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A92856 The parable of the prodigal. Containing, The riotous prodigal, or The sinners aversion from God. Returning prodigal, or The penitents conversion to God. Prodigals acceptation, or Favourable entertainment with God. Delivered in divers sermons on Luke 15. from vers. 11. to vers. 24. By that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ Obadiah Sedgwick, B.D. Perfected by himself, and perused by those whom he intrusted with the publishing of his works. Sedgwick, Obadiah, 1600?-1658. 1660 (1660) Wing S2378; Thomason E1011; ESTC R203523 357,415 377

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comes out of the hand of love and kindness O Sirs even the ordinary mercies to a converted man have a sweet distinction in them they are so perfumed they are so distilled they are so carved they are all of them the kisses of a father the gifts of a gracious God Every bit of Bread thou eatest and every draught of Beer thou drinkest and every piece of Cloath thou wearest it is the special provision of thy most gracious God and thy loving Father If some one royal mercy in the Covenant be able sometimes to sweeten an Ocean to turn hell into heaven to wipe off all tears and put the soul almost into an extasie of joy what rivers of joy then can the whole Covenant afford If the lifting up of the light of Gods countenance upon the soul which is but one beam of the Covenant if his saving to a man Soul I am thy Salvation if one word Son be of good cheer thy sins are forgiven thee imprints a superlative comfort a joy unspeakable and full of glory if one drop be so sweet how sweet is the Fountain if one Grape what is the cluster of Grapes Now not only this or that mercy in the Covenant belongs to a converted man but every mercy the God of all mercies and all the mercies of God the God of all comforts and all the comforts of God 5. True Conversion It is the infallible fore-runner the It is the infallible forerunner of glory earnest the pawn of Glory the pledg which God leaves in hand the first fruits of thy eternal Glory in the highest heavens and is not this a cause of great joy if I look back and see a love from all eternity if forward and see a glory to all eternity Truly if I should never taste Honey on earth if all the Wells of a present comfort were stopped up if my Father should never smile on me in the way if all my Life were a sayling on brinish tears and my Ship were still to be tossed with troublesome waves yet if I were sure at length to put in at this Port to come safe to Heaven at length to appear before the God of Gods at the last to see him in Glory and enjoy his face and the pleasures at his right hand for evermore even this confidence and assurance were enough to make me to rejoyce in the hope of the Glory of God Oh Christian besides all that joy which ariseth from converting grace which is it self a sweet Rose and besides all those Honey dewes which fall upon the soul in the exercise of grace in the way to Heaven Thou meetest him that rejoyceth and worketh righteousness those that remember thee in thy wayes Isai 64. 5. There is also reserved in the highest heavens that most perfect happiness that most perfect tranquillity that most perfect joy Oh I cannot express it I cannot comprehend it 1 Pet. 1. 3. He hath begotten us again unto a lively hope v. 4. To an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you Ponder the words an inheritance the best of possessions incorruptible the best of inheritances undefiled the best of incorruptibles unfading the best of undefileds and reserved in heaven the best of unfadings Nothing is so surely kept as that which is kept in heaven for us and born unto all this and a lively hope of all this Oh what comfort Oh what joy comes out of all this If I had all the world and lookt up towards heaven but my heart should tell me that goodly Canaan will never fall to thy portion it would be now with me as once with Ahab who though he enjoyed a Kingdome yet was very sad because the heavens were as Brass to him But in the midst of all distresses to look up to Heaven to think of God and the future Beatifical Vision and upon infallible grounds to say that God is my Father that Heaven is my inheritance that place of Glory is my home there shall I be shortly there shall I be to eternity I have the earnest of it the pawn of it in my heart the first fruits c. 2. Secondly As to Christ The converted condition cannot As to Christ but be joyful because the converted person hath 1. A neer relation to Christ Bone of his Bone 2. A singular propriety in Christ my beloved is mine c. 3. An admirable revenue by Christ wonderful riches of and by Christ all are yours for ye are Christs 4. He is bought by Christ and reconciled by Christ and loved by Christ and discharged by Christ and owned by Christ and defended by Christ and kept by Christ and shall one day be saved by Christ 3. As to Conscience As a mans conscience is so is his comfort As to Conscience or discomfort so is his joy or sorrow One drop of an evil conscience saith Luther doth imbitter the whole Sea of worldly joy an evil conscience is an hell in the brest and in hell said Latimer there is no mirth and on the contrary a good conscience it is a kind of heaven one good word from it will sweeten all our miseries and cause us to rejoyce under all sorrows Solomon saith it is a continual feast it is the year of Jubilee conscience speaks the truest joy and the strongest joy and the highest joy and no man hath a good conscience but a good man Conscience cannot speak peace till a man be converted and when he is converted conscience hath then a commission and authority to look on the man and speak to the man as God doth When thou hearest of pardon of sins Oh saith conscience hearken and be of good cheer that 's thy portion when thou hearest of Jesus Christ and of his sufferings and of his satisfactions and merits hearken saith conscience and take hold for all this also is thy portion when thou hearest the Covenant of Grace graciously explained and all the glories in heaven Oh saith conscience all this also is thy portion when thou art about to pray and fears are intruding themselves do not fear ●aith conscience thou art speaking to thy Father when thou art about to dye and tremblings are upon thee do not doubt or tremble saith conscience thou art going to thy God when Satan suggests thou hast nothing to do with the mercy-seat what such a sinner thou hast saith conscience when unbelief suggests Christ will have nothing to do with thee he will saith conscience Now against all that hath been said it is objected That the assertion of joy for a converted person cannot be true Because 1. No persons are so exposed to afflictions and persecutions and infamies as converted persons They are appointed to them 1 Thes 3. And they that will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecutions how can that condition be so very joyful which may and oftentimes doth deprive a man of all his comforts 2. Conversion brings the person into
