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A46526 Compunction or pricking of heart with the time, meanes, nature, necessity, and order of it, and of conversion; with motives, directions, signes, and means of cure of the wounded in heart, with other consequent or concomitant duties, especially self-deniall, all of them gathered from the text, Acts 2.37. and fitted, preached, and applied to his hearers at Dantzick in Pruse-land, in ann. 1641. and partly 1642. Being the sum of 80. sermons. With a post-script concerning these times, and the sutableness of this text and argument to the same, and to the calling of the Jews. By R.J. doctor of divinity. R. J. 1648 (1648) Wing J27; ESTC R213600 381,196 433

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Text they presumed on nothing in themselves but said to the Apostles What shall wee do yet not by our own strength no and on no power or worthiness in man as Peter and John in case of healing the lame man ascribed all to Christ his power and grace Act. 4.12 16. and nothing at all to their own power or holinesse so is it much more in the conversion of a sinner and in true repentance where is not onely the restoring the lame to his feet but the born blinde to his sight the deaf to hearing and in a word the dead to sense and life This presumption keeps men in whole or in part from Christ that they feek not to him or depend not wholly on him for this and all other grace as having the same at least in part within the compasse of their own power and so not fully and heartily seeking to Christ or depending on Christ his grace and power for it by going wholly out of themselves they wholly go without true and saving contrition otherwise then in seeming and in theiorw●n presumption and thus harbouring though secretly it may be and so as they take no great notice of it a conceit of some sufficiency in themselves they misse of Christ whose grace and power must either do all or in effect it doth nothing at all these by presumption think they need not so much be beholding to the grace of Christ as contrariwise some men apprehending the greatnesse of wrath due to them for their sin which whiles some closely conceit suffer themselves to be swallowed up of despair for seeing no power or sufficiency at all in themselves for their own help they fall to despaire as well of Gods help as their own and will not seek to Christ which is through a kind of pride stoutnesse and stubbornnesse of heart whereby seeing they cannot have what is needful of their own they will not go to any other to receive it and so their despaire is not out of sight and sense of sin and punishment so much as out of stoutnesse of heart as in Cain whose sins were not so great as King Manasses his were who yet despaired not being both humbled in himself and not without hope of help in God They either despair wholly or in part and so are long kept from comfort And this sometimes keeps even such as otherwise are broken-hearted and prove true Converts from their comfort a long while an apprehension of their own unworthinesse which makes them repel mercy as so exceedingly unworthy of it that they dare not apply the promise Belike then if they were in themselves more worthy they then durst go to Christ as if Christ were not able alone without some worthinesse or power of theirs to save and succour them through a secret Pride undiscerned by them whereby they still object their own unworthinesse but that they must joyn something with Christ in furthering the work of their salvation As such a conceit as this keeps the proud Papist for all his seeming austerity and Compunction from true sorrow for sin and from saving repentance they like Naaman in his fit of pride and scorn refusing their own help healing and salvation because they will not have it so easily without somewhat of their own so these though they have as much Compunction as would and should drive them to Christ yet in a nicenesse because they are such great sinners so disabled so unworthy they dare not be so bold and so couch and lie down under the burthen of their sins conceiting if their sins were lesse fewer or not so hainous they could better hope for mercy and might be bolder to beg it or to cast themselves on it as if God ever accepted any for any righteousnesse of their own whether simple or comparative because they are not so great sinners as some others or yet rejected from mercy the greatest of sinners that in a sense of sin and of the burthen thereof could or would come unto him True Compunction then and contrition of heart must be grounded on some Hope generall at least True Compunction is grounded on Hope in God and not in our selves if not speciall and particular but then that hope must be grounded on nothing in our selves on no power worthinesse and lesse unworthinesse and sinfullnesse of ours but onely on the mercy and goodnes of God in Christ and so by such hope our sorrow shall prove saving and not end in despaire