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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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late years to bring in woful changes to remove the Gospel and give away our Kingdom Liberties Freeholds and lives to strangers Remember that admirable year of eighty eight and that no less admirable threatning and deliverance in one thousand six hundred and five forget not the raging and devouring plague in which there was no peace or safety to him that went in and out Remember the furious fire in many great places of the Land burning up whole Towns and Villages the general diseases and distempers in mens bodies which have been as universal as our provocation hath been the change of our seasons the breaking out of waters drowning the earth the infection of the air many barbarous Conspiracies against the life of so innocent and merciful a King and the hot contentions of many brethren in our own Church All which are remarkable signs of Gods displeasure if not fore-runners of a lamentable change But he that considereth how all these things are forgotten and worn away unprofitably without all wholsome use or reformation cannot but think that the Lord if timely repentance hinder not will take some other course and so speak as hee will be heard for the truth never fayls which you have heard at large one Judgement is ever a fore runner of another unless repentance cuts them off O that God would put it in the hearts of high and low to seek the continuance of our happy peace in our seasonable seeking of God by repentance and not seeking still to provoke him by wilful impenitency Vse 2. Let us not expect an end of temptation and trial while we are here below seeing Satan goes away in respect of temptation and molestation but for a season If Satan be gone he will return yea although he cannot prevail he will not cease to be an enemy and the longer our peace hath been let us think our change the nearer None of Gods children but the Devil is sometimes departed from them but the experience of them all shews that he never stayed long away from any of them and therefore let us be wise although God● goodness have kept him a great while from us not thereby to grow secure but as fore-casting his coming again aim our selves for him 1 N●t mistaking our present estate which is a pilgrimage and not a paradise of ease and pleasure 2 Considering that evils fore-seen lose a great part of their bitterness and they are so much the weaker against us as we are stronger by our providence and fore-sight of them 3 Neither may we think much that after one or two or three assaults Satan hath not done with us but comes again as he did against our Lord for wee servants are not better than our Master nor better than our fellow-servants who have been often assaulted as David first to Adultery and after that to Murder and after that to pride in numbring the people and after that Satan came again and again And Paul was often bulleted by Satan yea after hee had prayed thrice he got no release but a promise of sufficient grace 4 Neither may we conceive it strange that after some sleighter temptations we should be urged with fouler for Satan commonly keeps his strongest till the last as hee did to our Lord. Many say never were any so foulely tempted not so often as they their flesh trembles and their hair stands an end to think what foul temptations Satan suggesteth with great instance But can there bee a fouler temptation than to worship the Devil himself yet the Son of God was tempted to it Therefore resist as he did and the sin is not thine but Satans who shall bee damned but thou shalt be saved in the day of the Lord. Satan still cometh with more malice and worst at last contrary unto God who is best at last Vse 3. In that Christian life is mixed with peace and trouble learn wee not to fix both our eyes upon any present prosperity nor use it as a perpetuity but hold it as a moveable which passeth and moveth from one to another We have now a sweet sense of God but this may be over-cast he may hide himself and we be troubled we may now have the joy of our faith and presently our souls be clouded with unbelief distrust and dreggs of infidelity All Gods graces are still in sight often soyled by their contraries And for temporal things our health is conflicted with sickness our good name wounded with disgraces and defamations our friends mortal and were they not so yet mutable often becoming our greatest enemies our wealth winged and leaves us when we have most need of comfort our life it self commutable with death which is the turning of us out of all that wee loved dearest excepting God himself Let us therefore fix our eyes upon those eternal good things and that eternal peace and that Kingdom which cannot bee shaken For the things which are seen are temporal but the things not seen are eternal And then whatsoever I lose it is but a moveable my inheritance is sale and sure Vse 4. Hence wee may see how like wicked men are unto their father the Devil in their courses Satan seems to goe from them but it is but for a season and so do their sins but for a season by a counterfeit repentance As we may see in two or three instances 1 Some upon some good motions and exhortations by Gods Word and Spirit are stru●k with some sense of their estate their conscience is checked and they resolve to take a new course and perhaps enter upon it as the Devil were quite gone But he comes again he went but for a season and sets them as deep in their usury deceit gaming and wicked fellowship as ever before the dogge returns to his vomit and the sow to her wallowing in the mire the evil sp●rit that seemed to be gone is returned and hath brought with him seven worse Devils because he found his house fit for him 2 Some about the time of receiving the Communion are very devout will make a shew of religion of prayer of repentance of charity and love they will not swear much that day perhaps not play but read and it may bee sing Psalmes A man would think for so doe they that the Devil is quite gone But it is but for a season their righteousness is but as a morning dew their unrighteousness returns and they become as disordered in their courses as malicious in their lives the next day as ever they were before A fearful case that with Judas they receive the sop and the Devil withall 3 Others in the time of sickness are very penitent will confess all promise amendment plead for pardon crave good prayers and vow to God if hee restore them to become new men and women and now the Devil they hope is quite gone But no sooner their sickness breaks but the Devil comes again and brings all their former sins back again and they are well contented
either in one calling or the other as much blessing as they seek they have So what other reason can bee given that many lingring evils and want of Gods blessing is in so many families but because men omit the chief means of procuring the one and repelling the other Men think they have nothing to do with this duty but when publike authority enjoyns it and that it is onely the fault of Magistracy it is so out of use as though every Master of a family were not a Magistrate and Bishop in his own house or as if that were not a means for private blessings which is so mighty for publike Oh deceive not thy self that which thou canst not do publikely thou maiest do in thine own house and therefore if thou wantest any grace or blessing blame thine own idleness that seekest it not in Gods means Vse 2. This should move us to perform so needful a duty as this is Motives to fasting 6. and thereunto to consider of these reasons 1 Consider the Promises that are made and have been made good to fasting and fervent prayer Remember that one example of good King Jehoshaphat against whom came the Moabites Ammonites and they of Mount Seir whereupon hee proclaimed a fast throughout all Judah and prayed earnestly 2 Chron. 20.2 17. and before they had ended their Prayer the Spirit of the Lord came upon Jahaziel a Levite who by the Spirit of Prophecy foretold the victory saying Yee shall not need to fight in this battel O Judah and Jerusalem Fear yee not but to morrow go out against them and the Lord will bee with you and so it came to pass for the enemies slew one another and the Jews gathered the spoil and returned and praised God in the valley of Beracha that is of blessing so called ever after 2 The ordinary prayers of Gods children have prevailed much and much more can their fasting and prayer bring greater blessings When Peter was in prison sleeping between two souldiers the night before he should bee brought out to death being bound with two chaines and the Keeper before the door watching the Prison at the ordinary Prayer of the Church an Angel smote Peter saying Arise quickly and his chains fell off and hee was delivered Act. 12.5 much more can Extraordinary Prayer joyned with fasting prevail 3 Many things are not obtained but by that prayer which is joyned to fasting Matth. 17.14 this kind of Devils is not cast out but by prayer and fasting that is by a most fervent kind of Prayer to which fasting is joyned as a whetstone to sharpen it and set an edge on it Some things as those that are pretious cost a greater price and some sutes must bee obtained of men not without long and instant supplication so here many things are long sought by ordinary prayer which being extraordinary favours might by extraordinary prayer have been sooner had 4 God hath rewarded the wicked who have used this Ordinance in Hypocrisy and much more will hee those his servants that use it in truth 1 King 21.21 Ahab fasting for the destruction threatned by Elijah humbled himself and this fast of his not joyned with true repentance but onely kept in the outward ceremony in abstaining from meat in sackcloth and giving some testimony of outward sorrow was not unrewarded but obtained a reprieve of the execution of the sentence till his Sons dayes How much more respect shall wee obtain of God if wee joyn to the outward fast the inward graces of humility repentance faith and fervency 5 Were this exercise in request sometimes in families it would prevent many judgements and many sins the procurers thereof in governours children and servants as adultery fornication drunkenness swearing riot and prophaneness these might bee kept out as well as cast out by this means and unspeakable were the good that might hereby be procured as release from many evils life health c. 6 We have the example of the Jews who besides all other moveable fasts upon special occasion must have one set fast in a year Levit. 