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A08586 The saints societie Delivered in XIV. sermons, by I.B. Master in arts, and preacher of Gods word at Broughton in Northampton Shire.; Societie of the saints Bentham, Joseph, 1594?-1671. 1636 (1636) STC 1890; ESTC S117220 223,204 307

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Christ with God Let him feare death saith St. Cyprian who will passe from this death to the second death It is his part or duty to feare death who will not go to Christ saith the same Father I desire to be dissolved saith the blessed Apostle Phil. 1. 23. Blessed are the dead saith the Spirit Rev. 14. 13. Come Lord Iesus saith the Bride Rev. 22. Whence springs this desire What is the ground of this blessednesse And whence flow those earnest longings save from the sweet society with the Father 5. How should we feare sinne having fellowship with him who justifieth Rom. 8. 33. Death having fellowship with life Or Sathan having fellowship with God True it is we living here on earth are subject 1. To sinne scil the staine yet free from the dominion and due desert of sinne 2. To death scil its stroke it being decreed for all men once to die yet free from the fling of death 3. We are liable to Sathans bitter buffetings yet that evill one cannot touch us with his deadly blowes Iohn 5. 18. 4. We are not exempted from the grave It must have us but it may not hold us for ever 6. How should we feare any thing having fellowship with God who hath all things To conclude therefore For our comfort we may ascertaine our selves that having fellowship with the Father wee shall have no good thing with-holden totally finally without a supply if it be good for us 1. Have we fellowship with the Father Then shall we be invested with his Spirit enriched with his graces rewarded with his kingdome 2. Have we fellowship with the Father We need not feare either want of sufficiencies want of counsell in distresse want of comfort in cur extremities want of grace in this life or glory in that which is to come 3. Have we fellowship with the Father We have him therefore to be our friend his Sonne our Spouse his Spirit our comforter his Angels our guard his Saints our companions and his creatures our servants And doth not this minister my brethren superabundant consolation to all such who have fellowship with the Father All matter of comfort is included in this fellowship Is an happy an honourable a pleasant or profitable condition matter of solace and rejoycing Behold here are all for who more happy who more honourable who more pleasant or rich then such who have fellowshippe with the Father CHAP. IIII. Vse 2. Reprehending wicked men Vse 2 WHy boast you so you bragging Belials terming your selves and such who are birds of the same feather with you the onely goodfellowes Whereas were it possible to take away your dunghill scurrilities quassing complements ridiculous girings obscoene ribauldries irreligious tongue-smitings of men better then your selves blasphemous oathes and such like hellish stuffe your time is irksome and your mirth is marred Why vaunt you so of your society it being with Sathan and his cursed workes of darknesse Here is a fellowship which is truly good because with God Yours brings shame this honour Yours perils this safety Yours losse of time of wealth of wit of credit of soule of heaven this great gaine interesting into earthly things giving a full enjoyment of a sufficiencie of saving graces and an assurance of immortall Glory yours no sound comfort this joy solid and substantiall for it is with the father In stead therefore of glorying in your sinne take notice of your danger folly and duty 1. Have the Saints fellowship with the Father then in what a lamentable case are all such who dare presume to abuse and wrong those who a●● so nearely indeared to the Lord It was and will be the use and practise of Sathan and his serpentine brood to esteeme of Gods Saints as of the refuse and of-scouring of all things 1. Cor. 4. 9. 13. to repute them monsters Isa 8. 18. Zach. 3. 8. Psal 71. 7. To make them their songs and byword Iob 30. 9. in their ale-bench meetings Psal 69. 12. To accuse them falsely lay to their charge things which they never knew or some waies or other to tongue-smite the spotlesse innocency of the Lords owne jewels and then with domineering insulations to laugh amaine that they had a dexterity to conceive give birth unto or greater growth to the fabulous fictions of their base brotherhood against the Saints of God But were such men well verst in the booke of God they should finde that mocking Ishmaels rayling Rabshakehs reviling Shimeies scoffing Children back biting Doegs slandering Tertullus and all the Kennell of those doggish barkers against Gods Children either for naturall infirmities 2. King 2. 23. Or for pieties sake Gen. 21. 19. Gal. 4. 19. Or for envie Acts 21. 24. 28. escaped not the sharpe and smarting punishments of the Lord Witnesse those 42. children eaten by 2. beares 2 King 2. 24. Witnesse the sonne of the bondwoman cast out of the Church of God Witnesse old Shimei cruell Doeg Witnesse 2. Chron. 36. 16. Ier. 18. 21. And doe you who treade in the same trace with that rayling rabble thinke to escape Ioabs souldiour if he might have received a thousand shekels of silver in his hand yet would not put forth his hand against Absolom 2. Sam. 18. 12. for had he he should have wrought falsehood against his owne life Haman for all his greatnesse dares not but honour Mordecai although he hated him to the death Ester 6. 11. because he was a man the King delighted to honour Meane men feare to hurt or harme the dearely beloved of great persons dreading their displeasure The children yea the favourites yea the servants of mortall Princes deeme themselves greatly priviledg'd from danger and disgrace And dare you abase and abuse not a Mord●cai not the sonnes or favorites of mortall Princes but such who have fellowship with the father These are the Lords iewels Mal. 3. 17. 1. Yea such that he purchased with his sonnes owne bloud Ephes 1. 14. the purchased possession Men may give much for Iewels but no man I think would give the life of a sonne of an onely sonne of such a one in whom he was well pleased for any Iewell the rich merchant sels all to buy a precious pearle but not the life of an onely sonne but these are such iewels that the Lord did buy at so deare a rate 2. Yea such that he doth carefully keepe giving his angels charge over them who pitch their tents about them Psal ●4 7. yea himselfe doth alwaies watch over them by his carefull providence Psal 121. 5. Are they so amiable and lovely so deare and precious so honourable and glorious so carefully kept and defended with and by the Lord and dare you offer violence unto them 2. These are the apple of Gods owne eye doe you not tremble to strike at God himselfe yea at his eye yea at the apple of his eye the tenderest part 3. These are his peculiar people his annointed ones whom you may not touch so as to hurt or offer
101. c. 3. Christ Iesus or Gods Son p. 202 Therefore 1. They hurt themselves who harme them pag. 209. c. 2. All should be disswaded from wronging them pag 126. c. 3. All are perswaded to joyne in this communion pag 129 c. 4. They who have fellowship with Christ are comforted pag. 224. c. 5. And perswaded to 1. To imitate Christ pag 257. c. 2. Have true faith pag. 265. c. 3. Have Gods Spirit pag 269. c. 4. Be Christs sheepe pag. 276. 5. Be branches grafted into Christ pag. 276. 6. Be Christs spouse pag. 276. 7. Members joyned to him pag. 276. 8. And stones built on him pag. 276. 2. These goodfellowes have God to be their Father pag. 41 c. Therefore they ought to 1. Love God pag. 46. c. 2. Shunne sinne pag. 53 c. 3. Depend upon the Lord. pag. 65. c. 4. Honour the Lord. pag 72. c. 5. Doe Gods will pag 88 c. 6. Be content with Gods allowance pag. 98 c. OF THE SOCIETIE OF THE SAINTS the first Booke CHAP. I. Shewing the Summe and Occasion of this Discourse 1 IOHN 1. 