If either thy hope be presumptuous as grounded on thine own power or worthines or none at all in God because thou canst see nothing in thy self to make thee hope thou hast cause to think that thy sorrow is not found It s true many mans sense of sin and miserry is such that in a fit and for a time they either cannot or will not see any ground of hope yet such as God will save are not alwayes left to themselves True Converts are sustained by some hope in God as Lam. 3.18 19 20 21. but are secretly sustained with some hope and perswaded of a possibility of help in God and from his All sufficiency free love and abundance of mercy which he hath for the greatest sinners upon their repentance whereby they are able to say when their soul is humbled or bowed in them this I recall to mind therefore have I hope though formerly they could say my strength and my hope is perished from the Lord so Jonah in the fishes belly I am cast out of thy sight yet I will look again toward thy holy Temple so these Converts in my Text secretly sustain themselves with hope Jonah 2 2 4. and in these Converts in my Text. they say not desperately there is no hope there is nothing to be done all means are in vain but what shall we do Is there no way for us being so guilty to escape our deserved punishment yes certainly if we could light on it ah good Sirs men and brethren let us know it tell us what 's to be done what course is to be holden that we may be saved so that they conceiving some hope and possibility resolve not to go on or to continue in their guiltiness or to adde sin to sin as some in like case desperately would say seeing we must go to hell and be damned we will take our pleasure while we live as one expresseth it and be damned for something but being inwardly and truly touched in soul and heart with sence of their sin as well as of hell and wrath deserved they become truly remorsefull and resolve not to despaire of that goodness and saving mercy offered them in Christ against which they had thus grievously sinned and therefore sustained with some hope of acceptance if they might be well directed to the means thereof they ask saying What shall we do Whereupon they are directed to the true meanes in the next Verse And thus we see their
ministeriall pains and conceptions which with some of my ancient hearers proved altogether abortive will yet find better acceptance here and such as I blesse God with many other of better temper among my ancient hearers they have found and that the seed cast on the thornie and stonie ground and hearts of many in England will take better root and thrive better in another soil as some trees transplanted do I recommend this mite of my good will to your Worships and to their perusall here as also to the Churches service and use elsewhere resting Dantzick June 28 1642. Your Worships and the Churches Servant R. J. An Advertisement to the Reader KNow that this insuing Treatise was sent into England and should have been printed in Anno 1642 but what by the death of one undertaker after the book was approved according to Order of Parliament and what by the inconstancy of another who after hee had printed the first three sheets gave it over and fell to a more gainfull trade of printing Diurnals it hath been laid aside thus long But now since my return into England the Copy being recovered and the printing of it by a third person procured I thought good though after six yeers of the date of it to let it passe in the stile it was written in at first and so as if I were still with my Hearers at Dantzick Judge of it then according to time place and persons when where and to whom it was preached and it being of generall use make improvement of it for thine own spirituall good for which thou hast the prayers of the unworthy Author The general Contents of each Chapter of this Treatise and of the several Sections under their several Chapters respectively containing the chief doctrines handled therein As for the many particulars under each Chapter and Section they may by a short glance of the eye be viewed in the margine of the booke it self CHAP. I. Concerning the time of mens Conversion Section 1. But first of the Change which is in Conversion Section 2. Why Christ converted not so many at any one Sermon as Peter and the rest here did with Uses Section 3. Why mens Conversion is often so long delayed by God with Reasons and Vses CHAP. II. Concerning the Persons converted by Peter c. their Quality Number Section 1. That some otherwise devout men need Conversion Section 2. God freely singles out some of many of whom his Church consists And of the freenesse of Gods Grace with four Vses CHAP. III. Concerning the Means of Conversion the hearing of Gods word preached Section 1. Of the Act of hearing and of the power of Gods Word whence it is with five Vses Sect. 2. Of the profit of hearing Gods word aright whence it is with three Vses CHAP. IIII. The Object of hearing generall and speciall here And what doctrine is like to do the greatest good even that which most advanceth Christ and debaseth man with reasons sons and uses respectively CHAP. V. The effects of saving hearing of Gods Word Section 1. 