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A19474 A hand of fellovvship, to helpe keepe out sinne and Antichrist In certaine sermons preached vpon seuerall occasions: by Robert Abbot ... Abbot, Robert, 1588?-1662? 1623 (1623) STC 59; ESTC S100379 198,722 312

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and depth of Gods loue to vs in Christ and see●ng there superabundant store of loue merit power to doe vs euerlasting good our hearts are ouercome to ecche out to God I come Lord I come and so the Father bestoweth the Sonne vpon vs and vs vpon him Vse Now men brethren and fathers hearken what securitanes can perswade themselues that they are of this Church though they hold their heads neuer so high amongst vs none none can doe it Are they that are corrupt and lie rotting in carnall wisedome and proud enmitie against God that goe a whoring after pleasures profits honours according to their seuerall dispositions are they I say cut off from the wilde oliue Are they whose soules were neuer filled with shame sorrow feare for sin and who neuer from a bleeding heart confessed their particular sinnes vnto God or from a melting soule begged pardon resoluing for euer after to be disposed as God shall please are they I say pared and made fit to grow into one bodie with the head Are they who neuer haue had experience of sin-sicke soules who doe neuer see by any comfortable adiudication their wants supplied in Christ who do not pant after him in such meanes as God hath appointed are they I say ingrafted into Christ No no when these things come to passe heauen and hell will be all one kingdome As you will be kind and louing people to your soules therfore apply these three particulars to your hearts and neuer thinke your selues to be of the true Church though you are in it till you find them in some measure wrought in you Gentlemen who are giuen to that studie know that there is an abatement of honour in Heraldrie to him that telleth a lie or is deuoted to the apron or committeth Idolatry to Bacchus And do we not thinke that God will clip the wings of those who thinke to fly aloft to this honour to be of the true Church and yet liue in sinne Yes write this for a truth that as sure as all are not Israel according to the spirit which are of Israel according to the flesh so surely none are vniuocall members of that Church wherof Christ is the head but those who find in themselues this totall alteration from their estate naturall to a feeling and comfortable estate in Christ Iesus But secondly you will now aske me what are those ligatures and ties whereby we are knit vnto Christ that wee may grow together with him For those are of the true Church who are knit vnto Christ by the true bands I answer therefore that they are the sauing and sauourie truths in the word of God This is that alone which makes our faith apt to conglutinate and glew vs to Christ Who is my mother saith Christ and who are my brethren Matth. 12.48 Who are those that are knit vnto me by the neerest bond They that heare the word of God and doe it that is Luke 8.21 they that receiue the truth of Gods word by faith and conforme themselues vnto it these are the men Antiquitie cannot knit vs vnto Christ for age is no crowne of honour except it be found in the wayes of righteousnesse Succession cannot doe it except together with it wee depart not from the true faith which was formerly holden Bonum et verum convertuntur Vnitie cannot doe it except it be good and nothing is good which is not true The bare titles of Catholike and Apostolike cannot doe it except together we forsake not the Catholike and Apostolike doctrine and truth Holinesse cannot doe it except it be holinesse agreeable to the truth without which there is none for Christ saith Sanctifie them by thy truth Ioh. 17. Thus you see that truth is that very glew and cyment in the hand of faith that must knit vs vnto our head Vse Oh therfore let vs striue and contend for the faith as Iude speaketh which was once giuen vnto the Saints Iude v. 3. If euer we stroue for it now is the time now more than euer because their destruction is neerer doth the Pope hound out as our Soueraign termeth it great swarmes of Iesuites to disgrace the Scriptures and to steale away the word of truth from vs. Blessed is he that holdeth fast in this fearefull time of temptation Apoc. 16.15 Behold I come as a theefe saith Christ blessed is he that watcheth and keepeth his garments of holy truth and true holines lest he walke naked and men see his filthines Ob. It may be you will say That if truth knit vs to our head truth is at Rome Sol. I answer that it may be so for Antichrist ruffles as God in the temple of God 2. Thes 2.4 which hath the Scripture but the Church of Rome the Popes apostacie consisting of head and members vnited by the doctrine of Trent hath it not Ob. If you say that the truth was once at Rome Sol. I grant it but it doth not follow that therefore it should be there now A fuisse ad esse non sequitur Es 1.21 22. 1. Thess 1.8 the faithfull Citie may become a harlot and her wine may be mixed with water and Thessalonica from whom sounded out the word of the Lord in Macedonia and Achaia and whose faith which was towards God spread abroad in all quarters is now a cabine of vncleane Turkes yea and who knoweth not that a chaste virgin may in time become a stinking harlot Euen so is it with Rome Ob. If you aske mee When went the truth from Rome for some or other must needs obserue it Sol. I answer Is it not gone except I can shew the time An apple may be rotten though I cannot shew the time when it began because it began at the coare A man may be sicke vnto death though I cannot tell when his disease began to preuaile against him So the Church of Rome though by reason of her strength and that good temper shee was in while Martyrs possessed her seat she stood out long before she kept her bed because she was not heart-sicke at the first infecting of her blood in which respect haply her first lying downe cannot be obserued of euerie eye yet hee that hath but one eye may see that she is sicke vnto death by her sicke and powerlesse actions as her surfetting vpon temporall glory Laesae actiones laesas arguunt facultates her vomiting vp of the wholesome food of Gods word her desire not to be stirred from her old rotten couch her pettishnesse if we doe but touch her to trie whether sicke or sound and many the like symptomes not only of a declining but of a desperately consuming estate Ob. Yea but you will say That in other heresies the persons broaching and the time when is obserued Sol. I answer That it doth not therefore follow that this can be done in Poperie for it is a mysterie as the Apostle saith and as Iohn saith Great Babylon the
ignorance was ineuitable as also because they practised according to that Christian knowledge which then was attainable and sinned not wilfully as we doe against that glorious light which God doth now offer in the ministerie of his most holy word Thirdly considering that our fore-fathers acts are no sufficient warrant for vs wee notwithstanding our reuerence vnto them dare not sweare to their sayings and admit of a blinde imitation of their actions without triall but with a holy anger against that cursed apostasie which misled our deare predecessors and brought them to some acts of superstition we bring them to the touchstone of Gods word and wherein he will haue vs leaue them we follow God and humbly thanke him for that reuelation wherein he will giue vs leaue to goe with them we cheerefully follow them blessing the same God who made them such faithfull guides Thus I feare I haue beene too long in striuing to root out the conceits of noueltie and vnnaturalnesse in those truths which our writings will present vnto you But hauing so good proofe of both your loues vnto me I doubt not but either of you and both of you will spare so much time as may afford diligent reading and obseruation of what is written As for the Writer yee may haue a more complementall not a more heartie well-willer As for the subiect of my writing as Terentius a noble Captaine in daies of old when he saw his petition which he put vp for the Christians to be torne in peeces by the Emperor gathered vp the tottered shreds and said I seeke neither houses nor lands gold nor gaine but a Church So haue I wholly aimed at Conscience and a Church the Church of God amongst vs. What shall I now say To you Sir as Occham said to the Emperour in another case and kinde when he was vexed with the Popes ambition Tu me defende gladio ego te defendam verbo Defend me with your sword and I will defend and second you by the Word the Spirits sword To you Madame as Paul to the Hebrewes Pray for vs Hebr. 13.18 for we are assured that we haue a good conscience in all things willing to liue honestly To you both liue to your selues liue to yours liue to the Church of God amongst vs. So shall hee with more cheare put vp your suits to God who alreadie is much and desires to be more bound vnto your Worships and shall rest Your faithfull Shepherd to vse in any thing within the compasse of his office ROBERT ABBOT TO THOSE CHRISTIAN Readers of whose reading I am well assured euen to my deare and louing Parishioners of Cranebrooke in Kent THE GOD of peace that brought againe from the dead our Lord Iesus Heb. 13.20 21. the great Shepherd of the sheepe through the bloud of the euerlasting Couenant make you all perfect in all good workes to doe his will working in you that which is pleasant in his sight through Iesus Christ our Lord. Though I cannot say with Paul to the Galathians I beare you record that if it had beene possible Gal. 4.15 yee would haue plucked out your owne eyes and haue giuen them me Yet out of a taste of the singular loue and respect which yee haue had vnto me for my workes sake 1 Thess 5.13 I can with good conscience greet you as the same Apostle doth the Philippians My brethren beloued and lon●ed for my ioy Phil 4.1 and my crowne and doe beseech you to continue in the Lord yee beloued Yee see that in publishing these Sermons I doe offer my selfe vnto publike censures In so good a cause I only desire to be found faithful 1 Cor. 4.2 3. and then I care little to be iudged by mans iudgement I know that some of the things which I write of are commonly knowne 2 Pet. 1.12 13 14 15. yet I will not be vnmindfull to put you in remembrance of what yee haue knowledge and of that truth wherein yee are alreadie established And though I cannot say that the time is at hand that I must lay downe this my Tabernacle yet I thinke it meet so long as am in it to stirre you vp yea and to endeuour that you may haue in remembrance the secret of the Gospell euen after my departure 1 Tim. 3.16 For I haue not followed deceiueable fables but the mysterie of godlinesse which may helpe you with or hold you out a right hand of fellowship to keepe out sinne and Antichrist I haue no dominion ouer your faith 2 Cor. 1.24 yet am I vnder God a helper of your ioy Gal. 3.7 In which respect yee haue runne well and yee doe well in that in my weake but by Gods fauour willing Ministery yee haue and doe take heed vnto the most sure word of the Prophets 2 Pet. 1.19 as vnto a light that shineth in a darke place Iames 1.21 and as to that good word of God which is able to saue your soules 2 Thess 1.11 12 And I desire to pray alwaies for you that our God may make you worthy of his calling and fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodnesse and the worke of faith with power That the name of our Lord Iesus Christ may be glorified in you and you in him according to the grace of our God 1 Thess 2.19 20 For what is my hope or ioy or crowne of reioycing Are not euen ye in the presence of our Lord Iesus at his comming Yea yee are my glory and ioy And therefore because one desire of mine is to keepe out sinne I will pray againe for you Ephes 3.14 Vers 16. and bow my knees vnto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory that yee may be strengthned by his Spirit in the inner man Vers 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith Oh how vnwillingly should I say of you with the Apostle Gal. 4.11 1 Cor. 6.15.19 I am in feare of you lest I haue bestowed on you labour in vaine Know yee not that your bodies are the temples of the holy Ghost in you and the members of Christ Phil. 2.1 2. If therefore there be any consolation in Christ if any comfort of loue if any fellowship of the Spirit if any compassion and mercie fulfill my ioy In thinking vpon and doing whatsoeuer things are true Philip. 4.8 whatsoeuer things are honest whatsoeuer things are iust whatsoeuer things are pure whatsoeuer things pertaine to loue whatsoeuer things are of good report or if there be any other vertue I know that in times past yee were foolish Titus 3.3 disobedient deceiued seruing the lusts and diuers pleasures liuing in maliciousnesse and enuy hatefull and hating one another But it is sufficient yea too too much for you 1 Pet. 4.3 that ye haue spent the time past of your liues after the lusts of the Gentiles walking in wantonnesse lusts drunkennesse in gluttony drinkings and in abominable securitie Now therefore dearely beloued 1
prosperitie ease and the like No surely For what worldling hath not such a peace ordinarily but a peace in sicknesse pouertie persecution death to haue peace when the foundations of the earth are out of course and shaken and shake at vs and when all worldly contentment is taken from vs is peace which passeth vnderstanding And whence comes all this but from this excusing power of conscience which saith of vs not guilty in our soules Dauids confidence was such as he was sure of his hand and durst put himselfe vpon Gods triall Iudge me ô Lord Psal 7.8 In●●tia ●●se non personae Psal 26.1 2. Psal according to my righteousnesse and againe Iudge me o Lord for I haue walked in mine innocencie Proue me and try me examine my reines and my heart and againe Try me and examine me whether there be any way of wickednesse in me Guilty Rachel will be vnmannerly and sit downe before her father rather than she will be tried The wicked in the day of wrath vvill rather call vpon the mountaines to fall vpon them than come to triall but Dauid will lift vp his head and not be confounded Now whence doth this confidence proceed but from this acquitting Iurie Gods childrens comfort is constant amid all discouragements It sometimes fainteth it neuer faileth It giueth vs such a first-fruits of heauen in our hearts that we passe along with our hands vpon our mouthes vnder good report and ill report honour and dishonour want and abundance and through all the changes and chances of this present world As hell were no hell without an accusing conscience so heauen no heauen without an excusing one That therefore the godly man before he enter into Canaan might haue a taste of the grapes of Canaan this good spie doth bring a cluster which yet it could not doe if it were not an acquitting Iurie Vse What shall I say then I will presse vpon all our soules to empanell this Iurie Let vnderstanding like a good Iudge open the law of God vnto vs. Let memorie like a good Clarke of Assize open all our particular facts and inditements Let no affection like a corrupted Lawyer presse an euidence or witnesse further than truth lest they iustifie the wicked for a reward and take away the righteousnesse of the righteous from him Make the whole Iurie to say as Dauid I haue sworne to keepe thy righteous iudgements Put them apart into the presence of God and see what verdict they will bring in and whether they will not finde according to truth Secundùm praesentem justitiam I warrant thee if God haue any part in thee thou shalt speed according to faithfull euidence The Iuries that are empaneled in this world before the Iudgement seats of men sometimes will too much incline to the affections of the Iudge So that as Alexanders Courtiers did imitate his stooping Platoes schollers his crookednesse Aristotles followers his stammering and Dionysius his hearers his dim-sightednesse so as they would stumble one vpon another so well they incline to the weaknesses of them before whom they stand Sometimes againe they will be carried by their owne passions and serue their own turnes vpon them vpon whom their spleenes will not giue them leaue to laugh except in hypocrisie as if they were warned to execute vengeance vpon enemies and not shew iustice vpon all Sometimes againe they will be swayed to serue the turnes of those particular men vpon whom they doe depend as if they had forgotten their names to be Iurers and had assumed the names of parasites and flatterers yea worse of spaniels to quest about for others games and gaines In Heraldry they tell vs A nominibus ad a●i●a bor●m de duc●ur argumentum that a good argument is drawne from Names to Armes but so is it not alwaies in Iuries here as if an oath had no teeth and could not bite if we did offend it Sometimes againe they would faine do something but that they are choaked by letters suits or threats of friends foes or superiours or if not thus then the weakest horse beares the burthen and they that are worst able to manage such affaires are drawne vp the more sufficient meane while hauing their heads hid in the Sheriffes or Bailiffes pocket In all which respects we may say to our temporall Iuries as Cyprian of the fine schismatikes who had taken shipping for Rome with their mart of lies Quasi veritas post eos navigare non posset They are gone as if truth could not follow them so the truth followes them and shall one day be discouered though they faile neuer so fast with lying verdicts But as for the Iuries in our hearts though some things are passed here with a doubtfull and deceiueable conscience because we know in part and with a regret of conscience because wee make not conscience enough of offending it yet when God sendeth out his summons there shall be no frowning Iudge to feare no great man to pleasure no passions to stop the mouth of conscience no penall statute of the God of heauen whereof we shall be ignorant no let to such a bold and faithfull Iurie as shall fill heauen and earth with Guilty Guilty to the confusion of the bad and not guiltie to the eternall comfort of the good The schollers of Pythagoras were to suffer themselues rather to be slaine than to stirre their foot and tread downe a beane and this Iurie will rather not be which is impossible than not take notice of euery act and euery circumstance which may make the iustice and mercy of God shine in the eternall disposition of all the children of Adam Oh therfore harken to this work of conscience If it deale with vs as the word of Peter with the Iewes that is pricke vs at the heart beware in time God doth then deale with vs as with Saul when he cast him into a dead sleepe and sent Dauid to take away his speare water-pot and the lap of his garment that is he giueth vs a remembrance to tell vs that we are in Gods hand who if we will take no warning will further punish vs. But if it speakes peaceably vnto vs killeth that worme within and bindes vp our wounds with wine and oyle I meane with the pacifying and purging bloud of our blessed Sauiour then shall wee be able to stand before our owne consciences and b●fore the God of our consciences We shall stand I say befor● our consciences for though in the winter of our hearts it may be with vs as with Iob in whom were the terrours of the Lord and the venome thereof as he termed it drinking vp his spirit or as with Dauid who roared all the day because Gods hand was heauy vpon him day and night and his moisture was like the drought in summer yet in the spring when the voice behinde vs shall say that Christ is our saluation we shall haue more ioy in heart than they
