the eye by reason whereof it requireth a strait watch God hath given to the eye power to see every thing but cannot looke into it selfe and therefore hee hath given to man understanding that he may looke into himselfe by
our callings both generall and speciall Be faithfull in thy profession of godlinesse lurke not as an hypocrite among the Saints carry no treacherous purpose to save thy selfe by denying or betraying the truth give it thy heart hand and tongue and life if it require it beware of a politique profession never let thy practise disagree from thy profession Consider Christ professed a good profession before Pilate and sealed it with his life and death 1 Tim. 5.13 and wilt thou so nourish any secret fraud in thy heart contrary to thy profession and Paul telleth Timothy hee had made a good profession and a faithfull before many witnesses And this is a most necessary doctrine we know not how soone we may be called to it therefore learne it betimes that we may be like our heavenly Father in faithfulnesse not onely in times of prosperity but in times of tryall for a Christian man is that indeede which he is in tryall let us shew our selves to bee that wee seeme to be Then in thy speciall calling be faithfull Christ was a faithfull high Priest in things concerning God Heb. 2.17 and Moses was faithfull in all the house of God as a servant Heb. 3.5 So it is required of every Minister or dispenser of the secrets of God that hee be faithfull 1 Cor. 4.1 the steward of Gods house must be faithfull to his Lord and to his family It is not great pompous titles that commends a Minister but his faithfulnesse Prov. 13.17 A faithfull Messenger is health And in thy private calling deale faithfully with all men and in all things both great and small so doth God who is not the rule onely but the witnesse and judge 1 Thess. 4.6 Let no man defraud his brother God is the avenger of all such things 4. In friendship be faithfull God is most faithfull to his friends in prosperity in adversity in life in death Be faithfull especially in the fellowship of the Gospell specially aiming at holinesse as the Lord doth and to draw thy friend along to heaven with thee and helpe him out of sinne else a sorry friend art thou But how farre we from this among whom it is so hard to finde a faithfull friend who in civill things will sticke to a man in adversity Where is to be found the friendship of David and Ionathan Among Heathens we reade of a Daman and Pithias of a Pylades and Orestes of an Euryalus and Nysus of an Achates who was a faithfull friend to Aeneas and would not leave him in danger But few such are to be found among Christians among whom faithfull friendship is degenerated into pollicy and flattery The Heathens could say that they used not fire or water oftner than friendship would Christians could say so of faithfull friendship and yet they seeme to pull the Sunne out of heaven who would take faithfulnes from friendship in the lives of men Would to God that Christians had not forgotten these naturall principles We all professe our selves to be of the family of Christ would it were with us as in that that but one of twelve were unfaithfull to God and their friend But wee see the contrary too too often 5. In communicating to thy brethren be faithfull lay out thy Lords talent faithfully as a wife and faithfull servant whom the Lord may make ruler over his house Luk. 12.42 Hast thou much many talents be faithfull in much and thou shalt finde much faithfulnesse in the Lord. Hast thou little be faithfull in that little and thy Lord shall make thee ruler over much when it shall be said Well done good and faithfull servant c. Matth. 25.23 Oh that men would remember the doome against the evill servant Matth. 25.30 Cast the unprofitable servant into utter darknesse Why was he judged so severely 1. Because an hypocrite comes among the good servants and receives some talents 2. Having his talent hee hideth it in the earth earth eates him up and buries him alive 3. He is unprofitable hinders his Lord and makes him a loser and doth no good to others all which makes the sentence as just as severe and certaine 2. This faithfulnesse of God is the ground of all true religion and hereupon must the whole frame and all parts of it be laid This appeares in five instances 1. In all the doctrine of faith 2. In all the practise of faith 3. In all the prayers of faith 4. In all profession of faith 5. In all perseverance in faith First we must ground all the doctrine of faith all the articles of faith all our judgement and opinion in matters of faith upon this faithfulnesse of God and this by holding fast in them all the faithfull word Titus 1.9 for that onely is the true religion which is wholly grounded upon his word who is unchangeable in truth and faithfulnesse How could we beleeve all the Articles of faith which are unconceivable and impossible to reason if we ground them not upon Gods faithfulnesse in his word How should we conceive that the heavens and earth were created of nothing that the Sonne of God should become man should be borne of a Virgin should by dying overcome death by descending into hell should deliver from hell How should wee beleeve that our bodies cloathed with corruption and wrapped in deaths garments should rise