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A77708 The good old way: or, Perkins improved, in a plain exposition and sound application of those depths of divinity briefly comprized in his Six principles: / by that late painful and faithful minister of the Gospel, Charles Broxolme in Darby-shire. Broxholme, Charles. 1653 (1653) Wing B5217; Thomason E1483_1; ESTC R208756 186,652 446

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wait long upon him in the use of means for comfort and consolation Object 5. But I cannot find my self to come on in grace in holy desires and affections but corruption to be more and more stirring in me and therefore I fear whether I have a true faith or no Answ First it may be thou dost not enjoy the means in a lively and constant way and it may be this thine own fault thou being too willing to live under an unprofitable ministry Secondly it may be thou dost not judge aright of thy own case There be times when the true Christian is not a competent judg of his own spiritual estate as when the humor of melancholly is big and boisterous in him or when his brain is crazie through some long or violent sicknesse or he is much overgone with trouble of conscience Thirdly Is it not the daily grief of thy soul that thou comest on no more in grace and that corruption is so lively in thee why then surely thou growest in the root although not in the blossome Fourthly To be sensible of corruption is a signe of a living soul which cannot be without a true faith Fifthly The more thou seest corruption the lesse it is because in seeing it thou hatest it it matters not so much what is in us as what good not what corruptions as how we stand affected to them Object 6. But I observe others to outstrip me who began profession long after I begun and therefore I suspect the truth of my faith Answ Fi●st take heed of envying the growth of others nay much rejoyce in it for the more grace any member attains unto thou rejoycing in it the better it is for thee Secondly If thou meanest by growth gifts as memory to carry away a Sermon ability to confer of the Points of Religion and to pray in a Methodical and enlarged way Thou art to know that natural parts and powers and so education doth much in all external exercises of Religion 3 To have a humble opinion of our selves and a high opinion of other Christians is good but yet we must take heed of wronging the work of Gods grace in our selves so highly thinking of others Graces as to conclude our selves to have none 4. If thou observe others indeed to outstrip thee beginning profession after thee take notice of them to be more diligent in the use of the Means thou that shouldst have been an example to them do not thou disdain they having got before thee now willingly to imitate them Object 7. I cannot pray at all sometimes and this makes me fear I have no faith Ans Thy case is such sometimes thou meanest as that thou canst not pray in an orderly and Methodical manner But 1. Is not this a trouble and grief unto thee Why then for all this thou mayest have a true faith 2. Is there not at such times an earnest desire in thee to pray and this manifested by sighs and groans Thou art to know this is a good sign of the Spirit of Adoption and further that the Lord can pick sense out of a confused prayer And for thy comfort weigh the places following Rom. 8.26 27. We know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered And he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the mind of the spirit because he maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God And Psal 102.19 20. He hath looked down from the height of his Sanctuary from Heaven did the Lord behold the earth to hear the groaning of the Prisoner And Psal 10.17 Lord thou hast heard the desire of the humble And so Psal 145.19 He will fulfil the desire of them that fear him Nay Psal 77.4 I am so troubled that I cannot speak and yet breathing out prayer as well he could see ver 1. of the same Psalm I cryed unto God with my voice even unto God with my voice and he gave ear unto me And so Hezekiah Isai 38.14 Like a crane or a swallow so did I chatter but this chattering of his had a gracious effect as we may see in the verses following Object 8. But I am so troubled sometimes with hideous and blasphemous thoughts as I much suspect my faith as that there is no God that the Scriptures are false that all Religious courses are in vaine c. Ans Thou mayest not hence conclude thou hast no faith For 1. Suppose thou hast faith why yet thou hast an unregenerate part from whence these thoughts may come 2 It may be they come only from Satan and then further then thou consentest they are thy affliction but not thy sin 3 Was not our Saviour himself molested in this kind by Satan Matth. 4.1 c. 4 Dost not thou in grief of soul cry to God for pardon of these thoughts and help against them 5 I should rather take this to be an Argument of thy faith Satan seldom molesting his friends I mean natural men and women this way Object 9. But I have so many outward crosses and afflictions upon me and I am so impatient under them as I fear I have no faith Ans For the former part of the Objection it is scarce worth answering afflictions and crosses being the common lot of Believers in this vaile of tears as Psal 34.19 Many are the afflictions of the Righteous And Heb. 12.8 If ye be without chastisement whereof all are partakers then are ye bastards and not sons Now for the latter part of the objection impatience under crosses that is much to be lamented and bewailed yet thou must not hence conclude that thou hast no faith because we read of divers Believers in holy writ who through humane frailty were impatient in time of great affliction as Job David Jeremiah These objections we thought fit to answer for the supporting of the poor Christian whose faith is so much assaulted and opposed it being the Divels great project as to keep men and women from faith so when they have it to keep them from the comfort of it Vse 2. To exhort every man and woman 1. Such as have not this grace to labour for it it being the Instrument and the onely Instrument that apprehends and applies Christ and all his Merits nay that Instrument without which we cannot make use of any promise made unto the Flect and get this grace and get every grace It is true Gods Spirit must work this grace in us if it be wrought yet we must use the means But of that in the next Principle where we have the means of faith laid down 2. To exhort all such as have even the least measure of this grace to make use of it Is it the Instrument whereby we apprehend and apply Christ and all his Merits unto our own souls Oh let us make use of it this way often in the use of holy means be applying him and bringing him near unto
reclaim wanderers and to establish waverers in the truth then by recalling them unto the serious consideration of the first grounds of Religion for by this means people would find sure footing for their faith and also grow able to defend fundamentals against gain-sayers when others are like Vessels without Ballast which float hither and thither according to the different motion of every wind and wave which doth assault them Many godly persons who reaped soul-fruit from this seed when first sown by these Sermons when first preached bave importuned the Printing of them according to the Authors own intention for their own further benefit and for the edification of many others The Sermons do breath the holiness and plainness of the Preachers spirit who was very laborious and prosperous in the work of his Ministry And although they be not so Notional and Rhetorical as many may desire yet they are substantially profitable and fitted to the capacity of such who most need them The Candle yeeldeth not the more light because it is painted neither doth the Sword any better service because gilded or put into a velvet Scabbard As curious sights do not fill empty bellies so neither doth gawdy language feed hungry souls Reverend Master Greenham was bold to call the Ministry Glassy Bright and Brittle foreseeing that vanity growing up in the Church in his dayes wherein ingenuity and affectation of words was preferred before solidity of savory matter Although it is by all men acknowledged that apt and pregnant expresssions have their profit and that the eloquence of Apollo's is not to be disregarded yet Phrases are onely the husks and shels but Truths are the Kernels wherein the soul findeth sweetness and strength Not the fair leaves but the fruits upon Trees are the food and the Prophet Jeremiah telleth us that Pastors according to Gods heart shall feed with knowledge and understanding Jer. 3.15 And because the Lord hath in his Family the Church both babes and well grown Children therefore in great wisdom he is pleased to provide both milk and stronger meats Heb. 5.12 13 14. Some means of spiritual nourishment wholesomly though not curiously cooked God hath here vouchsafed unto them whose hearts are disposed to be exercised in the Principles of the Doctrine of Christ Good Reader In the consciencious use hereof I heartily commend thee to the guidance and blessing of the Almighty that thou mayest be better rooted and further edified in the truths of the holy Scriptures through Jesus Christ in whom I am Aug. 29th 1653. Thy Friend and Servant SIMEON ASH● The Foundation of Christian Religion gathered into Six Principles EXPLAINED The first PRINCIPLE Quest What dost thou believe concerning God Answ There is one God Creator and Governor of all things distinguished into the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost THat there is a God There be three Books wherein we may read this great Truth 1. The Book of the Scriptures 2. The Book of the Creatures 3. The Book of Nature First the Book of the Scriptures as oft as God is mentioned in holy Writ so oft upon the matter it is affirmed that there is a God Now this is a great demonstration the Scriptures affirming a thing to be so But come we to the second Book the Book of the Creatures see what the Apostle saith of it Rom. 1.20 For the invisible things of him from the Creation of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead so that they are without excuse The meaning of the Apostle is That there is a God as is plain by the very Book of the Creatures and not a few Arguments in this kind may be deduced hence Argum. 1. As first From the Original of the Creatures or world They either had a beginning or not a beginning If we say Not a beginning then we make the world God all the Creatures from the least to the greatest God For to have their being from themselves without beginning is nothing else but to be God what hath a being of it self without beginning is God But to affirm the world to be God or the several Creatures therein to be God were not this absurd and brutish If we say They had a beginning the world and Creatures as is very evident who then was their beginner and Maker but God Why then there is a God Arg. 2. The Creatures being many are all referred to their several and peculiar ends and so they all work and are imployed Now hence it is plain and evident that there is one above them all who did aim at these ends in them that did create them to these ends and who is this but God why then there is a God Arg. 3. The comely order and beauty which may be observed in the worlds great variety evidence There is a God Arg. 4. Man himself confidered from the rest of the Creatures who may be termed the Epitome of the world or Microcosmos the little world Mans body reviewed is it not a wonderous and curious piece of work as Psal 139.14 15. But his soul especially that immaterial immortal invisible substance with the faculties of it and the great acts of those faculties Do not all these conclude a wise and infinite Creator and so a God The third Book wherein this great truth may be read is the Book of Nature Of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 1.19 Because that which may be known of God is manifest in them that is to say Is writ in the hearts of the old Gentiles and so in the hearts of all men not all that may be known of God but so much that there is a God because God hath shewed it unto them that is hath writ it in their hearts by a general work of his Spirit and so that place may be understood Joh. 1.9 That was the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world to wit with the light of nature in a great measure or in a less and this we call the Book of Nature Among those common notions imprinted in mans heart since Adams fall this is a principal one That there is a God Such sparks and notions as this are usually called the Light the Law or Book of Nature not that mans nature is the Author of them but God as before we have heard Yet so called First Because they are imprinted in mans nature Secondly Because they are as common as mans nature and hence it is that all Nations do acknowledge a God Suppose the most of them pitch upon a false god or seek the true God in a false way why yet this general acknowledgment from the light of nature is a mighty Argument that there is a God And although haply some particular persons have been found to deny this Principle yet those persons committing hainous and horrible Crimes but kept secret from man their consciences afterwards have accused and terrified them now their hainous Crimes being