displease God as God and doth carrie the Deuils stampe vpon it though it were neuer so small though neuer so profitable or pleasurable vnto vs though God did not see and iudge and the Deuill would not execute wee would not willingly commit it Behold this is our cutting off without hands Oh my beloued Christians now enter into your hearts and I hope that by this signe you shal see your selues to be in Christ If when you compare your selues with them that walke in naturall courses and see that you are cut off from them in iudgement in heart and in conuersation you can in simplicitie and godly purenesse say Lord thou knowest that our care hath not beene only to haue holinesse to the Lord without but to reforme our hearts and to dresse them vp for thee according to those spirituall abilities which thou hast giuen vs. Thou knowest Lord that we haue complained sighed and prayed vnto thee against the bodie of sinne and death and because thou louest the soule best we doe account all the sinnes of the soule most fearefull and therefore haue laboured against the blindnesse vanitie and carnall wisdome of our minds against the deadnesse and securitie of our hearts and the like It is not hid from thee our God that we haue beene and are vpright with thee Psal 18.23 and haue kept vs from our wickednesse not so much because it hurt vs as because it dishonoured thee not so much because it displeased vs as because it displeased thee and was contrary to thy most holy Law and Nature in the in●oyment of the communicable glorie whereof standeth our ioy and happinesse If it be thus with our soules at the least according to the desires purposes and endeuours of our hearts and if we doe groane vnder the want of that full measure of it which we might attaine vnto then we may comfort our hearts with this perswasion that we are in Christ The second Signe of our being cut from the first Adam is taken from the effect of it which is tendernesse of heart and conscience We know that a thing newly cut is tender as we may see in the example of Sychemites Gen. 34. newly circumcised And this was the reason why the Israelites were not circumcised in the wildernesse because through tendernesse they might not be vnfit for warre or trauell Now you must know that this our cutting off from Adam which being so done as it is alwaies doing till death is still fresh and bleeding new doth breed a double tendernesse First an inward tendernesse which is discouered by a sensiblenesse of our owne estate Secondly an outward tendernesse which is manifested by our sensiblenesse of anothers touch Wee are inwardly tender ouer our owne estates when with quicknesse we can apprehend the sinfulnesse of our natures Thus it was with Paul Rom. 7.18 when he professed to know that in him that is in his flesh dwelt no good thing This will fill vs with godly sorrow with a base opinion of our selues with Christian watchfulnesse and with a care to our power and in our places to preuent sinne in others and not willingly to admit of any thing that may kindle any lust or increase the practise of any sinne We are outwardly tender vnder anothers touch either in respect of euill or good In respect of euill when it is death and daggers to our soules that God should be dishonoured As in respect of our selues if sinne doe but touch our eares eyes tongues hands or thoughts we doe speedily turne them ouer to Gods vses desiring God to protect them and make them weapons of righteousnesse vnto holinesse so in respect of others like Iosephs irons it entereth into our soules that God should be dishonoured by them It was thus with Moses who Exod. 32.32 when he saw how greatly God would be dishonoured if hee should destroy a people whom he had so newly deliuered by his mightie power was so tender of that euill that he desired God rather to rase him out of the Booke of life You can parallele this with Paul his example also Rom. 9.3 Oh how excellently had they profited in Gods Schoole and learned to manifest their cutting off from the old stocke by their tendernesse vnder the touch of sinne Wee shall well imitate them when we can make all the rest of the petitions in faithfulnesse and truth to follow Hallowed be thy name In respect of good also wee are tender vnder anothers touch when we startle at the touch of God If God touch vs with his threatnings we must be as sensible as hee that said Psal 119. My flesh trembleth for feare of thee and I am afraid of thy iudgements If he touch vs with his promises we must hide them in our hearts and be so rauished with them that wee can feelingly say How sweet are thy promises to my mouth Psal 119. 1 Sam. 3. yea sweet●r than honey to my mouth If he touch vs with his precepts we answer with Samuel Speake Lord for thy seruant heareth and our hearts can eccho as Dauids did to this precept Psal 27.8 Seeke yee my face saying Thy face Lord will I seeke What shall I now say I will call vpon all our soules to apply this signe Let vs examine our owne hearts vpon our beds Psal 4. and be still Assure our selues of this that if we would fi●de our selues to be cut off from Adam wee must finde our selues tender Psal as I haue said Me thinks I heare you say that your sinfull estate is a burthen too heauy for you to beare that daily you groane to God vnder the sense of it as Paul Rom. 7. Wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death That you are grieued when God is dishonoured and because he is dishonoured daily therefore the very thought of it doth daily make you sigh Me thinks you say that you heartily desire that your eyes could gush out riuers of waters because men keepe not Gods law Psal 119. and that you quickly apprehend the touch of God in all his word or at the least if you cannot that your soules are filled with godly sorrow and that you doe desire God to circumcise the fore-skin of your hearts Deut 30.6 If it be thus then feare not but that you are in an vndoubted way to your being in Christ But if otherwise that our hearts are hard and senselesse of our owne miseries and Gods touch then woe woe woe vnto vs we are farre from being new creatures and so farre from Christ and so farre from heauen and happinesse T he second generall way whereby we may proue our selues to be new creatures We must be grafted into the new stock is by our ingrafting into the new stocke for before we are in Christ we must be grafted in Now in this ingrafting which is by the power of faith whereby we are through Gods ordinance made one with
Christ in his life death resurrection and ascension there being two things distinctly to be conceiued which yet goe together in time first our being made members and secondly our receiuing the gifts of members vpon this I say there will grow two questions wherein our consciences will desire satisfaction whereunto I would intreat you to attend in their order The first is this How we may know that we are made liuing members of Christ How we may know that we are made liuing members of Christ It is a sweet question and worthy our consideration Therefore marke diligently that this secret will be discouered vnto vs by three signes especially The first signe of our being a member of Christ is If we are borne againe No member can be a member of the bodie but by naturall generation and therefore in the want of armes and legs all that are made by Artizans are but counterfeit members so none can be a member of Christ but by spirituall regeneration Therefore through the power of Gods spirit and word we must finde an alteration in all the parts and powers of the bodie and soule from what we are by nature This is called a turning in the Scriptures when of Prodigals we become Conuerts feeding no longer vpon the husks of swine those noysome and filthy lusts of the flesh but of the feast of fat things and fined wines as Esay speaketh or of the fat calfe which God hath prouided Esai 25.6 Luke 25. that is chearing our hearts with the wisdome of Christ against our folly and blindnesse with the righteousnesse of Christ against our guiltinesse with the sanctification of Christ against the reliques of our sinne and vncleannesse 1 Cor. ● 3 and with the redemption of Christ against our apostaticall and back-sliding hearts The second signe of our being a member of Christ is If we receiue new sense and motion from the head As in the naturall bodie all the members doe receiue sense and motion from the head so in the spirituall bodie For though there be no naturall connexion of parts betwixt Christ and vs Act. 3.21 the heauen containing him in respect of his bodily presence and we being here on the earth yet by vertue of the spirituall ligatures and ties of faith which is Gods ordinance to this end wee haue no lesse reall coniunction though we cannot see it than naturall head and members haue Wee cannot see the coniunction betwixt man and wife who yet are one flesh though they are a thousand miles asunder Prov. 2.17 by vertue of that contract and couenant of God betwixt them The vnion betwixt the beasts and the wheeles in Ezekiels vision was not visible Ezek. 1.21 yet it was reall because the spirit of the beasts was in the wheeles which made them moue together and stand still together So it is betwixt our Head and vs. If therefore by vertue of this vnion we doe not daunce after natures pipe which the Apostle calleth walking after the flesh or sowing to the flesh or fulfilling the lusts of the flesh but are moued to walke after the spirit so to runne that we may obtaine not to be clogged with the earth but to haue our conuersation in heauen to sit with Christ in heauenly places and in our whole course though with much strife and reluctation to moue vpwards then may we safely say that we are members of Christ The third signe of our being a member of Christ is if we worke for the head As the whole naturall bodie is vnder the obedience of the head so the whole spirituall bodie doth worke for its head as for its king and soueraigne If the head be warred against the foot runneth or standeth and the hand doth defend if the head be in peace the whole bodie maintaineth its honour vseth meanes to better vnderstanding to ripen iudgement to corroborate memorie to quicken senses and to performe other offices vnto it So must we worke for Christ he must increase we must decrease All our labour must be to maintaine his honour therefore wee must denie our selues to wit our naturall iudgements wills affections and the worth of our worke●●hat Christ may be all in all vnto vs and wee may cry out with that blessed Martyr None to Christ none to Christ Oh that we had hearts to try our selues by these signes How great will our comfort be if we can finde our selues to be members of Christ Some men ioy that their armes and legs are members of sound and healthfull bodies but it is no matter though the outer man perish so long as the inward man by being a member of Christ is renewed daily I bowe therefore the knees of my heart vnto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ and beseech him that hee would grant both to you all and me and all Gods people that wee may for euer proue our selues to be borne againe to receiue heauenly motion from Christ and to worke for him that so wee may proue our selues to be his members I will open a little light vnto you in these three points We may know our selues to be borne againe How wee may know our selues to be borne againe if God haue giuen vs a conscionable care to nourish the hid man of the heart Euery thing hath a naturall instinct to nourish it selfe so soone as it hath a naturall production euen so must wee haue 1 Pet. 2.2 For therefore Peter saith As new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the word that yee may grow thereby As babes desire the mothers dug so must our soules if they be regenerated desire the word of God How is that 1 Vnappeasably I answer First wee must desire it vnappeasably Giue a childe houses and lands gold and gaine profit and pleasure and nothing will content it but a dug so all the world is worth nothing to Gods babes without the word Psal 1 19. as Dauid saith The word of thy mouth is dearer vnto me than thousands of gold and siluer Secondly we must desire the word constantly 2 Constantly Little children doe not onely desire the dugge waking but when they are asleepe their lips will be going so Gods babes though they being ouertaken with drowsinesse cry out with the Spouse I sleepe yet their hearts awake Cant. 5.2 and when they are most drowsie they will be nibbling vpon the word yea they cannot be content without it For looke as the needle of a Diall doth nothing but tremble and shake and hath no rest till it be turned vpon the North pole so the heart of Gods childe can haue no peace in any degree of securitie till it be raised feelingly to imbrace the word of God againe 3 Cryingly Thirdly we must desire the word cryingly Euery one of vs do see the new-borne babe to cry for the dugge euen so must we for the word We must cry to God for it and desire him that we may neuer be
againe vnto the Lord 2 Chro. 19.4 the practise of which wee may see in Iosiah who while he was yet a childe began to seeke after the God of Dauid his father 2 Chro. 34.3 And this example ought to be a monitor from generation to generation of what euery one of vs ought to doe Thirdly we must with care and conscience attend vpon the meanes of saluation as they are offered vnto vs in the ministery of the Church of God that so wee may know the vertues and powers of this couenant to doe thereafter 2 Cor. 1.24 For though wee haue no dominion ouer your faith in which respect the Apostle saith to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 10.15 Iudge ye what I say yet wee are helpers of your ioy and are ministers by whom yee beleeue 1 Cor. 3.5 As therefore Moses said of the bush which burned and not consumed Ex. 3.3 I will turne aside now and see this great sight So must wee say of the Church which is afflicted and yet is not quite ouer-borne I will turne aside now and heare what this great message is which it bringeth to direct me to heauen and happinesse Fourthly we must openly professe our selues to be in couenant with God Titus 1.1 This the Apostle calleth an acknowledgement of the truth which is according to godlinesse and euery one of vs must labour for it both by encreasing our knowledge in the things of God as also by labouring for a good and a godly life and preparing our selues to giue a reason of the hope that is in vs 1 Pet. 3.15 through the vse of such meanes of knowledge and holinesse as God hath appointed I know that euery one of vs cannot attaine vnto the like measure in this kinde For some of vs are so slow of heart and dull of hearing Luke 24.25 that when as concerning the time we ought to be teachers Hebr. 5.11 12. yet wee haue need againe to be taught the first principles of the word of God and are become such as haue need of milke and not of strong meat yet for all that wee must aime at and striue that through long custome in hearing meditation and conference Hebr. 5.14 we may haue our wits exercised to discerne both good and euill that so wee may with more boldnesse appeare before the greatest enemies of truth and profession Fiftly we must renue our couenant with God in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper so often as conueniently we can and with feare and trembling desire God to assure vnto vs the comforts of the Gospell according to the sinceritie of our hearts Yee know that Sacraments are called seales and the reason is because in their lawfull and holy vse they haue a confirming conueying and concluding nature They doe confirme because they doe as pledges visibly strengthen our faith in the promises They doe conuey because as written instruments by the ordinations of Princes are conueyances of houses and lands and inheritances vnto vs though we are many miles from them so by the ordination of God the Sacraments are no naturall but voluntary instruments to settle and assure Iesus Christ vpon and vnto vs being fitly prepared according to his will though he be ascended into heauen and sits at the right hand of God They doe conclude because as sealing and deliuering is the latter end of a bargaine and doth shut it vp so the Sacraments doe conclude and shut vp the couenant betweene God and vs to our endlesse comforts if according to those abilities which God hath vouchsafed vnto vs we keepe touch with him In this regard as we do publikely enter couenant with God in Baptisme and manifest our consciences in the same when we turne from our wicked waies to serue the liuing God in vprightnesse and truth so we doe or should renue our couenant in the Lords Supper to our more watchfull and warie walking in the waies of pietie and godlinesse Per delicta quotidianae incursionis Lastly because through the treacherie of the flesh wee cannot but faile through daily errours in a greater measure than wee would therefore if wee will be of a religion wee must humbly d●pend vpon God by prayer for pardon against sinne past and for spirituall power against sinne to come and that euery day Thus I haue taught you what wee must doe to haue a religion But yet we are not the nearer to God if wee be not of that religion which is pleasing to him and therefore we must now leaue this point and passe along to the next The second ground then to bee considered is this That We must be of that Religion which doth most approue it selfe to God For this is the reason that this Religion We must haue that Religion which doth most approue it selfe vnto God which we must haue is described to be pure and vndefiled before God thereby implying that the true Religion doth most labour for that And that it must be so will appeare by diuers considerations First In shew the religion of Hypocrites hath equalled the true Religion It hath equalled it in sacrifices for Kain brought an oblation to God of the fruit of the ground Gen. 4.3 So likewise in prayer for the hypocriticall Iewes stretched out their hands and made many prayers vnto God Esay 1.15 So likewise in preaching for we haue Iudas a Preacher as well as Peter and many hypocrites will say Matth. 7.22 Haue wee not by thy name prophecied So likewise in hearing for as God saith to hypocrites by Esay Yee seeke me daily to wit Esay 58.2 in the Ministerie of the Word and will know my waies euen as a Nation that did righteously So by EZ●kiel My people fit before thee Ezek. 33.31 and heare thy words but they will not doe them for with their mouths they make iests and their hearts are after couetousnesse So likewise in profession for euen they shall say Lord Lord who shall not enter into the Kingdome of heauen Matth. 7.21 And the foolish Virgins who receiued this doome Matth 25. I know you not h●d lampes of profession and said Lord Lord. So likewise in fasting for the Prophet speaketh of such dissembling wre●ches who fasted vnto strife and debate and to smite with the fist of wickednesse that they draw neare to God on the day of their Fast and say Esay 58.2 3 4. Wherefore haue we fasted and thou seest it not We haue punished our selues and thou regardest not as if they were the sincerest fasters in the world So likewise euen in giuing of almes for euen the hypocrites of old did giue almes Matth. 6.2 and that with a great grace when they made the trumpet to be blowne before them Thus the hypocrites religion in shew hath beene as good as the best Secondly in shew the religion of open wicked men hath beene as good as the true 2 Sam. 15. Matth. 2. Absolon will