a lost sinner p. 238. Why God doth thus find a lost sinner p. 241. Motives to a serious Trial whether our lost souls be found p. 242. An impenitent unconverted man is a dead man p. 254. Reasons of it p. 256. Trial whether we be spiritually dead p. 261. Every converted man is a living man p. 265. How this may be evidenced p. 268. Trial of our selves about our spiritual life p. 269. Objections answered p. 276. A very great and notorious sinner may be converted p. 279. Who may be called so p. 280. How it may appear great sinners may be converted p. 281. Directions to such converted sinners p. 288. Great afflictions are sometimes an occasion of great sinners conversion p. 289. How it may appear p. 290. There is an Almighty Ppower required to convert a sinner p. 294. proved 295. True Conversion is avery great inward and universal change p. 303. and demonstrated to p. 312. How may a man know that God hath indeed changed his heart p. 316. Comfort to those who are changed p. 323. How may we know this change is from converting Grace and not from the power of a troubling Conscinece p. 329. Conversion brings the soul into a very joyfull condition demonstrated p. 333. What kind of joy Conversion brings p. 336. Why Conversion makes the souls condition so joyfull p. 339. How can this condition be so joyfull that is so exposed to afflictions p. 344. and denies and abridges many delights p. 347. Trial whether converted or no p. 359. How converted persons should do to walk joyfully p. 363. The Parable of the PRODIGAL LUKE 15. 11 c. 11. A certain man had two Sons 12. And the younger of them said to his Father Father give me the portion of goods that falleth to me And he divided unto them his Living 13. And not many days after the younger Son gathered all together and took his journy into a far Country and there wasted his substance with riotous living 14. And when he had spent all there arose a mighty famine in that Land and he began to be in want 15. And he went and joined himself to a Citizen of that Countrey and he sent him into his fields to feed swine c. THis Chapter consists of three Parables all of them tending to one scope and issue though distinct in their special matter and object The first Parable is of a Sheep from vers 4. to vers 8. The second of a piece of Silver from vers 8. to vers 11. The third of a Child from vers 11. to the end All of these agree in two conditions One of Loss the Sheep was lost the Groat was lost and the Child was lost Secondly of Recovery the Sheep that wandred is brought home the Groat which was lost is found out and the Son who departed is returned and accepted There be who undertake the Cyril Reasons of these Parables or dark similitudes under which Christ doth couch some special Lesson as why man is compared to a Sheep viz. because of our Creation wherein God made us and not we our selves we are the sheep of his pasture Psal 100. And why man is then compared to a Groat because of that singular image of God which was stamped in man at his creation as the royal image of a King is stamped upon such a piece of Coin And then why man is compared to a Son because of that near relation which he had to God being once able to call him Father And then why in every one of these to a lost Sheep a lost Groat a lost Son because of his revolt and departure from God by sin Nay and if it were lawfull to put and use free conceits on Parables as I am sure some of the Ancients do as St. Austin Gregory c. what if in this threefold Parable you might espie a threefold cause of mans fall In the sheep wandring Satans suggestion In the Groat lost by the woman the womans yielding In the Sons departing Adams voluntary revolting and spending of his happy estate and condition But these and such like observations though to some they seem more acute and pleasant yet to me they are frothy and unprofitable Touching the Parable therefore concerning which I am to The Scope of the Parable with a division of the chief Heads thereof Who are meant by the two Sons treat there are several conjectures about the sense and intention of it Concerning the Father of the two Sons they all agree but about the two Sons they differ Some by the two Sons understand Angels and Men The Angels they were the elder Son Man the younger being created after them The Angels abode at home with their Father Man had the stock put into his own hands and in a quick time lost himself and it This opinion you see hath some kind of Vicinity or correspondency sensus pius as Aquinas speaks of it but not proprius And there is one pregnant Reason against it in the Text for that the elder Son in this place is described to be grieved and sad at the acclamations and welcome testimonies of the younger Brothers return but the Angels rejoice and are glad at the conversion or return of a sinner 2. Others by the two Sons understand the Jews and the Gentiles the Jews were the elder the Gentiles the younger the Jews kept home as it were of all the Nations of the Earth they seemed to be the inclosure for God and his service and the Gentiles were as it were excluded rejected wandring sheep a lost people yet at length God through Christ looks after these lost sheep the other sheep of his fold as Christ speaks Joh. 19. and returns and accepts of the Gentiles which did much provoke the Jew as the elder Son was here provoked at the repentance and acceptance of the younger and kept out they were provoked to jealousie by those who once were not a people This interpretation pleaseth S. Austin and Cyril and some others and indeed it bears a fair congruity with the Parable in most respects 3. But the third and general opinion is that by the elder Son is meant the Scribes and Pharisees and under them any Justitiaries persons too conceited and confident of their own works service righteousness as this elder Son who had been as he said thus long in his Fathers house and never transgrassed any of his Commandments but served him carefully which indeed was the opinion of the Scribes and Pharisees who trusted to and boasted of their own righteousness And that by the younger Son is meant the Publicans and Sinners persons more notoriously riotous and infamous in sinning utterly forsaking of God as it were and living without him And the end of this Parable was to convince the proud and envious Scribes and Pharisees who in vers 1. and 2. of this Chapter murmured against Christ for receiving Publicans and Sinners Now Christ tells them that though these notorious sinners were despised by
will not become obedient he can quickly destroy us for our disobedience There is a day wherein God offers himself to be ours in grace and peace how long or how short that day is I cannot justly determine onely of this we may bee sure that God may in justice refuse us for ever if we refuse him once Note these Scriptures and they may perhaps awaken and recall us Ezek. 24. 12. She hath wearied her self with lies and her great s●um went not forth out of her her scum shall be in the fire v. 13. In thy filthiness is lewdness because I have purged thee by afflictions and thou wast not purged by repentance thou shalt not be purged from thy filthiness any more till I have caused my fury to rest upon thee Ver. 14. I the Lord have spoken it it shall come to pass and I will do it I will not go back neither will I spare neither will I repent aocording to thy waies and according to thy doings shall they judge thee saith the Lord God Luke 19. ver 42. Oh! if thou hadst known even thou at the least in this thy day the things which belong unto thy peace but now they are hid from thine eies Hebr. 3. ver 10. I was grieved with that generation and said they do alwaies err in their hears and they have not known my waies Vers 11. So I sware in my wrath they shall not enter into my rest Psal 81. ver 11. But my people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me v. 12. So I gave them up to their own hearts lusts and they walked in their own counsels These four places do afford us four sad things which may befal persons refusing to return from their sins and deluding that work 1. That the Lord will not still be usi●g of means 2. That he will draw off the means 3. He will leave such sinners and give them up to themselves 4. They shall never enter into his rest and this the Lord binds with an Oath Every one of these is a Judgment sufficiently fearfull for what shall become of the sinner when the Lord shall judicially draw off the means of his Conversion or if the means be continued in common to others yet he will not work any more upon that person through them but he shall despise the counsels of the Word and slight the message of all Afflictions and that a person should run so far and so high in a way of wickedness that the Lord gives him over as a desperate hopeless and forlorn wretch to walk in his own counsels and after the lusts of his own heart and when the Lord seals him up by his Oath that this is a person who shall never see my face though many a sinner shall be pardoned and saved yet this sinfull Transgressor shall never enter into my rest Now what doth the sinner know who seeks new ways to secure his sinning and opposeth thereby all the ways which God useth for his converting I say how doth he know but that the Lord will deal thus with him God hath dealt so with some for dealing thus with him he closed up the day upon Jerusalem and left the Israelites to their own hearts lusts and never answered Saul any more neither by Prophets nor by Dreams and threatens to remove the Candlestick Revel 2. 