Selected quad for the lemma: evil_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
evil_n evil_a heart_n thought_n 2,080 5 8.0009 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A89336 The touch-stone of conversion. Or, Marks of true faith. Wherein the impenitent sinner is rowsed. True beleever discovered. And doubting saint resolved. / By that excellent man of God now in heaven, Mr. Arthur Morton Scotch man. Morton, Arthur, Scotch man. 1647 (1647) Wing M2820; Thomason E1141_1; ESTC R210080 110,861 289

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

our eyes and therfore in these two notable places Exod. 34. and Nahum 1. which two places speak very gloriously of Gods mercie yet in both of them are interwoven these two peremptory speeches of Gods justice In the one He will by no means clear the guilty in the other He will not at all acquit the wicked Josh 24.19 20. when he was stirring up the Israelites to serve and worship the Lord their God he was loath that they should mistake the nature of him whom they undertook to serve that they should conceive as people are ready to do God to be all good and gracious and mercifull and therefore he tels them what a one he is not denying the former but putting them in mind of that which they were readie to forget what saith he He is an holy God he is a jealous G●d he will not forgive you your sins if ye turn from him he will consume you after he hath done you good But it may be alledged he speaks this to try them He doth indeed but he would speak nothing but the truth for that and I intreat you therfore think upon the Justice of the Lord and whereof before I have been speaking to you upon the extent of his Justice both in regard of time and of persons Men do think that Gods justice may be soon satisfied and his favour soon obtained but ye shall see the contrary in the iniquitie of Peor we are not cleansed from it even to this day and that although there was a plague amongst the people So Manasseh a point very considerable for thy continuall humiliation Moreover men do scarcely apprehend that the Lords justice and anger for their sins can reach to themselves but ye shall find it hath extended to others one man sinned and the Lord was wroth with the whole congregation If this were considered as I told you before we should take better heed to our selves then we do and take better heed to the repressing of sin Wo is me saith the Prophet for I dwell among a people of polluted lips strange is the contagion of sin This makes David to say that he will take order with his family No wicked person will I know and they that do evill shall depart from me V. A fifth mean of humiliation is a setting our sins in order before our selves that is to have a due and deep weighing of our sins in their greatnesse number manner and such other circumstances of aggravation This if we do not the Lord hath threatned to do Psal 50. Whereas if we would judge our selves the Lord would not judge us First then thou shouldst consider the greatnesse of thy sins and withall call to remembrance the ground I layed down before and did prove to be true to wit that the very least sin that ever thou committedst doth provoke the just and powerfull Lord the good and gracious God to wrath and that in so high a degree that he hath ordained it to be punished with eternall and intollerable torment which should be a ground not of a sleight and superficiall but of an exceeding care to prevent even the least sin and should make us see that our humiliation and our godly sorrow even for our smallest sins be more deep we have need of this greatly But to the point Consider now with thy self if so be the least even one of the least of thy sins be yet so great that it deserves eternall and intollerable torment and hath provoked the Lord so highly to wrath and cannot be expiated but by the blood of the Son of God for that blood cleanses us from all sin and there is no other name or mean under heaven to be saved O then what must be the deserving and degree of the punishment of thy great and grosse sins and what meas●●e of wrath must th●u lye under in regard of them If thy flying and passing thoughts deserve such a punishment how then shalt thou be punished for thy entertained and fostered and delighted in sinful thoughts of covetousnesse revenge ambition uncleannesse c. If for every idle word thou must render an account in the day of judgement what account is then to be rendred of thy sinfull and so sinfull words wherewith thou hast blasphemed the great and dreadfull Name of the Lord thy God and for thy stinking corrupt communication unsavourie to a Christian eare but most abhominable to the holy Lord who is puritie it self and so cannot but highly abhor such filthinesse and which is an evident token that the unclean spirit hath possession of thy heart and mouth And finally if thy words and thoughts shall be so punished consider then what thy actions will bring upon thee for then sin is finished and if the least of thy sinfull actions shall be so severely taken order with O how shouldst thou tremble to think upon thy grosse trespasses and grievous offences in thy actions 2. Consider the number of thy sins if one sin deserves so much what will so many procure yea even thy great and grosse sins being so many in number and so often repeated Ye heard how severely and exemplarily the Lord punished his own people the naturall Olive for one act of one kind of sin and what then shalt thou expect for so many severall kinds of sins and so may acts of these kinds 1. For so often profaning his worship 2. So often profaning his Name 3. So often profaning his Sabbath 4. So many acts of uncleannesse 5. And which is worse then all this for so many times and occasions neglecting that great salvation And further by thy by-past great sins what innumerable certainly innumerable sins have escaped thee yea and daily do escape thee in these three respects to wit of thoughts words and manner of doing 1. The heart is desperately wicked and the imaginations thereof are evill continually whereby it comes to passe that out of that foule fountain is continually streaming out a source of sinfull thoughts 2. The tongue is also an unruly evill and it also makes us most frequently to sin against the Lord. And 3. Such is the pitifull corruption and pollution of our sinfull nature that we sin continually in the manner of doing even our best duties our best services are polluted our righteousnesse is like a menstruous cloth so that we are in regard of this corruption as one makes the comparison very like the snail that defiles all the way it passes through and leaves a slime behind it Even so do we in regard of this pollution of our nature defile all the footsteps we walk in there is the slime of sin to be seen in our best actions So that in respect of these three our thoughts our words and the manner of our doing we sin most frequently which is most pitifull Now since any of these deserve eternall to●ment what then do they being all joyned together 3. Consider the manner of thy sins for this addes exceedingly to the greatnesse of