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A15144 The vvay to the celestiall paradise Declaring how a sinner may be saued, and come to life euerlasting. Contained in three bookes.The first second third sheweth that a sinner may be saued, & come to life euerlasting. By faith, apprehending Christ for his iustification, & applying to himselfe the promises of the Gospell made in Iesus Christ. Repentance, hauing his sins washed away in the bloud of the lambe Iesus Christ. Prayer, calling vpon God in the name of Iesus Christ. By Robert Whittell, minister of the Gospell. Whittle, Robert, d. 1638. 1620 (1620) STC 25441; ESTC S120396 338,769 458

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children of God because their faith shall not vtterly faile cannot finally fall away this yeildeth exceeding great consolation to the children of God The faith of a Christian is not strong at all times but sometimes it may be very weake and scarcely felt as after the committing of some great sinne or in time of sore temptation● when as with Dauid a man may be in great heauinesse his soule may be g Psal 42. 11. cast downe yet notwithstanding faith is neuer so quenched in the true beleeuer but some sparke remaines yea a seede remaines that immortall incorruptible seed that in time will quicken and reuiue Like as a sicke man that is brought very low with sicknes his stomacke failes him he loaths his meat the Phisitian forsaks him all men hold him not a man for this world notwithstanding while breath is in his body there is hope many times such a one reuiues recouers and comes to his strength againe so a Christian sore wounded with sinne and in grieuous temptations giues few comfortable words but sends forth sighes and ●obs and many times doe proceed from him desperate speeches so that they that see and heare him might feare least all faith were gone yet afterwards in time the sparke of faith is kindled and flameth the immortall seed is quickned and the Spirit puts new life of grace into the distressed soule making the sinner to beleeue in Christ to hope in Gods mercy to trust in God to call vpon God and cry Abba Father To conclude a Christian who vpon good ground is assured that hee hath true iustifying faith may confidently say with St Paul h Rom. 8. 38. 39. I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. CHAP. XVII Of the signes and markes of true iustifying faith and first of the inward signes thereof THe tenth and last point in the Treatise of faith 10 Signes of true faith is touching the signes and marks of true iustifying faith How a man may know whether he hath the true faith The signes and markes of faith are two-fold Two-fold The first are inward The second outward There are inward signes of faith whereby a man may know and find in himselfe that he hath faith and there are also outward signes whereby not onely he himselfe may be assured but others also may vnderstand and perceiue that he hath faith First of the inward signes The inward signes of true iustifying faith are diuerse 1 Inward signes as The first is the witnesse of the Spirit euen the Spirit of God Of which St Iohn sayth a 1. Job 5. 10. he that beleeueth on 1 The witnesse of the Spirit the Sonne of God hath the witnesse in himselfe Now the Spirit of God is a true and infallible witnesse a witnesse that cannot deceiue the same Spirit beareth witnesse with our spirit that we are the sonnes of God Some may here demand How may I be assured that Quest it is the good Spirit of God which certifies me that I am the child of God and haue faith or that it is not a fancie or bare coniecture of mine owne or that it is not some delusion How shall I be able to discerne betweene Answ these I answere the Spirit of God the true witnesse doth certifie our spirit and assure our conscience that we haue indeed true iustifying faith that we are the adopted sonnes of God and shall certainly be saued specially by these two things First the Spirit of God perswades our conscience inwardly that we haue faith vpon good ground and sound reason taken not from our owne works or worthinesse but from the goodnesse and bountifulnesse of God towards vs from the mercie of God and grace in Christ and so neither the flesh nor the Deuill doth perswade Secondly the Spirit of God perswades vs of the certaintie of faith by the effects which it worketh in vs. As namely the purifying of the heart purging out sinne so that no sinne hath rule and dominion in the heart likewise stirring vp in our hearts a loue of God a hatred of sinne an earnest desire to pray vnto God and an endeuour to please God also an inward spirituall ioy and peace of conscience c. All which are true effects and manifest fruits of the Spirit and cannot come eyther from the flesh or the Deuill and therefore the testimony of the Spirit is a true and sure witnesse to assure vs that we haue the true faith and he that beleeueth on the son of God hath this witnesse in himselfe The second is an inward feeling of spirituall grace 2 A feeling of grace a feeling of faith in a mans selfe When a man is perswaded of the truth of the Gospell and all the promises contained therein and in particular is perswaded for himselfe that his sinnes of the mercie of God and through the merites of Christ are pardoned and he receiued into fauour with God the inward feeling and perceiuing of this in the b Menti nosirae fides nostra conspicua est heart is a signe of faith This was in Dauid after that he had confessed his sinnes vnto God as he witnesseth saying c Psal 32. 5. I acknowledge my sinne vnto thee and mine iniquitie haue I not hid I said I will confesse my transgressions vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the iniquitie of my sinne The third is a godly desire and a holy resolued purpose to walke in obedience to Gods commandements 3 A godly desire and purpose to obey Gods commandements to please God and to doe his will This was also in David for he saith d Psal 119. 6. 4 I haue respect vnto all thy Commandements The fourth is deuout prayer calling vpon the name of the Lord with confidence that God will heare our prayers and grant our requests For faith if it be in the 4 Deuout prayer heart indeed will set the heart a-working to thinke on God to pray vnto God and to call vpon his name For this cause the Spirit of God is called the spirit of grace and supplications the Lord by the Prophet Zacharie sayth e Zach. 12. 10. I will poure vpon the house of Dauid and vpon the inhabitants of Ierusalem the spirit of grace and of supplications And it is called the spirit of grace and supplications because it is of the gracious working of Gods holy spirit that sinners are brought to repentāce of their sins that they mourne sorrow for their sins and that they seeke vnto the Lord and call vnto him for grace and mercy This is the same Spirit which f Rom. 8 26. helpeth our infirmities as S. Paul speakes For we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit
breaking of the heart with godly sorrow for sinne is not felt at least in some measure there sinne sticks fast in the heart Secondly if any be so tender ouer themselues that 2 Except we breake our hearts God will breake vs in his wrath they will not suffer their hearts to be vexed and disquieted with the remembrance of their sinnes and thinke it a grieuous thing to rent breake their hearts with godly sorrow for their sinnes they may iustly feare least the time shall come when the Lord shall y Psal 2. 5 9. speake vnto them in his wrath and vexe them in his sore displeasure And least the Lord will breake them with a rod of iron and dash them in pieces like a potters vessell Fourthly to mooue vs to Contrition and inward 4 The benefits of contrition godly sorrow let vs consider the benefits that may come vnto vs thereby First Contrition or inward sorrow for sinne is a sacrifice acceptable to God when we doe in 1 It is a sacrifice to God secret humble our soules before God and sit sighing and groaning sorrowing and grieuing for our sinnes when we are labouring to rent and breake our earthly carnall fleshly hearts to roote vp some great master-sinne out of our hearts we then offer a sacrifice well-pleasing to God such a sacrifice as Dauid offered when he humbled himselfe for his sinnes z Psal 51. 17. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Secondly worldly sorrow and griefe may hurt a man 2 Godly sorrow hurts not but godly sorrow hurteth not For a 2. Cor. 7. 10. godly sorrow worketh repentance to saluation not to be repented of but the sorrow of the world worketh Death as saith the Apostle and Dauid saith b Psal 147. 3. the Lord healeth the broken in heart and bindeth vp their wounds Thirdly the renting and breaking of the heart with 3 Sorrowing for sinne in this life will keepe vs from sorrowing in the life to come godly sorrow in this life is a meanes to keepe vs from sorrowing and grieuing after this life For after this life c R●u 21. 4. there shall be no more death neither sorrow nor crying neither shall there be any more paine for the former things are passed away In the Booke of Wisedome the wicked being in hell in torments are described by sorrow and anguish of spirit when they shall see the righteous whom they despised on earth in ioy and felicitie and themselues cast into outer darknesse Then they shall groane for anguish of spirit and say within themselues d Wis 5. 4. 5. c. We fooles accounted his life mad●●sse and his end to ●e without honour How is he numbred among the children of God and his lot is among the Saints therfore haue we erred from the way of truth and the light of righteousnesse hath not shined vnto vs and the Sunne of righteousnesse r●se not vpon vs. We wearied our selues in the way of wickednesse and destruction yea we haue gone through deserts where there lay no way but as for the way of the Lord we haue not knowne it What hath pride profited vs or what good hath riches with our vaunting brought vs all those things are passed away like a shaddow c. They that will not sorrow nor grieue after a godly manner for their sins in this life they that will not rent their hearts and turne to the Lord while they haue space for repentance granted them on earth after death shall lie in the place of outer darkenesse sighing and sorrowing grieuing and groaning renting and breaking their hearts when it is too late Blessed then and happie are they Vse who now in this life doe sorrow after a godly manner Against those who breake their hart with worldly sorrow but haue little sorrow of heart for their sinnes for their sinnes that they neede not sorrow nor grieue after this life Now whereas God requireth contrition and inward sorrow for sinne seeing all penitent sinners haue had it more or lesse and seeing that it is so necessarie and profitable for euery sinner as hath beene declared the consideration hereof serues to reproue those who for some wor●dly calami●ie or losse are so inwardly vexed and grieued at the heart that they euen breake their heart with sorrow griefe and yet are little or nothing mooued to sorrow and griefe for their sinnes they breake their hearts with worldly sorrow but not with godly sorrow And yet worldly sorrow is hurtfull and godly sorrow is necessarie and profitable Be not deceiued with the vaine and false opinion of those who thinke that this sorrowing for sinne will make a man Melancholike all the dayes of his life not so For the Lord will e Psal 147. 3. heale the broken in heart and they that f Mat. 5. 4. mou●ne shall bee comforted Yea godly sorrow brings the best ioy and soundest comfort Of worldly ioy and mirth Solomon saith g Pro. 14. 13. the end of that mirth is heauinesse But h 2. Cor. 7. 10. godly sorrow St Paul saith worketh repentance to saluation not to be repented of A sinner that hath truly repented and beene sorrowfull after a godly manner shall neuer repent that he hath repented nor euer be sory that he hath bin sorry after a godly sort For though a sinner sorrowing and grieuing for his sinnes be in heauinesse for a time yet in the end the Lord will send him comfort and refreshing to his soule and the end of that sorrow will be peace and ioy peace of conscience and ioy in the holy-Ghost CHAP. VI. Of Godly sorrow which is outward in mourning and weeping for sinne HItherto of Godly sorrow which is inward 2 Outward sorrow for sinne Therein two things Godly sorrow is also outward and it stands in outward mourning lamenting and weeping for sinne In the handling whereof I will First shew the manner how a penitent sinner may expresse his godly sorrow aright by outward mourning lamenting and weeping Secondly vse motiues to perswade thereunto First of the manner how a sinner that is sory after a 1 How a penitent sinner may rightly mourne for his sinnes godly sort ought to mourne and weepe and therein I consider foure things First for whome we are to mourne and weepe Secondly for what Thirdly the time when Fourthly the measure how much and how greatly Therein foure things a sinner is bound to mourne and weepe Touching the first we are to mourne and weepe for our selues and others for our owne sinnes and for all 1 For whom the abhominations that are done by others Dauid wept and mourned not only for his owne sins but also for the sinnes of others So he saith a Psal 119 136 Riuers of waters run downe mine eies because they keepe not thy law In Ezekiel the man cloathed with linnen which had