3. Consider That if the Lord should shew almost the Miracle of his Goodness towards such a shuffling sinner his Conversion The conversion of such a one will be will be 1. the Harder 2. the more Bitter It will be the Harder for as much as all further degrees and steps The Harder in sinning do engage the heart more to the love of sin and naturally infers more hardness of heart and resistance against the motions of Grace When a Skaine of Thread is more and more clotted and entangled it will be the harder to clear it and a Cord may be so knotted that you cannot undo it but by cutting it asunder Though the work of Conversion be not difficult to God yet the far running sinner shall find it for his part a more intricate and hitching thing to wind his heart from those acts and paths of iniquity into which it hath been so long accustomed However it will be the Harsher the child which sticks so often in the birth causeth the birth to be Or the harsher more sharp and dolorous Usually the more sinfull a man hath been and the longer he hath held off God his soul is more cut partly with Fears for now he hath many doors to unlock ere he can fasten on grounds of comfort not onely that he hath held on a course of sin so long but also that he hath so subtilly and frequently withstood the tenders of grace and Gods manifold dealings with him already Though the person may have grace truly wrought in him to make him see all this vileness yet it may be long ere his faith shall be able comfortably to apprehend Gods mercy to forgive it He may have doubts not onely of mercy but of the truth of his conversion as if it seemed rather to be compulsive God may long withhold from him the testimony of his love who hath a long time perversly withheld the consent of his heart from returning unto him Partly with Shame It will be an exceeding reproach and confusion of face unto this person when ever the Lord converts him that he should deal with the Lord thus resist his Spirit so much and withstand that great kindness of God intended to him by the many means which he hath used Surely after that I was turned I repented saith Ephraim and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth Jer. 31. 19. Then shall ye remember your own evil ways and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and for your abominations Ezek. 36. 31. Ah! how it will rent and press the soul Such a fool such a beast was I to pursue my own ruine to reject my own mercies to slight so great salvation to vex so good a God and to be so infinitely unthankfully base that if I could have found any means of support I would never have submitted unto him and left my sinfull course Ah! how doth the Lord take this at my hands how unacceptable may my returning now be which may seem rather to be forced through extremity than to spring out of any ingenuity So that you see by our sinfull shiftings either God may deny us converting grace or else we shall make our Conversion much less easie and comfortable Object But some may say What can we help it can we turn our own hearts it must be the Lord who must do that and he We cannot convert our selves might do it at the first as well at at the last if he would Sol.
occulta even your secret sins que sunt contra duo ultima decalogi praecepta Nay those which are committed against the two last commandments circumstancias yea and all the circumstances of your sins this is the confession which the Church of Rome in the Trent Council doth injoin upon pain of Anathema to be made unto the Priest Sess 14. Can. 7. but without any warrant from the Scripture or averment from true Antiquity for Scripture assures us that confession of sin made to God alone obtained remission of sins and favour Psal 32. 5. I said I will confess my sins unto the Lord and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin Lo here confession to God alone not to a Priest and upon it remission of sins by God himself dares any Popish Priest reverse this absolution or confession because not made to man which yet is accepted with God Saint Chrysostome speaks strange words Let Tom. 5. Hom. de paenit confess Lat. ●d Bas an 1 558. God onely see thee confessing And again upon Hob. 12. Hom. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reveal thy way unto the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Confess them before God and again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Confess thy sins before thy Judge and Saint Austins tongue needs to be clipped Quid mihi cum hominibus ut audiant confessiones nostras Conf. lib 10. cap. 13. quasi ipsi sanaturi sint omnes languores meas What have I to do with men that they should hear my confessions as though they could heal all my diseases Saint Basil saith that the groans of his In Psal 37. heart did suffice for a Confession Surely here was no absolute necessity to confess all to the Priest but yet again observe there is a use of Confession in case of 1. Injury 2. Anxiety 3. Scandal to the Church as in the next particular 2. Christian and prudential Confession and this is the acknowledging Christian and prudential of sins to men either in case of notorious scandal which the primitive Churches much urged and used or else in case of trouble and thus we deny not but any person may lawfully and warrantably go unto a faithful godly skilful compassionate Minister and confess his sins either to obtain counsel out of the Word of God for the remedy of sins to recover or prevent them or to be imformed aright concerning his present estate or to have his conscience quieted and settled 3. Penitential which is made onely to God this the Scripture Penitential to God doth command and this wee hold as absolutely necessary when wee do repent then to make confession of our sins to God Penitential confession considered In respect of the material part onely or Secondly This penitential confession may be considered either in respect of the material part onely and so it consists of words whereby we acknowledge wherein we have transgressed Hos 4. ver 1 2. Or of the formal part also and thus it conteins these Of the formal also ingredients which specifie and dist●nguish it from all superstitious or hypocritical or false confessions 1. It is an hearty acknowledgment no● nuda confessio feigned And so it is or meerly verbal confession It is affectionate the lips do u●ter An hearty acknowledgment the mind of the heart in it cum sensu peccati miseriae as a sick man opens his disease here I feel it c. The publican smote upon his breast and confessed True confession is the language of the very soul being very sensible of sin 2. It is voluntary not coacta confessio the Thief may confess upon the rack though And voluntary there were no wrath in God no rack in conscience no flames in hell yet the true penitent will confess When there is no other cause of confession of sin but that which is penal it is not then truly penitential Pharaoh confessed under the plagues and Judas under the stings of conscience it was an extorted confession but penitential confession is voluntary it is an act that ariseth from an inward displicence with and detestation of sin though there be no apprehension of hell no sense of wrath yet the penitent confesseth even to a Father I have sinned Many of the Saints did I shut up in prison and when they were put to death I gave my voice against them I punished them oft in every Synagogue Acts 26. 10 11. 