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A42920 The holy arbor, containing a body of divinity, or, The sum and substance of Christian religion collected from many orthodox laborers in the Lords vineyard, for the benefit and delight of such as thirst after righteousness / ... by John Godolphin ... vvherein also are fully resolved the questions of whatsoever points of moment have been, or are, now controverted in divinity : together with a large and full alphabetical table of such matters as are therein contained ... Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1651 (1651) Wing G943; ESTC R9148 471,915 454

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too much sorrow arising from the grief of the punishment 2 Cor. 2.7 7.10 3. Of those who are troubled in minde for sins supposing that their sins are so great and so many that God cannot nor will not forgive them This kinde ariseth from grief for sin and is twofold viz. 1. Temporary onely for a time This is curable and may happen to a childe of God 2. Final and incurable This kinde is onely incident to the Reprobate The causes of Despair are twofold viz. 1. Hidden and secret So Reprobation may be said to be the cause of final Despair 2. Open and more manifest which generally are these four Unbelief Impenitency Hardness of Heart and An absolute Denyal of the known Truth joyned with Blasphemy The more particular open causes of Despair are these viz. 1. The greatness and multitude of sins Gen. 4.13 2. The multitude of Temptations Judg. 3.1 Gen. 21.1 3. The often falling into sin This is incident to the best Prov. 24.24 4. Overmuch grief melancholly and sadness of heart Prov. 15.13 5. Ignorance in mindes not instructed in the Reconciliation by Christ 6. An inveterate custom in sinning whence proceeds hardness of heart 7. The too much consideration of our own unworthiness with the least reflection on Christ and his Merits 8. That compelled Abnegation and denyal of the known Truth through tyrannical Violence and Compulsion too hard for the weakness of the flesh Four Caveats in private Confession convenient in case of Distress of minde Jam. 5.16 1. It must not be urged as a thing simply or absolutely necessary to Salvation 2. It need not be of all sins but of such as trouble the Conscience 3. It is especially to be made to Ministers though it may be made to any man 4. The person to whom it is made must be one of trust and fidelity Helps and Remedies against Despair or that we may the better avoid Desperation and carnal security we are always to have in minde 1. That the Promises of Grace and Favor to Mankinde are universal Mark 11.38 2. The Promises of Mercy how hainous soever ours sins have been Isa 1.18 3. That the Mercy of God is above all sin Rom. 20. 4. That the Doctrine of the Gospel for the free Remission of sins is to be preached not unto a few but universally and generally unto all Mat. 28.19 5. That the Seals of the Covenant are appointed to be given to all men which are members of the Visible Church or desirous to be incorporated thereinto Matth. 28.19 26.26 27. 6. That as the Disobedience of Adam brought Condemnation on all men So the Blood and Obedience of Christ is All-sufficient to wash away all sins and that of all men 1 Cor. 11.24 7. That God delights not in any sinners Death but desires his Conversion Ezek. 33. 8. That if any Believer sin he hath a sufficient Advocate with the Father 1 Joh. 2.2 Heb. 9.24 Rom. 8.34 9. Labor to lay hold upon the Promises by a right-grounded Faith 10. Take heed of too much melancholly and worldly sorrow 11. Consider the grievousness of the sin of Despair 12. Remember the Passion of Christ the Truth and greatness of his Mercy 13. Have in minde the Examples of mercy as to Murther and Adultery in David to Apostacy in Peter to Idolatry in Manasseh to Theft in the Thief on the Cross to Blasphemy in Paul and much Iniquity and Impurity in Mary having many foul Devils in her 14. The Indignity offered unto God by Despair seeing we refuse to trust him upon his most holy Word and the inevitable destruction of our own Souls thereby consider That so long as we despair not we are not shut out from Mercy upon Repentance but while we despair there is no hope we are lost for ever and most worthily Again to avoid Despair it is necessary that we pray to be kept and preserved 1. From presumptuous and notorious sins most chiefly as Murther Apostacy Adultery Blasphemy c. 2. From wicked Company which like a violent stream and torrent doth force men to all kinde of wickedness 3. From the Neglect of Gods Worship whereby we lose our Spiritual Armature and are laid naked to our potent foes 4. From the love of and immoderate affection to the things of this world which having the heart if they fail our heart faileth also and a wide gap is opened to Despair Reader When ere thou meat one in Despair Lock thine Ears his very breath poisons th' Air Nothing but Sulphur from his Lungs proceed Hot enough to make an Adamant bleed Of Gods free Promises discourse the point And thou wilt finde his Soul quite out of joynt His lips foam Blasphemies and who can tell But that his Heart goes to the tune of Hell In this sad case his wound is much the worse In that he holds the Salve his greatest Curse §. 10. Of Pride THe last Vice in opposition to this Commandment which we promised to touch was Pride a sin so obviously condemned even by Heathen Writers as we shall here onely abstract it is as it were from that Pride which is so generally condemned and taking the word in somewhat a more strict sense chiefly as it relates to Inward Spiritual Arrogancy the insensible poison even of a sanctified heart we shall onely glance at it and proceed to the Second Commandment Pride is a puffing up of the heart and minde proceeding from the opinion of some good thing in us more then in other men Pride truly so called is the most pestilent and incompatible Opposite that Grace hath and therefore he that is most sanctified most fights against it For besides that impoisoned tincture our Souls are stained with by this sin in our depraved Nature the subtile Serpent experimentally knows how to manage it with most accurate policy who follows this poison with such eagerness and activity sweetning it with such specious Delusions that after it is expelled by the Antidote of Faith he yet endeavors with all the power and policy of Hell that some spice thereof may remain behinde even in the Soul humbled for sin and devoted unto the service of God For being exactly experienced in all advantages for Spiritual Assaults and tempering the powerful Ingredients of his Temptations with the Reliques of mans proud Nature doth cunningly perswade him to advance above that which is meet within himself in his own opinion the worth of his own Graces and Vertues by reason of the predominancy and delightsomness whereof the undermining Venom and cankering Pestilency of this sin corrodes the Soul and frets out the very heart of Grace undiscernably This Lyon in a Lambs skin ths Devil in an Angels shape this sin of Spiritual Pride is the harder to be expelled because so easie to be entertained and so difficult to be discerned such is the insensibleness of those Meanders wherein she walks invisibly when she haunts the Saints and children of God who with the more circumspection and
Cor. 1.30 Col. 1.19 in whom are hid all the treasures of it of whose fulness we receive Grace for Grace Joh. 1.16 Christs Holiness as he is Man being the Root of our Sanctification as Adams Unrighteousness was of our corruption Thus Sanctification is nothing else but the repairing of the Image of God in us which was lost in Adam which Image of God was when the understanding was enlightned with the true knowledge of God and of his Worship instead whereof by the Fall came the Ignorance of God and his Service Wickedness hating Vertue and loving Sin and weakness to every thing that is good Now Sanctification amendeth the corruption planted in our mindes and repaireth the decay of the Soul otherwise cast away and undone by Original Sin for man by Nature is an enemy to God full of wickedness and a servant of Sin This Natural corruption of the Minde Will and Affections which is amended by Sanctification we call the Flesh the created Qualities of Holiness wrought in the said Faculties by the Holy Ghost we call Spirit and Grace is the effectual working of the Truth of the Gospel to the making of us indeed partakers of the Grace whereby we are justified before God Now no man can see the Riches of Christ so as to be affected with them without the help of the Spirit for there is a maner of seeing proper onely to the Saints and that is the work of the Spirit in them otherwise we may reade the Scriptures a thousand times over we may understand them yet we shall not be affected with them till the Holy Ghost shew them unto us This is the secret of God which he revealeth to those whom he meaneth to save Now as the evidence of our Justification is a sound and true Faith so the evidence of our Sanctification is a good and clear conscience which Sanctification ever presupposeth Justification it being a fruit and evidence thereof in which respect we are said to be justified by Works Jam. 2.24 that is declared or manifested to be justified by Works which are the fruits of Sanctification and that the fruits of Justification And we must likewise know That the Gifts of Sanctification that are simply necessary to Salvation without which no man of years of discretion can enter into the Kingdom of Heaven as Faith and Repentance considered in themselves may both wholly and finally be lost for there is nothing in them or their Nature in us or our Nature to make them or us unchangeable Angels fell when left unto themselves and nothing in its own Nature is unchangeable but God by whose Grace of corroboration unless those Graces of absolute necessity be confirmed in us they may perish fully and finally So that the Reason why the Elect after their calling do not fall from Grace is not in the nature of Faith or the constancy of Grace it self but proceedeth wholly from the merciful Promise of God made unto the Faithful The parts of Sanctification viz. 1. Mortification whereby the power tyranny and strength of Original sin is weakned and also by little and little abolished 2. Vivification or Quickning which is when Christ dwells and reigns in our hearts by his Spirit so as we can say We henceforth live not but Christ in us Another division of Sanctification is taken from the Faculties of Man as the Sanctification 1. Of the Minde being that part of man which frameth the Reason this Paul calleth Eph. 4.5 The Spirit of the minde which must be renewed the Sanctification whereof is called Rev. 3. The Eye-salve for it is a Grace clearing the dark Minde and dim Understanding enlightning it with the true knowledge of Gods Word 2. Of the Memory which is an aptness by Grace to keep good things specially the Doctrine of Salvation when it can retain what is good and agreeable to Gods Will whereby David was preserved from sinning Psal 119.11 3. Of the Conscience which is an aptness to testifie always truly that a mans sins are pardoned and that he preserveth in his heart a care to please God 2 Cor. 1.12 This Testimony was Pauls rejoycing and Hezekiahs comfort on his death-bed and this is when the conscience checks for the least sins before actual Repentance 4. Of the Will when God gives Grace truly to will good as to Believe Fear and Obey God when it can chuse that which is acceptable to God and resist that which is evil when a man can say That though he sinde not to perform that which is good yet to will good is present with him Rom. 1.18 5. Of the Affections which chiefly are Zeal of Gods Glory The Fear of God Hatred of Sin Joy of heart for the approach of the second coming of Christ A regard of Gods Commandments A contentment and quietness of minde in all conditions of life Love to God in Christ and to Christ in Man 2 Cor. 5.14 Rom. 9.3 An high Estimation of Christ and his Blood above all things in the world Phil. 3.8 To love our Neighbor and to have a base Estimation of our selves in regard of our sins and corruptions 6. Of the Appetite which is a holy ordering of our desires in Meat Drink Apparel Riches c. And the practice of Sobriety Chastity and Contentation by which the Appetite must be governed 7. Of the Body when all the Members of it are carefully kept and preserved from being the means to execute any sin and are made the Instruments of Righteousness 8. Of the Life which stands principally in three things 1. In an Endeavor to do the Will of God that herein we may testifie our Thankfulness 2. In Testifying our love to God in man 3. In Denial of our selves and resigning our selves up wholly to the Lord. The first Beginnings and Motions of Sanctification are these 1. To feel our inward corruptions and to be displeased with our selves for them 2. To begin to hate sin and to grieve so oft as we offend God 3. To avoid the occasions of sin and to endeavor to do our duty using good means 4. To desire to sin no more and to pray to God for his Grace That we may not deceive our selves in this point of Sanctification consider That the Gifts and Graces of Gods Spirit are of two sorts viz. 1. General and common Graces whereby the corruption of mans Nature is onely restrained and limited for the maintaining of civil Societies that man with man may live in some order and quietness These and such like evil men may have for they are not sanctifying Vertues but rather shadows thereof which may be utterly taken away and quite lost as if they had never been given never had been received 2. More special and particular Graces whereby the corruption of mans Nature is mortified and in some part abolished and the Graces of Gods Image are renewed in man which in the Regenerate are true Christian vertues indeed These are of an higher nature and of greater importance then
the former and are proper onely to the sanctified Servants of God such are Faith Repentance Regeneration and other fruits of Election These shall never be quite lost The gifts pertaining to salvation are also of two sorts viz. 1. Simply Necessary without which a man cannot be saved such are Faith and Sanctification which is begun in this life where though it come not to full perfection contrary to the Anabaptists Dream yet can never be wholly lost 2. Others less Necessary not always going with Faith but sometimes onely and sometimes are separated for a time from it of this sort are a plentiful feeling of Gods favor boldness in Prayer joy in the Holy Ghost and a full assurance of Salvation these being not absolutely necessary nor always found in them though onely proper to them may for a time be wholly lost in the best and most approved Servants of God The outward familiar general and easily discernable marks of Difference betwixt the state of saving Grace and formal Hypocrisie viz. 1. The power of Grace doth beget in a Regenerate man a watchfulness care and conscience of smaller offences of secret sins of sinful thoughts of appearances of evil of all occasions of sin of prophane company of giving just offence in indifferent actions and the like The unregenerate Hypocrite takes not these things much to heart 2. The power of Saving Grace doth subdue and sanctifie our affections with a conscionable and holy moderation so that they become serviceable to the Glory of God and for a more resolute carriage of good causes and zealous discharge of all Christian duties but the bridling of Passions in the Formal Hypocrite is not so much of Conscience as of artificial Policy for advantage and by the guidance of Moral discretion 3. Every childe of God by the power of Saving Grace doth hunger and thirst after all those means God hath appointed or offers for his furtherance in the way to Heaven and doth make a holy use of whatsoever is publikely or privately laid upon him for his amendment therefore he continually profits and proceeds in Sanctification by his Word his Judgements and his Mercies by the exercise observation and sense whereof he grows sensible in heavenly knowledge Faith Humiliation Repentance Thankfulness and all other Spiritual Graces But the Hypocrite so far onely regards them as they further his Temporal Happiness or as his neglect of them may by consequence threaten danger to his worldly estate As the gifts of Gods Spirit are twofold so the Grace of God in Man is also twofold viz. 1. Restraining which bridleth the corruptions of mens hearts from breaking forth into outward actions for the common good that Societies may be preserved and one man may live orderly with another 2. Renewing which doth not onely restrain the corruption but also mortifieth sin and renews the heart daily more and more and the least beginnings of Grace be they never so weak are accepted of God provided they be not fleeting but constant and setled How God saveth men viz. 1. By giving of the first Grace which hath nine several actions or God gives this first Grace by nine operations but the first four are indeed no infallible fruits of Grace for so far a Reprobate may go 1. The outward means of Salvation as the Ministery Crosses c. 2. A consideration of the Law of God 3. A consideration of our particular peculiar sins 4. A smiting of the heart with legal fear 5. A stirring up of the minde after the Promises of Salvation in the Gospel 6. A kindling in the heart some sparks of Faith 7. Faiths victory by invocation over Doubting Distrust and Despair 8. A quieting of the Conscience touching the Souls Salvation 9. Grace to endeavor to obey Gods Commandments by New-Obedience 2. By giving of the second Grace which is nothing else but the continuance of the first Grace given as God doth by his Providence in preserving what he created at the beginning Among all the Graces of God which are many the principal the most special