not knowne to any man but themselves why should their consciences vex and terrifie them if there were not a God Object 1. But may some men say in whom the light of nature is almost extinguished I never saw God how can I then believe there is a God Answ Thou didst never see thy soul and dost thou believe therefore thou hast no soul Thou didst never see the wind yet surely thou believest there is such a thing such a creature Object 2. But if this be a Truth generally acknowledged How comes it to pass that the most men and women live as though there were no God Answ First by way of Concession or Grant Secondly By way of Solution 1. By way of Concession or Grant It is true the most do live as though there were no God so walk as denying the Presence Power and Justice of God 2. By way of Solution or Satisfaction Although men and women generally by the light of Nature do acknowledg a God yet through the corruption of nature they frame and fain him to themselves to be such a one as they please to wit without Attributes not present in all places not infinitely powerful and just As this is a Truth That by the light of nature we know and believe there is a God so likewise this is a Truth That since Adams fall by the corruption of nature in regard of the true God we are all Atheists Thus the Psalmist describing the natural man Psal 14.1 The fool hath said in his heart There is no God The natural man confesseth there is a God but it is a God of his own framing without Attributes to wit an Idol which upon the matter is as much as to deny the true God Object 3. Although this be a Truth granted and plain why yet the Regenerate themselves have doubtings this way they sometimes doubt Whether there be a God or no. Answ And this comes to pass First by Satans suggestion who sometimes darts this thought maliciously into them even in their best Devotions Secondly this thought may be in them through the corruption of nature remaining they having a seed and some degrees of Atheism remaining in them so long as they are in this world Thirdly Want of through consideration may occasion doubting this way As when they observe themselves men and women of affliction and the wicked great in the world and highly exalted looking meerly upon this and no further may occasion them to question this great Truth but going on to the end and issue the doubt is presently removed considering what the wicked's exultation ends in and so considering what is the issue of the godly mans afflictions Vse 1. To expostulate with the wicked and unregenerate There is a God this thou sayest thou beleevest I say thou dost well but the divels do as much nay more ●hey beleeve and tremble Jam. 2.19 Examine thy self do not they exceed thee in this Thou believest there is a God but dost thou tremble at his Justice Power and Omnipresence Dost thou perswade thy self of his Omnipresence that he sees thy waies courses and proceedings in all places and at all times How comes it to passe then that thou willingly and willfully committest that sin in secret in his sight which thou wouldest be ashamed to commit in the eye and veiw of the world Observe now Thou beleevest there is a God but it is a god of thy own framing a god that sees not thy sinfull courses and proceedings And to this purpose take notice how the spirit of God brings in the wicked or naturall man speaking in his heart Job 22.13 14. And thou sayest how doth God know and is there knowledg in the most high Psal 73.11 Can he judg thorow the dark cloud thick clouds are a covering to him that he seeth not And Psal 94.7 They say the Lord shall not see neither shall the God of Jacob regard it Thus what the wicked mans thoughts are of God his actions declare And so in regard of Gods Justice if thou didst beleeve him to be a God of justice how durst thou go on obstinately in thy sins making a covenant with death and being at agreement with hell he having openly proclaimed in his word that he wil be revenged on al such malefactors The truth of it is although thou dost acknowledg a God why yet again thou deniest him by denying his justice as if he were a God all of mercy but such as thou shall one day find him to be a God of justice of infinite justice Deut. 29.19 20. Again in regard of Gods Power Thou beleevest there is a God but again deniest him in that thou dost not believe him to be a God of infinite power If thou dost beleeve him to be a God of infinite power why dost not thou rather tremble at his threatning then at the threatning of a mortal man Let an earthly Magistrate or Prince threaten and menace for the breach of his statutes and edicts presently men and women begin to tremble and to be afraid and know not which way to turn themselves but let the Lord the mighty God of heaven and earth threaten to bring this and that plague this and that judgment upon them for their sins and transgressions nay even to damn them to the pit of hell if they do not reform for all this they go on still in their sins and evill courses as though the Lord had not power to maintain his threatnings upon them Well thou that art a wicked and ungodly liver see thy condition to be a wofull condition there is just so much light in thee as to make thee inexcusable Thou beleevest there is a God but in life deniest his presence power and justice Thou art not an absolute Athiest in judgment but an Athiest in practice Wel it is as thou thinkest there is a God but thou shalt find him otherwise then thou thinkest to wit all-saving for he is infinitely just and powerfull Vse 2. For Direction Thou beleevest there is a God First more and more examine this great truth more and more ponder and perpend it untill thy heart be established in it and if God be God serve him if Baal be God follow him The meaning is if this principle be not true follow the waies of thy own heart live and walk according to thy own lust without any restraint but if it be true as it is undoubtedly then walk and live as throughly beleeving this principle Labour to please God to glorifie him and to have communion with him and know there is nothing doth so choak and suffocate this Principle as a wicked and profane life as Rom. 1.18 For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who hold the truth in unrighteousness This is the first rule of Direction 2. Thou believing this Principle endeavor to nourish and maintain it To this purpose thou maiest help thy self by the Book of the Creatures as
we use to pray then in Prayer are we earnest after faith for an encrease of this grace Many in prayer are more for temporal things then Spiritual but this is to pray in a carnal manner And divers in prayer that beg spiritual Blessings and yet sue for them but in a carnal way not seeing any beauty and excellency in them neither finding any taste or rellish in them but only because they are convinced they cannot be saved without them So then the Question is Whether in Prayer we be more earnest for faith and the other Graces of Gods Spirit then for Temporal Blessings And then in suing for spiritual Blessings whether the beauty we see in them and rellish we find in them do much induce and move us to be earnest at the Throne of Grace for them 3. Do we use Prayer and in prayer are we earnest for faith in the manner aforesaid observe we then the fruit of our praying Psal 85.8 He will speak peace to his Saints to wit by stirring up and encreasing their faith Surely suing for faith as aforesaid we shall upon examination find an encrease of it And this is the great wheel in the Clock come on in this grace and come on in every sanctifying and saving grace Vse 2. For Inquisition Seeing Prayer is one good means to encrease faith to enquire into the Doctrine of Prayer As first What Prayer is and the parts of it 2. The necessity of prayer and the Motives to it 3. The Objections against Prayer and the Answers of them 4. The Qualifications of true and acceptable prayer First What prayer is and the parts of it Answ We are not now speaking of the requests and suits we make one to another in our civil converse here in the world which may be called civil prayer But of Religious Praier which we thus describe It is an opening of the desire of the heart or a pouring out of the foul to the Lord. 1. I say It is an opening of the desire of the heart or a pouring out of the soul See Psal 62.8 1 Sam. 1.15 2. I say It is a pouring out of the soul to the Lord he only being the object of religious praier it is he and he only that sees and knows the heart he and he only which is present in all places to hear the praiers of all his people he and he only which is Almighty to help Now the Parts of praier In Scripture we find divers divisions of prayer but in 1 Tim. 2.1 we have the parts of praier punctually laid down 1. Supplication 2. Precation or petition 3. Intercession 4. Thanksgiving By supplication we understand humble suit to the Lord for his favour and pardon of sin and in this part of praier we have the confession of sin implied By precation or petition the second part of praier we understand a begging of all other things needful for soul and body By Intercession the third part of praier we do not understand an entreating for others as divers interpretors doe for not only this part of praier but all the parts of praier are here injoyned to be performed as in the behalf of our selves why so in the behalf of others But we understand by it a contending with God for the prevention and removall of judgment By Thanksgiving the last part of praier we understand a rendring praise to God for his blessings and mercies Thus then we see that prayer consists of 4 parts Supplication Precation Intercession and Thanksgiving Now we come to the second thing concerning prayer to wit What necessity of it and the motives unto it I answer It is an excellent part of Gods worship Psal 95.6 where by bowing down and calling upon God is meant to worship him Hence the place of Gods worship by way of excellencie was called the house of prayer Isa 56.7 2. By the duty of prayer the Lord is much glorified for hereby all his attributes are acknowledged Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity confessed The puritie and holinesse of his Law subscribed unto His promises in the Gospel professed to be believed the accomplishment of them to be hoped for and expected and he blessed and praised for his mercies 3. Gods command The Lord commands us to pray Psal 105.4 1 Thes 5.17 4. The example of Christ and all the worthies mentioned in Scripture Luke 3.21 and 9.18 28 29. and 6 12. And so all Gods people mentioned in holy writ they all were adicted to prayer 5. The misery that attends those that neglect this duty Jerem. 10.25 Matth. 26.41 Ezek. 22.30 31. Dan. 9.13.14 6. This is a good means to easie our hearts This Hannah knew wel 1 Sam. 1 15. And Job Job 16.20 And so all practial Christians 7. Our continual and innumerable necessities inward and outward 8. The promise of supply and help Psal 50.15 and 91.15 Matth. 7.7 9. The dignitie of this duty hereby a mortal worm hath conference and converse with the greatest majesty 10. The power and efficacie of praier compare Gen. 32.11 and 33.4 And 2 Sam. 15.31 and 17.23 See Exod. 14.15 and 15.25 Matth. 17.21 Remember Hezekiahs and Isaiahs praier and so Esters and Mordecai's In the primitive Church Anno 175 the army of Christians was called the thundering legion because upon their praiers God scattered their enemies with thunder And the very heathen in those times could observe that the Christians were able to obtain any thing by prayer And what man or woman of religious observation in these our times but may speak of the efficacie and power of prayer Now we come to the third particular the objections against prayer Object 1 May some ignorant men and women say the Lord knows our wants before we pray and then to what purpose should we pray Answ We do not pray because the Lord knows not our wants But 1. Because it is his comand that we pray Phil. 4.6 2. That we may demonstrate our selves sensible of our wants which the Lord will have us to be Psal 34.18 3. Hereby we acknowledg the Lord to be the fountain of all good 4. This is the condition the Lord ties us unto if so be we would have him to impart his blessings unto us Prov. 2.3 5. Jer. 33.2 3. Matth. 7.7 Object 2 But the Lord in his eternall counsell hath decreed what blessings we shall have and what blessings we shall not have and his decree cannot be altered Answ All this is true but yet as the Lord hath decreed the end why so the means and in the ordinary course by the means works to the end The Lord had decreed to give the Gentiles to Christ but yet see what he saith unto him Psal 2.8 Ask of me c. And so he had decreed as he was pleased to make known the return of the Jewes out of the captivitie Yet see what he saith Ezek. 36.37 I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel Nay Daniel knowing the very time