a new heart and a new spirit for why will ye die ô house of Israel And Iohn Baptist preaching repentance and exhorting to amendment or life doth thus threaten all such as wil not amend their liues a Mat. 3. 10. euery tree which bringeth not forth good fruit is hewen downe and cast into the fire By which it is manifest that except a sinner doe so repent and so cast away his sins as that he be renewed and reformed as that he amend his life and bring forth better fruits he shall die in his sinnes and shall be cast into hell fire And thirdly as reformation and amendment of life 3 The benefit of amendment of life is great is verie necessarie so the benefit that comes thereby is exceeding great for it is a meanes to bring downe blessings of three sorts Temporall Spirituall and Eternall The first benefit that comes by reformation and amendment 1 Outward prosperitie of life is a prosperous and happie state on earth the enioying of temporall good things as peace and plentie and such like blessings euen as God shall see it good for his children The Psalmist saith b Psal 37. 27. depart from euill and doe good and dwell for euermore The LORD speakes thus to the Iewes by Ieremie c Ier. 7. 5. 6. 7. If you throughly amend your wayes and your doings c. then will I cause you to dwell in this place in the lend that I gaue to your Fathers for euer euer And Moses from the mouth of the Lord shewes the people of Israel what great prosperitie they shall haue if they will d Deut. 28. 1. 2. 3. 4. c. hearken diligently vnto the voice of the Lord to obserue and doe all his Commandements Blessed shalt thou be in the cittie and blessed shalt thou be in the field Blessed shall be the fruit of thy bodie and the fruit of thy ground and the fruit of thy cattell the increase of thy kine and the flockes of thy sheepe The second is spirituall happinesse Reformation and 2 Spirituall happinesse amendment of life brings a sinner into the happie state of grace for a sinner that hath forsaken his sinnes and amended his life is awaked out of the sleepe of sinne yea is raised from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse and is deliuered from the feare of eternall death this is called the first Resurrection of which St Iohn saith e Reu. 20. 6. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first Resurrection on such the second death hath no power The third is eternall glorie and euerlasting peace 3 Eternall glory they that are reformed and lead a new life they that bring forth the fruit of good workes and are exercised in doing of good shall inherite eternall felicitie and euerlasting happinesse at saith the Apostle f Rom. 2. 10. glorie honour and peace to euery man that worketh good Now whereas God requireth amendment of life and seeing that euery sinner ought to be renewed in minde and reformed in life as hath beene prooued by the Scriptures and seeing that the necessitie and benefite thereof is so great as hath beene declared the consideration hereof is profitable First for Instruction to teach and admonish vs to prooue our selue● to search our hearts and examine our Vse 1 liues whether we can finde this blessed change and holy To trie our selues whether we be come to amendment of life alteration in our selues which the Scripture so call● for at our hands without which a sinner remaines still in his old state of corruption and without which hee shall neuer see the kingdome of God but shall die in his sinnes and perish euerlastingly How greatly then doth it concerne euery one of vs to search our hearts and examine our liues to finde out whether we be the same in heart in mind in will in affection the same in thought in word and deede that we haue beene heretofore whether our hearts be as greatly puft vp with pride whether they be as malicious and as lustfull as they haue beene and whether we be as earthly minded as we haue beene whether our tongues be the same that they haue beene for swearing and cursing and lying and slandering and euill speaking whether our hands be the same for violence and wrong In a word whether we liue still in the transgression and breach of the commandements of God as we haue done and find no change O then let vs know that our state is miserable and fearfull And therefore let vs with all speede make hast to set about this worke of Reformation and Amendment of life And to encourage vs herein let vs set before our eyes the examples of such penitent sinners as haue not onely forsaken their sinnes but haue also amended their liues Manasseh was a very Idolatrous and wicked King yet vpon his repentance he reformed himselfe and amended his wayes he puld downe his idoles and set vp the worship of the true God Peter though through infirmitie he denied Christ yet repenting he boldly confessed Christ And Paul though first a bloodie persecu●our yet afterwards repenting became a zealous preacher These were all changed in mind and in life they came to amendment of life S. Ambrose exhorteth euery one to g Scipsum sibi homo abn●get totus mutetur Amb. de poe●it l. 2. c. 10. denie himselfe and to be wholy changed And hereupon reporteth the strange alteration of a young man who hauing liued in lust and wantonnesse wantonly dallying with the strange woman afterwards absenting himselfe from her was in processe of time changed and reformed at his returne meeting with his olde familiar passeth by her but shee impudently calls vnto him saying It is I. He answered h Sed ego non sumego ibid. But I am not I. I am not now the same that I was I am changed I am become a new man Happie is he that is so changed Let vs therefore follow these good examples and not rest our selues content till we haue attained to that state of grace that we may euery one truly say of himselfe I am not now the same that I was I am changed I am become a new man Moreouer to encourage vs yet more to redresse our wayes and to amend our liues let vs consider the benefit of amendment of life Amendment of life you haue heard procures outward prosperitie it brings a sinner into a farre better state of grace and promiseth eternall glorie Wherefore if we would be either happy in this life or blessed in the life to come we must be changed from our former euil conuersation and come to amendment of life Secondly this reprooues those who hold it sufficient Vse 2 to cease from their former euill life though they henceforward Against those who onely cease from some euill but doe no good doe no good and thinke they haue amended their liues well enough
against the Lord by thought word deed we cannot but acknowledge that it is of the Lords mercies that we are not consumed The Lord might in his iustice cut vs off for the very first transgression for one euill thought for one wicked word for one sinnefull deede and when we find the mercy and goodnesse of God so much shewed towards vs as to spare ●s and suffer vs to liue notwithstanding our vile wicked and sinnefull life O how ought wee to acknowledge the goodnesse of God herein and how ought wee to praise the Lord for his mercy and patience towards vs in suffering vs so long Wherefore a sinner should be so far from making the patience of God to be an occasion of deferring that it ought rather to hasten his repeatance And he should reason thus hitherto I haue liued in sinne and done wickedly and yet the Lord hath beene ●o gracious vnto me that he hath spared me he might haue cut me off in the midst of my sinnes it is of the Lords mercies that I am not consumed and now I know not whether the Lord will forbeare me any more Wherefore I will delay the time no longer I will now repent I will now returne vnto the Lord the patience and long-suffering and the goodnesse of the Lord shall lead me to repentance CHAP. XIX Of the shortnesse of our life of the certaintie of death and the vncertaintie of the day and houre of death and how in regard of these its necessarie for a sinner to repent THirdly its necessarie for a sinner to repent of his sinnes and to amend his life in regard of 3 The shortnesse of mans life the shortnesse of our life In the first age of the world men liued long because as yet sin was not multiplied in the world for as one saith a D●c●r●●tus est 〈…〉 dec●●sus s●●●●dum 〈…〉 cap. ●6 the course of mans life was shortned according to the increase of some For when sinne beganne to be multiplied on the earth when the wickednesse of man was great in the earth then did God drowne the world of the vngodly and shortned the dayes of man so that whereas in the beginning of the world and before the stood men liued eight or nine hundred yeere after the floud they attained not two hundred for Abraham liued but an b Gen. ●5 7. hundred threescore and fifteene yeeres And Iacob counteth his dayes to be c Gen 47. 9. an hundred and thirtie And in the time of Moses the dayes of mans life were counted but d Psal 90. 10. threescore and ten The Scriptures speake thus of the shortnesse of mans life Iob saith e I●b 14. 1. Man that is borne of a woman is of few dayes Dauid thus f Psal 39. 5. behold thou hast made my dayes as an hand-breadth and mine age is as nothing before thee verily euery men at his best state is altogether vanitie Our life for the shortnesse thereof is compared to things of great swiftnesse and short continuance Iob compares our life to a g Job 7. 6. Weauers shuttle to a running h Iob. 9. 25. 26. Post to the swift Ships and to the flying of an Eagle hasting to the prey to a i I●b 14. 2. flower of the field that is soone cut downe and withered as al●o to a shaddow that fleeth and continueth not Dauid to the k Psal 103. 15. grasse and slower of the field which in the morning flourisheth and groweth vp in the euening is cut downe and withereth St Iames to a l Iam. 4. 14. vapour that appeareth for a little time and then vanisheth away The woman of Tekoa in her parable compares the life of man to m 2 Sam. 14. 14. water spilt on the ground which cannot be gathered vp againe and indeed n Pret●reunt ann●m refluentis aquae our yeeres passe away as the running waters For as all Riuers runne into the sea from whence they came so doe all men runne and hast to the earth from whence they came Our life is nothing else but a passing from life and a tending to death For from our infancie we passe to child-hood from childhood to young age from yong age to middle age from middle age to old age and from old age to death Now the shortnesse of our life ought to be a great motiue to perswade vs to repentance and amendment of life And to be warie how we spend our dayes This Moses the man of God teacheth vs from the consideration of the shortnesse of our life for hauing told vs that the length of our dayes is but threescore yeares and ten hereupon prayes and therein teacheth vs to pray o Psal 90. 12. so teach vs to number our dayes that we may apply our hearts vnto wisedome This reprooues the great folly of those who spend their daies in vanitie and wickednesse liuing at ease passing Vse away their time in eating and drinking and making Against those who spend the sho●t time of their life ill merrie considering not how short their life is nor how soone and suddenly they may be cut off and their daies come to an end It is with manie as Iob saith p Iob. 21. 13 they spend their dayes in wealth and in a moment goe downe to the graue It is the prayse of Moses that when he was in Pharaoh's Court and might haue liued there in all worldly honour and enioyed his pleasures at full yet q Heb. 11. 25. he refused to be called the sonne of Pharaoh's daughter chusing rather affliction with the people of God then to enioy the pleasures of sinne for a season Letting vs thereby vnderstand two things first that the pleasures of sinne are but for a season secondly that a wise man as Moses will not aduenture the losse of felicitie in heauen which is euerlasting for the enioying of the pleasures of sinne for a season Sinne is committed in this present life and this life is but short we are but of small continuance here and therefore if a man should giue himselfe to all sports and mirth that could be inuented and solace himselfe in all worldly delights and earthly pleasures euen to satietie yet these pleasures would be but for a short time but for a season now no wise man none but a very foole will buy his pleasures so deare as for the enioying of his earthly pleasures to loose heauenly ioyes and for the winning of things temporall to loose things eternall Fourthly its necessarie for a sinner to repent and amend 4 The certaintie of Death his life if he consider the certaintie of death Our life is but short and death is certaine God hath determined the end of mans dayes vpon earth After that Adam had finned God said vnto him r Gen. 3. 19. dust thou art and vnto dust shalt thou returne Iob saith ſ Iob 14. 10. Man dieth and wasteth away yea man giueth
dye in impenitencie and hardnesse of heart Secondly this is profitable for instruction to all that know there is a hell and heare of the paines and torments Vse 2 To feare God of hell that they learne to feare God to stand in awe of him and not to sinne against him to this our Sauiour Christ exhorteth vs vpon the consideration of the paines and torments of hell saying Feare not them which c Mat. 10. 28. kill the body but are not able to kill the soule But rather feare him which is able to destroy both soule and body in hell Because there is a hell and because that God is able to cast the soules and bodies of all impenitent sinners into hell for this cause see that ye feare God stand in awe of God tremble before him and sinne not against him for as God is mercifull to penitent sinners and will pardon the iniquitie and transgressions of them that repent and turne from their sinnes and returne vnto God So also is he a God o● iustice and fierce wrath for as the Apostle saith d Heb. 12. 29. God is a consuming fi●r and he will cast both the bodies and soules of all impenitent sinners into hell-fire there to be tormented for euermore as it is also written e Reu. 21. 8. The fearefull and vnbeleeuing and the abhomminable and murderers and whore-mongers sorcerers and idolaters and all l●ers shall haue their part in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death O then sinfull man who soeuer thou art now betimes repent and returne vnto the Lord least death vnawares seize vpon thee and suddenly thou be cast downe into hell and there shalt finde thy case to be remedilesse and thy torment endlesse CHAP. XXIII Of the benefit of Repentance how it remooueth Iudgements temporall spirituall and eternall Which may perswade vs to Repentonce HItherto of the motiues to Repentance taken from the necessitie thereof The fourth and last motiue to Repentance 4 The benefit of Repentance I take from the benefit thereof Repentance brings much good to the penitent sinner he shall be blessed with manie blessings I reduce them to these two heads True Repentance Two-fold First remooueth iudgements Secondly procuteth blessings First Repentance remooueth iudgements and those 1 It remooueth iudgements Three fold three-fold Temporall Spirituall and Eternall Touching the first Repentance is a meanes to remooue 1 Temporall temporall iudgements either threatned against sinners or else deseruedly drawne vpon them for their sinnes The Lord sendeth Ieremie the Prophet to the people of Israell saying a Ier. 3. 12. Returne thou back-sliding Israel saith the Lord and I will not cause mine anger to fall vpon you for I am mercifull saith the Lord and I will not keepe anger for euer Isaiah the Prophet is sent to King Kezekiah with this message b Isa 38. 5. 6. Goe and say to Hezekiah Thus saith the Lord the God of Dauid thy Father I haue heard thy prayer I haue seene thy teares beholde I will adde vnto thy dayes fifteene yeeres and I will deliuer thee and this Cittie out of the hand of the King of Assyria and I will defend this Cittie Ionah the Prophet is sent to Niniueh to threaten them and their Cittie with destruction and ouerthrow except they did repent within the space of fortie dayes c Joh. 3. 4. Yet fortie dayes and Niniueh shall he ouerthrowne But vpon this threatning Niniueh did repent for the King and the whole Cittie put on sackcloth and fasted and cryed mightily vnto God and repented of their euill wayes and d Ver. 10. God saw their workes that they turned from their euill wayes And God repented of the euill that he had said hee would doe vnto them and he did it not When God saw the people repent of their sinnes he repented of the iudgement which he had threatned against them According to that saying of the Lord in Ieremie e Ier. 18. 7. 8. At what instant I shall speake concerning a nation and concerning a kingdome to plucke vp and to pull downe and to destroy it if that nation against whom I haue pronounced turne from their euill I will repent of the euill that I thought to doe vnto them Thus Repentance remooueth temporall iudgements Secondly Repentance remooueth spirituall iudgements 2 Spirituall as blindnesse of minde hardnesse of heart and horrour of conscience It remooues blindnesse of mind When God giueth the grace of illumination for before that a sinner beleeueth and repenteth he liues in blindnesse and darknesse but beleeuing and repenting he is inlightned with the knowledge of the truth and walkes no more in darkenesse but in light as the Apostle speakes f Ephe. 5. 8. ye were sometimes darknesse but now are ye light in the Lord. Repentance also remooueth hardnesse of heart when God giueth the sinner true contrition softning the hard heart For when God giueth grace to repent he giueth also a mollified and melting heart as it is said in Ezechiel g Ezek. 36. 25. 26. I will sprinckle cleane water vpon you and ye shall be cleane from all your filthinesse and from all your Idoles will I cleanse you A new heart also will I giue you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stonie heart out of your flesh and I will giue you an heart of flesh Yea Repentance also remooueth horrour of conscience and the intollerable burden of sinne when God giueth to the penitent sinner peace of conscience and rest to the soule h Mat. 11. 28. Come vnto me saith our Sauiour all ye that labour and are heauie laden and I will giue you rest Now the conscience neuer hath true peace neither doth the soule euer enioy quiet rest til sinne be done away by Repentance Thirdly Repentance remooueth eternall iudgements 3 Eternall so that neither death nor hell nor condemnation can hurt them that doe truly beleeue in Christ and haue vnfainedly repented of their sinnes and doe now lead a new life So saith St Paul to the Romanes i Rom. 8. 1. There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus who walke not after the flesh but after the spirit And St Iohn saith k Reu. 20. 6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection on such the second death hath no power Thus it is apparent that great benefit commeth by Repentance for it remooueth from the penitent sinner punishments temporall concerning the bodie and outward state it deliuereth from spirituall iudgements and it Vse freeth from eternall condemnation That may escape the iudgements of God we must repent of our sinnes The consideration of which benefit of Repentance in remoouing Iudgements temporall spirituall and eternall serues for instruction to teach and admonish euery one that would escape these iudgements that would haue temporall iudgements remooued from