and necessary to Salvation are Knowledge Faith Repentance Hope and Charity and when God begins to kindle any seeds or sparks of Grace in the heart that is a will and desire to believe and grace to strive against Doubting and Despair at the same instant he justifieth the sinner and withal begins the work of Sanctification in him Again there are two ways or Covenants whereby God offereth Salvation to men viz. 1. Of Works by which Adam had been saved had he stood in his Innocency 2. Of Grace which is a Board given us against Shipwrack This Covenant of Grace is twofold viz. 1. Absolute and peculiar as onely to the Elect Jer. 31. Ezek. 36. the choycest of all the gifts of Grace being to have Grace to accept of Christ for though Christ be offered to all yet God intends him onely to the Elect and such as to whom he gives power grace and ability by Faith and Repentance to accept him Though the Papists say but most falsly That his intention is the same to all to Judas as to Peter and that all have sufficient grace to receive him 2. Conditional that is to all men as if you believe you shall be saved All they who are sanctified have the true Testimony of the Spirit known from carnal Presumption 1. By the Means whereby the true Testimony of the Holy Ghost is wrought ordinarily as Reading Hearing Prayer Meditation use of the Sacraments c. 2. By the Effects and Fruits of the Spirit as Prayer Invocation c. The Testimony of the Spirit is wrought two ways viz. 1. By clearing the Promises shining into our hearts by such a light as makes us able To Discern them To Believe them To Assent unto them 2. By an immediate voyce by which he speaketh immediately to our Spirits so that a man shall never be so perswaded as to have any sure or sound comfort by the Ministery of the Word be it never so powerful till there be a work of the Spirit which having done its work upon us our understandings are presently enlightned our desires ravish'd and our conversations reformed for sanctified Knowledge holy Affections and good Actions are never disjoyned The Properties whereby the joy of Spirit differeth from carnal joy 1. The joy of Spirit is brought forth of sorrow for sin and for the want of Christ 2. It is the fruit of Righteousness that is flowing from Christ believed to be made unto us by God Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption 3. It is founded in the holy use of the Word Sacraments Prayer and in the practice of Christian Duties 4. It is so fixed and rooted in the heart that it cannot be removed 5. It is eternal abiding in the minde not onely now but for ever The Battel of the Flesh and Spirit 1. The Flesh is puffed up with Ignorance and love of the World but the Spirit is endued with the Knowledge Love and Fear
Fury These Symptomes give it to be a Spiritual Frenzy caused at first by Spiritual Pride and now attended on by desperate Presumption If the Cephalick Vein of Ignorance were speedily opened and an infusion taken of Humility and Knowledge to the weight of their Zeal probably the Cure would follow Others have the faculties of their Souls so chain'd and manacled to Carnal Objects as that they cannot exercise them about Holy Duties but are quite dead to Good Works and wholly forget the Duties both of their Publick and Private Callings otherwise then relating to a Carnal Interest yea are so Spirit-bound that they cannot hear a Sermon without nodding to the Preacher that they must take a nap or two nor say their Prayers but between sleeping and waking begin them in a Fog and conclude them in a Dream In this Spiritual Lethargy if the still voyce of the Gospel be but Cradle-Musick the Thunder of the Law should be the Graves-Expositor It is within the Bill of Mortality to finde some who having lost the Function of Vital Graces all checks of Conscience all sense of Sin all motions of the Spirit lie gasping for Spiritual Life while the breath thereof is checked by Customary sinning This is a Spiritual Apoplexy onely the Spirit of God can restore that Soul But to lose the use of some special Grace for a time the operations of this or that gracious Quality is a most common defect incident to the soundest of Gods Servants now to suffer an eclipse of his Favor anon the Motions of his Spirit then the comfortable sense of Assurance sometimes to be wavering in the Faith at other times to be nigh swallow'd up in Doubtings are all the Symptomes of a Spiritual Palsie He that is thus affected must give himself unto Prayer That God would fix and stablish his Heart confirm his Faith and cause the influence of his Love to revive his Hope sealing it up unto full Assurance To commit the Sins we would not is the Epidemical Disease of the most Regenerate and we are all naturaliz'd unto daily failings This is a Spiritual Epilepsie or the Falling-sickness hereditary thence the more difficult to be cured yet the Righteousness of Christ well applied will do it if as thou fallest thou rise again by sound Repentance and so keep to the strict Dyet of New Obedience But if a Soul be suddenly taken with strange and violent Fits of some desperate Sins who formerly had been unaccustomed thereto acquiescing all his time under the silence of a calm Conscience and now rusheth into horrid acts of the grossest Enormities Conclude that Soul in a Spiritual Convulsion the very Heart must be let Blood by sound Repentance till the Corruption of the Inner-man the evil Affections and vicious Inclinations which held a candle to the Devil to level his Temptations be all discordiated Let the dark Understanding that discerns not Spiritual things the Mystery of Salvation Excellencies of Christ or Beauties of Holiness take Bartimeus for his Guide and pray fervently for Spiritual Eye-salve that Christ would touch and unseal his judgement but if his Eye offend him or any Lust as tender to him as the Apple thereof Exoculation is the Remedy prescribed Matth. 5.29 And he who hath an Imposthume in his Ears when God talks with him in the language of his Mercies or his Judgements of his Word his Spirit or his Works wants an Ephatha But seldom are his Lungs Ulcerless whose Heart is not in Charity yet let not such unsheath the Razor in his mouth and possibly the Disease may not be mortal Or say the Soul is imposthumated by corrupt Affections through a long continuance of slimy distillations and unclean thoughts from the heart to the obstruction of the Spiritual Breath whereby the Graces languish and the Vitals thereof decay Is not this a Spiritual Hectique a Consumption in the highest degree Must not that Soul be cleansed from all filthiness both of the Flesh and Spirit and make a constant use at every Spring to sin and fall from Grace the Diet-drink of Repentance Adde to this the Restorative of Faith whose principal Ingredients are Gods Promises and Christs Righteousness then keep to the strict Diet of a Gospel-Conversation and by the Mercy of God through the Merit of Christ that Soul shall recover Pantings of the Heart after a full Meal of Spiritual Dainties or upon a full stomack after some plentiful Feast of Heavenly Manna is no strange Malady in the childe of God If those pantings proceed from a fulness of the Spirit and not from an emptiness of Grace if they are after Christ and his Righteousness not after the World and its Vain-gloriousness it s then a blessed Malady and the Cure is mortal in this case trouble not the Physitian But if those pantings of the Heart be through too much vacuity of Grace occasioned by worldly Cares or carnal Grief whereby follows a loss of Appetite to that Food which came down from Heaven thereby rendring the stomack unapt for digestion of Spirit-savoring Meats In this case such things as callifie and corroborate the Heart are not improper Let therefore thy Prayer be as Frankincense thy Humility as Camomil thy Faith as Mastick thy Penitence as Wormwood of each a like quantity in this Distemper will afford an excellent Plaister to apply to the Heart Obedience to the sixth Commandment is a soveraign Remedy against a Spiritual Plurisie and if thou spit Blood the Rule Paul prescribes the Romans Rom. 12.18 is very proper for thy Constitution Also Envy Pride and Ambition are very Tympanous Maladies which in time engender a Spiritual Dropsie but Charity Humility and Self-denial will evacuate those flatuous Humors Likewise Abstinence is the onely Cure after a Surfet of sin to which adde Fasting and Prayer But if thou art troubled with the Stone I mean in the Heart Remember who was Davids Key-keeper who wert thou all Adamant can filiarize thee unto Abraham The immoderate heat of any Lust which hath its origination from the Heart will in time spread it self by the Faculties into the whole Soul and impede the operations of Grace This is a Spiritual Feaver whereof there be divers kindes If this be thy Malady whether a Burning-Feaver through the violence of some strong Temptations Satans fiery Darts or through the Inflammation of some inordinate Lust or whether a Putrid-Feaver through the foul corruptions of Nature and filthiness of sin or whether a Quotidian-Feaver whereby the whole course of thy life is but as one fit of sin or whether a Tertian or a Quartan-Feaver wherein through the intermission of the opportunities and occasions of sin thou enjoyest some intervals of a better disposition though no health or whether a Hectique-Feaver whereby a sinful slame is kindled not onely in the meer Natural Qualities and Inferior Inclinations of the Minde but also in the more Noble Faculties and higher Region of the Soul which through the habitualness of that equal Heat in
no notice of others necessities of such complained the Church of the Jews in her captivity Lam. 1.12 These bewray too much self-love 2. Such as who though they take notice yet are not at all moved to any compassion of such the Prophet Amos complaineth Amos 6.6 These discover too great senslesness and plain inhumanity 3. Such who though they be moved yet perform not this duty because they think it an idle frivolous thing nothing available and profitable of such Job speaks Job 21.15 These manifest too much distrust in God and plain Atheism They are not to be prayed for whom we know our prayers cannot help These are 1. All such as are dead for their estate is unchangeable 2. They which sin against the Holy Ghost 3. They concerning whom God hath given an express command and charge to the contrary and who are expresly and apparently rejected of God for who pray for such gainsay the revealed will of God Thus we read not that Samuel prayed for Saul after the Lord expresly forbade him 2 Sam. 16.1 and thus the Lord forbade Jeremiah to pray for the people Jer. 7.16 Motives to publike prayer 1. The more publike prayer is the more honorable and acceptable it is to God because it is an honor to him even when one faithfully prays unto him and that it is the more acceptable his promise shews Matth. 18.28 2. It is more powerful thus to prevent a Judgement or rather to remove it the Prophet assembles all the people together to pray Joel 2.16 17. So did the King of Niniveh Jonah 3.8 3. It is a sign of communion an outward sign whereby we manifest our selves to be of the chosen and called flock of Christ 4. It is an especial means of mutual edification for thereby we mutually stir up the zeal and enflame the affection of one another 5. The neglect of it is a note of prophaneness from which blame Seperatists and Schismaticks though they would seem very Religious cannot well acquit themselves they are not of Davids minde who mourned when he could not come into the house of Prayer Psal 48.1 c. These would too untimely seperate the Tares from the Wheat before the Harvest Prayer in a Family is very necessary because 1. A Family hath need of peculiar blessings beside the common which in the Church are prayed for yea and hath received many for which peculiar thanks is to be given 2. A true Christians house if Gods worship a principal part whereof is Prayer be there from time to time performed is made Gods Church which is a great honor unto a Family Rom. 16.5 Phil. 4. 3. By prayer a Christian brings Gods blessing into his house for where God is called upon there is he present to bestow his blessings as he blessed Obed-Edom and all his houshold while the Ark was in his house 2 Sam. 6.11 It is very needful that secret prayer be added both to publike prayer at Church and private prayer in a Family and that for these Reasons 1. Hereby we may more freely pour out our whole hearts to God and make known our minde 2. This kinde of prayer affordeth the truest tryal of the uprightness of a mans heart for a man may a long time continue to pray in the Church and in a Family and his prayer be meer formal even onely for companies sake 3. This argueth great familiarity with God 4. It bringeth greatest comfort to a mans heart and they which content themselves with Church and Family-prayers have very just cause to suspect themselves 5. Such Wives Children Servants and other inferiors as live in any house under prophane Governors that will not have prayers in their Families may by this kinde of prayer make supply thereof unto their own souls for none can hinder secret prayer The difference betwixt praying wishing viz. 1. Wishes are sudden and inconsiderate straightway ceasing Prayer is with deliberation and giveth not over without speeding of the thing desired 2. Wishes are without respect of the means and care of right or wrong in attaining the thing wished for Prayer is with submission to the lawful use of the means and care of prevailing by right onely 3. Wishes are for the most part of things worldly Prayer is chiefly for things Spiritual and heavenly one onely Petition of six in the Lords Prayer being for things Temporal 4. Wishes are sometimes for things Spiritual and heavenly but very unconstant as Balaams wish Let me dye the death of the righteous but Prayer persevereth like Jacob wrestling with God Reasons to enforce us to the practice of this duty of prayer 1. Prayer is one of the most principal parts of Gods worship for herein we acknowledge him to be the Giver of all good things the Searcher and knower of all hearts and hereby we testifie the Faith Hope and Confidence we have in God it is called The calves of our lips Hosea 14.2 because it is a Sacrifice well-pleasing to God 2. By prayer we do obtain and also continue and preserve unto our selves every good grace and blessing of God specially such as concern eternal life for God promiseth his Spirit to them that ask it by prayer Luke 11.13 3. The true gift and Spirit of prayer is a pledge of the Spirit of Adoption and therefore the Spirit of prayer is called the Spirit of Grace Zech. 1.3 4. By prayer we have Spiritual communion and familiarity with God for in preaching of the word God speaks to us and in prayer we speak to God and the more we pray the nearer and greater fellowship we have with him 5. It is specially commanded of God as a special means to obtain all blessings 1 Thess 5.17 6. The gracious Promises God hath made unto effectual prayer may allure us to pray Mat. 7.7 7. Consider the efficacy power and force of prayer Jam. 5.16 8. The excellency thereof and the priviledge we have by it to have free liberty to come to God 9. The profit of prayer for it hath the promise of this life and of the life to come Rom. 10.12 10. The necessity thereof for without it we shew our selves destitute of Grace and so in the state of condemnation Jam. 4.2 Motives to prayer repeated 1. Gods express charge and command David obeyed it Psal 27.8 and indeed this of it self were fully sufficient without any other motives 2. Gods worship Prayer being the most principal especial and proper part thereof 3. The honor of God for he is not by any thing more honored then by Prayer by which we do acknowledge him to be 1. Every where present and in every place to hear his children 2. To be the Fountain of all Blessings therefore we give the praise thereof to God 3. To be a God full of pity and compassion which maketh us to lay open our griefs distresses to him 4. To be an Almighty God able to give whatsoever we desire 5. To be a bountiful God who giveth to all liberally
