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A26951 The life of faith in three parts, the first is a sermon on Heb. 11, 1, formerly preached before His Majesty, and published by his command, with another added for the fuller application : the second is instructions for confirming believers in the Christian faith : the third is directions how to live by faith, or how to exercise it upon all occasions / by Richard Baxter. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1670 (1670) Wing B1301; ESTC R5103 494,148 660

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goodness of Gods Laws Whether the Promise and ●●eward be the end of Obedience or Obedience the end of the 〈…〉 Reward Of Scripture examples 232 Chap. 5. How to live by faith on Gods Promises What will of God it is according to which they must ask who will receive Of a particular faith in prayer Is the same degree of grace conditionally promised to all Directions for understanding the Promises The true nature of faith or trust in Gods Promises opened at large Affiance is in the understanding will and vital power Whether Faith be Obedience or how related to it Ten acts of the understanding essential to the Christian Faith in the Promises Several acts of the will essential to Faith And in the vital power whether all true Faith have a subjective certainty of the truth of the Word Choice and venturing or forsaking all is the sign of real trust Promises collected for the help of Faith 1. Of Pardon 2. Of Salvation 3. Of Reconciliation and Adoption 4. Of pardon of new sins after conversion 5. Of Sanctification 6. Promises to them that desire and seek 7. To Prayer 8. To groans that want expression 9. Promises of all that we want and that is good for us 10. To the use of Gods Word and Sacraments 11. To the humble meek and lowly 12. To the peaceable 13. To the diligent 14. To the patient 15. To Obedience 16. To the Love of God 17. To them that love the godly and are merciful in good works 18. To the poor 19. To the oppressed 20. To the persecuted 21. In dangers 22. Against temptations 23. To them that overcome and persevere 24. In sickness and at death 25. Of Resurrection final Justification and Glory 26. For children of the godly 27. To the Church 241 Chap. 6. How to exercise faith on God● Threatnings and Judgements How far belief of the threatnings in good necessary and a saving faith How saving faith is a personal application How to perceive true faith 297 Chap. 7. How to live by faith for Pardon and Justification In how many respects and waies Christ justifieth us Of the imputation of Christs Righteousness Twelve reasons to help our belief of pardon How far sin should make us doubt of our Justification 308 Chap. 8. 58 Dangerous Errours detected which hinder the 〈…〉 faith about 〈…〉 and the contrary truth●●sserted● 321 Chap. 9. How to live by faith in the exercise of other graces and duties And 1. Of the doctrinal Directions What Sanctification is How God loveth the unsanctified How 〈◊〉 loveth 〈◊〉 in Christ Of Preaching meer Morality ●61 Chap. 10. The practical Directions to promote Love to God and Holiness 367 Chap. 11. Of the order and harmony of graces and duties which must be taken all together Of the parts that make up the new Creature 1. The intellectual order or a method or scheme of the heads of Divinity 2. The order of Intention and Affection 3. The order of practice Of the various degrees of means to mans ultimate end Of the grace necessary to concur with these various means The circular motion by divine communication to our Receiving Graces and so by our Returning Graces unto God again The frame of the present means of grace and of our returning duties Rules about the order of Christian practice which shew that and how the best is to be preferred and which is best in fifty three Propositions How mans Laws bind conscience and many other cases resolved A lamentation for the great want of order and method and harmony in the understandings wills and lives of Christians Many instances of mens partiality as to truths graces duties sins c. Twenty Reasons why few Christians are compleat and entire but ●ame and partial in their Religion Ten Consectaries Whether all graces be equal in habit Religion not so perfect in us as in the Scriptures which therefore are the Rule to us c. 373 Chap. 12. How to use faith against particular sins 417 Chap. 13. What sins the best are most in danger of and should most carefully avoid And wherein the infirmities of the upright differ from mortal sins 421 Chap. 14. How to live by faith in prosperity The way by which faith doth save us from the world General Directions against the danger of prosperity Twenty marks of worldliness The pretences of worldly minds The greatness of the sin The ill effects 428 Chap. 15. How to be poor in spirit And 1. How to escape the Pride of prosperous men The cleaks of Pride The signs of Pride and 〈…〉 446 Chap. 16. How to escape the 〈…〉 by faith The mischiefe of serving the appetite 〈…〉 465 Chap. 17. How faith must conquer sloth and idleness Who are guilty of this sin Cases resolved The evil of idleness The remedies 474 Chap. 18. Vnmercifulness to the poor to be conquered by faith The remedies 491 Chap. 19. How to live by faith in adversity 493 Chap. 20. How to live by faith in trouble of conscience and doubts of our salvation The difference between true and false repentance How to apply the universal grace to our comfort The danger of casting our part on Christ and of ascribing all melancholy disturbances and thoughts to the spirit Of the trying the spiri● and of the witness of the Spirit 503 Chap. 21. How to live by faith in the publick Woshipping of God Overvalue not your own manner of Worship and overvilifie not other mens Of communion with others 519 Chap. 22. How to pray in faith 527 Chap. 23. How to live by faith towards children and other Relations 530 Chap. 24. How by faith to order our affections to publick Societies and to the unconverted world 535 Chap. 25. How to live by faith in the love of one another and to mortifie self-love It is our own interest and gain to love our neighbours as our selves Objections wherein it consisteth What is the sincerity of it Consectaries Loving others as your selves is a duty even as to the degree 539 Chap. 26. How by faith to be followers of the Saints and to look with profit to their examples and their end and to hold communion with the heavenly Society Reasons of the duty The nature of it Negatively what it is not and Affirmatively what it is Wherein they must be imitated 556 Chap. 27. How to receive the sentence of death and how to die by Faith 589 Chap. 28. How by faith to look aright to the coming of Jesus Christ in Glory 594 Reader The first and great Errour of the Printer i● that he hath not distinguished the three distinct Parts of the Treatise Therefore you must write Page 1. PART 1. and Pag. 81. PART 2. Chap. 1. and Pag. 168. PART 3. Chap. 1. IN the Preface Page 3. l. 16. put If you would have p. 8. l. 8. put out have p. 31. l. 31. put out out p. 40. l. 22. for that r. the p. 51. l. 37. for yo●r r. their p. 54. l. 13. for believe r.
sinful world and flesh linger not now as unwilling to depart repent not of thy choice when all that the world can do for thee is past repent not of thy warfare when thou hast got the victory nor of thy voyage when thou art past the storms and waves and ready to land at the haven of felicity Thus Faith may sing our Nunc dimittis when the flesh is lothest to be dissolved But we must live by faith if we would thus die by faith Such a death doth not use to be the period of a fleshly worldly life nor of a careless dull and negligent life Nature which brought us into the world without our forecast or care will turn us out of the world without it But it will not give us a joyful passage nor bring us to a better world without it It costeth worldlings no small care to die in an honourable or plentiful estate that they may fall from an higher place than others and may have something to make death more grievous and unwelcome to them and may have a greater account to make at Judgement and that their passage to Heaven may be as a Camels through a Needle And may a believing joyful death be expected without the preparations of exercise and experience in a believing life Nature is so much afraid of dying and an incorporated soul is so incarcerated in sense and so hardly riseth to serious and satisfying apprehensions of the unseen world that even true Believers do find it a work of no small difficulty to desire to depart and be with Christ and to die in the joyful hopes of faith A little abatement of the terrours of death a little supporting hope and peace is all that the greater part of them attain instead of the fervent desires and triumphant joyes which the lively belief of endless glory should produce O therefore make it the work of your lives of all your lives your greatest work your constant work to live by faith that the faith which hath first conquered all the rest of your enemies may be able also to overcome the last and may do your last work well when it hath done the rest CHAP. I. Directions how to live by Faith And first how to strengthen Faith And secondly the natural Truths presupposed to be considered THe Directions which I shall give you as helps to live by Faith are of two ranks 1. Such as tend to the strengthening of your Faith 2. Such as tell you how to use it The first is the greatest part of our task for no man can use that faith which he hath not nor can use more of it than he hath And the commonest reason why we use but little is because we have but little to use But on this subject supposing it most weighty I have written many Treatises already The second part of the Saints Rest The Unreasonableness of Infidelity And last of all The Reasons of the Christian Religion Besides others which handle it on the by And somewhat is said in the beginning of this discourse But yet because in so great a matter I am more afraid of doing too little than too much I will here give you an Index of some of the chief Helps to be close together before you for your memories to be the constant fuel of your Faith In the work of Faith it is first needful that you get all the prerequisite Helps of Natural Light and be well acquainted with their Order and Evidence and their Vsefulness to befriend the supernatural revelations For it is supposed that we are men before we are Christians We were created before we were redeemed And we must know that there is a God before we can know that we have offended him or that we need a Saviour to reconcile us to him And we must know that we have reasonable souls before we can know that sin hath corrupted them or that grace must sanctifie them And we must know that whatso●ver God saith is true before we can believe that the Scripture is true as being his revelation Faith is an act of Reason and Believing is a kind of knowing even a knowing by the testim●ny of him whom we believe because we have sufficient reason to believe him 2. And next we must be well acquainted with the evidence of supernatural Truth which presupposeth the foresaid Natural Verities I shall set both b●fore you briefly in their order 1. Think well ●f the nature of your souls of their faculties or p●wers their excellency and their proper use And then you will find that you are not meer brutes who know not their Creat●ur nor live no● by a Law nor think not of another world nor ●●ar any ●●fferings after death But that you have reas●n free-will and executive power to kn●w your Maker and to live by ●ule a●d to hope for a Reward in another life and to fear a p●n●shme●t hereafter And that as no wise Artificer maketh any thing in vain so God is m●ch less to be thought to hav● given you such souls and faculties in vain 2. Co●sid●r next how all the world declareth to you that there is a G●d wh● is infinite●y p●werful wise and good And tha● it is not possible that all things which we see should have no cause or that the derived Power and Wisdom and Goodnes● of the creature should not proceed from that which is more excellent in the first and total cause Or that God should give more than he had to give 3. Consider nex● in wh●t Relation such a creature must needs stand to such a Creatour If he made us of N●●hing 〈◊〉 is not p●ssible but that he must be 〈◊〉 Owner and w● a●d all things absolutely his Own And if he be our Maker and Owner and be infinitely powerful wise and good and we be Reasonable-free-agents made to be guided by Laws or Moral Means unto our end it is not possible but that we should stand related to him as subjects to their rightful Governour And if he be our Creatour Owner and Ruler and also infinitely Good and the grand Benefactor of the world and if the nature of our souls be to Love Good as Good it cannot be possible that he should not be our End who is our Creatour and that we should not be related to him as to the Chiefest Good both originally as our Benefactor and finally as our End 4. And then it is easie for you next to see what duty you owe to that God to whom you are thus related That if you are absolutely his Own you should willingly be at his absolute dispose And i● he b● your Soveraign Ruler you should labour most diligently to know his Laws and absolutely to obey them And if he be infinitely Good and your Benefactor and your End you are absolutely bound to Love him most devotedly and to place your own felicity in his Love All this is so evidently the duty of man to God by nature that nothing but madness can deny
Image of God It s essence is a Living Spirit It s essential faculties are 1. A Vital Activity or Power 2. An Vnderstanding 3. A Will. 13. His Rectitude which is Gods Moral Image on him consisteth 1. In the promptitude and fortitude of his Active Power 2. In the Wisdom of his Vnderstanding 3. In the Moral Goodness of his Will which is its Inclination to its End and Readiness for its Duty 14. Being created such a creature by a meer resultancy from his Nature and his Creator he is related to him as his Creature and in that Unity is the subsequent Trinity of Relations 1. As we are Gods Propriety or his Own 2. His Subjects 3. His Beneficiaries and Lovers all comprized in the one title of his children And at once with these Relations of man to God it is that God is as before related to man as his Creator and as his Owner Ruler and Chief Good 15. Man is also related to his fellow creatures below him 1. As their Owner 2. Their Ruler 3. Their End under God which is Gods Dominative or Honorary Image upon man and is called commonly our Dominion over the creatures So that by meer Creation and the Nature of the creatures there is constituted a state of communion between God and Man which is 1. A Dominion 2. A Kingdom 3. A Family or Paternity And the whole is sometime called by one of these names and sometime by the other still implying the rest 16. Gods Kingdom being thus constituted his Attributes appropriate to these his Relations follow 1. His Absoluteness as our Owner 2. His Holiness Truth and Justice as our Ruler 3. And his Kindness Benignity and Mercy as our Father or Benefactor 17. And then the Works of God as in these three Relations follow which are 1. To Dispose of us at his pleasure as our Owner 2. To govern us as our King 3. To love us and do us good and make us perfectly happy as our Benefactor and our end 18. And here more particularly is to be considered 1. How God disposed of Adam when he had new made him 2. How he began his Government of him And 3. What Benefits he gave him and what he further offered or promised him 19. And as to the second we must 1. Consider the Antecedent part of Gods Government which is Legislation and then herafter the consequent part which is 1. Judgment 2. Execution And Gods Legislation is 1. By making our Natures such as compared with objects Duty shall result from this Nature so related 2. Or else by Precept or Revelation from himself besides our Natures 1. The Law of Nature is fundamental and radical in our foresaid Relations to God themselves in which it is made our natural duty 1. To submit our selves wholly to God and his disposal as his own 2. To obey his commands 3. And to receive his mercies and thankfully to return them and to love him But though as Gods essential principles and his foresaid Relations are admirably conjunct in their operations ad extra so our Relative obligations are conjunct yet are they so far distinguishable that we may say that these which conjunctly make our Moral duty yet are not all the results of our Relation to a Governour as such but the second only and therefore that only is to be called the Radical Law in the strict sense the other two being the Moral results of our Rectitude The duty of subjection and obedience in general arising from our Natures related to our Creator is the radical governing Law of God in us But yet the same submission and gratitude and love which are primarily our duty from their proper foundations are secondarily made also the matter of our subjective duty because they are also commanded of God 2. The particular Laws of Nature are 1. Of our particular duties to God or of Piety 2. Or of our duties to our selves and others 1. Acts of Justice 2. And of Charity These Laws of Nature are 1. Vnalterable and that is where the nature of our persons and of the objects which are the foundations of them are unalterable or still the same 2. Or mutable when the Nature of the things which are its foundation is mutable As it is the immutable Law of immutable nature that we love God as God and that we do all the good we can c. because the foundation of it is immutable But e. g. the Law against Incest was mutable in nature For nature bound Adams children to marry each other and nature bindeth us since ordinarily to the contrary 2. The revealed Law to Adam was superinduced The parts of Gods Law must also here be considered 1. The introductive Teaching part for Gods teaching us is part of his ruling us and that is Doctrines History and Prophecy 2. The Imperative part commands to do and not to do 3. And the sanctions or motive parts in Law and execution which are 1. Promises of Beneficial Rewards 2. Threatnings of hurtful penalties 20. Gods Laws being thus described in general and those made to Adam thus in particular the next thing to be considered is mans behaviour in breaking those Laws which must be considered in the Causes and the Nature of it and the immediate effects and consequents 21. And next must be considered Gods consequent part of Government as to Adam viz. his judging him according to his Law 22. And here cometh in the Promise or the first edition of the New Covenant or Law of Grace which must be opened in its parts original and end 23. And then must be considered Gods execution of his sentence on Adam so far as he was unpardoned and so upon the world till the end 24. And next must be considered Gods enlargements and explications of his Covenant of Grace till Christs Incarnation 25. And next mens behaviour under that explained Covenant 26. And Gods sentence and execution upon them thereupon 27. Then we come to the fulness of time and to explain the work of Redemption distinctly And 1. It s Original the God of Nature giving the world a Physician or a Saviour 2. The Ends 3. The constitutive Causes Where 1. Of the Person of the Redeemer in his Essence as God and Man and in his perfections both essential and modal and accidental 28. And 2. Of the fundamental works of our Redemption such as Creation was to the first Administration viz. his first Vndertaking Interposition and Incarnation being all presupposed 1. His perfect Resignation of himself to his Father and submission to his disposing Will 2. His perfect subjection and obedience to his Coverning Will 3. His perfect Love to him 4. And the suffering by which he exprest all these The three first meriting of themselves and the last meriting as a satisfactory Sacrifice not for it self but for its usefulness to its proper ends 29. From this Offering once made to God Christ acquired the perfecter title of a Saviour or Redeemer or Mediatour which one contained
