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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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stablished in the faith Colos 2.7 this is that rocky foundation which shall bear up the house against all winds and weathers It is the first work of change in the heart and the first difference between man and man when God by faith purifieth the heart Acts 15. It is the foundation of all obedience for whatsoevee is not of faith is sin It is the root of all Gods worship for till we beleeve in God we can neither trust nor hope nor love nor pray nor perform any other part of his service truly or acceptably It is the mother of all good works the word is the seed of them which faith conceiveth and digesteth and so bringeth forth commanded and commended actions General faith knoweth the work to bee good in the kind of it and special justifying faith beginneth it and maketh it good in the person and endeavour of the doer and layeth hold upon Christ to cover the defects of it Hence is it that often in the Scriptures we read it to bee the first Commandement given by Christ and his Apostles to such as were desirous to know the way of life and how they might please God The Jews come to our Saviour and ask him what they might doe to work the works of God and Christ beginning here telleth them that this is the work of God that they beleeve in him whom he hath sent Joh. 6.28 29. And 1 Joh. 3.23 This is his Commandement that we beleeve in the name of his Son Jesus Christ and love one another for we cannot perform any work of love before we beleeve In one word faith is the very soul of all obedience without which the most fightly and glorious actions be it of alms prayer preaching hearing worship or miracles themselves all are but very Corpses and Carcases of good works dead and liveless Secondly faith exalteth it self above all other graces not only in the excellent object of it which is Christ and Salvation but also in the excellent work of it above them all notwithstanding they all have their special excellencies it espouseth us unto Jesus Christ and in these espousals and contract for the present it assureth us of our marriage with him hereafter And being the condition of the New Covenant of life Joh. 3.16 it tyeth God himself unto us who is not further bound to any man than he is a beleever True it is that Love placeth it self upon Christ but it is after faith for hee must bee apprehended before he be loved Hope waiteth for salvation but faith first beleeveth it Trust leaneth upon the promises but faith first layeth hold on Christ the Author and accomplisher of them And though the Apostle say that of Faith Hope and Love Love is the chiefest 1 Cor. 13. himself interpreteth it to be in respect of durance and continuance but not in respect of our justification or acceptation with God Love indeed surviveth and lasteth longest for our sight of God as he is shall vanish faith but yet faith is before it and the mother of it Thirdly saving faith is a living thing and maketh a man to live by it It purgeth his own dwelling by purifying the heart and conscience it reneweth the spirit and mind it quickneth to all good duties for it being an instrument to unite unto Christ by it as by a bond of union wee receive from him our Head life and power to move and stirre in Christian duties yea it so governeth the whole life that we henceforth live not but Christ liveth in us In our business and labour it maketh men diligent in the work but leave the successe to God In temporal wants it faith with Abraham God will provide at least in the mountain it careth not so much for bread as the staff of it if it have means it blesseth God and useth them but trusteth not in them if it have them not it resteth on God but useth no unlawful courses for them In afflictions it stablisheth the heart with assurance of a good issue and still waiteth the Lords leasure without making haste In temptations it goeth against sence and feeling and resteth upon the naked promise yea when it can scarce apprehend any thing but wrath it will uphold the heart and rear it even when God seemeth to ●id him to trust in his mercy In the use of things Spiritual● as the Words Sacraments Prayer and other holy means only faith draweth vertue from Christ and all of them are unprofitable further than they are mingled with faith In the use of Temporal it is faith that weaneth the ●ea●● and k●epeth it that earthly cares choak it not earthly pleasures possess it not and ear●hly comforts oppr●ss it not but it holdeth the mind heavenly in the midst of earthly business and suffereth it not to love pleasures more than God not to enjoy any comfort of the Creature above or against the comforts of God and his Word whom they acknowledge the very life of their lives and the soul of their souls and bodies here and for ever Thus is faith every where diffused if we walk we walk by faith if we live we live by faith in the Son of God if we stand we stand by faith if we dye we must dye in faith as the Patriarks did Heb. 11.13 4 This excellent grace only fenceth against temptation quieteth the distressed soul and keepeth it from sinking as once it did Peter Matth. 14.20 This is the only shield which quencheth all the fiery darts of the Devils Ephes 6.16 and 1 Pet. 5.9 Your adversary the Devil goeth about like a roaring Lion whom resist stedfast in the faith This is the victory also that overcometh the world even our faith 1 Joh. 5.4 This is the conquest over the lusts of our own flesh 1 Thess 5.8 Be sober and put on the breast-pla●e of faith Again as it moun●eth and fenceth so it stilleth the heart disquieted and distressed when it seeth it self beset with spiritual wickednesses and lusts and even almost drowned in the gulfs of sinful and earthly courses Therefore the poor Jav●or that could not tell what to doe with himself that of an unhappy man now ready to kill himself he might become happy and an heir of Salvation was sent n● where else by the Apostle but to the doctrin and practise of this grac of faith This only resolveth fully the question Oh what shall I doe to be saved Beleeve in the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved he getteth no other answer of Paul because he well knew that no other would have answered his question nor setled his conscience now touched with sence of his sin If he had sent him to the Word that could have done him no good if he did 〈◊〉 mingle it with faith If to his prayers only the prayer of faith is available Jam. 5.15 If to the Sacraments they must be seals of faith Rom. 4.11 or else d●e no more good than seals set to blanks If to a good life
which draw on such fearful falls and mischiefs and preserveth him that neither hope of promotion nor gain nor ease nor favour of man who is but a worm shall make him forget the Lord that spread the Heavens this fear which is Loves keeper holdeth the heart in the Love of God himself of his Worship of his Word of his Children and whatsoever carrieth his Image all which without it either lye or quickly grow as refuse wares out of request 4 To drive away security awake sloathfulness provoke to watchfulness stir up to prayer keep in a fitness to profit by the word to tremble at it when God threatneth to rejoice in the promises as those to whom they belong to help us to better our selves by our afflictions as the speech of the converted Theef to his fellow implieth that if hee had had the fear of God he would being in the same condemnation have otherwise carried himself towards Christ than hee did And in a word to fence the heart which is as the market-place of a City against temptation in which special use it is called a Well-spring of life to escape the snares of death By all this that hath been spoken every man that would seem religious ought to labour above all things for this worthy Grace which God specially bestoweth upon his Children with whom hee maketh his new Covenant Jerem. 32. I will put my fear in their hearts never to depart from mee saith the Lord. Which hath all promises belonging unto it for a mans Self for his Children for this life present for a better for supplies of every good for with-holding and removing of every evil so as whosoever feareth the Lord wanteth not a good and rich treasury such as all the Indian Mines cannot afford yea such as both possesseth himself and entaileth unto his posterity the rich blessing of the Almighty Blessed saith the Psalm is the man that feareth the Lord Psal 128.2 3. himself shall bee mighty on earth his Children shall bee blessed after him his Wife shall bee as a fruitful Vine Riches and Treasure shall bee in his house Psalm 112.3 hee shall want nothing that is good and let his troubles bee never so great the Lord will deliver him out of them all Here is a Jewel worth hiding and laying up in the safest closet of the soul even in the midst of the heart for there God layeth it and calleth for the Heart to make room for it Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear mee Isa 8.13 Sanctify the Lord in your hearts and let him be your dread Another bond whereby man is knit unto God is the working of righteousnesse an immediate fruit of the fear of God Where must bee considered 1 What this righteousness is and then 2 What is the working of it For the former To work righteousnesse what it is This righteousness is a grace of God whereby the beleever is inclined unto honest actions according to the prescript of Gods Law When I say a grace of God I understand that righteousness whereof a man in the state of grace is by grace made partaker and exclude all that Original Righteousness which was set in the nature of man by his Creation whereby hee was wholly conformable to the Image and Righteousness of God further saying that the beleever is hereby inclined to honest actions three things are implyed 1 That this righteousnesse is not that imputed righteousnesse of Christ which is a most exact conformity of the humane nature of Christ with all his actions and sufferings performed of him in our stead with the whole Law of God whereby wee are wholly covered as with a Garment in the sight of God but rather a fruit of that namely that infused and inherent righteousness wrought in the heart of every beleever by the finger of the Spirit whereby the Image of God is daily renewed and repaired in him and so himself inclined to works of righteousness to which hee is now Created Eph. 4.24 2 That the subject of this righteousness is the Beleever for all the works of unbeleevers whose mind and conscience are defiled Tit. 1.15 inward or outward cannot be other than sin and unrighteousness 3 That the next efficient cause of it is lively faith being the instrument of the Holy Ghost by which hee begetteth this righteousness wheresoever it is now Faith produceth this righteousness in us not as it is a● excellent gift of God nor as an excellent quality in us but onely as it is a●●and or instrument apprehending and laying hold upon Christ who justifying us by his own righteousness imputed and by his Spirit regenerating and sanctifying our natures is the very proper cause of this infused and inherent righteousness The last words in the description according to the prescript of Gods Law shew that then a work is righteous Juste agere est agere ex praescripto juris when it is framed according to the right rule of the Law of God it being the only perfect rule of all righteousness Mens Laws are rules also but imperfect and no further yet so far bind as they are agreeable unto Gods II. The second point is the working of righteousness wherein 1 The Order 2 The Manner The Order is in the words first To fear God and then to work righteousnesse all the duties of love must bee founded in Faith and in the fear of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is sin and the fear of God is the very seed and life of all true obedience which the wise man implyeth when hee calleth it the head and beginning of wisdome Prov. 1.7 that look as all sense floweth from the head so all heavenly sense and motion from the fear of the Lord. Which sheweth that many men begin at the wrong end in the matter of their obedience some think they do God high service if they come to Church say some prayers hear a Sermon things not to bee dis-allowed but know not how far they are from pleasing God herein because they bring not hearts renewed with Faith and Repentance nor souls possessed with Hope Love and the true knowledge of God without which the Lord accounteth their sacrifices but maimed and professeth his hatred against them others place all their Holiness and Obedience in the works and duties of the second Table If they bee liberal to the poor just in their dealing sober and civil in their conversation though they live in gross ignorance of God and his Word utterly careless of the waies and worship of God yet conceive themselves in as good case as any other man which is all one as to account that man a living man who hath no head the fear of God being to true religion even as the head to the body of a man besides that they thrust the second Table into the place of the first inverting the order of God yea they pull and break asunder the two Tables which the Lord