all We can thy Love or our Salvation call This doth with mutual tenderness combine As thou art Ours so grant we may be Thine §. 4. Which art in Heaven HEaven here signifieth the habitation of God of the holy Angels and of blessed men and God is said to dwell there not that he is there onely for he is every where but because his Majesty power and glory is more apparent in heaven then in earth and doth also there immediately shew and manifest himself whence we learn with reverence to pray unto him being our Father most glorious and most powerful for to be in heaven what is it but to be above all things and to have them in subjection Psal 115.3 So that we say Which art in heaven because there he sheweth himself chiefly to the Saints Eccles 21.24 and from thence he manifestth himself to man Psal 57.3 There is mention made of three Heavens in Scripture 1. The Air in which we breath Gen. 1.26 2. The Sky in which are the Stars Deut. 1.10 3. The Heaven of Heavens in which Christ the Angels and Saints departed are 1 Kings 8.27 called by Christ His Fathers house Joh. 14 2. by Paul Paradice 2 Cor. 12.4 by Matthew The Throne of God and The City of the great King Mat. 5.34 This is the heaven here specially understood being as it were Gods Mansion-house God by an excellency is said to be in heaven and that in three especial respects 1. To shew that there is no proportion betwixt him and Earthly Potentates for he is infinitely more excellent then any under heaven Psal 113.5 2. To shew that he hath his eyes continually on all his servants he seeth every thing that they do as one placed above and over them Psal 102.19 33.19 Prov. 15.3 3. To shew that he is Almighty able both to recompence his faithful servants Psal 123.1 and also to execute vengeance on those that are unfaithful to God and cruel to his servants Eccles 5.8 The Lord commandeth us to say Our Father Which art in heaven for these Reasons 1. Thereby to shew the opposition and contrariety of earthly fathers and this Father 2. To raise up in us a confidence that God heareth us 3. To raise a reverence of him in us 4. That we call on him in fervency of Spirit 5. That the minde of him that worshippeth be lifted up to heavenly things 6. That heavenly things be desired 7. That the error of Ethnicks might be met withal who think that they may worship God in Creatures as also of the blinde Papists who suppose they may worship the God of heaven in an Image of Earth 8. To admonish us that we are not to direct our prayers to a certain place as in the Old Testament God is said to be in heaven 1. For his glory which doth most shine in the third heaven it being there most manifested to the holy Angels and blessed Saints by an immediate vision and fruition 2. There there is not onely a natural but also a supernatural and extraordinary demonstration of his glorious Attributes of Justice Mercy Power Wisdom c. 3. From his purity and holiness even as heaven is pure and not obnoxious to corruption in such maner as the inferior bodies are 4. For his excellent majestical and inaccessible brightness even as the most shining heavenly Creatures the Sun and Stars which are but dim Creatures in respect of his glorious brightness and all this serveth to breed in us humility and reverence in coming before the Lord. This Prayer begins not with a Preface of Gods Soveraignty Omnipotency Justice c. but with this of Paternity and that in Heaven for these Reasons viz. 1. His Soveraignty would terrifie us because we have rebelled 2. His Omnipotency would amaze us being dust and ashes 3. His Justice would affright us being guilty of our sins 4. His Paternity doth allure us as prodigal sons coming to a liberal and merciful Father Luke 1.15 18. yet so as he is in heaven whereby we are held back from unreverently presuming on this paternal stile he is so graciously pleased to vouchsafe us that filial honor to entitle him by From this place of God the Father in heaven we may draw these necessary Observations 1. That the eye of Faith is needful to behold him withal for heaven is too high for any bodily eye to pierce into but by faith Moses saw him who was invisible 2. Though Potentates have none on earth above them yet in heaven there is one higher then the highest of them 3. That they who cannot be heard on earth have yet one to Appeal unto 4. That the command under which earthly Princes are is far greater then that which themselves have Their Commander is in heaven 5. That the poorest and meanest that be may have as free access to God as the wealthiest and greatest and their suit shall be as soon received Job 34.19 6. That the great ones on earth have as great cause to fear the revenging hand of God for any sin as mean ones These words Which art in heaven instruct us 1. Towards what place we are to address our selves in prayer 2. When we pray to come before God with reverence godly fear and filial trembling Remember therefore to use all reverence in prayer 3. To ask of God in prayer heavenly things especially Luke 11.13 other things as helps onely to them 4. To make it our principal care how we may come to heaven for there our Father is and though our bodies be on earth yet in affection and desire our souls should mount to heaven 5. That God is therefore able to grant our requests 1 Kings 8.30 6. That we may pray with confidence unto him Psal 123.1 7. That in prayer our heart must be in heaven 1 Kings 8.48 Psal 25.1 This is the true worship Joh. 4.23 8. That we are here as Pilgrims and that our conversation must be in heaven Phil. 3.21 Heb. 13.14 9. That we must look for all graces and helps from heaven Jer. 1.17 10. That by Pilgrimages we need not seek to God Psal 145.18 11. That he differs far from earthly parents who would help but cannot oftentimes 12. That no creature can hurt us Psal 2.4 5. 118.6 Rom. 8.30 13. That we must prefer him before earthly parents Mat. 8.22 14. That we also shall be with him in heaven God is said to be in heaven not as though he were included in the Circle of the Heavens for the Heavens and the Heaven of Heavens is not able to contain him 1 Kings 8.27 and indeed he is neither included nor excluded being Infinite and so every where but because his Majesty and glory is most eminent in the highest Heavens to his Saints and Angels and thence doth he manifest himself unto us in his Power Wisdom Justice and Mercy while we are on earth for Heaven is his throne and Earth is his footstool Isa 66.1 Thus the words Which art in Heaven
obedience towards his Father in offering himself a Sacrifice for us 2. Us 1. By imputing his own Righteousness 2. By a real communicating of his holiness which is wrought by the Holy Ghost When we desire that the Name of God may be sanctified or hallowed we desire 1. That God would enlighten us with the knowledge of his holiness 2. That he would give us a minde to profess the same in words and deeds or that he would give us Faith and Repentance whereby we may glorifie him and sever him from Idols or prophane things or that he would new frame and regenerate us By Knowledge By Profession By Conformity 3. That he would give us a minde to profess that holiness of his Divine Name to his own praise and glory Again to hallow or sanctifie signifies 1. The purifying of a thing which before was corrupt and unholy Thus mystically it was shewed to Peter that God had sanctified the Gentiles Acts 10.15 2. The seperating of any thing common to an holy use Thus Aaron and his sons are said to be sanctified and their vestments and the vessels of the Temple 3. The acknowledging of a thing to be holy and declaring it by giving all due observance and respect thereunto so that the holiness thereof may be made more famous and notable among all men And thus in this sense we do pray Hallowed be thy Name whether we do speak of thy Titles behold thy Creatures and works of Providence receive thy blessings or be conversant in the exercises of thy Word and Sacraments or of any other Divine Ordinances Gods Name is generally sanctified or hallowed by us these five ways 1. That we sing his praises read his word and speak reverently of him 2. That in adversity he be praised of us both in heart and mouth 3. That so oft as need shall require we make a free confession of his Truth and lead a life agreeable to the same confession 4. That we pray unto him and from our heart give him thanks 5. That when it shall be necessary we lawfully swear by his Name More specially thus Gods Name is hallowed by us 1. In himself and that by three actions 1. When we conceive of God in our mindes and acknowledge him as he hath revealed himself in his Word 2. When we love the Lord above all fear him above all and put our whole trust in him in all estates 3. When we praise and laud the Name of God for his infinite goodness to us 2. In his word and that three ways 1. When we acknowledge the Wisdom Mercy and Power of God in it 2. When we have a reverent estimation of the Word in regard of Gods Image therein 3. When we use it in a sanctified and holy maner giving our selves to be ruled and guided thereby 3. In his Creatures by three special actions 1. When we acknowledge the wisdom of God and his powerful hand in every Creature 2. When we have a reverent estimation of the Creatures and use them in Christian sobriety in regard of the stamp of Gods power and wisdom which appeareth in them 3. When we sanctifie the moderate use of them by the Word and Prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 This Petition in the Lords Prayer as every one of the other containeth 1. A Supplication That we and all the people of God may glorifie the holy Name of God in our affections loving him with all our hearts with all our souls and with all our might fearing him above all and putting our whole trust in him in our Devotion with pure mindes lifted up to him onely to pray and in our speeches swearing rightly and reverently by his Name when we are required thereto and never making mention of him but with high reverence and in all our natural and civil actions 2. A Deprecation against the sins contrary to the said Duties as Self-love and of the world Fear of men Trust in the Arm of Flesh Corrupt worshipping of God Neglect of his worship Errors in speech to the dishonor of his Name Cursings Swearings Perjuries Neglect of Vows Giving Gods honor to Creatures Swearing by them also Errors in action and lastly all thinking or speaking unworthily of the Works of God by murmuring cavilling objecting against them or slighting them as things falling out by Chance or Fortune and for strength to overcome all these Corruptions we pray Hallowed be thy Name 3. A Thanksgiving which is for these Corruptions mortified and purged and for the contrary revived and setled to the praise of Gods Name when in deed and in truth we finde them to our comfort in some measure in our hearts and for his grace in other men by whom his Name hath also glory whilest they consent together with us in things tending to the honoring of God All which in this first petition may be abbreviated thus 1. The Supplication we pray thee Let thy Name be hallowed 2. The Deprecation we pray thee Let not thy Name be unhallowed 3. The Thanksgiving we thank thee for disposing us to the manifying and giving glory to thy grace and goodness and so Let thy Name be hallowed that is Suffer not Sin Satan or the World to raign in us but by thy Word and Spirit rule in our hearts giving us grace to be guided thereby in all our ways The wants which we bewail in this Petition 1. Our own and others pride of heart that we labor more for our own credit then Gods glory Luke 18.11 2. Our hardness of heart that we cannot as we ought see Gods glory in his Creatures Mark 6.52 3. Our unthankfulness for his many favors to mankinde above all creatures Psal 51.15 4. Our impiety that in our lives we dishonor God Psal 119.136 In this Petition we are taught earnestly to desire of God those Spiritual Graces which enable us to glorisie his Name in our selves and others which are these especially 1. The true knowledge of God as he hath revealed himself in his Word and Works 2. To sanctifie God in our hearts by loving fearing and trusting in him above all 3. The Calves of our lips which is a Sacrifice of praise to God for all his mercies Psal 50.23 4. To see Gods hand in all his Works how mighty wise just and gracious the Lord is 5. To reverence the works of God for his Mercy Justice Power c. appearing in them 6. To use all his Creatures reverently sanctifying the same unto our selves by the word and prayer As we pray that Gods Name may be hallowed so we must be careful to sanctifie the same in our Conversation For which end we must have regard to these three things 1. That our lives be unblameable not tainted with any sin Away therefore with Idolatry blasphemous Oathes cursed speeches with Sabbath-breaking and all other sins against the second Table 2. We must propound the right end of our life every day in our Calling and Conversation viz. Gods glory and not our own praise profit pleasure
come desire that God will by his Son our Mediator 1. Preserve the Ministery which he hath ordained 2. Gather his Church by the Ministery of his Word and the working of the Holy Ghost 3. Rule his Church gathered and us the members thereof with his Holy Spirit 4. Defend us and his whole Church against our Enemies and Tyrants 5. Cast away his and our enemies into eternal pains 6. At length deliver his Church and glorifie us in the world to come Again The Kingdom of God is twofold viz. 1. General which is his absolute Power and Soveraignty whereby he ruleth all things in Heaven in Earth and in Hell even the Devils themselves Psa 103.19 This we acknowledge in the conclusion of the Lords Prayer but pray not for it in this Petition because nothing can hinder it 2. Special which is that whereby he Ruleth his Elect and chosen people working his will in them by his Holy Spirit And called special because it is not exercised over all the World but only over all the elect whō he hath ordained unto eternal life This special Kingdom of God is twofold viz. 1. Of Grace which is a Spiritual estate because 1. It is principally exercised in the Conscience 2. This Regiment in the Conscience is by the Spirit of God Wherein God makes men willingly subject to the written word of his Spirit which is a voluntary subjection of the whole man in soul body and Spirit to the Will of God reveal'd in his Word This subjection which indeed is perfect freedom stands in these 3 things especially Rom. 14.17 18. 1. In Righteousness that is 1. In Christs Righteousness imputed 2. In the Righteousness of a good Conscience the ground whereof is Sanctification by the Spirit which Christ gives to whom he justifies 2. In Peace that is Peace of Conscience towards God and peace with Gods Church yea with all Creatures so far forth as is needful for them Under which is comprehended love for as Righteousness concerns the person in soul and body so Peace respects all duties and actions of the life Righteousness is the Root whence springeth this Peace for when the heart is sanctified the life is reformed 3. In Joy in the Holy Ghost which is a fruit of both the former respecting especially the state of affliction for when a man is justified and sanctified and hath peace towards God then ariseth in his heart a Spiritual delight in God in all estates Now whosoever hath these three branches of this Spiritual subjection is a good Subject in the Kingdom of Grace 2. Of Glory which is the blessed estate of Gods Elect in Heaven whereby God in Christ becomes all things unto them immediately all things needful to the perfection of felicity The state of grace in this life is the beginning and entrance to the state of glory the state of glory in the life to come is the perfection of the state of grace And this special Kingdom of God in both these estates do we in this Petition pray for Understand therefore this Petition of the special Kingdom the coming whereof is in four degrees viz. 1. Let it be erected where it is not 2. Let it be confirmed and continued where it is Let it not be abolished by Persecution corrupted by Heresie vanish by Hypocrisie or degenerate and grow into the contrary by Prophaneness 3. Let it be restored where it is decayed or corrupted in doctrine or maners Restore such as are faln by weakness and purge the Errors of such as are seduced 4. Let it be perfected and made compleat by hastning the Marriage-day the eternal Jubile of Joy unconceiveable much more unutterable such as neither eye hath seen nor ear heard nor heart conceived and by finally destroying Sin Death the Devil and every enemy Thy Kingdom come that is to us men in the world then it cometh when God doth erect and establish the same in their hearts Now unto perfection it comes by five degrees viz. 1. When God gives unto men the outward means of Salvation wherein he doth reveal his grace and favor in Christ Thus the Gospel preached is called The word of the Kingdom Mat. 13.19 and The Kingdom of God Luke 11.20 17.21 2. When the word preached enlightens the minde so as a man knows and understands the mystery of the Gospel which is the Law of this Kingdom 3. When a man is thereby regenerate and so brought into this Kingdom for by Regeneration we have effectual entrance into the state of grace whereby Christ rules in us by his word and Spirit and we yield subjection unto him 4. At the end of this life when the body goeth to the earth but the soul to God that gave it being translated to the joys of heaven in the glory of this Kingdom 5. At the last Judgement when body and soul being reunited are both made partakers of this Kingdoms glory And this is the full and perfect coming of it In this kingdom are observable these things especially 1. That Christ is King Mat. 2.2 2. That the Subjects are true Christians Psal 2.8 Angels and Saints 3. That the Laws are the Word Psal 119.105 and the efficacy of the Holy Ghost 4. The enemies are Satan Sin Death Hell Damnation the Flesh the World and the Wicked Eph. 6.12 Rom. 6.12 8.1 1 Cor. 15.51 Gal. 5.17 Gen. 3.15 5. The Rewards are the good things of this life and eternal happiness in that to come Mark 10.30 6. The Chastisements are afflictions Heb. 12.6 7. The Weapons are Faith Hope Love the Word and Prayer Eph. 6.16 8. The Time of it is to the worlds end Mat. 28.20 9. The place is this world and the world to come Rev. 5.10 Mat. 25.34 10. The Officers are Preachers 2 Cor. 5.20 11. The Vice-gerents are Governors Isa 49.25 12. It is exercised upon the Conscience of man Rom. 14.17 Again the Head or King of this Kingdom is God the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost There is but one King because there is but one God 1. The Father is King and Ruleth by the Son and the Holy Ghost 2. The Son is King because 1. He sitteth God at the right hand of God and Ruleth with equal power with the Father 2. He is Mediator by whom God worketh immediately and giveth the Holy Ghost The enemies of this Kingdom are 1. Partly in the Church as Hypocrites who challenge to themselves the Name and Title of the Kingdom when as they are nothing less 2. Partly without the Church as Turks Jews and all such as defend Errors against the ground and foundation of the true Religion It appears from what hath been said That the Kingdom of God cometh to us four ways viz. 1. By the Preaching of the Gospel whereby is revealed the light of the true and heavenly Doctrine 2. By Conversion when some are converted and are endued with Faith and Repentance 3. By making progress or encrease when the godly receive encrease or