him that would be deliuered from spirituall or freed from eternall iudgements and that would be saued from hell and condemnation to repent of his sinnes to purge and cleanse his heart from wickednes that he may be saued as saith the Prophet Ieremie l Iere. 4. 14. O Ierusalem wash thine heart from wickednesse that thou maist be saued Consider then O man if the hand of God be vpon thee afflicting thee with any outward calamitie and affliction in thy bodie goods and outward state thy remedie is to humble thy selfe before the Lord with Hezekiah to pray vnto thy God and to weepe for thy sinnes with the Niniuites to fast and weepe and pray and to turne from all thy euill wayes that so the Lord may be gracious vnto thee and turne away his anger from thee that thou maiest be preserued Moreouer if the Lord lay vpon thee spirituall iudgements afflicting thy soule and wounding thy conscience with the bitter remembrance of thy sinnes the way to finde rest and comfort to thy soule is to seeke to Christ to come to Christ by faith and repentance confessing thy sinnes and earnestly suing for the pardon of thy sinnes that so Christ may giue thee rest And if thou standest in feare of hell and condemnation if thou bee fearefull of that lake of fire the way and meanes to escape hell and condemnation is now to repent of thy sinnes now to cleanse thy heart from wickednesse now to rise from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse and now to haue thy part and portion in the first resurrection and then the second death shal I haue no power ouer thee In a word if we would be preserued from the wrath of God in this life and saued from hell and condemnation in the life to come we must now repent and returne to the Lord now be renewed in minde and reformed in life or else we cannot be saued CHAP. XXIIII Shewing that Repentance procureth blessings Temporall Spirituall and Eternall where of the ioyes of Heauen how these ought to be a most forcible motiue to perswade euery one to repent and to serue God and what comfort they bring THat Repentance remooueth Iudgements hath beene shewed Secondly repentance is also profitable for 2 It procureth blessings Threefold the procuring of blessings And those also threefold Temporall 1 Temporall Spirituall and Eternall Repentance is a meanes to procure First temporall blessings The Prophet Esay hauing exhorted to repentance and amendment of life a Isa 1. 16. 17. Wash ye make you cleane c. Annexeth this promise b Vers 19. If yee be willing and obedient ye shall eate the good of the land So Ieremie c Jer. 7 5 6. 7. If ye throughly amend your waies and your doings c then will I cause you to dwell in this place so likewise the Prophet Ioel hauing exhorted to repentance d Ioel. 2. 12. 13. therefore now saith the Lord turne ye euen to me with fasting and weeping and with mourning c. annexeth a promise of temporall blessings e Vers 19. The Lord will answere and say vnto his people behold I will send you corne and wine and oyle ye shall be satisfied therewith Secondly spirituall blessings as mercy pardon and 2 Spirituall forgiuenesse of sins the Lord by his prophet Isaiah exhorteth to repentance and vpon repentance maketh a large promise of forgiuenesse of sinnes f Isa 1. 16. 17. 18. Wash ye make you cleane put away the euill of your doings from before mine eyes cease to doe euill learne to doe well c. Come now and let vs reason together saith the Lord though your sinnes be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wooll Againe g Isa 55 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the vnrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne vnto the Lord and he will haue mercie vpon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon S. Peter in his Sermon to the Iewes hauing laid to their charge the crucifying of Christ exhorteth them to repentance with a promise of mercie and forgiuenesse h Acts 2. 38. Repent and be baptized euery one of you in the name of Iesus Christ for the remission of sinnes Againe he saith i Acts 3. 19. Repent ye therefore and be conuerted that your sinnes may be blotted out Mercie is promised to penitent sinners yea and that free mercy and forgiuenesse so promiseth the Lord by Ezekiel k Eze. 18. 21. 22 If the wicked will turne from all his sinnes that he hath committed and keepe all my statutes and doe that which is lawfull and right he shall surely liue he shall not die All his transgressions that he hath committed they shall not be mentioned vnto him And by Ieremy hee saith l Ier. 31. 34. I will forgiue their iniquitie and I will remember their sinne no more Thirdly eternall blessednesse Which eternall blessednesse 3 Eternal where of is to be considered First in regard of the excellency of the place of happinesse prepared for all those that haue repented of their 1 The excellency of the place of happinesse sinnes and are washed from their wickednesse The place of eternall happinesse is Heauen whither Christ ascended S. Marke speaking of the ascension of Christ saith m Mar. 16. 19. Hee was receiued vp into Heauen And whither Christ the head is ascended thither shall his members also ascend they shall be where he is As hee himselfe saith n Iohn 14. 2. 3. I goe to prepare a place for you And if I goe and prepare a place for you I will come againe and receiue you vnto my selfe that where I am there ye may be also Many excellent things are spoken of this heauenly place It is called a Kingdome o Mat. 25. 34. Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the kingdome prepared for you It is called the kingdome of God p 1 Cor. 69. Know ye not saith S. Paul that the vnrightous shall not inherite the kingdome of God It is called the kingdome of Heauen q Math. 7. 21. Not euery one saith our Sauiour that saith vnto me Lord Lord shall enter inthe kingdome of heauen And it is called an r 1 Pet. 1. 4. Inheritance incorruptible and vndefiled that f●●deth not away reserued in heauen for vs And this place of happinesse is all glorious and bea●fu●l So S. Iohn describeth the heauenly Ierusalem the Cittie of God ſ Reu. 21. 18. 19. 20. 21. The building of the wall of it he saith was of I●sper and the Cittie was pure gold like vnto clea●e glasse And the foundations of the wall of the Cittie were ga●●●shed with all manner of precious stones c. And the twelue gates were twelue Pearles euery seuerall gate was of one ●earle and the street of the Cittie was pure go●● as it were transparent
either to be with h Diues in hell torments 1 The Scripture acknowledgeth but two places after this life or with Lazarus in Abrahams bosome that is in ioy and felicity now they that are in heauen are in so great ioyes alreadie that they cannot be bettered till the day of the resurrection when they shall haue fulnesse of glory both in bodie and soule and they that are in hell cannot by h Luk. 16. 22. 23 any prayers be deliuered thence as Abraham tells Diues i Ver. 26. betweene vs and you there is a great gulfe fixed so that they which would passe from hence to you cannot neither can they passe to vs that would come from thence From Hell there is no redemption Secondly whereas the Romish Church teacheth and 2 All the faithfull and true beleeuers are cleansed from their sinnes in this life holdeth that they that are cast into Purgatorie are of the faithfull sort beleeuers the Scripture prooueth that all the faithfull all true beleeuers are washed and cleansed from their sinnes in this life and are therefore blessed after this life For S Iohn saith k 1. Ioh. 1. 7. the bloud of Iesus Christ his Sonne cleanseth vs from all sinne St Paul saith l Rom. 8. 1. there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus Christ himselfe saith m Ioh. 5. 24. He that heareth my word and beleeueth on him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death vnto life And a voice from heauen saith vnto Iohn n Reu. 14. 13. Write blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the Spirit that they may rest from their labours and their workes doe follow them Now seeing that the state of the faithfull beleeuers is such that they are cleansed and purified from their sinnes in the bloud of Christ seeing there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ seeing they that beleeue in Christ shall not come into condemnation but passe from death to life and seeing that all the faithfull are blessed when they die and their workes follow them that is they haue the reward of their workes then it is euident that they goe not to any place of torment before they come to heauen but vpon their dissolution they ascend to heauen and are with Christ 3 The canonicall Scripture doth not mention prayer for the dead Thirdly the Canonicall Scripture doth not so much as mention Prayer for the dead no not in those places where there is mention of sacrifices and prayer yea mention of the death of the righteous but rather the contrarie S. Paul to the Thessalonians saith o 1. Thes 4. 13. I would not haue you to be ignorant brethren concerning them which are asleepe that ye sorrow not euen as other which haue no hope Where the Apostle giueth vs to vnderstand that if our friends departed were in any place of torment if they were in paine and miserie then indeed we had cause to sorrow and mourne to pray and to doe any thing that might procure them ease but saith the Apostle I would not haue you to sorrow as men without hope as if he had said If you haue hope that your friends departed are at rest haue ease and shall rise againe to glorie why then doe you sorrow for them as they that haue no hope either of their present rest or future Resurrection to glorie you should rather reioyce for that they are at rest Fourthly though it cannot be denied but that Prayer 4 Prayer for the dead though it be auncient yet is it neither Apostolicall nor yet vsed by the most auncient orthodoxall Fathers of the Church as it is by the Romists at this day for the dead is an auncient custome long vsed in the Church yet notwithstanding I say First that it commeth short of that antiquitie to be an Apostolicall doctrine For before p Tertul. de coro mil. Turtullians time there 's little or no mention of Prayer for the dead and he himselfe acknowledgeth that it hath no firme foundation in the Scriptures but onely from Tradition and custome Secondly the auncient Fathers did not vse Prayer for the dead as the Romish Church doth vse it at this day namely for the easing of soules in Purgatorie and to deliuer them from thence but for other ends as hath bin sufficiently declared before And the auncient Fathers if they be rightly vnderstood doe nothing at all confirme the doctrine of the present Romish Church concerning their manner of praying for the dead The consideration hereof serues Vse 1 First to reproue those who when they speake of their Against those that pray for mercie to the soules of their friends departed friend departed pray that God would haue mercie on their soules for although the Prayers of the auncient Church for the soules of the dead might receiue some tollerable interpretation before Purgatory was beleeued yet now since that the Romish Church hath deuised a Purgatorie and that it is held amongst them as an article of faith it is dangerous to make such a Prayer For this kinde of Prayer that God would haue mercy on his soule howsoeuer it may demonstrate the affection of him that prayeth for his friend departed yet may it be offensiue two wayes First by taking Gods name in vaine through a too frequent and common vsing of it in ordinarie communication as the manner of some is Secondly by an opinion of supposing his friend to be in Purgatorie for in praying for mercie to his soule hee supposeth or at least breeds an opinion in the mindes of the hearers that he doth suppose that the soule of his friend departed is in the paines of Purgatorie and hath neede of mercie to be shewed to his soule whereas it is certaine that the faithfull departed out of this life haue obtained mercie before they yeeld vp the Ghost and they are purged cleansed from their sins in the bloud of Iesus Christ Secondly hence we learne that although it be vnlawfull Vse 2 to pray for any one departed in particular for his It is no superstition to laud and praise God for the departure of our Christian friends ease in or deliuerie out of Purgatorie yet it is no superstition to laud and prayse God for the departure of our Christian friends out of the miseries of this mortall life nor yet to wish to vs and them in generall the hastning of Christ's second comming to iudgement that we with them and they with vs may haue a glorious Resurrection and enioy perfect blessednesse both in bodie and soule For q Perk. Cathol reform de Purgator this is included in that Petition r Mat. 6. 10. Thy kingdome come And this is that sweete and pleasant voice of the Bridegroome Christ Iesus and of the Bride the spouse of Christ the Church of God and euery faithfull soule Å¿