16.29 1 Because many great sins of all sorts might be committed in a year for which they needed to be humbled 2 Once a year God might shew some tokens of displeasure publick or private that they might know that once a year they had cause to be humbled Obj. That was a Ceremony Ans The day was not the thing the equity of which binds us as well as them because the ends and causes bind us And in the Gospel wee have the example of John and his Disciples who fasted often and Christs Disciples must fast when the Bridegroom is gone and causes of mourning come Beside these we have sundry other motives to religious fasting as 1 Shall Christ fast for us and not we for our selves 2 Shall the Pharisees fast twice a week in hypocrisie and wee not once in our lives in sincerity 3 Can we cheerfully betake us for our bodily health to fasting diet or abstinence so long as the Physician will prescribe and will we doe nothing for our souls health 4 Can worldly men for a good market fast from morning to evening and can Christians be so careless as to dedicate no time to the exercise of fasting and prayer to increase their gain of godliness 5 Is not this a seasonable exhortation hath not God sounded the Trumpet to fasting Matth. 9.16 when the Bridegroom is taken away it is time to fast But now 1 Sins abound as Drunkenness Pride and high wickedness and there is no more fear of Gods wrath in the Church and Land 2 The Word and Ministery is more despised than ever and less loved Preachers and Professors of the Gospel are scorned as in the days of Noah the heavenly Mannah is contemned and the contempt of it threatneth a final departure ot the Bridegroom 3 Papists increase in numbers in boldness in pride in power and are so farre from being converted by the light as they are daily more perverted and perverse notwithstanding the glorious Gospel of God and the wholsome Laws of the Land Adde unto these the swarms of Atheists Machevilians carnal and cold Protestants among us 4 Who hath not smarted in the common judgements of the Land lingring by many years in plagues unseasonable weather fires waters and the like all of them fore-runners of greater misery Who can forget the warning of Gun-powder and the present unfeelingness of it And were not these publike evils how may every one of us bewail Christs hiding of himself from our souls His gracious beams shine not on us with such comfort as they might his Word is not so fruitful in the best as it should dulness and conformity with the times creep in upon the best the Sun and Moon great Lights in the Ministry are darkned and the Starres lose their light among professors Is it not time to awake our selves if ever and to betake our selves to sack-cloth and ashes to fasting
alledge Scripture hee saith nothing against it but was silent he replies not and much less rails on him as a phantastical or precise person But reprove the Swearer the Drunkard the Gamester the unjust courses of men in their trades Sabbath-breaking in Masters or Servants and do it out of the Scripture as Christ did wee shall have the same measure that hee had returned from the Scribes and Pharisees who railed out-right on him He is too precise and severe wee can do nothing for him or What hath hee to do with our Government or Trades or He might finde other things to speak of Thus if Paul speak against Diana or whatsoever the craft-masters live by all the City is in an uproar against him It seems men are loath in their callings to meddle with the word of God or the directions of it else wee should have to deal with them It were too much to sit down silent and go on in sinne against the Word but to resist the word in termes or to rail upon the Preachers thereof goes one step beyond the Devil Vse 4. Take knowledge of the secret working of the Devil against the light and truth in such as spurn against it They cannot abide that truth and innocency should acquit it self but though they see nothing but meekness patience and innocency yet will side against it as though they had the greatest advantage and occasion What is the cause that men will take part with most abject and base persons and bring the curse on themselves in condemning the innocent and justifying the wicked in their horrible riots and misbehaviour but the hatred they carry against goodnesse Why did the Jews band themselves for Barrabas and seek to acquit him Was it because there was any cause of love in him knew they him not to bee a murtherer and a Rebel Yes It was hatred of Christ that made them stick to him and why hated they Christ but because he was the light Some there bee of that Jewish generation lest to whom if Christ be weighed with Barrabas he will seem too light Barrabas shall carry the credit and defence from him Not him but Barrabas Into the holy City We come to the second circumstance in the preparation to this second assault which is the place that Satan chuseth set down 1 In general the holy City 2 In special a pinacle of the Temple What holy City this was Luke expresseth chap. 4.9 He brought him to Jerusalem here called the holy City Jerusalem is called the holy City not because of any holiness in the place for no place as a place is more holy than other It is true that wee read in Scripture of holy ground as Exod. 3.5 Mount Horeb where Moses stood is called holy ground and Moses must put off his shooes But this was no inherent holiness in the place only for the present the presence of God appearing after a special manner makes a special holiness to bee ascribed unto it Neither is it called holy in respect of the people and Inhabitants for the faithful City was long before this become an Harlot Isa 1.21 and Christ not long after this Combate cryeth out against Jerusalem That shee had killed the Prophets and slain such as were sent unto her and proclaimeth a speedy desolation against her But it was so called 1 Because God had made choyce of this City to put his name there 2 Chron. 7.12 I have chosen this place for my self Hence was it called the City of God and Gods holy Mountain Dan. 9.16 and the holy Hill of Sion because God had chosen it and sanctified it for himself wherein himself kept residence and made it eminent above all the places of the earth 2 Because of the holy things which were there established even all the holy worship of God it was not lawful for the Jewes to sacrifice or eat the Passeover any where but in Jerusalem There was the Temple built on mount Moriah wherein I. There was the Sanctum seculare the utter Court of the Jews and Salomons porch which did rise up by fourteen stairs wherein Christ preached often and Peter healed the lame man Acts 3.3 and probably where Peter converted three thousand souls at one Sermon In this porch was the great brazen Altar for whole Burnt-offerings on which Altar the fire which at Aarons first offering in the Wilderness fell from Heaven Levit 9 2● 24. was to be kept perpetually before the Lord the which when Aarons sons neglected and offered with strange fire they were burnt with fire before the Lord. In this Court was the great brasen Sea wherein the Priests washed themselves and the Beasts to be offered on that Altar especially their feet because they were to minister bare-foot before the Lord. Both of them holy representations of Christ the former of his Sacrifice who gave himself for a whole Burnt-offering the latter the fruit of it he being the Laver of the Church by whose bloud we are washed from the guilt and power of sin II. There was the inner Court which was called the Sanctum or the Sanctuary or the Court of the Priests whence the Jewes were barred There was here 1 The Altar of Incense for sweet perfume wherein the Priests were evening and morning to burn the holy Incense before the Lord as a sweet-smelling savour unto God and no strange incense might be offered thereon Exod. 30.9 While Zachary stood at the right side of this Altar offering incense to God the Angel Gabriel stood and fore-told the birth of John Baptist This was an holy type of Christ who offered himself on the altar of the Cross a sacrifice of sweet smell to God his Father and through whom God savoureth a sweet smell from all our duties 2 In this Court was the golden Candlestick with seven Lamps and seven Lights which were ●ed with most pure holy oyl night and day to lighten the whole inner Court And this was an holy type of Christ the light of the world enlightening all his elect with spiritual and heavenly light 3 In this Court was that golden Table on which the holy Shew-bread was ever to stand even twelve Loaves which were to be made of the purest flower of Wheat and were to bee renewed every Sabbath the old Loaves converted to the Priests use a holy type of Christ in whom alone the Church and every member setting themselves continually before God are nourished and preserved unto eternal life 4 In this Court was that costly and precious Veil of blew silk and purple and scarlet and fine twined Linnen made of broydered work with Cherubims the use of which was to separate the Sanctum from the Holy of Holies this veil at the death of Christ was rent from the top to the bottom A notable representation of the flesh of Christ which hid his Divinity but being rent asunder by his passion on the Cross the way to Heaven was laid open unto us III. There in the Temple
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