when he counterfeits godliness his dissembling of Piety makes every sin he commits leave a double blot of guilt on the painted Sepulchre of his Soul Without Integrity and Uprightness of heart our Prayers hearin of Sermons partaking of the Sacraments or the performance of any other holy Exercises doth nothing avail If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Isa 1.15 Sincerity is as Salt that seasoneth every work the life and substance of all other Graces without it the best things are no better then sins against God but to such as are pure in heart he is good and gracious Psal 79.1 125.4 5. Hence it is that men in this Age hate the Saints under pretence that they are the Hypocrites and this hath been the Devils policy against all holy men in all Ages David was said to be a subtile man to deceive others Paul was reckoned the great Impostor of the world nay Christ himself was called a Deceiver And indeed no man speaks against Religion or hates Religion under its own notion under its own name but somewhat else as Hypocrisie indeed such as have not Grace themselves cannot possibly judge of Grace in others Now in the state of Formal Hypocrisie may concur immunity from notorious sins all natural and moral Perfections admirable variety of Learning Policy and all other acquired Ornaments of the Minde an outward performance of all duties of Religion some measure of inward illumination a resemblance or shadow of the whole body of true Regeneration and a perswasion of being in the state of Grace even thus far a man may go in the profession of Christian Religion and yet for want of true sincerity be a stranger from the power of Faith and from the life of godliness yea though a man were a moral Saint an Angel among the Pharisees absolute in all other Perfections yet without the inward power of Grace to give them the life of sincerity he is but a spectacle of commiseration to Angels and Men. The difference betwixt this Moral civil man and the Hypocrite is onely this That the Hypocrite doth much of the First Table little of the Second but the Civil man doth much of the Second Table little of the First neither doth what he doth in sincerity both do what they do in Hypocrisie yea though Moral Honesty and outward Righteousness be in themselves good and in a kinde necessary yet by accident are many times a strong bar to keep men from the power of godliness and unfeigned sincerity for resting therein and not stepping forward they content themselves with a probable error of being in the state of Crace and with a plausible passage unto eternal Death for he which reacheth but to civil Honesty comes far short of being in Christ and consequently of true happiness Thus the two main Engines whereby the Devil deludes the world and ensnares the Souls of Unregenerate men are Civil Honesty and Formal Hypocrisie Hypocrisie is either 1. In works commanded of God but not done after that maner which God requireth 2. In works not commanded of God yet done for ostentations sake as all superstitious and humane Traditions which appertain not to the edifying of the Church The causes or Reasons that many profess God that serve the Devil 1. Pride or Self-love which so overcometh their hearts and blindeth their eyes that they cannot see their wickedness or judge of themselves and their own Misery as they should 2. Because the heart of man is so deceitful he can speak with his Tongue what he meaneth not in his heart beguiling with lying lips and a double tongue Hypocrisie is threefold 1. Privy Hypocrisie by which a man maketh profession of more then is in his heart This kinde of Hypocrisie ariseth from Spiritual Pride and sometimes mixeth it self even with the fairest and most sanctified actions of Gods dearest children soonest insinuating into the holiest heart 2. Gross Hypocrisie by which a man professes that which is not in his heart at all and so deceives others but not his own heart This most properly is Hypocrisie 3. Formal Hypocrisie by which a man doth not onely deceive others but also his own heart with a false conceit and perswasion that he is in a happy state The Reasons why the gross Hypocrite is more miserable and of less hope then the open sinner 1. Because he sins against the light of his Conscience which maner of sinning makes him incapable of saving Graces 2. Because by his outward profession he so dazles the eyes of men that he bars himself of those Reproofs and wholesom Admonitions whereby the open sinner is many times reclaimed humbled and converted 3. Because all publike Reprehensions and Admonitions from the Ministery he posts over from himself to the open sinner as not belonging to himself 4. Because he is justly obnoxious to an extraordinary measure of Gods hatred and indignation and weight of vengeance The unhappy issue of the Formal Hypocrite 1. A cursed Security wherein he slumbers to eternal destruction 2. A wretched Opposition to more sincerity then he findes in himself 3. A searedness deadness and benummedness of Conscience 4. An Impatiency of having his Formality censured by the Ministery of the Word 5. A Neglect of a more sound search into the state of his Soul Reasons moving the Formal Hypocrite to think well of himself and his own state good 1. A comparing himself with those which are more sinful 2. A prejudice which he conceives from the imputation which the world layeth upon the children of God 3. An outward Success in worldly matter much plenty in outward things 4. A Misconceit of Gods Justice and a straining and a racking of his Mercy beyond his Truth and Promise 5. A Misapprehension of the Opposition in the passage of Grace 6. A Misobservation upon the Death and Ends of other men A performance of outward Duties of Religion without the power of Grace upon the Soul and an universal Sanctification in all the faculties thereof cannot produce any sound comfort in the heart or acceptation with God and that for these Reasons 1. Because the iniquity defect or exorbitancy of any particular of one circumstance maketh an action evil but an absolute integrity of all concurrents is required to make a good work acceptable to God comfortable and profitable to a Christian 2. Because except our Righteousness exceed that of the Scribes and Pharisees we shall not enter into the kingdom of Heaven 3. Because the principal and holiest Exercises the most solemn and sacred actions of Religion without sincerity and Sanctification of heart are but as the cutting off a Dogs neck and the offering of Swines blood which Truth ariseth out of Isa 1. Mic. 6. Hag. 2. Psal 50. and many other places Hypocrisie though long covered will be at last uncased and that for these Reasons 1. Because it is like a wound healed outwardly but festering inwardly and therefore at last the corruption cannot but break
Spirit to Regenerate and Sanctifie us c. 2. He doth never cease to communicate his Love unto us it is never dry 3. He Loves us for our own good having no need of us he gets nought by it 4. He Redeems us from all sins gives us Faith and Repentance freely we deserve it not 5. He Dyed for us even when we were his very Enemies the Children of wrath 6. He Prevents us with his Grace when we sought not to him for it 7. He Bestows Temporal Favors and withholds present Afflictions from the Reprobate 8. He Prosecutes us with his Love unto the end and in the end gives us the Salvation of our Souls the end of our Faith The consideration of Gods Love must Teach us these Duties viz. 1. To beware of all sin whereby we do offend and displease our God who is so gracious unto us 2. To trust God with our Lives Healths Bodies Estates and all we have for Food Raiment and Protection in the sober use of all lawful means 3. To seek for help and succor from God in all distresses and want 4. To love so bountiful a God yea to enforce our hearts to all duties of love to him 5. To be thankful to God for all good things we enjoy for whatever good we have comes from him 6. We must labor continually in heart and life to walk worthy of the Lord and to please him in all things being fruitful in all good works Col. 1.10 The Duties required of such of us to whom Gods Love hath been specially manifested in raising us who before were weak and contemptible in the world to be Instruments of his Glory viz. 1. We must confess our selves miserable by Nature and no good thing in us to raise up our selves above others being no way better then others 2. We must consider That whatsoever we have it is Gods gift we have received at his hands it cometh down from above and therefore let us not glory as if we had not received it 1 Cor. 4.7 3. We must walk worthy of our Calling even of those Mercies which we have tasted and acknowledge our selves to be unworthy of them 4. We must be humble in our own eyes and not boast of any thing in our selves or in our own merits nor think our selves worthy to be regarded of him 5. If we be thankful for lesser Mercies we may be assured of greater and of fatter blessings 6. We must keep a Register of his blessings and so settle them in our hearts that we forget them not but may thereby be provoked to set forth his praise II. ELection is a Decree in which God according to the good pleasure of his Will hath certainly Chosen some men to Life Eternal in Christ and that for the praise of the glory of his grace Eph. 1.4 5. God Decree is that by which God hath necessarily and yet freely from all Eternity Isa 46.10 determined all things Howbeit the Decree of God is the first and Principal Cause of all things yet it doth not take away the nature and property of second Causes Eph. 1.12 Mat. 10.29 Rom. 9.2 but brings them into a certain order that is directeth them unto the determinate end whereupon the effect of things are contingent or necessary as the nature of the second Cause is When Christ was offered freely to every man and one received him and another rejected him then the Mystery of Election and Reprobation was Revealed The Reason why some received him being Because God gave them a heart which to the rest he gave not but in point of offering of Christ we must be general without having respect to Election So that Predestination is the Decree of God in as much as it concerns man by which God hath ordained all men to a certain and everlasting estate that is some to Salvation in his Son 1 Thess 5.9 others to condemnation for his own glory and their sins Rom. 9.22 Reprobation is Gods Decree in the which because it so pleased him he hath purposed to resuse some men by means of Adams Fall and their own Corruptions for the manifestation of his Justice Prov. 16.4 2 Cor. 13.5 Again Election is the eternal unchangeable free and most just Decree of God whereby he hath decreed to convert some to Christ to preserve and keep them in Faith and Repentance and by him to give them Eternal Life So Predestination is an Eternal Decree or Purpose of God in time causing effectual Grace in all those whom he hath Chosen and by this effectual Grace bringing them infallibly unto Glory Predestination being thus an immanent and eternal Act of Divine Understanding and Will cannot be conceived as dependent upon any foreseen Temporal Acts of mans Free-will for Election findeth or considereth all meer men in one and the self-same condition and it is the Grace prepared for them in Predestination which maketh the predestinate become holy and happy men They who will have God in his Divine Predestination to behold all men and elect those men consequently whom he considereth as believing and persevering in Faith and Holiness unto the last gasp are in an Error for our Election is not grounded upon any foreseen acts in us of Obeying Believing Persevering and the like but these acts are grounded upon our Election for whoever is predestinated to Salvation is also predestinated to the Grace of Believing Obeying and the like otherwise it were a conditional Predestination but there is none such for whoever is elected to Salvation is predestinated also to the means of Salvation God in his most gracious Decree of Election is as absolutely and certainly ordaining men unto Saving Grace as unto Everlasting Life and Glory And this Grace prepared for the Elect in Gods Eternal Predestination and bestowed upon them in the Temporal Dispensations so causeth their Belief Repentance Perseverance as that it imposeth no necessity or violent coaction upon the Wills of men but causeth their free and voluntary Endeavors All that are inwardly and effectually called are Elected but many are called onely outwardly few such are chosen Now that God hath chosen some and passed by others he is not at all cruel for he owed not his Grace to any but justly might have suffered all Mankinde to have perished That some are Elect and some Reprobate is known unto us in general but not in special whether this or that man be but of our own Election every of us not onely may but ought to be in special certain and assured whereof he may be by the effect which is Conversion that is true Faith and true Repentance Now if any one shall think that the Election of some before others in regard of Gods special Mercy came from this That God foresaw something in them which was not in the others let him hear what Moses saith to the Jews The Lord did not set his love upon you nor chuse you for your multitude but because the Lord loved you and would keep the
no farther Such is the Secret Vertue Divine Power and inexpressible Efficacy of Christ that works by his Spirit on the hearts of the Regenerate being made New Creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 The will and ability to do a work pleasing and acceptable to God is no mo●e in the unregenerates power then their Creation Now by our Regeneration we are assured of our Justification not as by the cause of the Effect but as by the effect of the Cause and though Regeneration be not perfect in this life yet if it be indeed begun it sufficeth for the confirmation and proving of the Truth of our Faith And though the Faithful fail in the measure of those Graces they have yet is it not such as can justly impeach the Truth of Grace It is true though it may be weak and their Sanctification is sound though imperfect the Perfecting is not a work so powerful as the Beginning of it for the very New-Birth and first act of Conversion is the most powerful work of Gods Spirit for then a Sinner is anew created of nothing in regard of Spiritual Being he is made something of a man dead in sin he is quickned and hath Spiritual life put into him As a Childe born of a Woman hath all the parts of Soul and Body so he that is born again of God hath all the parts of a New-man All the Faithful have all such Graces as are absolutely necessary to Salvation actually wrought in them no Saint wanteth any Grace that may hinder his Salvation though he should instantly dye the perfection of Sanctification is but the highest degree of that which was begun before and without Regeneration there is no attaining to this perfection Except a man be born again by Water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Joh. 3.5 Hereby a man of a limb of the Devil is made a member of Christ and of a childe of Satan the childe of God Now the work of Regeneration in man is a proper and immediate work of the Godhead for to regenerate is to create and man in that he is regenerated is created again Nothing then can actively regenerate but God though Sacraments are said to regenerate as Moral Instruments because when they are rightly used God himself confers Grace by them We receive not new and Spiritual life from the Son but by the means of his Flesh apprehended by our Faith yet the power and efficacy of quickning or reviving is not in the Flesh as in a proper subject but in the Godhead And we are not in this Regeneration perfectly sanctified but onely in part not perfectly till death whence it is that a regenerate man restored by Grace is not by his Regeneration enabled to fulfil the Law perfectly yet of a meer natural man is made a new man in regard of Gods Image restored and renewed by Christ Eph. 4.24 This is the restoring of that new quality of Righteousness and Holiness lost in Adam which is as it were a new Soul for in a regenerate man there is a Body-Soul and besides the Spirit which is the Grace of Sanctification opposed to Flesh and Corruption of Nature Rom. 8.10 This is as it were the Soul of a Soul renewed without which we cannot see the Kingdom of God Joh. 3.5 And lastly he that is indeed regenerate hath this priviledge That the Corruption of Nature is no part of him neither doth it belong to his person in respect of Divine Imputation Rom. 7.17 In the work of our Regeneration these three Graces be required viz. 1. The Preventing Grace which is when God of his Mercy sets and imprints in the Minde a new light in the Will a new quality or inclination in the Heart new affections 2. The Working Grace which is when God gives to the Will the act of well-willing namely the will to Believe the will to Repent the will to Obey God in his Word 3. The Co-working Grace when God giveth the Deed to the Will that is the exercise and practice of Faith and Repentance The first of these gives the power of doing good the second the Will the third the Deed and all three together make up the work of Regeneration The Regerate man cannot do the evil he would for these Reasons viz. 1. Because he cannot commit sin at what time soever he would 1 Joh. 3.9 Thus was it with Joseph when he was assaulted by Potiphars wife to Adultery and with Lot when his righteous Soul was so vexed with the abominations of the Sodomites 2. Because the man regenerate cannot sin in that maner he would whereof there be two Reasons viz. 1. He cannot sin with full consent of Will or with all his heart because the Will so far forth as it is regenerate resisteth and dreweth back It is a Rule That sin doth not reign in the Regenerate for how much Grace is wrought in the Minde Will and Affections so much is abated proportionably of the strength of the Flesh 2. Though he fall into any sin yet he doth not lie long in it but speedily recovers himself by reason of Grace in his heart Two contrary Grounds or Beginnings of actions in man after his Regeneration 1. Natural Corruption of the Minde Will and Affections to that which is against the Law called the Flesh 2. A created Quality of Holiness wrought in the said faculties by the Holy Ghost called the Spirit These two are not severed but joyned and mingled together in all the faculties of the Soul Why the Wills of the Regenerate are enclined not onely to good but to evil also viz. 1. In this life the renewing of our Nature is not perfect neither as concerning our knowledge of God or our inclinations to obey him Rom. 7.18 2. The Regenerate be not always ruled by the Spirit but sometimes are for a time as it were left to themselves as if they were forsaken of God either for to try or to chastise or to humble them but yet are called to Repentance that they perish not Isa 63.17 for as the beginning so the continuance of our Conversion dependeth on God The work of our Regeneration is distinctly attributed in Scripture to each person in the Trinity To the Father 1 Pet. 1.3 To the Son Jam. 1.18 To the Holy Ghost Joh. 3.5 It is also attributed to the Ministery of the Word As thus 1. The Father as it were the Beginner of this work of his own will begat he us for this end he sent his Son into the world 2. The Son put in execution the Will of his Father Joh. 6.13 he took flesh upon him that we might be of his flesh being born anew Christ is not onely the Author but the Matter also of our New-Birth the new Spiritual Being which the Saints have encreaseth with the encrease of God Col. 2.19 Eph. 1.3 This cometh to pass by his Incarnation Zech. 13.1 Joh. 1.16 3. The Spirit applieth unto us the vertue and efficacy of Christs slesh