make shew of performing a Vow at Hebron Herod of worshipping Christ and of another Herod hearing Iohn gladly Prou. ● yea the Harlot her selfe hath made her peace offerings and payed her vowes and Christ doth so discouer the rich Gluttons wickednes that we may yet see the religion of his linage saying They haue Moses and the Prophets L●ke 16. What wicked man doth not frame a religion to himselfe in appearance and shew to stop the mouth of his conscience and gloze with the world None shall bow lower than he none shall looke more sowre in the day of fasting and in all the kindes of superstition none shall more glister with deuotion in the view of men especially in the day of affliction and houre of death Thirdly in shew euen false religion may imitate the true Let God haue a Temple so hath the Deuill yea where God hath his Church the Deuill hath his Chapell and Synagogue Apoc. 2.12 as his Throne in Pergamus and Antichrist with his apostacie in the Temple of God 2 Thess 2.4 If God answer from betweene the Cherubims the Deuill will haue his oracles Let him haue his Priests the Deuil also will haue Arch-flamines and Flamines his Druids Sophists Sacrificers and the like The Deuill and his instruments haue still beene seene to be Gods apes to imitate him so farre as it hath been permitted vnto them in the great workes of his creation and prouidence Fourthly in shew false religion may not only imitate but outstrip the true If true religion haue golden Priests and woodden Chalices false religion will haue with woodden Priests golden Chalices Let true religion haue a sacrifice of beasts the false will haue a sacrifice of men If the true haue washings the false will haue abundance of washings and other ceremonies which shall goe vnder the name of the traditions of the Elders In which respect they who reade the exceptions of Atheists and Heathen against the true religion shall ●●nde this to be one that it was farre behinde the heathenish religion in the beauty of their Temples array of their Priests gestures and significant representations in their deuotions Thus let vs carry with vs these foure meditations and conclude from them thus much that seeing the religion of hypocrites and wicked men may equall and false religion may imitate and outstrip the true religion in shewes therefore we must iudge righteous iudgement wee must not chuse religion according to appearance and shewes but striue to be of that which doth most approue it selfe to God What vse shall we make of this point now but this to learne to cleaue to that religion which we shall finde to be more in heart than in shew I know that we must not neglect such shewes as God hath appointed as praying preaching hearing reading bowing the knees lifting vp the hands and eyes together with a decent course and cariage in Gods whole seruice Of these we say as Christ to the Pharisies These ought yee to haue done Matth. 23.23 yet the sincere seruice and glory of the heart ought not to be left vndone the principall end of a good religion being to approue the heart vnto God Gods seruice doth chiefly consist in the holy exercise and vsage of the vnderstanding and affections of the heart according to Gods will What hypocrite cannot draw neere to God with the lips What carnall wretch cannot make a crucifix or other image to be a mouer of fleshly deuotion Objectum motivam vehiculum devotionis and as it were a popish chariot of desires to the persons whom they doe represent What Idiot whose vnderstanding is idle cannot giue God a knee and a knocke vpon the breast at the Popish Latine seruice and Masse of humane inuentions Alas for them whose religion is in shewes If the shew and outside of religion were ordained by God y●● as it might sometimes be omitted without sinne as Circumcision and the Passeouer yea and the feast of Tabernacles for a thousand yeeres together Neh. 8.17 if my Chronologer deceiue me not euen so also may it be practised of vs without grace Oh therefore beleeue not neither trust in shewes but cleaue vnto that religion whose grace and glory doth stand in inward worship which cannot be omitted without sinne nor practised without grace We draw neere to God with our hearts we heare the word with faith feare loue and full assurance we pray in the Holy Ghost yea though wee vse the helpe of others yet we make such prayers our owne by a thorow applying them to our wants and graces when we sing Psalmes we make melodie to God in our hearts and when we doe receiue the Lords Supper we doe it in remembrance of Christ and shew forth his death till he come yea like true worshippers we are so farre from delighting in shewes that as God said of old They shall say no more The Arke of the couenant of the Lord Ier. 3.16 for it shall come no more to minde neither shall they remember it neither shall they visit it so doe we willingly forget all the typicall rites and ceremonies wherewith the Church of Rome did Iewishly and heathenishly abuse our forefathers and doe striue to build vp the hid man of the heart and to worship God in spirit and truth Ioh. 4. not neglecting such outward expressments as are warranted either by generall or particular rules and examples out of the holy word But as for garish shewes let children and babies delight in such rattles We account our selues to haue iust cause to suspect the religion of Rome which is all for shewes They know right well that euery man would be accounted godly and that the wickedest wretch and wisest politician of the world would faine goe to heauen To this end therefore as it may seeme namely to please the wise men of the world and desperate sinners who know by nature that they must frame a kinde of religion to procure Gods fauour they haue patched together as the secure times of the world and their preuailing faction would giue them leaue an outward seruice glorious in shew to stop the mouth of conscience for a time Their faith is resolued into a glorious and pompous Church for shew Their repentance stands only in contrition confession and satisfaction by visible penances which being performed in shew receiueth an absolute forgiuenesse of sinne They boast of their altars sacrifices washings and anointings they adorne their altars images priests and temples They haue their Iubilees processions pilgrimages to their ridiculous Ladies vigils trentals diriges and requiems and all for shew still They haue musicke and chaunting for the eare without the exercise either of vnderstanding or heart They haue golden and veluet silken and taffatie Images for the eye They haue Incense or other sweet perfumes for the nose They haue iuncates and banquets on their falsly called fasting daies for their pallates though they will not ordinarily eat
of the Priests Court and whoso was found perfect and fit was clothed in white and accounted worthy To what end should the care of God and man concurre in this if it were not necessary You haue learned how to apply deeper things I will therefore end this rule with that speech of Ierome to Nepotian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sors Talem se exhibere debet vi ipse possideat dominum pos ideatur a domino Ministers are therefore called Clergie-men either because they are the Lords lot or because the Lord is their lot and portion Now he which either is the Lords part or hath the Lord for his ought to carie himselfe that both hee may possesse the Lord and bee possessed of him The last rule which I would commend vnto you to be obserued that you may proue your selues to bee sent of God is to be in a readinesse to giue your Master an account of your seruice For this is an argument of faithfulnesse and faithfulnesse of a diuine Sender who before he sends can try the heart and reines Put case therefore that now yee heard that voice of God Arise ye dead and come to iudgement that now the earth did vomit vp her dead that Saint Peter stood vp with his conuerted Iewes and Paul with his Gentiles that Iohn came in with Asia Thomas India and Titus Creta What would ye doe What would ye do I say Could ye say Lord I tooke thy person vpon me to feed thy Sheep of conscience not of couetousnesse to build vp thy kingdome not to inlarge my owne praise and purse I haue walked before thee with an vpright heart in the middest of thine house and now Lord behold I am ready to giue thee an account of my sinceritie though not of my perfection If it be thus my Reuerend and beloued Brethren giue me your hands and let vs with comforts goe together and trade into heauen by prayer studie and meditation for the best commodities that in Gods stead we may enrich his people and present such as belong to him as chast Virgins to God in the day of Christ What shall I now say I will humbly beseech you to measure with loue what I haue said and to supply some of the defects in particulars with what I could say in the throng of my businesses in the Sermon following which I offer vnto your eyes as I haue for the most part vnto your eares at our last Visitation as ye freshly remember and with it I present you with the prayers of my heart that this my seruice may in this kind as it hath in another be accepted and also that it may some way be profitable to prouoke against all Antichristian abhominations So prayeth hee who desires euer to rest From my Studie this 9th of May 1625. Your faithfull fellow-helper in the haruest of CHRIST IESVS Robert Abbott DAVIDS DESIRES PSAL. 27.4 One thing haue I desired of the Lord that will I require that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the daies of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to inquire in his Temple WE haue often from this place This Sermon was preached at an Assise beene full fed and fatted with Sermons from Texts which haue put both Iudges and Iurers Lawyers Plaintiffes and Defendants in minde of such duties as God doth require at their hands If you will giue mee leaue this one time to digresse I shall striue to winde vp your hearts to heauen to kindle your affections to religion and religious duties knowing assuredly that if once we be good men we shall also be good Common-wealths men and doe nothing but that which is iust in the sight of God and Man We reade of the Bird of Paradise that shee hauing no legs neuer toucheth the earth but liueth in the aire with the vapors which arise from below till she dieth and then shee falleth to the ground and is discouered Many such birds of Paradise hath our God who though they sucke vpon earthly things for their necessarie releefe and maintenance yet haue their conuersation in heauen and are neuer discouered to be more earthly than when by death they are brought into the wombe and embracings of the earth their common mother Amongst the rest DAVID hath been famous in this kinde whose deuotions doe discouer such liuely graces such mortified lusts such a heauenly minde and such an anatomie of a good soule as the Psalmes are aptly called that as it was with Ierome when he had read the life and death of Hilarion he folded vp his booke and said Well Hilarion thou shalt be the Champion whom I will follow so it may be with vs when we reade the sweet precepts and godly patternes of deuotion in Dauid we may iustly cry out Well Dauid thou shalt be the champion whom we will follow Through the whole bodie of the Psalmes he hath discouered wonders in this kinde neither is this Psalme barren For ye may finde a threefold peece of deuotion in it The first is shewed by eleuation when by an exuberancie of speech he lifteth vp his heart and draweth it to cling close vnto God amid all his enemies Verse 1 2 3. as his light saluation and strength The second is shewed by admiration when he draweth his heart from all the world to loue those meanes wherein God doth communicate himselfe vnto vs. Verse 4 5 6. The third is shewed by petition whereby he draweth his heart to rest vpon God to be vnto him as he had said and to doe vnto him as he had desired Verse 7 8 c. We haue to doe you see with the second discouery of DAVIDS deuotion that is his admiration secretly implied in the frame of his whole speech Wherein by the heauenly disposition of his desires hee doth shew his dependance vpon God in his ordinarie course of offering grace For whereas the soules of men are considered either according to their vnderstandings or according to their desires and appetites reasonable sensitiue DAVID hauing exercised his vnderstanding in the beholding of God as he was to him and as he would be to his enemies doth here exercise his desires to Gods house Touching which desires these three things offer themselues to our consideration 1. The office of his desires which is shewed in two things 1. The first is their choise One thing haue I desired They chose one thing aboue the rest 2. The second is their constancie That will I seeke He doth prosecute his desires and will not let them vanish to no purpose 2. The obiect of his desires The house of God There was nothing after which his heart panted more eagerly than Gods house 3. The motiues of his desires which are two 1. The worth of Gods house in it selfe Beauty amenitie or sweet and amiable presentment which it offereth and holdeth out to the godly view 2. The worth of Gods house to DAVID To inquire in his
in praying with him yea though his tongue be the pen of a ready writer Truly none in it selfe but as the sighes and grones of the heart are linked together in loue to knocke at the gates of heauen to talke with God to binde and open his hands to goe into Gods treasury and fill our selues of Gods dainties or at the least to view them and by confidence to craue and enjoy them What beauty is there to heare a company of people to cleere their throats and to chant out a Psalme or song yea though spirituall None in it selfe but as by the voice the graces of the spirit in the heart are exercised as faith in promises feare in threatnings loue and joy in mercies humility in arguments of power and the like When melody is thus made to God in the hid man of the heart this is beauty indeed These are also the beauty of the Lord in our Assemblies saue that now they are more beautifull because knowledge abounds as the waters of the Sea Es 11. in a more plentifull and seasoning manner as also now the sacrifice is more excellent being that one once for all appearing before God for vs and presenting his merits to God as a perfect and sufficient attonement in our behalfe in the highest heauens where is glory for euermore Vse 1 Seeing therefore that the house of God hath such beauty in it let vs looke vpon it and so carry our selues that it may not be wronged by vs but that it may haue the best aduantage to doe vs good To presse this I come first to you my fellow labourers in Christ intreating you in the bowels of our common Sauiour not to besmeare this beauty of the Lord to make the people out of loue with it You know that once the sonnes of Ely made the people to abhorre the sacrifices once was too too often God forbid it should be so againe It is true wee ordinarily complaine of our people and truly wee haue too just cause it being the fault of most to seeke their owne and not either Gods by giuing him his duty or ours by giuing vs our due but be we sure that the blacke coale be not in our own hands It is truly said that our fancy first wrought a face in the Moone from the vnequall enlightning of her vnequall substance and that afterward it was thought that the Sunne had a face too as it may seeme because it should not be outfaced of the Moone God forbid that we who should be as the Sunne in glorious presidents amid this crooked generation should haue our blots and spots because they are to bee found in the Moone and other sublunary creatures within the cope and compasse of our lots our earthly heauens It will condemne them not helpe vs if they bee worse than wee Let them goe alone yet with our compassions teares prayers preachings and examples following to reuoke them but for vs take wee heede that we lay not the least blot vpon the beauty of Gods house either by our Preaching or by our Practice We may doe it by preaching when wee doe discouer either Idlenesse or Pride in preaching Sometimes Idlenesse spewes in the face of this beauty when wee speake whatsoeuer commeth next hand and making a shift to out-runne the houre-glasse with some verball discourse neuer aime before we shoot to pierce and batter the throne of Satan that Christ may dwell in our peoples hearts by faith Sometimes pride creepes vp into the Pulpet and doth so ruffle in false colours that the humble hearer cannot see God in his ordinance Hence is it that euery word shall be so marshalled and euery sentence with its apt fall sh●ll lie in such aequipage as if the owner were cousen German to that proud man of sinne whose name is six-hundred-sixty-six 666 Hence is it that some are content to borrow their