3. That you also may have fellowship with us and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Sonne Iesus Christ GOodfellowship the times favorite is so generally applauded that most men are almost enchaunted with its clamorous bruite Insomuch that many ample patrimonies and great reuenewes by goodfellowship are wholly exhausted many extravagant enormities are sleighted over because committed not by some simple sot or rude rusticke but by some goodfellow Yea it is esteem'd a sufficient protection with many against reprehensions and condigne punishments for blaspheming the names of God so sacred excessive drinking more then brutish rotten communication so contagious scurrulous jests so offensiue mis spending time so precious scandalizing the wayes of men better then themselves so holy and for many like execrable abominations to plead goodfellowship Goodfellowes I doe intimately love and with such intirenesse affect goodfellowship that I deeme my selfe too too unfit to decipher such an heauenly association Yet perceiving slavish Hagard mineering over princely Sarah hellish vice jet about varnished over with the title of vertue impiety that disguised anticke to dis-franchise true society of its due renowne endeavouring to make it ridiculous with satyricall mocks cynicall girds and hellish reproaches and striving to soare higher then is meet for such ignoble and illegitimate counterfeits I cannot but desire curiosity to curbe this copped monster yet with no wrongfull obtrectations and adorne true goodfellowship not with any Hyperbolicall praises a naked tale most truly setting forth the naked truth it shining most bright when it is in the least bravery Neither with any borrowed paintings painting being more meet for ragged wals then precious marble But with its owne ineffable beauty and inestimable splendour faire countenances needing no colours To this end I have chosen our Apostles words which snew vs an excellent fraternity and endeauour to agglutinate vs into that so sweet Societie which is with the Saints with the Father and with his Sonne Iesus Christ which is the true goodfellowship yea such that whosoever is in this is a goodfellow indeed Whosoever is not in this Society is in truth no good-fellow Yea so precious is this that we all should labour to have fellowship with the Saints the Father and his Sonne Iesus Christ This fellowship or communion is threefold 1. Of the members amongst themselves You with us 2. Of the children with the Father Truly our fellowship is with the Father 3. Of the members with the Head And with his Sonne Iesus Christ CHAP. II. Saints have fellowship together Doct. 1 FRom the first observe this generall ground or Doctrine All the Saints and Servants of God have fellowship one with another although never so farre distant in place different in condition or aliens by nation The scattred Apostles and dispersed Christians The pious Prince and upright peasant The beleeving Iew and converted Gentile have all communion each with other you with us 1 Cor. 10. 17. Wee that is all true Christians are one bread shewing the union and Society of the Saints partaking in one bread 1 Cor. 12. 12 13 20 27. Now you are the body of Christ and members in particular Eph. 4 4. There is one body 5. 23. Col. 1. 18. Heb. 13. 3. Being your selves also in the body Zach. 3. 8. Thou and thy fellowes Reason 1 1. All members of one and the selfesame body have mutuall Society But all the Saints although distant different c. are members of one and the selfe same body Ephes 3. 6. The Gentiles fellow heires and of the same body Therefore c. 2. All stones of the same building have communion one with another All the Saints c. are stones of the same building Ephes 2. 20 21 22. 1 Pet. 2. 4 5. 3. All branches of the same vine have fellowship one with another But all Saints are branches of the same vine Ioh. 15. 15 of which vine Christs Godhead is the root his manhood the stock his graces the sappe his servants the branches and good works the grapes 4. All such who are children of the same parents have fellowship each with other But all the Saints are children of the same parents having all one Father Rom. 8. 14. Eph. 4. 6. One Mother Gal. 4. 26. One elder Brother Christ Iesus Heb. 2. 11. All being begotten by the same immortall seed 1 Pet. 1. 23. And nourished by the same milke 1 Pet. 2. 2. 5. All those who are heires of the same kingdome have fellowship one with another But all the Saints are heires of the same kingdome All being Heires of promise Heb. 6. 17. Of an eternall inheritance Heb. 9. 15. Of Gods kingdome Iam. 2. 5. And same kingdome Mat. 25. 24. 6. All such who are souldiers of the same band have fellowship one with another But all Saints are souldiers of the same combate against the same enemies Eph. 6. 12. With the same weapons Eph. 6. 12 13. Vnder the same Captaine Christ Iesus 2. Tim. 2. 3. For the same Crowne and Conquest 7. All those who are the one and onely spouse of Christ have fellowship one with another But all the Saints are the one and onely spouse of Christ Rev. 19. 7. 8. All sheep of the same flock and fold have fellowship one with another But all Gods Saints are sheepe of the same flocke and fold Luke 12. 32. Ioh. 10. 4. 16. 9. Those amongst whom is unity in Religion unanimity in affection and mutuall charity have fellowship one with another But Gods Saints are such amongst whom is unity in Religion Eph. 4 4 5 6. Sympathy in affection Rom. 12. 15 16 10. And mutuall charity Rom. 12. 13. 10. Those who have the selfe same grace and glory have 10. fellowship one with another But all the Saints have the selfe same grace and
Lyon Beare Dog and Dragon give him the tormenting taile of a stinging Scorpion the venemous teeth of a gnawing Viper the virulent breath and dreadfull sight of an eye killing Cockatrice farce his bowels with the poyson of Aspes and the venime of Spiders go to an hedge of thornes briars and brambles and a bed of thistles and thence extract the hurtfull properties of these evill plants and adde them to this monster heape on the stinking loathsome and vnprofitable conditions of the most loathsome scumme canker-eaten drosse suffocating smoake sterilous dust and contaminating dirt The wicked man is this compacted monster and therefore an unmeete associate for a Saint for such a one who hath or desireth fellowship with the Father CHAP. VIII The third meanes and duty We must be like God WOuld we communicate in this community we must 3. Meanes Duty endeavour to be like the Lord. Similitude is a fastening linke to conglutinate Societies which all delight in such who are most like themselves hence it is that birds of a f●ather flie together like master like man If thou wilt marry marry thy like saith the Poet and that friendship is the pleasantest which likenesse of conditions hath linked together saith the hear●en Oratour and Saint Iohn tells us expressely there must be a congruence in this consociety 1 Iohn 1. 7. If we walke in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with an●ther Be we therefore followers of God as deare Children Ephes 5. 1. 1. In holinesse 1. Pet. 1. 15. as he which hath called you is holy so be you holy in all manner of conversation ver 16. Because it is written be you holy as I am holy True it is God only is holy i. e. infinitely pure and righteous yet the Saints are holy also i. e. separate from sinne and corruption unperfectly here most perfectly hereafter in heaven 2. In a godly remuneration rendering love for hatred benedictions for execrations good turnes for bad prayers for persecutions Matth. 5. 44 45. That we may be Children of our father for he makes his sunne c. 3. In a pitifull compassionatenesse easily mooved to grieve at the miseries of others and to succour them Luke 6. 6. Be you therefore mercifull as your heavenly father is mercifull Col. 3. 12. put you on as the c. 4. In perfection Matth. 5. 48. Be you therefore perfect as your father in heaven is perfect not as if we could be without sinne as doting fantasticke Familists averre or keepe the whole law as superstitious Antichristian Papists avowe For Scripture and each man 's enlightened conscience witnesse the contrary But 1. Comparatively in regard of the weake and wicked 2. In regard of parts being sanctified in every part and power of soule and body to every duty concerning them in some measure So that there is an upright judgement in the minde an honest heart a sincere and good conscience 5. In walking in the light 1. Iohn 1. 