1 Pricking of heart Section 2. Pricking of heart considered 1 As the work of the Word And that the best kinde of preaching is that which pricks the heart Why With two Vses Sect. 3. Pricking of heart considered 2 As the fruit of sin And that sin carries a sting with it With Vse Section 4. Pricking of heart considered here as the first step to true Conversion And that Conversion must begin at the heart With two Reasons and three Vses CHAP. VI. How these Converts in the Text came to be pricked in Conscience CHAP. VII Shewing that all true Converts must first in some measure be pricked in heart Section 1. The Explication of this point of Doctrine and of whom and how it is meant with the difference between the Elect and Reprobate in their legall sorrows Sect. 2. The former point illustrated by Scripture and examples Sect. 3. That all in some measure must be pricked in conscience though not all alike Where four Reasons why Sect. 4. Who are more roughly and who more gently dealt withall in their Conversion Which difference is shewed with respect of their different conditions 1. present 2. past 3. to come Wherein Gods wisdome wonderfully appeareth CHAP. VIII The Demonstration of the former Point with the Reasons both on mans behalf and Gods why God will have all Converts of age to be first brought under the spirit of bondage CHAP. IX Of the Order of Conversion and 1. As it depends on Love in God Where ten approaches of Gods grace towards us all free CHAP. X. Sect. 1. Conversion is also a work of Gods power Sect. 2. The Order of Conversion as it depends on Power And first In regard of the Persons and Means imployed in working of it which is onely the Word and no other means without the word neither Sacraments Miracles Afflictions c. without it Sect. 3. The order of the work it self of Conversion And first seven orderly works of the Law Sect. 4. Eleven orderly works of the Gospel CHAP. XI Containing anVse of Triall as preparative to the rest CHAP. XII Vses for such 1. as have not been pricked And first The danger of a false peace and the desperate estate of secure sinners CHAP. XIII 2. A large Exhortation to the secure And Motives urging them to be afflicted and to mourn for sinne CHAP. XIIII Containing Means of Contrition and first A removall of Lets Sect. 1. Such lets removed as hinder the Word of God to pierce And they are six Sect. 2. Le ts removed which make the soul senselesse And first Sensuality and worldlinesse Sect. 3. Three moe lets removed Which are Great sins Little sins Custome of sinning Sect. 4. Two moe Lets Gods secret vengeance and Hardnesse of heart with the nature and danger of it and means to prevent it CHAP. XV. 2. Of the Means of true Compunction and Sensiblenesse Sect. 1. And first Of Gods Word heard recalled and applyed With the power of it in pricking the heart Sect. 2. Of the Consideration of sin Originall and Actuall in the aggravations of it Sect. 3. Gods judgements on our selves past present and to come should humble us Sect. 4. Others sufferings especially Christs should move us Sect. 5. Gods high Majesty well thought on would abase us Sect. 6. Earnest prayer with God a meanes of Humiliation and a way to derive power from him when especially it is joyned with watchfulnesse Sect. 7. A reproof of the secure with an exhortation and caveat CHAP. XVI Vses for such secondly as have been wounded Sect. 1 And first that they return not to sins for which they formerly have smarted Sect. 2. That secondly they goe on with the work of humiliation and that they seek not ease too soon Sect. 3. An Exhortation hereunto that we follow home Gods strokes till we be throughly humbled and cured Sect. 4. Divers reasons why men are not to take up with legal qualms til they
Where 1 How they came to be pricked Chap. 6. 2 That all true Converts must first be pricked in heart Where The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or that it is so and there the 1 Explication Chap. 7. Sect. 1. 2 Illustration Sect. 2 3 4. 2. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Demonstrations or Reasons why God will have it so Chap. 8. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the manner order and degrees of Conversion 1. As it depends on love in God chap. 9. 2. As it depends on the power of God and that in regard 1. Of the meanes and persons working it Chap. 10. Sect. 1. 2. 2. Of the work it self where the works 1. Of the Law § 3. 2. Of the Gospel Sect. 4. 4. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Uses and Application The Vses and Application Where USES of four sorts 1. Generall of Triall and as preparative to the rest Chap. 11. 2. Such as respect those who as yet have not been pricked 1. Of Instruction Chap. 12. 2. Of Terror Chap. 12. 3. Of Exhortation where 1. Motives Chap. 13. 