preachings from his Chaplaines as Cowesta Bercorius and a rabble of his croaking Postillers wherein they onely magnifie Player-like conceits and Frier-like elegancies and so make themselues like tinckling Cymbals tickling the eare but not turning the heart vnto God Hearken my brother what Zerubbabel answered to the enemies of Iudah who offered their seruice craftily to build the Temple Ezr. 4 3. It is not for you but for vs to build the house vnto our God So let vs say vnto Popish Authors We need none of your helpe to instruct in righteousnesse and to conuert and comfort our brethren that they may be temples of the holy Ghost Doe we not know that it is a Iesuiticall brag that we are not able to stand before them for learning and eloquence and that all Europe is beholding to their Church for her knowledge Do we not see how ready they are to feede our humors by printing and reprinting such moth-eaten Bookes of theirs as the * Such as think that a p●ore Amos plaine Preacher is not worth the hearing Amaziahs of the time doe most hunt after Shall wee thus seed our enemies humors and in magnifying our selues make them swell who are too proud already God forbid I know that there may bee vse of Popish Writers to shew that true mens siluer may be in a theeues purse to confute themselues and to shew the confusions of Babel as is told them to their faces while they are driuen to say through want of sufficient answers wee are wounded with our owne weapons saue that they haue this poore and silly sleight P●●s●●js ●eunis co●sig●in● that all their diuisions in opinion are compounded in the vnity of their monstrous head before whom they will lay their hands vpon their mouthes when he shall determine yet to lay our foundation in them as too too many doe in Aquinas his Schoole and to build our congregations by them with such poore and powerlesse conceits as are spunne out of the word of the spirit by their wisdome of the flesh doth deforme the beauty of Gods house Secondly we may besmeare the beauty of the Lord by practise to wit partly by ordinarinesse partly by worldlinesse and partly by wickednesse First wee may doe it by ordinarinesse when we doe too much frequent the company of our people It is true that Paul himselfe vpon occasion met his friends at the three Tauernes where no doubt there was much passage much people but seldome hath some sauour in it especially in sports and recreations when mirth breeds familiarity and familiarity contempt Oh how much honour doth bowlings cardings dicings and the like steale from the persons and seruice of the Tribe of Leui who willingly forget that all things are lawfull but all things are not expedient whereas seldomnesse doth make the young men when they see vs to hide themselues the aged to arise and stand vp the Princes to stay talke Iob 29.8 9. and lay their hands vpon their mouthes as Iob speaketh of himselfe Secondly it may bee done by our worldlinesse If with Iudas
ministeriall head ouer all the world both for order and iurisdiction ouer all Bishops all Christians to set out the rule of faith lawes dispensations ouer all the world to trample vpon kings and to decree them to butchery or honour as they serue for the good of the Catholike cause Now how this and the like stuffe can bee inferred from the words of Christ to Peter to vphold their monarchicall head I would intreat you to call your best Logicke to an account and to doe your best to iudge Secondly because the Pope pleades more for himselfe than he doth for him from whom he pretends to receiue deputation He is like an vnfaithfull friend who being sent to speake a good word speakes one for his friend and two for himselfe For what is it that doth imbroyle the whole Christian world more than the Popes monarchie All kingdomes must be at his dispose that so such Princes as he can traine vp in dull ignorance may through ambition be prouoked to be his white sonnes that they may attaine to great honours and other mens inheritances vnder him All must be Hereticks that are not within his Pale The word of God must depend vpon his allowance Scripture must be no Scripture except he looke fauourably vpon it and giue it what sense pleaseth him Kings must be no Kings if it pleaseth him to excommunicate them and we must be no ministers because our calues are cow-calues as that blessed Martyr Woodman answered the Bishop of Chichester who wanted the Popes Bull to consecrate or confirme him in his Bishopricke with many other prettie toyes Thirdly because all the notes of the great Antichrist that are in Scripture doe agree to him to wit the Pope as is maintained to his face by our dread Soueraigne and the reuerend Father Bishop Downame in his treatise of Antichrist and in his Diatriba of the same subiect It is true indeed they would make vs beleeue that his chayre is made of Irish wood to which no copwebs of falshood can cleaue nor any venomous creature come neere without death and that his Church is like that which the mariners built in Illiria to Saint Iohn de Maluatia whose very morter was tempered with malmsey a sweet and precious Church but all the water in Tyber will not wash off that imputation except he doe penance for his ambition and opposition and become such a Bishop as the primitiue godly Fathers were Fourthly because it cannot be shewed that Christ hath appointed the Pope to be his Vicar hee often speaketh of the Holy Ghost as when he saith Ioh. 14.26 The Holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my Name he shall teach you all things and againe When he is come which is the Spirit of truth Ioh. 16.13 hee will lead you into all truth but he neuer speaketh of the Pope If he doe let him shew it if he doe not let him consider how hatefull it is for a man to put himselfe into such high commissions without warrant from God and how iustly wee may lay this in his dish No man taketh this honour but he that is called of God as Aaron was Thus I hope you perceiue that we cannot be assured that that is the true Church whereof the Pope is the head Vse Oh therefore my beloued countrey-men leane not to him and to his politicke apostasie lift vp your heads and behold by faith the bowing pillars of his proud monarchy All his diuine vnction cannot foresee nor all his keyes and swords helpe himselfe from that miserie which the Kings of the earth who are and shall fall from him shall bring vpon him As therefore Moselanus a Iew when hee had killed a fowle whose flight the hoast of Alexander expected to prognosticate good or euill successe by said vnto them What a foule shame is it for so many worthy men to seeke knowledge of her that knew not what should happen to her selfe So say I What a shame is it for so many wise men to seeke wisdome and direction from him who is not wise enough for himselfe but rageth now like the deuill because his time is but short and yet cannot see it Surely as he that died of the bite of a weasell lamented because it was not a Lion so will such at the last lament that they haue fallen by that weake one though neuer so great in the eyes of his flatterers whose very throne shall fall as a milstone into the sea to wit with great violence noyse horrour and trouble to the world But now you will say Put case that we account Iesus Christ our head yet if we are not of his body we are not of that Church whereof he is the head It is true therefore that you may know your selues to be of the body I must goe two steps further Richar. Transire in Christum et coalescere cum Christo Membra secundum praescientiam et s●cundum praesentem iusticiam First I must shew you how God doth fit vs to be made one with our head and to be members of his body We are falsly charged to require inward qualifications of holinesse in euery member of the Church for there are members in Gods Book before calling as well as such as are called and of such as are called there are members by profession which do admit of a cutting off yet if we would assure our hearts that we are so in the Church as wee are also of it Membra 1. Numero 2. Merito et electione ut corruptè à scholasticis pro opere et electione we must be inwardly coapted and fitted to be made one with him Now for this fitting of vs for our head it must be by three actions of our good and mercifull God First God must cut vs from the wilde oliue that is he must separate vs from corrupted Adam as we are borne after his cursed image To this end God giueth vs by the law a sight of some one sinne which hath haply made deepest gashes in our consciences together with the punishment due vnto it At which sight we suspecting what all our sins may deserue if God shall muster them together through compunction of heart we are brought to a detestation of our former estate and so to a casting off of our transgressions that we may not die Secondly God must pare vs to put vs into the true oliue Christ by humiliation when we see how fearefully wee lie liable to Gods iustice we despairing of all helpe and comfort elsewhere doe humbly lay our selues downe at Gods feet to bee disposed to shame sorrow feare confession prayer and application of spirituall reasons to our carnall hearts to mortifie and dead our corruptions according to Gods Word Thirdly God must ingraft vs into Christ How is this When by the power of the Word and Spirit he doth worke faith in our hearts by which wee comparing the bottomlesse pit of our sinful estate with the height length bredth
iudgements should sit at hand to giue aduice our affections should attend vpon them to maintaine and defend all honest resolutions and actions against all commers and lastly our desires should worke naturall instincts to practise them and the whole man should doe accordingly Or thus God hath placed the powers of the soule in excellent order for the gouernment of man Our mindes in a throne aboue to gouerne all the motions dispositions passions and affections of the heart our hearts are set in the midst to receiue information from the mindes to direct themselues and our desires and valorously to flie vpon them by feare loue ioy anger and the like if they shal● rebell our desires are set lowest to be corrected by the heart and gouerned by the head Now that God may haue an account how this worke within vs goeth forward and we may be furthered in our course to happinesse God hath appointed our consciences to keepe Assizes to try whether we haue beene faithfull yea or no. The second ground of our Assize is in respect of our selues that we may be the better prepared for the great Assize of the day of Iudgement whensoeuer it shall come Yee know that we beleeue that such a day shall come and that Christ shall keepe it in that nature which he assumed and wherein he suffered As therefore all our musterings before particular Captaines should not be for shew or fee but the better to fit vs to carry our selues in a martiall manner before our King or Generall if need require so these particular Assizes are but for the better fitting of vs for our great account before and vnto God And therefore when Dauid had arraigned himselfe at home he goeth to God and saith Try and examine me whether there be any way of wickednesse yea or no. Vse What shall I say now I will intreat you so farre to tender the glory of God and the good of your soules as diligently to attend to the businesse within Our soules doe so liue in our senses and wee are so inured to earthly things Facti sumus fugitivi a cordibus nostris that wee are made runnagates from our owne hearts But if euer we would haue a glorious triall before our God let vs see how our cause will stand or fall before the barre of our owne hearts I know that in the case of good we may be deceiued by the voice of conscience For the law of nature which should direct vs being in a great part dashed out and ignorance of the word being wilfully fauoured there are many fearefull euils which we doe not apprehend as euils as for example to sinne in thought is nothing for thoughts are free to sinne in word is but a word and what is that so we sinne not against our neighbour it is no matter though we make bold with God to sinne with the times to doe as others doe to walke in the waies of our fathers is good religion yea and besides such is the darknesse of our cogitations that in the midst of diligence that which we know is not the tenth tenth part of what we are ignorant of How therefore can it be other but that our owne hearts should deceiue vs in good yet in the case of euill we may assure our selues that it doth not make vs worse than we are in and of our selues Though in affliction o●●on●cience o● pan●●● o● the new birth ●t may make our estates worse th●n they are we being more sen●●ble of our ●st●tes from within than of that from without As therefore it is not safe for vs to rest in the voice of conscience when it makes vs good for Paul knew nothing by himselfe yet was he not thereby iustified so we must be carefull to heare what conscience saith when it layeth sinne to our charges that so Gods Assize there may goe on to Gods glory and our good What will it auaile vs to be crowned with a May-flower garland of the praises of this world if we walke not in the presence of our owne hearts Quest It may be you will say If God hath granted out a warrant for the keeping of this Assize why then is it not feelingly kept in euery man Answ I answer that wee may finde foure causes of this The first is ignorance For as the eye worketh not in a darke place where it cannot by a fitted conueiance receiue variety of obiects so the conscience worketh not where there is not the light of knowledge from the word of God to direct it by The second is hardnesse of heart for as a man that is dead or hath a deaded or astonished bodie for the present cannot feele any order or disorder any whip lash or gash so a seared crusted and senselesse conscience is not sensible of the cursed garboiles in the soule nor capable of any orderly proceeding against them The third is spirituall madnesse for as mad men cannot keepe any faire quarter with themselues much lesse can it be expected that he should wisely execute any deputation from others so spiritually mad men who are out of their wits with selfe-loue and loue of this world who runne vpon the pikes of hell-dangers who will not be perswaded by the praiers and teares of their best friends are neither fit nor able to receiue order from God for so high and so excellent imployment The last is pride For as in a countrey where there is no disorder if it were possible in these cursed daies of sinne for such an one to be there is no Assize because no need so when we are Pharisies in iustifying our selues priding our hearts in our ciuill righteousnesse and therefore setting our passions on worke vpon whomsoeuer shall discouer their hellish nakednesse there is no inward Assize because as they thinke there is no need Quest It may be you will say seeing these things doe hinder it how may I further the keeping of it Answ I answer As in generall we must striue to root out ignorance to rent our hearts to come vnto our selues as the prodigall and to be nothing yea hell in our owne eies so in particular I would commend three meanes to this end especially The first is our praiers to God to write the records of his truth in our mindes and hearts An Assize cannot be kept without law nor this without the law of God But if once we can get the law written in our mindes and in our hearts so as it doth not onely gild our vnderstandings but goare our hearts and leaue a new impression of holinesse to the Lord then we shall see a full Court presently and such wounding inditements for sinnes past with such crying out for the Psalme of mercy that we shall haue no rest till we haue rowled our selues vpon God in Christ and haue found our selues in some measure sealed with the spirit of promise against the day of redemption The second meanes is our not disturbing the Court but suffering