day and so the woman Gen. 1.27.31 2. If you ask of what was man made Ans His body was of the dust of the earth the womans body of one of the mans ribs Gen. 2.7 and 2.22 both their souls of nothing inspired of God Gen. 2.7 In man we have an Epitome or compendium of all Creatures he being partly visible and partly invisible Visible in regard of his body Invisible in regard of his soul And touching the excellency of man as he was created this is implyed in that the Trinity hold a consultation about him Gen. 1.26 And God said Let us make man c. Now mans excellency as he was created did especially consist in three things 1. In that he was made according to Gods image Gen. 1.27 So God created man in his own Image in the Image of God created he him Now by the Image of God according unto which Adam was created we are to understand 1. His Immaterial Invisible and Immortal soul for so every man is the Image of God in regard of the substance of his soul Gen. 9.6 Whoso sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his blood be shed for in the Image of God made he man By the Image of God in this place we only understand the substance of the soul 2. Adam was created according to Gods Image in regard of Holiness and Righteousness he is said to be created according to Gods Image because he was created a holy and righteous Creature Ephes 4.24 And that ye put on that new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness The second thing wherein mans excellency did consist as he was created was in this That he had sweet communion and fellowship with God This may be gathered from Gen. 2.19 And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field and every foul of the aire and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them The third thing wherein mans excellency did consist as he was created was he was made Lord of all visible Creatures Gen. 1.26 And God said Let us make man in our own image after our likeness and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the foul of the aire and over the cattel and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth And so ver 28. God said to Adam and Eve Have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the foul of the aire and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth And thus far touching the work of Creation We come in the next place to the work of Preservation MEMBER IV. Preserver and Governor of all things Doct. THe one true God the Lord is the Preserver and Governor of all things For so we must understand the Catechism when it saith the Lord is Governor of all things the former to be implied to wit that he is the Preserver as wel as the Governor of all things And so we come from the work of Creation unto the work of Gods Providence which consists of these two parts Preservation and Gubernation or governing And what is Preservation but Creation continued or the upholding of all creatures in their kinds beings motions and operations And what is Gubernation but the moving ordering and directing of all the Creatures and their actions to their decreed ends Now that the Lord is the Preserver and Governor of all things the Scripture is very copious this way but we wil only produce three or four places Eph. 1.11 the Apostle describes the Lord to be such a one as worketh all things according to the counsel of his own wil and the Psalmist Ps 36.6 O Lord thou preservest man and beast Act. 17.28 In him we live move and have our being And do but see Nehem. 9.6 Thou preservest them all to wit all the Creatures and the Host of Heaven worshipeth thee that is to say is governed by thee is at thy command and appointment And further to argue the point in hand That the Lord doth preserve and uphold all the Creatures in their kinds beings motions and operations is evident and plain Arg. 1 Otherwise they would not continue but would return to their first nothing to that nothing of which they were at first made The Lord is called Jehovah not only because he gave being to every thing but likewise because he maintained it in every thing And that the Lord is Governor of all things to wit moveth directeth and disposeth of all the Creatures and their actions to their decreed ends this we demonstrate two wayes 1. By instancing particular Creatures 2. Particular Actions Arg. 2 As first The good Angels 1 Chr. 21.15 And God sent an Angel unto Jerusalem to destroy it and as he was destroying he said to the Angel that destroyed It is enough stay now thy hand And so Luke 1.26 And in the sixth month the Angel Gabriel was sent from God unto a City of Galilee named Nazareth 2. The evil angels The Divels are governed by God and act his command 1 King 22.22 The Lord saith unto the lying spirit go forth and in ver 23. Michajah saith to Ahab Behold the Lord hath put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these thy Prophets And so in Mark 9.26 And the spirit cryed and rent him sore and came out of him but in the verse next foregoing God-man layes a command upon this wicked spirit Thou dumb and deaf spirit I charge thee come out of him and enter no more into him 3. Men and Women the Lord governeth and disposeth of them as he pleaseth Prov. 21.1 The Kings heart is in the hand of the Lord as the rivers of water he turneth it whithersoever he will And so Prov. 29.26 Many seek the Rulers favor but every mans judgment cometh from the Lord. And if those superior creatures Job 12.17 to 22. be at Gods command and governed by him why then sure all the inferior creatures also Obj. But may some men say If the Lord so command and govern the reasonable Creatures is not the freedom of their wils by this altogether taken away An. No because the Lord doth not compel the reasonable Creatures to do this or that but only bends and inclines them The necessity of Gods will doth not overthrow the freedom of their wills This or that action if it be referred to Gods will may be said to be necessary if to their wills it may be said to be voluntary Arg. 3. The second way whereby we demonstrate that the Lord is the governor of all things is by instancing particular actions If the providence of God doth extend 1. Even to the least actions to actions of the smallest nature 2. To actions that are the most casual 3. To actions that are the most sinful why then the Lord is governor of all things But that the providence of God doth extend to actions of all these kinds the Scriptures do plainly demonstrate 1. That
as live idlely do not walk diligently in their callings Joh. 5.17 My Father worketh hitherto and I work The Lord never ceaseth from his work of Providence 3. Reproof to all such as are discontented with their outward condition and estates and so calling Gods wise Providence in question contrary to the Apostle Phil. 4.11 I have learned in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content And David Psal 39.9 I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didest it 4. To reprove all such as neglect the lawful means Civil or Holy the Lord in his ordinary course working by means or if the means fail they distrust the Lord as though he that tyed us to means were himself tyed to means and could not work by little means against means above means 5. To reprove all such as lay their sins on God because nothing comes to pass but by his Providence but hearken to the Apostle James 1.13 Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted of evil neither tempteth he any man There is no sin in God neither doth he put sin into any mans heart It is true indeed the Lord could prevent sin and would if he could not gain himself glory out of it thou canst not do this or that wicked action without Gods Providence but thy sin as it is sin is of thy self and Satan thou sinning willingly and chearfully not endeavouring to serve Gods Providence but thy own vile affections 6. To reprove the evil speech of some as they that say this or that came to pass by meer chance as though any thing came to pass without a cause or without Gods Providence and so such as say this or that we will do not putting in Saint James's condition Jam. 4.15 If the Lord will not remembring that they and their actions are in Gods disposing and not in their own Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all the godly It is true they have many enemies but the Lord hath them all in a string as he saith to Sennacherib King of Assyria 2 Kin. 19.27 28. I know thy abode and thy going out and thy coming in and thy rage against me because thy rage against me and thy tumult is come up into my ears therefore I will put my hook into thy nose and my bridle in thy lips and I will turn thee back by the way by which thou camest Nay the Devils themselves the Lord hath them in Chains they cannot go a link beyond his permission as is evident in the History of Job even as he saith unto the Sea Job 38.11 Hitherto shalt thou come but no further and here shall thy proud waves be stayed And so in regard of any affliction no affliction can befal the godly but by the Providence of God and no affliction shall befal them but the Providence of God will turn it to their good insomuch as every true Believer may say with David Psal 16.8 The Lord is at my right hand I shall not be moved not moved to my hurt and as he saith Psal 23.1 The Lord is my shepherd I shall not want and verse 4. Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me And wondrous comfortable is that sentence 2 Chron. 16.9 The eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth to shew himself strong in the behalf of them whose heart is perfect towards him And not a little may the godly man succour his faith by his former experience of Gods Providence Psal 56.13 Thou hast delivered my soul from death wilt not thou deliver my feet from falling that I may walk before God in the light of the living And 1 Sam. 17.37 David said The Lord that delivered me out of the paw of the Lion and out of the paw of the Bear he will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine And so Psal 46.1.2 God is our refuge and strength a very present help in trouble Therefore will we not fear though the Earth be removed and though the Mountains be carryed into the midst of the Sea Vse 3. To exhort every one to serve Gods Providence in the use of all good means Civil and Holy because so the Lord works ordinarily To neglect ordinary means is to tempt God and great presumption as our Saviour replies to Satan when he would have had him cast himself down from the Pinacle of the Temple Matth. 4.7 It is written thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God And yet we must take heed of trusting in the means for that is Idolatry the truth of it is it is Gods blessing that doth mainly effect a thing as Psal 127.1 Except the Lord build the house they labour in vain that build it Except the Lord keep the City the Watchman waketh but in vain And therefore when the means fail us at any time our faith must not It was an evil saying of the Israelites Psal 78.19 Can God furnish a table in the Wilderness and therefore the Spirit of God saith of them putting forth such a question that they spake against God But it was a good saying of Abraham Gen. 22.8 God will provide and if you peruse verse 14. you shall perceive that this speech of his grew to a Proverb intimating thus much that in due time and place the Lord will supply the wants and necessities of all his people And thus far touching the description of God by his works of Creation and Preservation MEMBER V. One true God Creator and Governor of all things is distinguished into the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost THat there is a distinction of Persons and this distinction in the Divine Essence is evident if so be we look into the holy Scriptures Gen. 1.26 And God said Let us make man in our image where God the Father consults with his Son and holy Spirit The like phrase we have in Gen. 11.7 Let us go down and there confound their Language And Isa 63.9 10. The Angel of his presence saved them Of whose presence Of God the Fathers and who was this Angel but the Son the second Person in Trinity But they rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit to wit the Holy Ghost Haggai 2.5 7. According to the word that I convenanted with you when ye came out of Aegypt Who was it that did covenant with the Israelites to wit God the Father So My Spirit remaineth among you to wit the Holy Ghost And The desire of all Nations shall come to wit the Sonne But this Mysterie is more clearly revealed in the New Testament as when Christ was baptized Matthew 3.16 17. And he saw to wit John the Baptist the Spirit of God descending like a Doue and lighting upon him to wit upon Christ And lo a voyce from Heaven that is to say from God the Father saying This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased But more
and righteousness but a corrupt inclination in every faculty of soul and member of body Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is evil from his youth even from the very time he begins to conceive 4. By Actual transgression And thus we see how many wayes the natural man is a sinner We now come to the Application Vse 1. For Confutation To confute the Papists who affirme that the Virgin M. was without sin free from original sin and from sin all her life long but this were to make her equal to Christ as he was man and this is to cross the Apostles allegation There is none righteous no not one to wit by nature meer man or meer woman since Adams fall and that the V. M. was not exempted in this kind is evident by our Saviours reproving of her John 2.4 When she told him of a want of Wine at the Marriage-feast in Cana Woman what have I to do with thee my hour is not yet come Had she not been in fault he would not so have check'd her And further observe what she her self saith Luke 1.47 My spirit hath rejoyced in God my Saviour If she were free from sin what needed she a Saviour Vse 2. To reprove divers men and women The most will confess they are sinners and great sinners but with so little knowledge as when they became sinners or how or wherein or what sinne is they cannot tell As if a Debtor should acknowledge himself to be indebted to such a man and yet he cannot tell when wherein or how he became indebted to him were not this an ignorant acknowledgement And likewise with so little humility ' the most men and women will confess they are sinners but with so little sense and feeling with so little griefe and shame not considering how great an evil sinne is how odious it makes a man or a woman to God how it layes them open to Gods wrath here and hereafter The Leper we know in the time of the old Testament must be shut up must not converse with men but no Leper so odious to mans eye as sinne makes a man odious to God And no man indebted be it never so much is so in danger of an Arrest by man as the unhumbled sinner is in danger of Gods wrath to Arrest him every hour and to presse him down to the pit of Hell where his worme shall never dye and his fire never goes out Mark 9.44 Vse 3. To awaken the Natural man he being a sinner and a sinner so many wayes as we have heard Ephesians 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest and stand up from the Dead and Christ shall give thee light Would any man unlesse he were dead drunk lay himselfe downe to sleep on the top of the Mast the Ship being under-saile in the midst of the Sea Or will any man but a mad man wittingly and willingly lye sleeping in a house that is on fire over his head O that the Natural man would take notice