2. Meanes to be used 1. Le ts removed 1. Such as hinder the words to pierce Chap. 14. Sect. 1. 2. Such as keep the soul from being sensible of pricking Sect. 2 3 4. 2. The Means to be used are 1. Gods Word C. 15. § 1. 1. Heard 2. Recalled 3. Applied 2. Consideration of sin sect 2 1. Originall 2. Actuall 3. Gods judgements 1. On our selves § 3. 1 Past 2 present 3 tocome 2 On others c. § 4. 4. Gods high Majesty well thought on Sect. 5. 5. Earnest prayer Sect. 6. 3. Such as respect those that have been pricked in heart who are 1. Instructed 1. Not to return to sins sorrowed for chap. 16. § 1 2. 2. To go forward with this work of Humiliation sect 2. 2. Exhorted § 3. where 1. Reasons why we are not to rest in every slight sorrow Sect. 4 5. 2. A Case resolved shewing when a man is humbled enough where 1. Directions to such as seem not humbled enough Chap. 17. Sect. 1. 2. Signes of true sorrow 1. From the grounds of sorrow 1. Negatively § 2. 2 Affirmatively c. 18. § 1 2 3 4 2. From the Concomitants and Effects of it cap. 19. in seven Sections 3. Comforted cap. 20. 4. Such as concern all who are 1. Instructed how to carry themselves towards mourners Chap. 21. 2. Such reproved as censure and reproach them Chap. 21. 3. All of all sorts exhorted to get mournful hearts Chap. 22. 3. What they said And said unto Peter and to the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren What shall we do Where four thing 1. Who said Such as were pricked Chap. 23. 2. When Presently Chap. 24. 3. To whom and so of whom do they seek direction namely of the Apostles who are considered in relation 1. To God where 1. The nature of their Office Chap. 25. § 1 2 3 4. 2. Their order of naming Chap. 26. 3. Their number Chap. 26. 2. To these Converts as the same who 1. Wounded them C. 27 2. Were derided by some of them Ch. 28 4. What they said where 1. A Compellation 1. Men Chap. 30. 2. Brethren Chap. 31. 2. A Consultation where 1. Who consult who 1. For number Chap. 32. 2. For inward motive Chap. 33. 2. About what even the saving of their souls Ch. 34. 3. The Consultation it self Shewing how such as are converted must be qualified namely They must 1. Consult and shew care of the main shaking off security Chap. 35. 2. Deny themselves 1. Specially in matter of salvation and in duties belonging to Conversion Chap. 36. Sect. 1 2 3. 2. Generally in all things else where 1. In what things 1. Absolutely Section 4. 2. In some case only as in things 1. Natural Sect. 5. 1. Faculties of soul 2. Things of this life 3. Life it self 2. Spirituall in 1. Duties § 6. 2 Gifts § 6. 3. Eternall as 1. In some accidentals of glory as 1 Degree Sect. 7. 2 Time Sect. 7. 2. In glory it self that concerning the salvation 1 Of others Sect. 8. 1 dead 2 living 2 Our own Sect. 9. With a Generall Reproof Sect. 10. 2. For what we are to deny our selves namely for 1. God in his 1. Perfections Sect. 11. 2. Glory Sect. 11. 2. Christ in his 1. Excellencies Sect. 12. 2. Alsufficiencie Sect. 12. 3. Our own souls considered in their 1. Worth § 13 2. Salvation § 13 4. Publick good of 1. Church § 14. 2. Common-wealth § 14. 3. Publick persons § 14. 3. Be ready to do Gods wil and to submit to it in matter of 1. Salvation Ch. 37. § 1 2 2. Religion and Worship Ch. 37. § 1 2 3. Odedience with the comfort of so doing at Christs coming Ch. 37. § 1 2 A TREATISE OF COMPUNCTION OR Pricking of Heart Acts 2.37 Now when they heard this they were pricked in their heart and said unto Peter and to the rest of the Apostles Men and Brethren what shall we doe CHAP. I. Concerning the time of mens Conversion With Vses The good fruit of Peters Sermon THese words and the following shew the fruit and good effect of the Apostles teaching on the day of Pentecost especially of Peters Sermon which was the conversion of many Jewes Conversion even three thousand soules the beginning and preparation whereunto is contained in these words Where we have first Where 1 The Meanes Instrument of Conversion Gods word preached The Instrumentall cause of their conversion expressed which was Peters Sermon from the fourteenth verse to this verse but the vertue and power of the principall Worker which is God and Christ by the Spirit is included Secondly A double Effect First Their being wounded in heart Secondly The expression of their inward sorrow and care to be saved by their words Or we may referre all to these three Heads What these Converts First heard Secondly suffered thirdly said SECT 1. Concerning the change in Conversion NOw when they heard this The summe of what they heard is in the thirty sixth verse namely first The dominion of Christ Secondly Their sin in crucifying him This heard and beleeved Where 1. Time 2. Persons 3 Meanes of Conversion is made the ground of their conversion Where we may take notice of first the Time Now when secondly Persons They thirdly Meanes Heard this Where first the Act heard secondly Object this All which being expressed in the English are implyed in the Originall The Time Now and not till now The time of their conversion Now and not before though formerly these Jewes heard not only the Apostles but Christ himselfe often preach unto them Now they are pricked and cry out when before no word would pierce their hard hearts nothing was heard from them then but such like speeches as these Thou art a Samaritane and hast a Devill Away with him crucifie him c. but now they are inwardly wounded