Object represented unto it 4. The Will doing one of the two upon former deliberation 5. The Will doing it of her self or having the cause and beginning of her motion internal this is to do by her own proper motion 6. Not being constrained by any external Agent This Faculty or Power of the Soul is called Free in respect of the will for these Reasons viz. 1. The Will doth of her own accord follow the judgement of the Minde and Understanding 2. Because it is by Nature equally fit to receive or refuse 3. Because it moveth her self by its own proper motion 4. In this Election or Rejection it suffereth no impediment or constraint of any external Agent There are four degrees of Free-will in Man which are distinguished according to the diverse states and conditions of mans nature viz. 1. In Man not fain before sin when man had perfect liberty to continue good or to fall and though most free yet not so strong but he might fall God not assisting him which denial of Gods Grace was no cruelty but a way to greater Mercy nor any compulsion to make man fall for he had Free-will to stand 2. After the Fall in man not Regenerate in which state it is a proneness in man to chuse onely evil which evil necessity came from man voluntarily and by his own will 3. In Man Regenerated in this life wherein the Will useth her liberty not onely to do evil as when the work is not done according to Gods Commandment but partly to do evil partly to do well as when it does it as God hath commanded his Spirit working by the will giving him power to will what he commandeth and approveth 4. In Man perfectly Regenerated after his Glorification in this state the will shall be onely free to chuse good and not to chuse evil and this liberty is greater then the first before his Fall because this excludeth all possibility of falling the other did not The disterence between the liberty of Gods will and ours viz. 1. God knoweth all things of himself perfectly and perpetually but the Creatures know neither of themselves neither all things neither the same at all times but at such or such a time and onely so much as is revealed unto them 2. In the VVill the will of God is governed or moved or depending of no other Cause but it self our wills are depending of him 3. In the Understanding and the VVill God determined all things which he will from everlasting and wills them unchangeable we determine what we will in time and many times change from that which we first determine In the Will are two things common both to Angels and Men with God viz. 1. To do things upon deliberation and advice 2. To will without coaction those things which they have considered and thought of that is their will being by Nature fit to will the contrary or diverse from that which it doth will or also to defer and forbear the action doth encline to the other part of its own accord The use of the doctrine concerning the diversities of liberty of the will in God and in Man and of the diverse degrees of the liberty of Mans Will viz. 1. That this glory may be given to God That he alone is the most free Agent whose liberty and wisdom dependeth on no other 2. That we remember That they who wittingly and willingly sin or have cast themselves into a necessity of sinning are not at all excused and so not God but their own wills declining of their own accord from Gods Commandments to be the true and onely Cause of all their sins 3. That we may know God alone to be of himself and unchangeably good and the Fountain of Goodness but no creature to have more then God works and keeps in him 4. That remembring what we are faln from we may deplore our unthankfulness and magnifie Gods Mercy in restoring us 5. That knowing the naughtiness of our disposition if God leave us to our selves we may be humbled in his sight and crave his Assistance 6. That knowing the liberty into which the Son of God restoreth us we may the more desire his Benefits and be thankful unto him for them 7. That knowing we alone are severed from them that perish we be not lifted up with a any conceit of worthiness in our selves but magnifie the free Bounty of God to us more then others 8. That acknowledging the weakness and corruption that still remain in the Regenerate we may seek for Justification in Christ alone 9. That knowing of our selves we are not able to withstand Temptations we may ardently and daily desire to be preserved and guided by God 10. That understanding we are not preserved against our wills but with our wills we may wrestle with Temptations and endeavor to make our Calling and Election sure having received the Grace of Conversion whereof we now again proceed in a word or two Conversion is twofold 1. Passive which is an action of God whereby he converteth man being as yet unconverted In this Man is but a subject to receive the impression of Grace and no Agent at all for in the creating setting and imprinting of Righteousness in the heart and Holiness in the inward man Will can do nothing 2. Active which is an action whereby man being once turned of God turns himself in all his thoughts words and actions This Conversion is onely of Grace for Grace is the Principal Agent and Will but the Instrument of Grace for being first turned by grace we can then move and turn our selves And thus there is a co-operation of Mans Will with Gods Grace He that made thee without thee will not save thee without thee In the Conversion of a Sinner there be three works viz. 1. The Holy Ghost who is the principal Agent enlightning the Minde with true knowledge softning the Heart and changing the Will from evil to good 2. The VVord which is the Instrument of the Holy Ghost for now he worketh not by Revelation or special instinct but ordinarily in and by the VVord 3. Mans VVill which though by Nature be evil and dead unto Grace yet being renewed by the Holy Ghost in the very first act of Conversion moveth and striveth to be turned It is not like wax onely passive but as fire so soon as it is fire doth burn and so soon as it burneth it is fire So the VVill though by Nature it move not yet being renewed by Grace it moveth and so soon as it moveth it is renewed There is a fivefold Grace bestowed in the true Conversion of a sinner viz. 1. Preventing Grace whereby God inspireth into the Minde of the sinner that is to be converted good thoughts a good purpose and a desire of supernatural Grace 2. Preparing Grace whereby it is given us to consent unto God offering Grace or whereby the Minde and VVill are prepared that they may yield Assent and Obedience to the Holy Spirit 3.
Artist they may fall within the ambit of your Charity to dictionate according to the Rule thereof The Civil man that looking through the crevice of Morality spies Religion afar off will doubtless pretend a Right to many precious Flowers in this Arbor as legally descended to him from his Pharisaick Parents under a Title of much supercilious Sanctity and no little Righteousness whilest the pestilent air of sulphur'd-mouthed Prophaners enhazard the fairest leaves of withering into waste paper But since neither the Vsurping Hypocrisie of the one nor the Malicious Satanity of the other was ever yet Prayer-proof Be it your delight to engage your interest with Heaven Be it your Spirits holy Rapture to wrestle with the Angel of the Covenant Mount Elisha's Chariot and travel a Prayers journey for a Flaming Sword Yours in all Faithful Observance J. G. To the Reader BY the late unseasonableness of the Weather thou mayest guess Reader what little cause there is to promise this ARBOR any assurance of a flourishing Condition the Air being still so generally distempered yea frozen to such an habit of coldness to every thing that is substantially good To tell thee what unwholesom fogs still poison the Judgements of men what blasphemous vapors are yet exhaled out of hell by the black Magick of a Reprobate Sense is not my purpose nor shall be thy entertainment In this Arbor thou mayest walk secure from those whirlwinds of Doctrines which in bryar-paths and ensnaring Pamphlets ravish the innocent and oft times hurry the humblest minde to the highest pinacle of Presumption Here blow no gusts of shifting Opinions to menace danger to the Vessel no ill dews of Pride Formality or Hypocrisie to stain the Flowers of this Arbor which are all so self-interestless as that they fade into a dead letter without the influence of a pruning hand When the late unseasonable showres of Blood had nigh delug'd Gods Vineyard this Arbor lay sheltered in the Ark of his special protection even in the bosom of his super-deluging mercies when the Land seemed to labor under Egypt's plagues in a Gospel-season when our Rivers were turned into blood and Lusts bred of our slimy affections came even like Frogs into the Closet of the hearts both of Prince and People when the dust of our carkases were turned into Vermine and the Lusts of all Nations monopoliz'd by this like Swarms of Flies multiplied and corrupted the whole Land when as if there had been a very grievous Murrain of Beasts we might reade Famine in the cheeks of the Land which were but lean though very sanguine and many of our Members touched with the plague of Boyl and Blayns when God shot the Arrows of his Vengeance like Hail-stones on man and beast and sent Armies of Locusts into our coast when Darkness which might be sadly felt seiz'd on our excommunicated Souls and many of our First-born fell by the sword even when the furious Pharaohs were unequipaged whilest the Servants of the Most High waded under his Canopy through a sea of blood when a general Apostacy from the Truth received back-clap'd the Demetrian Craftsman to shout Great is Diana of the Psudoprotestants when these and many other fearful violfulls were pouring out on this exceeding sinfully sinful Nation then even then in that lowring age were the seeds of these Flowers sown in hope of a better Resurrection Thou seest Reader in what a turbulent and improper season this Arbor received its first plant yea and from a hand which hath no other warrant to touch the Sacred Oracles then the general Calling of a Christian which to a sacrilegious Monopolist may seem no little piece of audacious Uzzaism more then an aliquantity of irresponsible Presumption by reason of such irregularity of Motion in so improper a sphear These Grapes thus unseasonably gathered in the Fall of more then the Leaf in the Autumn of true and sound Religion when the Sun of Righteousness withdrew his influence and stood as at a distance from our Horizon Wonder not if some seem even rotten-ripe though I dare promise thee none are juyceless And know that though here are few but happily thou hast had a taste of in thy Christian perambulation through the Church's Vineyard yet remember the same Vine oft times proves better in one soyl then in another and sprouts fairest when her unfolded arms are widest spread and if any disrelish thy gust impute it not to the sowreness or sharpness of the Grape but to the indisposition of thine own Pallate To say these Grapes came all from this or that mans Vine is a greater piece of Sacriledge then I would wish any unfrantick Minde to usurp And for my self if I challenge more then the Gathering and Digesting them into the method thou seest let me be numbred among the Pulpit-Diurnalists Nor was it ever intended that herein should be more then was sufficient for intimation to an industrious Genius what in this kinde might for the Church of God be compleated by a more skilful hand In a Medicinal sense this Arbor may not improperly be stiled The Souls Physick-Garden for the Flowers enamelling it contain most Soveraign Vertue for each Spiritual Malady What thine is let Conscience speak but say not thou art well for he who saith he hath no sin deceives himself And indeed never was Age more guilty of this Self-deceit then this wherein men say in their Hearts and proclaim in their Lives That there is no God whilest they mean-while become their own Idols by sacrificing to the Calf of the Lip and the Viper in the Brain Look we into the state of the Body Politique and wiser men then Empericks tell us Many Epidemical Diseases are too discoverable therein But where the Patient deserves our Prayers the Press hath no warrant for Invectives and 't is no improvident wisdom to be silent where our judgements are Non-pluss'd Sufficient for the Publique is the evil thereof Physitians tell us The Cure is half way home when the Malady is known but experienced Symptomes are oft-times very false Prophets otherwise he that is carried about with every wind of Doctrine might without breach of the least Link in Charities Chain be stiled Errors Weathercock 'T were not amiss to prescribe such the Word of Truth as a Pillow for their Faith to rest on till the Vertigo or Giddiness in the Brain be evaporated also to advise them what Doctrines they swallow till tryal be made whether the Spirit be of God or no. There are some within the Pales of Spiritual Bedlam that are in such a continual Burning Extasie as they can seldom or never repose their Thoughts in any Spiritual Rest but are ever and anon babling Scripture without sense or any feeling of the Power thereof Spiritual Expressions without Affection and Divinity without Sense Their Eyes are Blood-shot and the whole Creature is become so Self-resolved as no bands either Civil or Religious Natural or Politick can restrain not their Liberty but their