1 Seeing a man cannot safely and comfortably pass through any part of the day without the light strength and comfort of the Scriptures it pleased the Lord to set up this publike ministery in his Church that even beleevers themselves by hearing the Scriptures daily explained obscure places opened by those which are clearer and figurative speeches cleared by the proper might attain not onely to a clearer understanding of the Scriptures but also to have them printed in their minds and memories so as they might bee able to draw them into continual use 2 Even the best have nature in them and their daily failings and without daily repair grow weak in faith weary of well-doing and unfruitful in the work of the Lord. And therefore though they should not need to come to increase their knowledge yet have they need to hear their faults controlled to bee provoked unto duty to bee confirmed in their obedience to bee strengthened in their faith reformed in their lives comforted in their troubles and spurred to bring every thing to use and practice and therefore the best may be still Disciples and Learners in the School of Christ 3 The agreement and fellowship of the members of the Church is excellently hereby maintained and preserved not onely by communication of gift● and graces while some teach and some learn but also while it is a mean to hold them all of a mind whereas without this publike Ministery if every one were left to hi● private sense and reading it could not but br●●d corrupt and private opinion● to the dissolving of minds and affections And this special benefit of thi● publike ordinance the Apostle aimed at Eph. 4.13 Till wee all meet together in the unity of the Faith and knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man implying that the scope of the Ministry is to bring and preserve all the members of the Church in this unity of faith and knowledge wh ch in this world it cannot do but so soon as it hath done this it self shall ce●se nam●ly in the life to come Hee must needs bee wilfully blind that espieth n●t very gr at necessity of the word preached for the strengthening of th●se joy●●s and bands whereby beleevers are knit both unto the head as also unto the me● 〈◊〉 From the oppo●ition of the Devil and wic●ed on●● Thirdly The necessity of this Ordinance appeareth in that the Devil and wicked 〈◊〉 W●●●● have ever resisted it above all other as being the greatest enemy unto his Kingdome which maketh him fall down like lightening in the heart of men Hence is it that hee stirreth up Jannes and Jambres and all the ●able of Egypts Inchanters against Moses and setteth all his power against him to prove him a counterfeit Hence is it that hee will not want a Pashur to sinne Jeremy nor an Amaziah to do as much to Amos. Hence raised hee up many Armies against Paul Elimas and Alexander Hymeneus and Philetus D●otrephes and Demas and from his mouth hee casts out floods of r●pro●chful and virulent slanders against him that hee is a pestilent and 〈◊〉 ou● fellow that hee speaketh against the Law and against the Temple away with such a fellow it is not fit that hee should live A d hath the Devil grown any whit more calm or can hee digest Pauls preach●● better since Pauls time no sure hee is no changling except because his time is shorter his malice bee stronger and more raging I wish Gods faithful Ministers every where found it otherwise But to omit other proofs 〈◊〉 serve generally the voice of the multitude Where there is no Preacher but some poor creature to serve as they say or starve them rather it is wonderful how well people think themselves with him he shall be commended and defended for a very honest peaceable man or for a very good fellow that will bear his Neighbors company they could not have a better and for all hee cannot preach a worse they f ar will come when hee is gone But whose voice is this and is not the hand of the Devil in all this Well on the contrary where there is by Gods mercy a painful and faithful Minister that Preacheth constantly and conscionably how goeth the cry and common voice of people upon him wee have one that Preacheth indeed often and perhaps is a good Scholar but hee is very unpeaceable a reprover of every man a spy-fault hee hath made such contention in our Parish since hee came that wee wish hee had never come amongst us we were quiet enough and held peace and neighbourhood before he came And thus he is cou●ted as Jeremy a man that striveth with the whole earth The same prove● by experience Fourthly The necessity appeareth by common experience if we compare the people who have had the Ministry planted amongst them with those who have it not In the one what shall a man sooner meet with than woful ignorance Popish opinions superstitious practices heathenish conversation they live as men without God in the world or as if the old Sodomites were alive again But in the other by Gods mercy some seal of the Ministry you shall meet withall some men of knowledge of conscience and out of conscience performing duties in publike and in private in the house of God and in their own houses you shall hear godly and gracious speech in their mouths see good example in their lives holy desires and endeavours to grow in grace and in the knowledge of Jesus Christ And whence is this difference but from the presence or absence of this ordinance and Gods blessing attending or departing from it Vse 1. Ministers must urge themselves to diligence by this necessity The Ministers of Christ must urge upon themselves this self same Commandement to provoke themselves to diligence in p●eaching for it layeth necessity upon them and woe unto that Minister that pre●●heth not the Gospel A lamentable thing is it to see how little either this commandement● or the denunciation of this fearful woe prevaileth with many but some are given up with Demas to imbrace this present world some give up themselves to idleness and voluptuousness of life some to ambition and further preferments some to policy and state matters and very few onely to faithful and painful Preaching Thus this commandement of Christ is generally forgotten the sheep and Lambs of Christ unfed and forsaken the Kingdome of Christ unbuilded and unrepaired and the Kingdome and power of sin generally standeth in the state of it unshaken in the hearts of men 2 Wee see hence what little need wee have of a dumb or blind Ministery unless there hee need of breaking so express a Commandement of Jesus Christ who sealeth no mans Commission but to Preach to his people No need of a du●b o● blind Ministe●y What need is there of wells without water of mouths that speak not of candlesticks without light of stars without shine of salt without
brought them to take their own ways as if God had quite forgotten them Abraham thought God had left him to the cruelty of the Aegyptians and that there was no way to help him but by lying and teaching his VVife so to doe also Lot was so invironed by the Sodomites as to avoyd their fury he saw no way but to offer his Daughters to their abuse and filthiness David was so hunted by Saul as hee must shift for himself by feigning himself mad An heart now cleaving unto God and resting in his assured love and providence would have waited till God had come unto it and not turned it self to carnal counsels Use This condemns their folly who judge themselves and others by outward things which fall alike to all who may see by this what spirit it is that suggesteth them It is a delusion of Satan and general in the world to make men deem themselves and others happy and in Gods favour because they prosper in the world and Gods people infortunate because the world crosseth them for the most part For 1 By this conclusion Christ himself the Son of God Outward things make neither happy nor unhappy four reasons who had all his Fathers love poured upon him should have been most hated of his Father and a most unhappy creature He was in want of house of money of friends of food the world had no malice in it which was not cast upon him and hee was not only forsaken of men but in such distress on the Cross as he complained hee was forsaken of God And yet all creatures were not capable of that love wherewith his Father loved him when he loved him least 2 Neither the testimony of Gods love nor the dignity of his Children stands in outward things nor in the abundance of worldly comforts for then the rich Glutton should have been farre better than Lazarus Abraham Isaac Jacob who for famine were glad to fly their Country should be in less grace with God than the wicked Kings to whom they went The Apostles who were the lights of the world who were in hunger thirst nakedness buffeted without any certain dwelling place reviled persecuted accounted as the filth of the world and the off-scouring of all things should have been in no better account with God than with men The Saints in Heb. 11.36 to 39. who were tried by mockings and scourgings by bonds and imprisonment were stoned hewn asunder tempted slain with the sword wandred in sheep-skins c. being destitute afflicted and tormented should have lost both their dignity in themselves and their favour of God But they lost neither of these For the same text saith that the world was not worthy of them being men of such worth and that by faith they received a good report namely from God and all good men 3 The beauty of Gods children is inward that which argueth Gods love is the gift of his Son faith hope a joyful expectation of the future inheritance 1 Joh. 3.1 Behold what love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the sons of God In which words the Apostle calleth our eyes back from beholding earthly dignities and prerogatives which we are ever poring into and have Hawks eye to see into the glory of the world But hee would have us behold Gods love in other things than these Difference between the love of God as God and of God as a Father namely in the inward notes and marks of Gods children And here is a main difference between that love which comes from God as God and that which cometh from him as a Father between that which he bestoweth on his enemies and that which he bestoweth on his sons that which Bond-children receive which are moveables and that which the sons of the free-woman receive for this is the inheritance let Isaac carry that away and no scoffing Ismael have a foot in it 4 Whereas Satan from crosses losses afflictions anguish and durable sorrows perswades that men are not Gods children the Apostle Heb. 12.6 8. makes a clean contrary argument that afflictions and crosses are signs of Gods love rather than of hatred and marks of election rather than of rejection Whomsoever the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every son he receiveth If yee bee without correction whereof all are partakers then are yet bastards and not sons And 2 Tim. 3.12 All that will live godly in Christ must suffer persecution the world must rejoyce while they must be sorrowful and cannot but hate them because they are not of the world It is the condition of Christian hope that those who will be conformable to Christ in glory must be conformable to him in his sufferings Rules to withstand this dangerous temptation Rules to confirm the heart in the love of God notwithstanding outward crosses Rule 1. Labour to confirm thy self in the assurance of thy adoption which Satan would have thee stagger in as Christ here and if thou beest assured thou art Gods child it will draw on another assurance namely that God will be careful of thee to releeve thy want and deliver thee in thy distress whose love surpasseth the love of most natural Parents to their children as appeareth Isa 49.15 Can they that are evil give their children good things how much more shall God our heavenly Father give good things to his children which he seeth good for them Quest How shall I confirm my self in my adoption Ans By thy resemblance of God as the natural child is like his natural father In Adam we lost the excellent image of God let us labour now to find it restored in the second Adam Means to confirm to a mans self his own adoption three 1. Examine the life of God in thee who art naturally dead in sin the breath of this life is heavenly thoughts meditations affections the actions of this life are spiritual growth and increase in grace and vertue Christians duties in general and special the maintenance of this life is the hungring and thirsting alter the heavenly Mannah and water of life the Word of God the very being of it is our union and communion with God by his Spirit which is as the soul to the body 2 Examine the light of God in thee for he is light and in him is no darkness and if thou beest his child thou art one of the children of light As thou growest in understanding what the will of the Lord is so thou growest in this Image and art like unto Christ thy elder Brother upon whom the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and strength the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord doth rest Isa 11.2 whereas on the contrary these two things goe together as in the Heathens darkness of understanding and estranging from the life of God Ephes 4.18 Wouldst thou be confirmed in assurance that thou art Gods child then labour for this part of his image which is