the City Gaza thou carriest I may say the very gates of hell upon thy back and goest upright under many execrable abominations unclenness drunkenness oppression profanation of the Lords day and other impieties and yet art not pressed therewith though God be even as a cart laden with sheaves Amos 2.13 and groaning as it were under the burden thou hast a whole sea of Gods wrath upon thee Without which we cannot feel the burthen of it and yet as the fishes in the sea or as one diving under water feelest not the burthen But now that thou mayst feel it and be sensible of it consider thy sin in the forenamed aggravating and greatning circumstance thereof and so lay it upon thy shoulders and thou shalt finde it heavier then thou canst bear as David did Psalm 38.4 as one shall do a small vessel of water laid on his back on dry land Sins taken severally and barely and slightly looked on may seem small and little and nothing burdensome but if thou lookest on them in the heap or as on the sand lying on the sea-shore thou wilt finde them and the grief of them heavier then the sand of the sea as Job speaks of his grief and calamitie when it is throughly weighed and laid in the balance together Job 6.2 3. A weight suppose of many hundreds whilest it lieth on the ground is not felt in the burthen and heaviness of it till we begin to pluck and heave at it no more is thy sin till thus thou weigh it in the balance of the sanctuary and take it into deep and serious consideration Hold thy self then constantly to this duty of consideration and pondering thy sin Serious consideration of our sin is needful and then a small sin like a small weight which we carry far and long being much thought on will prove a burthen and make thee in the sense thereof cry and by repentance and faith come to Christ that thou mayst be eased In case thou receive an injury from man or a small affront by much thinking on it thou makest it very great Thus deal with the injuries thou dost unto the great and holy God and which lie upon thy score and I suppose thou wilt finde and feel them a burthen intolerable heavie pressing and oppressing thy heart SECT 3. Gods judgements on our selves past present and to come should humble us 2 God softens our hearts also by his judgements and afflictions 1 On our selves Which accordingly and to that end wee are to make use of Whether the afflictions be NOw moreover seeing God often wounds mens spirits and softens their hearts by his Judgements by Afflictions and Corrections working with his word let us take the advantage thereof and make a right use of the same whether they be his corrections and crosses which befall or belong to our selves or more directly and firstly do concern others 1. God would work in us true and saving sorrow by such outward evils as he is pleased to inflict upon us being otherwise justly procured and deserved by our sins which may and should be diligently considered and made use of by us to the same end and that whether wee consider them as past present or to come 1. We are to call to minde especially being of riper yeers and judgement what great things wee have suffered 1 Past and what fore afflictions have befallen us by dangerous sicknesses hurts wounds extreme perils and sharp corrections of God when we were young or howsoever in former times whether lately or longer since when it may be either through childishness ignorance or otherwise by distraction of thoughts or sharpness of bodily pain or astonishment of our senses we could not so well meditate on the same or take things into such serious consideration as was meet Such corrections would not now be forgot but seriously called to minde and considered of as then sent of God in his displeasure against us for our sins whereby we provoked this patient God so to smite us that so we may now do that which he expected from us then Which wee must remember and be humbled for them that is be humbled in soul and come to true sorrow and repentance for our sin Thus Jeremy in the name of the faithful Remembring mine affliction and my misery the wormwood and the gall my soul hath them stil in remembrance and is humbled or bowed in mee Lament 3.19 20. That which was bitter to the body in the present feeling thereof is now bitter to the soul in remembrance thereof and in consideration of sin the cause thereof Thus should it be with us 2 present By which God humbles and converts 2 If Gods hand be upon thee by any outward cross and affliction for the present which hee sends of purpose to