greater than heart duties only because in the outward duty it is to be supposed that both parts concur both soul and body And the operations of both is more than of one alone and also because the nobler ends are attained by both together more than by one only For God is loved and man is benefited by them As when the Sun shineth upon a tree or on the earth it is a more noble effect to have a return of its influences in ripe and pleasant fruits than in a meer sudden reflexion of the heat alone 18. All outward duties must begin at the heart and it must animate them all and they are valued in the sight of God no further than they come from a rectified will even from the Love of God and Goodness However without this they are good works materially in respect to the Receiver He may do good to the Church or Common-wealth or Poor who doth none to himself thereby 19. As the motion is circular from God to man and from man to God again Mercies received and Duties and Love returned so is the motion circular between the heart and the outward man The heart moving the tongue and hand c. and these moving the heart again partly of their own nature and partly by divine reward The Love of God and Goodness produceth holy thoughts and words and actions and these again increase the Love which did produce them Gal. 5.6.13 Heb. 6.10 Heb. 10.24 2 John 6. Jude 21. 20. The Judgment must be well informed before the Will resolve 21. Yet when God hath given us plain instruction it is a sin to cherish causless doubts and scruples 22. And when we see our duty before us it is not every scruple that will excuse us from doing it But when we have more conviction that it is a duty then that it is none or that it is a sin we must do it notwithstanding those mistaking doubts As if in Prayer or Alms-deeds you should scruple the lawfulness of them you ought not to forbear till your scruples be resolved because you so long neglect a duty Else folly might justifie men in ungodliness and disobedience 23. But in things meerly indifferent it is a sin to do them doubtingly because you may be sure it is no sin to forbear them Rom. 14.23 1 Cor. 8.13 14. 24. An erring Judgment intangleth a man in a necessity of sinning till it be reformed whether he act or not according to it Therefore if an erring person ask What am I bound to the true answer is to lay by your errour or reform your Judgment first and then to do accordingly and if he ask an hundred times over But what must I do in case I cannot change my Judgment the same answer must be given him God still bindeth you to change your Judgment and hath given you the necessary means of information and therefore he will not take up with your supposition that you cannot His Law is a fixed Rule which telleth you what you must believe and chuse and do And this Rule will not change though you be blind and say I cannot change my mind Your mind must come to the Rule for the Rule will not come to your perverted mind Say what you will the Law of God will be still the same and will still bind you to believe according to its meaning 25. Yet supposing that a mans errour so entangleth him in a necessity of sinning it is a double sin to prefer a greater sin before a lesser For though no sin is an object of our choice yet the greater sin is the object of our greater hatred and refusal and must be with the greater fear and care avoided 26. An erring Conscience then is never the voice or messenger of God nor are we ever bound to follow it because it is neither our God nor his Law but only our own Judgment which should discern his Law And mis-reading or misunderstanding the Law will not make a bad cause good though it may excuse it from a greater degree of evil 27. The judicious fixing of the Wills Resolutions and especially the increasing of its Love or complacency and delight in good is the chief thing to be done in all our duties as being the heart and life of all Prov. 23.26.12 4.23 7.3 22.17 3.1 2 3. 4.4 21. Deut. 30.6 Psal 37.4 40.8 119.16 35 70 47. 1.2 Isa 58.14 28. The grand motives to duty must ever be before our eyes and set upon our hearts as the poise of all our motions and endeavours As the travelers home and business is deepest in his mind as the cause of every step which he goeth 29. No price imaginable must seem great enough to hire us to commit the least known sin Luke 12.4 14.26 28 33. Mat. 10.39 16.26 30. The second great means next to the right forming of the heart for the avoiding of sin is to get away from the temptations baits and occasions of it And he that hath most grace must take himself to be still in great danger while he is under strong temptations and allurements and when sin is brought to his hands and alluring objects are close to the appetite and senses 31. The keeping clean our Imaginations and commanding our Thoughts is the next great means for the avoiding sin and a polluted fantasie and ungoverned thoughts are the nest where all iniquity is hatched and the instruments that bring it forth into act 32. The governing of the senses is the first means to keep clean the Imagination When Acha● seeth the wedge of gold he desireth it and then he taketh it When men wilfully fill their eyes with the objects which entice them to lust to covetousness to wrath the impression is presently made upon the fantasie and then the Devil hath abundance more power to renew such imaginations a thousand times than if such impressions had been never made And it is a very hard thing to cleanse the fantasie which is once polluted 33. And the next notable means of keeping out all evil Imaginations and curing lust and vanity of mind is constant laborious diligence in a lawful calling which shall allow the mind no leisure for vain and sinful thoughts as the great nourisher of all foul and wicked thoughts is Idleness and Vacancy which inviteth the tempter and giveth him time and opportunity 34. Watchfulness over our selves and thankful accepting the watchfulness fault-findings and reproofs of others is a great part of the safety of our souls Mat. 26.41 25 13. Mark 13.37 Luke 21.36 1 Cor. 16.13 1 Thes 5.6.2 Tim. 4.5 Heb. 12.17 1 Pet. 4.7 35. Affirmative Precepts bind not to all times that is no positive duty is a duty at all times As to preach to pray to speak of God to think of holy things c. it is not alwaies a sin to intermit them 36. All that God commandeth us to do is both a Duty and a Means it
is called a Duty in relation to God the efficient Law-giver first and it is a Means next in relation to God the end whose work is done and whose will is pleased by it And we must alwaies respect it in both these notions inseparably No Duty is not a Means and no true Means is not a Duty but many seem to man to have the aptitude of a Means which are no duty but a sin because we see not all things and therefore are apt to think that fit which is pernicious 37. Therefore nothing must be thought a true Means to any good end which God forbiddeth For God knoweth better than we 38. But we must see that the negative or prohibition be universal or indeed extendeth to our particular case and then and not else you may say that negatives bind to all times 39. Nothing which is certainly destructive to the end and contrary to the nature of a Means is to be taken for a Duty For it is certain that Gods Commands are for edification and not for destruction for good and not for evil 40. Yet that may tend to present inferiour hurt which ultimately tendeth to the greatest good Therefore it is not some present or inferiour incommodity that must cause us to reject such a means of greater future good 41. Whatsoever we are certain God commandeth we may be certain is a proper Means though we see not the aptitude or may think it to be destructive because God knoweth better than we But then we must indeed be sure that it is commanded hic nunc in this case and place and time and circumstances 42. It is one of the most needful things to our innocency to have Christian wisdom to compare the various accidents of those duties and sins which are such by accident and to judge which accidents do preponderate For indeed the actions are very few which are absolutely and simply duties or sins in themselves considered without those accidents which qualifie them to be such Accidental duties and sins are the most numerous by far And in many cases the difficulty of comparing the various accidents and contrary motives is not small 43. Therefore it is that as in Physick and Law Cases c. the common people have greatest need of the advice of skilful Artists to help them to judge of particular Cases taking in all the circumstances which their narrow understandings cannot comprehend which is more of the use of Physicians and Lawyers than to read a publick Lecture of Physick or of Law so the Office of the Church-Guides or Bishops is of so great necessity to the people in every particular Church And that not only for publick Preaching but also to be at hand to help the people who have recourse unto them in all such cases to know in particular what is duty and what is sin 44. And therefore it is besides other reasons that the Office of the Bishops or Pastors of the Churches must in all the proper parts of it be done only by themselves or men in that Office and not per alios by men of another Office And therefore it is that bare titles or authority will not serve the turn without proportionable or necessary abilities or gifts because the work is done by personal fitness and cases and difficulties can no more be resolved nor safe counsel given for the soul in matters of Morality by men unable than for the body or estate in points of Physick or of Law As the Lord Verulam in his Considerations of Ecclesiastical Government hath well observed 45. In such cases where duty or sin must be judged of by compared accidents the nature of a Means or the interest of the End is the principal thing to be considered And that which will evidently do more harm than good is not to be judged a duty in those circumstances but a sin as if the question were whether Preaching be at this time in this place to this number to these individuals a duty If it appear to true Christian prudence that it would be like to do more hurt than good it is a sin at that time and not a duty and yet Preaching in due season as great a duty still So if the question were whether secret prayer be at this hour or day a duty If true reason tell you that it is like to hinder either family-prayer or any other greater good it is not at that time a duty Or if the question be whether reproof or personal exhortation of a sinner be now a duty If true reason tell me that it is like to do more harm than good it is not a duty then but accidentally a sin For we must not cast pearls before Swine nor give that which is holy unto Dogs lest they tread it under foot or turn again and all to rend us And there is a time when Preachers that are persecuted in one City must fly to another and when they must shake off the dust of their feet for a witness against the disobedient and turn away from them The imprudent people can easily discern this when it is their own case but not when it is the Preachers case so powerful is self-love and partiality Mat. 7.6 7. Mat. 10.14 23.34 10.23 The reason of all this is 1. Because God appointeth all Means for the End 2. And because the Law by which in such cases we must be ruled is only general as Let all things be done to edification as if he should say Fit all your actions which I have not given you a particular peremptory Law for to that good which is their proper end 1 Cor. 14.5 12.3 26.17 2 Cor. 10.8 12.19 13.10 1 Cor. 10.23 Ephes 4.12 16 29. 1 Tim. 1.4 Rom. 15.2 1 Cor. 12.7 46. Publick Duties ordinarily must be preferred before private And that which is for the good of many before that which is for the good of one only 47. Yet when the private necessity is more pressing and the publick may be omitted at that time with less detriment the case doth alter As also when that one that we do good to is more worth than the many in order to the honour of God or the more publick good of the whole society or when it is one that by special precept we are obliged to prefer in our beneficence 48. Civil Power is to be obeyed before Ecclesiastical in things belonging to the Office of the Magistrate and Ecclesiastical before the Civil in things proper to the Ecclesiastical Gvoernours only And Family Power before both in things proper to their cognizance only But what it is that is proper to each power I shall tell them when I think they are willing to know and it will do more good than harm to tell it them 49. The supreme Magistrate is ever to be obeyed before his Inferiours because they have no power but from him and therefore have none against him unless he so give it them 50. No Humane Authority
12.12 Esther 8.15 So that it still remaineth clear that loving our neighbours as our selves doth entitle us to the comforts of all mens health estates prosperity honours yea and their holiness and wisdom too and this without any such participation of their sorrows as should be any considerable ecclipse of our delights if we do it all regularly as God requireth us 6. If I love my neighbour as my self I am freed from all the trouble of cross interests in buying and selling in trespassing in Law-suits It will comfort me as much if he get by me as if I get by him If his bargain prove the better as if mine did if he have the better at Law as if it were judged to my self Yea all his successes prosperity and whatever good befalleth any that I know of in the world will all be mine 7. And I shall never be loth by death to leave the world while I have no cause to fear the missing of salvation because whatever I leave behind me will be possessed by such as I love as my self They will have life and time and health and comforts and whatever my nature is loth to leave Therefore whilest I live why should it not be as comforting to me to think that so many shall live and prosper whom I love as my self as if I were my self to live and prosper 8. Yea more than so I have by Love a part in the Joyes of Heaven before I am actually there For the Joyes of all those blessed souls and of those holy Angels are mine by participation so far as to cause me to rejoyce in their felicity as if it were my own as far as I can now apprehend it Yea the Glory of the Lord Jesus and the eternal blessedness of God himself would rejoyce us more than our own felicity if we loved him as much above our selves as we ought to do we should partake of our Masters joy And now judge whether loving God as God and our neighbours sincerely as our selves would not cure almost all the calamities of our minds and give us a kind of Heaven and be a cheap and certain way to have what we can wish in all the world and even to make all the world our own And whether it be not sin it self which is the first part of all mens hell and misery Object But my neighbours meat will not fill my belly nor his health doth not ease my pain nor his fire keep me warm Answ The flesh hath got the dominion indeed when men cannot distinguish between soul and body between the pain and pleasures of the body and of the mind I do not say that Love will change the pain or pleasure of your bodies but of your minds Your appetites will not be satisfied with your neighbours food but your minds may be comforted to see his welfare Your pain is not eased by your neighbours health but your minds may be pleased by it as much as if it were your own if you loved him as much as you do your self And therefore many in a danger have saved the life of a Prince a Captain a Parent a Child a Friend with the voluntary loss of their own Object This is all true but who is there in the world that doth it or findeth it possible to love another as himself And how can that be a duty which is to nature it self an impossibility Therefore let us first know what this duty is of loving our neighbours as our selves Answ Doubtless if it be the summ of the Law all true Christians do it in sincerity though not in perfection And as to the sense of it 1. You must distinguish between that sensitive and passionate affection which is in the soul as sensitive and is common to beasts with men and that rational appetite which doth will and chuse and is pleased according to the conduct of pure reason The first we doubt not will be still more to our selves than others and it is not the use of grace to destroy it but to rule and moderate it 2. You must distinguish between Love and outward actions which are the expressions of it When our Love is due as much to one as to another yet our outward actions may be under a particular Law which obligeth us to do that for one which we are not bound to do for others As to maintain our own children families servants and so our selves rather than others And the reason is because the difference of individuals maketh that fit for one which is not fit for another and so maketh every man the fittest chuser for himself and those that are neerest to him and nature instigateth him to the greatest care in doing it And all good must be done in a regular order or else confusion will destroy it And nature maketh this most orderly As every Parish must keep their own poor and yet must love other poor as well 3. You must know that Love is formally nothing but complacence as aforesaid but Love joyned with a will and purpose to do good to another is called Love of benevolence when yet the Love there is one thing and the doing good or purpose to do it is another and I may in obedience to God purpose and do more good to one whom I am bound to Love not more but less And now you may see what it is to love our neighbours as our selves 1. God must be loved above our neighbours and our selves and both must be loved purely as related and subordinate to him and for his sake There is a double respect which all things have to God 1. As they contain that excellency which he hath put upon them which is some likeness representation or signification of himself and is called his Glory shining in the creature that is it 's derived Goodness 2. As they conduce to his further service and may honour him and please him Thus all creatures must be loved only as a means even a means declaring God being derivatively and significantly good and useful and as a means to serve and please him 2. Therefore this being the formal reason of our Rational Love must also be the measure of it à quatenus ad quantum As it is certain that I must love that best which is best because I must love it only as good so it is certain that that is best which hath most likeness to God and most of his Glory upon it and that which is most pleasing to him and useful to his service Therefore if my neighbour be better than I am I must judge him better and love him better 3. Though natural self-appetite and self-preservation by which all creatures are for themselves only not feeling the hunger cold pain of others be not sinful but the effect of creating individuation yet Reason was perfect and the Will could perfectly follow Reason in its complacency and choice till sin corrupted it Reason could judge that best which was best and the Will