people and they grudge within themselues repine and fret because the hand of God is vpon them afflicting them this was the sinne of the Israelites going out of Egypt When they came to the wildernesse and found no bread they g Exod. 16. 2. murmured against Moses and Aaron and when they wanted water they murmured h Exod. 17. 3. againe Such murmurers are likened to swine which make a great noise and grudge if they be not satisfied Secondly when men will not waite Gods leasure nor 2 Limiting God stay his good time but will appoint themselues a time and limit God this was likewise the sinne of Israel of whome its said in the Psalmes i Psal 78. 41. The turned backe and tempted God and limited the holy one of Israel This was the sinne of those k Iud●th 7. Bethulians who when their citie was besieged would not waite the time of the Lords deliuerance but set a certaine time that if the Lord did not send them helpe within the space of siue daies then they would deliuer vp the City to the enemie But to keepe vs from this kind of impatience we ought rather to l Psal 130. 5. 6. 7. Wait for the Lord and to hope in him for with the Lord there is mercie and with him is plentuous redemtion as saith the Psalmist Thirdlycby fainting vnder the crosse being wearied 3 Fainting vnder the crosse with the burthen of afflictions hence it is that many in time of tribulation cry out of the greatnesse of their crosse and grieuosnesse of their paine n●uer was any so crossed neuer was any so much troubled neuer had any such paine and such like words of impatience and diuerse hereupon out of discontentment and through impatience wish themselues out of the world that they might be rid of their trouble and eased of their paine But I wish and desire that such people would first examine themselues and consider well aforehand whether they be ready and well-prepared for death before they so much desire the comming of death lest death come vnlookt for and take them vnawares And I demand of all such as are any way impatient either by murmuring against God or are not content to wait the Lords leisure or that faint vnder their afflictions and crosses where is your patience and where is your faith certaine it is if faith were in the the heart it would help to strengthen our hearts that we should not faint in tribulation and the triall of our faith would worke patience and our patience in suffering would be a testimony and a witnesse of our faith that as it is giuen vnto vs in the behalfe of Christ to beleeue in him so also to suffer for his sake CHAP. XIX Of Patience in suffering wrongs and iniuries HItherto of Patience in suffering afflictions in 2 In suffering wrongs and iniuries from men And therein two things generall There is also Patience to be shewed in suffering wrongs and iniuries from men In handling whereof I will shew First what the wrongs and iniuries are which a Christian may or can suffer from men that so hee may see how farre his patience is to extend and stretch it selfe Secondly I will make it manifest that a Christian is to suffer wrongs and iniuries from men For the first All wrongs and iniuries that one man 1 The sorts and kindes of wrongs and iniuries Three-fold may or can doe to another may bee reduced to these three heads They are either touching First a mans body and so concerne his person or Secondly a mans goods or Thirdly a mans good name And these wrongs and iniuries to others are or may Which may be done two wayes be done two waies either Secretly or Openly First Secretly by the euill imaginations thoughts 1 Secretly of the heart When an enuious or malicious minded man thinkes euill of his neighbour in his heart concerning which the Prophet Zachary hath this admonition a Zach. 8. 17. Let none of you imagine euill in your hearts against his neighbour Secondly more openly and manifestly and that 2 Openly both by Word and Two manner of wayes Deed. For both by word and deede a man may do wrong to his neighbour three wayes In regard of First his body Secondly his goods Thirdly his good name First a man may doe wrong to his neighbours body 1 To a mans body And that and that First by word discommending and disgracing his person or speaking disdainefully and scornefully of the shape and proportion of his body 1 By word Secondly by deede as smiting his neighbour hurting and wounding his body or shedding his bloud also 2 By deede by abusing the body of any through fornication or any manner of vncleannesse Secondly wrongs and iniuries may bee done to a 2 To a mans goods And that man concerning his goods First by word when any one speaks the worst of his neighbours goods dispraising his corne or cattell or wares or any thing that his neighbour hath with a purpose 1 By word to bring others in dislike with his neighbours goods and so to hinder him in the sale of them Secondly by deede when any one offers any personall 2 By deede wrong to a mans children or seruants by smiting and hurting them or when any one doth steale and purloyne any mans goods or violently take them from him when any one goeth about to hurt and hinder another of his right and when one doth trespasse against his neighbour and either spoile or hurt his neighbours corne or cattell or any thing that is his Thirdly men may doe wrong to others in regard of 3 To a mans good name And that their good name And that First by word by railing termes reuiling speeches and false accusations by slandring and back-biting 1 By word and by any manner of words which may tend to the defaming and discrediting of a mans neighbour Secondly by deede by the act of bearing false witnesse 2 By deede before a Magistrate for there not only the tongue speakes but the hand acts a part and both tongue and hand agree together to testifie an vntruth against his neighbour These are the sorts and kindes of wrongs which any man may or can doe vnto another Now in the second 2 To suffer wrong patiently place I am to prooue that it is the part of a good Christian when he is iniuried and wronged to suffer wrong and iniury and that patiently whether the wrong bee touching his body goods or good name Which I Motiues thereunto manifest First by testimonies of Scripture Secondly by example in Scripture For the first The Scripture is plentifull in precepts 1 Testimonies of Scripture and exhortations to patience in suffering wrongs Our Sauiour Christ saith b Matth. 5. 44. Loue your enemies blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them which
that they care not greatly of what religion they be so they be of any There are others who as they would not be too irreligious and profane not exceedingly wicked and vile in their life so they are afraid of being noted to be too precise in their carriage too zealous too holy such are luke-warme Christians neither hote nor cold neither so cold as to be of no religion nor so hote as to be sincere in the profession of godlinesse Such luke-warme professours are abhominable in the sight of God and euen loathed of him As is manifest in the reprehension of the Angell of the Church of the Laodiceans p Reu. 3. 14. 15. 16. I know thy workes that thou art neither colde nor hote I would thou wert cold or hote So then because thou art lukewarme and neither cold nor hote I will spew thee out of my mouth here are two things said of these Laodiceans one is concerning the state of that Church for their profession of religion they are noted to be lukewarme neither cold nor hote the other is there iudgement and punishment for their lukewarmenesse in religion except they be more zealous and repent the Lord will spew them out of his mouth that is the Lord will loath and abhorr them and will cast them out from him euen as a mans stomacke loathes lukewarme water casting it vp againe And this of the confession of Christ before men in 2 In time of persecution time of peace There is also a confession of Christ to be made of euery good christian in time of persecution And that Twofold is also twofold The first is to stand boldly in the defence of our 1 To stand to our faith when we are called in question for it faith and religion if we be called in question for it This our Sauiour Christ taught his Disciples q Math. 10. 17. 18. 19. Beware of men for they will deliuer you vp to the Councills and they will scourge you in their Synagognes And ye shall be brought before gouernours and Kings for my sake for a testimony against them and the Gentiles But when they deliuer you vp take no thought how or what ye shall speake for it shall be giuen you in that same howre what ye shal speake A worthy example hereof there is in Peter and Iohn the Apostles of Christ who preaching Iesus Christ and working miracles through his name were called before the rulers of the Iewes and examined about the healing of the creeple r Act 4 7. by what power or by what name haue ye done this then Peter with great courage and boldnesse answered ſ ver 8. 9. 10. Ye rulers of the people and elders of Israel if we this day be examined of the good deede done to the impotent man by what meanes he is made whole be it knowne vnto you all and to all the people of Israel that by the name of Iesus Christ of nazareth whom ye crucifie whom God raised from the dead euen by him doth this man stand heere before you whole Here was the constant confession of Christ by these Apostles standing to their faith when they were called in question for it and that with courage and great boldnesse yea further when the rulers called the Apostles t ver 18. 19. 20. And commanded them not to speake at all nor teach in the Name of Iesus Peter Iohn answered said vnto them whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken vnto you more thē vnto God iudge yee For we cannot but speake the things which we haue seene heard See still their cōstant cōfession of ther faith in Iesus Christ they beleeued therfore they spake this is the first kind of confessing Christ in time of persecution The second i● to stand boldly in the defence of our 2 To stand in the defence of our faith vnto the death faith euen vnto death and not to deny Christ though we loose our life for Christs sake Memorable is the example of the three children of the Captiuity who being threatned to be cast into the fiery fornace because they would not worship the golden Image which Nebuchadnezzar had set vp did notwithstanding sticke fast vnto the worship of the true God of Heauen and earth when the King threatned them with the fiery furnace they were not afraid of the fier but with courage and boldnesse thus confidently answered the king u Dan. 3. 16. 17. 18. O Nebuchad-nezzar we are not carefull to answer thee in this matter If it be so our God whom we serue is able to deliuer vs from the burning fiery furnace and he will deliuer vs out of thine hand ô King But if not be it knowne vnto thee o King that we will not serue thy Gods nor worship thy golden image which thou hast set vp This was the constancy of the Apostle S. Paul when the Prophet Agabus tooke Pauls girdle and bound his owne hands and feete prophecied that so the Iewes at Ierusalem should binde the man that owed that girdle and when the beleeuers with whom Paul was heard these things and wept and besought him that he would not goe to Ierusalem Paul answered x Acts. 21. 13. What meane ye to weepe and to breake mine heart For I am ready not to be bound onely but also to die at Ierusalem for the Name of the Lord Iesus Such was the constancy of the faithfull in the times of the most cruell persecutions both before Christ and since Before Christ as is manifest in the diuerse sufferings of the Saints of God mentioned by the Apostle to the Hebrewes y Heb. 11. 35. 36. 37. 38. others were tortured not accepting deliuerance that they might obtaine a better resurrection And other had triall of cruell mockings and scourgings yea moreouer of bonds and imprisonment They were stoned they were sawen a sunder were tempted were staine with the sword they wandred about in sheepe-skins goat-skins being destitute afflicted tormented of whom the world was not worthy they wandred in deserts and in mountaines and in denns and caues of the earth And after Christ from Steuen Protomartyr the first that suffered for the name of Christ so downward to these times as many as haue suffered in deede and in truth for the testimony of Iesus haue with constancy and boldnesse with courage and reioycing endured any torments that cruell persecutors could inuent against them and spared not their liues for his sake that gaue his life for them z Acts. 7. 59. 60 Steuen was stoned to death and and praied for his persecutors Lord lay not this sinne to their charge a Euseb l. 2. c. 25. Paul was beheaded b id l. 3. c. 1. Peter was crucified with his head downeward c Acts. 12. 2. Iames the brother of Iohn was killed with the sword Ignatius was cast to the wild beasts it was he that said d
hath ●●●den these sixe steps hee hath gone so farre in the bro●● way that leadeth to dest●uction that he is now neere to the gates of death at the verie brim of the bottomlesse pit and cannot possibly escape destruction euen the destruction ouerthrow of soule and bodie euerlastingly in the pit of hell except he returne Now the returning of a sinner from the gates of death must not be by the same way but with the wisemen of the East he must returne f Mat. 2. 12. another way and must ascend vp to the high mountaine of Heauen by these six steps and degrees Six steps and degrees whereby a sinner ascendeth to Heauen Or The first is a knowledge and sight of his owne sinnes The second is godly sorrow for sinne The third is humble confession and acknowledgement of his sinnes The fourth is the forsaking of his sinnes The fift is reformation of life The sixt is perseuerance in grace and goodnesse These sixe are like the sixe steps whereby g 1. Kin. 10. 18. 19. Solamon ascended to his iuory Throne by these six steps knowledge of sinne godly sorrow for sinne confession of sin forsaking sinne reformation of life and perseuerance in grace and goodnesse a sinner that hath gone astray returnes and ascends to the glorious throne of the king of heauen for when a sinner hath troden the first step of grace being come to the knowledge of his sinnes and from the knowledge of his sinnes come to godly sorrow for his sinnes from godly sorrow to confession of his sinnes from confession to the forsaking of his sins and after the forsaking of his sinnes being come to reformation of life there remaines then but one other step to bring him to heauen namely perseuerance in grace and goodnesse continuing in well-doing for h Mat. 24. 13. Sixe things required to true Repentance he that endureth to the end shall be saued So then there are sixe things necessarily required to true and sound repentance without which a sinner cannot be saued The first is the knowledge of sinne 1 The knowledg of sinne In the knowledge of sinne two thinges are necessary to be considered First what knowledge of sinne is required Wherein two things Secondly how a sinner may come to the true knowledge of his sinnes Touching the first The knowledge of sinne is two-fold 1 What knowledge of sin is required Knowledge of sin two-fold Generall and Particular The generall knowledge of sinne is to know sinne to be the transgression of the law that he that sinnes and 1 Generall knowledge of sinne doth wickedly breakes Gods commaundements to know that swearing and cursing and lying and slandering that murther and adulterie that drunkennesse and pride and maliciousnesse c. are transgressions of Gods commandements and to know that they that doe such things are in danger of Gods iudgement this is a knowledge of sinne but this is onely a generall knowledge this may be in the wicked vngodly who come short of true repentance But ther 's a particular knowledge of sinne and that 2 Particular knowledge of sinne Two-fold To know our sinnes stands in two things To know our sinnes first which they are Secondly what manner of ones they are Touching the first To know our sinnes which they are is necessarie and although it be hard for a man to know and remember at any one time all the sinnes that 1 Which they are he hath done all his life time to call to minde how and in what particular he hath broken the commaundements of God either by thought word or deede and to remember all his secret faults though this I say be difficult and a hard labour yet its necessarie for euery one as much as possiblie he may to know and find out his owne particular sinnes how he hath offended God or wronged man that a sinner may say with Dauid i Psal 51. 