of his wretched condition that so he might be dejected and cast down crying out of himselfe as the Leper in the Law Leviticus 13.45 Vnclean Vnclean Crying to God with the Publican Luke 18.13 Lord be merciful to me a sinner And with more words then so for we must know we have there but the abridgement of the Publicanes Prayer and crying to the Minister of God with them in the Acts Chapter 2d. Verse 37. Men and Brethren what shall we do Now that men and women would labour for a fight and sense of their Natural misery consider 1. Some Motives 2. Some Means Motive 1. Otherwise they can never confesse their sinnes heartily What is the reason men and women confesse their sinnes so generall and carelesly but because they have not a sight and sense of their natural misery Hosea 14.2 Take with you words and turne to the Lord to wit in the way of confession saith the Prophet to the Israelites But in the first Verse they must before consider how they had fallen by their iniquity how sinful they were Motive 2. Without sight and sense of misery men and women are not capable of true Comfort and Consolation Before true Consolation goes hearty humiliation Luke 5.31 They that are whole need not a Physitian but they that are sick 2 Corinthians Chapter 7. Verse 6. the Apostle Paul stiles the Lord the Comforter of the abject Motive 3. Observe the Promise made to the truly dejected Matthew 5.4 Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Isaiah 37.15 Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth Eternity whose Name is Holy I dwell in the High and Holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones We come to the Meanes to bring men and women to a sight and sence of their misery Means 1. To look themselves throughly in the glass of the Law Rom. 3.20 By the Law comes the knowledg of sin 2 By applying to themselves the curses which are without partiality threatned to every transgressor of the Law for every transgression as Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them 3. Consider of how pure eyes the Lord is how he hates iniquity and suffers no transgression to pass unpunished but doth either punish it in the party offending or hath already punished it in the Mediator Vse 4 To justifie the Lord in regard of the judgments he sends upon the world All men and women being corrupted with sin and so many wayes as we have heard no marvel then that the world is so plagued In the seventh of Genesis we read how the Lord destroyed the world by water but see the sixth Chapter from the first verse unto the fourteenth The world was exceedingly corrupted with sin We know what the Psalmist saith Psal 107.17 Fools by reason of their sins and because of their iniquities are afflicted And the Church Lament 5.16 17. Wo unto us that we have sinned for this our heart is faint and for these things our eyes wax dim Nay the very young Infant that is taken away by death the Lord is not unjust in that proceeding even the young Infant being a sinner three wayes at the least by Participation by Imputation and by natural Corruption When judgments are upon us we must not murmur and repine but consider as Solomon doth advise Eccles 7.14 In the day of adversity consider that is consider for what and then we shall justifie him from whom the affliction comes Vse 5. For comfort and consolation to all true Converts It is true they are sinners but the Lord sees no sin in them which he will impute unto them It is true they are sinners but not such as he that was blind speaks of John 9.31 We know that God heareth not sinners for Prov. 15.8 The prayer of the upright
all his merits unto himself is justified before God and sanctified MEMB. I. A man of a contrite and humble spirit NOW we come to the fourth Principle which requireth of us how a man or a woman may be made partakers of Christ and his Benefits In the first place saith the Catechism they must have contrite and humble spirits A man of a contrite and humble spirit We commend the Point unto you in the form of a Doctrine thus Doct. That a man may be partaker of Christ and his Benefits he must have a contrite and humble spirit See Isai 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters to wit to Christ and he that hath no money that is sees nothing in himselfe to trust unto and so consequently is of a humble and contrite spirit And Jerem. 50.4 In those dayes and in that time saith the Lord the children of Israel shall come they and the children of Judah together going and weeping they shall go and seek the Lord their God observe I pray you going and weeping shall seek the Lord their God as though that were the way and the onely way to find God in Christ to partake of Christ and his benefits And doth not our Saviour tell us this Matth 9.13 I am not come to call the righteous that is such as think themselves righteous but sinners to repentance to wit contrite and humble sinners to call them to a new life to partake of me and my benefits And Mat. 11.28 Come unto me saith he all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest And hence it is that the Lord is described 2 Corinth 7.6 to be the Comforter of such as are cast down And this Doctrine the Apostle James informes us of Jam. 4.6 God resisteth the proud but giveth grace to the humble that is assures such of his favour and therefore ver 10. of the same Chapter Humble your selves saith he in the sight of the Lord and he shall lift you up And do but see that place for all Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath annointed me to preach the Gospel to the poor he hath sent me to heal the broken hearted and to set at liberty them that are bruised Now we come to the Reasons Reas 1. Such and only such have an appetite to Christ hunger and thirst after him and his benefits Till we be sick of sin we can find no need of this Physician neither care much for him according to that Mat. 9.12 They that be whole need not a Physician but they that are sick When the fiery Serpent Numb 21.9 had bitten and stung an Israelite then he would run and make use of the Brazen Serpent but never till then Reas 2. Such and only such do prize Christ at his full value are willing to part with any thing to purchase him See what the Apostle Paul saith Philip. 3.8 9. He esteemed all things but dung in comparison of Christ and his Benefits but to make way for this observe the deep sense and feeling he had of his owne unworthinesse 1 Timoth. 1.15 This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom saith he I am chief Reas 3. Such and only such are made fit to receive Christ by faith and to make him their own Mark 1.15 Repent and believe the Gospel the unhumbled and unbroken-hearted sinner is altogether unfit to receive Christ and his benefits Reas 4. Such and only such truly rejoice and take comfort in Christ account him their chief Treasure and happiness Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory in any thing save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ that is save in the Passion and Sufferings of our Lord Jesus Christ But who was this that did thus rejoice in Christ and his Sufferings Surely it was one that had such a low opinion of himself as that Ephes 3.8 he stiles himself less then the least of all Saints But that you may further see into this weighty Doctrine we intend to answer the Questions following 1. What that contrition and humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits 2. Whether every man and woman that hath this contrite and humble spirit shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits 3. Whether this contrition and humiliation be wrought in the like measure in all that are made partakers of Christ and his benefits Quest 1 What that contrition and humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ This contrition and humiliation contains the particulars following 1. A true and distinct sight of sin and not onely as punishment doth attend it but as it is vile and lothsome in its own nature as Ezek. 36.31 Then shall ye remember your own evil wayes and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and for your abominations 2. Unfained and sound sorrow and as for the consequent so for the cause as for punishment so for sin Acts 2.37 Now when they heard this they were pricked in the is hearts to wit that they were guilty of the death of the Lord of Life 3. A being weary of sin finding it a load and burden upon the conscience Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest Our Saviour means here all that have contrite and humble spirits 4. Humble and hearty confession of sin as Luke 15.21 Father saith the Prodigal I have sinned against heaven and in thy sight and am no more worthy to be called thy son Lu. 23.40 41. 5. Earnest suit to the God of heaven for mercy as the Publicane Luke 18.13 God be merciful to me a sinner And Saul afterwards called Paul Acts 9.11 Behold he prayeth surely the three dayes he was without sight he sent up many a loud cry to heaven for mercy 6. The sixth particular This Contrition and Humiliation contains a distaste and dislike of sin as Isaiah 30.22 Ye shall defile also the covering of the graven Images of silver and the ornament of thy molten Images of gold thou shalt cast them away as a mensturous cloth to wit in the day of thy repentance thou shalt say unto it get thee hence And Luke 19.8 Zacheus stood and said unto the Lord Behold Lord the half of my goods I give to the poor and if I have taken any thing from any man by false accusation I restore him four fold Thus we see now what Contrition and Humiliation is which truly and sufficiently prepares a man or a woman to be made partakers of Christ and his benefits But yet we must not think this preparatory work in the particulars aforesaid to be the same that is in the soul after
Christ is received and partaked of for that flows from the Principle of grace and so works more freely and absolutely But in this the soul is onely a Patient this is a saving work but not a sanctifying work but yet alwayes sanctification followes upon the same Now we come to the second question Quest 2. Whether every man and woman that hath this Contrite and Humble spirit shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ Yes because this is the lost soul which Christ came to seek and to save for of this soul we must understand our Saviour when he saith Luke 19.20 The Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost And this is the bruised reed which in no case he will break Matth. 12.20 And do but see Psal 51.17 A broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise not the broken and contrite heart aforesaid And Isaiah 57.15 Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity whose Name is HOLY I dwell in the high and holy place with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones And so Matth. 5.3.4 Our Saviour saith Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of heaven And Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted It is the contrite and humble ones which our Saviour here intends Thus we see distinctly and plainly that every man and woman that hath the contrite and humble spirit aforesaid shall certainly be made partakers of Christ and his benefits Quest 3. Whether this contrition and humiliation be wrought in the like measure in all that are made partakers of Christ and his benefits Answ No and for the Causes and Reasons following 1. Some have committed more gross and heinous sins then others and therefore have cause and need to be more terrified and humbled then others 2. The Lord intends to bestow a greater measure of grace upon some then upon others to do greater works by them then by others and therefore prepares them accordingly by contrition and humiliation 3. Some have been Religiously educated from their Child-hood whereby as they were kept from gross sins so corruption was subdued in them gently and secretly by little and little without any great measure of contrition and humiliation grace and comfort being instilled into them almost insensibly 4. Some by natural constitution and temper of body are more fearful and sensible of anguish then others 5. Some after the Wound have the Medicine sooner revealed and applyed to them then others Now we proceed to the Uses Vse 1. To acquaint us that there is but a few comparatively that partake of Christ and his benefits and this will be evident if so be we weigh the particulars which the contrition and humiliation aforesaid contains As first a true and distinct sight of sin many see their sins in a general slight and confused way but where is the man that sees sin to be the greatest evil even separating from the greatest good to wit God himself Isaiah 59.2 nay that so far as he gives way unto it so far he joynes with the Divel and fights against God that sees into the vile and loathsom nature of sin And where is the man that sees himself to be guilty of Adams fall himself to be stained and polluted universally with natural corruption himself to be guilty of such and such actual sins sins of Omission and sins of Commission that turns his sins upside down considers them in the circumstances of them Psal 119.59 2. The second particular the contrition and humiliation aforesaid contains is unfained and sound sorrow for sin Psal 94.16 17. Alas the most sin is their meat and their drink their very delight they storm and grieve because they cannot sin as they would are sorry and angry they have such a Minister as will reprove them for their sins that they may not go on in sin without any controul or if they have any sorrow in them at any time it is onely because of the punishment that attends sin Many that mourn for this and that outward cross and calamity present and imminent but do not at al mourn for sin the cause of it but a few whose hearts are rightly pricked for their sins Acts 2.37 And so for the other particulars Where is the man that finds sin a load and burden upon his conscience that doth humbly and heartily confess his sins that importunately cryes to heaven for mercy and that truly dislikes sin even to a sinful thought The particulars aforesaid being perpended it will appear that there is but a few that have contrite and humble spirits and so consequently but a few that partake of Christ and his benefits Vse 2. For the comfort and consolation of all such as have contrite and humble spirits they all they shall partake of Christ and his benefits such all such are they whom Christ came to seek and to save Psal 51.17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Isa 57.15 And Matth. 