7. If we walke in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another and this we may doe by following Gods Word as our guide in our travaile to eternall blessednesse Let Sathans hellish brood doe the workes of their father the divell walke foot by foot in those cursed paths which Sathan hath traced out unto them viz. in the darke and damned waies of swearing lying cursing c. and so demonstrate to the whole world that themselves have fellowship with the divell Let cavelling carpers deeme these sayings hard and harsh Paradoxes peremptorily concluding it to bee altogether impossible for any man to be holy mercifull perfect c. as the father in heaven is Yet let all such who already have or desire to enjoy fellowship with the Father conforme themselves unto him in the Scripture sense which speakes not of equality but similitude endeavouring to bee holy loving mercifull and perfect as a staggering childe may imitate a mighty man This sanctity perfection and such like excellencies of all the glorified Saints that are or shall be being no more in comparison of this unparalel'd holinesse and perfection of God then the dimme and duskish light of a pinking candle compared with the splendent lustre of the radiant sun enlightned moone and glistering starres CHAP. IX The fourth meanes and duty is prayer to God HAve we or desire we fellowship with the father delight 4. Meanes Duty we then to speake to him in prayer and rejoyce to heare him speake to us in the ministery of the Word What society where intercourse of speech is wanting every colleague in each community will acknowledge society and mutuall exchange of speech to be inseperable and that it is one way to connexe men firmely in a friendly fellowship A word of each 1. Should I say prayerlesse persons are gracelesse I have my warrant Zach. 12. 10. the spirit of grace and prayer being joynt companions 2. Should I terme them godlesse Atheists who can justly contradict me not to pray being one of those markes wherewith men foolish and without God are branded out Psal 14. 4. 3. May I not confidently affirme such to have cast off the feare of the Lord restraining prayers before God Iob 15. 8. 4. May I not pronounce peremptorily prayerlesse persons to be destitute of the spirit of adoption Saint Paul testifying that the Saints have received the spirit of adoption whereby they cry Abba father Rom. 8. 15. And can a prayerlesse person he wanting gods grace his feare the true God and his blessed Spirit have fellowship with the Father Moreover doe many people pray to no purpose asking and not receiving because they aske amisse Iam. 4. 3. their prayers being pinnioned that they cannot mount aloft into the eares of the Lord of Sabbaths 1. By grosse pollutions Isa 1. 15. I will not heare because your hands are full of bloud 2. By disobedience to the voice of God in the ministery of his Word Zach 7. 13. therefore as he cryed and they would not heare so they cryed and I would not heare saith the Lord of hoasts 3. By impenitency Iob. 9. 31. God heareth not sinners 4. By regarding iniquity in their hearts Psal 66. 18. 5. By 〈◊〉 Prov. 23. 13. He that stops his eares at the crie of the poore shall crie himselfe and not be heard 6. By crueltie Micah 3. 4. Then shall crie c. 7. By painted hypocrisie Math. 6. 5. 8. By faithlesse infidelity Iam. 1. 6. 7. 9. By pharisaicall selfe-conceitednesse Luke 18. 11. 14. 10. By blind ignorance Mat. 20. 22. You aske you c. 11. By malicious envy Math. 6. 15. If you forgive not 12. By praying for those things which are impious unjust hurtfull impossible needlesse or otherwise not to be prayed for It stands us in hand therefore if we either have or desire to have fellowship with the Father not onely to pray but so to pray as we are directed in the Word of truth viz.
he parts with his treasure the servant of God dies his gaines follow him Rev. 14. 13. His treasure was laid up in heaven departing hence therefore he followes his treasure goes to his gaine Perhaps he forgoes a materiall building and layes downe an earthly tabernacle but he finds a building given of God not made with hands eternall in the heavens 2 Cor. 5. 1. He leaves behind him some worldly substance but gets in heaven a better and enduring substance Heb. 10. 34. Peradventure he may part with some corruptible inheritance to take possession of an inheritance incorruptible reserved in heaven 1 Pet. 1. 4. Where he hath so much that he is ever satisfied and so much to come that he is never glutted where there is infinite abundance of all things and yet infinite more to come 3. Most delightfull David had an honourable service ascending from keeping sheepe to be sonne in law to a King Iacob a gainefull growing from alone man and a staffe into a populous family and certaine droves but neither had much delight in his service But as there is honour and profit in this service so there is plenitude of delight and consolation For 1. Our Master is no churlish Nabal to whom a man could not speake 1 Sam. 25. 17. No unkind Laban but a God most mercifull and pitifull gracious and favourable patient and long suffering He termes his servants friends Isa 41. 8. Yea sonnes Exod. 4. 23. He layes upon us no burdensome yoke but such which is easie and light Math. 11. 28. Not grievous 1 Ioh. 5. 3. But the rejoycing of our hearts Psal 119. 111. I need not go from my Point in hand to fetch this threefold cord which is not easily broken Those who truly serve the Lord have fellowship with the Father then which what more honourable gainfull or delightfull Good servants 1. obey their Masters precepts 2. Spend the chiefe of their time in their Masters businesse 3. Delight to please them 4. Have no intimate society with their Masters professed enemies 5. Cannot endure to see or heare them abused 6. And feare to offend them Be we such good servants 1. Obeying the will and Word of God 2. Spending the day of our time in his service walking Enoch-like with God Gen. 5. 24. 3. Ioy in pleasing our so good and gracious Master 4. Avoiding intimate familiarity with his enemies 5. Not enduring to heare or see him dishonoured 6. And fearing to offend him Thus let us serve him this serving being a duty we owe if we have or meanes to obtaine if we want fellowship with the Father OF THE SOCIETIE OF THE SAINTS the fourth Booke NOW I come to the fourth and last part of the true goodfellowship consisting betwixt the Head and members And with his Sonne Iesus Christ This part of the true goodfellowship is not the least although the last For by fellowship with Christ we have fellowship with the Saints and without Christ Iesus there is no fellowship for man with God I will now forbeare to speake of these three titles his Sonne Iesus Christ It only sufficeth for the present to tell you that Christ is Gods Sonne 1. By Nature According to his Divine nature he and he onely is the Sonne of God being begotten of the same substance of the Father by an everlasting generation Math. 17. 5. 2. By Grace of personall union the manhood of Christ being unseparably united to the person of the Sonne of God Luke 1. 35. The Saints are Gods Sonnes by Adoption Rom. 8. 17. Yea all professours without practice are Gods Sonnes although by profession onely Gen. 6. 1. The creatures may be termed Gods Sonnes commonly Saints are Gods Sonnes specially But Christ is Gods Sonne singularly CHAP. I. The Saints have fellowship with Christ Doct. 4 ALL true believers Saints or faithfull Christians have societie fellowship or communion with Iesus Christ the Sonne of God With his Son Iesus Christ Ioh. 15. 1 2 3 4. I am the true vine ye are the branches 17. 23. 26. 21. I in them c. Eph. 3. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith Gal. 2. 20. I live yet not I but Christ lives in me Reason 1 All those who are Christ his fellowes have fellowship with Iesus Christ the Sonne of God But all true believers Saints or faithfull Christians are Christ his fellowes for Christ hath taken them into fellowship of himselfe and his merits Psal 45. 7. Therefore all true believers Saints c. Have fellowship with Iesus Christ the Sonne of God That they are Christ his fellowes I prove thus Those who are fellow-servants of the same Master brethren of the same father fellow-members of the same body c. are fellowes But all true believers Saints or faithfull Christians are 1. Fellow-servants with Christ of the same Master Phil. 2. 7. 2. Fellow-brethren of the same Father Math. 12. 50. Heb. 2. 11. 3. Fellow-members of the same body Eph. 4. 13. 15. 16. 4. Fellow-souldiers against Sathan 2 Tim. 2. 3 4. 5. Fellow-sufferers Rom. 8. 17. 6. Fellow-Conquerours Rom. 8. 17. 