3. It is distinct and not confused the penitent hath special bills of inditement he knows his sins and And distinct wherein he hath exceeded and failed such sins as he hath most delighted in such as he hath most walked in such as he hath most dishonoured God by such as cleave most unto his nature such as conscience may be most clogged with these he doth more especially confess unto God and indite and condemn himself for small sins as well as great Sauls lap as well as Vriahs murther antient sins as well as present secret sins as well as open But must our confession of sins be particular Sol. Either explicitly so or virtually so the heart hath a particular intention or affection the more particular the better to humble our hearts to obtein mercies to make us fervent As David though hee did give a touch at all his sins in the beginning of the 51 Psalm yet at length brancheth his confession into particulars into that of Adultery and the other of Blood So doth Paul often uncover his special sins of Persecuting the Church and Blaspheming and of Injuriousness Judas cryed out of Blood but not of Covetous●ess and Hypocrisie 4. It is Humble and not And Humble proud as Benhadads servants with ropes c. done with Contrition of Heart not with Ostentation of Spirit Like a flash of Lightning breaks out of a cloud rented and Josephs garment was shewed to his father rent and dipt in blood Anciently when they did confess their sins to God they did it with Sack●loth and Ashes and the opening of their sins is termed The pouring out of water before the Lord I am vile Job 40. 4. Not worthy c. Luke 15. because when they p●ured out their sins in confession of Tongue they likewise poured out contrition of Heart their tears of Grief spake as much as the words of their Lips I will declare mine Iniquities and be sorry for my sin Psal 38. The Papists indeed have as course a Garment and as severe a Garb in penitential confession as any but underneath they have dainty Linnen there lies great pride under all this pretended Humiliation as if all this did merit at the hands of God the Voice is humble Jacob's but the pride upon the act is proud Esau's If they saw the wrong which they did by sinning how could they so proudly challenge God upon their confessing what doth the murtherer deserve because he confesseth But truly Penitential Confession is accompanied with grief in the heart and with
death what rewards after death it shall procure to persons upon the one and the other he is stirred up to the sense of his sins to the admiration of Holiness to a condemnation of his evil course to a resolution for a better But then it is with him as with some ship sometimes as soon as it is putting out of the Harbor it strikes upon a rock or falls into the sands and loseth all the precious lading Or as with Corn sown and let fall in an open and solid place where the Birds come down and instantly pick it up so is it here with this man the world meets him again at the Church door or at his own door and all these impressions and resolutions are spilt and gone Worldly engagements take present possession of his thoughts and all the service of his affections so that he hath no time to consider what God did speak or work in him no time secretly to beg of God to write those truths in his heart to keep all this in the purpose of his heart to give him the Spirit of Grace and strength to walk in the wayes of God revealed now unto him When you turn the course of the water another way the Mill cannot stir so when men turn the course of their thoughts and affections to secular and vain imployments all resolutions stand still they have nothing now to elicit or draw them on and out into any holy or careful diligence of obedience and performance The Oxen and the Farm c. took them quite off and they made excuses .i. for the present they had other engagements therefore take heed of worldly cares It is impossible that you should be much in the actings of any Grace if you be very much in the service of worldly cares 6. Lastly Presumptuous Confidence is also an Impediment to the Presumptuous confidence present executions of good resolutions whether it be of future time hereafter shall serve the turn it is not wisdom to be so forward soft and fair will go far we have day enough yet before us a year two or ten hence after such a business is effected or which is worse after the pleasures of such a sin is a little more tasted Or of Future ability This is a work which we will do at pleasure and at leisure when we see the scouts the forerunners of the army then we will buckle on our armor when we espy the harbingers of death approaching old age sickness weakness diseases then we will think of heaven and forsake hell what need we be troubling our selves to be doing of that a long time which we can dispatch at any time if we have but time to say Lord have mercy upon me what would ye more Or of Future Mercy Wherefore hath God Mercy but for sinners and he hath said That if at any time a sinner convert he will have mercy We have found him kind unto us all our dayes and doubt not of his fatherly compassion at the last Thus do men post of all penitential executions and for ever endanger their souls Alas for future time whose is it Seneca the Heathen could see more truth then this Solum tempus presens nostrum No time is ours but the present Thou carriest thy life in thy hands thy breath in thy nostrils and seest more Graves made for the young then for the aged And as for thy future ability why dost thou so grosly befool thy self knowest thou not that present Neglects cause stronger Indispositions Qui non est hodie cras minus aptus erit the School-boy will teach thee Every man by more sinning grows more sinful and therefore most unapt and averse to good And then Future Mercy it is of all things the most uncertain to pardon sin where present mercy leaves us not to repentance from sin it is all one as if thou shouldst thus argue God will hereafter pardon me and therefore for the present I will sin against him disobey dishonour vex and grieve and abuse him These are the principal impediments to a present expectation of penitential resolutions and are to be declined by us I now proceed to the helps and furtherances to a present Helps execution of penitential● resolutions which are these amongst many 1. Solid Conviction of a sinful estate This will put us upon a present Execution When the Soul is brought to an experimental Solid conviction of a sinful state sense of the vileness and bitterness of sin it will not then lye hovering Were I best to give up this course or shall I go on in it still No but when the Soul is indeed wounded the wayes shall without delay be reformed take a person in some judicial and close conviction of sin upon a sick and dying bed how forward is a person then to change and better his courses much more do solid and evangelical convictions sweetly dispose and incline the heart to the forsaking of an evil and walking in a good way They in Acts 2. 37. were pricked in their hearts and what did this work in them they cry out presently Men and brethren what shall we do So Saul was struck to the ground and was astonished and trembled and then presently cries out Lord what wilt thou have me to do Act. 9. 4 6. Outward afflictions you see many times do put on men to alter and reform their wayes of much greater force are inward afflictions of spirit Go on yet in sin God forbid shall I continue in sin any longer who if I make not haste may lose all mercy and drop into Hell it self what I feel is much what I deserve I cannot bear 2. Holy Wisdome To know times and seasons is an high Holy wisdome part of Wisdome Walk not as fools but as wise redeeming the time saith the Apostle Eph. 5. 15 16. There are four things which solid Wisdome teacheth a man One is to look to the best part Another to make choice of the best good A third to walk in the best wayes A fourth is to do all this in the first place and surest time Have I any thing more near to me then my soul more concerning my soul then God more concerning God then walking before him Where am I if I lose my Soul what am I if I enjoy not God whether run I if I continue in sin if my soul be nearest and God choicest and his wayes safest why do I demur what should I take time or put off the doing of that which is ever best done when it is done If I will live yet in sin for ought I know I may then dye in sin and if I dye in sin I must for ever perish for sin Why should I not Do I not admit the present loss of that which else may be the eternal loss of my Soul But if I set into an holy life this is the very path of God the image of Glory the Ark of safety and the pledg of an happy eternity