againe to eternall life which Article the Sadduces mocke at if wee should not apprehend them as the word of him that is faithfull and true Contrary hereto the maine pillars of Popery are set upon the unfaithfull words of men of Fathers Councels Traditions Popes Whereas Rom. 3.4 Let God be true and every man a lyer Be he Father or holy Father further than hee speakes according to the faithfull word Nay if an Angel from heaven speake otherwise let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 Nay the Popish Church is so farre from acknowledging this faithfulnesse of God in the Scripture as it never found a greater resister or opposite among the sects and opposite heresies in the world For bring in either Iewes or Turkes or any kinde of heretickes more vilifying Gods faithfulnesse in the Scripture and Papists shall not be the worst But did ever any of them accuse the Scripture to be a nose of waxe the authority of it to be no better than Esops Fables without the Churches determination to be a leaden and a Lesbian rule to be a seed-plot of heresies and they to be heretickes that stand to the voice of the Scriptures Doe not they call the Bible the booke of heretickes doe they not burne the Scriptures as sometime did wicked Asa Antiochus Maximinus Have they not burned Christian men for having them Let any such furious heretickes against Gods faithfull word be brought in if they can But certainly Papists must carry the bell above all other in the world for standing opposite to the faithfulnesse of God in the Scripture and be the most hereticall as who shut the doore against the
truth according to Chrysostomes rule Haereticorum haereticissimi qui claudunt januas veritati Chrysost. Secondly on this ground wee must lay all our practise and obedience of faith Both in respect of the object of faith and the manner of mans o-obedience 1. For the object We must therefore beleeve the whole word of God contained in the Law and Gospell because it is of the nature of God himselfe immediatly flowing from that eternall truth and faithfulnesse conceived in the minde of God who is unchangeable This is the argument of the Scripture Because by faith we give him the honour of truth and we set our seale to God that he is faithfull Ioh. 3.33 And thus he also honours us to give witnesse to his faithfulnesse and contrary not mingling the word with faith we make him a lyer namely so farre as wee can because we beleeve not the record that the Father witnesseth of his Sonne and this is the ground why we must beleeve the Scripture to be the word of God because wee doe beleeve it to be true and faithfull as he is faithfull 2. For the act because Satan himselfe beleeves historically the Scripture and acknowledgeth Gods faithfulnesse in it we must specially apply the parts of the word to our selves First the promises all which because he is faithfull he will performe to a thousand generations not onely beleeving them true in themselves but even to us else wee deprive our selves of them seeing he promiseth nothing to unbeleevers Yea not onely beleeving and applying them but on the same faithfulnesse of God grounding the hope and expectation of all those promises which thy faith hath already apprehended For what is it else but this faithfulnesse in God that makes our hope never leave us ashamed Where had Sarah strength to conceive and bring forth a sonne being past age but because shee counted him faithfull that had promised Hebr. 11.11 That is she knew that whatsoever God had promised he would faithfully performe and Heb. 10.23 Let us keepe fast the profession of our hope for faithfull is he that hath promised Secondly we must also beleeve his threats for though he use sometimes lenity and patience to vessels of wrath yet his faithfulnesse suffers not the least jote of them to be unaccomplished Zeph. 3.5 The just Lord is in the middest of her early even early will he bring forth judgement and will not faile Hath the faithfull Lord covenanted wrath with the sinner Hearest thou his word let fly plagues as thicke as haile against the transgressours and thinkest thou to escape Was his faithfulnesse never yet impeached and shall it be so for thee Hearest thou that a large booke of curses comes flying into the house of the swearer and darest thou sweare and into the house of the thiefe and darest thou be unjust Surely if God have not lost all his faithfulnesse thou shalt certainly finde it this is the act of faith 3. For the manner of obedience of faith when the eye of the soule is once lifted up to behold this faithfulnesse of God it will bestirre it selfe with diligence in well-doing By this argument the Apostle inciteth the Iewes Hebr. 6.10 God is not unfaithfull to forget the labour of your love and Matth. 10.42 The giving of a cup of colde water hath promise of a recompence and his faithfulnesse will make it good No just Prince can forget the faithfull service of his subject Ahashuerosh at length remembred Mordecai his good service much more will our God who is faithfull Eccles. 