3. I acknowledge my transgressions before a sinner can with Dauid come to an humble acknowledgement and confession of his sins he must needs haue first a knowledge of his particular sinnes know his sinnes whereby he hath offended Before Dauid confessed his sinne of adulterie with Bathsheba saying k 2. Sam. 12. 13. I haue sinned against the Lord the Prophet of the Lord had opened his eyes that he might both see and know his sinne he had first the knowledge of sinne before he was brought to acknowledge confesse his sinne So the Iewes confessing their sinnes say l Isa 59. 12. our transgressions are multiplied before thee and our sinnes testifie against vs for our transgressions are with vs and as for our iniquities we know them And if a sinner cannot come to the knowledge of all his sinnes but some remaine secret vnknowne vnto him for his vnknowne sinnes he must pray with Dauid m Psa 19. 12. cleanse thou me from secret faults Our sinnes must first be found out that we may see them and know which they are Secondly we must also know what manner of ones 2 What manner of ones they are they are and to that end we must view them * a priori a p●steriori We must take knowledge of our sinnes before and behind consider their beginning and their end In aword we must know them First by their cause Secondly by their effects Thirdly by their adiuncts First by their cause The cause of sin is partly from 1 By the cause thereof Sathan through his subtile suggestion and partly of our selues through our owne lust and concupiscence of both which S. Iames speaketh thus n Iam. 1. 14. 15. Euery man is tempted when he is drawne away of his owne lust and entised Then when lust hath conceiued it bringeth forth sinne where the Diuell is made the Father of sinne and our owne lust and concupiscence the mother of sinne heere 's the procreating cause of sinne heere 's the generation and breede of sinne Secondly by the effects of sinne which are two Shame and 2 By the effects of sinne Two Death The first is shame noted in those words of the Apostle to the Romanes o Rom. 6. 21. What fruite had ye then in those things 1 Shame whereof ye are now ashamed there 's the shame of sinne sinne goeth before and shame followeth after The Second is death yea eternall death malediction 2 Death yea hell and condemnation without repentance Of this S. Paul also saith p ver 21. the end of those things is Death againe he saith q ver 23. the wages of sinne is death and S. Iames saith r Iam. 1. 15. sinne when it is finished bringeth forth Death Thirdly by the adiuncts of sinne which are three 3 By the adiuncts of sinne Three First foule Secondly great Thirdly manie Our sinnes are First foule S. Iames saith ſ Iam 1. 15. When lust 1 Foule hath conceiued it bringeth forth
sinne but sinne being brought forth is very foule and vglie to looke vpon a mishapen thing a filthie leper there 's nothing in the world so foule to looke vpon as this childe of wickednesse Consider it in some particulars murther is a bloody sinne the murtherer's hands are full of blood Fornication adulterie are filthy sinns called t Eph 5. 3. v●cleannes Drunkennes is a very beast like swinish sinne what a filthy sight is it to see a man made in the Image of God vomiting like a dogge tumbling in the dirt and wallowing in the mire like a swine we finde in the law that there were diuerse washings and purifiings to wash and cleanse the offenders signifiing thereby that sinne is a most filthie thing and that the soule stained with sinne hath neede of much washing Secondly our sinnes are great and that in a twofold 2 Great respect first comparing one sinne with another secondly in their owne nature for they are committed against God who is great in power and infinite Thirdly our sinnes are many they exceede in multitude 3 Manie they are innumerable Insomuch that Dauid saith u Psal 19. 12. who can vnderstand his errours and againe x Psal 40. 12. they are mothen the haires of my head Manasseh in his praier counting the number of his sinnes findes them so greatly to exceede that he saith They are aboue the number of the sands of the sea Hereby it may appeare what manner of knowledge of sinne is required of euery penitent sinner The Second thing concerning the knowledge of sin How a sinner may come to the knowledge of his sinnes Namely by the law is how a sinner may come to the knowledge of his sins S. Paul sheweth that the knowledge of sinne is by the Law y Rom. 3. 20. By the law is the knowledge of sinne The law of God euen the Morall law written in the two tables of ston● is the meanes to finde out our sinnes the law of God wi●l let vs see our originall sinne by making vs see and know our corruption of nature our euill inclinations and euill dispositions against the law of God Of which S. Paul speakes thus z Rom. 7. 7. I had not knowne sinne but by the law for I had not knowne lust except the law had said thou shalt not couet The law also will let vs see and know our actuall transgressions whether they be committed by thought word or deede against any commandement by the law of God we may see and know our euill thoughts against God and against our neighbour our lustfull thoughts our couetous thoughts our carnall and worldly thoughts our blasphemous words and slanderous speeches and all our sinfull and wicked deedes Yea what euill we haue committed or what good we haue omitted For this cause the Law of God is compared to a looking-glasse for as a man beholding his face in a glasse may see and perceiue the spots and blemishes that are therein so a sinner looking into the law of God and diligently perusing the Commaundements may find out and euidently perceiue the spots and blemishe● of his soule Thus a sinner commeth to the knowledge of his sinnes Now whereas there is necessarily required such a particular Vse 1 knowledge of sinne and that the knowledge of To know our selues sinne comes by the law the consideration hereof is first profitable for instruction to teach vs to know our selues This hath beene alwayes held a good precept amongst wise men know thy selfe It s good and profitable for euery 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one to know himselfe to search and try his own heart and by diligent inquirie to find out his owne particular sinnes to know his owne weakenesse and wickednesse his sinnes and his miserie Dauids exhorta●ion is a Psal 4 4. commune with your owne heart vpon your bed Enter into your closet yea into the secret chamber of your owne heart there beginne to thinke with your selues there speake vnto your selues there conferre and reason about the spirituall state not of others but of your owne selues And for the better knowledge of our selues we are to How to know our selues consider and search diligently both what we were by Creation and also what we are by corruption through the fall of Adam By Creation man was in a happie and blessed state created in the b Gen. 1. 27. image of God expounded by S. Paul to be c Ephe. 4. 24. righteousnesse and true holinesse But since the fall of Adam man is brought into a farre worse state by reason of sinne so that if a man could d Si bene inspexeris teipsum inuenies materiam contemnend● teipsum Stell d● contemp●● Mundi well looke into himselfe he might finde matter enough to humble yea to contemne himselfe in regard of any goodnesse or worthinesse that is in himselfe and that whether we regard the bodie or the soule of man In regard of the body what is man but earth a vessell of corruption dust and ashes wormes-meat yea a sinfull polluted bodie And for the soule now in the corrupt state infected and polluted with sinne till we be renewed by the Spirit of God till God come vnto vs to cleanse and purifie and sanctifie vs with his renewing grace what are we but as the Scripture calleth vs e Rom. 5. Ver. 6. 8. 10. vngodly sinners enemies of God f Ephe. 2. 13. dead in trespasses and sinnes children of wrath and g Ephe. 5. 6. children of disobedience Yea by nature and of our selues without Christ we are h R●u 3. 17. wretched and miserable and poore and blind and naked Besides all this in danger of the i Gal. 3. 10. malediction and curse of God in danger of hell and condemnation and that which augmenteth our miserie and wretched state is that we are the cause of our owne miserie and are no way able to helpe our selues out of our miserie either to purge our selues from our sinnes or to free our selues from the danger o● condemnation and eternall death so that a sinner comming to this humble acknowledgement of himselfe in regard of his owne spirituall state and considering seriously what he hath beene what he is may crie out and say with St Paul k Rom 7. 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me This knowledge of a mans selfe to know his owne sinnes and his miserie to know how wretched and miserable The knowledg of our selues necessarie he is by reason of sinne is ve●ie necessarie for First vnlesse a man know himsel●e to be sinfull and 1 For our Humiliation wretched and miserable he will neuer be brought to true l Zanch. de Natur Dei l. 3. c. 3. humiliation but will thinke too well of himselfe trust too much in his owne righteousnesse and boast too much of his owne goodnesse and say with the proud Pharisie
two sorts 2 The sorts and kinds of it Two-fold Generall and Particular Generall when a Sinner doth onely in a generall manner confesse that he is a sinner that hee hath offended 1 Generall God that he hath broken Gods commandements and done wickedly c. Particular confession of sinne is an acknowledgement 2 Particular of our particular sinnes when hauing made diligent search by the law of God to finde out our sinnes we doe then confesse those sinnes which our owne conscience witnesseth against vs that we are guilty of as Dauid when hee had committed adultery with Bathsheba confessed his sinne in particular saying d Psal 51. 4. Against thee thee onely haue I sinned and done this euill in thy sight The Iewes confessed their sinnes both in generall and particular In generall e Isa 59 12. Our transgressions say they are multiplyed before thee and our sinnes testifie against vs for our transgressions are with vs and as for our iniquities wee know them And in particular they confesse and say f Vers 13. in transgressing and lying against the Lord and departing away from our God speaking oppression and reuolt conceiuing and vttering from the heart words of falshood The third thing in Confession is the manner how a 3 The manner of making Confession aright sinner is to make confession of his sinnes that his confession may be acceptable to God Dauid saith g Psal 32. I said I will confesse my transgressions vnto the Lord. The vulgar Latine translation readeth it thus g Psal 32. I said I will confesse against my selfe mine vnrightousnesse vnto the Lord. From whence sixe things are obserued to bee necessary in the confession of sinne First that our Confession of sinne be done with premeditation 5 h Dixi confitebor aduersum me iniustitiam meam Domino Six things are necessary in the Confession of Sinne. that we doe not rashly and rudely thrust our selues into the presence of the Lord but first search our hearts try our wayes finde out our sinnes take notice of them view them consider them and haue them before our eyes when wee come to make confession of them This is noted in the beginning of the sentence i Dixi. I said before I confessed my sinnes I first thought with 1 That it be with premeditation my selfe I considered in my minde the sinnes which I was to confesse I said within my selfe I will confesse my sinnes Secondly Confession of sinne must be in truth without 2 That it be in 〈◊〉 guile not hiding sinne but plainely and truely confessing our sinnes wherfore he saith k Confit●bor I will confesse I will make knowne my sinne I will hide nothing I will search euery corner of my heart I will lay open all and euery sinne I will confesse my sinne Thirdly our Confession must be accusing not excusing 3 That it be accusing not excusing noted in the next words l Aduersum me against my selfe Our confession must be against our selues Howsoeuer it be dangerous for any one to accuse himselfe before men yet euery sinner must accuse himselfe before God iudge himselfe to haue broken the commandements of God and condemne himselfe to be worthy of death For this cause a sinner must come before the Lord in all humility and lowlinesse of mind with shame and confusion of face being ashamed to lift vp his eyes to heauen for the multitude of his sinnes and transgressions saying with Ezra m Ezra 96. O my God I am ashamed and blush to lift vp my face to thee my God for our iniquities are encreased ouer our heads and our trespasse is growen vp vnto the heauens And must be like the penitent Publican who comming before the Lord to confesse his sinnes n Luk 18. 13. Stood a farre off and would not lift vp so much as his eyes to heauen but smote vpon his breast saying God be mercifull to me a sinner Fourthly Confession must be made of sinne and iniquity 4 Confession must be of Sinne and iniquity noted in the word o Iniustitiam vnrighteousnesse or transgresgressions Wee must not with the Pharisee boast our good deeeds and praise our well-doing but with the Publicane confesse our sinnes and our selues sinners and earnestly pray for the pardon of our sinnes Fiftly Confession must be made of our owne sinnes 5 That we confesse our owne sinnes wherefore he saith I will confesse against my selfe p Meam mine vnrighteousnesse or my transgressions S●xtly Confession of our sinnes must be made vnto the Lord our God wherefore he saith I will confesse my 6 That our confessiō be made vnt● God transgressions q Domino vnto the Lord. Confession must be made vnto God to the honour of God that God may haue the glory and we the comfort Of this Dauid speakes thus in another place r Psal 51 4. Against thee thee onely haue I sinned So also when he had numbred the people his heart smote him and Dauid said vnto the Lord ſ 2 Sam. 24. 10. I haue sinned greatly in that I haue done Daniel said t Dan. 9 4. 4. I praied vnto the Lord my God and made my confession and said O Lord we haue sinned and committed iniquitie and haue done wickedly c. Chrysostome taught the same doctrine u De● s●luendis pe●catum Chrys de pae●it Hom. 9. Tell thy sinne onely vnto God Againe he saith * S●lu●te Deus confi●ent●m vid●a● Chrys de pae●it conf●s Let God onely see the confessing of thy sinnes After this manner we are to make Confession of our sinnes In the fourth place I come to the motiues which may perswade vs to confesse our sinnes vnto God Which I take 4 Motiues to cōfesse our sinnes vnto God First from the necessity Secondly from the benefite thereof For the first Confession of Sinne vnto God is necessary 1 〈◊〉 necess●ry For for First God is chiefly and principally offended by our sinnes wherefore it is that Dauid hauing committed 1 God is principally off●nded by our sinnes adultery and thereby hauing not onely offended God but wronged man comming to make confession saith y Psal 51. 4. Against thee thee onely haue I sinned Now because sinne is chiefly and principally committed against God therefore it 's necessary that wee make our confession chiefly and principally vnto God Secondly without confession of sinne we can looke 2 Without Confession we can haue no remission for no remission of sinne Salomon saith z Pro. 28. 13. He that couereth his sinnes shall not prosper but who so confesseth and forsaketh them shall haue mercy Giuing vs to vnderstand that he onely obtaineth mercie of the Lord that confesseth his sinnes but if any one will not confesse but hide and couer his sinnes he shall not prosper it shall not be well with him the Lord will shew him no fauour nor mercie