just and unjust but the beams thereof have happy influence onely on the Heirs of Grace melting the hearts of such into Faith and Repentance whilest they harden the cley-hearts of carnal Worldlings into stupidity and searedness of Conscience whose Mindes the god of this World hath blinded 2 Cor. 4.4 yet the express Command for Dispensation thereof is as Catholick as Christ or words could make it when being Risen from the Dead he accosted his Disciples saying Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature Mark 16.15 So that if the Gospel be hid it is hid to them that are lost 2 Cor. 4.3 In the next place stands the Ministerial Function the highest imployment that ever the Lord of Heaven vouchsafed the Sons of men If the Ministers of the Word would sit down satisfied with the Stiles and Titles given them in Scripture they needed no other Herald to blazon the Nobleness of their Calling nor any Stellicidiaries to invite the Hosanna's of the People Are they not called The Salt of the Earth the Builders of Christs Body Gods Fellow-workmen Christs Embassadors the Steward 's of the House the Fathers of the Church Fishers of men Ministers of the Spirit Builders of the Temple Shepherds of the Sheep Planters and Waterers of the Garden the Lords Harvest men his Vine-dressers Watchmen of the City Trumpeters of the Host yea Stars of the Firmament Rev. 1.10 It were worth a National Fast that all such as are thus highly dignified were or might be responsibly qualified Attribute we therefore none of these Titles to any such as are unfaithful in their Embassie not to unsavory Salt not to the Ignorant or Idle not to the Scandalous nor the Mercenary not to the Contentious nor the Covetous not to the Proud nor to the Superstitious into whose Mindes the subtile Sophister of all Ages hath specially in this foisted such specious Qualifications and such self-deceiving Equivocations to palliate those sins as if in order to Life and Doctrine he would feign perswade the World to spight the POPE the CLERGY could not erre Next follows the Hearing of the Word by this cometh Faith without this posteth Atheism yet take heed what ye hear Mark 2.24 yea and how ye hear Luke 8.18 Away therefore with itching ears with prejudicate thoughts with an impreparatory heart with presumptuous self-conceits Away with distracted Cogitations unsanctified Affections turbulent Passions sublunar Cares careless and extravagant Attention Away with carnal Security with vain Dissention of Opinions touching the Truths delivered Away with overchargings of Nature with drowsie Faculties with Unbelief Hardness of Heart Pride and uncharitable Thoughts ever Remembring that it is or should be the Word of God and not of man 1 Thess 2.13 not a tittle whereof shall go unfulfilled Matth. 5.18 till it become the savor of life unto life or of death unto deeper condemnation 2 Cor. 2.16 Take heed therefore how ye hear Luke ibid. After the Word in order follows the Sacraments which though they confer no Grace ex opere operato yet are effectual Signs and Witnesses of Gods incomprehensible Benevolence to man-wards For of Baptism saith our Savior He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved Mark 16.16 And of his Supper he saith This is my Body which is given Luke 22.19 and broken for you 1 Cor. 11.24 This is my Blood of the New Testament that is shed for many for the remission of sins Luke 22.20 Indeed a Sacrament is a Covenant of Gods free Favor to us confirmed by some outward Sign or Seal instituted by himself Thus was the Tree of Life a Sacrament to Adam Gen. 2.9 The Rainbow to Noah Gen. 9.9 13. The smoaking Furnace to Abraham Gen. 15.17 18. The Fleece of Wooll to Gideon Judg. 6.37 The Dyal to Hezekiah 2 Kings 20.7 11. The Sacrifices Circumcision and the Paschal Lamb to the Jews Baptism and the Lords Supper to the Faithful under the Gospel Mat. 28.19 Luke 22.19 In the next place stands Prayer the Souls Incense whereby she is wing'd for Heaven Wonderful are the Works wrought by Prayer not as a Cause but onely as an Instrument sanctified by God and effectual to the Righteous if it be fervent Jam. 5.16 This Fervency is that Magnetick Vertue in Prayer which attracts Heaven to Earth but the fervent Prayer of an unrighteous man availeth little save to betray his sinister dexterity in vanifying so excellent a Gift which in such the Lord knows too often comes within a breaths bredth of Blasphemy But let the Faithful be exceeding cautious whom they censure in this case lest they chance to touch the Apple of Gods eye and let him that prayeth pray fervently for Faith is full of vigor full of life and God loveth a sprightly Faith yea the Promise made to the Prayer of a Righteous man is not otherwise annex'd then on the condition of Fervency which we may not dream is confin'd to the activity of external gestures or volubility of a never-stammering tongue but chiefly consists in the sincerity of the Supplicant in the extent of his Faith and cordiality of his Desires Next follows the Lords Prayer if we have not forgot that there is such a thing in rerum natura Spiritualium It 's worth a Catechism to ask the Worlds Favorites Which of them that do so highly adore this Prayer can truly say Our Father Most can say but few can pray it Others disuse it under the notion of a set Form of Prayer but set Forms of Prayer quatenus such are not prohibited This is indeed a set Form of words for Prayer but no set Prayer as is generally mis-thought for it is a Prayer to none but such as can pray it in Faith Nor can there properly be said to be any such thing as a set Prayer for in submission to better judgements I conceive the motion of the Spirit in Prayer is that which denominates Prayer to be Prayer which Spirit is not confineable by this or any set Form of words as may appear 1 Sam. 1.15 For the motion of the Spirit in one praying the same words of another may be more extensively Spiritual in that one then in the other which could not be if the very words set in that Form Method and Order could confine the Spirit And hence it is that all that can say the Lords Prayer cannot pray Our Father for my voyce may be articulate enough without Faith but without Faith and the Spirit that articulate sound cannot properly be called a Prayer though articulated by the form of words in the Lords Prayer Thus though many say the same form of words for Prayer yet they may not be said to pray the same Prayer yea one and the same person at sundry times praying the same form of words may not infallibly be said to pray the same Prayer for it varies according to the measure of the Spirit in the person praying which may not be one the same in the same
4. They served to be as an open confession of their Faith what God they served and in whom they believed and that they hated and detested the vanity and the Idolatry of the Gentiles 5. They were also a Testification of their thankfulness for sundry benefits received that thereby they might be taught to acknowledge from whence they came 6. They served for the maintenance of the Ministery and consequently for the furtherance of the worship of God Deut. 18.3 4. 1 Cor. 9.13 Under the Law the Priests as Priests 1. Were ordinary Ministers of the old Church 2. Were appointed by men 3. Were tyed to the Doctrine of Moses and the Prophets which they learned not from God immediately but mediately by men 4. They might erre in Doctrine and Counsels and did erre often when they departed from the Rule of the Prophets So that the difference between the Priests and the Prophets stands thus 1. The Priests were ordained out of one certain Tribe the Levitical but God raised up Prophets out of any Tribe 2. The Prophets were called extraordinarily and immediately by God himself and so received from him the Doctrine which they were to declare to men 3. They were so guided by the special motion of the Holy Ghost that they could not erre in that Doctrine which they uttered to men in the name of God but with the Priests it was otherwise In the Law as the Priesthood so the Priest was twofold 1. Signifying or typical who was a person appointed by God 1. To offer typical Sacrifices 2. To make intercession for himself and others 3. To declare to the people the Doctrine of the Law and the Promise of the Messias and true Sacrifice which was to come 2. Signified that is Christ of whom the most notable Type was the High Priest himself The things that were proper and peculiar to the high Priest onely 1. He alone entred into the Tabernacle called The Holiest of all or Sanctuary and that but once every year 2. His raiment was more gorgeous then the vesture of the other Priests 3. He was set over the rest 4. He onely was consulted with in matters doubtful touching Religion or the Common-weal 5. He did therefore govern and order some Counsels and Offices of the State and Kingdom and did see that all things were lawfully administred They that were under the Law were of three sorts viz. 1. Israelites which were of Abrahams posterity and were necessarily bound by the Law to observe Circumcision and the Ceremonies 2. Proselytes who of the Gentiles were converted unto the Jews and did more and more for confirming of their faith submit themselves unto Circumcision and the whole Ceremonial Law 3. Those of the Gentiles who were converted unto the Jews but did not observe the Ceremonies these embraced onely the Doctrine and Promises of God And unto the Gentiles and Proselytes it was free to keep or not to keep Circumcision and the Ceremonies Four special Sects among the Jews under the Law 1. The Essens who were like Popish Monks and Fryars which did seperate themselves from the people vowing and dedicating themselves to live in perpetual Sanctity 2. The Sadduces who did expound the Law according to the letter and syllable and withal denyed the Resurrection and Immortality of the Soul as appears Acts 2.3 8. 3. The Pharisees who did forsake the common Exposition of the Scribes and taught and framed a more exact and strict Exposition of the Law according to the Traditions of the Fathers These Pharisees were by office Scribes as appears by comparing Joh. 1.29 with ver 24. 4. Herodians who as some think were Courtiers who held and taught that Herod was the Messias The Church of Rome erreth grosly in Confounding the Law and the Gospel under pretence that the Precepts of both are the same for substance that both require righteousness both promise life threaten death both command faith repentance and obedience Put his opinion overturns true Religion and is erroneous for these Reasons 1. Adam in his innocency knew the Law but he knew nothing then of believing in Christ and though both require righteousness promise life and threaten death yet the maner is far different 2. Likewise they differ in the commanding of faith for the Gospel commandeth faith not as a work done as the Law doth but as an instrument laying hold on Christ Again the Law commands faith generally as to believe in God and to believe his word to be true but besides this the Gospel requires a particular faith in Christ the Redeemer whom the Law never knew 3. The Law commandeth not Repentance for the knowledge of the Law was in Adams heart when he needed no Repentance True Repentance therefore is a saving Grace wrought and commanded onely by the Gospel 4. Though obedience be commanded both by the Law and the Gospel yet not in the same maner The Law commandeth obedience every way perfect both in parts and in degrees and alloweth no other but the Gospel in Christ approveth imperfect obedience that is an endeavor in all things to obey and please God if it be without hypocrisie Again the Law commandeth obedience as a work to be done for the obtaining of salvation but the Gospel requires obedience onely to testifie our faith and thankfulness to God This is not the onely Error touching the Law there are certain people in the world living under a Christian Climate known by the Name of New-Libertines who say The Old Testament is abrogated others think us necessarily tyed to all the Judicials of Moses boldly affirming That the Laws Judicial of Moses belong as well unto Christians as they did unto the Jews Others have entertained an Opinion That Love was now come in the place of the Ten Commandments Others will not have Gods Law to be preached nor the Conscience of sinners to be terrified and troubled with the Judgements of God yea it hath been held How that it was utterly unlawful for the Elect so much as to think much less to speak or hear of the fear of God which the Law preacheth Now the common Objection of such men is That Christians are not ruled by the Law but by the Spirit of Regeneration according as it is said Ye are not under the Law but under Grace Again the Law is not given unto the righteous man therefore it is not to be taught in the Church of Christ But the Answer hereto is as ancient as the Error Christians indeed are not ruled that is are not compelled and constrained by the Law and fear of punishment unto whatsoever Discipline or Order like as are the wicked but yet they are taught and instructed by the Law of God what worship is pleasing unto God and the Holy Ghost useth the voyce of the Law to teach and incline them to an obedience not constrained or hypocritical but true or voluntary so that not onely the Law commandeth them what to do but the Spirit also of Grace doth
Baptism succeeds Col. 2.11 12. 2. The Jews practice in a faithful observance of this Ordinance as of Abraham Zachary Elizabeth Joseph and Mary 3. The practice of the Christians who believing were themselves and their whole houshold Baptized Acts 16.15 33. under which whole houshold children might probably be comprised 4. Christ embracing and blessing such children as were brought to him and rebuking those that would have kept them from him Mat. 19.13 5. Gods promise made to them Gen. 17.7 Acts 2.39 as the seal for confirmation whereof God offereth Baptism 6. The right they have to Gods Kingdom Mat. 19.14 Baptism is an evidence of that their right 7. The constant continued custom of the true Catholick Church which ever since the Apostles time hath afforded the Sacrament of Baptism to children Touching the necessity of Baptisms we must know that things are said to be necessary two ways 1. Absolutely so as the thing cannot possibly be without it thus Baptism is not absolutely necessary as a cause for then should it be equal to Gods Covenant Christs Blood and the work of the Spirit 2. By consequence so as according to that course and order which God hath set down things may not well be without them Thus Baptism is by consequence and that in a double respect 1. In regard of Gods Ordinance 2. In regard of our need thereof by reason of our dulness in conceiving things Spiritual of our weakness in believing things invisible To this Sacrament of Baptism the Papists attribute too much making it a plain Idol by their opinion 1. Of the necessity thereof in such degree as that they hold if any dye unbaptized he cannot be saved 2. Of the efficacy thereof in such degree as they hold it giveth grace by the work it self thereby equalling it to the very blood of Christ taking away the peculiar work of the Spirit and the use of the grace thereby The differences of Circumcision and Baptism viz. 1. In Rites for the same are not the Rites of Circumcision and Baptism 2. Circumcision promised grace for the Messias to come Baptism for the Messias exhibited 3. Circumcision had a promise of a corporal benefit a testimony that God would give a certain place for the Church in the Land of Canaan until the coming of the Messias Baptism hath no promise in particular of any temporal benefit other then what flows from the influence of a a general promise made to godliness 1 Tim. 4.8 4. Circumcision did binde to the observing of the whole Law Ceremonial Judicial and Moral Baptism bindeth us onely to faith and amendment of life that is to observe onely the Moral Law 5. Circumcision was instituted for the Israelites Baptism was instituted for all Nations that are desirous and willing to come unto the society of the Church 6. Circumcision was to continue until the coming of the Messias Baptism shall continue until the end of the world Baptism and Circumcision agree thus 1. In the chief and principal end whereas in both is sealed the Promise of Grace by Christ which is always one and the same 2. By both of them is wrought our receiving into the Church 3. By both is signified Regeneration ye are circumcised in Christ with Circumcision made without hands For as Circumcision in the old Law was a token how the corrupt and carnal affections of the minde should be subdued and that the Lord required not so much an outward of the body as an inward circumcision of the heart Deut. 18.16 30. Acts 7.51 So Baptism telleth us that being once dead unto sin we are to live unto righteousness that all we that have been Baptized unto Jesus Christ have been Baptized unto his death c. and must walk in newness of life c. Rom. 6.3 For we have put on Christ by Baptism Gal. 3.26 The Reasons why Christ was circumcised 1. That he might signifie that he was also a member of that circumcised people 2. That he might shew that he received and took our sins on himself that he might satisfie for them 3. That he might testifie that he did entirely and fully fulfil the Law on our behalf 4. The circumcision of Christ was a part also of his humiliation and suffering Reasons why circumcision is abolished viz. 1. Because the thing signified which was the Messias is exhibited 2. Because circumcision was instituted for the severing of the Jews from all other Nations but now the Church that difference being abolished is collected and gathered out of all Nations The chief and proper ends of the institution of Baptism viz. 1. That it should be a mark whereby the Church may be discerned from all other Nations and Sects which is as it were gathered by the Word and Baptism 2. To be a confirmation of our faith that is a testification that Christ washeth us with his blood that he bestoweth on us Remission of sins Justification and Regeneration or To be the sealing of God and also the sealing or obsignation of the Promise of Grace and a testimony of Gods will that he giveth us these gifts at this present and will give them ever henceforward 3. To be a testification of our duty towards God and a binding of us and the Church to the knowledge and worship of God into whose Name we are Baptized we binde our selves in Baptism to thankfulness namely to Faith that is to receive the promised benefits with faith and then withal unto repentance and amendment of life 4. To be a signification or an advertisement unto us of the Cross and of the preservation of the Church therein and deliverance thereof from it Mat. 20.22 In regard whereof Baptism is compared unto the flood for as in that general Deluge some were shut into the Ark the rest of mankinde perishing so in the Church they who cleave unto Christ although they be pressed with calamities yet at length in their appointed time they are delivered 5. To signifie the unity of the Church for Baptism is a binding of the members of the Church among themselves to mutual love because when it severeth and distinguisheth the members of the Church from others it doth also joyn and unite them among themselves 6. To be a Token and Symbole of our receiving and entrance into the Church Hither appertain all those places in Scripture in which those who were become Christians are said to have been presently Baptized 7. To be a means of preserving and propagating the Doctrine of the free Promise through the death of Christ that the Baptized may have occasion to teach and learn who is the Author and what is the meaning or signification of Baptism The Type of Baptism was Noahs Ark born up by the waters wherein the Church which then was in Noahs family was saved 1 Pet. 3.21 And though Baptism be a mark of the true Church yet may not the Papists thereby challenge theirs to be the true Church for Baptism severed from the true preaching of the