AN EXPOSITION OF Christ's Temptations OR CHRISTS COMBATE AND CONQUEST BEING The LYON of the Tribe of JUDAH vanquishing the Roaring Lyon assaulting him in three most fierce and Hellish TEMPTATIONS BY Thomas Taylor D. D. Preacher of Gods VVord at Aldermanbury London HEBR. 2.18 For in that hee suffered and was tempted hee is able to succour them that are tempted Tentatus est Christus ne vincatur à Tentatore Christianus August LONDON Printed for A. K. and R. I. and are to be sold by Elisha Wallis at the Golden Horse-shooe in the Old-Bayley 1659. To the Right Worthy and Noble Knight Sir Francis Knollis and the vertuous Lady Lettice his Wife All blessings of this Life and a better SIR WHEN that great Prophet Moses was to bee confirmed in the certainty of his vocation for the delivery of Gods people out of Egypt a Act. 7.30 There appeared unto him in the wildernesse of Mount Sinai b Christ himsel● so called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just Matt. an Angel of the Lord in a flame of fire in the bush c Exod. 3.1 and hee looked and behold the bush burnt with fire and the bush was not consumed A sight at which Moses d Act. 7.31 wondred and so may we But if you please with Moses e Exod. 3.4 to turn aside to see this great sight that is f Act 7.31 draw a little nearer to consider it This it is I. The bush which at that time betokened the people of Israel g Exod. 3.7 9. under the oppressions of Egypt signifieth the Church of God for 1. As a bryar-bush is a base and despicable thing made for nothing but the fire or to stop a gap or some other base use so seems the Church and members to be in the eyes of men in so much as not the most eminent members the blessed Apostles themselves are h 1 Cor. 4.10 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 despised and accounted the filth of the World and the off-scowring or out-sweepings of all things but the Head of it our Lord himself was in the eies of men without form i Isa 55.2 3 or beauty despised and rejected of men who hid their eies from him and esteemed him not 2 As a bush pricketh and vexeth him that deals roughly with it so shall the Church of God bee as a stiff and prickly bramble to vex and wound at length all the proud enemies of it so as all that k Zach. 12 3 lift at it shal be torn though all the people of the earth should be gathered against it 3 As the creatures for their own safety make their nests and muses in a bush so the mighty Creator not for his but the bushes safety vouchsafeth l Deut. 33. ●● to dwell in this bush of the Church The bush was in Mount m Exod. 3.1 Famous for s●● memorable things in Mos●● done there 1 This visio● 2 Fasting the●● forty daies an● nights 3 Receiving the 〈◊〉 there 4 Scriking the rock for water 5 Lifting his hands against Am●●●ck 6 Breaking t●●●ables of 〈◊〉 Horeb and God was in the bush even so the Church is in the mountain of the Lord lifted up as a mountain above the vallies in holinesse and priviledges above all the earth besides for of this mountain the Lord hath said n Psa 68.16 there will I dwell for ever II. The bush burns with fire In this resemblance is shadowed the oppressed estate of the Israelites in the Egyptian furnace and by fire here is meant the most painful and pittiful afflictions and miseries which seiz upon the Church and Members as a raging and devouring fire upon a dry bush for 1 Fire is a diffusive and spreading element catching whatsoever combustible matter is neer it even so not a sprig of this bush of the Church shall escape the flame of affliction but whosoever will live godly in Christ Jesus o 2 Tim. 3.12 shall suffer persecution for either the fiery darts of Satan shall scorch them within or they shall be sindged with the fiery p 1 Pet. 4.12 tryals of the worlds hatred or at least they must look to bee be-smeared and blacked in their names with the colly and smoak of odious false and scandalous imputations and what are q Quid a●●● su●●s quam flemma 〈…〉 Gods people saith one but the fewel of the wicked worlds fiery indignation 2 Fire shineth and inlighteneth so the afflictions of the Church as fire inlighten the mind r Psal 119.71 teach the statutes The rod and correction saith Solomon ſ Prov. 29.15 give wisdome and the Lord t Job 33.16 36.9 openeth by correction saith Elihu the ears of man which hee had sealed in which use this fire of affliction becomes as another u Exod. 13.21 pillar of fire to inlighten and guide the Israel of God in the night of their wandring through the wilderness of this world towards their land of promise that heavenly Canaan 3 Fire giveth heat and warm'th so the heat of this fire of affliction melteth and thaweth our frozen hearts condensed and congealed by the pinching air of cold security this fire kindleth our devotion enflameth our zeal x Isa 26.16 Hos 5.15 warmeth our prayers and makes us hot suters for releef 4 Fire softneth and smodreth metals y Exod. 9.27 Pharaohs steely heart will melt and soften while it is in this hot furnace yea in the same man it separateth dross from pure metal and like that fire which burnt only the z D●n 3.27 Ig●is non perdi● sed purg●s bands of them that were cast in but not their bodies so it only consumeth the corruptions but preserveth alive the children of God who only walk at more liberty and further inlargement in the fire than they did out of it and as gold come forth more purified more glorious 5 Fire is a climbing and ascending element so the fire of affliction maketh the heart to ascend and raiseth the thoughts to heaven-ward Luk. 15.17 Misery maketh the Prodigal bethink himself of his Fathers house when he is a great way from it and this is the fire which Moses saw seizing upon the bush Stabilitatem populi ex veritate promissionum dei ad●●ravit Junius in analys III. The bush burning is not consumed signifying the preservation of the Church and Members as Israel in Egypt in the hottest furnace of their afflictions Well may wee wonder that so flaming and terrible a fire falling upon so contemptible a bush and so dry and despicable a shrub should not presently turn it into ashes for why is the fire too weak or is the bush so strong as to defend it self or is it not disposed or apt to be burnt consumed by so fierce a fire Certainly it is not from the impotency of the fire nor from the strength or constitution of the bush which is in the matter of it as combustible
as any chaff and as easily destroyed as any stubble that it is not consumed But 1 This fire is not kindled against the bush cut of the sparks of Gods wrath Heb. 12.29 Heb. 12.10 and indignation which is indeed a consuming fire but of his Fatherly affection and love not for the hurt of the bush but for the profit of it not to destroy the persons but the sin for the persons sake Wee have indeed kindled and blown up our selves a violent and devouring fire Heb. 10.27 which God might send into our bones Lam. 1.13 Psal 83.14 Lam. 3.22 to burn us up as fire burneth the forrest and as the flames set the mountains on fire But the mercy of God is as water to quench this fire for else would it burn to the bottome of Hell and instead of a Furnace of fury which melteth away his enemies Ezek. 22.22 he setteth up in Zion Isa 27.9 a furnace of favour only to melt the metal consume away the dross and refine his chosen ones to become vessels of honour 2 Because the fuel of the consuming fire of Gods wrath are slaves not sons those wicked brambles Ezek. 15.7 which if they escape one fire saith the Prophet they fall into another which shall consume them but not this bush which is only made brighter and better by the flame but not blacker not worser The chaff and stubble must feed the fire of wrath never to come forth more but the pure metal is cast into the furnace to come forth so much the purer as it hath been the longer tryed Exod. 3.2 3 Because the Angel of God is in the bush This Angel was Jesus Christ the Lord of the holy Angels and the great Angel of the Covenant For Moses saith expresly of this vision ver 4. The Lord appeared unto Moses and God called unto him out of the middest of the bush and S. Luke recording the same vision Act. 7.31 2. greeing with Exod. 3.6 after that hee had called him an Angel bringeth him in saying I am the Lord of Abraham c. This same presence of the Son of God was noted the cause why the three children in that furious furnace of Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.25 being cast in bound walked loose in the midst of the flames why not they but their bands were burnt and why not an hair of their cloaths vers 27. and much lesse of their heads were touched no nor smelt of the fire Isa 43.2 Behold the bush burned but not consumed because the King saw four men walking loose having cast in but three bound and they have no hurt for the form of the fourth is like the Son of God Because God is in the midst of it saith David of the Church it shall not bee moved No● potentia urendi sublata ab ig●e sed operatio tantum ut Dan. 3 for God shall help it very early How partly 1 by restraining the natural force of the fire 2 partly by obfirming and strengthening the bush against it 3 partly by watching it that it spread not too far for himself as it were sits by the fire to tend it 4 partly by slaking and cooling it when it groweth too hot lest the heat smite the bush as the worm did Jonas his gourd By these means Jonab 4.7 the bush in the flame becometh like the Gem Amiantus Amiantus g●●●a ig●● non absumitur sed lucidi●● ac ●urior redditur Dub. Chytr●●s Isa 53.3 which is not consumed by fire but becomes brighter and purer than before This most holy and comfortable truth is fully assured unto us in the person of our Lord and Head as well as in the body who in the daies of his flesh was 1 A bush most able to peirce and wound his enemies in himself most desplicable and base in all outward appearances and in this bush God dwelt not in any visible sign of his presence but as never in any before essentially and bodily 2 A bush in the fire partly of Gods wrath Col. 2.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa 53.10 Matth. 26.38 Mat. 27.46 Lam. 1.14 True first in the head and then in the members in inward passion and suffering in his soul the sorrows of the second death which made him cry My God my God why hast thou forsaken me into which flame had the bush of the Church been cast it had been utterly consumed Partly of mans wrath in outward passion and misery such as whereof hee complained that no sorrow was ever matchable to his And partly of Satans wrath in most fiery and furious temptation the which hellish fire was renewed and blown up against him in most violent sort three several times as in the Treatise following we shall by Gods grace discover 3 A bush in the fire not consumed but came forth of the hotest Furnace that ever was kindled more bright and glorious than the Sun in his strength For easy it was with him to convince his temporal adversaries by the mighty raising of himself from the dead through his own Divine power Rom. 1.4 when hee had overcome the wrath of God his Father and not difficult for him that had in his life overcome Satans Temptations and in the wilderness spoiled him of his power and weapons in part Col. 2.15 upon the cross by his death openly and perfectly to destroy his Forces and as on a glorious Chariot to triumph over him This bush burnt but not consumed As he is the end of all the Scriptures so also of the exposition of them in whom and for whose glory I have published this Exposition at the importunate request of some Friends Notwithstanding many discouragements that was on the one hand and sundry godly lights in our own tongue opening the same Scripture on the other Mr. Udal Mr. Perkins Mr. Dike 2 Sam. 23.13 The truth is magnified in the mouth of many witnesses and a poor man may give in as true an evidence as a rich If I may hold Benajahs place in the Church of God and stand for God among the thirties and the many of his Worthies it shall well content me although I attain not unto the first three What ever this labour is I have presumed to dedicate it unto you noble Sir as a testimony of my true and unfeigned affection and duty 1 Because God hath made you a worthy instrument in this place which as well by your authority and care as through your godly affection and countenance of good men and causes hath a long time enjoyed much comfort assistance and refreshing 2 Your sound love to the truth hath invited this truth to run under your patronage 3 As he which hath been once friendly bid welcome will boldly come again so your good entertainment of this doctrin in the delivery of it assures it you will now bid it as welcome to your eye as it was to your ears at the first offer of it