9.15 Wee reade of a poore man who by his wisdome delivered the Citty but hee was forgotten in that Citty But God because hee is faithfull is never so forgetfull of him that doth good in the world Vpon this ground we must lay all our prayers of faith so our Apostle here in the Text for Gods faithfulnesse onely gives us confidence of obtaining our suites Our owne unfaithfulnesse in the Covenant might choake us in our suites and stoppe our mouthes and cover our faces with shame But it is Gods faithfulnesse that undershores us seeing his promise hath bound him to be found of all them that seeke him truly Therefore Daniel 9.16 in the name of the Church having disclaimed all their owne righteousnesse bindeth God from all his displeasure Lord according to all thy righteousnesse let thy wrath be turned away from thy Citty and Sanctuary This will answer all the objections wee can make against our owne prayers Object I am unworthy to pray or be heard and my prayer is as unworthy as my selfe Answ. True but Gods faithfulnesse gives worthinesse to both Object But my sinnes hinder good things they are a partition wall and stoppe my prayers Answ. Begge remission of sinnes beholde hee is faithfull and just to forgive thee 1 Iohn 1.9 Object I have no comfort of my prayer nor deserve any Answ. Cast thy selfe on this faithfulnesse of God trust thy selfe with him Commend thy selfe unto him as to a faithfull Creatour 1 Pet. 4.19 Object But I see no meanes or way of escape or deliverance Answ. Pray as David Psal. 31.1 Deliver me oh Lord according to thy righteousnesse that is that faithfulnesse whereby thou defendest thine owne children according to thy promise Object But I see nothing but present death on every side and am even cast on my death-bed creeping into the grave Answ. Now behold this faithfulnesse and be safe it will make thee in peace and silence to commit thy selfe wholly to him in life and death Psal. 31.5 Into thy hand I commit my spirit for thou hast redeemed me oh Lord God of truth Vpon the same ground lay a sound profession of faith Sound profession stands in two things 1. A constant profession of truth 2. Pure and upright conversation To uphold both these behold Gods faithfulnesse Is God so faithfull in his word and promises let us then boldly confesse and constantly embrace his faithfull word 1. Because it is of the nature of God truth and faithfulnesse it selfe Why should wee be ashamed to holde out this faithfull word as many Politicians be what neede a man be ashamed of the truth Remember what Truth hath said Hee that is ashamed of me in my sayings before men I will be ashamed of him before my Father and his holy Angels 2. How dare men fall off from the truth of the Gospell to Popery or profanesse after the knowledge of it what change is in the truth that they should change their mindes and turne from it Have not we a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles 2 Pet. 1.19 which is as immutable and unchangeable as God himselfe is 3. How venterously doe men goe on in their sinne notwithstanding the light of the word checking their consciences reprooving their wayes as if some part of the faithfulnesse of it should be abated to them Is it not an eternall word that endureth for ever as God doth of which not one jot can
yours As for me I and my house will serve the Lord. And Lot in the midst of a naughty generation did not follow that patterne but walked alone in his owne way Eliah stood alone for the worship of God and in Iohn 11. Mary desired that her sister would come and sit with her at Christs feete but she will sit downe alone if Martha will not so a good heart will if it can get company to heaven and be glad of it but if it cannot it will goe alone But a false heart will looke at rulers at rich men at safety among men at lawes at multitudes and cannot abide the reproach of singularity Fourthly see thy heart be well watched for it will soone be bowed away from God 1. Suspect the deceit of it for it is deceitfull above all things Ierem. 17.9 therefore thou must looke well to it and to the flipperinesse of it it will deceive thee else deale with it as with an untrusty fellow set a watchfull eye over him to keepe him from his flippery trickes 2. Watch it in the first motions of sinfull thoughts for these being admitted defile the man and make him justly blameable Matth. 15.18 Consider that a godly man is said to have right thoughts Prov. 12.5 and that his desires are onely good chap. 11.23 not that his heart is quite empty of evill motions and desires but hee resists and fights against them he hates them and repents of them and God imputes them not 3. Watch it in the least sinnes as well as in the greatest for he that is unjust in the least is unjust in much a pilferer will easily purloyne a greater booty Yea watch it well not onely in sinnes that bring no benefit but in those that are somewhat beneficiall not onely in things our inclinations or occasions carry us not unto but those which run with the streame of nature Herod will doe many things but leaves not Herodias Iehu destroyes Baal but not the calves for that was now dangerous hee feared the people and walked for all this in Ieroboams sin that set them up 4. Because thy watch is not sufficient set it under Gods watch keepe thy heart in Gods presence set thy selfe still in his sight and thou shalt not sinne Shall I doe this saith Ioseph and sinne against God Walke with God as Henoch did and avoid blame Fifthly let thy heart be a right ordered heart carried in the wayes of God and this will leade the whole m●n in the same way To this purpose 1. Get the law written in thy heart Psal. 119.3 Blessed are they that keepe his testimonies they worke no iniquity Ierem. 