In the expression of it and this is when so much Grace appears as to enter into a new path and do new works 3. In the progression of it And this is when a greater Victory is obtained over our sins and appears in our course of new obedience Now the Initials of true Repentance I conjecture to consists partly in the Conversion of the heart when the mind and will and affections are healed and turned and partly in the reformation of the life when the person out of an hatred of sin and love of God sets upon another course of obedience and service It is just like a Ship that is going out or like a Shop that is newly set up things are very raw there is much dross with the little Silver a little health and much lameness a great journey and but a few steps the work is rather in desire and much in complaints and though perhaps little be done yet all is heartily endeavoured to be done this I call the Initials of Repentance There are six things shew that Repentance is begun in truth Six things shew Repentance is begun in truth Condemnation 1. One is Condemnation When the judgement looks upon all sin after another manner then formerly sentencing it as the most vile and accursed of all evils and no sin knowingly finds favour 2. Another is Aversation When the will flies Aversation and shuns it as that which is most contrary to all goodness and happiness 3. A third is Weariness When the Soul is as Weariness weary of Sin as any Porter can be of his Burthen or as a sick-man is of his Bed Psal 51. 17. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise 4. A fourth is Lamentation That the Soul cannot yet be rid of Lamentation the unruly motions and insolencies of sin It is grieved that Life and Death Hell and Heaven Grace and Sin should thus be together 5. A fifth is Resistance or conflict The Soul doth Resistance use the best means it can to separate more from sin and all sinfull wayes and to walk only in all holy pathes in the pathes of righteousness And the sixth is an active Inctination to obey God in all things a thirsting and striving an aiming a writing after the Copy An active Inclination And there are four things which do shew that Repentance is Four things shew that Repentance is but begun Impotency but begun it is only initial 1. One is Impotency or weakness of operation When the penitential parts do move and stir yet like a child who begins to go very feebly There is as much appears in the course as declares another spring or principle and rule by which the Soul strives to walk but the performance is very tender and feeble like a young Tree that hath but tender branches and small fruit The person doth mourn and confess and pray and live and obey but with weakness 2. A second is efficacy of Temptation When Temptations do easily Efficacy of Temptation beset and discourage the Soul as when the Tree is but a young plant the Winds to toss it and make it reel so when Temptations do as it were drive the Soul and are apt to raise quick fears and discouragements Oh! I shall be overcome again I shall hardly hold on I cannot well see how I shall be able to perform and preserve in these wayes which I have chosen A third is the Validity of present Corruption which though it be truly hated and bewailed yet it is very apt upon occasions to assault and Validity of present Corruption prevail when every little stone is apt to make one stumble it argues that the strength is weak 4. Necessary presence of many helps When a Man cannot go but with two Crutches and a Child must lean upon many props and a penitent upon many sensible encouragements Now that these Initials of Repentance are graciously accepted The Doctrine proved God respects the truth as well as the degrees of Grace of God may be thus manifested 1. The Lord doth respect the truth of Grace as well as the degrees of it every quality as well as the quantity Are not thine eyes upon the truth The Goldsmith hath his eye on the very thin raies of Godl as well as on the great knobs and pieces Grace is excellent and amiable at the lowest though then admirable when at highest 2. The main thing that God looks upon is to the heart My Son give me thy God looks most at the Heart heart All that is done if the heart be not in it it is of little or no estimation with God but if the heart be right this the Lord prizeth exceedingly and so much that for its sake he passeth by many infirmities The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart c. 2 Chro. 30. 19. Now in the Initials of Repentance the heart is set right it is set on God and towards God in truth 3. Even the Initials of Repentance are his own Gifts special gifts of his blessed Spirit it is he that worketh The Initials of Repentance are his Cist in us to will and to do Phil. 2. 13. The spirituall will and the spiritual deed though both be imperfect yet are they the genuine effect of Gods own spirit sparks out of his fire works of his own hands Now as in the Creation God looked upon all that he made and saw that it was good he liked it well So is it in our Renovation all that good which God works in us he doth accept and approve he doth not despise his own image which though it shine more fairly in progressive Repentance yet is it truly stampt in our initial Conversion 4. T●at which comes This Springs ●●om faith not only from a person having faith but from faith it self that the Lord will graciously accept For as our actions do not please him without faith it is impossible without faith to please God So on the contrary when the actions do come from faith they do please the Lord. Abels Sacrifice presented in Faith did please him when Cains presented without faith was not regarded faith puts a value and acceptance on our actions But even initial Repentance comes from faith the person is by faith united to Jesus Christ from whom he hath received strength and grace to forsake his sins and to become a servant of righteousness 5. The Lord hath said that he will not despise the day of small things nor quench the smoaking flax nor break the God will not de●p●se ●he Day 〈◊〉 ●mall things bruised reed What Husbandman doth despise the little plant which he hath set Or what father doth despise the little child he hath begoten Why that God who hath appointed all the meanes and ordinances to cherish and prop and comfort and nourish and perfect the initials of Repentance doth not he
is Knowledge of Christ as revealed in the Word which a man may have and utter too and yet not have Faith there is Profession of Faith for the truth against errours and yet the Grace of Faith is another thing A man may have so much faith as to believe that there is a Christ and to confess his excellencies and in some sort to see his own necessities of Christ yea he may begin to article and capitulate as the Young-man and yet break off and be far enough from a Faith which doth indeed espouse and marry his soul unto Christ 4. Lastly The misery and danger Suppose The misery and danger you do deceive your selves and in the event it appears that you are not espoused to Jesus Christ by Faith that you never gave your hearts unto him that there never was any conjugal Union and Bond twixt you if thou indeed shouldst live Christless and die Christless what helpless hopeless happyless person art thou But you will reply We trust that we are truly penitent persons and that God hath given unto us such a Faith whereby we are really married unto Christ Sol. Well if that be so you have great cause to bless the Lord And that you may not be deceived therein I will deliver unto you some proper effects which that Faith produceth in every soul that is indeed married unto Qualities produced by an espousing