renewed in knowledge wait at the gates of Wisdom shut not thy heart and eyes from the beams of this blessed light 3 Grow up in holiness and righteousness as God himself is not only free from all evil but infinite in goodness most just most holy and as hee letteth his light shine before men so must thou let thy light shine before men that they may see thy good works Matth. 5.16 2 Cor. 7.1 cleanse your selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit that yee may grow up to full holiness This holiness must not only fence the heart from uncleaneness but the eye the ear the mouth the hands and feet and all the members when they bee ordered according to the Word prescribing rules for them all Rule 2. VVhen thou feelest grudgings of diffidence arise and Satan will urge thee how thou canst think thy self respected of God being beset with such a world of trouble and almost drowned in a sea of vexations without bottom or bank Now call to mind and set before thee Christs blessed example in whom as in a glass thou mayest see the sharpest of thy sorrows in any kind not only sanctified and sweetned but mingled with admirable love of his Father VVhat evil befalls thy body and soul or thy estate inward or outward which he hath not born and broken and yet never the less loved of his Father Thou wantest comforts of body House Land Meat Money hee had not a foot of land not a house to hide his head in not any money till he borrowed of a fish not a cup of cold water till he had requested it of the Samaritan who would give him none Thou wantest friends respect in the world yea where thou well deservest yea where thou mightest justly expect it Remember it was his case his friends became his foes his scholar a Traytor the world hated him causeless he came to his own and his own received him not he was without honour in his own Countrey hee had evil repayed him for good he wept over Jerusalems misery but Jerusalem laught at his Thou wantest peace of conscience canst not see a clear look from God nor feel any ease from the sting of thy sins thy sorrowful mind dries up thy bones all outward troubles are nothing to this But remember that never was any so laden with the burden of sin as Christ when his bitter torment expressed such words as these My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee 3 Rule From these crosses by which Satan would drive thee from God Sundry waies of God drawing neer his Saints in their troubles labour to see how near and graciously God draweth towards thee and thus beat him with his own weapon 1 The Lord helpeth forward our salvation by them being sour sawces to bring us out of love with our sweet sins and of this evil world plowing of ground kills the weeds and harrowing breaks the clods they be the Lords sharp salves to draw out our secret corruptions and the Lords sope to wash foul linnen white they bee the Lords ushers to teach us his statutes to teach by a little smart both what thou hast deserved in the life to come and what Christ hath suffered for thee in bearing the whole punishment of all thy sins to teath thankfulnesse for contrary blessings by poverty sickness trouble men learn to bee thankful for wealth health peace to teach pity and compassion towards the misery of others to teach circumspection in our waies and more care of obedience to all Gods Commandements 2 The Lord by crosses tryeth and exerciseth the faith patience and sincerity of his servants whether they will hold out as Job for as a man by wrestling knows his own strength better than before so is it here 3 The Lord is never nearer his children than in trouble in fire and water in six troubles and in seven to support them with strength and patience to give a blessed issue and use● and turn it to his own glory in their mighty deliverance and to their best all things are turned to their best to recompence their light afflictions with an eternal weight of glory As Christ said of Lazarus This sicknesse is not to death but that God may bee glorified John 11.4 so wee may say This poverty loss disgrace c. is not to the utter undoing of a man but that God may have glory in his deliverance and glorification So much of the third drift of Satan in this first temptation now of the fourth In that the Devils last drift in it is to have Christ in his want and hunger to use an unlawful means of supply note that Doct. 4. It is an ordinary instigation and temptation of the Devil To use unlawful means to help our selves is diabolical or a Devillish spirit to use unlawful means in our want to help our selves Because Christ had no ordinary means of getting bread hee must provide for himself by extraordinary Gen. 25.29 32. Esau comes out of the field weary and hungry and almost dead for meat how must hee supply his want Sell thy birth-right said Satan and so hee did Peter was in great danger in the High-Priests Hall how must hee help himself out of their hands Deny thy Master said Satan forswear him and curse thy self and thus hee gat out Saul was in great straights God was gone from him hee was not answered by Urim nor Oracle how shall hee do for counsel hee must go to the witch of Endor and so the Devil sends him from himself to himself who can tell him more than all his Vrim his Dreams his Prophets Sarah wanted a Child shee had a promise of one but shee laught at that Gen. 16.2 yet must she have one another way shee gives her maid to her Husband and shee brings an Ismael a mocker and persecutor of the promised seed Reasons 1 Satan sees how easily hee can weaken our confidence in God seeing wee are ready to trust more in the means than in God hee knows our infidelity which makes us hasty and soon weary of waiting 2 Hee knows how derogatory this is to the promise truth power and providence of God who can sustain his children as well above means without means yea against means as with them His hand is not shortened that he cannot help 3 Hee easily draws on this temptation under of a colour of necessity which wee say hath no law but falsly Hence is the common speech of the world to defend any injustice Why I must live I must not put forth my wife and children to beg I must so exercise my calling as to maintain my wife and family I must utter my wares though I lye and swear and exact and deceive and so under a colour of good and pretence of necessity no wickedness comes amiss in the course of ones trade Use 1. This teacheth us to bewail the pittiful estate of numbers of men taken in this snare of the Devil as 1 Numbers of
stripes bee not the more 8 Thou art an ignorant man thou understandest not Sermons why then doest thou follow them or read the Scriptures A wretched conclusion the more ignorant I am the more I need use the means of knowledge the less I understand the more I had need bee taught But this ignorance is one of the chief Pillars of Satans kingdome Object These Preachers agree not among themselves and therefore I will beleeve never a one of them Answ Thou must search for wisdome as for silver and for understanding as for gold 9 Thou art a man of good conscience of much integrity above other Christians and if thou beest so then separate thy self from these mixed companies of godly and prophane Come out from among them my people lest yee partake of their plagues separate from their preaching and prayers from their fellowship and company from civility and salutation thou maiest eat their meat but say not grace with them pray for them not with them Ah but if my conscience bee good I must not forsake the fellowship as the manner of some is Heb. 10.25 as knowing that such pure assemblies cannot bee found under the whole cope of heaven And if wee would fence our selves against these wicked inferences of Satan wee must carefully observe these rules 1 Beleeve not every Spirit but prove the spirits whether they bee of God 1 John 4.1 as Goldsmiths separate gold and dross and examine every piece of gold by the touchstone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Thess 5.18 Try all things 2 Compare doctrines and the reasons of them with the Scripture if a doctrin disagree from any part of the Word it is erroneous and dangerous as namely that of the real presence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which impugns the article of Christs ascension 3 Hold fast that which is good 1 Thess 5.18 When wee have considered and known truths 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wee must with Mary lay them up in our hearts to bee ready to serve our use Command these stones to bee made bread Wee have considered the scope of Satan in this first temptation which was 1 To impugn the word of the Father proclaiming Christ his Son 2 To shake the saith of Christ 3 From consideration of his present estate to bring him to doubt of his Fathers providence 4 To use an unlawful means to ●elieve himself Wee have heard also what a dangerous inference hee bringeth upon a true ground Now wee come to the more special handling of the suggestion it self wherein wee shall see how cunningly Sathan conveies it Eight things cunningly contrived in this one suggestion and how instantly hee follows it implying in these few words 1 That it is an easy thing say the word or Command here is no labour and being so easy why should Christ stick at it 2 That it is now fit here is an object ready here bee stones these stones 3 That it is harmlesse onely a proof of the power of the Son of God and in reason what should Satan have gained by it and Gods Son cannot sin not God bee angry with his Son 4 That it is a necessary thing is it not necessary for a man that is ready to starve to eat and procure