till it hath brought vs downe to the desperation of hell Thus we haue passed the generalls of this reasoning In reasoning there is first the to descend now vnto the particulars wee shall first meet with the proposition which is the first part of reasoning wherein wee doe propound and beare witnesse vnto that truth which is made knowne vnto vs. 1 Proposition Whence I offer this point to be considered that In our selues there is a witnesse which will propound the truth according to knowledge From hence is it that Paul ioyneth these two together to wit the knowledge of God and the knowledge of our owne hearts 1. Cor. 2.11 No man knoweth what is in man saue God and the spirit that is the conscience From this witnessing power Dauid saith Psal 51.3 My sinne is euer before me and the brethren of Ioseph were compelled to vtter this speech Wee verily sinned against our brother Gen. 42.21 in that wee saw the anguish of his soule when he besought vs and we would not heare him therefore is this trouble come vpon vs. Yea and God himselfe implying this power vnto Kain Gen. 4. saith Sinne lieth at the doore Sinne lieth at the doore What is that We ordinarily looke vnto one of these three senses either the punishment of sinne is at hand for amongst the Hebrew sinne is taken for the punishment of sinne as Christ is said To be sinne for vs 2 Cor. 5.21 or else thy sinne is not secret for thou shalt be no more able to conceale it than that which doth lie at the doore in euery ones view or else the conscience of thy sinne shall forthwith fly vpon thee because the witnessings and twinges of the conscience doe ineuitably follow sinne But if wee take all these three together they make one intire sense as if God should say Kain thou canst not so hide thy sinne from mee but that it will inwardly fret and gnaw vpon thy conscience and outwardly draw speedie vengeance But more fully to open this witnessing power of conscience I would consider foure points First Whether wee in our courses can lie hid from our consciences I answer for a time wee may both through the weaknesse of nature when the naturall conscience doth not take notice of sinne Acts 15. as when the Gentiles accounted fornication a thing indifferent when the people of Calicute and Narsinga doe without regret worship the deuill when we walke in the waies of our Fathers whether good or bad without checke and the like as also by the iust iudgement of God when he doth giue vs ouer for our sins to hardnesse of heart and to a cauterized conscience as the Gentiles Rom. 1. who because they did not glorifie God with their naturall knowledge were giuen ouer to vnnaturall sinnes Yet wee shall not alwaies sleepe thus securely it will looke vpon vs with a witnesse and speake so loud in our eares that we shall see a map of our miseries as Theodoricus did the face of Symachus whom he had murthered in a fish-head on his table and shall make vs leaue behinde vs such a desperate will when wee die as English Hubertus did who had beene a couetous oppressor I yeeld my goods to the King my bodie to the graue my soule to the deuill The second point is this to consider seeing we cannot lie hid from our consciences what conscience doth witnesse I answer It witnesseth both our sins and our righteousnesse As for our sinnes this is that ancient officer of God whereby he doth reproue vs and set our sinnes in order before vs. If wee sinne in our thoughts Psal 50.21 conscience taketh notice of it for as we will say for our owne cleering In my conscience I did not so much as thinke it so Paul said of the Gentiles their thoughts accused or excused them Rom. 2. yea and those that are come from the knowledge of conscience to the feeling of it can with griefe tell that conscience doth thus If we sin in our wills and affections conscience taketh notice of it As Paul saith Rom. 9.1 My conscience beareth mee witnesse by the Holy Ghost that I haue great heauinesse for you So on the contrary if his will and affections had not beene carried the right way his conscience would haue beene vpon the backe of him for it as we see in his reluct●tion betweene the flesh and the spirit Rom. 7.15 I allow not that which I doe yea what I hate that I doe If we sinne in our words conscience presently heareth therefore Solomon obseruing it saith Take no heed to all words for oftentimes thine owne heart knowes that thou hast also cursed others If we sinne in our actions conscience will not ouerpasse them It told Iudas that hee had sinned in betraying innocent bloud and makes infinite complain●s and con●essions in all sorts of people at some times or other Se●ondly as for o●r righteousnesse conscience doth witnesse our sonship as the Apostle saith Rom. 8.16 The spirit of Go● beareth witnesse with our spirit that wee are the children of God as also our new obedience and holinesse For this w● see plaine in the example of Paul Heb. 13.18 2 Cor. 1.12 Act. 23.1 whose conscience told hi● That hee was willing in all things to liue honestly that in simplicitie and godly purenesse he had his conuersation in the world and that in all good conscience he serued God In the third place if it be demanded how the conscience doth witnesse I answer that you that feele it know and from my feeling I expresse it thus The vnderstanding is the spy to informe from that light which it doth receiue either from Nature or from the Word of God the Memorie is the recorder of the court within for all the passages of mans life we cannot in this kinde learne the art of forgetfulnesse for though wee may seeme to forget it for a time as the sonnes of Iacob did the selling of Ioseph yet in day of affliction houre of death and day of iudgement our reckonings will be bleeding new and then this diuine power doth take a view of our whole liues and from that office which God hath giuen it witnesse truly and bring to passe all our doings as in the sight and presence of God If now in the fourth place you will aske me Why the conscience doth in these reasonings as a witnesse propound the truth I answer In two respects First In respect of God that God may bee manifested to be a iust God in his proceedings There a●e many secret sinnes which no man in the world can witnesse for which if God should proceed against vs he might seeme vniust To the end therefore that God might be cleered in the day of vengeance hee hath set a witnesse within our selues which will not lie Secondly In respect of our selues because it might be of excellent vse through the whole course of our
that we may be afraid to abuse our consciences for this we may be assured of that though our consciences be calmed for a time yet as Nycippus his sheepe brought forth a Lion which portended to tyrannie so our consciences which seeme to be as quiet as lambes will at the last bring forth roaring as a presagement of our eternall thraldome Soli Deo gloria THE HID MAN OF THE HEART VPON 2 CORINTH 5.17 By ROBERT ABBOT LONDON Printed by John Haviland for Nathaniel Butter 1623. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL SIR HENRY BAKER Knight and Baronet and to the Lady KATHERINE his religious and louing Wife Grace in this world and glory in the world to come through CHRIST our LORD RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL The rule is not more old than good Ingenuum est fat●r● per quem prof●●cris That it is an ingenuous thing to confesse by whom we reape profit Hauing therefore by good proofe found your hands not to be sealed vp to me though I beg no new fauours because through Gods mercy I haue learned to want and to abound and in all estates to be content yet I humbly beseech you to giue me leaue freely to acknowledge your loue vnto me It was not wi●hout your charge that I came first to settle in this Cou●●ry neither haue I here continued without the inlargement of my Librarie by your Bookes bestowed vpon me What therefore can I render vnto you besides my publike Ministerie but some such poore acknowledgment as this is A plaine Sermon I confesse it is yet such an interpreter of my heart that I hope you shall plainly see my honest desires to lay before you a picture of your together with the rest of Gods peoples gratious estates It was a vse in rich mens feasts Herodot lib. 3. amongst the Aegyptians of old to appoint one who should shew a wodden carkasse of a man liuelily cut out to euery guest and to say to this effect So eat drinke and delight thy selfe as withall thou cast thy eye vpon this which sheweth thee what thou shalt be when thou art dead It may be this spirituall anatomie which I offer vnto you may haue as good a vse to call backe our ouer-lauish loues from the delights of this world by shewing vs either what we are or what we should be What though it be rudely cut yet when I remember a worthy speech of your owne What care I for a young man who can talke of genus and species and other logicall and philosophicall subtleties giue me an experienced Preacher who can speake to the heart I cannot doubt of your louing entertainment of this my homely worke I know you neglect not any humane Arts prouided they doe prepare and not imprison our wits from more noble imployments Modo praepareat no● detinc●●t ingentum it hath beene your glory to be well seene in some of them yet when I doe consider what S. Augustine saith if my memory faile not Surg●●● 〈…〉 〈…〉 〈◊〉 ●●●or●● tr●●●●●● 〈…〉 The vnlearned arise and take heauen by violence whereas great Doctors are thrust into Hell and when I see that many thriue in grace who haue no learning but Scripture and no eloquence but what conscience doth dictate I cannot but humbly pray to God that you may alwaies be of that minde which you d●e d scouer in that gratious speech I know right well that they are to be found in the world who will lay other draughts of holinesse before you than you shall here finde They will tell you of Masses of haire-cloth of whippings of pilgrimages and other penances and were it not that God hath taught you already to discouer the hypocrisies of these and to see that to stop the mouth of conscience for a time they may be practised by the wickedest wretches they might haply preuaile with you being gilded ouer by the subtleties of Antichrist But blessed be God your soules are from amongst Lions and I hope you haue beene longer trained vp in Christs schoole than to be so gulled with such impostures My care and prayer to God for you shall rather be that yee may adorne the profession of the Gospell which yee haue vndertaken There are too many in the world who with Caius Curio are singularly eloquent Lin. vitae ex vell Pat●r● lib. 2. and wittily wicked but how much better is it to haue a flower tongue and a duller braine with more true godlinesse and honestie Goe on I humbly beseech you to be recluses from the world and from the wickednesse of it And because there are many who are like Copronimus of whom it is said Ne● Christianū nec Iudaeum nec Paganum fu●sse sed colluui●m quandam impietatis that though he would be called a Christian yet he was neither Christian nor Iew nor Pagan but a very sinke and puddle of sinne th●refore how will it honour such persons as yee are to redeeme the c●edit of the Gospell f●om obloquie and to honour God by sincere and constant practises of pietie They lay a kinde of disgrace vpon God as well as vpon the Gospell that would be accounted Christians and yet are not good If a King should send with instructions for the presenting of his person and will to another Prince such a messenger as could not execute it did it not lay this disgrace vpon him that he is not able to chuse a fit person to doe his businesse So is it disgracefull to God to send such an one into the world in his name and with the honourable title of his seruant yea Sonne who doth the errand of the world the flesh and the deuill rather than of him whose name he beareth That therefore the censure of the Cynick vpon the common people who did highly extoll those that contemned money and yet were very money-mongers themselues may not fall vpon you let it be your glory and your reioycing not onely to praise and countenance the vertuous but also as you haue begun to be of the same knot and blessed societie I know that this must be effected by a spirituall death vnto the world and sinne but if it were a comfort to be put to death with Phocion 〈…〉 because Phocion was innocent and well-deseruing of the Common-wealth then how much comfort may it be vnto vs to haue fellowship in the death of Christ to our death vnto sinne and in his resurrection to our rising vnto newnesse of life This Sermon shall through Gods blessing a little helpe you forward in this gracious worke in which respect my humble suit vnto you is that you would be pleased to vse it as your owne I was loth to let you passe amongst my publike acknowledgments of others loues though I cannot at thi● ti●e giue you what place you haue and I would be lot● that now I doe shew my selfe vnto you I should not giue you that content which I desire To end in a word SIR let me put you
without it Thus we shall resemble that man after Gods owne heart Psal 84. whose soule longed and fainted for the Courts of the Lord. Fourthly we must desire the word by supernaturall instinct By instinct Babes in desiring the dugge doe not respect the profit the pleasure the goodnesse and nourishment of it but are carried vnto it by a naturall instinct so we must be addicted vnto the word not for eloquence learning law or times sake but by a supernaturall instinct and spirituall inclination to seeke nourishment from thence from whence we receiued our being in grace Let these foure be tokens of our n●w ●irth which if wee finde in our soules yea but in desire prouided there be a purpose and endeuour to increase let me then say vnto vs all with ioy that if we care a while we shall be for euer safe Secondly we may know that we receiue motion from Christ our head How wee may know that wee receiue motion from Christ our head if our heads and hearts be not moued to the world as the world but as it may be in any of the kindes of it a testimonie of Gods loue and a necessarie supply for our pilgrimage in this vale of teares It is true ●hat Agar may be in the familie for seruice but Sarah must be mistresse Abraham may build a Groue for his delight Gen. 21.33 ●ut hee must not forget God but call vpon the Lord the euerlasting God there The things of this world are but left-hand blessings and they must be vsed accordingly We all feele to our griefe that naturally we are carried to the earth but Christ swayeth his members another w●y For as it is wi●h the waters of the Sea though by their naturall course they follow the Center yet by obedience to the Moone they are subiect to her motion As it is conceiued and resolued by the wise men of nature and so turne and returne ebbe and flow and are kept in continuall motion to keepe them from corruption so is it with Christs members though by their owne motion they are carried to the ear●h yet by obedience to Christ their first mouer they seeke the things that are aboue to keepe themselues from corrupting Lastly we may know that we as members doe worke for Christ How wee may kno● that wee worke for Christ our head if we seeke to aduance the honour of Christ in all things but especially in our selues If we looke into our owne soules wee shall finde that there is a cursed carnall wisdome which will worke a glorying in our worldly happinesse and an aduancing of our owne righteousnesse and moralitie together with a drawing vs to pride our selues in the many graces which God hath giuen vs. But if wee can wisely separate the worke of Christ from our owne working and when we feelingly consider our selues cry out with that holy Martyr Gehennah sum Domine I am hell Lord I am hell and with the blessed Apostle I am the least of Saints I am the chiefe of sinners and notwithstanding all the graces that are in vs to say in humble wise with the same Apostle I thanke God through Iesus Christ our Lord Rom. 7.25 and againe thanks be to God for his vnspeakable gift then with a holy confidence in the merits of our Sauiour wee may write our selues members of Christ Thus I hope that through Gods goodnesse I haue in some measure satisfied the first demand and made it appeare vnto vs how wee may discerne our selues to be the members of Christ What are those gifts of members which we doe receiue in our ingrafting into Christ The second question may be this What are those gifts which we doe receiue in our ingrafting into Christ by which it may be manifested vnto vs that we are new creatures and in Christ I answer that there are many gifts which God bestowes vpon vs at that time but I shall onely speake of those that are most sensible in their working as being most manifest discouerers of our new estates in Christ These gifts are two The first is the death of sinne the second is the life of grace Sinne must die and by degrees perish Grace must liue and by degrees flourish in vs if we be new creatures in Christ First sinne must die in vs. This the Apostle expresseth by mortifying our earthly members Mortification by crucifying the old man with the lusts thereof and by casting off concerning our conuersation in times past Col. 3.5 Gal. 5.24 Eph. 4.22 which is corrupt through the deceiueable lusts For the effecting whereof I would haue you distinctly conceiue these two points First what we must doe against sinne Secondly what we must suffer for the death of sinne As for our doing against sinne we must imitate the crucifying of Iesus Christ What we must doe against sinne which is an exact patterne of Gods iustice against sinne First wee must attache sinne by not suffering it freely to doe that mischiefe which it hath done It hath conuersed formerly in our soules without controll but now we must begin to thinke that it is possible for sin to be our enemie We must suspect it of felonie and treason against God therefore we must lay hands vpon it and resolue that it shall not haue that liberty to play its prancks as it hath had This counsell Paul giues to the Romanes when he saith Let not sinne reigne that is Rom. 6.12 13. call the authoritie of it into question giue not your members as weapons vnto it call in your forces from it and put it in hold that it may be forth-comming to answer that which shall be laid vnto its charge Secondly We must arraigne sinne by bringing of it vnto a iudiciall triall before the barre of our consciences as before Gods deputie We must examine it vpon the dishonour which it hath done to the God of mercy the wounds it hath made in our soules and the hurt it hath done to all which wee are and haue want of this it was that God complained of by Ieremy when hee hearkened and heard and no man spake aright saying What haue I done That is Ier. 8.6 no man betweene God and his owne soule called his sinne to an account Thirdly wee must indite sinne by making the accusation of it as large as the flying booke of Zacharies curses As if we should say O my God Zach. 5.2 this rebell sinne dishonoureth thee defaceth thy image makes me like the deuill hides thy fatherly countenance from me grieues thy spirit and wounds my conscience Luk. 15.17 18 19 and the like Thus the prodigall laid to the charge of sinne that he died for hunger that he had sinned against heauen that he departed from his father and that he was not worthy to be his sonne 1 Cor. 11.31 Fourthly we must condemne sinne by iudging of it out of measure sinfull and our selues for it worthy of