Psal 27. 8. Seeke ye my face Dauids heart said thy face Lord will I seeke So when the Lord cals to repentance we should hearken to the voice of the Lord and when the Lord saith returne and repent the heart of a sinner should answere and say Lord I returne Lord I repent Thirdly the time limited for our repentance is the time present now yea the o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 very instant of time in regard 3 The time present of our dutie for the practise of repentance This time of repentance is expressed in the Scriptures by these tearmes To day and now p Heb. 3. 15. To day if ye will heare his voice harden not your hearts q Ioel. 2. 12. Therefore also now saith the Lord turne ye euen to me with all your heart thus speakes S. Ambrose concerning the time of our repentance r Agenda est paenitentia non solum solicitè sed etiam maturè Amb. de poeuit l. 2. c. 1. We ought to be carefull not only to repent but to repent betimes The consideration of this that the time p●esent is the time of repentance serues to reprooue the follie of those who deferre their repentance and put off their amendment Vse of life from day to day manie deferre their Against those that deferie their Repentance repentance till they be sicke thinking that they may both make their wills and repent all on a day Young men thinke its to soone for them to repent and old men thinke its soone enough there 's no time ouerpast As the sluggard saith f Pro. 6. 10. Yet a little sleepe a little slumber so the couetous man saith yet a little gaine the licentious yet a little pleasure and euery sinner that is loath to part with his sinnes deferres the time with God and puts off his repentance from day to day and is vnwil●ing to repent now or to day but promiseth to repent tomorrow and heereafter though perhaps he meane it not Like to the men of Iabesh Gilead who being besieged be Nahash the Ammoni●e said t 1 Sam. 11. 10. To morrow we will come out vnto you and ye shall doe with vs all that seemeth good vnto you when as they meant nothing lesse for they had aide promised them by Saul for this deferring of repentance the Lord reprooued the people of Ierusalem and cried woe against them u Jer. 13. 27. Woe vnto thee ô Ierusalem wilt thou not be made cleane when shall it once be for this cause the virgines that did not prepare to meete the bridegrome Christ the Lord but carelesly delaied and deferred the time are called x Math. 25. 2. 3. foelish virgins And indeede whosoeuer doe deferre their repentance and put of their turning to the Lord from day to day they are not wise but foolish They that deferre their repentance doe foolishly their folly appeareth in diuerse things First A Sinner by deferring repentance continueth longer in his sinnes and continu●●● in sinne 1 By deferring repentance a sinner continueth longer in sinne as hath bene shewed before is very dangerous the longer that a sinner deferreth his repentance the more sinnes hath he to repent of y Quid enim quod diff●ratian vt plura peccata committas Ano. de pauit l. 2. c. 11 Wherefore is it saith a Father that thou still deferrest thy repentance is it that thou maiest commit more sinnes the more sinnes that any one committeth the harder will be his repentance the more enemies he hath to fight against the greater striuing shall he haue to get the victorie and the greater sorrow must he haue for his sinnes Secondly whosoeuer deferreth this repentance till 2 No man is certaine of the time to come herafter doth foolishly for he is not certaine of the time to come to day is our day to repent in and now is the time that the Lord would haue vs to turne vnto him and no man can assure himselfe of to morrow Wherefore Solomon saith z Pro. 27. 1. boast not thy selfe of to morrow for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth That foolish rich man boasted of many yeeres a Luk. 12. 19. soule thou hast much goods laid vp for many yeares When as God said vnto him b Ver. 20. thou foole this night thy soule shall be required of thee God hath giuen vs to day to repent in but hath not promised to wait for our repentance till to morrow How foolish then are we to deferre our repentance till hereafter hauing to day and not being sure of to morrow Thirdly to deferre repentance till a man be olde till 3 He that deferrs Repentance till old age is then vnfit to repent the euill dayes come vpon him and till death be readie to cease vpon him is foolish and dangerous for whoso doth so makes himselfe vnfit to repent If the yong man deferre his repentance till his middle age and the Lord then strike him with sicknesse and death Cease vpon him before he haue repented how hard will it be for him then on a suddaine to repent How hardly will he be perswaded to leaue his old companions To part with his friends and acquaintance To forsake the world To denie himselfe And to yeeld vnto death But how much harder will this be in an old man that hath deferred his repentance to the end of his dayes when sicknesse and old age meete together When as Moses saith c Psal 90. 10. their strength is labour and sorrow And when those euill dayes are come and those yeares draw nigh as Solomon saith d Eccles 12. 1. when thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them ●n yong age when a man hath quicknesse of sight readinesse of hearing sharpnesse of wit strength of memory then is it a fit time for a man to apply his heart vnto wisedome to seeke to saue his soule to vse the meanes of saluation to get faith and repentance and not foolishly to deferre all till olde age when as experience shewes old folkes are vsually heard complaining of the paine of their body ake of their bones lamenes of their limmes dimnesse of sight and dulnesse of hearing And certaine it is if men haue not repented before these euill daye● come vpon them they will be very vnfit now to beginne to learne this lesson of Repentance when they are so grieued with paine and ake yea when they are lame and blind and deafe Fourthly a sinner that will not now repent but saith 4 No man is sure that he shall haue grace to repent hereafter he will repent hereafter is not sure that he shall repent hereafter for God may so harden his heart that he cannot repent because that in his life time he contemned the meanes of his saluation and despised the patience of God waiting for his repentance St Paul speaks thus to the impenitent sinner that hath despised the patience of
deserued punishment of sinne St Paul saith of the Gentiles p Rom. 1. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. they changed the glory of the vncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man and to birds and foure footed beasts and creeping things wherefore God gaue them vp to vncleannesse through the lusts of their owne hearts c. For this cause God gaue them vp vnto vile affections c. And God gaue them ouer to a reprobate minde to doe those things which are not conuenient Againe in his Epistle to the Ephesians he sheweth that the q Ephe. 4. 17. 18. 19. Gentiles walked in the vanitie of their minde hauing the vnderstanding darkned being alienated from the life of God through the ignorace that is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart who being past feeling haue giuen themselues ouer vnto lasciuiousnesse to worke all vncleannesse with greedinesse Pharaoh's r Exod. 4. 21. heart was hardned that he would not let Israell goe And to the sinner that hath despised the riches of Gods goodnesse and forbearance and long-suffering which should haue led him to repentance the Apostle saith ſ Rom. 2. 5. after thy hardnesse and impenitent heart treasurest vp vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath shewing thereby that when God hath shewed his patience and long-suffering towards a sinner and the sinner repenteth not but still deferreth his repentance in the end the Lord will lay a heauie and sore iudgement vpon him hardnesse of heart so that now his heart is hardned he hath an impenitent heart a heart that cannot repent And sometimes the impenitent sinner is so forsaken of God and left to himselfe that he growes to desperation and then through the strong temptations of the Deuill he workes meanes to bring himselfe to some vntimely death as t 2 Sam. 17. 23. Ahitophel and u Mat. 27. 5. Iudas Now whereas the Lord doth iustly punish impenitent Vse sinners with such spirituall iudgements blinding To pray that God would soften our hard hearts their minds hardning their hearts and leauing them to themselues this should teach vs to pray vnto the Lord that he would giue vs grace to lay aside all pride of heart and stubbornnesse of minde and that the Lord would take away from vs our hard and stonie hearts and that by his good Spirit he would soften our hard hearts that we might be mooued to repentance when God calleth vs to repentance and that we might humble our selues before the Lord and tremble at his word For x Isa 66. 2. to this man will I looke faith the Lord euen to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and trembleth at my word To this end let vs heare and receiue the exhortation of the Apostle to the Hebrewes y Heb. 3. 12. 13 take heede brethren lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe in departing from the liuing God but exhort one another daily while it is called To day lest any of you be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne CHAP. XXII Of the eternall punishment of impenitent sinners and of the paines of hell And how this ought greatly to mooue vs to Repent●nce THe third punishment belonging to impenitent 3 Eternall Herein Two things sinners is eternall punishment concerning which I consider these two things First the place of their punishment Secondly the greatnesse and grieuousnesse of their punishment The place of punishment appointed for the wicked 1 The place of eternall punishment Two fold eternally to be punished and tormented is two-fold The one is the place from whence they shall be excluded The other is the place whither they shall be cast Touching the first The place from whence the wicked shall be excluded is the kingdome of God a 1 C●r 6. 9. The 1 The place from whence the wicked shall be excluded vnrighteous saith S. Paul shall not inherite the kingdome of God The wicked shall haue no possession or inheritance in heauen they shall be shut out of the kingdome of heauen they shall be cast from the glorious presence of God they shall be depriued of the cleare vision of God and they shall not see the face of God but shall be b 2 Thes 1. 9. punished as the Apostle saith with euerlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power And this losse of the kingdome of heauen to be depriued of the glorious presence of God neuer to see God to be excluded from the fellowship of the holy Angells and blessed Saints in heauen in a word to be thrust out of the place of happinesse neuer to see good day neuer to haue comfort any more is an vnspeakeable punishment yea a very hell In so much that a Father saith c N●●i autem qu●a 〈◊〉 p●rt●●escan● Gelien●●nt ego t●men gloriae amissi●nem multo amarius 〈◊〉 ipsius Gel●en●●● dic●●sse supplicium Chrys●n Math. Hom. 24. I know that many doe greatly stand in feare of hell but I say that the losse of glory in heauen is more bitter and grieuous then the punishment of hell it selfe This of the place from whence the wicked shall be excluded For the second the place whither they shall be cast 2 The place whither the wicked shall be cast is into vtter darkenesse as our Sauiour saith d Mat. 25. 30. cast ye the vnprofitable seruant into outer darkenesse there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth And of this place our Sauiour againe saith e Mat. 13. 49. 50. at the end of the world the Angels shall come forth and seuer the wicked from among the iust and shall cast them into the furnace of fire there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth This is that f Isa 30. 33. Tophet which is ordeined of old yea for the king it is prepared he hath made it deepe and large the pile thereof is fire and much wood the breath of the Lord like a streame of brimstone doth kindle it as saith the Prophet Isaiah And this place is said in the Reuelation to be a g Reu. 19. 20. lake of fire burning with brimstone And the h Reu. 20. 10. lake of fire and brimstone Now if the place prepared for the tormenting of the wicked and vngodly after this life be a place of outer darknesse where there is weeping gnashing of teeth if it be a furnace of fire if there be fire and much wood if the breath of the Lord like a streame of brimstone 2 The greatnesse and grieuousnesse of the punishment of the wicked in hell Their torment shall be doth kindle it and if it be a lake of fire and brimstone O then sure this must needs be a most fearefull place a place full of intollerable paine and torment And such is the place whither all impenitent sinners euen all wicked and vngodly men which haue liued wickedly and haue