11.28 Come unto me saith Christ all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest The Lord doth not deal with the burdened conscience as Satan and his Instruments Satan Revel 12.4 when the woman was ready to be delivered of her Child was ready to devour her Child and so are his Instruments Now we hope say they you have followed Preachers gone to Sermons long enough no no Psal 147.3 He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds to wit the Lord Isaiah 61.1 And to this purpose it is a wondrous thing to observe how the Lord sustains and bears up the wounded soul by a secret hope of mercy as we may see in the King of Niniveh Jonah 3.9 9. Who can tell if God will turn and repent and turn away from his fierce anger that we perish not But for this hope the bruised heart would break and but for this hope the means of recovery and raising up would not be endeavored This hope keeps from despair and provokes to the use of holy means It is true saith the wounded soul I am in a miserable case but if there be any hope I will cry to heaven for mercy I will depend upon the Ministry of the word constantly I will creep into the company of those that make profession of Religion in a special manner who can tell but that the Lord may shew mercy to my poor soul May some man say this is very comfortable that every contrite and humble spirit shall certainly pertake of Christ and his benefits But how may I know that my heart is truly contrite and humble Signes 1. If thou judgest sin to be the greatest evil and the favour of God to be the greatest good 2. If thou hadst rather hear of mercy to thy
poor soul then of an earthly Kingdome to be bestowed upon thee 3. If thou thinkest those that have true Peace of conscience and Joy in the Holy Ghost to be the happiest people under the sun 4. If thou tremble at the Word and honour the very feet of those Instruments that bring glad tydings of peace to such as thy self to wit to wounded consciences 5. If thou send up strong and uncessant cryes to God for the assurance of his favour in and through Christ 6. If thou dost pity and compassionate all such as have broken and bruised hearts Vse 3. To exhort all such as for the present have not contrite and humble spirits to labour and endeavour for that disposition Motives 1. The contrary disposition to wit hardness of heart and impenitency is a great sin and a grievous judgement A great sin Rom. 2.5 But thou after thy hard and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath A grievous judgement Exod. 9.12 And the Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh See John 12.40 Now there be two kinds of hardness of heart 1. Sensible that which is perceived and felt and this may be in the godly as Isa 63.17 Oh Lord why hast thou made us to erre from thy wayes and heardened our hearts from thy fear 2. Insensible that which is not perceived and felt and this indeed is a great sin and plague 2. The second Motive The sooner we labour after this disposition the more easily in likelyhood we shall attain unto it when a heart hath been long hardened with the deceitfulness of sin it will not easily become a contrite and humble heart and therefore Psalm 95.7.8 To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts So Joel 2.12 13. Besides it may be hereafter we shall not enjoy the like means this way we do for the present 3. Without this contrite and humble spirit according to the Doctrine we cannot partake of Christ and his benefits this is the Messenger that Christ ever sends before him unto those of years for we do not now speak of Infants and wo be unto us if we do not partake of Christ and his benefits it had been good for us we had never been born 4. Whosoever hath this contrite and humble spirit shall certainly partake of Christ and his benefits Now this may greatly induce us to labour for this disposition when the issue undoubtedly shall be so good and so happy Suppose this business be difficult and tedious why yet such an issue must needs put us on in it These are the Motives Now we proceed to the Means of a contrite and humble spirit Means 1. Prayer to God in the best manner we can it is he that must bruise our hard and stony hearts Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh to wit a contrite and humble heart 2. Because the Lord doth many times make use of afflictions and judgements for the bruising of mens hearts when he sends any great affliction upon us let us not stand out against him but joyn with him when he goes a bout to humble us let us labour to humble our selves as Saul afterwards called Paul Acts 9.6 trembling and astonished said Lord what wilt thou have me to do When the hand of God is upon us let us not stand murmuring and repining but fall to examination of our Spiritual estates and cases as the Wise-man adviseth us Eccles 7.14 In the day of adversity consider 3. Constant dependance upon the Ministry of the Word Jer. 23.29 Is not my word like as a fire saith the Lord and like a hammer that breaketh the Rocks in pieces Now we are to know that the Law hath a stroke in this work and so the Gospel 1. The Law by revealing of sin and the woful consequents of it and so the Spirit of God co-operating there is caused a servile fear and trembling a kind of contrition and humiliation which the Apostle Rom. 8.15 cals the spirit of bondage causing fear when the Spirit of God puts an edge upon the Law puts a sword into the hand of the Law to prick and wound the heart and to restrain it in the wayes of sin for fear of punishment Many a man and woman hears the Law opened and the threatnings of it thundringly denounced but stir not are little moved but when once the Lord by his Spirit puts an edge upon the Law then the stoutest heart trembles and quakes Now that the Law may have a kindly work upon us 1. By the Law let us labour for a distinct knowledge of sin 2. Rightly to understand what the Curse is which the Law threatneth unto sin and sinners 3. Examine our selves how guilty we are of that which the Law threatens the Curse unto to wit sin 4. Finding our selves guilty to labour our hearts to a deep contrition and humiliation Now as we have heard before as the Law hath a stroke in this work why so the Gospel more and more melting the heart by discovering Christ whom the sinner hath pierced by his sins and by supporting the heart by a secret hope of mercy and possibility of help in and through Christ even as Jonah Chap. 2. verse 4. Then I said I am cast out of thy sight yet I will look again toward thy holy Temple Or as the Prodigal Son Luke 15.17 18. And when he came to himself he said How many hired servants of my fathers house have bread enough and to spare and I perish with hunger I will arise and go to my father and will say unto him father I have sinned against heaven and before thee c. Now after the Law hath humbled us and the Gospel conveyed this glimpse of hope into our hearts it must be nourished and cherished 1. By considering of the Lords Infinite and Almighty Power how he is able more and more to bruise our souls to make us more and more capable of Christ and so to bring Christ nearer unto us that we may partake of him and his benefits Luke 1.37 With God nothing shall be unpossible And Matth. 3.9 God is able of stones to raise up children unto Abraham 2. The freeness of Gods mercy must be considered of he requires nothing of thee to procure this mercy but shewes mercy because he will shew mercy Suppose thou hast never so many exceptions to thy self why yet thou belonging unto him and his mercy being a free mercy he will proceed with thee until he hath made thee capable of Christ and bestowed Christ upon thee and his benefits Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh And Isaiah 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake 3. For supporting of this hope consider we of the riches of Gods mercy unto the proper objects of mercy Contrite and Humble men
are destitute of this grace to be for the present in a wofull condition no measure of this grace no benefit by Christ and then woe and alas Vse 2 For trial and examination whether we be qualified with this grace or no seeing it is of such necessity as that without it we cannot partake of Christ and his Benefits To this purpose 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether you be in the faith that is whether a true faith be in you or no prove your owne selves know you not your own selves how that Jesus Christ is in you except ye be Reprobates Now if we say we have a Justifying faith First How came we by it How was it wrought in us Did it come by hearing of the word Rom. 10.17 Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God Hath the Law been thy School-master to bring thee to Christ Gal. 3.24 Hath the ministry of the Law effectually discovered thy sins and miserable condition unto thee and so thy heart became contrite and broken Before Christ came into thy heart did John the Baptist come preparing his way Mark 1.2 This is the ordinary way whereby the Lord brings his Elect to faith before the Gospel work it instrumentally the Law prepares unto it 2. Thou that sayest thou hast faith how hast thou held it Hath it not been with doubtings and fears as the father of the possessed child Mark 9.24 Lord I believe help thou mine unbelief It is true indeed that doubting is not of the nature of faith but just contrary unto it yet there is no faith altogether without doubting although it cannot be denyed but as faith growes so doubting is expelled Many will say they never doubted they thank God but that such persons never had faith I need not doubt to affirm 2. Weigh we the effects and fruits of this Grace 1. It will make a man or a woman earnestly to desire after the word Job 23.12 I esteemed the words of his mouth more then my necessary food And 1 Pet. 2.2 As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby Amos 8.12 the Believer is described to be such an one as runs to and fro to seek the word of the Lord when there is a scarcity of it Such as in the ordinary course are indifferent whether they hear the word or no have an indifferent faith I mean none no true faith and there be abundance of such persons like to the Faction in Corinth that gloried they were neither followers of Paul nor of Apollo nor of Cephas but of Christ only They would seem so to depend upon Christ that they cared for never a Preacher of them all nor regarded to partake of their Ministry And so many men and women at this day that hope they say to be saved by Christ and yet care not in the least for the Ministry of the word but this hope of theirs is but a vain hope 2. A second fruit of this faith it is plentiful in Prayers and Supplications so we read of Paul in the swadling bands of Conversion Acts 9.11 Behold he prayeth And David Psal 86.3 I cry unto thee daily nay Psal 55.17 Evening and Morning and at noon will I pray and cry aloud And one special thing Believers pray for is an encrease of this grace Luke 17.5 O Lord encrease our faith So the Apostles praied And Mark 9.24 the father of the possessed child cryed out Lord I believe help thou mine unbelief There is a great difference betwixt the praying of such as have this grace and such as have it not Such as have not this grace praying especially for temporal things and if for Spiritual things in a lip cold carelesse and carnal way but the Believer especially for Spiritual things as before and from the heart earnestly as Galat. 4.6 Because ye are sons God hath sent fortht he Spirit of his Son onto your hearts crying Abba father Ephes 6.18 3. The third effect and fruit of this faith is Sins Mortification in some measure 1 Joh. 5.4 5. This grace purifies the heart as Acts 15.9 And this effect of faith is thus grounded 1. Because it applieth all that Christ did and suffered particularly to a man and perswadeth his soul that out of his love to him and care to keep him from perishing everlastingly he endured all that he did endure as Galat. 2.20 Who loved me and gave himself for me and hence the Believer cannot but love Christ again and manifest the same by setting himself against that which he knowes Christ hates to wit sin 1 John 4.19 2 Cor. 5.14 15. 2. The second ground is Because this Grace unites a man to Christ Joh. 15.5 brings Christ into the soul now if Christ be in the soul sin must needs be weakening and decaying Many pretend faith but where is the abatement of corruption See Malach. 4.2 But unto you that fear my name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings This Sun did never arise and shine upon any heart but it brought an healing vertue with it The fourth effect of faith A high esteem of the godly be they never so poor and a mean esteem of the wicked be they never so rich so the Psalmist sets forth the Believer Psal 15.4 In whose eyes a vile person is contemned suppose they be never so rich and wealthy but he honoureth them that fear the Lord be they never so mean and poor Now many in the ordinary course who are they familiar with but the wicked and whom do they oppose but the godly and for Godliness sake Such are far from having any measure of this grace 5. The fifth effect and fruit of this faith is A fear to offend God in any thing Prov. 28.14 Happy is the man that feareth alway to wit to offend God the true Believer is this man And Psal 130.4 There is forgiveness with thee saith the true Believer to God that thou mayest be feared The contrite and broken hearted sinner doth no sooner believe his sins to be pardonable through the rich mercy of God in Christ but he fears to offend God in the least thing he knowes to be sin and therefore tell such a party that unbelief is a sin and that he offends by doubting of Gods mercy in Christ Oh how doth he bewail his unbelief and earnestly strive after faith 6. And lastly Although the true Believer may sometimes doubt whether he hath faith or no yet he would not part with that faith of his which he so questions upon any termes for any thing and upon deliberation he would not change Estates with any Natural man no not with the best Civillist neither would he be in the same estate he was sometimes for all the world Thus much for the second Use wherein we have examined the justifying Faith Vse 2. To exhort every man and woman to labour for this Faith seeing without it we cannot partake of Christ and