7. Fellow-Kings Priests and Prophets Rev. 1. 5. 8. Fellow-heires of the same Kingdome Rom. 8. 17. Fellowes they are not by nature it is of grace not by desert it is of free gift or donation not by excellency or aequality it is onely by estimation 2. Those who are linkt and conglutinated in the firmest connexion of the Matrimoniall knot and conjugall yoke have fellowship each with other But Christ Iesus and all true believers Saints or faithfull Christians are linkt and conglutinated in the firmest connexion of the Matrimoniall knot and conjugall yoke therefore have fellowship each with other The first Proposition is cleare I prove the second or minor thus Those who are bride and bridegroome husband and wife are linkt and conglutinated in the firmest connexion of the Matrimoniall knot and Conjugall yoke But Christ Iesus is the Bridegroome or Husband all true belieuers Saints c. are the bride Therefore Christ and Christians are linkt and conglutinated c. That Christ is the Husband to true believers I thus prove He who doth wooe contract himselfe unto consummate the match made with and performe all duties of a husband to all true believers Saints or faithfull Christians is their husband But Christ Iesus doth all these to all true believers As for example 1. He wooeth beseeching us by his Ministers 2 Cor. 5. 20. 2. He contracts himselfe unto the Church by a firme and free promise of mariage with his Church with the consent of his Father 3. He will consummate the mariage at the end of the world Rev. 19. 7. 4. He promiseth all duties of a husband to all true believers For instance Husbands ought entirely to love their wives Col. 3. 19. Eph. 5. 22. Love them they ought for they are good things Prov. 18. 22. For they are their companions Mal. 2. 14. And their owne flesh Eph. 5. 28. Christ Iesus loved
Secondly and you of the last sort who have not the Spirit of Christ abiding in you and therefore have no interest in this incorporation forget not your miserable condition and let me entice and allure you to remedie the same by endeavouring to get this Spirit which is most of all and first of all to be sought Luc. 11. 13. How give his Spirit And is obtained 1. By fervent and faithfull prayer unto God Luc. 11. 13. 2. By carefull and conscionable hearing the Word of God Gal. 3. 2. Received faith preached Acts 10. 44. While Peter Holy Ghost fell c. 3. By true and unfained repentance Acts 2. 38. 4. By pious and sincere obedience Acts 5. 32. Do you therefore renounce and abdicate those loathsome deeds of darknesse wherein you have hitherto walked Do not rest contented in your hollow livelesse and spiritlesse performances of good actions and endeavour that by sincere and hearty prayer hearing repentance and obedience you may have the Spirit of God abiding in you that so you also may have fellowship with Gods Sonne Iesus Christ which will give you 1. More joy then children which barren women aske 2. More comfort then health which sicke folke desire 3. More benefit then strength desired of the weake 4. More profit then sight which the blind desire CHAP. XI Such who have fellowship with Christ be must be his sheepe braunches spouse members and stones built on him Their duties from the particulars TO these I might have joyned many other necessary duties certaine tokens of such which enjoy and availeable meanes for such to use who desire to enjoy this happy community and discoursed largely of them But purposing now to end I will onely nominate some without any large dilating upon them 1. Christ is the Shepheard these are the sheepe 2. Christ is the Vine these are the braunches 3. Christ is the Husband these are the spouse 4. Christ is the Head these are the members 5. Christ is the Foundation these are the stones Therefore such who partake of this Divine Society as they owe of duty so they testifie their incorporation into this connexion and they which desire ingredience into this peerelesse communion must seeke the same by endeavouring to paralell these resemblances so farre forth as sacred Writ doth enjoyne and warrant e. g. 1. They are sheepe therefore as sheepe are harmlesse profitable in regard of fleece fell carkasse and dung very fruitfull and increaseable notwithstanding many are killed and many die So these are innocent suffering wrongs but recompencing to none evill for evill very commodious to all about them Gen. 18. 10. And marvellous increaseable although persecuted and abused They are the sheepe of Christ therefore they heare they know they believe and follow him Ioh. 10. 3 4 5. 26. 27. 2. They are braunches of Christ the Vine Ioh. 15. 1 2 3. Therefore as 1. They grow exceedingly more then other trees 2. Have plenty of sappe within when they seeme withered and drie 3. Beare fruit which is sweet in it selfe pleasant to the user and profitable to the owner 4. Yea such which are conjoyned and well accord together both in the cluster and in the wine Even so these ought and do grow in grace from vertue to vertue 2 Pet. 1. 5 6. 2. Are replenished with the sappe of saving graces even in affliction when they seeme withered away and dried up 3. Have fruits and graces comfortable to themselves profitable to others and pleasing to God 4. Yea and are conjoyned in Christ the Vine and also among themselves one with another 3. These are the spouse of Christ therefore they ought to love reverence and feare him heare his voice and receive his instructions obey his commandements and be clad with his mariage garments sc the gifts and graces of his Spirit 4. These are the members therefore are knit to Christ the head as his members by a lively faith submitting themselves to him their head and assuring themselves that he as their head will care for their safety and well-being 5. These are the stones built upon him the foundation therefore submit themselves to the hammer of the Word and the Lords Builders to be fitted for the Lords building they are therefore knit together by the Spirit and laid upon Christ the Head-Stone to be an habitation of God and are supported by Christ Iesus their Foundation against the gates of hell CHAP. XII The Conclusion shewing the drift of all BY that which I have spoken at sundry times from this place concerning this subject of true goodfellowship shewing from sacred Writ who and what goodfellowes are wiping away many foule and filthy aspersions wherewith the world doth falsely blemish them and declaring their duties and dignity First I hope you see the errour and injustice of this erroneous world depriving Gods Saints of this their rightfull denomination and conferring it upon the most stigmaticall sonnes of Belial Is he a goodfellow truly and onely who hath fellowship with the Saints the Lord of heaven and earth and his Sonne Iesus Christ And are they which strive to imitate the Saints endeavour to please God and labour to have interest in Christ Iesus base companions insociable persons and unworthy the name of goodfellowes because they preferre this excellent communion before the beastly and Diabolicall society with the fruitlesse workes and unhappy workers if darknesse And shall such which make open profession of the Devills service are at open defiance with all manner of goodnesse be stiled and esteemed goodfellowes because with shamelesse foreheads and flinty hearts they wallow in all manner of wickednesse because they sweare and swagger roare and revell scorne and scoffe at goodnesse and good men consume wastfully their patrimonies and possessions in pipes and pots in Tavernes and Tap-houses in drunkennesse and other damnable courses Yet this is the usuall and common dealing of the most although impious and ungodly for what right have Sathans imps and agents to this holy title of goodfellow Heare our Church speake which saith If we lacke Iesus Christ that is to say the Saviour of our soules and bodies we shall not finde him in the market place or in the Guilde Hall much lesse in the Ale-house or Taverne amongst goodfellowes as they call them c. Hom. of right use of the Church Fol. 6. Let drunken beasts and pot-companions Let infatuated prodigals and riotous spend-thrifts Let swashing swaggerers who sport themselves at the godly simplicity of honest men and all other of the same kind assume to themselves and give to their companions their owne proper titles sc fooles beasts sonnes of Belial c. And not incroach upon this title which is properly due to none but such who have fellowship with the Saints the Father and his Sonne Iesus Christ. Secondly I hope that you understand sufficiently by the foregoing discourses the admirable and unspeakable priviledges of all goodfellowes or true believers being combined by the most astrictive ties in