faith Christ There are four Qualities produced by an espousing Faith 1. Estimation Let the Wife see that she reverence her Husband saith the Apostle Ephes 5. She must both acknowledg Estimation him as a Head and honour him as a Lord ju●●e and esteem of him in a relative consideration above all other The like effect doth Faith produce if it espouseth us to Christ it sets up Christ above all accounts of him as most excellent judgeth of all other things but as dross and dung in comparison of him will part with all for to get Christ The beauties of Christ are glorious in the eyes of every believer Christ doth not seem a mean thing an ordinary or common thing but he is the Pearl the Sun of Righteousness My Lord and my God saith Thomas In a word Faith if right exalts the Excellency of Christ and the Authority of Christ the Excellencies of his Person and the Authority of his Will and Laws 2. Election Election We make choice of Christ before all other Though sins though the pleasures and profits of the world proffer themselves yet as the Martyr at the stake None but Christ Or as Paul I desire to know nothing but Christ crucisied So the true believer Give me Christ I have enough I have that which is best of all he is the the Optimum and the Vnicum to Faith 3. Affection Conjugal Affection Faith ever produceth conjugal Love It were a monstrous evil for a woman to marry a man and no● love him and it were an adulterous thing for her to love any more then her own Husband Marriage doth by way of Duty infer and draw with it two qualities of Love one is exclusive and it is an unity of Love the other is intensive and it is a redundancy of Love Thus is it with us if Faith hath espoused us unto Christ it do●h kindle in us a love unto Christ not a divided love a love to Christ and a love to sin a love to Christ and a love to the world but an united love none is by us esteemed and loved as our Lord but Christ Nor doth it satisfie it self with a remiss and diminutive love which may serve any inferiour object but as Christ is in himself the most excellent object so Faith produceth such a degree of love which bears some proportion with that object viz. a superlative love a love of Christ above all and more then all more set on Christ than on any other object which yet may lawfully be loved more than our father or mother or wife or children Do we find this love in our hearts to Christ against all and above all Nay again True conjugal love infers with it a Love 1. of Complacency to delight in the thing loved 2. of Society to be with the person loved Is it so with us what delght have we in Christ in his person in his excellencies in his works in his ord●●ances Is it our best joy to hear him to see him to speak with him 4. Subjection I confess that marriage doth not make the Subjection woman a slave yet by vertue thereof she is bound to submission or subjection she doth in a sort give away her self unto the disposal of another in the Lord Thy desire saith God Gen. 3. 16. shall be to thy husband and he shall rule over thee If thou hast a Faith which doth espouse thee unto Christ that Faith brings thy heart into the obedience and subjection of Christ It subjects thy will to Christs will and thy judgment to his truths and thy desire to his rule and thy works to his laws If Christ would have thee be and do one thing and thou wilt be and do another that thy will is still contradicting of Christs will and thy way is still contrary to his way Though a man may be married to such a stubborn and perverse piece yet Christ is not for all that are married unto him by Faith have in some measure wrought in them an obediential spirit desirous to know the mind of the Lord and willing to live godly in Christ Jesus Now this subjection which is the effect of an espousing Faith hath these properties in it viz. 1. Vniversality the wife is subject in all things 2. Diligence we must take care to please him 3. Delightfulne●● it must be no burthen 4. Constancy as long as we live we must be subject to the will of our Lord. The last Use shall be for Exhortatiou That in case you find Vse 2. Exhortation this Ring of Faith by which you are espoused unto Christ given unto you then be very carefull to wear it and to bring it along with you to this next Sacrament We usually put on our Robes and our Rings when we come to any solemn Feasts The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is a Feast of good things there is Christ and mercy and redemption and sanctification and what not for the soul but bring your Ring with you Christ looks that you should come with it and you can do no good at the Sacrament if you have not the Ring on your hand Though you put forth your hand yet if the Ring be not on it the hand may take the bread but the Ring is it which onely can take Christ therefore bring Faith with you to the Sacrament Josephs Brethren must bring Benjamin with them or else they must not see his face nor should get food And let your faith work upon Christ all along on the love of Christ on the sufferings of Christ of the
Repentance formal cold negative way of repentance deeming themselves no less then Penitentiaries who have this only to plead They never in all their lives did wrong or harm c. But remember O self-deceiver if ever God gives to thee repentance indeed thou wilt find other sinful courses to be left besides those of Commission thou wilt find thine Omissions to be a highly guilty course of sin that thou frequently omits calling upon God hearing of his Word reading of his Word examining of thy heart humbling of thy soul walking in an holy and heavenly and exact manner c. Thou often criest out What bad course am I in I demand of thee what holy course art thou in what other course of life leadest thou then ever c. Well I will say no more but this but if other and better lives be the arguments of true Repentance the Lord be merciful to us there are then but very few penitents the same oaths the same cursings the same worldliness the same pride the same drunkenness the same uncleanness the same neglects of God and spiritual duties we are Vse 2. Let us shew our Repentance by our Conversation not others then we were we live not otherwise then we have done But secondly If any of you take your selves to be penitents I beseech you then let us carefully shew it by our lives and conversations Consider to this purpose 1. If there be truth of If there be true Repentance there will be newness of conversation Repentance there will be newness of Conversation A monstrous taing to see a man start up and walk with his Coffin and Grave-cloaths If it be light it will shine and if it be fire it will heat and if it be salt it will season if thy heart be purged indeed thy life will also be reformed indeed If ye have been taught as the Ephes 4. 21. truth is in Jesus put off concerning the former conversation the old man 2. The Lord ●esus hath purchased thy Life as well as thy Soul and redeemed thy Conversation as well as thy Nature Christ hath purchased thy life as well as thy soul He did dye not only to recover thy inward Man but also to cure thy outward Man that as thy Heart should not be profane so thy Conversation should not be vain Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh that we should no longer live the rest of our time in the flesh 1 Pet. 4. 