humble thee be sure thou let him not smite thee in vain Afflictions by Gods mercy prove means of conversion as in King Manasseh though not without the word Psal 94 12. and 2 Chr. 33.10 12 18. It s said when he was in affliction he besought the Lord his God and humbled himself greatly before the God of his Fathers his affliction prepared and made his heart fitter to receive profit by the words of the Seers that spake to him in the name of the Lord. and calls to weeping Isa 22.12 God humbled Manasseh and he humbled himself God at such times cals to weeping and to mourning to baldnesse and to girding with sackcloth and by such means would break the hardness stoutness and stoniness of our hearts thus bringing us under his hammer and stroke to bruise us into his fire and furnace to try fine and melt us unless we be reprobate silver In such case then let thy cross drive thee home first to thy self in consideration of thy sin the cause meritorious of thy cross then to thy God and Father with the Prodigal the efficient and inflicter of thy cross where 1 We are to be sensible of Gods displeasure And here first learne to be sensible of Gods displeasure God will be known by executing judgement he will have thee know he is angry and displeased with thee and would have thee sensible of his displeasure See what God said concerning Miriam after her sin against Moses the servant of the Lord for which she was smitten with leprosie when Moses prayed for her healing the Lord tels him saying If her father had spit in her face should she not be ashamed seven dayes Numb 12.14 Let her be shut out seven dayes c. Even thus when God shewes any token of his displeasure against thee be ashamed and humbled smite on thy breast with the Publican and on thy thigh with Ephraim Thus Naomi which signifieth pleasant disclaimes her name Call not me Naomi call me Mara that is bitter for the Almighty hath dealt very bitterly with me Ruth 1.20 21. Why then call ye me Naomi seeing the Lord hath testified against me and
the Almighty hath afflicted me Thus the good woman was humbled in Gods sight who had deprived her of her husband and two sonnes in a strange land and that doubtlesse in sight of her sin and unworthinesse and acknowledgement of Gods just hand upon her 2 To joyn with God 1 By justifying him 2. Secondly when God by afflictions humbles and bruiseth thee joyn with him in humbling thy selfe 1. Justifie God in his chastisements confesse him righteous and thy selfe the sinner and justly met withall this is one main end of Gods chastisements Levit. 26.41 that our hard and uncircumcised hearts be humbled and that we when his hand is upon us accept of the punishment of our iniquity and condemning our selves Do thou then follow home the affliction lament thine own unto wardnesse and if especially his hand lie long on thee or that his strokes be multiplied say Lord what an hard heart have I and senslesse that needs all this hammering and melting this battering and bruising that none of this could be spared Thus at length by Gods mercy thy hard and unrelenting heart shall be bruised softened and humbled 2. 2 By taking advantage of the occasion and time Take the advantage of the time when Gods hand is upon thee Men of the World both know and are carefull to observe the fittest Seasons for ploughing and breaking up of their grounds and God lookes that we do the like for the breaking up of the fallow and hard ground of our hearts Jer. 4.3 which he expects from us as a duty Eccles 3.4 There is a time to weep and a time to mourn God by his judgements on us by crosses and afflictions softens bowes and masters our stout stomackes brings down our high lookes and thoughts when we finde him stronger than our selves which perhaps we thought not on before and to take from us such stayes and props whether wealth friends health c. as on which we rested our selves more than on him Seeing men commonly under cresses are somewhat softened Job 23.15 16. Now hereby God workes in men more selfe deniall at least remorse and some more fitnesse and pronenesse to repent then at other times Thus saith Job I am troubled at his presence when I consider I am afraid of him for God maketh my heart soft and the Almighty troubleth me And in regard of troubles and distresses David complaineth to God saying I am poured out like water Psal 22.14 and all my bones are out of joynt my heart is like wax it is melted in the midst of my bowels And thus in some measure the unregenerate finde it with them in their troubles and feares whereby they finde themselves more disposed to pray and more disposed to pray and to repent and to repent as the Israelites though unsound and unconstant when God slew them they sought him and returned Psal 78.34 Isay 26.16 and Lord in trouble have they visited thee saith Isay they poured out a prayer when thy chastening was upon them At such times the hearts even of hypocrites become more remorsefull as we see in men in their sicknesse and