by bad means to be suspected sundry instances page 201 Accusers mouths how to be stopped four rules page 19 Against false accusation seven rules page 17 Adversaries must bee overcome rather with patience than power page 72 Adoption called into question by Satan for present adversity five reasons page 58 Allegories must not be stuck too fast unto page 170 Christs Allegation of Scripture with some addition and change of words five reasons page 217 Angels called Gods Angels three reasons page 151 Angels tender keepers of the godly three reasons page 153 Concerning Angels three observations page 154 Angels come not in unto Christ before the Devil is gone from him four reasons page 258 Angels cannot bee in two places at once why ibid Angels have bodily shapes by way of 1. description 2 dispensation page 259 Angels minister unto Christ and how page 262 Christ was more Angry in the last temptation than in the two former four reasons page 214 Apochryphal books not authentical three reasons page 86 In the Ark were three things kept page 105 Assemblies in the Church of England holy meetings four reasons page 107 Avoid signifieth three things page 213 B BAd causes are thrust on by bad means four reasons page 2●0 Behold signifieth five things in Scripture page 257 Blame thy self sinning more than the devil page 139 Blessing more desirable than means page 90 Blind and bloody battels for the holy land more for the Popes profit than Gods glory page 115 Boasters resemble the Devil page 303 To get Bread out of stones three waies page 70 Gods way to get bread contrary to the devils in three things page 71 C TO live out of a lawful calling wicked three reasons page 94 Calling to bee well carried two rules page 97 Special Calling requires the practice of four vertues page 98 Christ was locally carried to the Pinacl● four reasons page 123 In Christ Satan would have cast down all mankind page 133 Satan would have us cast down our selves why page 139 Causes of God must affect us above our own five reasons page 214 Changes here good for us five reasons page 254 To be chearful in trials four motives page 10 Chair of Rome a frivolous pretence page 114 Christ subject to temptations notwithstanding his perfection of 1 nature 2 grace 3 power page 5 Christ chose to be tempted in the wildernesse four reasons page 13 Christs going into the wilderness no ground for Popish Eremites four reas page 15 Chri●t would be tempted four reas page 11 Christ by being tempted succoureth us four waies ibid. Christ after among wilde beasts than wicked men page 29 Christ not so rough with Satan as with some wicked men no or with his own disciples four reasons page 73 Christ revealeth himself onely to such at will make right use of his knowledge four reas page 75 Christ as able to defend us as himself from wilde beasts and Devils page 29 Christs priviledge above all Creatures in the ministery of Angels three reasons page 263 Christs combate exemplary as victorious page 15● Christians must he reasonable even to most unreasonable adversaries three reasons page 71 Church no competent Judge of Controversies page 158 Church hath no authority over Scripture four reasons page 159 Church of England not to bee separated from for some corruptions four conclusions page 108 Comforts for weak Christians in temptation four grounds page 5 Circuit of Satan is the compasse of the earth page 13 Comforts from Christ being tempted four grounds page 24 Comfort of the creatures a greater blessing than the creatures themselves page 90 Comfort in that Satan cannot overcome him who is not willing to be overcome page 139 Comforts from the custody of Angels page 154 Comforts of God bid for a time but at length shine out upon his children four reasons page 260 Bad Company worse than solitarinesse page 15 Comforts when temptations come thick on us three page 180 Compacts with Satan 1 open 2 secret page 204 Means to avoid Satans Compacts five page 206 Conference of Scriptures beateth out the true sense of them see instances at large page 165 Councils no competent Judges of controversies four reas page 160 In the inner Court of the Temple were four things of note page 104 D DAy of sicknesse and death most unfit to resist Satans temptations three reas page 42 Death enters the Soul by the windows of the Senses four real page 187 Devil is not driven away by holy water reliques nor the naming of Jesus page 7 Difference between the love of God as God and of God as a Father page ●9 Directions for the fortifying of faith three page 56 Distinction of 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 1 silly 2 ignorant 3 novel page 223 Doctors and Fathers no competent Judges of Scripture five reas page 160 Doing of what God commaundeth not alwaies a sign of true grace three reasons page 247 God draweth neer his Saluts in trouble three waies page 61 E EFfects of the spirits assured governance in troubles three page 12 Eminent persons must be so much the more watchful page 186 Ends and means must be tyed together page 179 Equivocation a Jesultical trick discovered page 150 Three Estates Satan especially would cast men from 1 of innocency 2 regeneration 3 office in Church or Common-wealth page 133 Evill men cleave one to another because all of them hate Christ page 103 Excellency cannot exempt a man from Satans temptations three reasons page 6 How to avoid Satans extremities three rules page 129 F FAmily-worship of God stands in five things page 111 Fasting the kinds 1 civil 2 religious 3 miraculous page 31 Fasting of Christ differeth from Popish in eight things page 32 Christ fasted his fast for four causes ibid Fast of Christ no longer or shorter than forty daies five reasons page 33 Forty nights of Christs fast expressed two reasons ibid Fasting a necessary Christian duty three reasons page 34 Motives to fasting six page 35 Faith his ablions about the means of safety if present three 30. if absent three ibid Overthrow of faith the aim of all Satans temptations five reas page 54 Faith must be so much the stronglier fortified as Satan more furiously assaileth it page 56 Faith his excellency in four things ibid The least Faith can pray for more page 57 Properties of Faith in want of means three page 64 Faith how it demeaneth it self towards the word of Gods providence three Rules page 94 Faithfulness in Promises enforced by five reasons page 198 G COmmon Gamesters live by no word of God page 97 Generality of obedience in four things page 250 Gifts of God differ from the devils in four things page 205 Glory of God must bee preferred above all the world six reas page 210 Motives to promote the glory of God five page 225 To glorify God in good measure means four page 213 God glorifieth himself in our tryals four waies page 254 Glory of the world falsly claimed by Satan for
●farre off whilst your Country shall be reaping the encrease and your self the comfort of those hopeful seeds which every one that know you acknowledge with gladness in you Thus humbly craving pardon for my boldness I commend this Book to your Worships acceptance which for the whole argument containing a plain unfolding of the most grounds and main pillars of our Religion is worthy your respect and your selves with your vertuous Ladies and hopeful Children together with all your studies and endeavours for the Church or Common-wealth to the rich blessing of God who fill your hearts with heavenly wisedome and preserve you both blameless till his appearing Amen Your Worships to be commanded THOMAS TAYLOR Watford July 20. AN EXPOSITION UPON S. Peters Sermon BEFORE CORNELIUS ACTS 10.34 c. Vers 34. Then Peter opened his mouth and said Of a truth I perceive that God is no accepter of persons 35 But in every nation hee that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted of him 36 Yee know the word which God hath sent to the children of Israel preaching peace by Jesus Christ which is Lord of all 37 Even the word which came through all Judea beginning in Galilee after the baptism which John Preached 38 To wit how God annointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power who went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed of the Devil for God was with him 39 And wee are witnesses of all things which hee did both in the land of the Jews and in Jerusalem whom they slew hanging him on a tree 40 Him God raised up the third day and caused that hee was shewed openly 41 Not to all the people but unto the witnesses chosen before of God even to us which did eat and drink with him after hee arose from the dead 42 And hee commanded us to preach unto the people and to testify that he is ordained of God a judge of quick and dead 43 To him also give all the Prophets witness that through his name all that beleeve in him shall receive remission of sins THe occasion of this worthy Sermon breathed not only by an Apostolike spirit but from such an instrument also as was worthily accounted a Pillar of the Church Gal. 2.9 is laid down in the former verse which containeth an abridgement of the most of the Chapter going before included in these three points 1 Cornelius his obedience in sending for Peter Then that is having so good a ground even a Commandement from God by the ministery of an Angel vers 5. I sent for thee to Joppa which was somewhat above thirty miles from Caesaria Immediately as soon as ever I had received the Commandement Cyprian without delay yea or deliberation which being dangerous divine things admit not of Secondly his kind entertainment of Peter to encourage him and thou hast well done to come Thirdly his preparation and readiness of himself and his to heat whatsoever God by Peters ministery shall enjoyn them Now therefore wee all hee would have that holy doctrin communicated to his family friends and kinsfolks here present before God the place of Gods pure worship is the place of his presence to hear with attention understanding affection and obedience for all these go to the hearing ear all things for that is sound obedience which is universal to one Commandement as well as another every one being of like authority and necessity that are commanded thee of God for Peter himself m●st bee confined within his Commission and speak onely what God commandeth neither are hearers bound to receive any thing else The Apostle Peter by this speech perceiving both the occasion and scope of their meeting as also the readiness and attention of his hearers addresseth himself to speech Then Peter opened his mouth and said The phrase of opening the mouth some think to bee but a more full kind of speech Pleon●smus as wee say I heard it with mine ears or I saw it with mine eies But wee must conceive it rather to bee fetched from the Hebrews who in this form of speech signifye not the uttering of any trivial or vulgar matter or in a slight or carelesse manner but the relation of some excellent matter of great moment and that in grave and serious manner and not without premeditation and preparation such as is fit to attend things of worth and weight Thus is it used Psal 78.2 I will open my mouth in a Parable I will declare sentences of Old Job 33.1 Behold I have opened my mouth my tongue hath spoken in my mouth my words are in the uprightness of my heart and my lips shall speak pure knowledge Yea our Lord Jesus himself when hee begun his most heavenly Sermon on the Mount Matth. 5.2 is said to open his mouth and say Whence 1 wee have the Doctrin in the Sermon following commended unto us to be for the matter of it grave and high and neerly concerning the salvation of men wherein are laid down the main grounds of all Religion and whatsoever wee are to beleeve concerning Christ unto salvation as wee shall see when wee come to open the several points 2 Wee are secretly incited that seeing the Holy Ghost hath opened the mouth of such a worthy instrument wee are also to open our ears yea our hearts to let in the matter following that as it proceeded out of the treasury of a good and sanctified heart so wee also may hide it in good hearts as in good treasures to bring it forth as our needs and occasions shall require 3 Ministers must come with their mouthes open and not onely not to be dumb dogs which cannot or seal up their lips and will not protest against the sins of the times but also must have care to speak the words of wisdom judgement sobriety for if the holy men of God Prophets Apostles nor the Son of God himself did not preach without preparation and due consideration both of what how and to whom they spake how much more should ordinary ministers use all diligence in fitting themselves to speak from God and for God and even as God himself would speak to his people 4 Every Christian may hence also take up his duty namely that hee never open his mouth but to edification For it is attributed to every iust man that his mouth speaketh wisdome and his tongue talketh of judgement Psa 37.30 he judgeth of his speeches before he let them pass the doo● of his lips and of the vertuous woman it is said Shee openeth her mouth with wisdome and the law of grace is in her tongue Prov. 31.26 Now the Sermon following consisteth of three parts The parts of the Sermon three The first is an entrance or preface in the two first verses 34 35. 2 The Proposition or Narration that Jesus Christ was the Messias now exhibited in the flesh and Lord of all vers 36. 3 A confirmation of that narration partly from the Apostles and