1 2. Christ hath dyed for thee that now thou shouldst live unto him 3. The honour of Religion lyes upon thy The honour of Religion lies upon thy life Life Thy heart may be a secret a closet of much good or evil we leave it to the Searcher of hearts but thy life is a publick Letter an audible Voice a common Object The profession of truth and holiness is an honourable thing in it self but a good and answerable Conversation adds and reflects a greater honour to it As the Heaven is a beautiful Creature but it is the more beautified by the shining of the Stars So is it with Religion it is an Excellency in it self and is made the more excellent by an excellent Conversation But a lewd rude foolish boystrous incongruous fowl uneven evil life makes Religion to look like Gold in the dirt or like a Jewel in a Swines snout or like Beauty in a Whore It is the very scandal of Religion and as a death verse upon an holy profession What is it that thou now and then fillest the eyes of men with a little gravity and the ears of men with a little piety when still thou by thy wicked life armes the hearts of men to scorn and the tongues of men to blasphe● the Name of God and Professors The more pretence thou hast to repentance the more odious art thou by thy impenitent life to the profession thereof The strictest eyes are upon the strictest professors and no miscarriages take so soon with men or damp Religion more 4. The souls of men lie much upon their life What Greg. Nazianz The souls of men lie much upon their life said of the Painter That he teacheth not by his language but by his hand and Chrysostom of the Minister That his first part is to Live well and then to Teach well that is true of every penitent Christian for his inward affections come not so into our scales as his outword actions We judge of him and imitate him not by what lies hid in his heart but by what appears in his life and of all men we are most confident to imitate the actions of those who pretend most against sin Now then if thou who pretendest to repent of all sin by thy sinful life should●t multiply sinners amongst men or strengthen the hearts of sinners from returning O how bitter O how dismal how fearful how an amazing account that thou even under a forme of Repentance shouldst keep men in an estate of impenitency to damn their souls by thy continual sinnings Sins in conversation are alwayes of more publick danger then those of disposition as a Feavor or a Plague 5. The comfort and peace of thy Conscience lies much in it The comfort and peace of thy Conscience lies much in it A good Life is the best Commentary of an upright heart and uprightness is a comfort A good Life is the best Star to clear up Gods glory and to bring him glory is to bring our selves comfort Conscience will judge thee more for evil in life as more perfected more hurtful than for that within A good life is the only Plaister by which we heal others the only Pilot by which we direct others the only Hand by which we hold up others We may think good but this circumscribes it self with our selves we may desire good but this also con●ines it self with our selves The good life is the life only which doth good to others and the more good we do the more comfort still we have 6. The reward will be great to the life that is good It s true The Reward will be great to the good life that God in his future retribution hath respect to the inward graces and dispositions but he takes publick notice of the operations of them in our lives as for acting themselves and therefore pronounceth the reward to the doer and the kingdom unto him that cloaths and feeds and visits c. What! an eternal life for a good life 7. But lastly Look on all who are truly penitent or have All that are truly penitent have been very circumspect of their lives been so how tender and circumspect they have been of their lives and walkings How extremely circumspect was David of his tongue Psa 39. and as exceedingly pensive for any unbeseeming word or fact much more for any scandalous evo● such a fool such a beast was I Psa 51. So the Apostles both in their wayes and in their directions unto all the
pleaseth and when he pleaseth He hath the command of the heart and grace Take the heart as usually we do for any or all the faculties of the soul yea as corrupted by nature and custome yet God hath a dominion over it and he can make new impressions and divine alterations and inclinations upon it The Understanding naturally is blind and dark unable to unfold and apprehend the morality of conditions actions objects but God can turn it from darkness to light he can imprint on it the clearest light whereby it shall be able to behold what is good and what is evil The Judgment naturally is erroneous it mistakes good for evil and evil for good judgeth sinfull evil as the best and sweetest way condemneth good as most contrary to us to our delights courses ends But God is able to imprint on mans Judgment a discerning and righteously sentencing ability that a man shall not only see his sinfull nature and life but condemn it I was mad saith Paul such a fool a beast was I. They shall remember their evil wayes and loath themselves Hos 2. 7. as his greatest evil and misery and conclude that a new holy penitent life is the best of all lives and that for himself The Conscience is either sleepy or seared naturally But God can awaken it and imprint on it a power to feel sin to complain accuse indite wound and slay the sinner that he shall have no rest as long as he lies in his sinfull condition Sin revived and I died Rom. 7. The Will is naturally averse and perverse it is set against all spiritual good and set upon evil But cannot God alter this Will He can easily turn it about let him but drop in the least degree of Grace and the Will presently wheels about and is as ready and desirous and cleaving to good as ever it was to evil Lord what wilt thou have me to do Act. 9. So for the Affections the Lord hath the dominion over them He can make them to love him as much and more than ever they loved sin and to grieve and to hate and to fear sin c. Get thee hence what have I any more to do with Idols 4. The Lord doth sometimes convert a great sinner to glorifie his God doth this to glorifie his own grace own Grace 1. The power of it that it is able to cure great and strong diseases If ordinary sinners onely were converted men would imagine but a common and vulgar power lay in converting Grace where there is a lesser opposition there a weaker strength may suffice to do the work But if sin be strong now the power of Grace appears in rescuing the soul even from the Gates of Hell and from the Powers of Darkness 2. The riches of it When all the world knows and the man himself knows That there was nothing in him but a vilest heart and lewdest course and yet Divine Grace hath converted him O saith he this was rich Mercy and Grace indeed The Apostle saith That God quickned the dead Ephesians that he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace chap. 2. vers 7. O saith the great sinner now converted never was there such a gracious and such a mercifull God such a kind and loving God I was dead and he hath made me alive I was the greatest of sinners and I have yet obtained the sweetest of mercies I was the greatest Enemy and yet God would be my kindest Friend overcome by Sin and now overcome by Grace falling down into Hell and now lifted up to Heaven so bad that Justice might have had much Glory to damn me yet God hath been so good that Mercy shall have the Glory to save me Vs● ●o relieve the troubled Conscience and distressed Conscience You shall find by experience these two Truths 1. That whiles men are in a dead lost vile and unsensible condition they then imagine that their sins are little and mercies great and they have power to turn to God when they please 2. That when they come to be truly sensible of their hearts and ways then their sins appear exceeding great and the mercy and grace of God seem little O! they have withstood the offers of grace and all self-power is gone and the greatness of their sinning is an absolute bar to their conversion And there are eight Reasons why a man made sensible of Reasons why a man sensible of his great sin thinks God will not convert him his great sinnings inclines to think that God will never convert him 1. Because he hath been one who hath exceedingly provoked God to wrath against him He sees great wrath in God and that he hath by his continual sinnings incensed the Lord. O saith he it is mercy that must convert but I have turned a mercifull God into a just God and a kind God into an angry God my great sins have put me into the hands of his great wrath 2. Because such a person sees his condition lying under the threatnings of God and out of the reach of the promises of God God threatning him Warrants issued out to take and arrest him an Arrow levell'd at him God hath said That he will wound the hairy scalp of him that goes still on in his iniquities and that he who hardens his heart being often r●proved shall be destroyed without remedy Now I have been that sinner 3. Because such a person feels the impressions of Gods displeasure on his Conscience He is in the very hands of wrath Conscience tells him Thou art the man and these have been thy sinnings these have been thy ways and thy doings and Conscience condemns him for one who hath delighted himself in evil and secretly goes and smites him with unavoidable fears and terrours Now when a man feels wrath 't is an hard thing to perswade him that God hath any thoughts and intentions of mercy and grace for him 4. Such a person ordinarily looks more upon the examples of destruction than upon the instances of conversion rather what God hath done against them than for any of them O saith he God in Scripture hath often left such and such great sinners to their As the Israelites Psal 81. 