actiuitie it was in sinning we rushed into wickednesse as a horse into the battaile we drunke iniquitie like as the wilde Asse doth water But now our heat is much abated As it was with Iob when God had brought him to see himselfe hee was cold in his pleadings against God and said Once haue I spoken but I will answer no more Iob 39.38 yea twice but I will proceed no further so it is with all Gods people so that if euer they fall into sinne againe they are very bu●glers at it they cannot hide it and colour it as they did before they cannot giue it the full strength and force of will and affections yea as there is great difference betwixt the naturall worke of a childe and of a man so is there no lesse difference betwixt sinne in the childe of God in whom it waxeth more cold euery day than other and in the wicked who is a man in sinning and in whom it is vigorous and like the Leuiathan in the sea in its owne proper element Secondly sinne must as it were stinke in our nostrils It must be like Lazarus in the graue Iohn 11. of whom it was said he stinketh alreadie As therefore Dauids enemies said to him Fie vpon thee fie vpon thee so must we with loathing say to sinne The Prophet speaking of those that should be true conuerts from Idolatrie Esay 30.22 saith Yee shall pollute the couerings of the Images of siluer and the rich ornament of thine Images of gold and cast them away as a menstruous clout and thou shalt say vnto it Get thee hence Thus mu●t all true Conuerts deale with all sin If the righteous man can smell sin and iniquity euen in his holy offerings Exod. ●8 38 ●●a●●4 ● in which respect our righteousnes is as a menstruous and polluted cloth how much more must a penitent man smell hell in his sinne to make him to abhorre it for euermore Me thinkes now my beloued I haue laid a glasse before you wherein you may view your soules God make it to cause a comfortable ●eflexion vpon you that yee may see your owne pictures My hope is that the more yee view it the more yee shall see that it is none other but what yee feelingly and from experience finde to be wrought in you alreadie towards the eternall death of your cursed enemie 2 Viuification Yet yee must goe one step further as I haue told you for as sinne must die and perish so grace must liue and florish The second gift therefore which we doe receiue in our grafting into Christ 2 Cor. 4.10 ●phe● 4.18 1 Pet. 4.2 is a new life This is called the life of Iesus and the life of God and liuing after the will of God and Christs liuing in vs liuing vnto God ●al 2.20 Rom. ● ●7 and obeying from the heart vnto the forme of doctrine to which we are deliuered and the like Looke as when there shall be a new heauens and a new earth wherein righteousnesse shall dwell as Peter speaketh there shall be a new life ● Pet 3.13 and a new m●nner of liuing for wee shall not need the ordinarie supplies in this world for our necessities or infirmities when the Lambe shall be all in all vnto vs so when wee are new creatures in Christ Iesus wee doe receiue a new life and a new manner of liuing The old course of sinning cannot agree with this estate Rom. 8.1 He that is in Christ must not walke after the flesh but after the spirit Hence is it that Christ saith He that abideth in mee and I in him Iohn 15.5 the same bringeth forth much fruit And Iohn doth strongly second it saying If we say that we haue fellowship with him 1 Iohn 1.6 and walke in darknesse we lie As therefore when we looke vpon the Impes which we haue grafted and see them bring forth bud leafe and fruit we reioyce in the worke of our hands and say they take well so when we looke vpon our selues who are grafted into Christ Philip. 1.11 and see that wee bring forth the fruits of r●ghteousnesse which are by Iesus wee may reioyce in the worke of Gods hands who hath wrought all our workes for vs and say that we take well Esay 26.12 The Spirit of Christ which in our grafting into him he conueigheth vnto vs is a Spirit of life it is an actiue and operatiue Spirit Rom. 8.2 in which respect the second Adam is called a quickening Spirit What must we doe now I will tell you 1 Cor. 15.45 Seeing those that are new creatures in Christ must liue a new life therefore euery one of vs must trie whether we haue this new life in vs yea or no. I know that the newest life wee can procure cannot deserue Gods presence and fauour yet by Gods gratious acceptation it giues a fit qualification for the entertainment of such a guest as God is For if to bring vs vnto Kings we must not be base and sordid in our persons and conuersations yea we must be acquainted with fit complements for such a presence for Mordecai might not enter into the Kings gate when hee was clothed with sackcloth Host 4.2 much more must we be furnished with fit complements and qualities for the presence of God in Christ and to haue communion and fellowship with him How wee may discouer this new li●e Lift we vp our hearts then and let vs consider whether we haue this life in vs yea or no. It may be you will say How shall we know whether we haue this new life of the new creature I answer that this may be discouered vnto vs two waies 1. By our aptnesse in procuring the helps of life 2. By our imployment of our strength in the acts of life First Where there is the life of grace there is an aptnesse to preserue it selfe by procuring the helpes of life Now these helpes doe either respect our selues Helpes of a new life or our enemies That which respects our selues is fit maintenance for grace Fit maintenance Grace thriues not where it cannot bee maintained and wheresoeuer it is it will seeke for more As I said before that in the very entrance of our new birth We will as new borne babes desire the sincere milke of the Word so at that time when our ingrafting into Christ is more manifested vnto our consciences wee still ayme at meanes to maintaine and preserue it Oh how doe we pray to God That God would stablish vs by his free Spirit Psal 51. and not take his holy Spirit from vs How doe we pant vnto God That hee would grant vs according to the riches of his glory ●●hes 3.16 17. that wee may be strengthened by the Spirit in the inner man that Christ may dwell in our hearts by faith and that wee may bee rooted and grounded in loue How doe we hunger and thirst after
the good Word of God which is able to saue our soules As wee doe wry our mouthes with the new borne babe after the dugge of Gods Word so with the growne man we haue a good stomacke and appetite vnto it The huskes of mans wisdome and humane traditions are hunted after of those of whom the Apostle saith Beware of dogges Phil. 3.2 but the man of God hungreth to heare God speake And because he knowes that he is borne againe for the kingdome of God therfore though when he meets with the things of this world he doth thankfully embrace them vse them as if he vsed them not yet he seekes after the things aboue Col. 3.1 aboue the world the Church aboue nature grace aboue the fauour of Princes the grace of God aboue sinne a Sauiour aboue earth heauen If therefore it be thus with our soules that as all creatures do seek their meats sutable to their natures the Lion flesh the Horse grasse the Fowles Wormes the Catts Mise and the Bees hony so we doe hunt after these things then haue we entred into this life Secondly Those helpes that doe respect our enemies are our naturall vigilancy and watchfulnesse against that which doth thwart and oppose life And from this head I shall commend vnto you two signes of life The first is Sensiblenesse of the least degree of death or opposition of life He that is in an irrecouerable estate 2 Sensiblenesse of death findes not the least degrees of death creeping vpon him and when hee is readie to die saith He is well whereas he that is well is sensible of the least distemper but if a man be dead he doth not feele death it selfe he heares no alarum to battaile sees not the approach of any enemy nor smels the stinke of any wound So if we be in a spiritually-dead estate we feele not killing sinne to approach Prou. as Solomon saith of the foole Hee casteth fire-brands arrowes and mortall things and saith I am not in iest So we make sport vnto our selues in the committing of sinne and say Doe we not liue Yea if we be dead let God send one letter of defiance vnto vs after another for our sinnes we heare and heare not we know and vnderstand not and though from ●he crowne of the head to the sole o● the foot there be no part whole 〈…〉 nothing but botches and blaines full of corruption yet wee smell not the stinke of the corruption of our wounds we runne not to the b●lme of Gilead wee desire not the good Samaritane to helpe vs but if wee are aliue oh how doe we scud from death as the fearfull Hare from the greedie Hound How doth the least approach of this death by the least sinne make vs cry out with Paul Wretched man that I am Rom. 7. who shall deliuer mee from the bodie of this death Poore Christians who are deiected and cast downe at the fearefull fight of their owne guiltinesse the more sensible they are of the death of sinne the more they cry out of themselues as of dead men whereas if they would passe righteous iudgement they should conclude that the spirit of life is in them 3 Fi●hing against death The next signe of life is fighting against that which would take it away The liuing worme being trod vpon will turne vp the taile Heare O worme Iacob so wilt thou if thou haue any life in thee When the worme feeleth the earth to be shaken presently it commeth running out of the earth fearing the approach of the mole so if thou liue when thou feelest the shaking of the cabbin of thy ease and securitie thy bodie I meane by paine● ache● and diseases then thou dost presently startle come to the doore to see what newes meet thine enemy death disarme him and pull out his sting that at the last ●he conquest may bee thine Againe is there life in vs then the Spirit of life doth fight against the flesh ●om ● ● lest wee liuing after it do die Oh how doe liuing men striue against the whole bodie of sinne and death How doth the spirit lust aga●nst the flesh Yea Gal. 5.17 how doth the liuing spirit get the vpper hand and sight more manfully euery day than other especially against that sinne which doth most crosse it I haue kept me from my wickednesse saith Dauid that is P●●l 18.23 that sinne whereunto hee was most inclined euen so must we if we haue this new life This is the way to finde all liuing gr●●es to increase all sin to be in a decaying estate For we know that there is no equall match betweene the old man the new as God smites the enemies of his people on the checke bone that is Ps●l 3.7 hee deales not with them as with men but as with boyes in stead of opposing them with swords and stau●● hee sends them away with a boxe on the eare so will the liuing spirit deale with the dying flesh it will master it at the last as a growne man would a childe and ouercome it with lesse difficultie though not without all danger to it selfe Secondly Where there is the life of grace there will be an imployment of our strength in the acts of life The actions of liuing men are proper to men that are aliue so are they to these new men From this head therefore I shall giue you further two sorts of signes either such as doe concerne a mans owne indiuiduall person or those which are shewed for succession in propagating their kinde They which doe concerne a mans person are two 4 The breath of the new man First if we can freely draw the breath of the new man It is a signe of life to men of the world if wee can freely draw that breath which God doth offer for the prolonging of naturall life so likewise is this a signe of this new life if wee can freely draw the breath of Gods mouth which God doth breathe vnto the hid man of the heart And what breath is this but the Spirit of the Lord in the Scriptures Marke therefore if wee can draw in the Word of God to the cooling comforting and refreshing of our weary hearts which pant vnder the burden of sinne and if we can put it out againe both to coole the violence and fierie courses of sinfull men and to heat and warme the lukewarme and frozen hearted sonnes of men this will assure vs that we liue the life of God 5 Seruice of God The second signe which doth concerne our persons is this If wee doe put ouer our whole bodies and soules to the seruice of God For as then wee doe liue a naturall life when we doe imploy all our strength to the seruice of nature and as then wee doe liue a loyall life to our Soueraigne when wee are wholly taken vp for his honour and maintenance in good so then wee liue the life of
in his ordinances We sinne against Christ in his owne person either when we expect the forgiuenesse of sinnes and iustification from God for the workes of righteousnesse whi●h we haue done through the assistance of Go●s grace for by how much we fl●● to any thing o t of Christ by so much wee derogate from the worth o● Christ or when wee doe no● learne to know him in his natures and offices and worke as God hath set him forth to be a reconciliation through faith in his bloud Rom 3.25 Hebr. 2.3 to d●clare his righteousnesse c. for what is this but to neglect so great saluation or else when we returne to the lusts of our former ignorance as Peter speaketh 1 Pet. 1.14 18 19. for as this is to sinne that the merits of Christ may abound so in a manner wee doe account the bloud of Christ an impure thing and therefore doe rather cleaue to sinne than to it which is alone able to purge our consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God Secondly wee may sinne against Christ himselfe in his ordinances both in the Word and Sacrament We sinne against Christ in his word either when we despise the ministerie thereof as a poore powerlesse and beggarly means to bring vs to saluation whereof Christ speaketh He that despiseth you despiseth me or when we apply not the promises to our owne soules in particular For what is this but to say that Christ came in vaine In vaine should ●he clouds drop fatnesse if the showres that be sent by God should not be applied vnto the earth so in vaine should our Christ be giuen if he should not be applied to euery soule by it selfe to whom he is giuen I know that Christ ha●h not spoken vnto me by name but if when a man doth bequeath legacies to all the sonnes of my father I will come in for a share though I am not named how then can I doe lesse than sinne against the will and new testament of Iesus if I that am a sonne of my Father in heauen to whose sonnes all things are giuen doe not come in for a childes part for my selfe in particular Lastly wee sinne against Christ in the Sacrament when we doe receiue it with a prophane and vnworthy heart Yee know the words of the Apostle 1 Cor. 21.27 Whosoeuer shall eat this bread and drinke the cup of the Lord vnworthily shall be guilty of the bodie and bloud of the Lord. If therefore we receiue bare signes of bread and wine and doe not discerne the Lords bodie yea and receiue it according to the spi●ituall manner of perceiuing and receiuing wherein God doth offer him and communicate him vnto vs or if wee doe denie the truth of these signes by transubstantiation whereby it is childishly faigned that the substance of bread and wine doth passe away and the very bodie and bloud of Iesus Christ doe come in the roome whereto besides the word of God euen our very senses doe giue the lie or if we come to eat this Lambe but without the herbes of godly sorrow or lastly if we by sealing Christ vnto vs when he belongeth not to vs doe betray him into the hands of an impenitent and vnbeleeuing heart then doe we sinne against our blessed Sauiour in the Sacrament Loe thus my brethren beloued Philip. 4.1 and longed for haue I shewed you in part how we may be said to sinne against Christ that so we may auoid the danger God stirre vs vp and sanct●fie our hearts and minds wisely to consider these things How miserable are we if we are not in Christ yet to be in Christ is impossible if we sinne against him Alas Lord what then can we doe to helpe our selues Plow vp we humbly beseech thee ô thou Creator of cleane hearts the fallow ground of our hearts cut vs off from the old Adam by that circumcision which is made without hands glew vs vnto thy selfe in thine only Sonne Iesus Christ by a true and a liuing faith out of his fulnesse let vs all receiue grace for grace open from him a fountaine for vs the house of Dauid for sinne and for vncleannesse that wee hauing abilitie and power of not sinning willingly either against thee our God or against him our Sauiour either in his members or in his owne person either in his ordinances or in himselfe we may doe accordingly that so we assuring our hearts that we are in Christ and new creatures we may liue like Christians and by power from on high prepare our selues for that new estate in heauen which thou at the last wilt bring vs vnto to thy eternall glory and our eternall comfort Euen so Amen A PREVENTER OF SECVRITIE VPON 1 PETER 4.7 By ROBERT ABBOT LONDON Printed by John Haviland for Nathaniel Butter 1623. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL SIR THOMAS HENDLEY Knight and to the Lady ELIZABETH his dearely beloued Wife Life Health and Saluation through Christ Iesus our Lord. RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL I DOE not know whether those that doe aduenture to publish bookes in these woefull times wherein we liue doe goe too fast or too slow I remember it was fained of old that Aeolus hauing bestowed a bottle vpon Vlysses wherein all the windes were inclosed his seruants let them out when hee was asleepe to their owne hurt so many times it falleth out that wee doe emptie our owne poore withered bottles by the Presse to our owne preiudice Howsoeuer it proues for mine owne particular I doe humbly commit the successe to God who only knoweth with what heart I doe it and being drawne out by little and little to appeare in publike I being sensible of the many fauours which aboue my expectation or desert I haue reaped both from you and yours can doe no lesse than make you publikely to appeare also together with me your Pastour who ioy in your loue and shall more ioy in the increasing of your graces and the further fitting of your soules and bodies for heauen and happinesse I know not what benefit this poore Sermon can bring vnto you yet so farre as I can be mine owne carner thus much I resolue that whatsoeuer good shal arise by it either to your selues or others it shall beare your Worships names in the forehead of it and thereby speake thus much that the world should neuer haue seene it if the loue of God together with your kindnesses had not drawne out from me who can shew little other such a kinde of fruit and acknowledgement as this is I thought it was enough for me to preach vnto my owne and now and then to lend the best dugge I had to a neighbours childe abroad I well knew mine owne weaknesse and the weight of a presses burthen Yet considering how apt the weake mud-wals of my poore house are euery yeere to fall and withall that it is not altogether impossible that I should doe some small good vnto my good people euen when I am dead