of God which is the curse of the Law and not onely Ceremonially and typically as they were This the Apostle Paul teacheth Gal. 3.13 that Christ was not onely dead but made a curse for us his reason is because hee dyed on a tree and therefore are wee admonished Phil. 2.8 to consider not only that Christ was obedient unto the death but to the death of the Cross for any other death had not so much concerned us Fourthly This death which so much concerned all the Church of the Jews and Gentiles must not bee obscure and therefore the Lord would not have Christ to dye in a tumult or in secret but most conspicuously and apparently at Jerusalem the great City of the Jews but tributary to the Romans as it were upon the Theatre of the World at a solemn feast when all the Males out of all quarters must appear before the Lord upon a Cross high erected that all might see him and on the Cross himself proclaimed King of the Jewes in three several Langages the Latine Greek and Hebrew that all sorts of men might come to the knowledge of it and further because in his death standeth our life hee must bee thus lifted up that all men might see him certainly dead and that he dyed not in shew and appearance only but in deed and in truth really and perfectly for which cause also our Apostle doubleth his affirmation they slew him and hanged him on a tree which most necessary ground of Faith and Religion Satan hath mightily by many Hereticks sought to overthrow the Turks at this day are held off from the faith in this Messiah by that Diabolical suggestion that not Christ himself but Simon the Cyrenian was miraculously crucified in his stead And therefore because the assurance of the death it self assureth us more fully of all the fruits and benefits of it the Scripture is careful so pregnantly to confirm it as that it cannot be denied not only that he was in the sight of a number of thousands dead on the Crosse but by his three days burial by the peircing of his side out of which came water and bloud by which was manifest that the very Call of his heart was peirced by the confession of his very enemies who would beleeve nothing but their own sences and lastly by the fact of the Souldiers who whereas they hastened the death of the Theeves by breaking their leggs they broke not his because the text saith they saw that he was dead already The fourth point is the use of Christs Crucifying First in Christ on the Crosse take a full view of the cursednesse and execration of sin and consequently of thine own wretchednesse both in regard of thy wicked nature and cursed practices every sin being so loathsome and odious in the eyes of God as the least could never be put away but by such an ignominious death of the Son of God himself If thou lookest at sin in thy self or in thy sufferings yea or in the sufferings of the damned in Hell it will seem but a slight thing but behold God comming down from Heaven and him that thought it no robbery to bee equal to his Father in glory taking flesh in that flesh abasing himself to the death of the Crosse on that Crosse sustaining the whole wrath of his Father and so becoming accursed for it and thou shalt see it in the native face of it And indeed this one consideration setteth a more ugly face upon sin than the Law possibly can for that sheweth our sins to bee a knife to stab our selves withall The most ugly visage of sin that can be but this to be the very spear that went to Christs heart which is the most odious apprehension in the world all the sin that ever was committed on the earth could not bring a man so low suppose one man had committed them all as the least sin of the elect brought the Son of God seeing he that falleth lowest falleth but from one degree in earth to another but Christ falleth from the glory of Heaven into the very sorrows of Hell whosoever thou art then that makest light account of sin and pleadest that God is merciful look a little in this glasse wherein behold Gods Justice and sins desert in the Fathers just indignation against his wel-beloved Son whom nothing but the cursed death of his only Son in whom he professed himself well pleased could appease Secondly seeing all the knowledge of Christ profitable to salvation is of Christ crucified let us desire to know nothing in comparison but Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 seeing such a great Apostle as Paul was desired to know nothing else Now to come to the distinct knowledge of it we must consider these three points 1 The vertue and power of this death in it self 2 The application of it unto our selves 3 The fruits which must appear in us by such application For the first Look upon this death of the Son of God not as of another dead man neither think or speak of it as of the death of another ordinary felon executed but as of a death which slew all the sins of all the beleevers in the world and as a destroyer of all destroyers a death wherein was more power than in all the lives of all Angels and Men that ever were or shall bee More power in Christs death than in the lives of all men and Angels yea such a death as hath life in it quickning all the deaths of all that have benefit by it Here we have a mighty Sampson bearing away the gates of his enemies by death killing death by suffering his Fathers wrath overcoming it by entring into the Grave opening it for all beleevers by his Bloud shedding upon the Crosse reconciling all things Col. 1.20 never was there such an active suffering of any man which tormented and crucified the Devils themselves when the Devils instruments were tormenting and crucifying him it is peerlesse and unmatchable no Martyr ever thus suffered though Popish doctrin would match as Corrivals some of their Saints sufferings with it the most faithful Martyrs suffered but dissolution of soul and body but Christ besides suffered the whole Wrath of God due to mans sin they suffered in way of Christian duty and service but he to make a sacrifice of expiation of sin they having their sins removed and taken off from them but he bare all theirs and all beleevers sins in his body upon the tree 1 Pet. 2.24 Howsoever therefore Humane wisdom stumbleth at this death of Christ yet must we by the eye of faith labour to espy glory in ignominy esteem of the Crosse as an honourable Chariot and rejoyce in a triumph made as the Jews scoff by an hanged man thus shall we see the foolishness of God wiser than man and the weakness of God stronger than man thus also shall we imitate the holy men of God who looking back to the Cross of Christ could
things are by communication the more increased for wee read not of any man that laid out his Tallent but to increase and as the light of the Sun is never a whit impaired by communicating it self to the whole world or as hee that lighteth one candle of another dimisheth not in either but increaseth the light so is it in the light of the Sun of Righteousnesse much more and in the kindling of these heavenly sparkles whose property is to diffuse themselves as fire and the further they spread the greater and brighter is the flame 3 The third fruit or effect of Faith is an undaunted confession of it Rom. 10.10 With the heart wee beleeve to justification and with the mouth we confesse to salvation For where faith is in the heart it will bee also in the mouth The spirit of Faith and the speech of Faith are undivided as 2 Cor. 4.13 And because wee have the same spirit of Faith according to that which was written I beleeved and therefore I spake even so wee beleeve and therefore also wee speak Now there bee three actions of Faith which help forward this free confession 1 It maketh a man bold in a good cause Act. 5.29 Peter being full of faith with a bold spirit told the Council that had the power of Life and Death in their hands and himself in their power wee ought rather to obey God than you 2 Faith keepeth a man in a preparedness to suffer by leading him along in the denial of himself and hereof wee have a notable example in Paul Act. 21.13 who professed how ready hee was not onely to bee bound but to dye also at Jerusalem if God called him thereunto 3 It worketh joy yea much rejoycing in the heart in the suffering for Christ and a good cause Rom. 5.3 after the Apostle had laid down the justification of faith as a ground hee saith that wee then rejoyce in tribulation and that they did so indeed is plain Act. 5.41 They departed from the Council rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for his name hence could they sing Psalm● at mid-night in the dungeon and fetters and hence could the Martyrs imbrace the fire kiss the stake and testify such joy in the flames as all men might acknowledge the truth of the speech of our Saviour Your joy shall no man take away from you no Tyrant no tormentor nor any kind of torment The fourth and last fruit or work of faith is that wheresoever sound faith is it is most diligent in preserving yea and increasing of it self The most covetous man is not more complaining nor gathering than the beleever who is ever complaining of want of Faith or of the weaknesse of it Mar. 9.24 and knowing the want of it to bee so dangerous and hurtful as without which hee wanteth Christ himself as also that the weaknesse of it depriveth him of much comfort and many goods things for a man of weak estate must needs want many rich commoditys and sweet comforts which the wealthy enjoy in abundance Therefore hee useth all good means to increase his stock as 1 Hee is much in hearing reading and meditating in the word because he knoweth Means to increase the stock of faith faith commeth by hearing and every thing is preserved and nourished by that whereof it is begotten 2 Hee is much in godly talk and Christian conference by which as the fire by the bellows so is the grace of God blown and stirred up in him 3 Because hee seeth how without prayer both his own but especially Christs his faith is as ready to fail as Peters was Luk. 22.32 hee is much in prayer and with the Father of the Childe cryeth with tears often Lord I beleeve help my unbeleef Mark 9.24 and with the Disciples Lord increase our Faith Luke 17.5 And these are the marks by which the soundness and currence of Faith as by a touchstone may bee tryed and distinguished from all that false and counterfeit Faith which is so stiring in the World and wherby most men are lamentably deceived The use of this Doctrin is 1 To stir up men to examine and by these notes to prove themselves whether they are in the Faith or no to try their faith of what kinde it is least in the end they find that they have leaned upon a staffe of reed By which examination I fear it will bee too evidently seen that these are the last daies wherein the Sonne of man shall come and scarcely find faith upon the face of the earth Sure it is that the common faith of men is neither thus 1 Founded 2 Nor qualified The most common faith of men is not thus qualified 3 Nor attended 4 Nor thus fruitful as will briefly appear in the particulars First Every man saith he hath Faith but whence had hee it it was never begotten by the Word he never cared for that that was ever as a sixt finger and superfluity unto him It was never founded in repentance nor dwelleth with Humility for most men never saw change in themselves they have loved God and beleeved in Christ ever since they can remember It was never cherished with the duties of prayer and invocation they could never pray in all their lives except after the Minister or by set forms but the spirit of prayer never dwelt there It was never conflicted with unbeleef they wonder what that should bee or that any man should not ever beleeve so as indeed here is no character of the faith of the Elect and nothing all this while but a voice and very carkase of Faith 2 Others say they beleeve and brag of a saving faith in Christ but they feed a bare fancy for they could never beleeve God for lesser things they want the faith of Gods providence even for meat and drink which is apparent in that they can use wicked and unwarrantable means for them their strong faith they brag of waiteth not for Gods provision but will shift for it self by hook and by crook it holdeth not the heart to patient bearing of the Cross but flingeth out in distempers it putteth not forth in inferiour businesses to give directions to the particular actions of life and therefore seeing this faith faileth in lesser and smaller things how can it bee sound in the greatest of all 3 Others boast of a sound faith which were it so it would lay hold upon the promise and beleeve for themselves and their seed but this it doth not for many who for themselves would rest in the providence of God upon the good and warrantable m●●●s will yet indanger themselves for their children And hence is it that many who have lived conscionably in single estate have remitted much of their care and fear in their married condition and come short of their former uprightnesse and why is this else but that they conceive not the Lord to bee all sufficient for them and theirs Gen. 17.1 4 Others there