fellowship with the Lord of glory his blessed Sonne and gracious Saints and Servants As also the wretched and miserable condition of all other associations who have indeed a fellowship but most abominable and base with the fruitlesse works of darknesse Ephes 5. 11. As also most dangerous and dreadfull Prov. 13. 20. Acompanion of fooles shal be destroyed Thirdly I hope also that you of the wiser sort of those who as yet are without having any well-wishes unto your selves are perswaded to flee amaine seeking an hasty escape from all those unfruitfull fellowships with the deeds and doers of darknesse as Lot from Sodome so full of villany so neare destruction and to hasten speedily as the creatures into Noahs Arke to be firmely knit and inseparably incorporated into this society abounding with such felicities and contentments 4. And I doubt not but that you which have already admittance into and acquaintance in this goodfellowshippe by the former particulars are animated and encouraged to cleave more closely unto and to proceed more comfortably and couragiously in the same it abounding with such variety of excelling priviledges and transcendent prerogatives maugre Sathans subtill and hellish temptations and the worlds despightfull usage and injurious calumniations Of which hopes if I doe not faile I have that I labour for I having declared these things unto you 1. That you also which as yet are strangers from this heavenly communion may have fellowshippe with us which you need not either dread or shame for truly our fellowshippe is with the Father and his Sonne Iesus Christ 2. And that you which are infranchised into this Society may walke forward comfortably and couragiously through the many crossing oppositions you meet withall in he holy path Or to end with the Apostles words that your joy may be full FINIS An Alphabeticall Table A. ADmiration vaine to be shunned and why 76. Adoption what its excellencie why God adopted us 235. Afflictions should not discontent 42. They are the lot of the righteous 210. They benefit them 211 Why God afflicteth them and how 45. Christ is to be imitated in his sufferings why and how 256. Anabaptists confuted concerning swearing 80. Antinomists taxed and confuted 182 c 192 c. 243. c. Apostasie dangerous 95. Apparell what should content 107 Pride in apparell 260. c. Christians best apparell 44. B BEauty and lovelinesse of Christ and Christians 218 c. Beggers how to be relieved how not why 25 their vilenesse 104. Body is to honor God 73 Christ and Christians one body 207. 276 Brethren all Christians are brethren 3. C CAlling what lawfull 103. Changing of callings through discontent taxed 189. Labour in the same See labour Certaintie of salvation 118 c. Whence 270 c. Charity See relieve Christ is Christians fellow and how 202. Husband 203. Vine 204. Foundation 206. Head 207. A stone and what 206. His power 209. Love and nearenesse to Christians 209 c. Christs poverty what and why he was poore 222. Christians Christs fellowes 202. Spouse 203. Duties therefore 176. And branches 204. Duties therefore 277. Stones built on him 206. Duties therefore 277. And members 207. Duties therefore 277. Resemblances betwixt Christ and Christians and their nearenesse 208 214 c. Church a Vine 205. Its foundations what how many 206. A fold field c 208. Choosers we should be of what and why 177 c. Civill honest men in what they are defective 272 273. Cleane how Saints are cleane how not 240. See pure and perfect Cleaving to God a necessary duty what it is How we cleave to God motives therunto 189 c. Conference see tongue for the Lords Day 167 c. How delightfull Conscience what it is how it is bound to obey the Morall Law 245 c. See Law Conscience testimonie Consolation of Saints see Ioy. Whence 270 Contentation what Why we should be content 98. c. 106. With what 107 c. 118. Continuance crowned 95. Continuance of Saints See certainty Corrections and crosses See afflictions Covenant with God Its foundation frame kinds the same now with that of the iustified Iewes formerly It must be kept How why 178 c. Coveteousnesse its root and fruit 101. Puritanes how covetous how not 69. Riotous spend thrifts are covetous 66. Creation for Gods honour 71. God is derided in the derision of the creatures 80. Man an excellent creature 86. D DEath not to be feared 124. It s meditation ioyfull to the Saints 174. Dependance on Gods providence 65. Motives thereto 69 c. 123. Depopulatours hurtfull 67 98 99. Discontent fruitlesse 106. Disparity betwixt Saints and sinners 67. Drunkennesse a vile sinne 92. Hurtfull to the Commonwealth 67. E ENemies not to be feared 122. Envy a hateful and hurtfull sinne 38. Exercises for the Lords Day See sports Exile should not discontent 109. Not to be feared 124. F FAlling from grace how Saints may fall how they cannot 118 c. Family provided for without covetousnes 68. Lesse regarded by some then beasts 90. Father God is to al especially Saints 41. His fatherly love their filiall duties 41 c. Some fathers preferre their beasts before their children 90. Faith how all is like how not 4. Honoureth God 74. Takes hold of Gods Covenant 182. How it iustifieth how not 233. True faith described its fruits and properties who faulty concerning faith 265 266. Fashion following reproved 101 108 260. Feare honoureth God 74. Cleaves to God 150. It s excellencie 194 c. What to be feared what not 124 230. What feare is bad what good Obiections answered 194. Fellowship Saints have each with other Duties thence 3 c. With the Father 115. Motives meanes and duties 129 c. With Christ 202. It s nearenesse 213 c. Motives to ioyne in it 218. Who have fellowship with Christ 253 254. Obiections against the fellowship of Saints answered 113 c. Fellowship of wicked base 125 135 c To be shunned and why 6 c. 125 c. What wicked mens societie to be shunned 8. Food what should content 105. Spirituall the best 43. Fooles who sc What fooles wicked men are 128. Forgivenesse of our brethren necessary How Magistrates Ministers and private persons may and must forgive 37 c. Who must forgive whom when what how and why 38. Motives to forgive Obiections answered 39 c. Forgivenesse of sinnes a great favour to whom it belongs 234. God onely forgives sinne 37. Foundation of the Church what how many 206. Flesh an evill master disswasives from its service 196. G GAine of Saints is great 199. Garments of Christs righteousnesse the best 44. See apparell God the Saints Father 41. How a Husbandman 204 c. Good must be done aswell as evill avoided 82 91. Goodfellowship what 1 c. Of wicked naught See fellowship Wicked are falsely called goodfellowes 278. Name goodfellow to whom due 278 279. Glory how like 5. Gods glory See honor Glory of Saints
Pet. 2. 1. A worke of Sathan Gen. 2. 1. Of the Gentiles Rom. 1. 29. Of darknesse Rom. 13. 13. Of the flesh Gal. 5. 21. Opposite to charity ● Cor. 13. 4. And abdicated by holy men Titus 3. 3. Let him feed and foster this selfe-tormenting envy saith holy Salvian Invidia sola authorem persequitl●r Sa v. de Gub. Dei lib 3. pag 7● doth onely persecute the author viper by selfe-love impatience and selfe-conceitednesse making himselfe a foole Pro. 10. 18. An unprofitable hearer 1 Pet. 2. 1. Rotting his owne bones Prov. 14. ●0 And slaying himselfe Iob. 5. 2. Like the Mountaine Aetna scorching himselfe with his owne ●●mes What though the wrathfull man fl●sh●th himselfe in bloudy and barbarous cruelties acting that which is Sathans proper worke doing contrary to Gods nature he being mild and mercifull precept and practice Quid siulti propri●m non posse ve●●e nocere ●●as 49. What and if the furious irefull revenger proceed in his uncharitable and unwarrantable wayes thereby exasperating to more hurt doubling his owne griefe losi●g tranquillity and peace of conscience good will with men and favour with God by usurping his regall right and robbing him of his authority Yet let every member of this concrete communion freely fully soundly and sincerely forgive each other Mot. 1 To this end consider The Divine precept of our great God Math. 5. 