distresse Now as Ministers should take such opportunities to worke upon mens hearts Job 33.22 so should they themselves especially as the iron when it is hot is soon bowed and fashioned by hammering and as the Wax when it is warme and soft may better be wrought and formed as we please which opportunity would be followed home My advice then to thee who desirest this pliable and sensible heart is to take the oportunitie of thy deep afflictions and crosses to follow home this worke Is any afflicted Let him pray saith Saint James Let him humble himselfe in prayer Jam. 5.13 confesse heartily his sin and seek mercy Art thou affected with sorrow upon the death suppose of some dear Friend Parent Childe or Associate Husband or Wife Whatsoever the occasion of thy grief be yea or if a secret sadnesse or pensivenesse come upon thee so as thou findest thy selfe disposed to weep omit not such a fit season now that thy countenance is sad the heart is made better Eccles 7.3 that is more soft and yielding to good impressions and our sorrow turned the right way the Lord thus softens and inclines thy soul to fresh sorrow for sin and would have thee to turne the stream of thy natural sorrow or melacholicke pensivenesse into the right chanel from the out ward or inward occasion from the known or unknown cause of thy heavinesse to sorrow and mourning for thy sin from the effect to the cause seeing nothing is truly to be sorrowed for but sin which is the onely true cause of all our other sorrowes and afflictions Blessed is such a crosse losse or affliction as bereaving us of earthly if not sinfull comforts and confidence sends us to seek our comfort and to place our trust onely in God by seeking our peace with him with true teares of godly sorrow sor our sin by which he was offended 3 To come 3. Thirdly for evils to come and judgements threatened or feared in this life or at and after the end of it Death it selfe Hell and the last Judgement the dreadfulnesse and terrour of which should make us afraid and such fear will or should worke sensiblenesse and tendernesse in us as apprehension but of temporal judgements made Josiahs heart to melt though there was in him some mixture also of love to God and zeal to his honour howsoever As 1. Temporal judgements threatened it made him with teares seek peace with God for himselfe and his people for the aversion of his judgements from them If an earthly Prince should threaten us how would we fear and by humbling our selves seek to make our peace again with him How submissively did Jacob carry himselfe toward his brother Esau when he came towards wards him as an enemie Thy servant Jacob and Let me finde grace in the sight of my lord Gen. 32.20 33.15 How much more should we fear and humble our selves Amos 38. when the Lord God hath spoken when this Lion roares who will not fear and humble himselfe before him How also did the thought of death humble not onely a good King Hezekiah but an hypocrite King Ahab 2 Death Isay 38.1 2 3. 1 Kings 21 19-21 27.29 Jon. 3.5 c. and the Ninivites Let the living then lay death to heart Eccles 7 2 and apprehend it as near that as men in apparent danger of death both by sea or land on their death-beds or as men condemned to die they may be humbled sorrowfull and penitent Let us thinke often also of Hell and of that place of torments 3 Hell and how it is prepared as for all impenitent sinners so also for the secure and voluptuous livers Luke 16.27 c. 4 The last judgement such as was Dives and his brethren so of the dreadfull
a lying tongue a deceitfull tongue as Psalm 109.2 and 120.2 3. Psal 50.19 and 52.2 4. such as God will cut out and as is but for a moment Prov. 12.19 a signe of a gross hypocrite and of a fool Prov. 10.18 -20 Such dissembling with God and man argues abundance of wickedness in the heart which if it were truly and sincerely affected would without all simulation and dissimulation accordingly vent it self to others as it did in these here who being soundly and savingly pricked in heart and humbled did in all humility meekness and reverence to the Apostles of Christ truly and sincerely beg their advice with full purpose of heart to follow the same which they also did See Deut. 5.28 29. Others perhaps purpose and promise fair but their hearts deceive them CHAP. XXIV Shewing that in trouble of Conscience for sin Means would presently be used 2 When Presently BUt secondly When did they this When sought they after ease and after the means of their cure forthwith presently and immediately It s said They hearing were pricked in heart and said They did not suffer the Apostles to depart from them till they had sought their advice and obtained it I know many seek ease too soon but I have fully I hope warned such of that deceit These here were truly and sufficiently humbled as hath been shewed from pregnant proofs from the Text and when thou findest thy self so then defer not to seek relief so thy joy and comfort shall be seasonable and not over-hasty as it is in many hypocrites signified by the stony ground who immediately without any touch of conscience or true humiliation going before receive the word with joy Matth. 