Family the next of our Kindred and therefore of right belongeth to him to recover our weak estate as was figured in that Law Levit. 25.25 If thy brother be impoverished and sell his possession then his redeemer shall come even his near kinsman and buy out that which his brother sold 3 He only was deputed of God to derive life and grace into us as the head into the members and therefore most meet it is that whosoever would suck and draw of his fulnesse should beleeve in his name Now from these words we learn two instructions 1 What is the chief thing which every Christian must strive to obtain while hee liveth in his world namely remission of sins 2 What a his estate and condition that hath attained it The chief duty of every Christian while he is in this world For the first it is grounded in the text because howsoever rem●ssion of sins is here only named yet in it are included all the other gracious mercies of God not only all deliverances and freedom from the evils and punishments that attend upon sin but even all our redemption and salvation with the means of it and blessings accompanying the same And indeed this is the sum or epitome of all Gods mercy in which the Lord crowneth his Saints with compassion a mercy which reacheth up to heaven and draweth them out of the most miserable thing in all the world which is to lye under the curse and danger of sin and consequently under the endlesse displeasure of the Almighty Which point being even as the one thing necessary to be known and attained I will stand a little longer upon it hoping to spend my time well in setting down these five points 1 The necessity of remission of sins 2 The benefits of it 3 The Letters of it 4 The helpes to it 5 The companions of it by which as by so many notes we may know we have it and so we will adde the use of the whole doctrin 1 Necessity of remission of sins in three points First the necessity of it will appear if wee consider 1 The multitude and abundance of our sins which are to bee remitted being for number as our hairs and as the sand of the Sea which is numberlesse which cannot bee other seeing we drink in sin as the Fish doth water Job 15.16 that is incessantly for the Fish ceasing to drink in water ceaseth to live neither can we cease to sin till we cease to live Nay seeing our very best actions hold no correspondence with the Law of God and in strict justice are no better than so many sins this consideration exceedingly multiplieth our sins in that not only in fayling in but in doing of our duties wee sin incessantly against our God 2 If we look upon the danger of sin we shall better see the necessity of remission It is a filthy Leprosie which infecteth the body and soul the thoughts speeches and actions it maketh a man a loathsome creature in the eyes of God it maketh God our enemy who is the fountain of life and whose lightsome countenance is better than life yea it maketh God depart from his Creature and destroy the works of his own fingers it layeth the sinner open and naked to all the wrath of God to all the Curses of the Law in this life and in the life to come It setteth him as a butt against whom the Lord in anger shooteth out of his quiver all the arrows of his displeasure It is the only thing which unremitted maketh the sinner absolutely unhappy and every way most accursed Neither doth the whole heap of sin only make the sinner so miserable but any one sin even the least unpardoned would for ever hold the sinner under perdition And more all the men that ever were or shall be in the world were never able to rise from under the burthen of one sin if it were imputed unto them and yet the most of the world see no part of this danger of sin and therefore no such necessity of the remission of it 3 Consider thy own insufficiency if thou hadst the strength and power of all men and Angels to satisfie for the least sin and if we cannot satisfie for any what remaineth but a fearful perdition from the Lord and from the glory of his power if all be not remitted In one word the sinner who hath not got his discharge sealed is without all safety in his life all sound comfort in his death and at the Judgement Day shall have the sentence of everlasting torment with the Devil and his Angels awarded him before men and Angels The second point is the benefits issuing from it and these are Benefits flowing from remission of sin four 1 Peace of conscience an immediat fruit of our justification by faith and reconciliation with God Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God and it was ordinary with our Saviour to joyn them together as Luk 7.47 Thy sins are forgiven thee goe in peace This benefit the most know not what it meaneth but he that hath the feeling of the wrath of God against his sin and seeth nothing but an angry face of God burning like a consuming fire hee that is so straitned as hee can think no other thing but that the Lord in his just judgement hath cast him quite away this man as of all other torments that can be suffered in the world he lyeth under the greatest so nothing in the earth can content or comfort him but only the sence and perswasion of Gods favour Now the conditions of peace with his God are the most joyful tidings in all the world as is the unexpected news of a Pardon to a Malefactor ready to execution for high Treason against his Prince 2 The right and possession also of life everlasting For if wee bee estated unto life eternal by our justification and righteousnesse before God then are we so also by remission of sins because these two are confounded in the Scriptures and are the same Whence it is that the Apostle Rom. 4.7 being to prove the point of justification of a sinner before God without the works of the Law citeth the text Psal 32.1 Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered And further If our whole redemption put us in possession of everlasting happinesse so doth also remission of sin seeing the Apostle in sundry places confoundeth these two and expoundeth one by the other Ephes 1.7 By whom we have redemption through his bloud even the forgivenesse of our sins Col. 1.14 In whom we have redemption through his bloud that is the forgivenesse of sins And it must needs follow that if they who are justified and sanctified are also glorified then they have attained the beginnings of their glory who have attained remission of sins 3 The benefit of Christs intercession which meriteth all our good for hee prayeth not for the world but those that
marvail if the members look thus black when the Sun looketh upon them seeing their Head Christ himself was rejected because they saw and judged him to bee plagued and smitten of God Isa 53.4 But wee must look beyond all these as the Lord himself doth who in his judgement goeth beyond the out-side and pronounceth sentence according to the grace which himself worketh within Let us imitate our Lord Jesus who notwithstanding all the infirmities yea and deformities of his Church pronounceth of her that shee is all fair and no spot is in her not because there are none but because all are covered and none are reckoned and imputed unto her yea let us remember that the pure and holy Spirit of God is contented notwithstanding much blackness to take up his lodging in those hearts where hee findeth reigning sin dispossessed Now how far are they from the mind and judgement of this blessed Father Son and Spirit who have nimble eyes to spy out every infirmity of Gods Children to blaze them nay rather than they will not accuse and slander them can of themselves coin raise up and impute unto them that whereof they are most innocent Assuredly these are of neer kindred to the Devil who is the accuser of the brethren The glory of God in his children turned into shame And surely were Christ on earth again even this most innocent Lamb of God should not want accusers wherein are so many of Cains constitution who hate their brethren because their works are good and so many Sons of men who seek to turn the glory of God in his Children into shame Alas religion is at a low ebbe already and not so reckoned of as it should bee by the forwardest and yet so malitious is the Devil in his instruments as unless this smoaking flax also bee quenched wee can see nor hear of any hope or treaty of peace the beauty of Gods people goeth disgraced under titles of niceness preciseness purity holy brotherhood and the like To go ordinarily to Sermons is to bee a Sermon-munger not to swear is the next way for a man not to bee trusted and except a man bee as black and deformed as either the Devil is or can make him by Drinking Swearing Gaming Sabbath-breaking and casting off all care of Civil Honesty as well as godliness hee may sit alone well enough hee hath a great many Neighbours that care but a little for his company What can make it more evidently appear that numbers there are in this age who never knew and without Gods infinite mercy in their timely conversion are never like to know what the blessednesse of remission of sin meaneth neither in others nor yet in themselves Vse 2. Let no man bee discouraged in the pure waies of God but walk on without weariness or faintness A strong motive to hold on in well-doing seeing that whatsoever the blinde world may deem to the contrary thou who art a beleever in the name of Christ hast blessedness between thy hands for thy sins are remitted thou must go in peace And this happinesse by the grace wherein thou standest is surer than that of nature which Adam had in his innocency that was lost because it was in his own keeping this is seated in the unchangeable favour of God by whose mighty power thou shalt bee preserved to the full fruition of it Get faith in thy heart and thou shalt dea●ly behold thy happiness if all the World should set it self to make thee miserable Get faith into thy soul and thou shalt think him only happy whom God so esteemeth although it be the misery of the world to place happiness only in misery Get assurance of faith to clasp the sure promise and word of God and thou shalt possess in misery felicity in sorrow joy in trouble peace in nothing all things and in death it self life eternal An Alphabetical Table to lead the Reader more easily unto the things contained in this Exposition A. A Basement of Christ is the Christians advancement 335 A bundle of Popish blasphemies 405 Account must bee given to God of all things done by us and received of us 381 Administration of Judgement laid upon the Son for sundry reasons 375 Afflictions though lingring no sign of Gods hatred 356 Agreement of the life of the Saints upon earth with the life of the Saints in Heaven 350 All diligence must be given to make our pardon of sin sure unto our selves 414 Anointing of three sorts of persons what it signified 308 Antiquity of the Gospel and of our religion 298 Apostles peculiar witnesses of Christ and why 362 A proof by induction that all the Prophets bear witnesse unto Christ 388 Attendants and companions of faith four 396 A strong motive to hold on in wel-doing 417 B BAptisme often put for doctrin 303 Beleevers are fellow servants under one Lord. 302 Beleevers may know they have faith by four marks 395 Beleevers may and must know the pardon of their own sins 409 Benefits flowing from remission of sin four 407 Better to goe to Heaven alone than to Hell with company 411 C. CAre of Christians must bee to suffer as Christians 331 Care must be had of our receits and expences because we must bee countable for them 383 Chief duty of every Christian whilst hee is in this world 406 Children of God delayed often but not denied in their suits 355 Christ acknowledged our Lord by four practises 301 Christ already come proved 307 Christ his life not monastical 315 Christ preached to the Israelites two ways 297 Christ first preached to the children of Israel for three reasons ibid. Christ Lord of all two ways 299 Christ both a Lord and a Servant how 300 Christ is not a Jesus but to whom he is a Lord. ibid. Christ no sooner received gifts and calling but did good with them for our example 311 Christ seasonably preached after Johns Baptisme that is Johns doctrin of repentance 305 Christ proved the only Messiah because he was Jesus of Nazareth 306 Christ his Deity proved by his glorious resurrection 339 Christ by dying offereth and by rising applyeth his one only sacrifice 341 Christ went about doing good two way 311 Christ sent of his Father and came 〈◊〉 before he was sent 3●7 Christ his righteousnesse notably witnessed 328 Christ his two natures lively set out ibid. Christ reputed an arch-traytor in his life and death 332 Christ submitted to the l●west estate of death reas five 337 Christ the Lamb slain from the beginning how 341 Christ hath powerfully trodden Satan under his feet and under our feet how 323 Christ rose early in the morning and what we learn thence 354 Christ in respect of himself needeth not any witnesses and yet hee useth them 362 Christ must bee the matter of all our preaching 373 Christians must partake of Christs annointing 309 Christians must become Kings Priests and Prophets 310 Christians must imitate Christ in doing good 316 Chosen witnesses of