bread If hee will live he must eat 5 That it is a glorious thing to command stones I say not Pray for by prayer as great things as this have been done the Sea dryed fire turned into water the Sun staied in his course to stand still yea and go back but command by thine own proper power 6 That it is a work of special use not onely for the releef of thy self in this want but to satisfy mee for if thou makest stones bread I will confess the finger of God and beleeve thy Fathers voice that thou art the Son of God and accordingly account of thee and so shall all that shall come to the knowledge of this great and extraordinary work 7 That it is not unreasonable to command a few stones to bee made bread will bee no hurt to any man and if thou wilt not transubstantiate many stones turn but one stone into bread so it is Luke 4.3 Say to this stone that it bee bread in the singular number whereas it is probable that at first hee offered him many or all the stones in the place which Matthew recordeth if Christ think that too much hee will bee content that hee turn but that one into bread as Luke hath it 8 The Son of God should demean himself as the Son of such a Father who is heir and Lord of all things mee thinkes thy estate is not suited to thy person and therefore by this action manifest that which thy estate doth not and if thou doest not give me leave to doubt of thy person and take thee for an impostor Satan ordinarily moveth men to turn stones into bread Doct. It is an ordinary temptation of the Devil to shake the faith of Gods children to move them to turn stones into bread For as hee dealt with Christ in want Christ was hungry and the devil shews him stones let him turn them into bread if hee will so is it with men who are tempted in like manner if they bee in want Bread you must have what need I tell you of so sensible a want and therefore shift for your self here bee stones at least one stone in time of need turn it into bread why to help your self you may use a little extraordinary or unwarrantable means When Satan seduced Eve hee perswaded her to turn a stone or rather an apple into bread why thou seest how God envies your full happiness and doest thou beleeve his word to bee true No no it is but to keep you from being as Gods which what an excellent estate it is you now know not Esau was very hungry when hee came from his hunting and hee must dye if hee turn not a stone into bread and as Satan never goes without his stones that is his objects so there was a mess of broath ready for which prophanely hee sold his birth-right I am almost dead and what is the birth-right to mee Saul was extreamly haunted and vexed and knew not what to do with himself God was so far out with him as hee answered him no way and now hee must get him to another patron and who is fittest for him who is gone from God but the Devil Hee must now seek a familiar to answer him 1 Sam. 28.7 the stone is not far off there is a Witch at Endor and hee can eat no bread but from her hands There bee two especiall reasons or occasions whence Satan groundeth and followeth this temptation of turning stones into bread 1 The avoiding evil 2 The procuring of some apparent good both which hee knows our hasty inclination unto I. In avoiding troubles hee layeth two snares and hath two plots Snares laid by Satan in avoiding our troubles 1 To turn stones into
and thou art good no longer But thou that art so impatient and thus betrayest thy meekness towards thy brother what wouldest thou do if thou hadst the Devil in hand as Christ had here Also this makes against railers and scoffers of others for Christ railed not on the Devil himself nor would overcome him otherwise than by humility Christs answer most modest Thirdly This Answer of Christ was a most modest answer Satan would have him confess himself the Son of God this hee denyeth not nor yet affirmeth but modestly acknowledgeth himself a man Man liveth not by bread onely The like wee may note elsewhere being called to his confession before the Governours If hee were the King of the Jews Matth. 27.11 If hee were the Christ Luke 22.67 If hee were the Son of God hee did not directly affirm it but either Thou sayest it or yee say that I am not denying but modestly assenting and ordinarily hee called himself the son of man not the Son of God teaching us by his example when wee speak of our selves Note to speak modestly Paul being to speak of great things of himself speaketh all in anothers person 2 Cor. 12.2 I know a man in Christ above fourteen years ago c. taken into Paradise c. and John speaking of himself saith And when Jesus saw his mother and the Disciple whom hee loved and who leaned on Jesus at supper chap. 19.26 Alas how far are wee degenerate from this our pattern who if wee bee but the sons of mean men we will stand upon it much more than Christ did upon being the Son of God we will pride it out and ruffle and brag and bear our selves upon our ancestors if they bee stept but one step above the lowest Christ when hee had good occasion would not scarce profess himself the Son of God being of another manner of spirit than that which breathed out that brag in the temptation afterward All these will I give thee II. Now to come to the second point in the answer namely the affection But Jesus answered and said The conjunction discretive sheweth our Saviours disagreement from Satan and that his Answer is negative to the temptation for although Christ both might by that miracle of turning stones into bread have shewed himself the Son of God and now needed bread being hungry yet hee would not yeeld to Satan Quest But seeing Christ who as God could have turned stones into sons of Abraham could much more turn stones into bread so easily by his word for if hee had spoken to the stones as Satan desired certainly they would have had ears to hear him why would hee not do it what hurt had it been Why Christ who could turn stones into bread would not five reasons Answ 1 Miracles must confirm faith in Beleevers unto salvation John 2.11 but Christ knew the Devil could not beleeve if hee had all the miracles in the World Besides hee had even now heard the Fathers voice testifying Jesus his beloved Son and Christ knew if hee would not beleeve the Fathers voice he would not beleeve for the Sons miracles 2 Christ would not by this miracle give the least suspition that either he distrusted his fathers seasonable providence or that he would depend for his preservation upon the means but upon his Fathers word hee was in his fathers work and lead by the Spirit into the wilderness and therefore knew he should not want necessaries 3 It was an unseasonable motion it was now a time of humiliation of temptation of affliction wherein it was fit to avoid all shew of ostentation which was the scope of the temptation for Satan would onely have him to shew what hee could do for a need for a vaunt of his power Now in a time of serious humiliation to advance himself by a miracle had been as seasonable as Snow in harvest 4 Christ would not give the least credit to Satan nor do any thing at his desire were it good and profitable which hee suggesteth for his end and issue is ever wicked and devillish yea hee would shew how he contemned the will of the Tempter for hee is not overcome unlesse hee bee contemned 5 Christ Jesus being the wisdome of his Father well knew that Satan grossy dissembled with him for hee spake as if hee wished well unto him and would have his hunger satisfied but could hee indeed respect the releef of Christ did hee desire Christs preservation and welfare knew hee not that hee was the promised seed that must break his head and destroy his works and therefore seeing Christ knew that Satan must needs seek his destruction in all his attempts hee had just cause to yeeld to none of them all though they seemed never so beneficial In that Christ here would not make his Divinity known to Satan neither by word nor miracle wee may note that Doct. Christ will not purposely make himself known to such as hee knows will make no right use of him Luke 23.8 When Herod saw Jesus Christ revealeth himself only to such as make right use of him hee was exceeding glad for hee had heard many things of him and hoped to have seen some miracle But Christ would not work any sign in his presence because hee had wrought workes enough already to prove him the Son of God neither was it fit to prostitute the power of God to the pleasure of a vain man who would have made no right use of it Matth. 12.39 This evil and wicked Generation seeketh a sign and none shall bee given them save the sign of the Prophet Jonah Why had they not infinite signes and miracles both then and afterwards Yes but they had none such as they would have for they would have some extraordinary sign as Mat. 16.1 Master shew us a sign from heaven as if they had said Either cause the Sun to stand still or go back as in Joshuahs and Hezekiahs daies or the Moon to stand as in Ajelon or call for an extraordinary tempest of thunder and rain as Samuel did which made all the people to fear the Lord and Samuel exceedingly 1 Sam. 12.18 or call for fire from heaven as Elijah did These and the like they thought beseeming men of God as for turning water into wine restoring of sight and legs c. those they saw little power in But why would not our Saviour give them such a sign as they desired Surely hee had just reason the same in this our doctrin for they did not desire it for a good end but as Luke saith expresly to tempt him not to help their infirmity but to feed their curiosity neither to increase and strengthen faith but to nourish their infidelity For had that been their end had they not beside the doctrin of the Prophets and the fulfilling of the promises the blessed Doctrin of the son of God of whom some of themselves said Never man spake like him and for the confirmation of that