the Law that is to say by his holiness or inherent Righteousness but by the faith of Jesus Christ that is to say but by faith only apprehending and applying Christ the material and merit orious cause of Justification And to the same purpose Rom. 3.28 We conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the Law And see Believers up and down in Scripture renouncing their works in the way of Justification as David Psal 143.2 Enter not into judgment with thy servant O Lord for in thy sight shall no man living be justified And Isai 64 6. see what the Church saith We are all as an unclean thing and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags So John the Baptist Mat. 3.14 to Christ I have need to be baptized of thee And the Apostle Paul Philip. 3.12 Not as though I were already perfect And the Apostle James James 3.2 In many things we offend all and so 1 John 1.8 If we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and there is no truth in us The Papists so erring in this weighty doctrine know them to be in a wofull and desperate estate and especially in regard of this last errour Gal. 3.10 As many as are of the works of the Law that is look to be justified by their works and inherent righteousnesse are under the curse And Gal. 5.4 Christ is become of non● effect unto you whosoever of you are justified by the law that is to say so many of you as hope to be justified by your works have no benefit by Christ Vse 2. For the great comfort and consolation of all true beleevers they are justifyed persons and that this is no small ground of comfort is plain if we seriously consider the parts of justification As first sins remission all a mans sins to be blotted out of the book of Gods remembrance and never to be imputed unto him Let us hear what David saith in this case Psal 32.1 Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven and whose sin is covered And no marvel that this is Davids judgment sin being the greatest evil and the proper cause of all other evils and further this being an infalliable truth the cause being taken away the effect must needs cease all afflictions and judgments then being but trials or fatherly chastisements The Ministers of God must comfort the people of God Isa 40.1 Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith your God but how and upon what ground See verse 2d. Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned and this is the course our Saviour takes with the palsie man Mat. 9.2 Son be of good chear thy sins are forgiven thee and when he would comfort the penitent woman Luke 7.48 he said unto her thy sins are forgiven Hence indeed to wit from assurance of sins pardon and reconciliation with God ariseth that peace which passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 no heart being able to conceive the worth of this peace but that only that hath felt and enjoyed it so then this part of justification unto the true beleever is no small ground of comfort And if we consider of the other part of justification to wit the imputation of Christs righteousnesse is not that likewise unto the true beleever a ground of comfort see Isa 61.10 where the Church speaking of this righteousnesse saith I will greatly rejoyce in the Lord my soul shall be joyfull in my God for he hath clothed me with the garments of salvation he hath covered me with the robe of righteousnesse as a bridegrom decketh himself with ornaments and as a bride adorneth her self with her jewels It is not a little comfort the Christian findeth in that inherent righteousnesse which God by his spirit hath wrought in him though it be so stained and imperfect as it is when he can find that he hath been able to poure out his soul unto the Lord to mourn for his own sins and the sins of the times or to do any other service to God with an honest and upright heart O what a comfort it is unto him 1 Chron. 29.9 Then the people rejoyced for that they offered willingly because with perfect heart they offered willingly to the Lord and David the King also rejoyced with great joy And 2 Cor. 1.12 Our rejoycing is this the testimonie of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world and more aboundantly to you wards But if this poor and imperfect righteousnesse afford such comfort how just cause of comfort and rejoycing hath every true beleever that he hath another manner of righteousnesse then this to wit the perfect righteousnesse of the Lord Jesus Job saith of his inherent righteousnesse whereby he had been so rich in good works Job 29.14 I put on righteousnesse and it clothed me And a goodly garment doubtlesse that was Grace is a goodly garment certainly but if that garment that hath so many spots and rents in in it be so goodly what is the perfect righteousness of Christ that clean and white garment Rev. 19.8 And thus the Lord deals with the true beleever nor only takes from him his filthy garments Zach. 3.4 to wit his sins but likewise cloaths him with change of raiment to wit the pure and spotless robe of Christs righteousness a garment absolutely sufficient to make the beleever beautiful in Gods eyes Thus we see the great cause of comfort the true beleever hath in that hee is a justifyed person in Gods sight Vse 3. To exhort every man and woman destitute of faith to labour for it seeing this is an undoubted truth that all true Believers are justified persons their sins remitted and they cloathed with the white robe of Christs righteousnesse and if Justified why then the adopted sons and daughters of God Joh. 1.12 And so likewise Sanctified Justification and Sanctification being ever inseparable Thus far touching the fourth Member of the fourth Principle Now we come to the fifth and last Membet of the same MEMBER V. And Sanctified HEre we have the latter benefit which the true Believer receives by Christ to wit Sanctification And for the handling of it we commend unto you this point of Doctrine Doctr. Such persons as truly apprehend and apply Christ and his merits unto themselves are not only Justified but Sanctified Or thus Justification and Sanctification are inseparable The truth of this we may observe in the coupling together of the two last Petitions in the Lords Prayer Matth. 6.12 13. Forgive us our debts or trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil The former Petition being for Justification the later for Sanctification And the Apostle Paul in the five first Chapters of the Epistle to the Romans having handled the Doctrine of Justification presently in the beginning
is very willing to hearken to the Apostle Jude ver 23. injoyning him to hate even the garment spotted by the fl●sh And to the Apostle Paul 1 Thes 5.22 abstain from all appearance of evill and would faine imitate David Psal 119.101 I have refrained my feet from every evill way that I may keep thy word It is not any known sin no not the least that he dare allow himself in the practice of These differences are betwixt the formallist and the holy person Now we come to lay down some direct signes and marks of sanctification 1. The first signe is A renewed knowledg that is to say a new light in the mind and understanding conceiving the things of the spirit of God Colos 3.10 And have put on the new man speaking of the holy Colossians which is renewed in knowledg as though all that were sanctified had a renewed knowledg This is a part of Gods covenant with his Elect Jer. 31.34 They shall all know me from the least of them unto the greatest of them saith the Lord. And hence it is that the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 4.3 If our Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost And upon this ground it is that the sanctified are called the children of light 2 Thes 5.5 The unsanctified may have a great deal of literall and speculative knowledg but they have not a jot of spiritual and approving knowledg The second signe of one sanctified is a new quality in the will a readinesse to hear the voice of God in all things and to obey it John 8.47 He that is of God heareth Gods words yee therefore hear them not saith our Saviour to the rebellious Jewes because ye are not of God And Psal 27.8 saith David to God When thou saidst Seek yee my face my heart answered Thy face Lord will I seek The sanctified person hath a flexible heart to the word The third Signe new affections As especially love to God Psal 18.1 I will love thee oh Lord my strength saith David And Psal 116.1 I love the Lord. Thus we see sanctified persons described Psal 97.10 Ye that love the Lord hate evill And this love to God the sanctified person manifests divers waies 1. By an earnest desire after such means as whereby he may have converse with God as praier reading and hearing of the word c. How was David addicted to the use of those means if we look into the book of the Psalms and so all the Worthies of God we read of in the Scriptures Oh how is the sanctified man or woman crossed if they be the least restrained of their liberties these ways and however the unregenerate part be backward to the duties aforesaid yet this they mourn for and do not in the ordinary course omit them 2. They manifest their love to God by a love to his children 1 John 5.1 Every one that loveth him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of him See David Psalm 16.2.3 My goodnesse extendeth not to thee but to the Saints that are in the earth and to the excellent in whom is all my delight And Psal 119.63 I am a companion of all them that fear thee and of them that keep thy precepts The more holy the more watchful the more they observe the image of God to shine upon any the more they love them Such as love not the Saints are not sanctified 3. They manifest their love to God by an endeavour of universal obedience John 14.15 If ye love me saith our Saviour keep my commandments And verse 21. He that hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is and he only that loveth me And therefore see what David saith Psal 119.5 Oh that my waies were directed to keep thy statutes The sanctified man out of his very love to God would fain keep his commandments Fourthly They manifest their love to God by a grief and heavinesse when the Lord is at any time absent from them in their own apprehensions Psal 28.1 Vnto thee will I cry O Lord my rock be not silent to me lest if thou be silent to me I become like them that go down into the pit And Psal 88.14 Lord why castest thou off my soul Why hidest thou thy face from me Thus we see the third signe and mark of sanctification a love to God and this love manifested as you have heard The fourth signe of sanctification A continual combat betwixt the flesh and the spirit Gal. 5.17 There may be a combat in the unsanctified and is divers times but that is between two several faculties the conscience and the will the conscience terrifying from sin the will pulling and haling unto it Now this is not a combat betwixt the flesh and the spirit but a combat betwixt the flesh fearing and the flesh desiring whereas the combat that is in the sanctified is in one and the same faculty As for example the will of the sanctified person drawing two waies at one and the same time the flesh one way and the spirit another I mean corruption one way and grace another corruption the unregenerate part drawing to sin grace the regenerate part at one and the same time pulling back And so on the contrary grace the regenerate part moving to good but at one and the same time the flesh corruption pulling back as Rom. 7.19 The good that I would I do not but the evill which I would not that I do And many like passages we have in this same chapter And so Galat. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so that ye cannot do the things that ye would This is an evident mark of grace for there cannot be this combat but there must needs be sanctification Vse 3. For Exhortation And there be two branches of it First to exhort all such as are sanctified to endeavour a progresse a growth in grace for as we have heard although justification hath no degrees why yet sanctification hath And therefore such as have grace must ever be labouring further degrees Now to this purpose some Motives and Means Motive 1. Gods command 2 Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledg of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ The Thessalonians were a very holy people and yet 1 Thes 4.10 the Apostle would have them to abound more and more Motive 2. This will be a demonstration to us that the grace we have is kindly and of the right stamp it being the nature of true grace ever to desire the encrease of it selfe See Matth. 13.31 32. The kingdome of heaven that is to say the kingdome of grace is like to a grain of mustard seed which a man took and sowed in his field which indeed is the least of all seeds but when it is growen it is the greatest among herbs and becometh a tree so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches thereof And verse 33.