and not to our own commodity in the world 2. No man can deny this principle but by setting up natural self-love or appetite and making the rational stoop to that which would infer as well that we may love our selves better than God himself and that our sense is nobler than our reason and must rule it 3. We find our own reason tell us much more of our duty in this than our corrupted wills do follow The best way therefore to discern the truth is to treat with reason alone and leave out the will till we have dispatcht with reason And you will find that the common light of nature justifieth this Law of God 1. He that would not confess that it is better he had no being than that there were no God or no world besides him is a monster of selfishness And if a man say never so much I cannot do so yet while he confesseth that this should be his desire it sufficeth to the decision of our present case 2. He that will not confess that it is better that he himself should die than all the Church of Christ or the whole Kingdom die is unreasonably selfish in the eyes of all impartial men The gallant Romans and Athenians had learnt it as one of their plainest greatest Lessons to prefer their Country before their lives And is not that to love their Countryes better than themselves 3. For the same reason many of them saw that it was the duty of a good subject or a gallant souldier to save the life of his King or General with the loss of his own Because their lives were of more publick utility And the ground of all this was these natural verities The best should be best loved Goodness must be measured by a higher rule than personal self-interest Multitudes are better than one c. 4. All men acknowledge that a man of eminent Learning Piety Wisdom and Vsefulness to the Church or World should be loved and preserved rather than a wicked sottish worthless child of our own Yea God himself requireth that Parents procure the death of their own children by publick Justice if they be obstinately wicked Deut. 21. 5. The same Reasons plainly infer that I ought rather to desire the life of a much more worthy useful instrument for the Church and State than my own and so to love a better man better than my self if I be acquainted sufficiently with his goodness And if this be all so sure and plain hence observe 1. How much humane nature is corrupted Alas how rare is this equal Love 2. How few true Christians are and how defective and imperfect grace is in the best Alas how strange are many Christians to the extent of this duty and how far are we all from practising it in any eminent degree 3. Wherein it is that natures corruption most consisteth and what is the chief part of the nature and work of sanctifying grace and reformation 4. Whence come all the oppressions injuries persecutions frauds and cruelties on the earth For want of loving mens neighbours as themselves Otherwise how tenderly would they handle one another How easily would they pardon wrongs How patiently would they bear the dissent of honest upright Christians who cannot force their judgments to be of other mens mould and size How apt would men be to suspect their own understandings of weakness presumption or errour rather than to rave with the fury of the Dragon against all others who think them to be mistaken How safely and quietly might we live by them in the world if they loved their neighbours as themselves I do not say now How plentiful would men be in doing good to others I am but pleading a lower cause How seldom they would be in doing hurt But alas miserable Brittain It was in thee that one extraordinary Emperour Alexander Sevetus was betrayed and murdered who made that Christian precept his Motto and wrote it on his doors and books and goods Do as you would be done by In thee it is that Love hath been beheaded while nothing hath been more acknowledged and professed If Love be treacherous hurtful envious scandalous ensnaring and plotting for mens destruction If Love teach proud and vicious sots to take themselves for Deities and Oracles and all for Vermine that must be hunted unto death who bow not to their carnal erroneous conceits and do not with the readiest prostitute consciences serve their carnal interests and ends If Love be known by reviling those that are much better than our selves and stigmatizing the faithfullest servants of Christ with the most odious character that lyes can utter If it was Love that called Paul a pestilent fellow and a mover of sedition among the people and represented Christ as an enemy to Caesar and his followers as the filth and off-scouring of the earth then happy age in which we live and happy they that are possessed with the proud and factious spirit But if all be otherwise alas where be they and how few that love their neighbours or betters as themselves 5. You see here what a plague sin is to the earth and how great a punishment may I call it or rather a misery to the sinner and to the world 6. And you see how joyful and heavenly a life we should live if we did but follow Gods commands And what a felicity Love it self is to the soul 7. And you see by what measure to try mens spirits and to know who are the best among all the pretenders to goodness in the world Certainly not the most censorious contemptuous backbiters and cruel that seek to make all odious that are not for their interest But those that most abound in Love which Faith it self is given to produce Object All this is true but still we find it a thing impossible to love our neighbour equally with our selves Can you teach us how to do it Answ It is that I have been teaching you in the ten Directions before set down But it is this which I have reserved to the close that must do the work indeed and without it nothing else will do it Direct 11. Make it the work of all your lives by Faith in Christ to bring up your souls to the unfeigned Love of God and then it will be done For then you will love God above all and love God in all and love your selves and your neighbours principally for God Then Gods Image and Glory and Will will be Goodness or Amiableness in your eyes and not carnal pleasure honour or commodity And then it will be easie to you to love that most which hath most of God You will then easily see the reason of this seeming Paradox and that the contrary is most unreasonable You will then be as Timothy who had a natural Love to others as others have to themselves and who sought the things of Jesus Christ when all others even the best Ministers too much sought their own Phil. 2.20 21. You
great a likeness of the holy and heavenly nature in the Saints to the heavenly life that God hath promised that makes it the more easily believed 4. And it exceedingly helpeth our Belief of the life that 's yet unseen to find that Nature affordeth us undeniable Arguments to prove a future Happiness and Misery Reward and Punishment in the general yea and in special that the Love and Fruition of God is this Reward and that the effects of his displeasure are this Punishment Nothing more clear and certain than that there is a God He must be a fool indeed that dare deny it Psal 14.1 as also that this God is the Creatour of the rational nature and hath the absolute right of Soveraign Government and therefore that the rational Creature oweth him the most full and absolute obedience and deserveth punishment if he disobey And it 's most clear that infinite goodness should be loved above all finite imperfect created good And it 's clear that the rational nature is so formed that without the hopes and fears of another life the world neither is nor ever was nor by ordinary visible means can be well governed supposing God to work on man according to his nature And it is most certain that it consisteth not with infinite wisdom power and goodness to be put to rule the world in all ages by fraud and falshood And it is certain that Heathens do for the most part through the world by the light of nature acknowledge a life of joy or misery to come And the most hardened Atheists or Infidels must confess that for ought they know there may be such a life it being impossible they should know or prove the contrary And it is most certain that the meer probability or possibility of a Heaven and Hell being matters of such unspeakable concernment should in reason command our utmost diligence to the hazard or loss of the transitory vanities below and consequently that a holy diligent preparation for another life is naturally the duty of the reasonable creature And it 's a sure that God hath not made our nature in vain nor set us on a life of vain imployments nor made it our business in the world to seek after that which can never be attained These things and much more do shew that nature affordeth us so full a testimony of the life to come that 's yet invisible that it exceedingly helpeth us in believing the supernatural revelation of it which is more full 5. And though we have not seen the objects of our faith yet those that have given us their infallible testimony by infallible means have seen what they testified Though no man hath seen God at any time yet the only begotten Son which is in the bosom of the Father hath declared him Joh 1.18 Verily verily saith our Lord we speak that we know and testifie that we have seen Joh. 3.11 Vers 31 32. He that cometh from Heaven is above all and what he hath seen and heard that he testifieth Christ that hath told us saw the things that we have not seen and you will believe honest men that speak to you of what they were eye-witnesses of And the Disciples saw the person the transfiguration and the miracles of Christ Insomuch that John thus beginneth his Epistle 1 Cor. 1.1 2 3. That which was from the beginning which we have heard which we have seen with our eyes which we have looked upon and our hands have handled of the Word of life for the life was manifested and we have seen it and bear witness and shew it to you that eternal life which was with the Father and was manifested unto us That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you So Paul 1 Cor. 9.1 Am I not an Apostle have have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord 1 Cor. 15.5.6 7. He was seen of Cephas then of the twelve after that he was seen of above five hundred brethren at once of whom the greater part remain unto this present Heb. 2.3 4. This great salvation at first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed to us by them that heard him God also bearing them witness both with signs and wonders and with divers miracles and gifts of the holy Ghost according to his own will 2 Pet. 1.16 17. For we have not followed cunningly devised fables when we made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ but were eye-witnesses of his Majesty For he received from God the Father honour and glory when there came such a voice to him from the excellent glory This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased And this voice which came from Heaven we heard when we were with him in the holy Mount And therefore when the Apostles were commanded by their persecutors not to speak at all or teach in the name of Jesus they answered We cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard Acts 4.18 20. So that much of the obj●cts of our faith to us invisible have yet been s●en by those that have instrumentally revealed them and the glory of Heaven it self is seen by many millions of souls that are now possessing it And the tradition of the Testimony of the Apostles unto us is more full and satisfactory than the tradition of any Laws of the Land or History of the most unquestionable affairs that have been done among the people of the earth as I have manifested elsewhere So that faith hath the infallible Testimony of God and of them that have seen and therefore is to us instead of sight 6. Lastly Even the enemy of faith himself doth against his will confirm our faith by the violence and rage of malice that he stirreth up in the ungodly against the life of faith and holiness and by the importunity of his oppositions and temptations discovering that it is not for nothing that he is so maliciously solicitous industrious and violent And thus you see how much faith hath that should fully satisfie a rational man instead of presence possession and ●ight If any shall here say But why would not God let us have a sight of Heaven or Hell when he could not but know that it would more generally and certainly have prevailed for the conversion and salvation of the world Doth he envy us the most ●ff●ctua● means I answer 1. Who art thou O man that disputest against God shall the thing formed say to him that formed it Why hast thou made me thus M●st God come down to the bar of man to render an account of the reason of his works Why do ye not also ask him a reason of the nature situation magnitude order influences c. of all the Stars and Superiour Orbs and call him to an account for all his works when yet there are so many things in your own bodies of which you little understand the reason Is it not intollerable impudency for such worms as we so
it And this is it which we call Sanctification or Holiness to the Lord. And our cohabitation and relation to men will tell us that Justice and Charity are our duty as to them And when a man is fully satisfied that Holiness Justice and Charity are our duty he hath a great advantage for his progress towards the Christian Faith To which let me add that as to our selves also it is undeniably our duty to take more care for our souls than for our bodies and to rule our senses and passions by our Reason and to subject our lower faculties to the higher and so to use all sensible and present things as conduceth to the publick good and to the advancement of our nobler part and to our greatest benefit though it cross our sensual appetites All this being unquestionably our natural duty we see that man was made to live in Holiness Justice Charity Temperance and rational regularity in the world 5. When you have gone thus far consider next how far men are generally from the performance of this duty And how backward humane nature is to it even while they cannot deny it to be their duty And you will soon perceive that God who made it their duty did never put in them this enmity thereto nor ever made them without some aptitude to perform it And if any would infer that their indisposedn●ss proveth it to be none of their duty the nature of man will fully confute him and the conscience and confession of all the sober part of the world What wretch so blind if he believe a Deity who will not confess that he should love God with all his heart and that Justice Charity and Sobriety are his duty and that his sense should be ruled by his reason c The evidence before given is not to be denyed And therefore something is marr'd in nature Some enemy hath seduced man And some deplorable change hath befallen him 6. Yea if you had no great backwardness to this duty your self consider what it must cost you faithfully to perform it in such a malignant world as we now live in what envy and wrath what malice and persecution what opposition and discouragements on every side we must expect Universal experience is too full a proof of this Besides what it costeth our restrained flesh 7. Proceed then to think further that certainly God hath never appointed us so much duty without convenient Motives to perform it It cannot be that he should make us more noble than the brutes to be more miserable Or that he should make Holiness our duty that it might be our loss or our calamity If there were no other life but this and men had no hopes of future happiness nor any fears of punishment what a Hell would this world be Heart-wickedness would be but little feared nor heart-duty regarded Secret sin against Princes States and all degrees would be boldly committed and go unpunished for the most part The sins of Princes and of all that have power to defeat the Law would have little or no restraint Every mans interest would oblige him rather to offend God who so seldom punisheth here than to offend a Prince or any man in power who seldom lets offences against himself go unrevenged And so man more than God would be the Ruler of the world that is our God Nay actually the hopes and fears of another life among most Hea●hens Infidels and Hereticks is the principle of Divine Government by which God keepeth up most of the order and virtue which is in the world Yea think what you should be and do your self as to enemies and as to secret faults and as to sensual vices if you thought there were no life but this And is it possible that the infinitely powerful wise and good Creatour can be put to govern all mankind by meer deceit and a course of lyes as if he wanted better means By how much the better any man is by so much the more regardful is he of the life to come and the hopes and fears of another life are so much the more prevalent with him And is it possible that God should make men good to make them the most deceived and most miserable Hath he commanded all these cares to be our needless torments which brutes and fools and sottish sinners do all scape Is the greatest obedience to God become a sign of the greatest folly or the way to the greatest loss or disappointment We are all sure that this life is short and vain No Infidel can say that he is sure that there is no other life for us And if this be so reason commandeth us to prefer the p●ssibilities of such a life to come before the certain vanities of this life So that even the Infidels uncertainty will unavoidably infer that the preferring of the world to come is our duty And if it be our duty then the thing in it self is true For God will not make it all mens duties in the frame of their nature to seek an Vtopia and pursue a shadow and to spend their daies and chiefest cares for that which is not Godliness is not such a dreaming night-walk Conscience will not suffer dying men to believe that they have more cause to repent of their Godliness than of their sin and of their seeking Heaven than of wallowing in their lusts Nay then these h●avenly desires would be themselves our sins as being the following of a lye the aspiring after a state which is above us and the abuse and loss of our faculties and time And sensuality would be liker to be our virtue as being natural to us and a seeking of our most real felicity The common conscience of mankind doth justifie the wisdom and virtue of a temperate holy heavenly person and acknowledgeth that our heavenly desires are of God And doth God give men both natural faculties which shall never come to the perfection which is their End and also gracious desires which shall but deceive us and never be satisfied If God had made us for the enjoyments of brutes he would have given us but the knowledge and desires of brutes Every King and mortal Judge can punish faults against Man with death And hath God no greater or further punishment for sins as committed against himself And are his rewards no greater than a mans These and many more such Evidences may assure you that there is another life of Rewards and punishments and that this life is not our final state but only a ●ime of preparation thereunto Settle this deeply and fixedly in your minds 8. And look up to the heavenly Regions and think Is this world so replenished with inhabitants both Sea and Land and Air it self And can I dream that the vast and glorious Orbs and Regions are all uninhabited O● that they have not more numerous and glorious possessors than this small opacous spot of earth And then think that those higher creatures are intellectual spirits This is