be saved 3 How hardly can we bee kept from wicked companies and occasions Though we be warned by Christs voyce speaking in the Word as Peter was yet we thrust into Caiaphas his hall and the Players Hall which is the Devils School and will not avoyd occasions till the end of sin bring sorrow and bitterness incurable How easily doe men lose the watch over themselves against their own resolutions and the motions of Gods Word and Spirit when they might redeem their precious time gained from their special calling to the general in reading meditating prayer c. presently the Devil thrusts them out of both callings to gaming drinking or bowling or such unprofitable exercises O when God layes you on your Death-bed this one sorrow if God ever give you sense of your estate will be ready to sink you that you have loosely and unfruitfully parted with your time and now you cannot buy an after-noon to bewail the loss of many in with all your substance 4 How prone are we to venture and rush upon any thing without a calling or without a warrant as when men cast themselves into unnecessary dangers hoping that God will deliver them Many run on an head into unlawful contracts without care of any word to guide them Others strike the hand and undoe themselves by Suretiship Others cast off profitable callings and betake themselves to unprofitable and hurtful as Usurers and their Bawds and keepers of Smoke-shops And some will run upon ropes for praise or profit In all this men are out of their way and in a course of tempting God Would a man cast himself into the Sea in hope he should never be drowned or on a perswasion he should never be burnt cast himself into the fire Wee having stayrs are prone to leap down Christ our Lord would not doe so 5 How common a thing is it both in matters of soul and body to sever the means from the end which is a plain tempting of God as our Saviour here calleth it Every man hopes to goe to Heaven but never seeks the way I. What a number will be saved by Miracle for means they will use none faith repentance knowledge mortification sanctification they are strangers yea enemies unto God fed the Jewes miraculously in the Wilderness not in Canaan not in Aegypt where means were Christ fed many people by Miracle in the Wilderness but being near the City he bought bread Joh. 4.8 God will never feed thee with the heavenly Mannah by Miracle where the means are to be had but are neglected How many will either be saved as the Thief was on the Cross or they will never be saved they make their salvation but an hours work and make as short a matter of it as Balaam who would but dye the death of the righteous What a tempting of God is this as if a man would adde his Oath unto Gods that he shall never enter into his rest Christ hath sufficiently set forth his Divine power by that example of him on the Cross he need not nor will not doe it again in saving thee by miracle It is a better argument Christ saved the Thief at the last hour on the Cross therefore he will not so save me than otherwise VVhat a common sin is it to neglect the means and despise the word as a weak and silly means as the Preachers be silly men Oh if wee had greater means some man from the dead or some Angel from Heaven or some miracles we could bee better perswaded A great tempting of God as though his wisdome had failed in appointing sufficient means for the faith of his people Christ reproved this infidelity Joh. 4.48 Except yee see signs and wonders yee will not beleeve Notably Luther If God should offer me a vision I would refuse it I am so confirmed in the truth of the word How commonly doe men stand out the threats of the Word plainly denounced against their sin even in their own consciences which is nothing but to tempt God and try whether he will be so just and strict II. In the things of this life men tempt God many ways 1 Idle persons are tempters of God that for working might releeve themselves and theirs but they will not and yet hope to live whose presumptuous tempting of him God revengeth either by giving them over to stealing and so they fall into the Magistrates hand or he hardens mens hearts against them that they finde not that good in an idle and wandring life which they expected These must have water out of a rock and be extraordinarily fed thrusting themselves out of the ordinary course which God hath put all flesh under viz. By the sweat of thy brows thou shalt get thy bread 2 The omitting of any ordinary means of our good or over-prizing of any means is a tempting of God to take them from us and a revenging of the abuse Hezekiah though the Lord say he shall live fifteen years must not omit means but take dry figgs and lay to the apostem Asa must not trust to Physick for then he shall never come off his bed 3 In our trials when wee murmure grudge make haste or use unlawful means we tempt God and incur this great sin So as none of us can wash our hands of it but it will stick with us and we had need daily to repent of it because it daily thrusts us under the displeasure of God Vse 1. Labour we to nourish our confidence of Gods power and mercy which is an opposite unto this sin and strive against it Quest By what means Ans By observing these rules 1 See that in every thing thou hast Gods word and warrant for what thou doest say not I hope I may doe this or that but I know I may doe it If thou hast a word thou mayest be bold without tempting God that is the ground of faith and tempting of God is from infidelity Acts 27.34 when Paul was in extream peril he tells the Mariners they should come safe to land Why what was his ground even a special word the Angel of God told him that night that none should perish 2 Walk with God as Enoch provoke him not by sin then mayest thou pray unto God and secure thy self under his wing in danger without tempting him So long as a man hath a good conscience with Paul and an upright heart with Hezekiah he may bee bold with God and rejoyce in himself and assure himself that Gods power and justice is his he will not sink in trouble not say Is God with me 3 Vse the means conscionably which God hath appointed for the attaining of good ends Paul had a word that they should all come safe to land yet they must not cast themselves into the sea nor goe out of the ship Never did any promise of God make the godly careless in the means Daniel had a promise of return out of Babylon after seventy years and knew they should return
with grace than Eves in her innocency And yet when as Satan let upon her senses he sent in by them such poyson as wrought death unto all her posterity Rules for the ordering of our senses aright 1 Beware of the life of sense which is a brutish life 2 Pet. 2.12 the Apostle speaketh of men led by sensuality even as the brute beasts who follow sense and appetite without all restraint Thus did the Gentiles who were therefore given up to a reprobate sense Rom. 1.24 And the danger of this estate Salomon noteth Eccles 11.9 when hee bids the young man walk in the sight of his own eyes and after the lusts of his heart but withall Remember that for all this he must come to judgement Let such think hereon that think it is free to give up their senses to feed themselves upon every object themselves please 2 Consider that God made the senses to minister to a right ordered heart and not the heart to follow the senses and therefore the heart must be watched that it walk not after the eye which is to invert Gods order And what a deluge of sin over-floweth the soul when the understanding is buried in the senses and the heart drowned in sinful appetites David gives his eye leave to wander and look lustfully after Bathsheba and what wayes of misery one overtaking another did he bring into his soul And what marvel then if natural men neglecting their duty in taking off their eyes from unchaste objects never rest till they come to have e●es full of adultery 2 Pet. 2.14 not ceasing to sin according to our Saviours speech Matth. 6.23 If the eye be evil all the body is dark yea and the soul too 3 Keep the parts of Christian armour upon thy senses that thou lye not open there A valiant Captain knowing that the enemy is easier kept out than beaten out of a City hath great care to plant his Garrison about the gates and walls there he sets his most ●aithful watch and ward there he plants his chief munition and ordnance Had David kept his armour on his eye he had not been so foyled by Bathsheba If on his ear he had not been so injurious to Mephibosheth by means of slandring Zaba 2 Sam. 16.3 4. Salomon wisheth us Not to look upon the colour of the wine in the cup that is with too much pleasure to stirre up desire He would have us keep our sence upon our ears not to give ear to a flatterer or whisperer but brow-beat him and drive him away with an angry countenance The Apostle Paul would have our ears shut against evil and corrupt words which corrupt good manners Daniel desires not to taste of the Kings dainties nor will pollute himself with them chap. 1. vers 8. And so we must fence our whole man as we may not touch any unclean thing and yeeld nothing to the course of waters 4 Feed thy senses with warrantable objects 1 God 2 His Word 3 The Creatures 4 Thy Brethren 5 Thy self First our eyes are made to see God himself here below as wee can in his back-parts hereafter as wee would face to face And therefore a base thing it were to fixe them upon the vain pleasures and profits of this life This is fitter for brute beasts that have no higher object Again what fairer or fitter object can we chuse for our senses than himself that made them with all their faculties and gives us so much comfort by them Prov. 20.12 The hearing ear and seeing eye God made them both and both of them as all things else he made for himself Further where can we better place ou● senses than upon him from whom all our help cometh How ought our eyes to be continually lifted up in holy and servent prayers and praises considering both our continual necessities and supplies So David I lift up mine eyes unto the hills from whence my salvation cometh Psal 121.1 and As the eye of the Hand-maid is lifted up to the hand of her Mistris so are our eyes unto thee Psal 123.1 Lastly how can we place our senses better than upon him who is the most pleasant and durable object To see God in Christ reconciled to hear and know him become our Father is so ravishing a sight as the Saints have runne through fire and water to apprehend it And for the continuance it will feed the senses everlastingly yea when the senses themselves decay and wax dull this object shall feed them and be never the less sweet And therefore as Salomon adviseth Eccles 12.1 while thou hast thy senses fix them upon this object Remember thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth before they be dark that look out at the windows c. If a man set his senses and feed them upon any outward object wealth honour pleasure buildings and the like wee may justly say to him as our Saviour to his Disciples when they gazed upon the beautiful workmanship of the Temple Are these the things your eyes gaze upon verily the time comes when one stone shall not bee left upon another undemolished The like may bee said of all earthly objects whatsoever Only this object shall grow more and more glorious