not gotten with greatness but with goodness the former cannot force or compel affections the latter sweetly draws and allures them the former may procure flattery and applause the latter only yeeldeth true honour and sound comfort Might I adde but one grain to your godly care by this little direction with which I offer my most inward affections I have my expectation I know well your Honours sufficiency even in this kinde above many of my profession to furnish your self with Divine directions if your leisure or weighty affairs would permit you to set them down yet I assure my self your Honour will not refuse the help of such as are at more leisure to gather them and humbly offer them unto your hand I was also more presumptuous to offer these lines unto your view because I conceived that the rules of Christian prudence and circumspection could not bee more fitly directed nor bee better welcome than to so prudent and circumspect a personage In which assurance I rest commending your Honours further happiness and prosperity to him who is an exceeding great reward abundantly able to fill your heart with grace to crown your daies with blessing and finish them with comfort life and immortality 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Your Honours to be commanded THO. TAYLOR Circumspect Walking EPHES. 5.15 Take heed therefore that ye walk Circumspectly not as fools but as wise CHAP. I. The ground of the ensuing Treatise THe Apostle in the former words had under a comparison of Light and Darkness excited the Ephesians to holy conversation and to hate such obscene and filthy courses as were found with the Workers of darkness Now he speaks in plain terms that which before be infolded in comparisons Seeing ye are light and in the light wherein all things are manifest see ye walk circumspectly c. In which words are First A duty propounded Circumspect walking which in the first word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is straightly charged upon every Christian Secondly The expounding of that duty not as fools but as wise And the words run as if the holy Apostle had in other terms said thus You that are beleevers sons of the light ought as by your light to check and controle yea and discover other mens sins and corruptions so also to be as unblameable yea and lightsome in your selves as possibly may be and therefore take heed of your own walking and see it be circumspect Briefly thus Every Christian man must walk warily and circumspectly or Strict and accurate walking not warranted onely but necessarily inforced in the scriptures the course of Christianity must be a circumspect walking For so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies an accurate and a strickt walking or an exquisite course So it is used Luke 1.3 It seemed good to me when I had accurately searched all things And Mat. 2.8 Herod charged the wise men thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 search exquisitively and most diligently for the Babe And Act. 22. v. 3. Paul professeth he was brought up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the exact manner of the Law CHAP. II. What Circumspect Walking is and wherein it consisteth OUt of which so substantial a ground it shall be worth our labour to inquire what this Circumspect Walking is for we may not conceive it as any carnal craft and policy by which a man is wary to save his goods outward estate as many crafty heads and worldlings cast about and continually contrive with all wariness to save themselves and their profits and he must rise early that can get the better of them in any bargain Neither is this Circumspection any such policy and wariness in matters of Religion as relinguisheth any good duty to which it hath calling or any practice of holiness for outward profits and commodity or to preserve outward peace and pleasures as many crafty and deceitful Protestants that are so circumspect as they will profess a Religion which shall cost them nothing Neither is this Circumspection in any thing contrary or cross to that dove-like simplicity and Christian innocency What it is which is the ornament of holy profession But is a carefull and exact proceeding in the ways of God according to the rules of God even as a work-man most exactly fitteth his work by the level and rule and departs not from it And in what Now to this Circumspection are four things required To circumspect walking four things required 1. A knowledge of the right way which is as the light guiding him to set every foot safely For let a man be never so circumspect and wary if he be in the night without a light and without a guide he can never walk securely and safe The Word is the Lanthorn and the Commandement is the light And when wisdom enters into the heart and knowledge delighteth the soul then shall counsel preserve thee and understanding shall keep thee and deliver thee from the evil way Prov. 2.11 12. 2. A diligent watch and care to keep from all extremities to turn neither to the right hand nor to the left For it is hard to keep a mean we being very propense to extreams Satan cares not so he can conquer us whether it be by curiosity or by carelesness whether he can keep us out of the Church or cast us out by our own conceits whether he can keep us so cold as no good thing greatly affects us or whether he can make us boil over with unbridled zeal that because we cannot have all the good we would we will refuse a great deal of good we might have A Circumspect Christian will distinguish good from evil and not refuse good for evil for that is an extremity 3 An holy jealousie and suspicion lest the heart be deceived through the deceitfulness of sin The most simple-hearted Christian is a most wary man that is of his own hearts slipperiness suspecting himself in all thing● fearing in all things lest hee should offend God He knoweth sin lies in ambush and suspects the insinuations of it As he that is very circumspect for the World is most suspicious of others lest they over-reach and beguile him So one that is most circumspect for heaven doth more suspect himself than any other 4 A Provident Walking by which a man is able to foresee future danger and evils to prevent them and provide for such things as may best bestead him in the way Thus Solomon speaks of the circumspect and prudent Christian that he forsees the Plague and hides himself and learns of the Emmet to provide in Summer for Winter This property of Circumspection we see in the wise Virgins that prepared Oyl in time All these are inseparable properties of a provident and circumspect walking Which is injoyned us in sundry other places of scripture as Prov. 4.26 Ponder the path of thy feet and let all thy ways be ordered aright Matth. 10.16 Be wise as Serpents This Serpentine wisdom is nothing else but
their conscience can dispense with covetousness unbridled anger wantonness filthy speeches c. But if Gods word bee the same so must the conscience and hee that serves God as Paul did in Pure Conscience 2 Tim. 1.3 will do so at all times in all places and things and will avoid sin in his Closet as much as in most publike meetings yea small sins as well as great 5 Keep diligently the goodness and purity of conscience by two things 5 It is great wisdome to keep things well as to purchase th●●● therefore wee must if wee would walk wisely bee as careful to keep good consciences as to obtain them and thereunto observe two things 1 Daily take away matter of accusation which is sin by repentance 2 Rather displease all men than thine own conscience thy friends thy family thy rulers nay thy own self before thy conscience So did Daniel and his fellowes So did Cyprian as Augustine relates it when the Emperor in the way to his execution said Now I give thee space to consider whether thou wilt obey mee in casting a grain into the fire or bee thus miserably slain Nay saith hee In retam sancta deliberatio non habet locum there needs no deliberation in this case The like wee read in the History of France in the year 1572. presently after that tragical and perfidious slaughter massacre of so many thousands of Gods Saints by treacherous Papists Charls the ninth King of France called the Prince of Condo and proposed to him this choice Either to go to Mass or to die presently or to suffer perpetual imprisonment His noble answer was that by Gods help hee would never chuse the first and for either of the two latter her left to the Kings pleasure and Gods providence Thus a good conscience makes a good choice for it self chusing any thing rather than to offend God CHAP. X. Rules of Wisdome concerning the Affections THe fifth sort of rules for the inner man concerneth the Affections Rules concerning the affections 1 Give God the chief affections and hath these particulars 1 Delight thy self in the Lord and make him thy chief joy Psalm 37.4 For the object of our joy must not bee carnal but the Lord himself apprehending him as Gen. 17.1 El shaddi All-mighty to save All-sufficient to supply and a large portion our Sun our Shield Grace and Glory Psalm 84. Solomon having tried his heart with all other delights came at last to a recantation and so do all Gods children and say Lord lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us Psalm 4. 2 Labour to affect all other things in God and for God nothing like him 2 Affect all other things in God and for God much less above him or against him Psalm 34.8 Taste and see how good God is that is in all things labour to finde the sweetness of God in all his creatures and all his actions A wise man will not insist in the gift but look to the giver whose love hee prizeth more than the token of it If any affection make us unfit to pray or any way thrust us from God it is carnal 3 Let us labour to get our affections more to Heaven than earth 3 Fix them more upon Heavenly things than earthly Matth. 6.24 Col. 3.2 Set your affections on things which are above and not on things which are on earth where wee see plainly that these two cannot both have the affections set on them no more than two Masters served at once as also that it is not enough to affect heavenly things but also with chief affection and care in the first place Hence is that ordinary rule Verse 33. That spiritual things must bee affected and asked simply being simply good but temporal with limitation as being but conditionally good 4 Fear the evil of sin more than the evil of punishment 4 Fear evil of sin more than of suffering because the evil of sin is more evil Sin is simply evil and so is nothing else no not the punishment of it A wise man should rather chuse Hell than Gods offence for there is nothing but sin which God hateth and wee ought to hate nothing so much sin directly resisteth Gods glory but punishment makes for it in the manifestation of his justice 5 Bee affectionate one in the case and condition of another 5 Commiserate the afflicted estate of our brethren In case of spiritual misery sin weakness humane frailty Bee tender hearted one to another even as God for Christs sake forgave you Eph. 4.32 So Col. 3.12 Now Beloved as the Elect of God put on tender mercy kindness c one to another And in the temporal miseries of our brethren put on bowels of compassion bee not without natural affection forget not Josephs affliction Amos 6.6 but lend give cloath feed protect from violence and turn not thine eyes from thine own flesh The phrase Bowels of mercy shews that all our mercy must bee from within even from the tender compassions of the estate of our brother And the same in Isa 58.10 That wee pour out our souls to the needy that is our souls must first bee merciful and then our mercies will bee plentiful which is noted in the word Pouring CHAP. XI Rules of Wisdome for the outward man and first concerning his Calling NOw wee come to such rules of Wisdome as whereby the outward man is to bee ordered that wee may walk both toward our selves and others not as unwise but as wise and that by the Wisdome which is from above And these rules concern 1 His Calling 2 His Estate 3 His words 4 His actions Rules for the special calling 1 Live in a lawfull Calling Directions to walk wisely in his course and calling are these 1 Seeing the Calling is a part of Christian obedience and duty to God a Christian may neither live out a Calling nor in any Calling not warranted by Gods word For if God set us in our Callings hee promiseth both to bee with us in them and to give us good success and to help us against the tediousness of them Jos 1.8 Therefore sanctifie thy Calling and every part thereof 1 Tim. 4.5 1 Shew all good faithfulness in it by the Word and Prayer 2 In the whole exercise of our Calling wee must shew all good faithfulness 1 To God Hab. 1.16 Deut. 8.18 2 To our selves 1 To God by depending on him who hath made our Calling a chief means of our maintenance and not sacrificing to our own Nets For it is the Lord that gives power to get substance 2 To our selves by walking diligently and abiding in our Calling that wee may eat our own bread and provide for our selves and ours and give to him that needeth Eph. 4.28 For by idle and inordinate living through the neglect of the Vocation by Gods just judgement men fall into the depth of sin Drunkenness Gaming Whoredome Theeving and nothing