it being his work to make us thus both Believers and Saints and his perfective work of our real Sanctification being as necessary to us as our Redemption or Creation Matth. 28.19 2● Heb. 6.1 2 4 5 6. Direct 18. Therefore as every Christian must look upon himself as being in special Covenant with the Holy Ghost so be must understand distinctly what are the benefits and what are the conditions and what are the duties of that part of his Covenant The special Benefits are the Life Light and Love before mentioned by the quickening illumination and sanctification of the Spirit not as in the first Act or Seed for so they are presupposed in that Faith and Repentance which is the Condition But as in the following acts and habits and increase of both unto perfection Acts 2.38 Repent and be baptized every one of you in the Name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost for the promise is to you and to your children and to all that are afar off and to as many as the Lord our God shall call See Acts 26.18 Ephes 1.18 19. Titus 3.5 6 7. The special condition on our parts is our consent to the whole Covenant of Grace viz. To give up our selves to God as our Reconciled God and Father in Christ and to Jesus Christ as our Saviour and to the holy Spirit as to his Agent and our Sanctifier There needeth no other proof of this than actual Baptism as celebrated in the Church from Christs daies till now And the institution of it Mat. 28.19 with 1 John 5.7 8 9. 1 Pet. 3.21 with John 3.5 The special Duties afterward to be performed have their rewards as aforesaid and the neglect of them their penalties and therefore have the nature of a Condition as of those particular rewards or benefits Direct 19. The Duties which our Covenant with the Holy Ghost doth bind us to are 1. Faithfully to endeavour by the power and help which he giveth us to continue our consent to all the foresaid Covenant And 2. To obey his further motions for the work of Obedience and Love 3. And to use Christs appointed means with which his Spirit worketh And 4. To forbear those wilful sins which grieve the Spirit John 15.4 Abide in me and I in you v. 7. If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ye shall ask what ye will and it shall be done unto you v. 9. Continue in my love Col. 1.23 If ye continue in the Faith c. Jude 21. Keep your selves in the Love of God Heb. 10.25 26. Not forsaking the assembling of your selves together c. For if we sin wilfully c. of how much sorer punishment shall he be thought worthy who hath done despight to the Spi●it of grace v. 29. Heb. 6.4 5 6. Ephes 4 3● Grieve not the holy Spirit of God 1 Thes 5.19 Quench not the Spirit Direct 20. By this it is plain that the Spirit worketh not on man as a dead thing which hath no principle of activity in it self nor as on a naturally necessitated Agent which hath no self-determining faculty of will but as on a living free self-determining Agent which hath duty of its own to perform for the attaining of the end desired Those therefore that upon the pretence of the Spirits doing all and our doing nothing without him will lye idle and not do their parts with him and say that they wait for the motions of the Spirit and that our endeavours will not further the end do abuse the Spirit and contradict themselves seeing the Spirits work is to stir us up to endeavour which when we refuse to do we disobey and strive against the Spirit Direct 21. Though sometimes the Spirit work so efficaciously as certainly to cause the volition or other effect which it moveth to yet sometimes it so moveth as procureth not the effect when yet it gave man all the power and help which was necessary to the effect because that man failed of that endeavour of his own which should have concurred to the effect and which he was able without more help to have performed That there is such effectual grace Acts 9. and many Scriptures with our great experience tell us That there is such meer necessary uneffectual grace possible and sometime in being which some call sufficient grace is undeniable in the case of Adam who sinned not for want of necessary grace without which he could not do otherwise And to deny this blotteth out all Christianity and Religion at one dash By all which it appeareth that the work of the Spirit is such on mans will as that sometimes the effect is suspended on our concurrence so that though the Spirit be the total cause of its own proper effect and of the act of man in its own place and kind of action yet not simply a total cause of mans act or volition but mans concurrence may be further required to it and may fail Direct 22. Satan transformeth himself oft into an Angel of Light to deceive men by pretending to be the Spirit of God Therefore the spirits must be tryed and not every spirit trusted 2 Cor. 11.14 15. Mat. 24.4 5 11 24. 1 John 3.7 Ephes 4.14 Revel 10.3 8. 2 Thes 3.2 1 John 4.1 3 6. Direct 23. The way of trying the spirits is to try all their uncertain suggestions by the Rule of the certain Truths already revealed in Nature and in the holy Scriptures And to try them by the Scriptures is but to try the spirits by the Spirit the doubtfull spirit by the undoubted Spirit which indited and sealed the Scriptures more fully than can be expected in any after revelation 1 Thes 1.21 Isa 8.16 20. 2 Pet. 1.19 John 5.39 Acts 17.11 The Spirit of God is never contrary to it self Therefore nothing can be from that Spirit which is contrary to the Scriptures which the Spirit indited Direct 24. When you would have an increase of the Spirit go to Christ for it by renewed acts of that same Faith by which at first you obtained the Spirit Gal. 3.3 4. Gal. 4.6 Faith in Christ doth two waies help us to the Spirit 1. As it is that Condition upon which he hath promised it to whom it belongeth to give us the Spirit 2. As it is that act of the soul which is fitted in the nature of it to the work of the Spirit That is as it is the serious contemplation of the infinite Goodness and Love of God most brightly shining to us in the face of the Redeemer and as it is a serious contemplation of that heavenly glory procured by Christ which is the fullest expression of the Love of God and so is fittest to kindle that Love to God in the soul which is the work of the Spirit These are joyned Rom. 5.1 2 5 6. Being justified by Faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ By whom also we
reward of obedience and the beauties of holiness and the merciful conditions of filial obedience when we have a pardon of our infirmities and are accepted in Christ that so we may feel that Christs yoak is easie and his burden light and his Commandments are not grievous Mat. 11.28 29. 1 John 5.3 And when Faith hath taught you to hunger and thirst after righteousness and to delight to do the will of God Love which is the end of Faith will satisfie you Mat. 5.6 Psal 40.8 Direct 5. Take special notice how suitable a holy Law is to the nature of a most holy God and how much he is honoured in that demonstration of his holiness and how odious a thing it would be to wish that the most holy one would have made for us an unholy Law Would you draw the picture of your friend like an Ape or a Monkey or a Monster Or would you have the King pictured like a fool Or would you have his Laws written like the words of a Bedlam or the Laws of Barbarians or Cannibals How much more intollerable were it to wish that an unholy or unrighteous Law should be the product and impress of the most great most wise and holy God This thought should make every Believer exceedingly in love with the Holiness of Gods Commands because they are the Appearance or Image of his Holiness and necessary to his honour as he is the Governour of the world Rom. 7.6 7 12. When Paul confesseth that he could no more perfectly keep the Law without sin than a fettered prisoner can walk at liberty for that is the sense of the text yet doth he give the Law this honour that it is holy just and good and therefore he loveth it and fain would perfectly obey it if he could See Psal 19.7 12. c. 119.72 37.31 1.2 Isa 5.24 c. Direct 6. Remember that both Promises and Threatnings and Gods Mercies and his Judgements are appointed means to bring us to obey the Precepts and therefore obedience which is their end is highly to be esteemed It seemeth a great difficulty whether the Precept be for 〈◊〉 Promise or the Promise for the Precept which is the End and which is the Means whether obedience be a means to attain the reward or the reward be a means to procure obedience And the answer is as pleasant to our consideration viz. that as the works of the Trinity of persons and of Gods Power and Wisdom and Goodness ad extra are undivided so are the effects of the one in Gods Laws the effects also of the other and they are harmoniously and inseparably conjunct so that we must obey the Command that we may attain the blessing of the Promise and be assured of it And we must believe the Promise and the Reward that we may be moved to obey the Precept And when all is done we find that all comes to one and in the end the duty and the reward will be the same when duty cometh to perfection And that the reward which is promised is our perfection in that Holiness and Love and Conformity to the Will of God in which God doth take that complacency which is our ultimate end But if you look at the matter of obedience rather than the form it sometime consisteth in troublesome things as suffering persecution c. which is less desirable than the promised reward which is but pleasing God and obeying him in a more desirable and grateful matter even in perfect Love for ever And therefore the more desirable must be considered to draw us to the less desirable and that consideration of the reward and not the possessing of it is the means to our obedience not for the sake of the ungrateful matter but of the form and end Mat. 5.10 11 12 6.1 4. 10.41 42. 1 Cor. 9.17 18. 1 Tim. 5.18 Heb. 11.6 10.35 11.26 Col. 3.24 Direct 7. Remember how much Christ himself hath condescended to be made a Means or Mediatour to procure our obedience to God And surely that must be an excellent end which Christ himself became a means to He came to save his people from their sins Mat. 1.21 And to call sinners to repentance Luke 5.32 Mat. 9.13 Is Christ the Minister of sin God forbid Gal. 2.17 For this end was he revealed that he might destroy the works of the Devil 1 John 3.8 And he died to redeem and purifie to himself a peculiar people zealous of good works Titus 2.14 Christ came as much to kill sin as to pardon it Judge therefore of the worth of obedience by the nobleness and dignity of the means Direct 8. Remember still that the same Law which governeth us must judge us Let Faith see the sure and close connexion between obedience and judgement If Faith do but speak aloud to a sluggish soul Thou must be judged by the same word which commandeth thee to watch and pray and to walk in holiness with God it will much awaken the soul to duty And if Faith do but say aloud to a tempted sinner The Judge is at the door and thou must hear of this again and review sin when it will have another countenance it will do much to kill the force of the temptation Rom. 14.12 Phil. 4.17 Heb. 13.17 Mat. 12.36 2 Pet. 3.11 12. Direct 9. Be sure that your heart-subjection to God be fixed that you may live under the sense of his Authority For as Gods Veracity is the formal object of all Faith so Gods Authority is the formal object of all obedience And therefore the deep ●enewed apprehensions of his Majesty his Wisdom and absolute Authority will make us perceive that all things and persons must give place to him and he to none and will be a constant spring within us to move the will to a ready obedience in particular cases Mal. 1.6 Matth. 23.8 10. Jer. 5.22 Direct 10. Keep in memory some plain texts of Scripture for every particular duty and against every particular sin which I would willingly here write down but that the book swelleth too big and it is so plentifully done already in most Catechisms where they confirm all such commands with the texts of Scripture cited to that use As you may see in the Assemblies Catechism with the proofs and more briefly in Mr. Tobias Ellis his English School where a text or more for every Article of Faith and every duty is recited for the use of children Gods Word which is the object and Rule of Faith should be before 〈◊〉 eye of Faith in this great work of causing our obedience Direct 11. Vnderstand well the different nature and use of Scripture examples how some of them have the nature of a divine Revelation and a Law and others are only motives to obedience and others of them are evils to be avoided by us 1. To Moses and the Apostles of Christ a special Commission was granted to one to settle the Tabernacle and its worship
For it is no unbelief to doubt of that will which never was revealed But if they had doubted of his revealed will concerning the event they had then charged him with falshood and had sinned against him as ill as those who deny his power And the large experience of this our age confuteth this foresaid errour of a particular belief For we have abundance of instances of good people who were thus mistaken and have ventured thereupon to conclude with confidence that such a sick person shall be healed and such a thing shall come to pass when over and over the event hath proved contrary and brought such confidence into contempt upon the failing of it Direct 11. Think not that because some strong imagination bringeth some promis● to your minds that therefore it belongeth unto you unless upon tryal the true meaning of it do extend to you Many and many an honest ignorant melancholy woman hath told me what abundance of sudden comfort they have had because such a text was brought to their minds and such a promise was suddenly set upon their hearts when as they mistook the very sense of the promise and upon true enquiry ●t was nothing to their purpose Yet it is best not rather to contradict those mistaken and ungrounded comforts of such persons Because when they are godly and have true right to ●ounder comforts but cannot see it it is better that they support themselves a while with such mistakes than that they sink into despair For though we may not offer them such mistakes nor comfort them by a lie yet we may permit that which we may not do as God himself doth It is not at all times that we are bound to rectifie other mens mistakes viz. not when it will do them more harm than good Many an occasion may bring a text to our remembrance which concerneth us not without the Spirit of God Our own imaginations may do much that way of themselves Try therefore what is the true sense of the text before you build your conclusions on it But yet if indeed God bring to your minds any pertinent promise I would not have you to neglect the comfort of it D●rect 12. Think not that God hath promised to all Christians the same degrees of grace and therefore that you may expect as much as any others have Object But shall not all at last be perfect and what can there be added to perfection Answ The perfection of a creature is to be advanced to the highest degree which his own specifical and individual nature are capable of A beast may be perfect and yet not be a man and a man may be perfect and yet not be an Angel And Lazarus may be perfect and yet not reach the degree of Abraham For there is no doubt a gradual difference between the capacities of several individual souls of the same species As there is of several vessels of the same metal though not by such difference of corporal extension And there is no great probability that all the difference in the degrees of wit from the Ideot to Achitophel is founded only in the bodily organs and not at all in the souls And it is certain that there are various degrees of glory in Heaven and yet that every one there is perfect But if this were not so yet it is in this life only that we are now telling you that all Christians have not a promise of the same degrees Object But is not additional grace given by way of reward And then have not all a promise of the same degree which the best attain conditionally if they do as much as they for it Answ O yes objective but not subjective b●cause all have not the same natural capacity nor are bound to the same degree of duty as to the condition it self As perfection in H●●ven is given by way of reward and yet all shall not have the same degree of perfection so is it as to the degrees of grace on earth 2. All have not the same degrees of the first preventing grace given them and therefore it is most certain that all will not use the same degree of industry for more Some have but one talent and some two when some have five and therefore gain ten talents in the improvement Mat. 25. All must strive for the highest measure and all the sincere may at last expect their own perfection But God breaketh no promise if he give them not all as much as some have Direct 13. Much less hath God promised the same degree of common gifts to all If you never attain to the same measure of acuteness learning memory utterance do not think that God breaketh promise with you Nor do not call your presumption by the name of Faith if you have such expectations See 1 Cor. 12. throughout Direct 14. God often promiseth the thing it self when he promiseth the time of giving it Therefore do not take it to be an act of Faith to believe a set time where God hath set no time at all Many are the troubles of the righteous but God will deliver them out of all Psal 37. But he hath not set them just the time Christ hath promised to come again and take us to himself Joh. 14.1 2.3 But of that day and hour knoweth no man God will give necessary comfort to his servants but he best knoweth when it is necessary and therefore they must not set him a time and say Let it be now or thou breakest thy word Patient wa●ting Gods own time is as needful as believing Yea he that believeth will not make haste Isa 28.16 Rom. 2 7. 