and desirable Secondly God made our senses to be exercised in his holy Word which leads us to himself Heb. 5.14 the Apostle requires that Christians should have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 senses exercised in the word Prov. 2.2 Let thine ear hear wisdom 1 Hence comes faith which is by hearing 2 Hence we draw the comforts of the Scriptures which are the consolations of God in our trouble 3 Hence are we admonished directed and wholsomly corrected Prov. 15.31 The ear that heareth the rebuke of life shall dwell among wise men 4 The danger of neglect is great 1 He that turns his car from hearing the law his prayer is abominable 2 Uncircumcised cars resist the Holy Ghost Acts 7.51 3 Itching ears that turn from the truth doe by Gods just judgement turn unto ●ables 2 Tim. 4.3 5 It is a sign of a man that hath given his heart unto God for he that gives his heart will give his senses too knowing that God requires both Prov. 23.26 My son give me thy heart and let thine eyes that is thy senses delight in my wayes And our Saviour saith He that hath an ear to hear let him hear Seeing therefore that this is so notable a means of guiding our senses let us more carefully give up and take up our eyes and ears with the sight and sound of Gods Word upon all occasions in the hearing and reading of the Scripture I would ask the most carnal man that is whether this in sound judgement bee not a better object for our senses than Bowls or Tables and fitter for all times especially for the Sabbath Thirdly God made our senses to profit our selves by his Creatures that by them we might glorifie him their Creator and not by them corrupt or insnare our selves
God having in Justice put them under his power Now although Christ did most powerfully spoyl Satan of his dominion which he had in the souls of men this being the of his power but possessed and disposed by him and ruled at his will and pleasure For First who would think him possessed that can fall down on his knees make a solemn profession and confession of Jesus Christ that he is the Son of God and the most high Mark 5.7 and make loud prayers unto him as acknowledging him to be the Lord of glory and yet all these are the speeches and behaviours of a man possessed not with one or two but with a Legion of Devils Luke 8.28 What doe the Devils honour Christ who fear nothing more than that he should be honoured and hate nothing so much as he No but all this confession and worship was by constraint partly because they knew him a Prince and a Judge whose power they could not resist and partly they flatter him to obtain more gentle entreaty at his hands than they deserved so many a man professeth Christ but you shall observe at least he may himself that many foul spirits breath in him for although hee know Christ as the Devils did yet he obeyeth him not he would fain resist him if he were strong enough to make his part good against him which because he cannot doe he will give him fair words and call him Lord and Master he will pray to him in sickness or distress but it is but to get out of his hands and keep his wonted hold still If the power of Christs word come near him he can begin to accuse Christ and Christian profession of unpeaceableness and tormenting him before the time for what time would please these that Christ should come unto them he can ask Christ and his Ministers what they have to doe with him and Christ shall be blamed because he cannot be at peace for him if he would let him alone all should be well and quiet but the Ministery and Discipline are intollerable let Christ preach and he will preach him too so it be such a Gospel as bringeth no repentance or amendment of life to himself but he may remain where he was even in the Graves already lodged with death When hee cannot doe the greater mischief that he would he would doe the lesser if hee can if he cannot hinder the Ministery he can deprave it wherein as in all the rest he shews himself at the command of that wicked spirit who when he could no longer torment the man would drown the swine Secondly although the Devil might be forced through the power of Christ to acknowledge him the holy one of God so as themselves might continue Devils still yet who would think him guided by any other than a good Spirit of God that should extol the servants of Christ their persons their Ministery their doctrin for would any conceive that the Father of Lyes would praise the truth and yet mark what a large testimony the Devil himself in the Maid gave of Paul and Silas These men are the servants of the most high God which shew unto us the way of salvation and this she did many days A t s 16.17 Why did not the Devil know that they were the greatest enemies he had upon earth Yes he did but he must sometimes transform himself into an Angel of Light he must colour all his Lyes with some truth which is undeniable hee can lay all his falshoods upon appearance of truth as his eldest Son Mahomet enlarged the praises of Christ and his Disciples to overthrow Christian religion withall he hath his fetch to make men beleeve there is an agreement between Christ and his Apostles and himself or that they needed his testimony who therefore put him to silence and would receive no commendation from him but for praises returned sharp rebukes Even so many men can praise good men and Ministers before their faces whom they know to bee deadly enemies to their vices not for love of their vertues but lest they should use them and can call them honest men to try if by that they can hinder them from doing the duty of honest men as the Devils called Paul and Silas the Servants of God lest they should shew themselves so by dispossessing them Besides they would seem herein to bee better than they are and therefore will honour the Gospel and bringers with their mouths whereas in their hearts they cannot abide that the doctrin of it should bee in sincerity either published or practised the name of Christianity and of the Gospel pleaseth them well enough so as the power and fruit of it come not neer them But as the Devil had no sooner praised the Servants of God but presently hee changed his coppy and never left persecuting them till hee had cast them into prison got them soundly beaten set fast in the stocks and after sent out of the City even so many who now commend the person and doctrin of the Servants of God presently shewing what spirit guideth them can accuse them to bee mutinous and seditious troublers of their City and State and raise up the whole City and stir up the wrath of the Magistrates against them that so under pretence of the W●rd or Law or Peace or Order the true Ministers of God shall bee wrongfully condemned and cast out Thirdly Who would think that hee could be haunted with a wicked spirit that can see his sin 1 Sam. 24.17 18. confess it with tears and indignation against himself openly justify the righteousness of Gods children and yet in the example of Saul wee see that a soul possessed of Satan may do all this For as it is in bodily possession though the Devils desire is incessantly to hurt and vex the poor creatures yet by Gods over-ruling power hee is forced to give them some respite and though hardly yet sometimes departeth from them and not alwaies but sometimes casts them into the fire and sometimes into the water Luk. 9. So is it in spiritual possession the Lord for the common good bridleth often the rage of the Devil in his instruments that they cannot alwaies exercise it as they would but they have their fits sometimes that is some strong lusts which Satan watcheth and putteth himself into as Judas his Covetousness invited the Devil to enter into him and also sometimes again they have their good moods and seem to bee come to themselves but long stay they not here but in a moment are changed and cast into their fits again Thus in a good mood Saul could confess his wickedness and Davids innocency and lift up his voice and weep and David was now his good Son and who but hee but presently the good spirit went and the evil spirit came upon him and hee became more tyrannous and furious than ever before even so some there are who seem to have remorse of conscience for sin they will confess their
9.22 Master if thou canst do any thing help us but with confidence as the Leper Master if thou wilt thou canst make mee whole Matth. 8.2 or as the Centurion onely speak the word rebuke these dumb and deaf spirits within me and thou who only canst make the dumb to speak the deaf to hear the blinde to see and the lame to leap for joy set mee at liberty work my inlargement chase away these spiritual enemies and thou that art the Son set mee free and I shall bee free indeed In cases of sorcery and bodily oppressions by Satan what to do Again art thou in any affliction of body or mind or goods or name yea bee it in the case of Sorcery or Witchcraft against thy self or any of thine or whatsoever belongeth unto thee look up unto Christ hee can command Fire Water Windes Seas Diseases Death the Devils themselves and if hee see it good for thee he can check all thy grievances hee is of no lesse power now in his glory at his Fathers right hand than he was in his humility upon earth and yet when hee was at lowest hee could command Legions of Devils nay Legions of Angels as at his apprehension much more can hee now command and rebuke the former and pitch the latter round about them that fear him so as without his will all the Devils in Hell cannot make one hair of thy head to fall The superstitious sorcery of such as attempt by amulets and words to drive away Devils and Diseases Thirdly Hence are overthrown sundry superstitious and wicked opinions and practices very rife in the world As 1 Such Popish minded persons as think that by certain words and amulets Devils may bee driven away diseases healed c. And for this they alleadge that in the New Testament onely by naming Jesus such cures were effected To which I answer that it is too gross a conceit to think that there can be any vertue in words to dive away diseases much less Devils or to conceive that by the pronouncing of words but by the vertue and power of Christ working by the Apostles and miraculously put forth with those words both diseases and Devils gave place and so the parties were healed Popish charming 2 Such as think that by the applying of consecrated things as they call them Devils are scared away as by holy Water Salt hallowed Candles reliques of Saints the sign of the Cross Images fashioned in such or such a place All which howsoever very ordinary in the Church of Rome