13.20 Note Means would presently be used for the cure and ease of consciences truly touched The Observation hence is That when mens Consciences are truly pricked and wounded by the word good means would presently be sought after and used as we see here in Paul Acts 8. and in the jaylor Acts 16. and in King Josiah 2 Chr. 34.19 20 21. It s not enough that a man be sensible of his pain but he must also seek to the Physician as it is not enough that a man that is wounded in a fray complain of his sore cry out of brawling and repent of his anger rashnesse and hastiness yea and resolve not to be so hasty again but it will behove him presently to seek to the Surgeon for help and cure So is it here in the prickings and woundings of conscience where a man must not desay to seek to Christ and to his word and Ministers for direction and comfort and afterward he must follow and practise the same Why 1 Wounds as of body so of soul neglected prove dangerous And good reason for it 1 Nature and experience tels us that green wounds are soonest cured if balsome be presently poured in an hurt breach or sore long neglected doth the more deeply fester and so may prove gangrained and deathfull so a bleeding upon a little wound or prick not stayed in time may prove mortall and desperate or as a bone dislocated or out of joynt the longer the setting of it is forborn the cure and setting of it will be with much greater pain to the Patient and with much more difficultie yea it may so long be neglected that no skill or art of man can bring it right again So it is in the cure of a wounded spirit and of a bleeding conscience 2 The heart being sofined is fittest to be wrought upon 2 The heart being newly pricked softned and made sensible is more plyable and soft to receive the impressions of grace as the ground is fittest to receive the seed after it is newly riven up and plowed and wax the impreffion of the seal when it is once softned and molten We use to say It is good striking while the iron is hot for as iron after heating being suffered to cool is less malleable and frameable then before and as water once heated will sooner cool and freez into ice then other water so is it with the heart of man if being once softned through sense of sin we take not the time to bind it up and to work upon it it will be more uncapable of cure and comfort 3 To neglect or defer cure 3 Yea men once touched in conscience for sin if they neglect to seek for remedy or to submit unto it when it is shewed as they are apter to forget their sorrows and to be carried away by many occasions and worldly affairs Psal 51.3 when sin newly committed is better known and remembred with all the aggravating circumstances of it so it is just with God to deny them cure that with Esan they shall find no place of repentance though they seek it carefully with teares provokes God to deny it Hebr. 12.17 and to reject them as he did the five foolish Virgins when they would inherit the blessing and to shut the door of mercy and of heaven upon them who when they stood in need and were some way sensible of their need of mercy seeing we so refuse his first offers yet neglected and deferred to seek it or to accept it when it was offered Now God by such prickings of the conscience comes near us and would awaken us out of the deep sleep of our sins which his mercie if we do neglect we provoke him to leave us to depart from us and must not expect he should come so near us again but leavens wholly to our own hardnesse even to perish in the same Use 1. Not to conceal our sin and anguish for it either through love to sin This is of Use 1. For such as in their anguish of conscience for some sin or sins of theirs do conceal and smother the same some through pride and love to their sins which they will though inwardly they smart for them desire to hide under their tongues as sweet morsels till at length they become as the gall of Aspes within them Job 20.11 12. They would be comforted but secretly in heart still cleaving to their sin they resolve not to confesse the same though to such as are both able to direct and comfort them and faithfull to conceal their shame Thus concealing the true cause of their inward maladie the wound festers and at length it may be on their deathbed if not sooner they are so overwhelmed with horror and despair and that by Gods just judgement that all the spirituall Physitians in the Town or City can afford them no true comfort or ease They may thank their love to their sin for this in that though they smarted inwardly for it yet they were loth to bewray it or make it known even then loving it when they were in torment for it Others 2. Or through shame fac'dness through shame and bashfulnesse keep close their sin which yet they both sorrow for and do hate and so