Gods love towards us That we shall be heard for Christ the Mediators sake And it hath the chief place among Good Works yielding us the greatest testimony of our Salvation by enabling us to perform other good Duties Or thus Prayer is a Petition joyned with an ardent and earnest desire whether uttered in words or not uttered whereby we ask of the true God revealed in his Word those things which he hath commanded to be asked of him proceeding from an acknowledgement of our necessity and misery with humility repentance and confession of our own unworthiness made in true conversion unto God and in a confidence and sure trust in Gods Promises for Christs sake our Mediator For the right understanding of which Promises this Rule must be remembred That the Promises of God are not made directly to the work of Prayer but to the person that prayeth and yet not to him simply as he doth this good action of Prayer but as he is in Christ for whose Merits sake the Promise is accomplished whereby it is most evident That our Prayer is not the cause of the blessings we receive from God but onely a way and instrument in and by which God conveyeth his blessings unto his children in whom is required in Prayer a special particular faith to apply to themselves the Promise of God concerning that thing which they ask in Prayer which special faith we can never bring with us in Prayer unless we have a special saving faith whereby we believe our reconciliation with God in Christ So that the unfained desire of a touched heart is a Prayer in acceptance before God though knowledge memory and utterance to frame and conceive a form of Prayer in words be wanting Psal 10.17 for Prayer is not a work of the memory or a work of the wit but the work of a sanctified heart it is the work of Gods Spirit the very essence whereof consisteth in making known the inward desires 1 Sam. 1.15 Psal 62.8 always in the mediation of Christ by reason of the infinite Majesty of God and sinfulness of the creature with awful fear and inward reverence manifested with seemly words if it be oral Prayer befitting our matter not over-curious nor careless with reverent Psal 95.2 6. and humble gesture Ezra 9.5 6. to express which kneeling is most proper Paul useth it Eph. 3.14 Acts 2.30 if we cannot conveniently kneel then stand so did the poor humble Publican when he prayed Luke 18.13 other gestures when no necessity requireth argue little reverence less humility we must also come in assurance of faith to be heard and accepted Heb. 10.22 Jam. 1.6 which is strengthned by meditation on the Promises concerning such things as we pray for 2 Sam. 7.27 28. which full assurance as a lusty gale of wind carrieth our Prayers with full fail to heaven the desired Haven wavering and doubting like opposite uncertain winds carry them to some other place and so they return without speeding The supplicant must also be lowly in minde and holy in life Isa 1.15 the blinde man knew God heard not impenitents Joh. 9.31 he must have a true understanding sense and earnest desire of what he prays for in sincerity of heart and fervency of spirit Jam. 5.16 for Prayer ascends no higher then faith and fervor of Spirit carry it Yet notwithstanding which earnestness and fervency in Prayer it may be no true Prayer as the wicked mans prayer made in his extremity which is termed but howling Hosea 7.14 So a thief is earnest with a Judge to spare him but this is but carnal earnestness Thus God takes our prayers by weight not by number not by labor not by earnestness which is a thing that may come from the flesh but if it come from his Spirit he accepts it and then though we may have a secret answer to our prayers yet may we wait long before the thing it self be given us but then God continues a secret strength to us that we may wait and hold out yea though we never have any request in this world granted yet we must think this sufficient that we can and do pray unto God for by whose Grace have we alway continued in prayer but by the gift and Grace of God God indeed answers some sooner some later some he answers quickly and some he defers longer but importunity will prevail with him so as thou shalt have Christ and after thou hast him thou must look to the Priviledges thou hast by him onely remembring as the priviledges thou hast by him so the condition of after-obedience For Prayer is the means which God hath sanctified to unlock the closet of his Graces and he being the Fountain of all Blessings if we use not Prayer aright it may be truly said to us as the woman of Samaria spoke Joh. 4.11 Thou hast nothing to draw with and the well is deep from whence therefore canst thou have that living water yea what the Lord did miraculously to Stephen when he opened the heavens and shewed himself to the outward view that he doth ordinarily to the Saints in prayer he shews himself to their mindes and inward affections Touching the time of Prayer if it be the secret and lifting up of the heart to God called Ejaculation then pray continually pray without ceasing Eph. 6. but if it be a set and solemn prayer either in private or in the Congregation the Word of God appoints no precise hour for this kinde because now there is no difference between time and time in regard of Conscience for performing the worship of God and the duties of Religion the Lords-day onely excepted In the New Testament the distinction of days and hours is taken away Paul was afraid of the Galatians because they made difference of days times moneths and years in respect of holiness and Religion Gal. 4. And as touching the place of Prayer in regard of Conscience Holiness and Religion all places are equal and alike in the New Testament since the coming of Christ the house or field is holy as the Church and if we pray in either of them as we ought our prayer is as acceptable to God as that which is made in the Church for now the days are come foretold by the Prophet Mal. 1.11 which Paul expounds 1 Tim. 2.8 yet nevertheless for order decency and quietness sake publike prayer is to be made in publike places as Churches and Chappels appointed for that use But undenyable it is that all places are alike in respect of Gods presence and of his hearing for he is Omnipresent wheresoever a man hath occasion to pray there God is which concerns them to consider who make the Church a more holy place for prayer then other-where and therefore reserve all or most of their prayers till they come thither forgetting that wheresover two or three of the faithful are gathered together there God is in the midst of them for now difference of place in respect of Gods presence is
taken away God is as well in the field and in the private house as in the Church and yet Churches are ordained and used in a godly policy because a Congregation may more conveniently there meet to their mutual edification in the publike exercise of the Word and Prayer otherwise private houses were as good places for Gods worship as Churches if they were decent and convenient for edification for now in all places men may lift up pure hands unto God 1 Tim. 2.8 where it plainly appears That after the coming of Christ by whom the partition wall was broken down and both made one people to God all places were sanctified for prayer so as under the Gospel no one place is more holy then another yet it being Gods will to be worshipped publikely needful it is that there should be places fit for that purpose Thus the Corinthians had one place to worship God in 1 Cor. 11.20 though certain of the Inhabitants of Philippi went out to a Rivers side to pray on the Sabbath day Acts 16.13 but that was in time of persecution The Father Son and Holy Ghost is to be prayed unto we may pray unto the whole Trinity but more properly unto the first person God the Father in the Name of God the Son by the assistance of God the Holy Ghost So we pray unto the whole Trinity yet as the first person is the Fountain of the Deity we pray the Father by the Son through the Holy Ghost nor is it strange that we pray unto Christ for whose sake onely we are heard in our prayers for we pray unto him as he is the second person we have our prayers heard through him as he is our Mediator thus distinguishing his person from his office Prayer in general is twofold 1. Publike wherein words must be always used in a plain known distinct voyce 2. Private wherein the voyce is profitable but not simply necessary Two Rules of gesture in publike Prayer 1. It must alway be comely modest decent and uniform 2. It must serve as much as may be to express the inward sincerity of the heart without hypocrisie Again there is a twofold Prayer 1. One that is the voyce of our own spirit 2. Another that is the voyce of Gods Spirit in us that is when the Holy Ghost hath so sanctified the heart when he hath put it into such a holy frame of Grace that the heart comes to speak as it is quickned acted and moved from Gods Spirit This Spirit of Adoption makes us 1. Earnest and fervent in prayer 2. Bold and confident to God as to a Father so that we may know the voyce of Gods Spirit in our prayers by our boldness to and confidence in him for wicked men come to God as to a stranger the Saints as to a friend Prayer is one part of that holy worship of God called Invocation whereof there are four parts 1. Supplication when we intreat God to remove some evil from us 2. Prayer whereby we beg at the hands of God the gift of some good thing unto us 3. Intercession when as we intreat the Lord to grant some good thing unto our brethren or to remove some evil from them 4. Thanksgiving whereby we give laud and thanks to God for blessings received either by our selves or by our brethren The distinctions of Prayer in regard of the maner thereof viz. 1. Mental which is an opening inwardly of the desires of a mans heart to God without any outward manifestation of the same by word Neh. 2.4 Exod. 14.15 1 Sam. 1.13 2. Vocal and is that which is uttered with words 1 Kings 8.23 3. Sudden when upon some sudden occasion present the heart is instantly lift up unto God whether by sighs or words they are called Ejaculations of the heart and argue a holy familiarity with God yea a heavenly minde 4. Composed when a Christian setteth himself to make some solemn prayer unto God whether it be in the Church family closet field or any other place Dan. 6.10 to this kinde of Prayer preparation before-hand is very needful Eccl. 5.2 5. Conceived being that which he who uttereth the prayer inventeth and conceiveth himself which is very expedient and needful for these Reasons 1. It manifesteth the gift and power of the Spirit who can give both matter and maner words and affections who can suggest what to pray and how to pray 2. Every day we have new wants new assaults new sins and our petitions must be made according to our present wants our supplications according to our particular assaults and our confession according to our several sins 3. As God daily continueth and reneweth old blessings so also he addeth new to them 6. Prescribed when a set constant form is laid down before-hand and either conned by heart or read This is a good help to weak Christians if they endeavor to pray with the Spirit and with understanding 7. Publike when an Assembly of Saints publikely with one joynt-consent call upon God by the mouth of the Minister Joel 2.16 17. Neh. 8.1 6. For the maner of which publike prayer two things are very requisite viz. 1. Unanimity respecting the heart and affections for which an audible and intelligible voyce is necessary 2. Uniformity respecting the outward reverent carriage and humble gesture in prayer 8. Private which is made by one alone or by some few together 2 Kings 4.33 Luke 9.28 Acts 10.30 This especially belongeth to the Master of a Family 9. Secret which is made by one alone none being present but God and he that prayeth This may be in a close chamber or closet Mat. 6.6 or on a desolate Mountain Mark 1.35 or in a secret field Gen. 24.63 or on any house top Acts 10.9 or in any other place 1 Tim. 2.8 10. Extraordinary which after an extraordinary maner even above our usual custom is poured out before God consisting partly in ardency of affection as in Christ Luke 22.44 Heb. 5.7 in Moses Exod. 32.32 and in the King of Nineveh Jonah 3.8 and partly in continuance of time as Jacob a whole night Gen. 32.24 so did David 2 Sam. 12.16 and Christ Luke 6.12 Moses a whole day Exod. 17.12 so did Joshua and the Elders of Israel Josh 7.6 We must pray 1. For the glory of God always and that without any limitation or condition 2. For our own good 1. The salvation of Soul and that without any condition 2. In this present life but with this condition so far forth as it may stand with Gods glory and be for our own good The conditions and circumstances of true prayer viz. 1. A direction of it unto the true God and him onely 2. In the mediation of Christ not without a Mediator as Pagans nor in the name of any other Mediator as Papists 3. The knowledge of Gods Commandment in requiring us to pray else we doubt of being heard 4. The knowledge of those things which are to be asked else we mock
God 5. A true ardent desire of those things which are to be asked else we are hypocrites 6. A thorough sense and feeling of our own wants else we pray not at all 7. Lowliness of minde self-denyal impartially weighing our own baseness Humiliation that is true Repentance 1. Because God oweth us nothing 2. We are his enemies before our conversion 8. A considence and full perswasion of being heard for the Mediators sake Heb. 10.22 To this purpose meditate on the Promises 9. In fear before prayer meditating on the excellency and glory of God in prayer holding our hearts close with God that they wander not 10. With seemly words befitting the matter not strained nor careless 11. With reverent submiss and humble gesture 12. In holiness of life for the prayer of a righteous man availeth much Jam. 5.6 yea the prayer of a faithful man is more forcible then the power of a whole Army witness Moses against Amalek Exo. 17.11 13. In sincerity of heart and with fervency of Spirit even an hungring thirsting and longing desire Other conditions in an acceptable Prayer to be observed viz. 1. We must ask while the time of Grace and Mercy remaineth for if the day of Grace be once passed we shall be excluded with the foolish Virgins Mat. 25.8 9. Now the time whilest God offers mercy to us in his Word is the acceptable time this is the day of Grace 2. We must not ask as seemeth good unto our selves but according to Gods will and as his word alloweth lest we be denyed with the sons of Zebedee for asking we know not what Mat. 20.22 3. We must not doubt of Gods granting us those things which we ask according to his will for the wavering minded man shall receive nothing of God Jam. 1.5 6. 4. We must refer the time and maner of Gods accomplishing our requests to his good pleasure lest with the Israelites we seem to limit the Holy One of Israel Rules to be observed that we may conceive aright of God in Prayer 1. We must not conceive him in the form of any earthly or heavenly bodily or Spiritual creature whatsoever for thus not to conceive him is a degree of conceiving him aright We must not frame in our mindes any Image of God at all as that he should be like unto man or any other creature but we must conceive of him both in his works as our Creator Governor and Preserver and also in his properties as most wise most just most holy merciful c. Thus we may better conceive of him by his Works and Attributes then by his Nature 2. We must conceive that God is one in Substance and three in Persons We must not confound the Persons nor divide the Substance but conceive of one God in three Persons and three Persons in one and the same Godhead so he must not be conceived absolutely that is out of the Trinity but as he subsisteth in the Person of the Father Son and Holy Ghost 3. When we direct our prayers or any worship to any one Person of the Trinity we must include the rest in the same worship yea further we must retain in minde the distinction and order of all the three Persons without severing or sundring them The whole Trinity hath a work in this holy exercise of Prayer For The Holy Ghost frameth our Requests Rom. 8.26 The Son offereth them up unto the Father Rev. 8.3 The Father accepteth them thus framed and offered Rom. 8.27 The helps of preparation to Prayer viz. 1. Meditation 1. Of the Majesty of God to whom we pray 2. Of the matter of our prayers which are for Temporal things Spiritual things Eternal things 3. Of our own corruption and want of Grace 2. A stedfast belief to perswade our selves that there is a God one in Essence three in Persons rewarding those that call upon him and whereby we lay hold on Christ assuring our selves of the power goodness mercy and bounty of God Heb. 11.6 Before Prayer these things are necessary 1. Repentance and after sins committed a still renewed repentance 2. Reconciliation if need require to our brother 3. Preparation in heart and minde as one that is to speak familiarly with God in which preparation these things are required 1. The minde is to be emptied of all carnal and worldly thoughts 2. A consideration of the things to be asked 3. A lifting up of the heart to God 4. The heart must be touched with a reverence of the Majesty of God The impediments to be removed before we can pray 1. Pride for God abhors the proud Prov. 16.5 he hears them not Job 35.12 2. An absenting our selves from the word a careless and negligent hearing the same a deriding scorning and contempt of it Prov. 28.9 Zech. 7.13 3. Cruelty oppression and unmercifulness towards the poor Pro. 21.13 4. All corrupt affections as anger malice hatred discord wrath envy 1 Pet. 3.5 6 7. 5. A delight in sin taking pleasure in it and making a sport of wickedness Psal 66.16 Special Duties required in the act of Prayer 1. Our prayer must be the speech of the soul and heart not of the tongue onely Psal 25.1 2. In the minde the right understanding of what we ask Mat. 20.22 3. In the heart 1. Reverence in regard of Gods Majesty Mal. 1.6 2. Humility in regard of our own unworthines Gē 18.27 Ps 51.17 4. Every Petition must proceed from a lively sense of our poverty specially in Spiritual matters with an earnest desire to have them supplied Acts 237. 5. Every Petition must proceed from a saving and a justifying faith being fully perswaded in our hearts that God both can and will grant our requests Jam. 1.6 7. 6. Every Petition must be grounded on Gods word and not framed to the carnal conceit and fancy of mans brain and be onely for good things 1 Joh. 5.14 7. Our Prayer must in the name merit and mediation of Christ alone be presented to God alone not to Saints Angels the Virgin Mary or any other creature 8. We must pray by the help of the Spirit it must be the voyce of Gods Spirit speaking in our Spirit Rom. 8.26 9. We must pray for our brethren as well as for our selves for our enemies as well as our friends Mat. 5.44 10. Our Prayers must be without vain repetitions much babling and wandring thoughts 11. Every Petition must be made in obedience that is we must have a Commandment enjoyning us to ask the thing we pray for and a Promise to assure us that it shall be granted and yet here this Caveat must be remembred That we leave both the time and the maner of accomplishing our requests to the good pleasure and wisdom of God 12. There must be instancy in the act of Prayer and perseverance till the thing asked be granted 13. Every true Prayer must have in it some thanksgiving unto God for his benefits received It appears from what hath been said That in Prayer these