yet indeed are no better than sorcery and charming and the very practices of those who while they will drive the Devil from others plainly prove that themselves are spiritually possessed by him in that they will cast out Devils by Beelzebub the Prince of Devils They object for these reliques that a souldier that was to be buried was revived by touching the dead bones of Elisha 2 King 13.21 But this was a Miracle wrought by the finger of God to confirm the truth preached by that worthy Prophet and is not to be ascribed to the touching of the bones which in themselves nor at any other time had any such vertue They alledge also the example of the Woman having the bloudy issue who was cured by the touching of Christs garment whereas that disease was cured not by the Corporal touching of his skirt but by the Spiritual touching of himself which was by the hand of her faith and therefore our Saviour said be it unto thee not according to thy feeling but according to thy faith They alledge also Acts 19.12 That from Pauls body were brought to the sick Napkins or Handkerchiefs and the diseases departed from them and the evil spirits went out of them Which things had no such power in them but only that it pleased God by such weak means to produce Miracles for the confirmation of that holy Doctrin preached by ●aul And therefore the text ascribeth these Miracles not to the garments of Paul but to God himself who by the hands of Paul wrought them vers 11. W●●●ce we may conclude that whosoever use any such means as these shew th●mselves not only superstitious and wicked but most foolish and ridiculous to think that any bodily substance whatsoever can work upon or violence a substance which is not bodily such as the Devils is It will be alledged that experience sheweth that such means as these prevail to these intents and purposes which wee grant to bee true but that is by Satans subtilty who often dissembleth a flight as though he were forced by an exorcist to depart or else indeed goeth away that men might be confirmed in their impiety and grow more mad upon such wicked and unlawful means 3 Others who when Gods hand is any way upon them or theirs Against such as leave him with whom God is and run to the Witch with whom the Devil is especially if they conceive it as they are prone enough a case of Sorcery or Witchcraft leave the help of him with whom God is and run to one with whom the Devil is that is the Wizzard or Witch commonly called the Cunning man and Woman or the Wise man and Woman Which because it is so common a sin and so bold as men and women doe not so much as Saul who changed his garments that he might not bee known I will by some reasons prove this conclusion that although a man knew that a Cunning man or Woman so called or a Wizzard could and would help him yet ought hee not to seek or admit of such help were his case never so desperate 1 Besides expresse places of Scripture against it as Deut. 18.10 Levit. 19.31 Levit. 29.6 It is a departure from God to the Devil Isa 8.19 Should not a people inquire at their God from the living to the dead 2 King 1.16 Because thou hast sent messengers to inquire of Baalzebub the god of Ekron was is not because there was no God in Israel and indeed the seeking to such is a service and homage to Satan which he often and for most part being very skilful in Natural things recompenseth with cure of the disease Augustine Hence did the ancient Fathers call this seeking unto them a renouncing of Christianity and an Apostacy from God 2 All help is to be sought of God and in those lawful means which hee hath appointed and promised blessing unto But for words Amulets Characters which are Diabolical Sacraments or good prayers as they call them of the limbs of the Devil whose warrant have they or what power but from the Devil for God never put any such efficacy either into their nature by Creation or by any Divine institution since and therefore their work is from the Devil on his part by Satanical operation and on the Seekers part by Satanical faith and illusion Obj. But they use good means of Physick also Ans Seldome or never but if at any time
be preserved so long seeing Lazarus his body and our bodies in that time enter into many degrees of it Ans Christ was indeed balmed and sweetned with Odours but all this could not have preserved him if his soul and body had not now been ●aced from sin the mother of corruption Obj. But he had sin imputed unto him Ans Yea but he had overcome all that and slain it on the Crosse for had he not destroyed it himself had been destroyed by it and subdued for ever under the corruption of it In all which regards that is verified which himself being risen affirmed Luke 24.46 Thus it is written and th●● it beh●eveth Christ to suffer and to rise again from the dead the third day Other things the Evangelists observe in this circumstance as that it was the first day of the week that is the first day wherein hee had created the Heavens and the Earth and wherein he would create now a new Heaven and a new Earth and as before he had set up a marvellous frame of the world but sin●e exceedingly shaken and defaced by sin he would now restore the world again and repair the ruines of it by abolishing sin as formerly he had filled Heaven and earth with the glory of his power in Creation so would he now fill them with the glory of his power in Redemption which is a second creation Hence is it that that day is now converted into the Christian Sabbath and called the Lords Day Revel 1.10 or if you will Sunday but not as the Heathen Christ rose early and what we learn thence in honour of the Sun but as Christians in honour of the Sun of righteousnesse Again the Gospel noteth that this our glorious Son ●●s● about Sun rising early in the morning or a little before it Matth. 28.1 To shew unto us 1 The power of his God-head who could while his body was dead perform the promise which he had made alive even in the instant of which hee had spoken 2 The impotency of his enemies who although they watched him f●●l●●● him up laid an heavie stone upon him were every way cautelous to keep him d●wn till the third day was past and he not stealing away secretly in the d●●d time of the night but ●ose with noyse and warning even in the morning ye● could they no more stay him than they could the Sun from rising and running his course 3 The benefit which the world of beleevers obtain by his rising again set down by the Evangelist Luke 1.78 Through the tender mercy of our God the day-spring from an high hath visited us 79. To give light to them that s●● in darknesse and to guide our feet into the way of peace The Chronologers further observe that this was the day wherein Moses led the Israelites through the Sea wherein all the troops of Pharaoh and his Host were drowned Even to our Lord Jesus this third day led all the Israel of God out of the spiritual Aegypt of blindnesse and filthinesse but gloriously triumphed over all the bands of Satan Sin and Death all which were sunk like a stone into the bottomless pit of Hell Other observations concerning this day might be inserted out of Authors which because I see no sound ground for them out of the Scriptures I will omit them that I may now come to the lessons which out of this circumstance we may draw for our further instruction First we learn hence All the promises of God are accomplished in their du● season that all the promises of God shall be in due season accomplished whatsoever may seeme to come between them and us For seeing Christ being dead both could and did perform his promise to his Church will not hee much more being alive and in his glory doe it The Israelites had a promise of a good Land they must in the mean time suffer much oppression in Aegypt for the space of four hundred and thirty years together but the self-same night Exod. 12.41 when the term was expired they went out against the heart and yet at the entreaty of Pharaoh and his people In like sort Joseph had a Dream that the Sun and Moon and the twelve Starrs should worship him in the mean time he must be cast into the Pit and Dungeon where hee can see neither Sun Moon nor Starre many days and years passed wherein he saw nothing but the clean contrary and yet in the due season of it this dream was accomplished And the reason is because 1 God is true of his word he cannot lye nor repent and 2 He is able to fulfill whatsoever passeth from his mouth for shall any thing be hard or impossible to God or shall any power or death or the grave it self falsifie it Lean thy self then upon this truth of God hast thou a promise of outward or inward peace health wealth or any other good thing which thy heart can wish hold this promise fast in the midst of thy heart wait for the accomplishment of it it shall not fail thee so farre as thy Father seeth good for thee if it be delayed and deferred even this also shall turn to thy best Hast thou a promise of life everlasting hold it by the faith of thy soul as the aym and end of all thy faith and religion for all the miseries of this present life shall not be able to defeat thee of it Hast thou the promise of the resurrection of the body after death stick to this Article of thy faith also nothing could hinder the rising of thy head no more can let but the members shall be where the head is not the grave not fire not water not the bellies of beasts or fishes but they shall give up their dead and further the accomplishment of the word of their Creator The second observation is The L●●● denieth n t to help his children although he delay them till his own due time be come that as the Lord of life raised not his Son as soon as he was dead but he must lye in the grave two days yea and the third also till his case seemed desperate to the Disciples themselves even so may the members of Christ lye long in the graves of their misery yea so long as their case seemeth desperate and all that while the Lord not only deferreth but seemeth to deny their help and utterly to neglect them Abraham had the promise of a Son by Sarah he looked every year for him ten twenty years together nay till the thirtieth year till it was not with Sarah as with childing-women in so much as she laught when she heard it the case in nature was desperate who would have thought but that God had forgotten his promise which Abraham himself in all that time if God had not shoared up his faith might have forgotten but though long first yet at length the Lord found out a time fit enough to bring his word to passe David in like
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