2 Thes 3.5 James 5.7 8. Heb. 6.12 10.36 12.1 James 5.7 Revel 13.10 14.12 1 Thes 1.3 11. Direct 15. God often promiseth the thing when he promiseth not either in what manner or by what instrument he will do it He may deliver his Church and may deliver particular persons out of trouble and yet do it in a way and by such means as they never dreamed of Sometimes he foretelleth us his means when it is we that in duty are to use them And sometimes he keepeth them unknown to us when they are only to be used by himself In the Mount will the Lord be seen but yet Abraham thought not of the Ram in the Thicke● The Israelites knew not that God would deliver them by the hand of Moses Acts 7.25 Direct 16. Take not the promises proper to one time or age of the Church as if they were common to all or unto us There were many promises to the Israelites which belong not to us as well as many precepts The increase of their seed and the notable prosperity in the world which was promised them was partly because that the motive should be suited to the ceremonial duties and partly because the eternal things being not then so fully brought to light as now they were the more to be moved with the present outward tokens of
the consideration of final despisers of his Antecedent Love But of that Antecedent Love it self which he hath shewed to lost mankind in Christ And note also that I do not deny but that Love of God in some men may be true where their own presumption that God hath elected them and loved them above others before they had any proof of it was an additional motive But this is mans way and not Gods Errour 43. That trusting to any thing save God and Jesus Christ for our salvation is sin and damnable Contr. Confusion cheateth and choaketh mens understanding In a word to trust to any thing but God and Christ and the holy Spirit for any of that which is the proper part of God of Christ of the Spirit is sin and damnable But to trust to any thing or person for that which is but his own part is but our duty And he that prayeth and readeth and heareth and endeavoureth and looketh to be never the better by them nor trusteth them for their proper part will be both heartless and formal in his work And I have shewed before that the Scripture the Promise the Apostles the Minister and every Christian and honest man hath a certain trust due to them for that which is their part even in order to our salvation I may trust only to the skill of the Physician and yet trust his Apothecary and the Boy that carryeth the Medicine for their part Errour 44. That it is sinful and contrary to free grace to look at any thing in our selves or our own inherent righteousness as the evidence of our Justification Contr. Then no man can know his Justification at all The Spirit of Holiness and Adoption in our selves is our earnest of salvation and the witness that we are Gods children and the pledge of Gods love as is proved before This is Gods seal as God knoweth who are his so he that will know it himself must depart from iniquity when he nameth Christ If God sanctifie none but those whom he justifieth then may the sanctified know that they are justified Hath God delivered in Scripture so many signs or characters of the justified in vain Object The witness of the Spirit only can assure us Ans You know not what the witness of the Spirit is or else you would know that it is the Spirit making us holy and possessing us with a filial love of God and with a desire to please him and a dependance on him c. which is the witness even by way of an inherent evidence and helping us to perceive that evidence and take comfort in it As a childlike love and a pleasing obedience and dependance with a likeness to the F●ther is a witness that is an evidence which is your child Errour 45. That it is sinful to perswade wicked men to pray for Justification or any grace or to do any thing for it seeing their prayers and doings are abominable to God and cannot please him Contr. Then it is sinful to perswade a wicked man from his wickedness Praying and obeying is departing from wickedness He that prayeth to be sanctified indeed is repenting and turning from his sin to God We never exhort wicked men to pray with the tongue without the desire of the heart Desire is the soul of prayer and words are but the body We perswade them not to dissemble But as Peter did Simon Acts 8. Repent and pray for forgiveness And if we may not exhort them to good desires and to excite and express the best desires they have we may not exhort them to conversion Isa 55.6 10. Seek the Lord while he may be found and call upon him while he is neer Let the wicked forsake his way c. You see there that praying is a repenting act and when we exhort them to pray we exhort them to repent and seek God Object But they have no ability to do it Ans Thus the Devil would excuse sinners and accuse God Thus you may put by all Gods commands and say God should not have commanded them to repent believe love him obey him nor love one another nor forbear their sins for they have no ability to do it But they have their natural faculties or powers and they have common grace and Gods way of giving them special grace is by meeting them in the use of his appointed means and not by meeting them in an Ale-house or in sinful courses However a soul may be met with in his persecuting and God may be found of them that sought him not yet that is not his usual nor his appointed way Can any man of reason dream that it is not the duty of a wicked man to use any means for the obtaining of grace or to be better nor to do any thing towards his own recovery and salvation Nature and Scripture teach men as soon as they see their sin and misery to say What must I do to be saved As the re●●nting Jews and Paul and the Jaylor 〈◊〉 Acts 2.37 Acts 8. 16. The prayers of a wicked man as wicked are abominable that 〈◊〉 ●oth his wicked prayers and his praying to quiet and s●rengthen himself in his wickedness or praying with the tongue without the heart The prayers which come from a common faith and common good desires are better than none but have no promise of Justification But the wicked must be exhorted both to this and more even to repent desire and pray sincerely Errour 46. It is sinful and against free grace to think that any works or actions of our own are rewardable or to say that they are meritorious though it be nothing but rewardableness that is meant by it Contr. The Papists have so much abused the word merit by many dangerous op●nions about it that it is now become more unmeet to be used by us than it was in ancient times when the Doctors and Churches even Austin himself did commonly use it But if nothing be meant by it but rewardableness or the relation of a duty to the reward as freely promised by God as many Papists themselves understand it and the ancient Fathers generally did he that will charge a man with errour in doctrine for the use of an inconvenient word is uncharitable and perverse especially when it is other mens abuse which hath done most to make it inconvenient The merit of the cause is a common phrase among all Lawyers when there is commutative meriting intended I have fully shewed in my Confession that the Scripture frequently useth the word worthy which is the same or full as much And a subject may be said to merit protection of his Prince and a scholar to merit praise of his Master and a child to deserve love and respect from his Parents and all this in no respect to commutative Justice wherein the Rewarder is supposed to be a gainer at all but only in governing distributive Justice which giveth every one that which by gift or any way is
Justification or Salvation but to renounce all such expectations Nor will the Law of Works it self ever justifie us as some affirm as having perfectly fulfilled it by another But we are justified against its charge and not by it by the Covenant of Grace and not of Works But perfect obedience to all the Law of Nature and all the Commands of Christ is still our duty and sincere obedience is necessary to our salvation All our duty is not supererrogation Errour 56. When a man doubteth whether he be a Believer or penitent he must believe that Christ repented and believed for him Contr. Christ never had sin to repent of and it is not proper to say one repenteth of anothers sin Christ believed his Father but had no use for that faith in a Mediatour which we must have He that repenteth not and believeth not himself shall be damned Therefore you may see how Christ repented and believed for us Errour 57. A man that trusteth to be justified at the day of Judgement against the charge of unbelief impenitency and hypocrisie by his own faith repentance and sincerity as his particular subordinate Righteousness and not by Christs Righteousness imputed only sinneth against free grace Contr. Christs Righteousness is imputed or given to none nor shall justifie any that are true Vnbelievers Impenitent or Hypocrites Therefore if any such person trust to be justified by Christ he deceiveth him If the 〈◊〉 be Thou art an Infidel or impenitent it is frivolous to say But Christ obeyed suffered or believed or repented for me But he that will then be justified against that charge must say and say truly I truly believed repented and obeyed Errour 58. There is no use for a Justification against any such false accusation before God who knoweth all mens hearts Contr. 1. You might as well say There is no use of judging men according to what they have done when God knoweth what they have done already 2. We are to be justified by God before men and Angels that Christ may be glorified in his Saints and admired in all them that believe because the Gospel was believed by them 2 Thes 1.10 11. And not only the mouth of iniquity may be stopped and open false accusations confuted but that the prejudices and heart-slanders of the wicked may be refelled and our righteousness be brought forth as the light and our judgement as the noon day That all the false judgements and reproaches of the wicked against the just may be confounded and they may answer for all their ungodly sayings and hard speeches as Henoch prophesied against the godly and that they that speak evil of us because we run not with them to all excess of riot may give an account to him who is ready to judge the quick and the dead 1 Pet. 4.4 5. And that all may be set straight which men made crooked and hidden things be all brought to light 3. And we must be better acquainted with the ingenuity of the great accuser of the Brethren before we can be sure that he who belyed God to man will not bely man to God seeing he is the Father of lyes and did so by Job c. 4. But we m●st not think of the day of Judgement as a day of talk between God and Satan and Man but as a day of DECISIVE LIGHT or manifestation And so the case is out of doubt The Faith Repentance and Sincerity of the just will be there manifest against all former or latter real or vertual calumnies of men or devils to the contrary 5. But above all let it be marked that nothing else can be matter of controversie to be decided That Christ hath obeyed and suffered and satisfied for Believers sins and made a testament or covenant to pa●●●n all true Believers will be known to the accuser and past all doubt The day of Judgement is not to try Christs obedience and sufferings nor to decide the case whether he fulfilled the Law and satisfied for sin or made a pardoning Covenant to Believers But whether we have part in him or not and so are to be justified by the Gospel-Covenant through his merits against the Legal Covenant And whether we have fulfilled the conditions of the pardoning Covenant or not This is all that can be then made a Controversie this is the secrets of mens heart and case that must be opened before the world by God However we doubt not but the glory of all will redound to Christ whose merits are unquestioned 6. Note also that Christ will be the Judge on supposition of his merits and not the party to be tryed and judged 7. Note also that we are to be judged by the New Covenant or Law of Liberty and therefore it is the condition of that Covenant as made with us which is to be enquired after 8. Note also that Christ himself in Matth. 25. and every where when he describeth the day of Judgement doth not at all speak of any decision of such a controversie as whether he was the Lamb of God who took away the sins of the world or whether he did his part or not but only whether men did their parts or not and shewed the sincerity of their love to God and him by venturing all for him and owning him in his servants to their cost and hazard And the fruit of Christs part is only mentioned as a presupposed thing Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you For I was hungry c. The Preparation in Gods Decree and Christs merits is unquestioned and so is the donation to all true Believers therefore it is the case of their Title to this gift and of the condition or evidence of their title which is here tryed and decided Lastly Note that upon the decision in respect of both together Christs Merits and Covenant as supposed and their own true Faith and Love as manifested decisively they are called Righteous v. 46. The Righteous into life eternal So much to take the stumbling-blocks out of the way of Faith about Free-Grace and Justification which the weakness of many well meaning erroneous men hath laid there of late times to the great danger or impediment of weak Believers Isa 57.14 Take up the stumbling-block out of the way of my people Levit. 19.14 Thou shalt not put a stumbling-block before the blind but shalt fear thy God CHAP. IX How to live by Faith in order to the exercise of other graces and duties of Sanctification and Obedience to God And first of the Doctrinal Directions WE cannot by Faith promote Sanctification unless we understand the nature and reasons of Sanctification This therefore must be our first endeavour The word Sanctified doth signifie that which is separated to God from common uses And this separation is either by God himself as he hath sanctified the Lords day c. or by mans dedication either of persons to a holy office and so the Ministers of Christ are sanctified