32.40 I will write my law in their hearts and they shall not depart from it Keep the word and it sh●ll keepe thee The Lord having written his Law in Tables made choyce of the Arke to lay up the same in Exod. 25 1● but this Arke must be laid with pure golde within and without signifying that the proper place to lay the word in is a sincere heart both within and without any other but this will shut it out one time or other 2. Thou must see thy heart holde and hide all the commandements Psal. 119.6 Then shall not I be confounded when I have respect to all thy commandements It is a generall sinne of men they desire to have the word framed and fitted to their desirable and unprofitable lusts but thou must come to the light as one carefull to get a word for every action and as one submitted to the whole forme of doctrine delivered 3. Frame thy heart to the word and never seeke to have the word framed to thy heart So Ely 1 Sam. 3.18 The word of the Lord is good it was not fitted to his heart being a lamentable prediction of his owne ruine and the ruine of his posterity But yet he fitted his heart to it And so did Abraham to the difficult commandement Goe and sacrifice thy sonne So Hezekiah 2 Kings 20.19 Good is the word of the Lord which thou hast spoken when he was threatned by the Lord for his pride he frameth his heart unto the word and acknowledgeth it good Now for the second faculty and that is the will And because a perverse will upheapeth the measure of sinne and blame and there is no sinne we commit which is not a preferring of our owne will before Gods therefore it is impossible that any man should keepe his soule without blame unlesse hee set a narrow watch round about his will to keepe it in some order and frame with the most righteous will of God For which end our wills 1. must be denied 2. renewed 3. freed 4. framed unto God 1. Our wills by nature are crooked and rebellious the naturall will is not subject to God nor can be so long as it is naturall Now the cure of the crooked will is to deny it and captivate it to the will of God in all things let our wills loose to themselves they will be sure to approove improove chuse and refuse cleane contrary to God And therefore as he that must set up a frame must carry away the rubbish so must hee deny his owne will that must frame to Gods who commandeth Honour mee by not doing your owne wills 2. They must be renewed else shall a man still fulfill the will of the flesh And it is not in us to will till the Lord worke first the will and then the deede so that grace now must guide thy will as nature hath formerly swayed it 3. They must be freed Voluntas est libera quatenus liberata They are chained to unrighteousnesse and when the Sonne sets us free we are free indeede and till this time we are servants of sinne whose wills are not their owne but their masters we must every day seeke more freedome to good and get grace against the bondage under evill Rom. 7.25 4. They must be framed that there may be but one will betweene God and us that wee may say feelingly Thy will be done This is when the will determines every thing with God and for God both in matter of faith and obedience First in matter of faith and repentance If the will of God in the Gospell require repentance of sinne and to beleeve in Iesus Christ let thy will determine now with and for God bewaile thy sinne beleeve the promises cast thy selfe upon Iesus Christ claspe the promises against reason as Abraham did in receiving his sonne Secondly in matter of obedience both active and passive 1. Active If the Law require duties to be done to God or man there God expresseth his will frame now thy will to such duties be they never so difficult as Abraham in sacrificing his sonne never so dangerous as Daniel in praying to the God of heaven even under the sentence of death 2. Passive in any crosse or affliction upon thy selfe or others when God reveales his will
determine thy will with his as David Psal. 39.9 I held my tongue and spake nothing because thou Lord didst it There must be but one will betweene God and a faithfull soule betweene Christ and a Christian. Quest. How may I know my will thus denied renewed freed and framed to God Answ. The signes of it are 1. in respect of it selfe 2. in regard of sinne 3. in regard of good duties 1. In respect of it selfe it will not runne before but will waite upon sanctified knowledge and renewed reason it will not inthrall the light of the minde to inordinate desires it will be prooving still what is the good and acceptable will of God It will resolve and purpose that so long time as it is in the flesh to walke after the will of God 1 Pet. 4.2 2. Thou shalt know it in regard of sinne 1. It is resolute in resistance of sinne and the occasions for although the will renewed admit sinne in respect of corruption yet it selfe is in great part set against sinne that it willeth it not fully it purposeth not to sinne as David I vowed I will keepe thy judgements it hath a fast purpose to cleave to God Psal. 119.104 and hates all the wayes of falshood 2. When it yeelds to sinne it is with griefe