all of these nor any one or more of them preuaile with vs to admit of that doctrine which wee haue not receiued in our Church but watch we against all false doctrine whatsoeuer what pretence soeuer the Teachers may make shew of They that serue not the Lord Iesus but their owne bellies Rom. 16.18 may with faire speech and flattering deceiue the hearts of the simple like the Popish shauelings by Benedictions Absolutions Sacrifices and the like By how much more carefull therefore they are to plead against vs and for themselues and to liquor their speeches with sweet though deadly words by so much more diligent let vs be to watch ouer doctrine But we must not leaue here for as our watchfulnesse doth referre it selfe to faith so likewise to loue and that it may be in this place more principally Hearken therefore to this second branch of watchfulnesse that we must watch in respect of manners For the pressing whereof I shall not vary from my cou●se in the former first to shew you what it is and secondly how wee may be stirred vp to practise it I conceiue watchfulnesse to be a dutie which lookes to a double obiect namely to sinne and to grace What watchfulnesse in manners is Watchfulnesse about sinne is a holy care either to preuent or to crush it be it neuer so small Euen as if the plague were about vs carnall wisdome it selfe would make vs to looke to our feet and to beware that wee come not neare those dwellings Ephes 5.15 Hebr. 12.13 So doth watchfulnesse make vs walke cicumspectly and make straight steps to preuent the plague of sinne Or as if a Wolfe were about our houses euen naturall wisdome would make vs carefull to kill him so will spirituall watchfulnesse make vs watchfull to crush sinne yea euen as if wee should see a Boy creepe in at our windowes we would watch him as narrowly as if he were a man because though he could not doe vs much hurt himselfe yet he could let in men which might depriue vs of our goods and liues so if we apprehend the least sin gaining vpon vs we must be as diligent in watching against it as if it were of a greater size because it doth open the soule and prepare it for the greatest sinnes that are Secondly watchfulnesse about grace is a holy care to nourish the spirit and to take all good occasions to bring forth and practise grace and godlinesse As a man that doth desire and will to be rich doth cherish in himselfe all endeuours to that end and wait all occasions to be fingring the pence So watchfulnesse doth worke in a man an attendance vpon all holy meanes to increase grace with the increasings of God Where we must watch If now you shall aske me where this watch must be set Let me tell you that your listening to this will make you the better to conceiue and see what it is It must be kept in all the parts powers and faculties of soule and bodie First we must watch in our hearts Prou. 4.23 as Salomon saith Keepe thine heart with all diligence A negligent watch is for the most part set in this place because wee walke not as in Gods sight and presence but when wee doe consider that the heart is the principall commander in this little world and that according to the charge of the heart the tongue speaks Luke 8.45 Matt. 15.18 19. the hand workes and the eye sees by how much more authoritie the heart hath in vs by so much more carefull we must be to watch ouer the faithfulnesse of it Secondly we must watch in our minds that they do not roaue about vnprofitable and vnnecessarie things Though we labour to know other things which are of vse in this world yet we must watch that this be our chiefe care to know Iesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 3.2 Si Christum benè scis satis est si caetera nescis si Christum nescis nihil est si caetera discis Malum seminatum Malum innatum Iob 31.1 For as ignorance in other things can doe vs little hurt if wee doe soundly know Christ so knowledge of others can doe vs little good if wee are ignorant of Christ Thirdly we must watch in our senses for they are the cinqueports of the soule both to let in that euill which the Deuill doth sowe in the creatures and to let out that inward corruption in our hearts to strengthen our outward enemies Hence is it that as Iob made a couenant with his eyes Psal 119.37 so Dauid prayed that God would turne away his eyes from beholding vanitie Fourthly we must watch in our tongues in which point Dauid hath giuen vs a good president when he said I will take heed to my waies Psal 39.1 that I sin not with my tongue If he was so watchfull ouer his tongue Psal 57.8 which notwithstanding he calleth his glory much more must wee seeing wee may well call ours our shame Remember therefore what Dauid saith in another place Psal 34.13 Keepe thy tongue from euill and thy lips that they doe speake no guile especially considering what Iames saith If any man amongst you seemeth religious and refraineth not his tongue but deceiueth his heart this mans religion is vaine Lastly Iam. 1.26 2 Tim. 4.5 wee must watch in all things whether for our soules or bodies whether in our spiritual or corporal imployments In our commerce and trading with men in our talking walking buying selling we must be carefull that no iniustice vncharitablenesse or deceit doe creepe in and then we watch in bodily things In our reading praying conference hearing and receiuing the Sacrament Luke 8.18 wee must take heed how wee heare how we pray how we receiue and the like that no wandering thoughts either wicked or good besides the purpose that no hypocrisie dulnesse or securitie doe hinder our comfort in these things and then we watch in spirituall things Now at the length yee may fully conceiue what it is to watch It is to haue through Gods working a holy care and diligence in all the parts powers and actions of our soules and bodies against all sinne and for the doing of all good as in Gods sight and presence If now yee will aske me how we may be stirred vnto practise it Motiues to watchfulnesse I answer by a through considering of these foure points That when the end of all things commeth the righteous shall scarcely be saued In which respect mens hearts shall faile them for feare and for looking after those things which shall come on the world Luk. 21.26 for the heauen shall be shaken 1 Pet. 4.18 Oh where then shall the vngodly and sinner appeare We are too easily lulled asleepe with the facilitie of our attaining to heauenly happinesse And hence it comes to passe that sometimes we dreame not of entring into the way of heauen
them to their right obiects and bringing them by degrees to this measure that they are spent vpon Christ without measure Thirdly our faith doth shew it selfe in our wils when the soule hauing many times a blessed experience of Gods loue is perswaded of it Thus Pauls faith shewed it selfe when he said I am perswaded that neither life nor death and so forth shall seperate vs that is Rom. 8.38 39. me and other Christians from Gods loue which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Which perswasion as I take it doth more naturally belong vnto the will it being more proper to the vnderstanding to be conuicted and to the will to be perswaded So that though the soule be many times tossed with temptations feares and terrours yet more or lesse it is much refreshed with this perswasion Thus we see how faith quickneth the whole soule of the godly man In which respect if wee be quickned from the death of our vnderstandings and not of our desires if we perceiue the inliuing of our desires and not of our wils and affections we haue iust cause to suspect that we haue no faith For faith is in no part of the soule in any measure where it is not in all parts of the soule in some measure For in this doth the life of the soule differ from the life of the bodie that the life of the bodie doth begin in the heart it being that which first liues and doth end there it being that which last dieth but the life of the soule which can neuer perish though it may seeme not to worke for some time like a member deaded with a blow as it is in our first regeneration like light in the aire shed abroad thorow the whole soule so it is alwaies to be found in all the powers of the soule though in some man it be more predominant in the vnderstanding in some in the desires and in some others in the will and affections Now therefore let vs from hence-forth enter into our owne soules to trie whether we haue faith yea or no. If we haue it is our life and if it be our life it quickneth both our vnderstandings to know Christ our iudgements to approue him as our only Sauiour and Redeemer our memories to treasure vp the promises our desires to haue an vnquenchable thirst after him our affections to be spent vpon him our wils in some measure to be perswaded of his loue to vs and our whole soules to droope and mourne in our Christian ioy because we cannot receiue him more fully in the whole to our endlesse comfort Vse 2 Secondly concerning others we learne from this life of faith who are the men that onely may be said to liue to wit the godly man because he only hath faith The great man liueth gallantly the voluptuous man liueth merrily the rich man wealthily the politicke man warily only the faithfull man liueth indeed because he liueth graciously This is true life and all other liues are deaths to this The wealthie mans life is full of care feare griefe but Faith triumpheth That neither life nor death principalitie nor power things present nor things to come shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God in Christ Iesus The poore mans life is full of discontent and penury but Faith can want and abound and in stead of other dainties doth euery day feed vpon Christ The Infants life is full of mourning and crying but Faith glads the heart in the midst of heauinesse and makes it many times reioyce with ioy vnspeakable and glorious The young mans life is full of passion wauering and fickle inconstancie but Faith doth so ballace our soules that we runne a setled course and sweare to keepe Gods righteous iudgements The old mans life is full of deafenesse dulnesse decayednesse but Faith seeth thorow the clouds life in death glory in shame yea it heareth the voice of God in euery sentence and though the outward man perish yet in the inner and hid man of the heart Faith reneweth vs daily Although therefore we must liue other liues both naturall and ciuill yet let vs make more account of this That Christ liueth in vs by faith than of all other liues whatsoeuer Thus haue I brought you along vnto the last thing which I shall obserue from hence that is the exercise and expressement of that power which Faith giueth vs by our communion with Christ in a vertuous and holy life For as hee hath said that wee haue fellowship in his death for our mortification that we are quickned by faith in him for our viuification so that we through that quickning power which wee doe receiue from Christ by faith are made liuely vnto all holy obedience Therefore is it that the Apostle saith It is not I but Christ that quickneth mee concerning the life that we now liue to liue graciously Whence we must marke That it is from the vertue and power of Christ that wee are quickned to all holy obedience Though we haue faith yet we must not pride our selues in it for it is not faith in it selfe that quickneth vs but as it is a diuine power whereby we doe receiue that life which is in Christ Iohn 5.21 Therefore is it said That the Sonne quickneth whom he will Yea and hence is it that the Scripture is so exact in setting downe our weaknesse For whereas there are seuen degrees to be considered for the effecting of a good thing the Scriptures shew that man is weake in all of them Psal Can man thinke good No The Lord knoweth the thoughts of men that they are but vaine and wee are not sufficient of our selues to thinke a good thought 2 Cor. 2.14 Can we vnderstand good 1 Cor. 2.14 Rom. 8.7 No The naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit of God Yea the wisdome of flesh is enmitie against God Can we will and desire good No It is God that worketh in vs both the will and the deed Phil. 2.13 Can we speake good No Prov. 16.1 The wife man may purpose a thing in his heart but the answer of the tongue is of the Lord therefore Dauid prayeth to God that he would open his lips that his mouth might set forth his praise Psal 51.15 If he could not tune his tongue much lesse could he turne his heart Can wee begin to doe good No as Esay saith The children are come to the birth and there is no strength to bring forth so may we say of our inward good for it is God that beginneth this good worke in vs. Philip. 1.6 Can wee doe or worke any good No I know that the way of man is not in himselfe Ier. 10.23 for without Christ we can doe nothing Ioh. 15.5 Can we perfect any thing that good is No To will is present with vs as with Paul when we are sanctified but we haue no power to performe If God should bring
beare with the weake and pray for all to be praied for Visito poto ●ibo redimo tego colligo condo There are many who doe visit the sicke giue drinke to the thirsty feed the hungry redeeme the captiues cloath the naked reduce the wandring and build houses of reliefe for the aged and impotent There are many and many such I say and I pray God that there may bee more knowledge of the Lord Es 11.6 7 8 9. euen as the waters that couer that sea that the Lions may eat straw that is that the cruell oppressors may not liue vpon rapine but innocently and that the Wolfe the Lion the Leopard and the Beare may bee lead by the little childe that is that the meanest of Gods Ministers may finde those that are most cruell by nature so obedient to the doctrine of Iesus Christ that they may be altered and lead to workes of mercy in such kinds as the Gospell requireth that so the mouthes of them of Gath and Ashkalon may be stopped and they may euer be ashamed to barke against vs againe Thirdly who are these that except against vs I am sure we haue more iust cause to except against the Popish works of mercy because whatsoeuer they doe it is in pride and vaine-glory to merit an eternall estate Their works proceed not from faith neither are they sanctified by faith because they tend to maintaine idlenesse and pride against God and Christ in Monasteries of perfection as they dreame which God doth not allow Ob. Yea but you will say herein doth the mercy of their religion appeare that in the daies of Poperie good house-keeping did more abound Sol. I answer first to the persons who doe obiect it and secondly to the obiection it selfe To the persons that plead thus I answer two things That such are either idle vnprofitable and ale-house drones who could be content for the most part to liue vpon other mens costs and to be maintained at other mens tables or else that they measure God and religion by the belly like the vnbeleeuing Israelites who because they had not plenty in the wildernesse where they were in the way to libertie would returne into Aegypt againe to their flesh-pots with Idolatrie To the obiection it selfe I say Put case that there were better house-keeping and greater plenty of all things is this a note of the true religion or of the mercy of it No surely For first plenty of all things is giuen to godlesse persons Psal 73.3 4 5. It was Dauids temptation that the foolish had no bands in their death but were lustie and strong and were not in trouble like others neither plagued like other men It was Iobs trouble Iob 21.7 8 9 10 11 c. that the wicked did grow in wealth that their houses were peaceable without feare that their bullocke gendred and failed not that they sent forth their children like sheepe well clad and their sonnes danced c. It was Ieremies griefe Ier. 12.1 2 c. that the way of the wicked did prosper and that they were in wealth who did rebelliously transgresse Secondly greater plenty may be in the times of Idolatrie than when true Religion is practised and embraced Neuer forget that of the Prophet Ieremie Ier. 44.16 17 18 19. Full. Mis●e●● lib. 1. cap. 13. He bringeth in the Idolaters who had gone a whoring after Ashteroth the queene of heauen that is the Moone pleading thus that they would burne incense to the queene of heauen and powre out drinke-offerings vnto her because when they did so they were well and had plenty of all things and felt none euill but since they left it they had scarcenesse of all things and were consumed with the sword and with famine Thirdly they who are void of loue may be good house-keepers and liberall persons This Paul seemes to imply when he saith 1 Cor. 13.3 Though I feed the poore with all my goods and haue not loue it profiteth me nothing and wee know that vaine-glory and the praise of men doe ordinarily produce these effects euen in Pharisies Matth. 6.1 2. Lastly we may not wonder that there should be worse house-keeping now than in former times of Idolatry For the poore receiue the Gospell and the things of this world which are the matter of hospitalitie are more generally giuen as the rewards of this life to them that haue no assurance of a reward in heauen There are many conuinced of the truth of the Gospell but few are conuerted and so they are not filled with mercy and compassion as they should be And yet wee are not to blame our religion which is mercifull but such hard-hearted persons that doe not make that vse of it which they should but had rather spend their estates in garish pompe pride and prodigalitie than in releeuing the Saints of God Loe thus doth it still stand good that our Religion rather than Poperie hath this marke of mercy vpon it notwithstanding these shewes The last ground which I propounded to be considered from hence is this that Pure religion will keepe vs from open and professed tainture This is that which the Apostle implieth when he saith that it keeps our selues vnspotted of the world to wit if wee hearken and yeeld vnto it for the ruling of our hearts For otherwise it will doe vs no more good than physick which is presently vomited vp againe Religion in the very essence of it is a doctrine of liuing well called 1 Tim. 3.16 The mysterie of godlinesse 1 Tim. 6.3 and the wholsome words of our Lord Iesus Christ and the doctrine which is according to godlinesse The knowledge of it is of the truth which is according to godlinesse Tit. 1.1 Tit. 3.8 and the fruit of it is a carefulnesse to shew forth good workes all which doe imply that where true religion is it will keepe vs from open and professed tainture So long as Nicholas and Iezabel were ruled and swayed by true religion they were not spotted of the world but when they fell from that then was the one the founder and the other the protector of that cursed sect of the Nicolaitanes Psal 45.8 All Christs garments smell of Myrrhe Aloes and Cassia saith the Psalmist It may be he would signifie thus much vnto vs from the nature and vse of these three things named that those garments or ornaments wherewith he couereth vs his bodie in the sight of his Father are Comfortatiue Compurgatiue and Conseruatiue that is that the riches of Gods glorious grace which are communicated to vs from Christ will comfort vs against the guilt of sinne will purge vs from the filth of sin and will preserue vs from the dominion and power of sinne In which respect God speaketh vnto the religious not only as to those that are comforted 1 Ioh. 5.21 but to those that are purged Flie from Idols 2 Cor. 6.17 and goe out from