this Trinity also of Relations towards Man 1. Their Owner 2. Their Ruler 3. Their Benefactor The Father also as the first principle of Redemption acquiring a second title besides the first by Creation to all these and towards God Christ continueth the Relation of a heavenly Priest 30. In order to the works of these Relations for the future we must consider of Christs exaltation 1. Of his Justification and Resurrection 2. Of his Ascension and Glorification And 3. Of the delivering of All Power and All Things into his hands 31. The work of Redemption thus fundamentally wrought doth not of it self renew mans nature and therefore putteth no Law of Nature into us of it self as the Creation did And therefore we must next proceed to Christs Administration of this office according to these Relations which is 1. By Legislation or Donation enacting the New Covenant where this last and perfect edition of it is to be explained the Preceptive the Promisory and the Penal parts with its effects and its differences from the former Edition and from the Law of Nature and of Works 32. And 2. By the promulgation or publication of this Covenant or Gospel to the world by calling special Officers for that work and giving them their commission and promising them his Spirit his Protection and their Reward 33. And here we come to the special work of the Holy Ghost who is 1. To be known in his Essence and Person as the third in Trinity and the eternal Love of God 2. And as he is the grand Advocate or Agent of Christ in the world where his works are to be considered 1. Preparatory on and by Christ himself 2. Administratory 1. Extraordinary on the Apostles and their helpers 1. Being in them a spirit of extraordinary Power by gifts and miracles 2. Of extraordinary Wisdom and Infallibility as far as their commission-work required 3. And of extraordinary Love and Holiness 2. By the Apostles 1. Extraordinarily convincing and bringing in the world 2. Settling all Church-Doctrines Officers and Orders which Christ had left unsettled bringing all things to their remembrance which Christ had taught and commanded them and guiding them in the rest 3. Recording all this for posterity in the holy Scriptures 2. His Ordinary Agency 1. On Ministers 2. By sanctification on all true Believers is after to be opened 34. And here is to be considered the Nature of Christianity in fieri Faith and Repentance in our three great Relations to our Redeemer as we are his Own his Disciples and Subjects and his Beneficiaries with all the special benefits of these Relations as antecedent to our duty and then all our duty in them as commanded And then the benefits after to be expected as in promise only 35. Next must distinctly be considered the preaching and converting and baptizing part of the ministerial Office 1. As in the Apostles 2. And in their successors to the end with the nature of Baptism and the part of Christ and of the Minister and of the baptized in that Covenant 36. And then the description of the universal Church which the baptized constitute 37. Next is to be described the state of Christians after Baptism 1. Relative 1. In Pardon Reconciliation Justification 2. Adoption 2. Physical in the Spirit of Sanctification 38. Where is to be opened 1. The first sanctifying work of the Spirit 2. It s after-helps and their conditions 3. All the duties of Holiness primitive and medicinal towards God our selves and others 39. Our special duties in secret reading meditation prayer c. 40. Our duties in Family Relations and Callings 41. Our duties in Church Relations where is to be described the nature of particular Churches their work and worship their ministry and their members with the duties of each 42. Our duties in our Civil Relations 43. What temptations are against us as be to be overcome 44. Next is to be considered the state of Christians and Societies in the world How far all these duties are performed and what are their weaknesses and sins 45. And what are the punishments which God useth in this life 46. And what Christians must do for pardon and reparation after falls and to be delivered from those punishments 47. Of Death and the change which it maketh and of our special preparation for it 48. Of the coming of Christ and the Judgement of the great day 49. Of the punishment of the wicked impenitent in Hell 50. And of the blessedness of the Saints in Heaven and the everlasting Kingdom These are the Heads and this is the Method of true Divinity and the order in which it should lye in the understanding of him that will be compleat in knowledge II. And as this is the Intellectual Order of knowledge so the order which all things must lye in at our hearts and wills is much more necessary to be observed 1. That nothing but GOD be loved as the infinite simple good totally with all the heart and finally for himself And that nothing at all be loved with any Love which is not purely subordinate to the Love of God or which causeth us to love him ever the less 2. That the blessed person of our Mediatour as in the Humane Nature glorified be loved above all creatures next to God Because there is most of the Divines Perfections appearing in him 3. That the heavenly Church or Society of Angels and Saints be loved next to Jesus Christ as being next in excellence 4. That the Vniversal Church on earth be loved next to the perfect Church in Heaven 5. That particular Churches and Kingdoms be next loved and where ever there is more of Gods Interest and Image than in our selves that our Love be more there than on our selves 6. That we next love our selves with that peculiar kind of love which God hath made necessary to our duty and our happiness and end with a self-preserving watchful diligent love preferring our souls before our bodies and spiritual mercies before temporal and greater before less 7. That we love our Christian Relations with that double Love which is due to them as Christians and Relations and love all Relations according to their places with that kind of Love which is proper for them as fitting us to all the duties which we must perform to them 8. That we love all good Christians as the sanctified members of Christ with a special Love according to the measure of Gods Image appearing on them 9. That we love every visible Christian that we cannot prove hath unchristened himself by apostacy or ungodliness with the special Love also belonging to true Christians because he appeareth such to us But yet according to the measure of that appearance as being more confident of some and more doubtful of others 10. That we love our intimate suitable friends that are godly with a double Love as godly and as friends 11. That we love Neighbours and civil Relations with a Love which is suitable to
our duty towards them to do to them as we would have them do to us which is partly meant by loving them as our selves 12. That we love all mankind even Gods enemies much more our own as they are men for the dignity of humane nature and their capacity to become holy and truly amiable 13. That all means be chosen according to the end which is to be preferred before other ends and their suitableness and fitness for that end as they are to be preferred before other means III. And the order of practice is 1. That we be sure to begin with God alone and proceed to God in the creature and end in God alone It is the principal thing to be known for finding out the true method of Divinity and Religion that as in the great frame of Nature so in the frame of Morality the true motion is circular From 〈◊〉 the efficient by God the Dirigent to God the final Cause of all therefore as God is the first spring or cause of motion so the creature is the Recipient first and the Agent after in returning all to God again Therefore mark that our receiving Graces are our first graces in exercise and our receiving duties are our first duties and then our returning graces and duties come next in which we proceed from the lesser to the greater till we come up to God himself Therefore in point of practice the first thing that we have to do is to learn to know God himself as God and our God and to live as from him and upon him as our Benefactor from our hearts confessing that we have nothing but from him and shall never be at rest but with him and in him as our ultimate end and therefore to set our selves to seek him as our end accordingly which is but to seek to love him and be beloved by him in the perfection of knowledge and d●light 2. The whole frame of means appointed by God for the attainment of this end must be taken together and not broken asunder as they have all relation each to other And 1. The whole frame of Nature must be looked on as the first great means appointed to man in innocency for the preservation and exercise of his holiness and righteousness 2. And the Covenant or Law positive as conjoyned unto this 3. And the Spirit of God communicated only for such a meer sufficiency of necessary help as God saw meet to one in that condition And though these means the Creatures and the Spirit of the Creator in that degree be not now sufficient for lapsed man yet they are still to be looked on as delivered into the hand of Christ the Mediatour to be used by him on his terms and in order to his blessed ends 2. But it is the frame of the recovering and perfecting means which we are now to use And in this frame 1. Christ the Mediatour is the first and principal and the Author of our Faith or Religion and therefore from his Name it is called Christianity He is ●ow the first means used on Gods part for communicating mercy unto man and the first in dignity to be received and used by man himself but not the first in Time because the means of revealing him must go first 2. The second means in dignity under Christ is the operation of the Holy Spirit as sent or given by the Redeemer which Spirit being as the soul of outward means which are as the body is given variously in a suitableness to the several sorts of means of which more anon 3. The outward means for this Spirit to work by and with have been in three degrees 1. The lowest degree is the world or creatures called The Book of Nature alone 2. The second degree was the Law and Promises to the Jews and their fore-fathers together with the Law of Nature 3. The third and highest degree of outward means is the whole frame of Christian Institutions adjoyned to the Book of Nature and succeeding the foresaid Promises and Law Every one of these hath a sufficiency in its own kind and to its proper use 1. The Law of Nature is sufficient in its own kind to reveal a God in his Essential Principles and Relations and to teach man the necessity now of some supernatural Revelations and Institutions and so to direct him to enquire after them what and where they be 2. The Promises and Jewish Law of Types c. was sufficient in its own kind to acquaint men that a Saviour must be sent into the world to reveal the Will of God more fully and to be a sacrifice for sin and to make reconciliation between God and man and to give a greater measure of the Spirit and to renew mens souls and bring them to full perfection and to the blessed fruition of God The Jewish Scriptures teach them all this though it tell them not many of the Articles of our Christian Belief 3. The Christian Gospel is sufficient in its own kind to teach men first to believe aright in the Father Son and Holy Spirit and then to love and live aright When I say that each of these is sufficient in its own kind the meaning is not that these outward means are of themselves sufficient without the Holy Spirit for that were to be sufficient not only in suo genere but in alieno vel in omni genere not only for its own part and work but for the Spirits part also But other causes being supposed to concur it is sufficient for its own part As my Pen is a sufficient Pen though it be not sufficient to write without my hand Now the measure of the Spirits concourse with all these three degees of means is to be judged of by the nature of the means and by Gods ends in appointing them and by the visible effects And whereas the world is full of voluminous contentions about the doctrine of sufficient and effectual grace I shall here add thus much in order to their agreement 1. That certainly such a thing there is or hath been as is called sufficient not-effectual grace By sufficient they mean so much as giveth man all that Power which is necessary to the commanded act or forbearance so that man could do it without any other grace or help from God which supposeth that mans will in the Nature of it hath such a vital free self-determining power that sometimes at least it can act or not act when such bare power is given to it and sometimes doth and sometimes doth not But the word necessary is more proper than sufficient The latter being applicable to several degrees but nec●ssary signifieth that degree without which the Act cannot be performed That there is such a thing is evident in Adams case who had that grace which was necessary to his forbearing the first sin or else farewell all Religion And there are few men will deny but that all men have still such a degree of help for many duties
which they do not perform and against many sins which they do not forbear as to forbear an oath or a lye or a cup of drink to go to Church when they go to an Ale-house c. Such a thing therefore there is and such a power mans will hath to do or not do when such a degree only of help is given Therefore we have reason enough to suppose 1. That such a degree of the Spirits help is given under the bare Teachings of the Creature or to them that have no outward light but natural revelation as is necessary to the foresaid ends and uses of that Light or Means that is to convince man that there is a God and what he is as aforesaid and that we are his subjects and ben●ficiaries and owe him our chi●fest love and service and to convince them of the need of some further supernatural revelation Not that every one hath this measure of spiritual help for some by abusing the help which they have to learn the Alphabet of Nature or to practise it do forfeit that help which should bring them into Natures higher forms But so much as I have mentioned of the help of the Spirit is given to those that do not grosly forfeit it by abuse among the Pagans of the world And so much multitudes have attained 2. And so much of the Spirit was given ordinarily to the Jews as was sufficient to have enabled them to believe in the Messiah to come as aforesaid if they did not wilfully reject this help 3. And so much seemeth to be given to many that hear the Gospel and never believe it or that believe it not with a justifying Faith is as sufficient to have made them true Believers as Adams was to have kept him from his fall For seeing it is certain that such a sufficient uneffectual grace there is we have no reason to conceit that God doth any more desert his own means now than he did then or that he maketh Believing a more impossible condition of Justification under the Gospel to them that are in the neerest capacity of it before effectual grace than he made perfect obedience to be to Adam The objections against this are to be answered in due place and are already answered by the Dominicans at large 4. The outward means of grace under Christ are all one frame and must be used in harmony as followeth 1. The Witness and Preaching of Christ and his Apostles was the first and chief part together with their settling the Churches and recording so much as is to be our standing Rule in the holy Scriptures which are now to us the chief part of this means 2. Next to the Scriptures the Pastoral Office and Gifts to preserve them and teach them to us is the next principal part of this frame of means In which I comprehend all their office Preaching for conversion baptizing preaching for confirmation and edification of the faithful praying and praising God before the Church administring the body and blood of Christ in the Sacrament of communion and watching over all the flock by personal instruction admonition reproofs censures and absolutions 3. The next part conjunct with this is the communion of the faithful in the Churches 4. The next is our holy society in Christian families and family-instructions worship and just discipline 5. The next is our secret duties between God and us alone As. 1. Reading 2. Meditation and self examination 3. Prayer and thanksgiving and praise to God 6. The next part is our improvement of godly mens intimate friendship who may instruct and warn and reprove and comfort us 7. The next is the daily course of prospering Providences and Mercies which express Gods Love and call up ours as provisions protections preservations deliverances c. 8. The next is Gods castigations by what hand or means soever which are to make us partakers of his holiness Heb. 12.9 10. 9. The next is the examples of others 1. Their graces and duties 2. Their faults and falls 3. Their mercies And 4. Their sufferings and corrections 1 Cor. 10.1 10 11. 10. And lastly Our own constant watchfulness against temptations and stirring up Gods graces in our selves These are the frame of the means of Grace and of our receiving duties 2. The next in order to be considered is the whole frame of our returning duties in which we lay out the talents which we receive which lye in the order following 1. That we do what good we can to our own souls that we first pluck the beam out of our own eyes and set that motion on work at home which must go further Therefore all the foregoing means were primarily for this effect though not chiefly and ultimately for this end 2. Next we must do good according to our power to our neer Relations 3. And next to our whole Families and more remote Relations 4. And next them to our Neighbours 5. And next to Strangers 6. And lastly To Enemies of our selves and Christ 7. But our greatest duties must be for publick Societies viz. 1. For the Common-wealth both Governours and People 2. And for the Church 8. And the next part in intention and dignity must be for the whole world whose good by prayer and all just means we must endeavour 9. And the next for the honour of Jesus Christ our Mediatour 10. And the highest ultimate temination of our returning duties is the pure Deity alone For the further opening to you the Order of Christian Practice take these following Notes or Rules 1. Though receiving duties such as hearing reading praying faith c. go first in order of nature and time before expending or returning duties so that the motion is truly circular yet we must not stay till we have received more before we make returns to God of that which we have already But every degree of received grace must presently work towards God our end and as there is no intermission between my moving of my hand and pen and its writing upon this paper so must there be no intermission between Gods beams of Love and Mercy to us and our reflexions of Love and Duty unto him Even as ths veins and arteries in the body lye much together and one doth often empty it self into the other for circulation and not stay till the whole mass hath run through all the vessels of one sort veins or arteries before any pass into the other 2. The internal returns of Love are much quicker than the return of outward fruits The Love of God shed or streamed forth upon the soul doth presently warm it to a return of Love But it may be some time before that Love appear in any notable useful benefits to the world or in any thing that much glorifieth God and our Profession Even as the heat of the Sun upon the earth or trees is suddenly reflected but doth not so suddenly bring forth herbs and buds and blossoms and ripe fruits 3. All truly good works