striue against Answ them to be displeased at them to striue against them and to driue them away as e Gen. 15. 11. Abraham droue away the Fowles which would haue deuoured his sacrifice For to giue a willing consent vnto wandring thoughts and worldly cogitations which arise in the minde at the time of praier and to please our selues therewith is sinfull it sheweth small deuotion and argueth little or no preparatio before hand but to haue a sence feeling of our wandring thoughts withall to dislike thē to striue against them to labour to driue them away is a signe of grace and argueth a heart deuoutely affected CHAP. XIIII Of Humilitie in praying and of auoiding vaine repetitions THe third thing required in praying is Humilitie 3 Humilitie in praying Twofold And humiltie in praying is two fold The one is outward The other Inward First of outward Humilitie Outward humilitie in 1 Outward humilitie Shewed by out ward gestures as praying is shewed by our outward gesture Now the Scripture mentioneth diuers sorts of gestures which haue beene vsed in praying but the Scripture doth not binde vs by precept to the strict obseruance of any certaine gesture in praying onely it lets vs see by examples what hath been the custome of the Church of God concerning gesture in praying 1 Standing First Standing hath beene a gesture vsed in prayer a Luk 18. 11. The Pharisee stood and prayed And of the Publican it s said that he was b Vers 13. standing a farre off And I finde it decreed in a generall Councell that according to the custome of the Churches the people c P● siantes ad orationem v●ta Domino reddamus Concil Nicen 1. Can. 20. should pray standing Secondly Kneeling is a gesture commended vnto vs by the practise of godly and deuoute men Salomen in his prayer at the dedication of the Temple kneeled 2 Kneeling downe and praied for it is said d 1 Kin. 8. 54. When Salomon had made an end of praying all this prayer and supplication vnto the Lord he arose from before the altar of the Lord from kneeling on his knees Dauid saith e Psal 95. 6. O come let vs worship and bow downe let vs kneele before the Lord our maker So Daniel f Dan. 6. 10. kneeled vpon his knees three times a day and prayed And Paul when he was ready to take ship g Acts. 21. 5. kneeled downe on the shore and prayed And Christ himselfe h Luk. 32. 41. kneeled downe and prayed Thirdly Lifting vp of the hands is gesture vsed in 3 Lifting vp of the hands prayer Dauid vsed it for he saith i Psal 28. ● Heare the voice of my supplications when I crie vnto thee when I lift vp my hands towards thy holy Oracle And St. Paul saith k 1 Tim. 2. 8. I will that men pray euery where lifting vp holy hands Fourthly Looking vp to heauen is a gesture vsed in 4 Looking vp to Heauen prayer this gesture our Sauiour Christ vsed when hee sed the fiue thousand with fiue loaues and two fishes l Math 14. 19. Looking vp to heauen hee blessed and brake and gaue the looues to his Disciples and the Disciples to the multitude Besides these to pray m ● Cor. ●1 4. bareheaded to n Luk 18. 13. smite vpon the breast testifying thereby the sorrow and griefe of the heart and such like are outward gestures vsed in prayer But notwithstanding this diuersity of gesture in praying and that a Christian hath more libertie for his gesture in priuate yet both in publique and priuate wee are to vse such outward gesture as may manifest the inward humilitie of the heart and in publique wee are to conforme our selues to the same gesture which is vsed in the Church where we liue lest vsing a gesture different from that which is receiued and vsed in the Church wee giue occasion of offence and the rather because the Apostle speaking of the well ordering of the Church saith o 1 Cor. 14. 40. Let all things be done decently and in order Now for a man in time of publique prayer to vse a gesture different from the rest of the Congregation as to sit when the rest kneele to be couered when the rest are ba●●headed c. is no decency nor order but vnseemlinesse and disorder The consideration of this diuersity of gesture in praiing Vse and that a Christian is not limitted to the vsing of Consolation to sicke persons and lame people this or that certaine gesture at all times doth yeeld consolation to all sicke persons and lame people to all that are so holden with infirmitie in their limbes or are so weake in body that they cannot bow their body nor bend their knees according to the vsuall custome of the Church for God doth not somuch regard the outward gesture of bowing the body and bending the knee as the bowing and bending of the heart and therefore if the heart be right in the sight of God and if the minde be attentiue in praying God will not despise the prayer of him that prayeth though hee doe not kneele If through sicknesse or infirmity he cannot bend the knee of his body it is sufficient before God if hee bend the knee of his heart And therefore we finde Dauid praying and that earnestly with teares not kneeling vpon his knees but lying vpon the p Psal 6. 6. bed of his sicknesse so likewise Hezekiah being q 2 Kin. 20. 1. 2. sicke vnto death turned his face to the wall and prayed vnto the Lord. And it is recorded of Iacob that when he blessed the two sonnes of Ioseph Ephraim and Manasses that is when he prayed to God to blesse them and foretold their future state hee r Gen. 48. 2. 15. sate vpon the bed Necessity then dispenseth with the outward gesture in prayer And this of outward humility in praying The other kinde of Humility in praying is Inward 2 Inward humilitie which inward humility is the humblenesse of the heart the lowly bowing of the heart and the bending of the knees of the heart Of this humility it is that the Lord speakes to Salomon saying ſ 2 Chron. 7. 14. If my people which are called by my name shall humble themselues and pray and seeke my face and turne from their wicked wayes then will I heare from heauen and will forgiue their sinne and will heale their Land If the people in their distresse would haue the Lord to be gracious and mercifull vnto them and deliuer them they must pray but they must pray with humility and humblenes of mind they must bring downe the stubbornnesse of their heart humble their soules they must humble themselues and pray And this is done by an humble acknowledgement of our owne vnrighteousnesse wickednesse and vnworthinesse As Iacob doth saying t Gen. 32. 10. I am not worthy of the
stones and the dust and licked vp the water that was in the trench Secondly in the lower regions as to stay the heauens from rayning a long time together and againe to open the windowes of heauen to bring downe raine Such 2 In the lower regions power had Elias also as witnesseth S. Iames d Iam. 5. 17. 18. Elias was a man subiect to the like passions as we are and he prayed earnestly that it might not raigne and it rained not on the earth by the space of three yeares and sixe moneths And he praied againe and the heauen gaue raine and the earth brought forth her fruit thus in the heauens aboue Secondly Prayer hath auailed much in the wat●rs to stay their violent force from drowning the seruants of 2 In the waters the Lord which efficacie was in the praier of Ionah who being in the e Jon. 1. 17. Belly of the fish three dayes and three nights Yea euen f Ion 2. 1. 2. 3. 5. 10. In the deepe in the midst of the seas the flouds compassing him about all the billowes and waues passing ouer him and the weedes being wrapt about his head then he praied vnto the Lord his God out of the fishes belly And the Lord heard him and the Lord spake vnto the fish and it vomited out Ionah vpon the dry land Thirdly in the earth causing springs of waters to appeare 3 In the earth in dry places yea making the hard rocks to gush out water in abundance As at the praier of Moses for when the people murmured for want of water g Exod. 17. 4. 56. Moses cried vnto the Lord And the Lord answered him and bade him smite the rocke and there should come water out of it that the people might drinke and Moses did so in the sight of the Elders of Israel Lastly praier hath bene of force to cast out the fiercest 4 In hell ouer the euill spirits Diuells of hell when our sauiour Christ had cured the Iunatike and had cast out the Diuell which thing the disciples could not doe and demanded of Christ saying h Mat. 17. 19. 20. 21. Why could not wee cast him out Iesus said vnto them Because of your vnbeleife c. Howbeit this kind goeth not out but by prayer and fasting Thus prayer auaileth extraordinarily Secondly ordinarily a righteous mans prayer auaileth 2 Ordinarily Twofold much both for The remoouing of euill and for The procuring of good and that in regard of both 1 In regard of the Bodie and that Bodie and Soule First praier auaileth much for the remoouing of euill from the body whether it be 1 Remoouing euills from the Bodie Twofold A common calamitie or Anie priuate affliction For the First praier auaileth much to deliuer from common calamities which may hurt a mans bodie or 1 Common calamities happen to his temporall state as from the sword famine pestilence or any grieuous plague From the sword from the hand of the enemie as it deliuered Hezekiah king of Iudah from the power of Senacheri● King of Assyria for hauing receiued a most blasphemous Letter from the King of Assyria he i 2. Kin. 19. 14. 15 went vp into the house of the Lord and sp●ead it before the Lord. And Hezekiah prayed before the Lord and the Lord heard his Prayer and his prayer so preuailed with the Lord that the Lord sent his Angell to fight for Hezekiah against his enemies for k Ve● 35. it came to passe that night that the Angell of the Lord went out and sinote in the camp of the Assyrians an hundred fourescore and fiue thousand Prayer also auaileth much in the time of famine and dearth wherefore the Lord saith l Isa 41. 17. when the poore and needie seeke water and there is none and their tongue faileth for thirst I the Lord will heare them as if he had said if there be scarcitie and dearth in the land let the people pray vnto me and I will heare them So also in the time of plague and pestilence prayer auaileth much with God for the turning away of the heauy hand of the Lord thus the plague was stayed in Israel when m Num. 16. 46. 47. 48. Aaron tooke his censer and put sire therein from the Altar and put on incense and made an attonement for the people he stood betweene the dead and the liuing and the plague was stayed This sweete incense is holy and deuout Prayer ascending vp to the throne of God able to stay the plague And prayer auaileth against any other iudgement that hangeth ouer a people as the Niniuites elcaped a great iudgement threatned against them and the Lord was mooued to n Ion. 3. 8. 9. 10. turne away from his fierce anger when the Lord saw that they repented and cryed mightily vnto God Thus prayer auaileth in common calamities Secondly Prayer auaileth much in priuate afflictions 2 Priuate afflict●ons to helpe and deliuer vs in time of perill and danger in time of sicknesse and from the danger of death Dauid sheweth vs that being in distresse he prayed vnto the Lord and the Lord heard him o Psal 18. 6. In my distresse saith he I called vpon the Lord and cryed vnto my God he heard my v●ice out of his temple and my crie came before him euen into his eares And prayer is an effectuall meanes to preserue and saue in the time of sicknesse so S. Iames saith p Iam. 5. 15. the Prayer of faith shall saue the sicke and the Lord shall raise him vp by this means it pleased the Lord to saue Hezekiah's life for Hezekiah being q Isa 38. 1. 2 4. 5. sicke vnto death prayed vnto the Lord and the Lord heard his prayer and added vnto his dayes fifteene yeeres Thus praier auaileth for the remoouing of euill from the bodie and temporall state Secondly prayer also auaileth much for the procuring 2 Procuring good to the bodie of good to the bodie and temporall state for by praier it is that the Lord giueth vs things needfull for this present life as food and raiment and things conuenient for the preseruation of this life S. Iames saith r Iam. 1. 17. Euery good gift and euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth downe from the Father of lights and againe he saith ſ Jam. 4. 2. 3. ye lust and haue not ye kill and desire to haue and cannot obtaine ye fight and warre yet ye haue not because ye aske not Ye aske and receiue not because ye aske amisse that ye may consume it vpon your lusts Where the Apostle sheweth that the way and meanes to obtaine good things blessings and benefits at the hands of God is by Prayer asking them of God but so as we aske aright and aske things needfull to a good end not prodigally to waste and consume them vpon our lusts Thus praier auaileth concerning the bodie and temporall
state Secondly Prayer also auaileth greatly for the good 2 In regard of the soule And that of the soule and that both for the Remoouing of euill and Procuring of good 1 Remoouing euill As First for the remoouing of euill And first prayer is a meanes to remooue away our sinnes from vs which stand as a cloud betweene God and vs to hinder good 1 Our sinnes things from vs separating betweene God and vs and prouoking Gods wrath against vs wherefore Hezekiah being recouered from his sicknes and praising God for his deliuerance saith t Isa 38. Ver. 2. 3 And 17. thou hast in loue to my soule deliuered it from the pit of corruption for thou hast cast all my sins behind thy backe Secondly Prayer is effectuall and powerfull to helpe 2 Temptations vs against temptations and to deliuer vs from that euill one So our Sauiour teacheth vs to pray u Mat. 6. 13. lead vs not into temptation but deliuer vs from euill And so he exhorteth vs to pray x Mat. 26. 41. watch and pray that ye enter not into temptation Thirdly Prayer is powerfull to helpe vs in the euill 3 The te●●our of death and iudgement and perillous times to free our soules from the danger of death and the iudgement to come that neither death shall suddenly come vpon vs nor the day of the Lord take vs vnawares Which our Sauiour sheweth vs in this exhortation y Luk. 21. 36. Watch ye therefore and pray alwayes that ye may be accompted worthie to escape all these things that shall come to passe and to stand before the Sonne of man Thus prayer auaileth for the remoouing of euill from the soule Secondly prayer auaileth much for the procuring of 2 Procuring Good As good things to the soule as first mercie pardon and forgiuenesse Dauid in his Prayer confesseth his sinne 1 Mercy pard●n and forgiuenesse saying z Psal 32. 5. I acknowledge my sinne vnto thee and mine iniquity haue I not hid I said I will confesse my transgressions to the Lord and it followeth thou forgauest the iniquitie of my sinne Dauid confessed his sinne and prayed for the pardon of his sinne and the Lord heard his Prayer and pardoned his sinne So S. Iames saith a Iam. 5. 15. the prayer of faith shall saue the sicke and the Lord shall raise him vp and if he haue committed sinnes they shall be forgiuen him Secondly Prayer is a meanes to obtaine all graces necessarily 2 All graces necessarie for our saluation accompanying saluation For b Iam. 1. 17. euery good gift and euery perfect gift is from aboue and commeth down from the Father of lights Our Sauiour Christ saith c Mat 7. 7. Aske and it shall be giuen you and S. Iames saith d Iam. 1. 5. If any of you lacke wisedome let him aske of God that giueth to all men liberally and vpbraideth not and it shall be giuen him Thirdly Prayer is effectuall not onely for the obtaining 3 Increase of Grace of grace but likewise for the increase of grace the Apostles pray e Luk. 17. 5. Lord increase our Faith And S. Paul prayeth for the Ephesians that God would f Ephe. 3. 16. 17. 18. 19. grant them according to the riches of his glory to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man that Christ might dwell in their hearts by faith that being rooted and grounded in loue they might be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the loue of Christ Which passeth knowledge that they might be filled with all the fullness● of God And they that are strengthened by the Spirit in the inner man hauing Christ dwelling in their hearts by faith and are growing and increasing in grace in this life shall assuredly attaine to glorie in the life to come Prayer then as it remooueth euill ●o it procureth good to the soule mercie grace yea increase of grace and with grace glorie the perfection of Grace Such is the efficacie of Prayer The consideration of which efficacie and power of Vse Prayer may teach vs in all our necessities and tribulations To vse prayer in time of need as a sure defence to flee vnto God by Prayer to lay hold on prayer as a man would on his shield and buckler For prayer is a most sure defence in all troubles whatsoeuer It is a defence against tribulations outward and temptations inward It helpes the bodie and cures the soule it preuaileth both in heauen and in earth concerning which the exhortation of the Apostle S. Paul is to be receiued and embraced g Ephe. 6. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. take vnto you saith he the whole armour of God that ye may be able to withstand in the euill day and hauing done all to stand Stand therefore hauing your loynes girt about with truth and hauing on the breast-plate of righteousnesse and your feete shod with the preparation of the Gospell of peace Aboue all taking the shield of faith wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fierie darts of the wicked and take the helmet of saluation the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God Praying alwayes with all Prayer and supplication in the Spirit A Christian that is thus armed hauing the girdle of truth about his loynes hauing on the breast-plate of righteousnesse and his feete shod with the preparation of the Gospell of peace hauing the shield of faith before him the helmet of saluation vpon his head hauing the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God and being prepared to pray with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit Such a one is able to stand against the aduersarie the Deuill and all spirituall wickednesse and such a one shall preuaile against his spirituall enemies yea such a one shall preuaile with God himselfe for any petition that he shall make so farre as it shall be good for him For the effectuall feruent Prayer of a righteous man auaileth much CHAP. XVIII Of the helpes and furtherances of Prayer Of the first helpe the Spirit of God THe ninth thing in the Treatise of Prayer is of 9 The helps and furtherances of Prayer Three the helpes and furtherances of Prayer and they are three The first is Gods holy Spirit of which Saint Paul saith a Rom. 8. 26. 27. Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities 1 Gods holy Spirit And for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit it selfe maketh intercession for vs with groanings which cannot be vttered And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the Spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God For this cause the Spirit of God is called the spirit of supplications by the Prophet Zacharie b Zach. 12. 10. The holy spirit
slaughter and as a sheepe before her shearer is dumbe so he openeth not his mouth and then pray that the Lord would endue vs with meekenesse and patience in suffering And when we see a sheepe going astray we may meditate on the state of a sinner going astray like a lost sheepe yea on our owne wandring from the commaundements of the Lord and pray with Dauid saying k Psal 119. 17● I haue gone astray like a lost sheepe O Lord seeke thy seruant Such like meditations as these to stirre vp our deuotion may be taken from these and other creatures and workes of God on earth Thirdly from the waters and things therein we may 3 In the waters haue meditations to raise our affections on high as when we see and consider how euerie little brooke runs into the greater riuer and all riuers runne into the Sea whence they came as Solomon saith l Eccles 1. 7. All the riuers run into the Sea yet the Sea is not full vnto the place whence the riuers come thither they returne againe this should cause vs to thinke on our mortalitie and to meditate that euen as the riuers runne into the Sea whence they came so doe all men returne to the earth whence they came and this meditation should put vs in minde of our last end and make vs to consider how we euen hasten to our graue and then we should pray that we may be carefull to remember our last end and thinke much and often of the place whence we came and whither we are going When we see fishes caught with the angle or taken in the net vnawares as they are securely swimming and seeking their prey this may cause vs to meditate on the suddennesse of death and how it takes many vnawares according to the saying of Solomon m Eccles 9. 12. man knoweth not his time as the fishes that are taken in an euill net and as the birds that are caught in the snare so are the sonnes of men snared in an euill time when it falleth suddenly vpon them And then we should be mooued to pray that now while we liue and haue time and space to repent we may so prepare for death that whensoeuer that day commeth it may not n Luk 21. 34. 35. 36. come vpon vs vnawares Hitherto of meditations that concerne God The second sort of meditations which may helpe and 2 Concerning our selues Two-fold further vs in prayer concerne our selues and they are of two sorts The first are taken from the consideration of our 1 In regard of our state Three-fold three-fold state Past Present and To come First in regard of the time past we may meditate and 1 Past what we were call to minde what we were how we o Ephe. 2. 3. were by nature children of wrath p Psal 51. 5. Shapen in iniquitie and conceiued in sinne The meditation whereof should cause vs to pray that we may be renued may be made children of God by adoption and grace and may be q Ioh. 3. 3. borne againe that so we may enter into the kingdome of God Secondly in regard of the time present we may seriously 2 Present what we are thinke with our selues what we are and we may find that we are first fraile brittle euen dust and ashes which should humble vs in prayer and cause vs to say 1 Fraile with Abraham r Gen. 18. 27. I haue taken vpon me to speake vnto the Lord which am but dust and ashes Secondly sinfull hauing much naturall corruption 2 Sinnefull within vs and preuailing against vs so that oftimes ſ Rom. 7. 19. the good that we would we doe not and the euill which we would not that we doe Which meditation should cause vs to pray with the Apostle t Ver. 24. O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the bodie of this death Thirdly in regard of the time to come we may meditate 3 To come what we shall be what we shall be For we shall be In death corruptible In the resurrection glorious The one may humble vs the other may raise vs vp with consolation and both may teach vs to pray that when our bodie dieth our soule may liue and at the resurrection both soule and body may liue with God and be with the Lord for euer These and such like meditations may be taken from the consideration of our threefolde state Secondly meditations concerning our selues may be 2 In regard of our dayes and houres taken from the dayes and houres and time which God hath giuen vs here on earth We may euery day and euery houre of the day find some opportunitie for godly and diuine meditations And that Three fold In the morning In the day time and In the euening First in the morning as when we awake and see the 1 In the morning light we may meditate on the u Joh. 1. 9. true light which lighteth euery man that commeth into the world And pray that we may x 1. Cor. 15. 34. awake to righteousnesse and that the Lord would lighten our darknesse that we may come out of the darknesse of ignorance to the true light When we rise from our beds we may meditate on our two-fold rising from the death of sinne in this life and from our graues at the last day and then pray that we may no longer lye dead in our sinnes but may rise from the death of sinne to the life of righteousnesse and that we may haue our y Reu. 20. 6. part in the first resurrection so that the second death may haue no power ouer vs but when we z Dan. 12. 2. awake out of the dust of the earth we may rise to euerlasting life And when we put on our apparrell we may fitly meditate on the putting on of the a Ephe. 4 24. new man and pray that we may b Rom. 13. 14. put on the Lord Iesus Christ and may c Colos 3. 12. put on bowells of mercies kindnesse humblenesse of minde meekenesse long-sufferi●● Such meditations as these we may haue in the morning Secondly in the day time in our affaires and buisinesse 2 In the day time in the world euery man in his place in his vocation and calling may haue some good cogitations and diuine meditations as the husbandman when hee is plowing his ground may meditate on the plowing and d Iere. 4. 3. breaking vp of the fallow ground of the heart and when he soweth his seed may thinke on the e Luk. 8. 11. seed of Gods word and then pray that his owne heart may be like good ground fitted and prepared to receiue the seed of Gods word that it may enter into his heart may take deepe rooting there and bring forth the fruit of good workes So also in the day time when we are walking going in the way or trauelling we may fitly
are called by my Name shall humble themselues and pray and seeke my face and turne from their wicked wayes then will I heare from heauen and will forgiue their sinne and will heale their land Fiftly Prayer is the best helpe in temptation 5 In temptation either to be freed from the temptation or to obtaine grace and strength from God not to be ouercome of the temptation It was Pauls helpe when he had that q 2. Cor. 12. 7. thorne in the flesh the messenger of Sathan to buffet him in which case he prayed to the Lord and that with feruencie and perseuerance for saith he r Ver. 8 9. for this thing I besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me And he said vnto me My grace is sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weakenesse Sixtly Prayer is a helpe in time of sicknesse it deliuereth 6 In sicknesse from corporall infirmities Wherefore Saint Iames saith ſ Iam. 15. 4. 15. Is any sicke among you let him call for the Elders of the Church and let them pray ouer him annointing him with oile in the name of the Lord and the prayer of faith shall saue the sicke and the Lord shall raise him vp It helped Hezekiah in his sicknesse for Hezekiah being t Isa 38. 1. 2. c. sicke vnto death prayed vnto the Lord and the Lord heard his prayer and lengthened his dayes adding vnto his dayes fifteene yeeres Lastly Prayer helpeth not onely to ease and heale the 7 Prayer is a remedie to cu●e the sicke soule sicke bodie but also to cure the sicke soule This was Dauids remedie when his soule was sicke and diseased with sinne as his bodie was through infirmitie saying u Psal 6. 1. 2. 3. haue mercie vpon me O Lord for I am weake O Lord heale me for my bones are vexed My soule is also sore vexed but thou O Lord how long Returne O Lord deliuer my soule oh saue me for thy mercies sake And againe he praieth saying x Psal 41. 4. O Lord be mercifull vnto me heale my soule for I haue sinned against thee And Chrysostome agreeing with these Scriptures saith that Prayer is a y Animis aegrotantibus pharmacum Chrys de orando Deum lib. 1. medicine to sicke soules This is the second benefit of prayer it is a helpe in trouble Thirdly the Prayer of a righteous man framed according to the right manner formerly mentioned is a 3 Saluation promised to them that call vpon the name of the Lord. meanes to procure not onely temporall benefits and spirituall graces but also saluation for so is the promise z Rom. 10. 13. whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued For as the promise is made concerning them that beleeue in Christ that a Ioh. 3. 16. whosoeuer beleeueth in him shell not perish but haue euerlasting life and concerning them that repent that if they b Act. 3. 19. repent and be conuerted their sinnes may be blotted out and their soules saued so likewise concerning Prayer the promise is that Whosoeuer shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saued The consideration of this that Prayer is so great a Vse 1 helpe in trouble yea in all manner of tribulations and Against those who in time of trouble seeke not vnto the Lord but either put their trust in lawfull meanes or seeke helpe by vnlawfull meanes afflictions serues First to reproue those who in time of trouble seeke other helpe then from God and trust in meanes yea and vse such meanes as God hath not appointed and do not seeke to the Lord by prayer and supplication As some in their sicknesse seeke to the Physician they call earnestly vpon him and pray him to doe his best for them but doe not so earnestly call vpon God and pray vnto him to be fauourable vnto them to pardon their sinne and first to heale their soule that so their bodie may be healed Such are like to King Asa who c 2. Chro. 16. 12. in his disease sought not to the Lord but to the Physicians And this was imputed vnto Asa for sinne and it remaineth a blemish vpon his name to this day for although it be lawfull to seeke to the Physician and to vse his helpe yet to trust in the helpe of the Physician more then in the helpe of God and to seeke first and rather to the Physician then vnto God is sinnefull for God is our best helpe and our best Physician without whose helpe the helpe of the Physician is nothing worth Others there are who being sore sicke or any whit strangely diseased or visited with a lingring disease seeke not to God as to the best and chiefest helpe nor yet to the Physician as to the lawfull meanes but seeke and send to witches and wizards to forcerers and charmers like to King Ahaziah who being d 2. Kin. 1 2. sicke sent messengers and said vnto them Go enquire of Baal-zebub the god of Ekron whether I shall recouer of this disease This was Ahaziah's sinne and this is the sinne of all those who in their distresse seeke not to the Lord neither seeke helpe by lawfull meanes but seeke helpe by vnlawfull and deuillish meanes contrarie to the charge and commaundement of the Lord which he giueth vnto his people saying e Leuit. 19. 31. Regard not them that haue familiar spirits neither seeke after Wizards to be defiled by them I am the Lord your God Secondly seeing that we haue so many motiues to Vse 2 peswade vs to pray as the testimonies of Scripture examples To giue our selues denoutly to Prayer of holy and deuout men yea and of Christ himselfe seeing that the necessitie of Prayer is so great that without Prayer we can obtaine no good thing seeing we are in continuall perill and danger seeing they that do not pray vnto God are as dead men among the liuing and seeing that the want of Prayer is a marke of wicked and vngodly men Furthermore considering the great good and benefit which we haue by Prayer seeing that the Lord heareth vs and granteth our lawfull requests seeing that prayer is the best helpe in trouble the best weapon against our enemies the best ransome in captiuitie the best prouider in famine the best remedie against the pestilence the best Physicke in sicknesse the best comfort in temptation the best meanes to cure the body and heale the soule and seeing that whosoeuer calleth on the name of the Lord shall be saued the consideration of these things should be of great force to mooue and perswade vs to dedicate our selues to the seruing of God to giue our selues deuoutly to prayer to inuocation and calling vpon the name of the Lord accounting it our health our ioy and happinesse that we so wretched and miserable creatures should be admitted into the presence of so great a King as the King of Kings