amongst them and separate your selues and the like as if he should say being made whole sinne no more lest a worse thing come vnto you Ob. But you will say that in the Church where the truest religion doth reigne there is much wickednesse to bee found Sol. To this I answer three things First it is true that where God soweth his seed the deuill that euill one soweth tares For besides his malice to good he seeks to disgrace the generation of the iust so much as possibly he can Hee knew what line Iesus Christ should come of and therefore we see what blots he threw in the way in Dauid Iudah Tamar and the like Yea in this regard as sometimes he hath drawne professors of religion by his cunning sophistry to be fearefully scandalous in the way of God to the wounding of their soules so he hath thrust in hypocrites amongst them such as Simon Magus who for sinister respects of profit glory fellowship and the like haue made shew of godlinesse and religion Secondly though wickednesse may be found amongst them who professe themselues to be of the true Church yet not to be defended for cursed be such members There may be controuertible things which seeme to be sinnes to some and to others not so which may finde defences on both sides but none which are clearely iudged to be so by all sound members of the true Church Thirdly In vera ecclesia peccatum cū improbatione emendatione in falsa cum excusatione defensione there may be sinne in the true Church with the griefe reproofe and amendment of the true members of it whereas in a false Church it domineereth with excuse defence and approbation How should I now apply this point but first vnto our selues and secondly to the Church of Rome Vse 1 As for our selues let vs be exhorted in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7.1 Iude vers 23. to grow vp to full holinesse and to hate euen the garment spotted by the flesh that so we may be assured that true religion doth rule in our hearts You haue heard that pure religion will keepe vs from open and professed tainture Carry wee it therefore not only in our heads but in our hearts that it may make vs doe so Oh what a shame it is that wee should professe our selues to be of the pure religion and yet liue in impuritie and prophanenesse What good will physicke doe to vs if we doe not take it So neither will pure Religion if it doe not dwell in vs for our amendment I confesse that as there were three parts of Salomons Temple the outer Court the Holy place and the Holy of Holies so like to these there is a three-fold holinesse corruptly so accounted The first is outward ioyned with outward prophanenesse like the outer court where good and bad came Such holinesse is among the multitude who thinke it holinesse enough to liue amongst holy people to heare holy Sermons and now and then to cast out a holy word how wicked soeuer their life be Of this cursed holinesse euen all assemblies will witnesse that there is enough The second is outward holinesse ioyned with a pretence of holinesse in heart like the holy place where wicked Priests came such as Ely his sonnes were who had Holinesse to the Lord ingrauen on their foreheads 1 Sam. ● 22 yet would lie with the women assembled at the doore of the Tabernacle of the Congregation Of this holinesse also there is the Deuils plentie The third is outward ioyned with inward holinesse like the Holy of Holies where God spake from betweene the Cherubims Of this holinesse giue me leaue to speake a word to your consciences O yee cōsciences that one day shal be as books opened to accuse and condemne before God speake and speake truly where is this holinesse Gen. 5.22 Gen. 6.9 Gen. 24 40. Psal 116 9. Were Enoch Noah Abraham or Dauid now aliue who walked with God and before God in the Land of the liuing they would shame and grieue to see our prophanenesse There is little dying vnto sinne or liuing vnto grace and godlinesse to be found in the world Holinesse is the end of our redemption Luke 1.75 and yet as Aulus Fuluius slew his sonne when he found him in the conspiracie of Catiline Non Catilinae t● genui s●d pat●iae and said I begat thee not for Catiline but for thy Countrey so may God iustly deale with many and many of vs who are in head against him with his enemies and say I redeemed thee not for mine enemies but for my selfe I pray God make it otherwise with vs and giue vs hearts to endeuour otherwise especially considering that holinesse makes vs to be the preseruers of the Country Citie Town or house where wee liue Had there beene but ten holy men in Sodome it had beene spared Had not God ordained holy Moses to stand in the gap when the Israelites played the Calues in worshipping that cursed Idoll they had perished in their sinne Yea the Lord sought for a man in Ierusalem that should make vp the hedge and stand in the gap in the Land that he might not destroy it Ezek. 22.30 31. And because he found none therefore he poured out his wrath and consumed them with the fire of his indignation True it is Ex. 10.7 that Pharaoh accounted Moses an offence to his Aegypt and Ahab thought Elyas to be a troubler of Israel 1 King 18.17 But in truth as Laban was the better for Iacob and Pharaohs Court for Ioseph so Abraham was to be a blessing Gen. 12.2 and all the Seed of Abraham that is Holy people are as the horsmen of Israel and the Chariots of the same to defend and guard the places where they liue If then you will aske me How we may procure holinesse how we may procure this holinesse that we may not be spotted of the World I answer Looke what course a neat man doth take that he may be cleanly the same course in a spirituall sense must we take that we may be holy First he doth willingly looke himselfe in a Glasse He is not angry with the partie that doth set the Glasse before him but he calleth for it that he may see what spots are about him looketh neere that he may discerne them So we must be willing to looke into the Word of God that blessed Glasse of our Soules We must not be angry with the Ministers of God who are deputed to hold it out vnto vs. But as we are as ready to offer it as to pay our debts because as Paul saith Rom. 1.14 We are debters both to the Grecians and to the Barbarians so you must be ready to aske it to this end euen to discouer and rifle the closets of your hearts Here is an excellent difference betweene those who are in the way to cleannesse and vncleannesse These cannot endure to take notice of
their filthinesse their guiltie hearts will endure no sounding those haue a purpose to be cleanly and would haue the least filthinesse to be discouered Secondly he beginneth with those spots which are most conspicuous to the eye of those whom they may offend so must we begin with our vngodly hearts which are most offensiue to the eye of God As when God pulleth a sinner to him Ezek. 36. he diggeth out the quarry of stones from the heart So must we looke to that principally and say with Dauid Psal 51. Create in me a cleane heart O Lord and renue a right spirit within me Those that meane neuer to be cleane begin at the feet and hand that is the outer man and if in outward conuersation they doe abstaine from rebellion whoredome murther and the like they thinke all is well when they are but painted sepulchres full of rotten stuffe and stinke Thirdly hee proceedeth to all parts that they may be sutable So must we that we may attaine vnto holinesse be carefull that all our vessels be preserued in holinesse and honour 1 Thess 4.4 and that the new man be cleansed from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit 2 Cor. ● 1 and grow vp in full holinesse in the feare of God Fourthly he proceedeth to his garments and will not wittingly endure filth vpon them So we must hate the garment spotted of the flesh that is all occasions and inducements to sinne yea all sinfull appearances and such as we cannot auoid we must hate whereas the slouenly Christian thrusteth himselfe vpon all occasions and because he is filthie he careth not to be more filthie still Fiftly he is carefull to keepe himselfe cleane so long as he can So we must labour to increase faith which may purifie our hearts wee must oft besprinkle our soules with the bloud of Christ which is like purging fire and like Fullers sope and is that Fountaine opened for sinne and for vncleannesse Wee must reuerently frequent the Word and Sacrament and when wee heare Christ say That if he wash vs not we haue no part in him we must fall downe before him in faithfull prayer saying O blessed Sauiour wash me thorowly from mine iniquitie and cleanse me from my sins Oh wash my feet my head my hands my affections my imaginations and my actions that I may be vnspotted of the world Thus we haue heard the meanes of holinesse God giue vs grace to vse them to Gods glory and our eternall comfort Vse 2 Hauing applied this point vnto our selues we must apply it also to the Church of Rome and seeing it is naturall to pure religion to keepe vs from open professed tainture we learne that the religion of Rome is a false counterfeit religion True religion is as you haue heard according to godlinesse whereas the religion of Rome is the mystery of iniquity and 2 Thes 2.7 if we will be but carefull to marke we shall see that they teach and professe sins against all the grounds of religion Epis Derens Diatrib de Antich l. 3. c. 6 7. Thomps Antich arra●g pag. 96 97 c. Perk aduertis Willet Synopsis others Some of our side doe open it one way some another as they doe abound in their owne sense but I open it as it followeth as plainely as I can As Adam in his cursed apostasie from God brake the whole law of nature in that one sinne of eating the forbidden fruit He brake the first commandement by choosing the deuills temptation cleauing vnto him rather than to God and his cōmandements The second by not being ruled by Gods Word the rule of Gods worship The third by falling away from sinceritie and perseuerance and giuing way to the blasphemies of Satan The fourth by making himselfe vnfit to keepe the Sabbath for as we sin against the Sabbath vpon the Sabbath day when we doe not holily performe the duties of it so we may sin against it also vpon other dayes both when we doe not walke in the strength of the duties of that day and also when we doe make our selues vnfit to keepe the Sabbath when it comes The fifth commandement by exposing his owne honor to contempt in yeelding to the inticement of his wife and in not prouiding for the good of his posteritie The sixth by bringing death vpon himselfe and all the children of men the seuenth by being too vxorious for as there may be vncleannesse abroad so dotage at home the eight by depriuing of himselfe and all mankinde of their right to the creatures the ninth by giuing way to the schisme and heresie of Satan and to the lie of the woman and the tenth by disturbing concupiscence at home making a mutinie in the passions lusts and affections Euen so the Pope his faction in his departing from Iesus Christ haue do breake the whole law of God They sin against the first commandement by cleauing vnto Saints by faith and hope in praier and by putting trust in their Masse merits Against the second by making the images of God and idolatry or worshipping of Images and the Crosse Doctor Carier considerat p. 7. It is poorly blanched of them that say that the Papists do vse images for no other purpose but only for a deuout memory and representation of the Church triumphant which is most fit to be made in the time and place of praier where after a speciall manner we should with all reuerence haue our conuersations amongst the Saints in heauen This I say is a poore shift of those that wilfully will not see that they will haue images worshipped properly and for their owne sake Bell●r de Imag. l. 2. c. 21. ● 23. Azor. Iustit mor. p●r 1. l. 9. c. 6. 7 c. yea some images by the helpe of some nice distinction with the same worship which is due to God as euen their conscience men or casuists do offer it vnto vs. Against the third commandement they sin by swearing by Idols as the Masse and the creatures as the Saints by absoluing from oathes by making impious vowes of those things which they cannot keepe by making promises which they will not keep to wit with heretickes according to the decree of the Councell of Constance Against the fourth cōmandement by more solemne solemnities on some holy daies than on the Lords daies thereby equaling and preferring the appointments of the Church before the ordinance of almightie God Against the fifth cōmandement by abusing parents in pulling and exempting their children who haue taken vpon them Monkish vowes from their paternall power yea by abusing Kings in exempting the Clergy or Church-men as they are called from the power of their sword and so robbing them of a great part of their subiects as also by blanching such execrable treason as hath beene committed against them with their seeming to abhor the fact Doctor Car. consid p. 8. their not
whose corne and wine and oyle increase We shall stand againe before the God of our consciences for though he seeme to frowne and send afflictions and crosses and diseases and death Esai 38.3 yet as Hezekiahs Iurie gaue way to that comfortable prayer O Lord remember I beseech thee how I haue walked before thee with an vpright heart so will ours giue way to our comfortable grasping of God and his promise that we perish not in trouble Thus wee haue viewed these reasoning thoughts as a witnesse propounding the truth A Iudge within vs. and as a Iurie applying it to the parties to be tried we come now vnto it as a Iudge concluding Conclusion without all which three there can be no perfect reasoning Whence I offer this point to consider that Wee haue also in our selues vnder God our Iudges For hence is it that we are said to haue reasonings because as a Iudge wee both open the law that the witnesse may propound fit truths and as a Iudge we determine accordingly in the conclusion As it is with Princes and Kings who are the high Iudges of their kingdomes they haue Iudges vnder them by deputation to whom they commit their iudgements of God and allot their seuerall circuits so though God be the high Iudge of heauen and earth ouer the hearts and consciences of all men yet doth hee depute these inferiour Iudges in the circuit of euery mans brest to passe the conclusion and sentence of God Hence is it that Saint Iohn doth couple God and conscience in the selfe-same action of a Iudge 1 Iohn 3.20 If our hearts condemne vs God is greater then our hearts and knoweth all things To condemne wee know is an action of a Iudge and how good cause wee haue to account our consciences our Iudges will appeare if wee consider these three points First That sentence which is giuen by conscience is confirmed by God wee see that so soone as Adam had sinned though no man pursued him no Angell reproued him and the Lord was not yet come hee found himselfe condemned by the inward Iudge and when God came he ratified the same sentence But wee cannot thinke that God would confirme the sentence of a rebell who hath set himselfe in Gods throne to iudge without God Secondly Such is the maiestie and authoritie of conscience that it stands against all the world Looke as a good Iudge though all the world doe pleade against the truth yet he is for it and will not reuoke his iudgement so is it with conscience Therefore doth the Apostle set the sentence of conscience against the calumnies of all men saying 1 C●●●● 4 I passe very little to be iudged by you or of mans iudgement no I iudge not my selfe for I know nothing by my selfe and so forth as if hee should say Yee are very forward in censuring mee both in respect of my gifts and faithfulnesse in my place I weigh your censures little though I will not be the preacher of my owne praise yet I tell you I know nothing by my selfe Thus conscience of his faithfulnesse did beare him out against the slanders of false Apostles Thirdly where conscience terrifieth no creature can comfort the pleasures of Paradise auailed not Adam when he was driuen to hide his head in a bush the pleasures of Canaan did Dauid little pleasure when he was driuen to cry out My sinne is euer before me All the delights of Babylon could not raise vp Belshazzars heart when the hand wrote Gods sentence against him on the wall and in his conscience If the Iudge condemne who shall absolue Excellent is that similitude which an ancient makes to this purpose A man condemned to die trieth his three friends to procure his pardon one saith I haue no grace with the King and therefore I can promise thee no such kindnesse yet this will I doe I will buy thee meat and drinke garments and musicke thou shalt want nothing that may giue thee content while thou art here All this is good and yet it contents not because the poore man wanteth a pardon The second answereth I know not how to get to the King but this I will doe I will bewaile thy miserable hap weepe for thy losse and attend thee to the court gates All this is good kindnesse and yet it contents not because the poore condemned man would haue a pardon The third saith Rest vpon my kindnesse I am one of the Kings fauourites and he will deny me nothing I will goe to the court and before the day of execution I will surely bring thy pardon sealed This is he this is the friend that will make the poore man out-face all his trouble because he answereth to the point indeed Behold the case is ours we are poor condemned wretches who must to hel without our pardon our three friends are the world wife children and kindred and a good conscience The world will prouide all necessaries for our bodies but not a pardon this is not purchased with a corruptible price of siluer and gold Wife and children will lament our losse and goe sighing and sobbing to the graue with vs but they leaue vs to our owne shifts for a pardon But a good conscience will make vs outstand all dangers it will procure our peace and our pardon As the world cannot helpe where conscience hurteth so the world cannot hurt where conscience helpeth Vse Thus wee haue considered this iudging power of conscience Oh that wee had hearts to doe our office to conscience and to presse our consciences to doe their offices to and for vs neither can bee done without our care yet we must doe both We must doe our office to conscience three waies First by praying to God for it Ye know that we must pray for them that are in authoritie ouer vs and shall conscience be neglected God forbid When there was no King in Israel ye know what disorders happened surely lesse or fewer doe not happen where conscience is not in full power Miserable is the condition of the inhabitants of Brasile Sine fide Sine lege Sine rege who are said to bee without religion without law without a King and they are no lesse wretched who are without this religious Iudge and gouernour conscience Therefore let vs pray for it that God would giue it that God would keepe it and keepe it tender that so wee may liue a quiet and comfortable life vnder it Secondly wee must doe our dutie to conscience by giuing it good words Yee know the Word of God Thou shalt not curse the ruler of thy people Oh that we could alwaies remember it in the case of conscience hee that buies with conscience sells with conscience rules with conscience obeies with conscience is commended euen of men that haue no conscience yet if conscience rule in any in the seruing of God and make them tremble at Gods precepts promises or threatnings and the like hee is but