12. 2 Thes 2. J●r 13. 14. own hearts lusts and he hath given them up to Satans delusions and to a reprobate mind and sense and would not have mercy on them he would deal with them no more 5. The distance twixt his greatly sinning soul and converting grace seems to him wondrously large If I had been but sick and weak but can a dead man live should a Rebel be embraced can a Blackmore be made white It is great grace to convert a little sinner but what grace is sufficient to convert so great a sinner 6. He measures the disposition of Divine Grace by the indisposition of his own heart O saith he I have been how long how stubbornly unwilling to receive grace how violent to oppose grace If I
so for other duties 5. Spiritual joy will exceedingly It will exceddingly facilitate the way and work to heaven facilitate the way and work for heaven It is our facundus Comes which is pro Vehiculo As the fear of the Lord is our treasure Isa 33. 6. So the joy of the Lord is our strength Neh. 8. 10. An heavy dull sad spirit is a burden of● it self and is very apt to make every thing else a burden Now spiritual joy it takes off dulness and deadness and enables us to run the way of Gods Commandments and to run the race that is set before us Amanti nihil difficile it makes our spiritual work to come off the Wheels run if oyled Quest This is true will some reply but what should converted What should converted persons do to walk joyfully persons do that they may walk joyfully Sol. There are two sorts of converted persons Incipientes who are newly called newly wrought on newly brought home and these ordinarily are full of fears of doubts of temptations of conflicts of heaviness Proficientes who are long standers in the wayes of grace Will you favour me to speak a few words to either of these 1. To persons newly converted I would humbly present Directions To persons newly converted these directions as proper means or Conduits of joy and comforts to their souls 1. Draw up your spiritual condition to some issue Do not live with a doubtful suspition perhaps you are converted perhaps Draw up your Spirituall condition to some Issue you are not converted As ignorance is an enemy to grace so doubtfulness is an enemy to comfort That man who is still in suit whether his Conversion be true will not dare to lay claim to the joyes which result from Conversion If I fear my grace I shall much more fear my comfort Give all diligence to make your calling and election sure Therefore do this bring thy souls estate to the word that is the rule that is the fire that is the touchstone if the Word of God will approve and decide for thee bless God and maintain the truth of thy spiritual estate against all the suggestions of Satan and cavils of thine own heart when once that doth say truth of grace is in thee conscience will say truth of comfort belongs unto thee 2. Get a little more faith one dram more would turn the the scale and settle thine heart Faith trades with the Fountain Get a little more saith with the God of Comfort and of Peace and with Jesus Christ It is Faith that lets you into Christ and it is Faith which lets comfort into you The God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing Rom. 15. 13. There are five priviledges of Faith It hath the first look of Mercy it hath the first kiss from Christ it hath the first news of acceptance unto Life it hath the first answer of Peace it hath the first draught of Joy Oh get a little more faith a little more faith would weaken the grounds of thy fears quell the motions of thy doubts clear thy way to the fountains of comfort imprint on thy heart a most joyful Communion with thy God and Christ no life of joy but that of faith 3 And Learn to live by faith and then you will have more Learne to live by faith joy and comfort Four things would make a mans life very joyfull and comfortable 1. If he were eased of all burthens 2. If he were secured from all prejudices 3. If what he had were good and enough 4. If he were assured that whatsoever good he should need of that he should not fail but be supplied with it in due time Now the life of faith 1. Easeth you of all your burthens There are but two burthens upon us 1. The sinfull Faith sees this taken off by Christ He bare our sins 2. The earthly of cares Faith sees Gods providence taking that off The Lord is a Sun c. Psal 84. I will never leave thee Heb. 13. Bread shall be given to him his waters shall be sure Isa 33. 16. Cast your care on him for he careth for you 1 Pet. 5. 7. 2. Secures you against all prejudices and hurts Faith finds us still in Gods hands and in a safe custody Though there be evils in the world yet they shall not come nigh you and his work goes on though ours do not God is with you who can be against you There 's a Deluge but Noah's in the Ark a storm but you are in an hiding place He holds you in his hand and covers you under his wings makes all things to work for good Faith sees the Trouble and the Sanctuary both Occurrences and Providence both ruling carrying on observing watching preserving If Earth won't keep you safe Heaven shall 3. It renders the present possession as good and enough Your portion is so For what is a Christians portion Is not God is not his favour And is not God enough is not his favour better then life He who cannot be contented with a God and a Christ and a Covenant of Grace and Heaven will be satisfied with nothing You have but little of Earth A● but you have God and Christ If a man have but a little Garden yet if he have a large field c. A little of Earth and much of Heaven makes a fair Estate 4. It assures you of supplies universal and seasonable Vniversal I shall not want Psal 23. 1. No good thing will he withhold Psal 84. 11. No good for soul no good for body you have his Bonds for both and this is for life Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life Psal 23. Nay for everlastingness I will marry thee to my self for ever Hos 2. 19. 2. Seasonable In an acceptable time c. In the mount God will be seen 4. Get a little more understanding and judgment about your converted Get more understanding and judgment about your converted condition and gracious condition Shall I help thee a little with a few Considerations and Informations Know then 1. The great Fountain of thy Joy lies more in thy Justification then in thy Sanctification Thou hast not so much Holiness as another but thou hast of Christs Righteousness thou canst not apprehend so strongly but thou art apprehended as strongly Christ lays as fast hold of thee 2. That Grace and Weakness may dwell together It may be very true though very weak the smoaking flax and the bruised reed and the grain of mustard-seed A Father hath one Child in the Cradle and another in the Shop a Shepheard hath Lambs in the flock as well as Sheep the Gardiner hath Plants as well as Trees and Christ hath Babes as well as strong Men belonging to him 3. That the least Grace and the great Love of God do go together The little drop of Grace comes out of the Ocean of his great Love