heard one lunatick person say I am for health and not for medicine and another I am for medicine and not for the taking of it and another I am for the Physick and not for the Physician and another I am for the Physician and not the Physick and another I am for the Physick but not for health Or as if they contended at their meats I am for meat but not for eating it and I am for putting it into my mouth but not for chewing it or I am for chewing it but not for swallowing it or I am for swallowing it but not for digesting it or I am for digesting it but not for eating it c. Thus is Christ divided among a sort of ignorant proud Professors and some are for his Sacrifice and some for his Intercession some for his Teaching and some for his Commands and some for his Promises some for his Blood and some for his Spirit some for his Word and some for his Ministers and his Church and when they have made this strange proficiency in wisdom every party claim to be this Church themselves or if they cannot deny others to be parts with them of the Mystical Church yet the true ordered Political disciplined Church is among them the matter of their claim and competition and one saith It is we and the other no but it is we and the Kitchin and the Cole-house and the Sellar go to Law to try which of them is the House Thus when they have divided Christs garments among them and pierced if not divided himself they quarrel rather than cast lots for his coat 7. I perceive this Treatise swelleth too big or else I might next shew you how partial men are in the sense of their dangers 8. And in the resisting of Temptations he that scapeth sensuality feareth not worldliness or he that feareth both yet falleth into Heresie or Schism and he that scapeth errours falleth into fleshly sins 9. And what partial regard we have of Gods mercies 10. And how partial we are as to our Teachers and good Books 11. And also about all the Ordinances of God and all the the helps and means of grace 12. And how partial we are about good works extolling one and sensless of another and about the opportunities of good In a word what l●me apprehensions we have of Religion when men are so far from setting all the parts together in a well-ordered frame that they can scarce forbear the dividing of every part into particles and must take the food of their souls as Physick even like Pills which they cannot get down unless they are exceeding small III. The Causes of this Calamity I must for brevity but name 1. The natural weakness of mans mind doth make him like a narrow-mouthed bottle that can take in but a little at once and so must be long in learning and receiving 2. The natural laziness and impatience of men will not give them leave to be at such long and painful studies as compleatness of knowledge doth require 3. The natural pride of mens hearts will not give them leave to continue so long in a humble sense of their emptiness and ignorance nor to spend so many years in learning as Disciples but it presently perswadeth them that their first apprehensions are clear and right and their knowledge very considerable already and they are as ready to dispute and censure the ignorance of their Teachers if not to teach others themselves as to learn 4. The poverty and labours of many allow them not leisure to search and study so long and seriously as may bring them to any comprehensive knowledge 5. The most are not so happy as to have judicious methodical and laborious Teachers who may possess them with right principles and methods but deliver them some truths with great defectiveness and disorder themselves and perhaps by their weakness tempt the people into pride when they see that they are almost as wise as they 6. Most men are corrupted by company and converse with ignorant e●roneous and self-conceited men and hearing others perhaps that are very zealous make something of nothing and make a great matter of a little one and extolling their own poor and lame conceits they learn also to think that they are something when they are nothing deceiving themselves Gal. 6.3 4. 7. Most Christians have lost the sense of the need and use of the true Ministerial Office as it consisteth in personal counsel and assistance besides the publick Teaching and most Ministers by neglecting it teach them to overlook it 8. Every man hath some seeming Interest in some one Opinion or Duty or Way above the rest and selfishness causeth him to reel that way that interest leadeth him 9. Education usually possesseth men with a greater regard of some one opinion duty way or party than of the rest 10. The reputation of some good men doth fix others upon some particular waies or notions of theirs above others 11. Present occasions and necessities sometime do urge us harder to some means and studies than to others especially for the avoiding of some present evil or easing of some present trouble and then the rest are almost laid by 12. Some Doctrines deeplier affect us in the hearing than others and then the thoughts run more on that to the neglect of many thing as great 13. Perhaps we have had special experience of some Truths and Duties or Sins more than others and then we set all our thoughts about those only 14. Usually we live with such as talk most of some one duty or against some one sin more than all the rest and this doth occasion our thoughts to run most in one stream and confine them by hearing and custom to a narrow channel 15. Some things in their own quality are more easie and near to us and more within the reach of sense And therefore as corporal things because of their sensibility and nearness do possess the minds of carnal men instead of things spiritual and unseen even so Paul and Apollo and Cephas this good Preacher and that good Book and this Opinion and that Church-society and this or that Ordinance do possess the minds of the more carnal narrow sort of Christians instead of the harmony of Christian truth and holy duty 16. Nature it self as corrupted is much more against some truths and against some duties internal and external than against others And then when those that it is less averse to are received men dwell on them and make a Religion of them wholly or too much without the rest As when some veins are stopped all the blood is turned into the rest or when one part of the mould is stopped up the metal all runneth into the rest and maketh a defective vessel Or when one part of the seal is filled up before it maketh a defective impression on the wax Therefore the duties of inward self-denial humility mortification and heavenliness are almost left out in the Religion
agreeable to his mind and body Some are strong and some are weak some are of quick wits and some are dull All should be designed to that which they are fittest for 8. Every one should chuse that calling if he be fit for it in which he may be most serviceable to God for the doing of the greatest good in the world and not that in which he may have most ease or wealth or honour God and the publick good must be our chiefest ends in the choice 9. And in the labours of our calling the getting of riches must never be our principal end But we must labour to do the most publick good and to please God by living in obedience to his commands 10. Yet every man must desire the success of his labour and the blessing of God on it and may continue his work as best tendeth to success And though we may not labour to be rich Prov. 23.4 as our principal end yet we must not be formal in our callings nor think that God is delighted in our meer toil to see men fill a bottomless vessel but we must endeavour after the most successful way and pray for a just prosperity of our labours and when God doth prosper us with wealth we must take it thankfully though with fear and use it to his service and do all the good with it that we can 1 Cor. 16.2 Lay by as God hath prospered every man Ephes 4.28 Let him work with his hands the thing that is good that he may have to give to him that needeth James 1.9 Let the brother of low degree rejoyce in that he is exalted 11. The lowness of a mans calling or baseness of his employment will not allow him to be negligent or weary of it or uncomfortable in it Seeing God must be obeyed in the lowest services as well as in the highest and will reward men according to their faithful labour and not according to the dignity of their place And indeed no service should be accounted low and base which is sincerely done for so great and high a Master and hath the promise of so glorious a reward Col. 3.23 24. 12. The greater and more excellent any mans work and calling is his idleness and neligence is the greater sin It is bad in a Plow-man or any day-labourer but it is far worse in a Minister of the Gospel or a Magistrate Because they wrong many and that in the greatest things and violate the greatest trust from God Christ biddeth us pray the Lord of the harvest to send forth Labourers into his harvest Luke 10.27 and not proud covetous idle drones that would have honour only for their wealth and titles And he saith that the Labourer is worthy of his hire but not the loiterer Among the Elders that rule the Church it is especially the labourers in the word and doctrine that are worthy of double honour Dr. Hammond noteth on 1 Thes 5.12 that the Bishops whom they are required to know and honour were those that laboured among them and were over them in the Lord and admonished them and that it was for their works sake that they were to esteem them very highly in love The highest title that ever was put on Pastors was to be Labourers together with God 1 Cor. 3.9 And the calling of Magistrates also requireth no small diligence Jethro perswadeth Moses to take helpers not that he might himself be idle but lest he should wear away himself with doing more than he could undergo Exod. 18.18 So the calling of a Schoolmaster and of Parents and Masters of families who have rational souls to instruct and govern requireth a special diligence And negligence in such is a greater sin than in him that neglecteth sheep or horses So also it is a great sin in a Physician because he doth neglect mens lives and in a Lawyer when by sloth he destroyeth mens estates The greatness of the trust must greaten mens care 13. He that hath hired his labour to another as a Servant a Lawyer a Physician is guilty of a thievish fraud if he give him not that which he hath paid for Owe nothing to any man but love Rom. 13. Hired labour is a debt that must be paid 14. Religious duties will not excuse idleness nor negligence in our callings but oblige us to it the more nor will any bodily calling excuse us from Religious duties but both must take their place in their seasons and due proportions Q●est 1. But what if a man can live without labour may not be forbear who needeth it not Answ No because he is nevertheless a subject of God who doth command it and a member of the Common-wealth which needeth it Quest 2. What if I were not brought up to labour am I bound to use it Answ Yes you must yet learn to do your duty and repent and ask pardon for living so long in sinful idleness What if you had not been brought up to pray or to read or to any needful trade or ornament of life What if your Parents had never taught you to speak Is it not your duty therefore to learn it when you are at age rather than not at all Qu. 3. But what if I find that it hurteth my body to labour may I not forbear Answ If it so hurt you that you are unable to do it there is no remedy Necessity hath no Law Or if one sort of labour hurt you when you can take up another in which you may be as serviceable to the Common-wealth you may chuse that to which your strength is suitable But if you think that every sudden pain or weariness is a sufficient excuse or that some real hurt will warrant you in an idle life you may as well think that your servant and your Horse or Oxe may cease all their labour for you when they are weary or that your candle should not burn nor your knife be used in cutting because that use consumeth them Quest 4. What if I find that worldly business doth hinder me in the service of God I cannot pray or read or meditate so much Answ The labours of your callings are part of the service of God He hath set you both to do and you must do both that is both spiritual and corporal work And to quarrel with either is to quarrel against God who hath appointed them Quest 5. But is it not worldliness when we follow worldly business without any need Answ 1. Yes if you do it only from the love of the world and with a worldly mind But not when you do it in obedience to God and with a heavenly mind 2. He cannot be said to have no need who hath a body that needeth it or liveth in Common-wealth that needeth it and is a subject to God who commandeth it Quest 6. But what if I find by constant experince that my soul is more worldly after worldly business and more cold and alienated from God Answ What if you should
endure it As if their souls and Heaven were not worth their labour and as if they would go to Hell for ease and as if the feast of joy and glory were not worth the labour of eating or receiving it 2. Make not this a pretence to oppress your servants with unmerciful labours beyond their strength or such as so weary them and take up all their time that they have not leisure so much as to pray It is Gods great mercy to servants that he hath separated the Lords day for a holy rest or else many would have little rest or means of holiness Some think that others can never labour enough for them because they pay them wages and yet that they are bound to do nothing themselves even because God hath given them more wages and wealth than he hath given to others More particular Directions are as followeth 1. Give up your selves by absolute subjection to God as his servants and then you can never rest in an idle unserviceable life 2. Take all that you have as Gods talents and from his trust and then you dare not but prepare in the use of them for your account 3. Live as those that are certain to die and still uncertain of the time and that know what an eternal weight of joy or misery dependeth upon the spending of your present time And then you dare not live in Idleness Live but as men whose souls are awake to look before them into another world and you will say as I have long been forced to do O how short are the daies how long are the nights how swift is time how slow is work how far am I behind-hand I am afraid lest my life will be finished before the work of life and lest my time will be done while much of my work remaineth undone 4. Ask your selves what you would be found doing if death now surprize you and whether work or idleness will be best in the review 5. Try a laborious life of well-doing a while and the experience will draw you on 6. Try your selves by a standing resolution and engage your selves in necessary business and that in a set and stated course that necessity and resolution may keep you from an idle life 7. Forsake the company of the idle and voluptuous and accompany the laborious and diligent 8. Study well how to do the greatest good you can that the worth of the work may draw you on For they that are of little use for want of parts or skill or opportunity are more liable to be tempted into idleness as thinking their work is to no purpose when the well-furnished person doth long to be exercising his wisdom and vertue in profitable well-doing CHAP. XVIII How by Faith to overcome unmercifulness to the needy IV. THE fourth sin of Sodom and of Prosperity mentioned Ezek. 16.49 is They did not strengthen the hand of the poor and needy Against which at the present I shall give you but these brief Directions Direct 1. Love God your Creator and Redeemer and then you will love the poorest of your Brethren for his sake And love will easily perswade you to do them good Direct 2. Labour most diligently to cure your inordinate self-love which maketh men care little for any but themselves and such as are useful to themselves And when once you love your neighbours as your selves it will be as easie to perswade you to do good to them as to your selves and more easie to disswade you from hurting them than your selves because sensuality tempteth you stronglier to hurt your selves than any thing doth to hurt them Direct 3. Overvalue not the things of the world and then you will not make a great matter of parting with them for anothers good Direct 4. Do as you would be done by And ask your selves how you would be judged of and used if you were in their condition your selves Direct 5. Set the life of Christ and his Apostles before you and remember what a delight it was to them to do good And at how much dearer rate Christ shewed mercy to you and others than he requireth you to shew mercy at to any Direct 6. Read over Christs precepts of Charity and Mercy that a thing so frequently urged on you may not be senslesly despised by you Direct 7. Remember that Mercy is a duty applauded by all the world As humane interest requireth it so humane nature approveth it in all Good and bad even all the world do love the merciful Or if the partial interest of some proud and covetous persons as the Popish Clergy for instance do call for cruelty against those that are not of their mind and for their profit yet this goeth so much against the stream of the common interest and the light of humane nature that mankind will still abhor their cruelty though they may afright a few that are neer them from uttering their detestation All men speak well of a merciful man and ill of the unmerciful Direct 8. Believe Christs promises which he hath made to the merciful so fully and frequently in Scripture As in Mat. 5.7 Luke 6.36 Prov. 11.17 Psal 37.26 c. And believe his threatnings against the unmerciful that they shall find no mercy Prov. 12.10 James 2.13 And remember how Christ hath described the last Judgment as passing upon this reckoning Matth. 25. Direct 9. Live not in fleshly sensuality your selves For else your flesh will devour all and if you have hundreds and thousands a year will leave you but little or nothing to do good with Direct 10. Engage your selves not by rash vows but by resolution and practice in a stated way of doing good and take not only such occasions as fall out unexpectedly Set a part a convenient proportion of your estates as God doth bless you and let not needless occasions divert it and defraud the poor and you of the benefit Direct 11. Remember still that nothing is absolutely your own but God who lendeth it you hath the true propriety and will certainly call you to an account And ask your selves daily How shall I wish at the day of reckoning that I had expended and used all my estate and do accordingly Direct 12. Forget not what need you stand in daily of the mercy of God and what need you will shortly be in when your health and wealth will fail you And how earnestly then you will cry to God for mercy mercy Prov. 21.13 Whoso stoppeth his ears at the cry of the poor he also shall cry himself but shall not be heard Direct 13. Hearken not to an unbelieving heart which will tell you that you may want your selves and therefore would restrain you from well doing If God be to be trusted with your souls he is to be trusted with your bodies God tryeth whether indeed you take him for your God by trying whether you can trust him If you deal with him as with a bankerupt or a deceitful man whom you will trust no