ordinance our faith may be encreased Answ Something we must do before receiving something in and about the act of receiving And something after we have received 1. For the first part of the answer what we must do before our receiving This the Apostle acquaints us with 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man examine himself and so let him eat of that bread and drink of that cup. Now we are to know that when the Apostle saith let a man examine himself he doth not leave it to our choice and discretion as let a man examine himself if he so please But the Apostle speaks imperatively that is I injoyn and command from the Lord every one before they receive to practice this duty of self-examination that they sequester themselves from all other occasions and in their thoughts make choice of fit time and place and so seriously fall upon this businesse And if it be demanded what we must examine our selves of or about I answer first whether we have some measure of saving faith or no. For first if we have no measure of this grace how can we expect an encrease of it by the Sacrament an encrease of that we are not at all possessed of 2. If we have no measure of this grace what have we to do at the Supper of the Lord it being an ordinance to confirm and strengthen faith where it is already begun and not to begin it where it is not 3. If upon serious examination we find no measure of this grace begun in us hereby we shall or at least should be occasioned more earnestly and constantly to depend upon the ministry of the word that this grace may be wrought in us and so in time we fitted to approach to the Lords Table And 4. If upon examination it appear we have some measure of this grace hereby we shall not only be encouraged to present our selves at the Lords Table but hereby likewise not only this grace of faith but all other graces fitting a worthy communiacant wil be pointed quickned and stirred up in us that so we may more profitably and comfortably receive And this is one main reason why this duty of self-examination must be renewed as oft as we partake at the Lords Table it being an excellent means to quicken and set on work the graces of Gods spirit that so we may receive more worthily Now in affirming a man must examine himself before he partake at the Lords Table it is not our purpose to justle out self-examination at other times as though a man were never to examine himself but then For he that doth not practise a weekly nay daily examination it is to be feared will be far to seek in this Duty when he should by it prepare himself to the Sacrament Although we make some difference betwixt the weekly or daily examination and the examination before the Sacramen● the former being but a reviewing and considering of our daily disobedience and unkind dealing with the Lord every way so kind and gracious unto us the better to prepare and fit to secret prayer But the latter being a tryal of our selves how we are qualified as fitting Communicants Now to lay down some Marks and Signes of a true saving faith 1 Do we observe our selves very short in this Grace and is it a trouble and grief unto us Mark 9.24 Many speak of a good faith they have had ever since they were born and thank God they have alwayes been freed from doubting but such persons are farre from a true saving faith But if upon a true sight and sense of our misery wee would faine apply Christ and the promise of pardon and forgiveness in and through him grieve because we can come no nearer Christ and can get him no nearer unto us This is a good signe 2. What means do we use that we may grow in faith Do we pray earnestly for an encrease of it Luke 17.5 many seldome or never employ themselves this way seldome or never pray for faith an ill signe whatsoever they think of themselves 2. Do we earnestly hunger and thirst after the ministry of the Word that so we may grow in this grace 1 Pet. 2.2 Divers regard not this ordinance are very indifferent whether they partake of it or no This is a very bad signe 3. Do we love a Saint as a Saint even a poor man or woman that we perswade our selves to be truly religious and godly better then the richest man or woman irreligious or ungodly 1 John 3.14 Psal 16.2 3. Many persons of all people they cannot away with the forward in religion have not a good word for them a very ill signe 4. Is there in us an earnest endeavour after universal obedience although we daily take up our arrows short yet we do not favour our selves in this known sin or that but mourn for it strive against it although the corruption inward and unknown to others Psal 18.23 and 119.101 Heb. 13.18 But if our course be uneven we obey in some things but have no care to obey in other things in all things it is an ill signe Mark 6.20 And such is the obedience of the most This is the first thing we must examine our selves of and about to wit whether we have saving faith or no which if we have not some measure of we have nothing to do at the Lords Table but if we come come upon our perill and to the great indangering of our selves And yet such persons must not sit downe satisfied without the Sacrament but must earnestly in the use of all other means labour for faith that so at the length they may warrantably and comfortably partake of this ordinance This I say is the first thing we must examine our selves of and about before our receiving Whether we have some measure of saving faith or no. 2. The second thing we must examine our selves of and about before we partake at the Lords Table if so be we be such as have formerly and heretofore worthily received is how we have profited in faith and other graces since the last time we received The Lords Table is a feast of growth and the Lord expects at our hands that the oftner we come to his Table the more we should come on in grace Now if upon examination we find our selves to grow we may come with the more boldnesse and courage that so we may still make a further progresse our experience of receiving good at this feast putting us on But if so be upon examination we find our selves to have been bad proficients have suffered grace to go out of exercise this or that corruption to get head we must be the more humbled and dejected And the greater our slips and falls have been the more to make our hearts soft and tender by courses of humiliation the more earnest we must be with the Lord for pardon and forgivenesse and that he would blesse our approaching unto and proceeding at his table that so we
may renew our spirituall strength and come on in the course of Christianity And one thing we would adde even to those that carry themselves the most holily and watchfully betwixt Sacraments that seeing they gather and contract so much rubbish and soil in the intermission as they stand in great need to quicken and stir up their desire to the Sacrament and all other graces fitting worthy communicants that these I say would by extraordinary praier before they come to the Sacrament quicken and stir up the graces of Gods Spirit in themselves that so they may receive the more worthily And thus much now touching what we must do before we receive if so be we would receive to the encrease of our faith The second thing is what we must do in and about the act of receiving if so be we would receive worthily and to the encrease of our faith Answ Such as have prepared themselves as aforesaid First must labour to make sure to partake of all the publick ordinances before the administration of the Sacrament they must not come dropping in when the Minister is at praier or in his Sermon but should take all the ordinances before them 2. Betwixt the Ministers going out of the pulpit and his repairing to the Lords Table stir up thy self by considering that now thou art upon a great businesse to renew thy covenant with the Lord and the Lord with thee he to continue thy gracious faithfull and all-sufficient God in and through Christ for thy good every way And thou to continue his servant in better obedience then ever hitherto thou hast performed unto him and as the Lord intends fairly and faithfully towards thee so earnestly desire and resolve the like towards him 3. When the Minister doth addresse himself to the Celebration then seriously summon thy outward senses and inward affections to attend the whole businesse in hand Let nothing done at this sacred feast fall to the ground but employ thy outward senses upon the elements and upon the sacramentall acts of Minister and people and consider with thy self for the inciting and stirring up of thy faith that they are all signifying and sealing as before thou hast heard and so whilst thou art thus employed thou shalt not only receive the bread and wine of the Lord but the bread and wine which is the Lord as the one outwardly so the other inwardly Thus we have heard what must be done in and about the act of receiving Now we come to the third thing what must be done after we have received Answ 1. We must be willing to joyn with the congregation in praise and thanksgiving and so like wise in our liberality to the poor Matth. 26.30 Heb. 13.16 1 Cor. 16.1 2. 2. After we are departed the congregation we must labour to keep up our faith verily perswading our selves that the Lord will not fail a jot of his covenant renewed with us but as he hath said and sealed so he will work in us and for us It is Satans manner with some good communicants presently after they have received to stir up in them thoughts of unbelief as though their communicating were to no purpose but had been altogether in vain But in this case let them remember that the flesh of Christ is meat indeed and his blood drink indeed and that the Lord in the Sacrament doth not mock the prepared soul but intends fairly and in faithfulnesse 3. Sometime that day in secret take a survey and review of thy receiving what inward converse there was betwixt thee and the Lord in that businesse what secret signes and passages of love how thy affections were stirred and moved and how they continue Now in this survey and review if thou find there hath been little stirring and moving but rather deadnesse and dulnesse then thou hast just cause to suspect that there was some great want in thy preparation which if upon examination thou perceivest thou must greatly humble and judg thy self that so thou mayest not be judged of the Lord. 1 Cor. 11.31 But if upon examination thou find that thou seriously endeavoredst to prepare thy self as did befit this sacred businesse although thou must be sensible of the affliction yet thou must not be too much dismaied but in the Lords means wait the Lords time for the fruit of the Sacrament remembring what the holy Ghost saith Psal 97.11 Light is sown for the righteous and gladnesse for the upright in heart Now on the contrary if in this survey and review thou dost find thou didst speed well at the Sacrament that thou hadst sweet converse with the Lord thy affections graciously stirred and moved and so continue Oh then thou hast great cause 1. To blesse and praise God 2. From this experience of his love to be confidently earnest with him that thou maiest daily find and feel the fruit of the Sacrament And 3. Upon this ground hast thou not cause to be forward to this feast another time nay at all times as thou seest a call And 4. and lastly hast thou not cause the more carefully to look to the covenant on thy part as thou hast vowed so to pay as thou hast promised new obedience better obedience so to endeavour the performance Psal 76.11 and 116.14 18. Eccles 5.4 5. And thus now we have answered the fourth question what must be done of us that in the use of this Sacrament our faith may be encreased We come to the Uses Vse 1 To inform us touching the great wrong the Popish teachers labour to do the people of God as concerning this ordinance by their altering adding detracting annihilating 1. By their altering they changing the nature of this ordinance turning this Sacrament into a propitiatory sacrifice for the sins of the living and the dead the Minister into a sacrificing Priest and the communion Table into an Altar 2. By adding a multitude and world of ceremonies to this ordinance of their own inventing and which have no footsteps in the word of God they so contrarying this businesse as though they were in hand with some masking shew or acting some stage play 3. By detracting they depriving the people of the wine as though they were unwilling they should have a full meal Nay 4. They altogether annihilating this ordinance by their cursed transubstantiation teaching upon the words of consecration that the elements cease to be in regard of their substance and that they are changed into the body and blood of Christ Thus and many other waies do the popish teachers go about to wrong Gods people in regard of this excellent ordinance a speciall means which the Lord hath appointed for the encrease and furtheranee of his peoples faith Vse 2 To reprove divers persons 1. All such as adventure to this Sacrament not being qualified with saving faith How can such persons expect an encrease of that which they are not at all possessed of nay what have such to do at the Lords Table The truth