39. His sacred practise Gracious promise Math. 6. 4. And dreadfull judgements against all such who will not forgive Mat. 7. 1 2. 6. 15. Iam. 2. 13. Secondly our owne pronesse to offend Gal. 5. 17. Our flesh lusting against the Spirit Either against the same person which we should forgive some other and God himselfe But we offending would willingly have forgivenesse Thirdly that the person offending did it either ignorantly unawares by some inducements or through the violence of some prevailing temptation It was not the man therefore but his weakenesse which did offend Lastly consider the commodious advantages we shall reape by forgiving are many and great 1. We shall hereby become like to God Math 5. 44 45. We shall gaine comfort which while the boisterous s●rges of angry passions tempestuously trouble our cholericke nature we are senslesse of yet afterwards we shall find to our more then ordinary consolation witnesse 2 Sam. 25. 31. ●3 We may with a hopefull assurance sue unto God for a full remission of all our enormities and with a blessed confidence graspe and hold fast a firme perswasion that our sinnes are done away grounding upon Gods unchangeable promise Mat. 6. 14. By freely forgiving we shall make our foe our friend Rom. 12. 20. heape coales of fire on his head 1. He will repent and embrace us friendly or else if he continue in his malice he shall be fired with his owne conscience and consumed with the wrath of God And hereby we are made fitter for all pious duties 1 Pet. 2. 1. Ob. An. 1 Say not therefore I cannot forgive because the matter is so great Thou hast offended the Lord farre more yet he is willing to forgive thee But he ought not to have dealt thus and thus with me Neither oughtest thou to have wronged God But I meant him no harme Neither did the Lord thinke thee any harme yet hast thou offended him But thou art his superiour God is thine He is thy inferiour Thou art Gods But thou carest not for his favour thou livest not by his friendship The Lord our God needs none of thy helpe thou livest by him not he by thee yet he is willing to remit thee thine offences Be not we rigorous for a hundred pence lest we be bound to pay upon paine of everlasting Math. 18. damnation a thousand talents Let not us provoke the Lord to mete out to us condemnation by our not forgiving Let not us send up Vriahs letter in our prayer forgive not us because we will not forgive But let us freely forgive each other seeing we all have fellowship one with another Now before I enter upon the second braunch of our Society I intend to speake somwhat of the word Father not in the largest extent thereof as how he is Father to all creatures men Angels c. But onely how is the Father of these good-fellowes afterwards I purpose to shew how he and we have fellowship each with other OF THE SOCIETIE OF THE SAINTS the second Booke CHAP. I. GOD is the Saints Father Doct. 2 THE LORD of heaven and earth is not onely Father to men Angels creatures but also of all goodfellowes or the Saints after a speciall manner with the Father Iohn 1. 12. Rom. 8. 14 15. 1 Thes 1. 5. And a cloud of witnesses of Scriptures testifie this truth To the confirmation whereof I will use onely two Reasons it being as apparant and generally assented to as that the Sunne doth shine at noone day Reason 1 He who is Father to the Saints any some or all those wayes whereby one man is father to another he is the father of these goodfellowes But the Lord of heaven and earth is Father to the Saints all some or most of those wayes whereby one man is father to another Therefore the Lord of heaven and earth is the Father of these goodfellowes He who is Father to the Saints in regard of direction paternall procuration instruction imitation image and adoption is Father to the Saints most of those wayes whereby one man is father to another But the Lord of heaven and earth is Father to the Saints in those regards viz. 1. Man is father unto man by direction Gen. 45. 8. Thus God is Father to the Saints directing them by his Word which is a light to their feet and a lanterne to their paths And his Spirit leading them thereby Rom. 8. 14. so that they walk after the Spirit 2. Man by paternall procuration is father to man thus Iob was a father to the poore Iob 29. 16. And so is God a father of our society defending us from cursed calamities plucking us out of the jawes of the Lion and providing for us necessaries at the least so that we have Sufficient for our good if not satiety to give us contentment 3. Man is father to man in regard of instruction or doctrine 1 Cor. 4. 15. Gal. 4. 19. Thus is God much more pouring grace by his Spirit into the heart for Paul may plant Apollo water but God onely gives the increase 4. Man in regard of invention is father unto man who in regard of imitation is his sonne Gen. 4. 20. Iabal the father of such as dwell in tents The Divell thus is the father of all wicked ones Ioh. 8. 44. Thus is Abraham father of all godly persons who walke in the holy steps of Abraham Rom. 4. 12. Thus is God our Father we being followers of him as deare children Math. 4. 45. Eph. 5. 1. 5. Man is father to man in regard of image Gen. 5. 3. Some
creature Instance we in what we can Be it for proportion ilfavoured beyond all imagination be it more pestiferous then the eye-slaying Basilisk and hideous Gorgon Let it have all the concurring ingredients of misery and contempt being the subject of extreame wretchednesse and an object of hatred to men and other creatures Yet man not beloved of God is beyond all comparison more wretched death being a period to its calamities and an entrance to the others unsufferable and never ending torments But let a man be beloved of God although he be table talke for hypocriticall mockers at feasts a by-word to men vil●r then the earth the drunkards song and trampled under foot by every stigmaticall varl●t yet is he as honourable as an heire of heaven a member of Christ and a child of God Do we then as we do if we are in our right wits desire God to love us and shall not we love him againe Reason therefore thus with thy selfe O man Are there so many profitable advantages accom●dating true love to God and shall I neglect them Hath true love to God such beneficiall effects and wilt thou despise them The want thereof such dangerous execrations and wilt thou incurre them Is love to God that great and first commandement and wilt thou transgresse it Dost thou thinke to have the love of God without which thou art most miserable and thou not loving him Is it fit for children not to love their father No no if other men will hate yet I am resolved henceforth to love God Yea and expresse the same by hating what is evill Obedience to Gods commandements A conscionable discharge of the duties of my calling Conformity to God Not loving the world Entirely loving the Saints Often thinking on God as my chiefest treasure And loving the comming of Christ to judgement CHAP. III. Duty 2. Saints must shunne sinne IS God our Father Then ought we to consider advisedly Duty 2. of our noble parentage and with all circumspect consideration take heed we disgrace it not nor distaine our Fathers houshold And imploy our endeavours to the utmost to honour and glorifie our Father and grace his faithfull family by our vertuous conversations It is not seemly for a Kings son to defile himselfe with contaminating dung and such like sordid filth it 's not for them to consort with fellowes of base inordinate and immorigerous ranks How much more unfit is it for Gods sonnes children to a King truly really whose kingdome is of such large extension that heaven hell earth and all places are within his royall government and of such commanding power that all created beings whether ruling Kings or potent Emperours whether Coelestiall Angels or infernall Divels stand his subjects to do him homage and that not for a moment or some small time of continuance but through all eternity to pollute themselves with sinne and impiety more loathsome then any thing whatsoever e. g. Be it that a man from top to toe is soyled with the most noysome excrements that are imaginable to be upon the face of the earth yet with a small quantity of water and a little industry of man it 's easy to have him cleansed Suppose a man to be as it were clad with boyles and botches from the sole of the foot to the crowne of the head yet it is possible that good diet wholsome ayre the helpe of skilfull Phisitians should restore him to perfect sanity But all the water in Abana Parphar Iordan nor the whole O●ean is of force to wash off nor the most excellent diet wholsome ayre drugges and pearles of price hornes of V●icornes stones of Bezar ordered by the exactest skill of men and Angels is availeable to purge away sinne It is onely the bloud of Christ which cleanseth from sin 1 Ioh. 1. 