it doth not sleepe in sinne so but that the heart waketh So the Apostle Rom. 7.15 he even hateth sinne while he is a doing of it I hate that I doe 3. After sinne it riseth timely by repentance if he fall into sinne he hardens not his heart Prov. 28.14 he wills it not neither before nor after there is a strugling and a reluctation in him against it and thus you may know the will rightly framed 3. In regard of good duties it will not onely be well-doing but chearefull in well-doing he doth good duties willingly freely There is a difference in doing one and the same action betweene a good man and a wicked man the worke of the will renewed is not onely to take opportunity to doe good but seeke opportunity to doe it it will not doe good of constraint but will doe it with willingnesse he will doe it cheerefully as a good Pastour feedes his flocke not by constraint but of a willing minde 1 Pet. 5.2 Quest. Why should wee thus looke to our wills Answ. First the state of Christianity is rather a willing than a doing the will of God thou that canst doe no more wouldst thou doe lesse Secondly no greater plague can befall a man than to be given up to his owne will the holding to a mans owne will is the losse of the will and soule too Thirdly as thy will is pleased with the sinne so it shall be revenged in the sorrow of it that will of thine that will not be compelled to obey shall be compelled to suffer all the plagues of sinne by a just recompence are laid upon the will as his sinne was a resistance and renouncing of the will of God for in hell no sinner shall ever obtaine what hee would but shall ever sustaine what hee would not Thus God brings the wayes of the wilfull sinner upon his owne head Ezek. 11.21 Thirdly to keepe the soule blamelesse we must narrowly watch all our affections wherein the soule moves it selfe every where for man by his fall hath lost not his affections but the holinesse and rectitude of them for now man naturally hateth the Lord and his image in his word in his servants and graces he feares and flies what hee should most joy and delight in that is God himselfe he joyes in swallowing the pleasures of sinne the baytes of his perdition hee is angry and impatient at God himselfe as Ionas and carried with a rageing madnesse causelesly and intemperately on any occasion And therefore we must fly to the grace of regeneration which doth not abolish affections but the disordered motions of them and restores them towards their originall rectitude and goodnesse Where this worke of grace is not and where the spirit hath laid no bridle upon the affections no marvaile if that soule runne riot into all unruly lusts and make it selfe blame-worthy and guilty every moment of foule sinnes Yea where this grace is care must be to preserve it even in every affection the least disorder of any of which is enough to impure the soule and leave it under blame Now the rules of keeping the affections unblameable and then for the reasons I. To keepe thy affections unblameable thou must labour seeing they cannot be unblameable if they be not good in the rise to get a good rise for thy affections a good motion must be from a good mover labour to see who is the mover of thy affections whether the Spirit of God or the wicked spirit or thine owne carnall spirit Excellent are those affections that are moved by the Spirit of God as when feare anger love joy griefe are 1. grounded on just causes 2. guided by the rule of renewed reason for the Spirit never moves but according to the word 3. tempered in ordinate measure now they become servants of grace Whereas if thy owne carnall spirit move them contrary to the word for their subject object manner or measure now they turne enemies to God and to thine owne soule II. Be sure they be carried upon right objects onely set thy affections where Gods Spirit would set them Here first the proper object of love is God himselfe and not for his gifts but for himselfe and of Iesus Christ whom if any man love not let him be accursed and that not as a Iesus onely but as a Lord And then the things of God wee must covet the most excellent gifts and with Mary choose the better part even our part in the Gospell and word of Christ and then entirely love the friends of God all our delight must be in the Saints that excell in vertue Secondly the object of our anger is sinnes not persons nor so much the sinnes of others as our owne which are nearer us Thirdly the object of our joy is pardon of sinne Gods favour and countenance Psal. 4. It is wrong placed when it is in the creature not in the Creatour when in the gift not in the giver Fourthly the object of our patience is evills of punishment which we must patiently suffer but not evills of sinne as Moses Fifthly of our feare the true object is God more for his goodnesse than greatnesse more for his mercy than justice Mercy is with thee to be feared Psal. 130.4 more lest we offend him than be offended by him And so in the rest What a businesse now is it to keepe our affections upon allowed and warrantable objects III. In these best objects see they be most vehement and intense To doe this observe these rules First bestow on the best things the best affections thou must love the Lord thy God with all thy soule all thy heart and strength nay more thou