comes amiss to an idle person Besides discredit bad report and poverty come as an armed man upon such a one Prov. 6.11 3 To others 3 To others whether wee bee Masters or servants as knowing that in our Calling wee are to practise most Christian duties as love to our brethren patience truth fidelity uprightness as being ever under Gods eye 3 Be not busie in other mens Callings 3 Another point of Wisdome in our Callings is not to meddle with other mens business but follow our own close 1 Thes 4.11 Study to be quiet and to do your own business And every where the Apostle reproves busie bodies who going beyond their own bounds thrust their sickle into every mans harvest and being out of their own places and business intermeddle with that which no way concerns them And these are disturbers of peace and civil tranquillity kindling and blowing up contentions for lack of other work The same rule is for women also that they bee not gadders but house-keepers Tit. 2.5 4 In earthly business carry an Heavenly minde Phil. 3.20 4 In all earthly business study to carry an heavenly minde A Christian while hee converseth in earth must have his conversation in Heaven And know that in all the ways of this present life hee ought never to step out of the way to eternal life Neither shall a man bee a loser by this course seeing wee have an express promise that if wee seek Gods Kingdome first and principally these outward things should so far as they are needful for us without such carking care bee cast upon us 5 Intend most the most necessary duties of them 5 As all duties of the Calling must bee profitable in themselves and for the publike good so the most profitable must bee most intended and specially performed A Minister must read the Word but must apply himself more to Preaching as being more necessary A Magistrate must execute Justice upon transgressors of mens Laws but especially against open transgressors of Gods Law Masters of families must provide for the bodies and health of their family but especially for the good and salvation of their souls CHAP. XII Rules of Wisdome concerning a mans estate and first for adversity THe rules of Wisdome concerning a Christian mans estate are these One general Rule for all estates is to think the present estate best for thee First General Secondly Special The general rule for all estates is this Bee prepared for any estate contented in every estate and assure thy self the present estate whatsoever it is is best for thee though not ever in thy sense yet in Gods gracious and wise ordering of it This lesson the Apostle Paul had well learned Phil. 4.11 12. I can want and abound I can bee full and hungry I have learned in all estates to bee contented The special rules are either for prosperity or for adversity Rules for affliction Concerning adversity and afflictions these are the rules of Christian wisdome 1 Consider thou art not placed here in the world by God 1 God may as well be injoyed in Adversity as Prosperity to injoy the pleasures of the World but to injoy God which thou mayest do as well in affliction as in prosperity and to cleave to him in his service looking for nothing but afflictions as a Pilgrim going to thy Country the way whereunto lyeth through afflictions This ground not laid men count troubles a strange thing 1 Pet. 4.11 and start at the mention of them as the Apostles Joh. 11.8 when they heard Christ speaking of going into Jury where the Jews had lately sought to stone him And note it to bee a corruption of the heart to bee more grieved for thine own troubles than the troubles of the Church for private than publick evils 2 Lay up strength and comforts aforehand As first Humility 2 Lay up strength and comfort aforehand to over-master and tame the pride and rebellion of our hearts and to bring in contentedness to sweeten our troubles and our labour will be well spent for if wee can relish the hardest part of our life our whole life else will assuredly bee more sweet and joyful 2 Grow up in the knowledge of God which will make thee rise up in much comfort and will bring in comfort against that confused heaviness distrust and dangerous affections and passions which else in trouble might beat us down and off him 3 Get assurance of faith which will sweetly warm the heart in the sense of Gods love in Jesus Christ The fruit of which will bee first To inable us to trust our selves with God in any estate and bee assured the Lord is with us in fire and water in the midst of the Valley of the shadow of Death Secondly to depend on him for strength Psal 23.4 for howsoever Satan would make us beleeve our affliction is greater than it is or wee are for it yet wee shall assure our hearts that the Lord hath measured it out for our strength and not above Thridly 1 Cor. 10.13 to wait upon him for a good issue and seasonable deliverance who hath promised to turn it to the best This shall keep us from fainting distrust and despair Rom. 8.28 3 In all evils of punishment take occasion to set upon the evil of sin 3 In evils of punishment to set upon evil of sin and revenge upon that complain of it to God and men murmure and grudge at nothing else If affliction bee sharper than ordinary it is sure some sin or lust addes a sting unto it But this rule mortifies sin and unruly passions and will weaken the heart and make a man say with the Church Mic. 7.9 I will bear the wrath of the Lord because I have sinned 4 Make them no heavier than God maketh them by impatience 4 Make them no heavier th●n God hath made them frowardness and looseness of heart God sometimes layes on a little finger and the froward heart lays on the whole hand and loyns to make the burden heavier with faithless heaviness and distrust which is but an addition of new and worse troubles than the former How inconsiderately do many men load themselves with troubles too too light in themselves and on the shoulders of wise men who can make a vertue of necessity and step over a number of rubs which others stoop to remove and infinitely toil themselves How do many in smaller troubles as discourtesie of neighbours unruliness of children unfaithfulness of servants smaller losses and crosses in Family-matters give place to unquietness impatience and passion till their folly have by seeking to case their burden increased it from a dram to a talent And now how unmeet are they for the service of God How unprofitable in any Christian society How sowr and heavy in countenance disguised in speech Levius sit pationus Quicquid corrigere est nosas Horat. and impotent in their behaviour All which
Cor. 6.12 All things are lawful for mee but I will not bee brought under the power of any thing And 2 Cor. 7.30 Wee must rejoyce in the creature as not rejoycing use it as not using buy sell and have a wife is not having This is to affect indifferent things indifferently Contrary whereunto is that excessive desire and use of any creature which makes our servants our Masters and puts us out of possession of them that wee may bee possessed by them as when riches have our hearts and wee have not power to command them to any good use the Heathen disclaimed this slavery Divitiae mea sunt non ego divitiarum Sence My riches are mine said Seneca not I my riches Would God Christians would say so much to whom grace offers better things So when a man or woman have inslaved themselves to any creature and made it a Tyrant and Commander as insatiable Drunkards who can no more bee without strong drink or wine than the fish without water or themselves without ayr The Mule they say must have the bag hang by his mouth and these must have the bottle or pot at their elbow continually Others that so addict themselves to that bewitching weed Tobacco above all season set more thoughts upon it than they bestow upon God bestow more time on it by ten parts in one day than upon Gods service yea than upon any profitable Calling bestow more charge upon it than upon all pious and charitable uses through the year yea serve it as their God night and day and all to turn their bodies into Chimnies their blood into Sut their best and radical humour into smoak This is an intemperate and sinful use of a creature in it self good if physically used For wee condemn not drink when wee condemn drunkenness but the drunken use of it Neither can these dry Drunkards more justifie their sin than the moist nay far less seeing the one is ordained for common use so is not the other But without comparing them together it is a great sin to bee a slave either to a Pot or to a Pipe 5 In all indifferent actions wee must endeavour so wisely to pass them 5 For no indifferent forgo better things th●n they as 1 Time as wee d● not for them lose any thing better than they such as are 1 Time Men must not cast away much time in them Wee should eat out as little time with our meat as wee may much less play away our time Women must bee conscionable to spend as little time as may bee in arraying and trimming themselves for time is better than apparel Neither for wealth must wee exchange our time but that wee reserve special times for better ends For all the wealth on earth will not buy an hour of time 2 Our good name is better than any indifferent thing 2 Good name and ought to bee more precious than the sweetest ●yntment Wee must not eat and drink to bee counted Gluttons and Drunkards nor play in excess to bee counted Dicers and Gamesters which are infamous names and such persons were banished out of the Heathens Commonwealth nor so apparel our selves as to bee accounted proud garish and wanton nor build to bee accounted vain and prodigal but prefer our good names before the use of these 3 Our goods and portion of wealth which God hath given us 3 Estate are better than the excessive use of any of th●se and wee must not waste our goods more than is fit for our estate Men have no warrant to venture great sums of mony upon a few casts at Dice or Bowls or other sports Wee are not Lords of our goods but Stewards and must bee drawn to an account for them Religion will teach a man good husbandry and though it allow not onely a necessary and convenient expense but also for honest delight and pleasure in meat drink apparel recreation building c. yet it allows no prodigality except in the case of godly and charitable uses to the poor members of Christ Oh how rich should some mean men bee in good works if they had given that to the poor which they have lost in p●ay And who can say but one is far better far more comfortable than the other 4 Our vertues and graces are far better than any indifferent thing 4 Vertues and therefore wee must not lose these for the other Against which rule they sin who in meats and drinks lose moderation sobriety and temperanc● and they who in apparel lose their humility and lowliness and they who in recreation lose their patience meekness love and peace and they who in Marriage lose their chastity and holiness c. By all which Rules wee see h●w godliness takes not away the use of Gods creatures for it onely gives liberty in them but orders the use thereof that they may bee used in the just measure of their goodness and give place to better and restrains us no further than so as the Calling bee not exceeded nor the Rules of moderation violated CHAP. XXIV Special Rules for Meat and Drink NOW for the special Rules of things indifferent because I must not suffer this Discourse to grow so large as it would omitting all other things indifferent there bee three things as most common so more specially to bee treated of 1 Meat and drink 2 Recreation 3 Apparel For all which the word of God is plentiful in the Rules of Christian Wisdome and Direction I. Rules for Eating and Drinking Rule● f●r eating and d●inking 1 Necessity First For the lawfulness of it 1 It is necessary to nourish and strengthen us in our duties and repair strength decayed 2 It may also serve for delight for God hath given us leave liberally to use the creatures not onely bread to strengthen the heart but oyl to make his face glad 3 God hath afforded us leave to feast togeth●r and invite one another for the maintaining and cherishing of Christian love and mutual fellowship as wee see in Jobs children which was nor unlawful and the Primitive Churches had their Agapa's and Love-feasts of which the Scripture makes mention Act. 2.46 2 Propriety Secondly For the Propriety Wee must eat and drink our own the sweat of our own brows not other mens Many cut large peeces in other mens loaves I mean that which they know is not theirs but other mens if all debts were payed This is an high kinde of injustice 2 Thess 3.12 not to eat our own bread 3 Measure Thirdly For the Measure Wee must eat and drink according to the call of Nature or honest and moderate delight to make us and keep us in a fitn●ss to godly duties of hearing reading praying c. All that eating and drinking whereby men make themselves heavy sleepy unwieldy and unfit for good duties is sinful for this is not a refection or refreshing but a destruction or oppression of nature 4 Affection Fourthly For our