is they have no call unto it but in coming they partake unworthily in a high degree If such as are true believers may partake unworthily as is very evident in the example of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11.17 c. How unworthily do they partake alas what do all such when they receive but exceedingly prophane this holy ordinance And that this is no little sin do but see 1 Cor. 11.27 that is guilty of the death of Christ Now it is a great sin to be guilty of the death of any man but to be guilty of the death of an innocent man of the death of the innocent Lamb of God of his death who was God as well as man how foul and horrible a crime is this If the death of Abel did lie so heavily upon the conscience of Cain Gen. 4.13 How should the death of the Son of God lie heavy upon their consciences that are guilty thereof And the Apostle tels us to receive unworthily as they must needs do in a high degree that have no measure of saving faith is to be guilty of the death of Christ His meaning is that all such as receive unworthily doe upon the matter consent unto the horrible fact of Judas and the Jewes in their crucifying of Christ But this is the misery that men and women will not beleeve the word of God but their own thoughts and conceits what they will say or at least think Are we not baptized persons Do we not profess the Gospel Do we not come to the Church And do we not come in our intents and meanings to receive good at the Lords Table And will you make us guilty of the same sin that Judas and the Jewes were in their crucifying of Christ and to consent to that bloodie and horrible fact of theirs I answer the Apostle affirms no lesse of all unworthy receivers And it is an undoubted truth which you have heard that all who are not qualified with some measure of saving faith receive unworthily in a high degree 1. Oh then first we see all persons grosly ignorant coming to the Lords Supper to be in a woful case there can be no saving faith in such this faith ever presupposing some measure of knowledg in the mysteries of religion Alas how many approach to this Sacrament and cannot tell what a Sacrament is what this Sacrament is what are the ends why this Sacrament was ordained neither how it should be received 2. See we all p●ophane persons coming to this Sacrament to be in a lamentable case I mean swearers drunkards whoremasters prophaners of the Sabbath c. It being plain that such have no measure of the grace aforesaid saving faith ever purifying the heart Act. 15.9 And if the heart be in some measure clean it will appear in the life 3. See we many others partaking at the Lords Table to be in a wofull case such as have some measure of knowledg and it may be are of civil conversation But they are inward opposers of sincere preaching and so of sincere professors they would either have no preaching at all or else especially approve of that which doth the most tickle the ear And so for professors of religion that are forward they have no mind no affection unto them think they are but half witted people factious and turbulent have no delight in their company Now such persons are far from the grace aforesaid And this one thing I would have you to take notice of many we have that are very forward after the Sacrament in their kind needs they must receive at Easter however and yet have no desire after the powerfull preaching of the Word care not much whether they ever hear a powerfull Sermon or no. That that we would give you to understand of such persons is this that their desire after the Sacrament is not a kindly desire and from Gods Spirit but a popish preposterous and corrupt desire Thus we have reproved the unregenerate and unbeleevers adventuring to the Lords Table and as you have seen their sin 1 Cor. 11.27 so you may the punishment attending them for the same ver 29. that is Judgment temporall eternall if they do not truly and seriously repent for it The second branch of this use of reproofe extends it self to divers who are qualified with some measure of saving faith First the Lords Supper being such an excellent means to encrease and confirme faith that they do no more frequent it when as they might often partake conscionably and comfortably no impediment being in the way but their ignorance sloth or this needlesse fear or that 1. Their ignorance not throughly receiving information what an excellent help this would be to their faith and other graces and how the Lord commands them to receive often 1 Cor. 11.6 As for other ends so to sh●w forth Christs death untill his coming to judgment Or 2. Their sloth they being unwilling to set upon that preparation which is required of those that receive worthily as though this were so difficult a thing to those that use a daily examination and upon occasion inure themselves to courses of humiliation Or 3 This or that needlesse fear As haply because their faith is so little and therfore that they should not receive worthily Whereas this should greatly induce them to hasten to this feast of fulness for the strengthening and encrease of that they complain to be so little the Sacrament being the proper portion of such especially belonging unto those truely sensible of their wants If we look at the first celebration of this ordinance we shall upon examination find that our Saviour did administer to those that were far from perfection nay full of infirmities And thus we reprove divers true beleevers 1. for not coming oft enough to the Lords Supper no just impediment lying in their way 2. To reprove divers true believers who come and it may be frequently to the Sacrament but it is in a customary way a sleepy carelesse way do not reexamine their faith do not by extraordinary prayer so stir up their graces as befits them in the act of receiving do not earnestly labour spirituall consideration summon their outward senses and inward affections to attend the whole businesse in hand And after they have received little observe the fruit of their receiving Now such are to know that partaking in this manner at the Lords Table they partake unworthily in a degree And hence it comes to passe that they are so far from gaining spiritual strength by this ordinance as they occasion the Lord to bring divers temporall judgments upon them as we may see in the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11.30 Oh therefore let all such know they have great cause to mourn for what is past and better to look to the matter for time to come And thus we have done with the use of reproof Vse 3 For Exhortation 1. To exhort all such as have not some measure of saving faith earnestly to labour after
when this great deliverance should be doth not thereupon forbear prayer but is the more earnest in prayer Dan. 9.2 3. And the Prophet David although it were revealed to him that the Lord would establish his house and the kingdom upon his posterity yet doth not cease to pray in that kind but rather prayeth 2 Sam. 7.11 12 18 19 25 26 27 28 29. 2. I answer Although by prayer we cannot alter Gods decree why yet by prayer it being hearty and holy we alter our selves the heart thereby being put into a fitting frame and so we made capable of Gods blessings Object 3 But there be divers men and women that are far from the practice of true and kindly prayer who enjoy the blessings of God in great abundance Answ It is true but yet sanctifying grace which is the best blessing they do not enjoy the least measure of it sanctifying grace and kindly praier they ever go together want the one and want the other and have the one and have the other Zach. 12.10 It is but outward blessings and common graces at the most which unpraying persons do enjoy 2. These blessings which the persons aforesaid do enjoy they enjoy them rather for the good of others then for the good of themselves suppose health wealth strength wit learning Cyrus was a man of great parts and power but was it not for the good of the Church rather then for his own good Isa 45.4 3. There is a great difference betwixt the having of blessings through the providence of God and the having them from the mercy of God and his speciall love in Christ Unpraying persons have blessings only the former way and not in mercy 4. The blessings such have it were better for them to be without them they proving but snares unto them and they living to abuse them to their owne utter overthrow Object 4 But there be divers that use prayer and have prayed for this and that blessing a long time but yet come short of it Answ This may be true and for the reasons and upon the grounds following 1 It may be the parties we speak of live in some known sin or sins unrepented of and then what promise have they of audience Psal 66.18 Job 11.13.14 Or 2. It may be they ask such things as would not be good for them to enjoy and then it is no unkindnesse but love in the Lord to deny them See we how the promise runs Psal 34.10 Matth. 7.11 Or 3. It may be they ask in an evill manner in their praiers prefer temporall blessings to spirituall or if they be earnest for spirituall blessings it is not because of the excellencie and beauty of them but only because of the necessity of them because without them they cannot be saved Or it may be they ask heedlesly and irreverently do not consider of the Lords majesty and greatnesse Psal 2.11 and 5.7 Or it may be they ask coldly and faintly Jam. 5.16 and are such suitors like to speed Or it may be they go in a proud way to God as the Pharisee Luke 18.11 not with a through sense of their own unworthinesse and wants as the Publican and Prodigal Luke 18.13 and 15.21 Or else it may be they do not ask in faith that is do not lay the promises before them grounding their confidence upon them Or do not in their prayres set before them the worthinesse of their advocate and high Preist who sits at his fathers right hand to present their prayers unto him and to make them acceptable unto him Now the persons we are speaking of asking in an evil manner to wit in the manner aforesaid it is no wonder that they speed no better Jam. 4.3 Or 4. Suppose they do not live in any known sin unrepented of and that the things which they ask would be good for them in Gods time and that they pray in a right manner Suppose all these things why yet there may be divers good reasons why the Lord doth defer and delay them As 1. Hereby to make trial of their faith as we may see in the woman of Canaan Matth. 15.22 c. Although the Lord did intend to grant her suit yet he deferred her and put her off long and all for the trial of her faith ver 28. Or 2. He defers them the more to humble them He intended to take from Paul that messenger of Satan wherewith he was b●ffeted but not so soon as he would have had it Paul was not yet sufficiently humbled but in danger to have been puffed up with his former revelations 2 Cor. 12.7 8.9 As if the Lord had said it is too soon for thee Paul to be rid of that thorn thou must be brought to a greater pitch of humilliation Or 3. He defers them to make them more earnest and importunate in prayer as we may see in the examples before alledged to wit the woman of Canaan and Paul Or 4. He defers them lest they should think that they merited by their prayers although never so fervent Dan. 9.17 18 19. Or 5. He defers them that they might be more able to use and manage those blessings he means to bestow upon them This was one cause why he deferred to bring David to the kingdome that he might be the better able to manage it when he came to be possessed of it 6. Or lastly He defers them that he might cause them to account more highly of the good things they obtain of him by prayer The good things that are easily and readily come by are usually lightly esteemed After the Spouse had lost her welbeloved long it is said Cant. 3.4 She held him c. 5. And in the last place for answering of the objection we are to know that the Lord grants requests divers waies 1. When he gives the particular blessing begged As Gen. 20.17 1 Sam. 1.27 2. When denying the particular thing begged he gives a better thing As Gen. 17.18 19 And 2 Sam. 12.16 compared with verse 24.25 of the same chapter 3. When though he neither grant the thing begged nor a better thing in the same kind why yet he supporteth by his grace and giveth strength to beare the want of it As 2 Cor. 12.9 And Psalm 138.3 Hebr● 5.7 4. When the particular blessing begged is not given and afforded why yet the Lord warmes and cheeres the heart by assuring that the person and prayer is accepted Philip. 4.6 7. Psal 35.13 5. Lastly When the particular blessing is not obtained neither inward comfort afforded and yet the Lord gives to hold out in prayer abilitie and strength to pray when God seemeth to neglect is a speciall work and fruit of Gods Spirit Rom. 8.26 Now God cannot but hear and regard the voice of his own spirit for verse 27. he knoweth that is approveth it And Psal 10.17 See also thus have we answered the main objections against prayer We come now to the fourth thing propounded touching prayer to wit