will understand Pauls charge Phil. 2.3 4. In lowliness of mind let each esteem others better than themselves Look not every man on his own but every man also on the things of others Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus You will learn of Christ to take your neerest friend for a Satan that would perswade you to save or spare your self yea your life when you ought to lay it down for the Glory of God and the good of many Matth. 16.22 23. SELF and OWN are words which would then be better understood and be more suspected And the reason of the great Gospel duty of SELF-DENYAL would be better discerned Therefore set your selves to the study of God especially in his Goodness study him in his Works and in his Word and in his Son and in the Glory where you hope everlastingly to see him And if you once love God as God indeed it will teach you to love your Brethren and in what sort and in what degree to do it For many waies are we taught of God to love one another Even 1. By the great and heavenly teacher of Love Jesus Christ 2. And by Gods own example Matth. 5.44 45 3. And by the shedding abroad of his love in our hearts by the Spirit of Love Rom. 5.5 4. And by this actual loving God and so loving all of God in the world Object But by this doctrine you will prepare for the Levellers and Fryers to cast down or cry down Propriety Answ 1. There is a propriety of food rayment c. which individuation hath made necessary 2. There is a propriety of Stewardship which God causeth by the various disposal of his talents and which is the just reward of humane industry and the necessary encouragement of wit and labour in the world None of these would we cast down or preach down 3. But there is a common abuse of propriety to the maintenance of mens own lusts and to the hurt of others and of all Societies This we would preach down if we could But it is Love only which must be the Leveller In the Primitive Church Love shewed its power by such a voluntary community Acts 4. And all Politicians who have drawn the Idea of a perfect Common-wealth have been fumbling at other waies of accomplishing it But it is Christian Love alone that must do it Unfeignedly love God as God and love your neighbours really as your selves and then keep your proprieties as far as this will give you leave I will conclude with this considerable observation that though it is false which some affirm that individuation is a punishment for some former sin for how could a soul not individuate sin And though sensitive self-love which is the principle of self-preservation be no sin it self nor doth grace destroy it yet the inordinacy of it is the summ and root of all positive sin and an increaser of privative sin And this inseparable sensitive self-love was made to be more under the power of reason and to be ruled by it than now we find it in any the most sanctified person even as Abrahams love of the life of his only Son was to be subject to his Faith And holiness lyeth more in this subjection than most men well understand And the inordinacy of this personal self-love hath so strangely perverted the mind it self that it is not only very hard to convince men of the evil of any selfish principles or sins but it greatly blindeth them as to all duties of publick interest and social nature Yea and maketh them afraid of Heaven it self where the union of souls will be as much neerer than now it is as their Love will be greater and more perfect And though it will not be by any cessation of personal individuation and by falling into one universal soul yet perfect Love will make the union neerer than we who have no experience of it can possibly now comprehend And when we feel the strongest Love to a friend desiring the neerest union we have the best help to understand it But men that feel not the divine and holy love are by inordinate self-love and abuse of individuation afraid of the life to come lest the union should be so great as to lose their individuation or prejudice their personal divided interests Yea true believers so far as their holy Love is weak and their inordinate sensitive self-love is yet too strong are from hence afraid of another world when they scarce know why but indeed it is much from this disease which maketh men still desire their personal felicity too partially and in a divided way and to be afraid of losing their personality or propriety by too ne●r a union and communion of souls CHAP. XXVI How by Faith to be followers of the Saints and to look with profit to their examples and to their end THE great work of living in Heaven by Faith I have said so much of as to the principal part in my Saints Rest that no more of that must be expected here Only this subject which is not so usually and fully treated of to the people as it it ought being one part of our heavenly conversation I think meet to speak to more distinctly at this time As we are commanded first to look to Jesus the Author and perfecter of our faith Heb. 12.2 3. so are we commanded to remember our guides and to follow their faith and consider the end of their conversation Heb. 13.7 And not to be slothful but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises Heb. 6.12 To which end we have a cloud of witnesses set before us in Heb. 11. that next to Jesus whom they followed we should look to them and follow them Jam. 5.10 My Brethren take the Prophets for an example The Reasons of this duty are these 1. God hath made them our examples two waies 1. By his graces making them holy and fit for our imitation He gave them their gifts not only for themselves nor only for that present generation but for us also and all that must survive to the end of the world As it is said of Abrahams Justification Rom. 4.23 24. It was said that Faith was imputed to him for righteousness not for his sake alone but for us also to whom it shall be imputed if we believe So I may say in this case their faith their piety their patience was given them and is recorded not for their salvation or their honour only but also to further the salvation of their posterity by encouragement and imitation If all things are for our sakes 2 Cor. 4.15 then the graces of Gods Saints were for our sakes For the Churches edification it is that Christ giveth both offices gifts and graces to his Ministers Ephes 4.5 12 14 15 16. yea and sufferings too Phil. 1.12 20. 2 Cor. 1.4 6. 2 Tim. 2.10 I endure all things for the elects sake 2. By commanding us to follow
words which are apt and orderly and moving and to do all with such skill and reverence and seriousness as tendeth not to encrease but to cure the dulness hypocrisie and unreverence of others Eccles 5.1 2. Matth. 6.7 8 9 10 c. Direct 11. Pray as earnestly as if God himself were to be moved with your prayers Yet so as to remember that the change is not to be made upon him but upon you As when the Boat-man layeth hold upon the bank he draweth the Boat to it and not the bank unto the Boat Prayer fitteth you to receive the mercy both naturally as it exciteth your desires after it and morally as it is a condition on which God hath promised to give it when you pray you tell God nothing which before he knew not better than you But you tell him that in confession and petition which he will hear from your own mouths before he will judge you meet for the mercies which you are to pray for In summ pray because you believe that praying Believers shall have the promised blessing And believe particularly and absolutely that you shall have that promised blessing through Christ because you are praying Believers and therefore the persons to whom it is promised CHAP. XXIII How to live by Faith towards Children and other Relations Direct 1. BElieve Gods Promises made to Believers and their seed of which I have written at large in my treatise of Infant-baptism And labour to understand how far tho●e promises extend both as to the persons and the blessings There was never an age of the world in which God did not distinguish the holy seed even Believers and their Children from the rest of the world and take them as those that were specially in his Covenant Direct 2. Let not your conceits of the bare birth-priviledge make you omit your serious solemn and believing Dedication of them unto God and entering them into his Covenant For the reason why your seed is called Holy and in a better case than the seed of Infidels is not meerly because they are the off-spring of your bodies and have their natures from you much less as deriving any grace or vertue from you by generation But because you are persons your selves who have dedicated your selves with all that you have absolutely to God by Christ And they being your own and therefore at your disposal your wills are taken for their wills so far as you act in their names and on their behalf And therefore when you dedicate them to God you do but that which you have both power and command to do And therefore God accepteth what you so dedicate to him And Baptism is the regular way in which this dedication should be solemnly made But if through the want of a Minister or water or time this be not done your believing dedication of your child to God without Baptism shall be accepted For it is the substance and not the sign the will and not the water which God requireth in this case Quest But what then shall we think of the children of godly Anabaptists whose Judgement is against such dedication Answ Many whose Judgement is against baptizing them is not against an offering or dedicating them to God And those who think that they are not allowed solemnly to enter them into Covenant with God yet really do that which is the same thing For they cannot be imagined to be unwilling to dedicate them to God to the utmost of that interest and power which they understand that God hath given them and doubtless they most earnestly desire that according to their capacity they may be the children of God and God will be their God in Christ And this vertual dedication seemeth to be the principal requisite condition But yet as the unbaptized are ordinarily without the visible Church and its priviledges so if any be so blind as neither explicitely nor vertually to dedicate their seed to God I know no promise of their childrens salvation any more than of the seed of Infidels Direct 3. If the children of true Christians dedicated by the Parents will to God through Christ shall die before they come to the use of reason the Parents have no cause to doubt of their salvation It is the conclusion of the Synod of Dort in Artic. 1. And the reason is this If the Parent and child be in the same Covenant then if that Covenant pardon and adopt the Parent it doth pardon and adopt the child But the Parent and child are in the same Covenant Therefore c. God hath but one Covenant on his part which is sealed by baptism as I have proved at large to Mr. Blake Indeed some are only externally in Covenant with him on their part that is they did covenant only with the tongue and not the heart And consequently God is no further in covenant with them than to allow and command his Ministers to receive them into the Visible Church and give them its priviledges and is not as a Promiser in Covenant with them at all himself either for inward or for outward blessings He hath not one Covenant which giveth outward and another which giveth inward blessings And it is here supposed that the only condition prerequisite on the Infants part that he may have right to this Covenant and its blessings is that he be the seed of a true Believer and dedicated in Covenant to God by the Parents will or act Actual Faith is not prerequired Seminal grace may be inherent but 1. Not known to the Baptizer 2. Nor prerequired as a condition but liker to be given by vertue of the Covenant Nothing else therefore being prerequisite as a condition it followeth that as the Parents dedicating themselves to God if baptized at age is the condition of their certain title to the present blessings of the Covenant viz. that God be their Father Christ their Saviour and the Spirit in Covenant to operate in them to sanctification and their sins are all pardoned and they are heirs of Heaven even so upon the Parents dedication of their children to God they have right to the same blessings else why do we baptize them seeing Baptism in the true nature and use of it is a solemn dedicating them to God in that same Covenant and a solemn investing them in the relations and rights of that same pardoning Covenant and not in any other I do not say that all baptized Infants so dying are saved be they the children of Infidels or Heathens and remaining their true propriety nor those that are offered and baptized never so wrongfully or hypocritically nor will I stay to dispute for what I have asserted But 1. I exhort Christians believingly to dedicate their children in Covenant with God in Christ And 2. To believe that if they so dye that Covenant of Christ forbiddeth them to doubt of their salvation Direct 4. Let your Duty be answerable to your hope And do not only pray for your childrens
sanctification but if they live endeavour it by all possible care in a wise and godly education Remember that nature and your dedicating them to God do both oblige you to this care for their salvation And that the education of children is one of the greatest duties in the world for the service of Christ and the prosperity of Church and State And the neglect of it not the smallest cause of the ruine of both and of the worlds calamity Many a poor sottish lazy Professor have I known who cry out against ignorant dumb and unfaithful Ministers as guilty of the blood of souls and are so religious as to separate from the Assemblies that have Ministers that are but partly such when as their own children are almost as ignorant as Heathens and they only use them to a few customary formal duties while they think they are enough against forms and turn over the chief care of their instruction to the Schoolmaster And are themselves so ignorant dumb and idle unfaithful and unnatural to their poor childrens souls as that it is a doubt whether in a well-ordered Church they ought not to be denyed communion themselves They so little practise Deut. 11.18 19. 6.7 Ephes 6.4 c. Direct 5. If your children live to the flesh in an ungodly course of life contrary to the Covenant which by you they made they forfeit all the benefits of the Covenant And you can have no assurance by any thing that you can do for them that ever they shall be converted though it is not past hope And if they be converted at age their pardon and adoption will be the effect of Gods Covenant as then it was newly entered with themselves and not as it was made before for them in infancy Direct 6. Y●t because that still while there is life there is hope you ought not by despair or negligence to omit prayer exhortation or any other duty which you can perform in order to their recovery And though now they have wills of their own their salvation is not laid so much upon you as it was in Infancy at their first covenanting with God yet still God will shew his love to his servants in their seed and faithful endeavours are not vain nor hopeless and therefore it is still one of your greatest duties in the world to seek their true recovery to Christ Direct 7. If God make your children a scourge or a heart-breaking to you bear and improve it as becomes Believers That is 1. Repent of your own former sin your own youthfull lusts your disobedience to your Parents your carnal fondness on your children your loving them too much and God too little the evil examples you have given them and your manifold neglect of a prudent seasonable earnest unwearied instructing them in godliness your bearing with their sin and giving them their own wills till they were masterless c Renew your Repentance and you have got some benefit 2. Think how unkindly and unthankfully you have dealt with a gracious Saviour and a heavenly Father 3. Let it take off your affections from all things under the Sun and call them up the more to God For who would love a world where none are to be trusted and where all things are vexatious even the children of your love and bowels Direct 8. If they die impenitently and perish mourn for them but with the moderation of Believers That is 1. Consider that God is more the owner of your children than you are and may do with his own as he list 2. And he is more wise and merciful than you and therefore not to be murmured at as wanting either 3. And it is an unvaluable mercy that your own soul is sanctified and shall be saved 4. And the most godly have had ungodly children before you Adam had a Cain Noah had a Cham Isaac had an Esau David had an Absalom c. 5. And if all the godly that pray for their childrens salvation must be therein gratified all the world would then have been saved For Noah would have prayed for all his children and they for theirs and so to the worlds end Object Oh but my conscience telleth me that it is my own sin which hath had a hand in their undoing Answ Suppose it be so it is certainly a pardonable sin Do you then repent of it or not If you repent as you mourn for your relations so you should rejoyce that God hath forgiven you For repented sin is certainly pardoned to you and pardoned sin to you is as great cause of joy as unpardoned sin in your relations is cause of sorrow Therefore mourn with such moderation and mixed comfort and thanksgiving as becometh one that liveth by faith The affliction indeed is neer and great and heavier than any calamity that could have befallen their bodies and is not to be slighted by an unnatural insensibility But yet you have a God who is better to you than a thousand children and your cross is but as a feather if you set it in the ballance against your blessings even the Love of God and your part in Christ and life eternal CHAP. XXIV How by Faith to order our Affections to publick Societies and the unconverted world Direct 1. TAke heed that you lose not that common Love which you owe to mankind nor that desire of the increase of the Kingdom of Christ which must keep up in you a constant compassion to the unconverted world viz. Idolaters Infidels and ungodly Hypocrites It is pittiful to observe the unchristian senslesness of most zealous Professors of Religion in this point Though God hath purposely put the three publick Petitions first in the Lords Prayer to tell them what they must first and most desire that is the hallowing of his Name and the coming of his Kingdom and the doing of his Will on Earth as it is in Heaven yet they seem not to understand it or to regard it But their thoughts and desires are as selfish and private and narrow as if they knew nothing what the World or the Church is or cared for neither Their mind and talk is all of their own matters for body or soul or of their several Parties and particular Churches or if any extend his care as far as this spot of Land in Brittain and Ireland or some of the Reformed Churches they go further than their companions their selves and their side or party is almost all that most regard Perhaps the poor scattered Jews have a few words in the prayers of some but the miserable case of the vast Nations of the Earth who seem to be forsaken of God is neglected by them Five parts in six of the earth are Heathens and Mahometanes and of the sixth part the Protestants are but about a sixth compared with the poor ignorant Abbassines Armenians Syrians the Greek Churches and the Papists to say nothing what the most of the Protestants themselves are Yet are almost all these put by with