7. What made those for●orne Apostate fiends of glorious Angels to become damned Divels detested of God Angels and men Sure I am not their Creation it being excellent but their depravation their sinne Whence is it that the Lord doth hate his owne Ordinances New Moones Sabbaths and prayers Isa 1. 15 What occasioneth the Lord to turne a fruitfull land into barrennes●e save the iniquity of those that dwell therein Psal 107. 37. Why did the Lord drowne the whole world with an overflowing deluge overturne those pleasant and fertile cities even as the Garden of God Gen. 13. 10. with fire and brimstone save onely because of their sinnes By which particulars it is most perspicuous that nothing whatsoever so filthily polluteth as sinne and therefore such persons whose father is the great King ought not to pollute themselves therewith What els meane those Scriptures 2 Tim. 2. 19. Let every one who names the name of Christ depart from iniquity 1 Ioh. 3. 8. He who commits sinne is of the Divell Ver. 9. Whosoever is borne of God sinneth not And againe Hee cannot sinne because hee is borne of God 1 Ioh. 2. 1. These things have I written that you sinne not 1. Mistake me not I pray I intend not the least allowance of Donatists Pelagians Catharists and Familists who glory of perfect purity yea to be as pure as Christ in heaven of freedome from all sinne the Scriptures telling me that in many things we offend all Iam. 3. 2. I seeing the Publican whose prayer was accepted saying God be mercifull to me a sinner Luke 18. 13. Saint Paul complaining to be of sinners the chiefe 1 Tim. 1. 15. And our Saviours owne Apostles commanded to pray forgive us our trespasses not for modesty sake as Pellagians affirme but of consciousnesse of humane fr●ilty as saith Saint Hierome He who commanded to sinne no more Ioh. 5. 14. Commanded also to pray daily for forgivenesse He who said whosoever is borne of God sinneth not 1 Ioh. ● 6. Said also If we say we have no sinne we deceive our selves and the truth i● not in us 1 Ioh. 1. 8. We make God a lyar and his word is not in us verse 10. Although we know God heareth not sinners Ioh. 9. 31. Yet we know also that Christ came to call sinners to repentance The same God who directed Balaams tongue to say God hath beheld no iniquity in Iacob nor seene perversenesse in Israel Num. 23. 21. Directed the tong●e of Moyses the man of God to say Thou settest our sins before thee our secret sinnes in the light of thy countenance Psal ●0 8. What then is there contradiction in the Scripture No such matter both the one and the other are the undeniable sacred truths of God God seeth no sinne in his people sc with a revenging eye as to condemne his people for their sinnes That mandate sinne no more is a comparative speech whereby the cured is exhorted to strive that his sinnes be not such nor so many as they had beene but that their force might be weakned their number lessened and occasions avoided God heareth not sinners i. such who make a trade of sinning suffering
and from former signes and sense of Gods favour Of graces some are principall and absolutely necessary to salvation as faith hope love these may be lessened decayed and covered in regard of operation Psal 51. 10. Create in me a new heart Some are lesse principall yet requisite and very profitable as the feeling of Gods favour chearefulnesse in prayer joy in the Holy Ghost which lesser graces may be quite lost for a time Me thinkes such like considerations as these following may sufficiently incourage all of this society against feare of not continuing in the love and favour of God 1. Such are the gifts of God the Father to his onely Sonne Christ Iesus Which Donatives he will not lose Iohn 6. 39. Neither shall any take them out of his hands 10. 28. 2. Such are the precious purchase of the invaluable bloud of the immaculate Lambe the Sonne of God more worth then millions of worlds Acts 20. 28. Things dearely bought are dearely beloved dearely beloved are carefully kept and not willingly lost 3. Such have Christ Iesus praying for them Luke ●● 32. That their faith faile not Iohn 17. 9. That his Father would keepe them Verse 11. from the evill one Verse 24. Heb. 7. 25. That they may be with Christ 4. Such are kept by the invincible power of God through faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1. 5. 5. To such the Lord hath promised and his promises are yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1. 20. eternall life 1 Iohn 2. 24. 6. Such are sealed by the Spirit of God to the day of redemption Eph. 4. 30. Therefore it is as possible 1. For Iesus Christ that invincible Lion of the Tribe of Iuda victoriously conquering sinne Sathan death and damnation 2. For the Lord of Hosts whose hosts and armies are all creatures from the most contemptible flyes and lice to the mightiest Angels whose omnipotencie is such that he effecteth what he will all things being alike possible to him It 's as possible I say for the Sonne and Father to be overcome as for the Saints being kept and preserved by them both 3. It 's as possible for Gods decree to suffer mutation and change and so for that Lambes Booke of Life for so is the Decree of Gods Election called continually to be mutilate subject alwayes to defacing by having the names of some of Gods Elect blotted out of the same and yet there is no variablenesse with the Lord nor the least shadow of changing Iam. 1. 17. 4. For the ingraven seale of Gods sanctifying Spirit to be blotted out and so to be more uncertaine then those of the Medes and Persians 5. For the inestimable bloud of the immaculate Lambe Christ Iesus to be as water spilt upon the earth 6. For the purest and most prevailing prayers that ever ascended to the Lord of Sabbaths the meritorious petitions of Gods owne Sonne to be of no force and yet the Prayers of one righteous man availeth if it be fervent Iames 5. 17. 7. For Gods promise to be unfaithfull as for those who have fellowship with the Father to fall from grace finally totally But the one therefore the other are altogether impossible I know the Prophet Ezek. 18. 24. saith when the righteous Ob. c. But as Mr. Yates and others say well Those words are a commination or warning to keepe the elect from falling to make the reprobate inexcusable 2. The words are generally spoken to all in the Church therefore the worser part may fall away ●his ad Casarem pag 110. Zanch. Tom. 7. page 340 341. Contra Rem in Collat. Hagien Thes 5. 3. They are conditionall like Rom. 8. 13. Luke 19. 40. Scriptures and reasons against this are learnedly answered by Mr. Bernard in his Rhens against Rome When therefore that roaring Lyon who seekes by all meanes to devoure shall use such like temptations against the assurance of thy perseverance as these following O thou who hast fellowship with the Lord and so furnished with true saving faith thou art mutable fraile and weake 2. Thou art uncertaine of thy salvation 3. Thy first parents in Paradise could not stand 4. Their strongest Children have fallen witnesse David Salomon Paul Peter c. and dost thou thinke to continue Thine enemies are not few but many not meane but mighty not malecontent alone but also malicious not tractable but truculent not lither but laborious not simple but subtile not negligent but vigilant and dost thou dreame of perseverance Enliven thy selfe after this or the like manner I confesse mine owne imbecillitie the fall of my first parents in Paradise in their innocency and their posteritie neither am I ignorant of the number nature and properties of mine enemies What then Must I therefore of necessitie fall away No such matter 1. I am weake and seeble True But I doe not rest upon my selfe but upon the Lord who keeps me who is greater then all neither is any able to pluck me out of my Fathers hands Iohn 10. 29. 2. I am uncertaine But how In regard of my selfe but God hath established me in Christ 2 Cor. 1. 21. 