lest yee bee hardened through the deceitfulness of sin Think what a fearful thing it is to fall from the grace of God yea or the degrees of it and would wee suffer a brother to run into this danger Secondly Chuse fit matter to confer of in company either by calling to minde things heard or by stirring up to profitable hearing diligent proceeding in-offensive walking watchful speaking and the like or if need bee of Admonition Exhortation or Reproof shew thy love therein full clouds will distill rain light will shine abroad and charitable knowledge is communicative Thirdly Bee sure to perform these private Christian duties in good and holy and unrebukeable manner As 1 Orderly those beginnings which are fittest in gifts and place as Elihu spake in his turn 2 Humbly none seeking to speak beyond his skill and reach 3 Wisely watching the fittest time and best occasion 4 Meekly and lovingly without reasonings and murmuring Phil. 2.15 none crossing others but through love one forbearing another advising in the spirit of meekness and with offering to submit themselves in other cases to receive words of Exhortation and Admonition 5 Conscionably so as in all such meetings and conference every one bee an helper to the truth 3 Joh. 8. to finde it out not to obscure or weaken it By these means wee shall have cause to rejoyce in our Christian fellowship as Jonathan and David 1 Sam. 23.14 Fourthly Observe the graces that are in others for a pattern to our selves 1 Thess 1 7. for our own provocation and imitation Yea spy and incourage the graces of God in the weakest and meanest Christian so framing our selves to that mark of a good man who honours all that fear the Lord Psal 15.4 Neither let the strongest scorn to receive help from the weakest Moses was content to bee advised by Jethro and David by Abigail and note Pauls humility Rom. 1.12 hee hoped to come and bee comforted by their faith as well as to help theirs Fifthly In the use of good company beware of giving any occasion of scandal or offence to any Matth. 18.7 8. leave no ill smell behinde thee avoid the note of pride conceit forwardness in speaking frowardness or stiffeness in thine own sense 1 Joh. 2.10 Hee that loveth his brother there is no occasion of stumbling or scandal in him Motives thus to carry our selves in good company Motives to provoke us wisely to carry our selves in good company 1 Consider how in our company wee are especially to watch seeing in no part of our life wee are sooner corrupted than in that seeing in no part of our life wee do so much discover our selves and seeing in no part thereof wee do either more good or more harm seeing wee do nothing without witness and should do nothing which wee would not have exemplary 2 As Satan layes snares every where so also in our company one with another not so much to bring the godly to such excess of riot as hee effecteth in wicked societies where is swearing gaming drinking rayling c. but to make them unfruitful and keep them from the good they might do and so far prevaileth as sometimes impertinent speech sometime debate and detracting speeches arise and the most tolerable speech is worldliness which stealeth away the heart and the time so as some who intended more good to themselves and others carry away hearts smiting them for not better imploying that opportunity 3 There is apparent loss when wee watch not to do or receive good in company with good men For godly men by reason of their Callings and distance of places seldome meet and when they do they lose the gain of that time in their special Calling and it they get it not up in the furtherance of the general calling of a Christian it is utterly lost And what but this makes the mindfulness one of another sweet in their absence when there was reaped so good fruit one of another in their presence 4 By this wise and fruitful carriage of company and meetings of good men Christians shall stop the mouthes of such as are ever complaining of and accusing Christian meetings to bee scarce to any other purpose but to detract defame slander censure to strengthen one another in faction and the like Or if such mouthes will not bee shut yet the conscience of Christians may rejoyce in the contrary innocency and not bee dejected by such false testimony 3 Rule In our speeches let us bee Proctors and Solicitors for the Saints speak wisely and willingly of the good wee know in our brethren 3 Apology and maintain the cause person and name of good men to our power The sincerity of love between David and Jonathan was manifest in that Jonathan defended Davids innocency to Saul his Father not onely to the loss of his Kingdome but the danger of his own life Ebedmelech the Blackmoor spake a good word for Jeremy and was saved from destruction when his Master Zedekiah was slain Nicodemus even in the beginning of grace spake for Christ when the whole Council was against him And how dangerous is it to devise and invent words against Gods children as Davids enemies to belye or reproach them to raise or receive slanders against them If such as stand not for grace shall fall then much more they that stand against it How needful is this Apology for them against the reproaches and scorns of this age How earnestly would children speak for their parents brethren or kindred Even so should it bee here It is nothing to speak for a man when others speak for him 4 Rule Concerning our actions towards good men 4 Rule Helpfulness wee should every way bestir our selves to procure their good and welfare Wee must to our hearts and affections joyn our hands and help to do them good yea bee ready to lay our hands under the feet of the Saints Gal. 6.10 Do good to all but especially to the houshold of faith Now in special 1 Wee must prevent from them all the evil wee can Means of it hinder them from sins and from falling hinder by all means reproach from their profession and danger from their persons 2 If thou findest a good man slipt into an infirmity labour to cover it make the best of i● as may bee Vaunt not thy self over him but consider thy self and by all good means cure it if it lye in thy power 3 If thou finde a good man stand in need of inward comfort and cast down help to raise him again Christ was sent to speak a word of comfort to the weary and every Christian hath received of his anointing When David was in deep distress his faithful friend Jonathan comforted him in the Lord his God 1 Sam. 23.16 4 I● thou knowest a good man helpless and without outward comforts thou must now shew bowels of mercy and compassion gladly receiving the poor Saints communicating willingly and freely to their nec●ssity 1 Pet. 3.8 Love one
being of no Religion cannot bee at leasure to give it hearing But wee have seen it to be no novelty to the Spirit of God every where charging it upon us nor to the godly guided by his Spirit who can neither bee idle nor unfruitful in the work of the Lord. Object 6. I like such as can bee so strict and I could wish so to bee but then I must part from the pleasure and joy of my life For this continual watch and circumspection is full of melancholy and uncomfortable it hinders neighbours from sports and merriments breaks off good company and makes the husband and wife often look heavily one upon another and besides I should lose some profits and customers and wrong my estate by neglecting it Answ 1. This is a clean contrary judgement to Gods Spirit Prov. 3.17 Her wayes are the wayes of pleasures Gods wisdome ordering the wayes of man brings true joy and pleasure For is there no joy in God in his word Psal 19. Joh. 16. which was wont to bee as sweet as the hony-comb nor in the Spirit of God which is called the Comforter Is it such a thing of heaviness to live with God Alas What is such an heart made of 2 What delights do wee call men from but such as are carnal foolish perishing and unlawful is stollen waters so sweet and savoury to corrupt flesh the forbidden fruit which a Christian should neither touch nor taste and happy hee were if hee never saw it 3 There is no sorrow in godly life but all the sorrow of Gods servants is that they cannot bee more godly Lay this for a ground that God is thy chief delight and no man may bee so moderately joyful as thou 4 For pleasant companionship thou losest no good company but exchangest for better thou hast now fellowship with God union with Jesus Christ the inseparable presence of Gods blessed Spirit the attendance of the Angels the communion of the Saints the benefit of their prayers comfort and example This is a pleasant thing for brethren in the faith to live together in unity And what true joy is therein the company of Gamesters Drinkers Swearers riotous or idle persons who are never merry unless they bee mad and never glad but when they have driven away the remembrance of God 5 As for the loss of any part of thy estate trust God on his word Prov. 3.16 In her right hand is length of dayes and in her left hand riches and glory Never did true piety weaken any mans estate but godliness hath been the true and constant gain this makes a small portion sweet and precious and intails a blessing upon it when it passeth into the hands of our posterity after us CHAP. XXXV Marks of a man walking Circumspectly AND seeing most men beguile themselves with the goodness of their present course and esteem a civil life and external honesty Marks of a circumspect walker not onely unblameable enough but justifiable and sufficiently commendable Bee it known to them that if they examine not the goodness of their course by this Doctrine they are far from Gods approbation whatsoever they may conceive of themselves In which examination I will help them with a few notes and signes of a Circumspect person by whose wayes as by a right line they may both see the crookedness and at length begin to straighten the obliquity of their own 1 A circumspect man watcheth all occasions for his own good and advantage and if they bee offered slips them no So a circumspect Christian looks round about him and thinks it not sufficient to take occasions of grace and well-doing being offered but will seek them How might every moment of our lives make us more stored with grace than other if wee would seek occasions of good to our selves What a rich stock of grace might wee have attained How rich in good works How should wee have furthered our reckoning 2 A circumspect man looks round about him and so ordereth his many businesses as one hinder not the other but all may go forward and so saveth one commodity as another bee not lost or lye in hazard So a circumspect Christian casteth his occasions as seeing every Christian duty is enjoyned him hee hath respect to all Gods Commandements Duties of piety shall not justle out civil duties nor civil duties eat out duties of piety but as ●ne hand helps another so one table shall further the other one calling forward another yea hee looks to the thriving of all his graces Hee will walk very humbly before God but so as hee maintain his joy in God His moderation shall not damp his zeal his zeal shall not out-run his knowledge His providence shall not lessen his faith nor his faith destroy his providence His love with mens persons brings him not into love with their sins and his hatred of their sins impeacheth not his love of their persons His righteousness to men hindreth not his mercy neither doth cruel mercy withstand or thrust down needful justice Thus hee is busie in maintaining all his graces all of them beeing of great use and all of them flowing from the same Spirit 3 A circumspect man will bee sure not to disadvantage himself by his words but will speak to his own profit So a circumspect Christians words make for his own best advantage Hee will speak for Gods glory for good men Gal. 4.6 and good causes Hee will bee sure to profit himself and others with gracious and Religious speeches and bee silent where fruitful speech will not bee heard Exercise to good speeches brings a dexterity and readiness of well-speaking to which every Christian is exhorted Col. 4.6 Let your speeches bee gracious alwayes and powdered with salt that yee may know how to answer every man 4 As a wary and circumspect man proves a good husband for the world so circumspect Christians are the best husbands for their souls Such a one hath wisdome and will to increase his estate of grace by every thing and thinks himself then truly rich when hee thrives in the best Commodities Hee conceives himself rich not when hee hath things about him to leave to his heirs but when hee hath his Wealth personally in himself and for himself such Wealth as hee carries to Heaven with him A circumspect Christian will not win the whole world with the losse of his own soul which is nothing but to make his heirs happy in his own eternal misery A circumspect Christian is not so careful to heap up gold as good works in abundance and by works of Mercy and Love hee makes himself Bags that waxe not old a Treasure in Heaven that can never faile where the Theef commeth not not the moth corrupteth Luke 12.33 A circumspect Christian is not so careful for the soyling tilling and sowing of his ground the mounding of his Pasture the weeding of his Field the pruning of his Trees the feeding of his Cattel as in fencing