3. Neither did Adam stand in innocency nor Sathan in glory True they stood by their owne strength so do not I by Christ I stand and am kept by the power of God to salvation 4. The strongest of Adams posterity have fallen yet not finally Peter was winnowed Paul buffeted But they rose againe their faith did not faile Gods grace was sufficient for them Winnowed I may be buffeted I may be overcome can I not be for my life is hid with Christ in God 5. Mine enemies are many yet more with me then against mee 2 Reg. 6. 6. They are malicious But God is mercifull They are not so strong but God is more strong and although they are watchfull yet I know to my comfort that he that keepeth Israel doth neither slumber nor sleepe and therefore I shall continue Moreover 1. Since it is Gods will to save me Iohn 6. 39. 2. And Gods will shal be done Psal 115. 3. For he can do what he will although he will not doe all he can 4. Since the faithfull formerly beleeved this 2 Tim. 1. 12. For I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I have committed to him against that day 4. ●8 Will preserve me c. 5. And warrantably The Apostles and Prophets preaching it 2 Tim. 2. 10. The foundation of God standeth sure having this seale the Lord knoweth who are his 6. Since the gifts and callings of God are without repentance Rom. 11. 29. And so the graces of God are irrevocable in regard of the seed substance and habite of them although not in regard of the actions fruits feeling measure and degrees Psal 51. 9 10 11 12 1● 7. Since the Lord will finish and perfect his workes of grace once begun Phil. 1. 6. 8. Since in a word I have fellowship with the Father and so intimate that he vouchsafeth to dwell
left undone 2. In respect of his will he having a desire which is accepted 3. In regard of endeavour striving to frame his life according to the Commandements of God 4. Comparatively in respect of others 5. In regard of integrity of heart to one commandement as to another to all and euery one at all times as saith Mr. Bernard Besides although they cannot fulfill any of them yet they are carefull to follow all of them though they cannot keepe them throughly yet they desire and endeauour to keepe them truly Although they cannot attaine to the perfection of obedience yet they strive for some proportion and measure of obedience And so they keepe the law of God First by imputation 2. Cor. 5. 21. Secondly by inchoation Rom. 15. 14. Thirdly by acceptation 2. Cor. 8. 12. God accepting the desire for the deed the will for the worke the purpose for the performance and part for the whole 4. Is it because you can enter covenant elsewhere more for your advancement and preferment If so where and with whom If you thinke with the world you are pitifully deceaved and mistaken It 's but vanity therfore seeming that it is not shewing that it hath not soone passing away It is but vanity therefore light unprofitable deceitfull and transitory If with sinne how are you deluded it oppresseth it damneth If with Sathan do you deale wisely What good can he give you who hath none himselfe What favours will he bestow who seekes your vtter ruine and destruction Relinquish therefore and extirpate such diabolicall charmes enter into covenant you cannot with any more honourable then our God more powerfull to defend you then the Lord of Lords more rich to reward you mercifull to blesse wife to direct you and more just to performe all his promises Those who keepe covenant with our God shall be graciously Protected comfortably directed plentifully rewarded triumphantly crowned and immortally glorified Never did any man gaine by breaking nor loose by keeping covenant with God O●t did the ancient Israelites breake covenant with God but their guerdon was not gratefull Iudg. 2. 20. 2. King 18. 11 12. and no marvaile for not to keepe covenant with God is disobedience to breake it wilfully is rebellion Psal 78. 10. breach of covenant with man is a great offence Rom. 1. 31. therefore with God a grand impiety Abraham left his native countrey and fathers house he went with an intent to sacrifice his sonne upon mount Moriah Moses left the courtly pleasures of Egypt Matthew forsooke the receipt of Custome to follow Christ they refused not Gods designement because of those many perillous obstacles and dangerous difficulties they were to encounter with and they were no loosers It is no losse to leave a fathers house for a kingdome carnall kindred to be father of the faithfull the pleasures of a corrupt idolatrous court to guide Gods people the gathering of tolle or taxe to gather Saints into Gods Kingdome There is nothing better then to be in league with God Had you such a comely proportion starre-like beauty matchlesse validity undaunted valour nimble agility perfect sanity which is not attainable by nature Could you dive into deeper profundities and discourse more profoundly of matters Ethicall Politicall Physicall and Metaphysicall then all Philosophers that ever breathed Had you worldly honours wealth and delight even to content which is not possible yet all those are but as drosse in respect of being in Covenant with God For by vertue hereof 1. The Lord is our God not onely by creation and conservation as he is to all But by election redemption covenant possession affection and adoption 2. And we are his people not onely by vocation and profession but his peculiar people holy nation his people by election conversion perswasion and practice By vertue of which it is that the Lord is our strength shield salvation righteousnesse King Father Redeemer hope helpe fortresse and Deliverer Hence it is that we have interest in earthly favours remission of sinnes imputation of righteousnesse and donation of Gods Spirit Hence it is that we shall have a joyfull resurrection immortall glory and consummation of blisse Hence comes our spirituall power and authority honour and dignity sonne ship and adoption Isa 56. 5. Hence comes our right and title to the use of the creatures happy guard of Angels beatificall blissefull promises and that unparalel'd matchlesse crowne of immortality And to conclude Hence it is that we have fellowship with the Father Ioyne we therefore our selves in covenant with the Lord. 1. Inwardly by faith and perswasion 2. Outwardly by vocation and profession 3. Both wayes joyntly by perswasion profession and practice of piety and true godlinesse that wanting we may obtaine having we may declare that truly our fellowship is with the Father CHAP. XV. The tenth Meanes and Duty is Cleaving to God HAve we fellowship with the Father Cleave we then unto 10. Meanes Duty the Lord The prodigall a servant cleaved to his Master Luke 15. 15. The conjugall knot makes leave father c. and cleave to his wife Math. 19. 5. The friendly society tw●xt Ionathan and David knits the soule of Ionathan to David 1 Sam. 18. 1. Where there is firme communion there To cleave to the Lord is to be knit to him in heart without purpose of any 〈…〉 ration ever is a cleaving together Those therefore who have fellowship with the Father must cleave to him as a wife unto her husband as a servant unto his Master as a friend unto a friend as a girdle to a mans loines for so saith the Lord Ier. 13. 11 For as a girdle cleaveth unto the loines of a man so have I caused to cleave unto me the whole house of Israel c. Draw w● therefore neare to the Lord walke with him continue in the Lord depend upon him sticke fast to him or in a word cleave we to the Lord. 1. Vniversally in all things Deut. 11. 22. 2. Totally in soule and body both Ios 22. 5. 3. Spiritually and sincerely Acts 11. 23. 4. Vnseperably and continually Ios 23. 8. We cleave unto the Lord 1. Inwardly 1. By faith Heb. 11. 6. He that draweth neare to God must c. 2. By feare Deut. 10. 20. Feare the to cleave unto him 3. By love Ios 23. 11 12. Love unites it selfe asmuch as may be to the thing loved it makes a man desire and seeke above all things this fellowship when wanting 1. In those meanes he hath appointed to communicate himselfe unto us 2. Doth communicate it selfe to God in things in which he wil be loved of us And 3. It will make us accomplish the will of God Cleave we therefore thus unto the Lord For why should we not 1. Trust in him who is both true and faithfull mighty and able to helpe 2. Feare him who is both just and terrible also able to destroy both soule and body 3. And love him which is so mercifull gracious