of right confession of sins in prayer to God 1. We must impartially confess to God to the best of our knowledge and remembrance our special and particular sins 2. We must set out our sins in their right colours making them appear vile and heinous as they are 3. It must proceed from the heart Jer. 31.18 hypocritical confession is no confession 4. We must confess our sins with an hatred of them for many hypocrites confess like Judas their particular sins but it is of custom without conscience or of passion without remorse or of fear without change whereas the sins that are in us should more grieve us then the Judgements that are upon us 5. Our confession must not be extorted or enforced but freely and willingly performed otherwise it is not true confession 6. In our confession this must be observed That we ought not so far to dwell upon the meditation of our sins that we forget the mercies of God and faith in his Promises and forgiveness of our sins 7. It belongeth to us and our confession ever to joyn prayer to God for the pardon of our sins without which all is vain 8. We ought so to confess our sins as that we have also a full purpose to leave and forsake them we may not think to finde mercy so long as we continue in that for which we crave it The vain repetitions in prayer condemned by our Savior Christ Mat. 6.7 comprehend many abuses in the maner of prayer viz. 1. Meer babling when words are used for prayer which contain neither requests unto God nor giving of thanks nor confession Such is the use of the Ave-Maria or the Angel Gabriels Salutation to the Virgin Mary yea the rehearsal of the Ten Commandments and of the Creed for Prayers is but meer babling 2. Ignorance in prayer as prayer in an unknown tongue and thus many sin that use the Lords Prayer without understanding of the words 3. Cold and dull praying when the lips draw near unto God but the heart not affected therewith 4. Superstitious prayers when as Gods worship is measured out by set numbers This opinion takes place with our common people for they think that God is served by the work done if the words be said they think all is well 5. Rash praying without due preparation when men pray onely on the sudden by the motion of the Spirit as they call it too many are of this minde as allowing no set form of prayer to any sort of people but however conceived prayer be most comfortable yet without due preparation of the heart it is most subject to vain repetitions 6. All vain and superfluous speech in any maner of Invocation wherein the heart is not affected according to the will of God Perseverence in prayer is grounded on Gods wise disposing Providence and is necessary to all faithful Christians for these Reasons 1. Because the Sacrifice of true prayer is a sweet and delightsom Sacrifice to God Heb. 13.15 16. 2. God thus tryeth the faith and patience of his Saints whether they can and will continue to wait upon him 3. By perseverance prayers move more earnest and fervent but as for cold prayers God will spew them out Rev. 3.16 4. God thus moveth his children to search their hearts to see if they can finde any cause in them why God heareth them not Jos 7.6 c. 5. God doth thus commend his blessings so much the more unto us for good things much desired oft craved long expected are the more welcome when they are obtained and we moved to be the more thankful for them Prov. 13.12 The Signs of extraordinary ardency in prayer are such as these viz. 1. Extraordinary distemper of the body thus was it with Christ Luke 22.44 and Nehemiah Neh. 2.2 2. Unusual motion of the parts of the body as in Hannah 1 Sam. 1.13 in Solomon 1 Kings 8.22 in the Publican Luke 18.13 and in Christ himself Mark 14.35 3. Deep sighing and groans as in David Psal 38.9 The sighs of the Spirit are inexpressible Rom. 8.26 4. Loud crying David roared all the day Psal 32.3 Christ cryed with a loud voyce Mat. 27.46 5. Often inculcating and repeating the same petition Thus did Christ Mat. 26.39 42 44. So did Daniel Dan. 9.18 19. This is far from babling or vain repetitions 6. Tears these Christ poured forth Heb. 5.7 So did the sinful woman Luke 7.38 yet tears simply in themselves are not acceptable to God but onely as they are Signs of true Prayer when they proceed from a broken heart and a contrite Spirit The faults or abuses in our prayers viz. 1. When we make our prayers unto any other then God or unto him in any other name then in Christ 2. When the power or grace of God is tyed to some certain prayers to a certain number or set form 3. When God is prayed to onely with the mouth without the heart 4. When any prays unto God with a vain opinion of his own righteousness 5. When any impenitent person or that laboreth not to amend his life prayeth 6. When a man prayeth without faith The duties required after Prayer viz. 1. A particular faith whereby he that prayeth must be assured that his particular request shall be granted 2. We must with patience and hope expect the fulfilling of our requests 3. We must use all good means whereby we may shun those things we pray against or attain to these blessings and graces we pray for we must do and practice that which we pray for and use all lawful means that we can to obtain it 4. We must take heed of fainting or growing weary but labor to persevere and hold out which implieth these three things viz. 1. When we cleave to Christ constantly 2. When we will take no denyal 3. When we are content to wait in prayer and not give over We are bound to desire the prayers of others for these Reasons 1. For the testification of the earnestness of our desire 2. To shew that we acknowledge a Communion of Saints which perform mutual duties one to another 3. We manifest a sense of our own weakness yea much humility 4. We maintain mutual love which consisteth not onely in offering and doing kindenesses but also in craving and accepting the like We are also bound to pray for others as well as our selves Because 1. Therein we acknowledge God to be not onely our own Father but also the common Father of others in which Christ taught us to say Our Father 2. Hereby we perform a duty of Love one of the most principal duties that be it is an act both of Charity and Justice they which neglect it sin 1 Sam. 12.13 3. There is no one thing wherein and whereby we can be more beneficial and do more good to any then in and by faithful and fervent prayer They are justly to be reproved who pray not for others and they are of three sorts viz. 1. Such as will take
or honor 3. When God offers occasion by any work of his Providence we must endeavor to glorifie and magnifie his Name therein whether they be acts of his Mercy or of his Justice We must thus labor to hallow Gods Name for these Reasons 1. Because it is an honor even due unto him Rev. 4.11 2. It is a credit to us also 3. We thereby testifie how we esteem of God 4. The contrary argues impiety Exod. 5.2 Isa 36.20 5. He hath severely punished the prophanation of his Name Exod. 14.28 2 Kings 19.37 Isa 37.36 37. Acts 12.23 6. He created us for this purpose Prov. 16.3 7. As all men account of their Names Eccl. 7.1 so God doth highly of his 8. It is not onely holy in it self but gives holiness to all other things that are holy 9. Moses and Aaron entred not into Canaan because they did not sanctifie the Word amongst the children of Israel Deut. 32.51 Num. 20.12 10. The Lord himself proclaims That he will be sanctified in them that come near him and that before all the people he will be glorified Lev. 10.3 If we say Hallowed be thy Name with our mouthes and prophane it in our lives we bewray a false heart and discover the rotten profession of most damnable hypocrisie by this unchristian contradiction rendring our selves more odious in the sight of God then base dissemblers are in our own estimation Let therefore the practice of our lives demonstrate the sincerity of our hearts keep tune with the Musick of our lips when we sing Glory to God on high and in an holy sympathy eccho forth the Devotion of our souls when we pray Hallowed be thy Name May all our Thoughts Words Actions sanctifie Thee Holy Father May this Prayer be In all our Thoughts in all our Words still pray'd In all our Actions still devoutly said And may our Hearts to this Petition be Joyn'd to make up this holy Harmony Touch thou the strings thereof and then no fear Of jarring discord to ascend thine ear Thy Servants with thy holy Spirit inflame Thy Church shall practice Hallowed be thy Name §. 6. Thy Kingdom come GOds Kingdom is the Rule that he doth exercise over his Creatures generally over all the whole world specially over his Elect over his Church howsoever now dispersed into many places yet making but one Kingdom which is partly in Heaven Triumphant partly upon Earth Militant till the last great Day when in Heaven onely it shall be everlastingly glorious Now besides this there is a Spiritual Kingdom an inward Spiritual Kingdom of God which is over all those in whose hearts his Laws are written to do them and the holy Spirit ruleth and beareth sway and happy is that man who is thus of his Kingdom Let thy Kingdom come that is Let it by continual encrease be augmented and always by a new enlargement and accession be extended and multiplied which thou O Lord in thy Church dost hold and possess wherein we desire That the number of true Believers may be daily encreased that Gods Kingdom of Grace may be enlarged and his Kingdom of Glory hastned Thus let thy Kingdom come outwardly thy Power and Providence being exercised and inwardly Grace being encreased and Glory hastned Let nothing hinder the coming of thy Kingdom neither the Devil nor wicked men neither in the Magistracy Ministery nor People neither infidelity impenitency any raigning sin or negligence but let thy Kingdom come to us that be pilgrims and strangers here on earth prepare us for it and enter us into it that be yet without renew us by thy Spirit that we may be subject to thy Will confirm us also in this estate that our souls after this life and both souls and bodies at the Day of Judgement may be fully glorified yea Lord hasten this glory to us and to all thine Elect. And here also implicitely we acknowledge our opposite disposition to Gods Kingdom and bewail it For this imports That there is another Kingdom even the Kingdom of Satan which is a Kingdom of darkness full of disorder and confusion through sins which greatly hindreth and annoyeth Gods Kingdom of Grace especially This is that Tyrannical Regency by which as the Prince of Darkness he by Gods just permission ruleth in the children of darkness and rageth against the children of light 2 Cor. 4.4 Rev. 12.3 erecting up two other Kingdoms the one of Sin Rom. 6.12.5.21 the other of Death Rom. 5.14 all which are Enemies to this Kingdom we pray for This Petition doth in order next follow Hallowed be thy Name because it is the first means by which Gods Name is hallowed and next to the hallowing of his Name we ought chiesly to pray That Gods Kingdom may come Mat. 6.31 And it is also placed before Thy will be done to teach us That no man can rightly do the will of God and please him unless he be of his Kingdom and delivered out of the Kingdom of Darkness by faith in Christ and the Spirit of Sanctification he shall do his will indeed as a vessel of wrath being over-ruled by his Almighty power but not as a vessel of mercy out of a good heart to be accepted Thus no man can ever do Gods will in any thing till such time as Gods Kingdom be erected in his heart because no man can do Gods will that is not Gods Subject Joh. 1.24 neither can any man keep Gods Law but by Gods grace Psal 119.32 Conclude we therefore That Gods Kingdom is that Spiritual Rule which God through Christ doth by grace begin in us in this life and by glory will accomplish in the life to come Dan. 2.37 Mat. 25.37.6.31 Rom. 14.17 The kingdom of God is threefold viz. 1. The Kingdom of Power Psal 99.1 By this he ruleth Satan and all his enemies Psa 2.9.145.13 commands all creatures and preserveth his own people This Kingdom is external and is a government of all 2. The Kingdom of Grace Mat. 3.2 By this he ruleth the godly and raigns in their hearts by his Word and Spirit Luke 17.20 This Kingdom is internal and a government of the Elect. 3. The Kingdom of Glory Luke 23.42 By this he crowneth the godly with Celestial happiness This Kingdom is eternal and a government of the departed out of this life into heaven The kingdom of God signifies these particulars viz. 1. The sending of the Son our Mediator 2. The ordaining and maintaining of the Ministery of Christ 3. The gathering of the Church by Christ out of mankinde by the voyce of the Gospel and the efficacy of the holy Ghost beginning in us true Faith and Repentance 4. The perpetual Government of the Church 5. The preservation thereof in this life and protection against her enemies 6. The casting away of her enemies into eternal pains 7. The raising of the Church unto eternal life 8. The glorifying of the Church in eternal life when God shall be all in all We therefore when we pray Thy Kingdom
when the proper gifts or blessings of the faithful are augmented with perpetual encrease in the godly or converted Rev. 22.11 4. By Consummation or full accomplishment when the godly shall be glorified at the second coming of our Lord. We ought to desire that the Kingdom of God may come for these Reasons specially 1. For the glory of God or in respect of the first Petion because that we may sanctifie and hallow his Name it is required that he Rule us by his Word and Spirit 2. Because God will give his Kingdom onely to those that ask it The wants we are to bewail taught us in this Petition concern either our selves or others 1. We must lament and mourn for our own miserable estate by Nature whereby we are the servants of Sin and so in bondage and thraldom thereto Joh. 8.34 And the best of us do but weakly yield to Christs Scepter and where Sin raigneth there the Devil hath dominion 2. We must bewail the sins of all the world in the transgression of Gods Law whereby God is dishonored his Kingdom hindred and the Kingdom of Darkness furthered We must therefore bewail that there be so many hinderers of Gods Kingdom as namely the Flesh to infect the World to allure the Devil to seduce Antichrist to withdraw the Turk to withstand and the Wicked to trouble men that should be Subjects of this Kingdom Pray therefore Thy Kingdom come The helps which further Gods kingdom and are to be desired of us viz. 1. The Preaching of the Gospel and all other divine Ordinances whereby Gods Kingdom is erected and maintained that they may be where they are not and may be blessed where they are vouchsafed and herein for godly Magistrates and faithful Ministers 2. That God would enlighten the eyes of our mindes that we may see the wonders of his Law that so the Lords ordinances may be blessed unto us 3. That we may be wholly subject unto Christ and that of Conscience not onely in our outward behavior but in minde heart will and in all our affections that we may grow in grace and in the saving knowledge of Christ Jesus 4. We must desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ in the Kingdom of glory for this end that we may make an end of sinning and become more obedient Subjects unto Christ yea wholly ruled by him though for the good of others we must be content to live 5. That both by the hour of death and by the coming of Christ to Judgement this Kingdom in us and all Gods chosen may be accomplished that Satan being trodden under our feet and the power of death destroyed God may be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 6. That Christ would come in Judgement when all things shall be subdued unto God and all his obedient Subjects shall be fully glorified This we may desire in heart though we must leave the time to Gods good will and pleasure still waiting for it by faith in his Promise 7. That God would enlarge his Sanctuary here on earth gather his elect more and more and still defend and maintain his Church in every place in the world when these desires affect our souls then do we truly say Thy Kingdom come The duties to be practised by us that Gods Kingdom may come viz. 1. We must labor for true humiliation and conversion else we cannot enter into the Kingdom Matth. 8.3 Joh. 3.5 nay otherwise we do but mock God by saying well and doing nothing 2. We must be careful to bring forth the fruits of Gods Kingdom which are Righteousness Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 3. We must hence learn to be contented in all estates of this life whatsoever the hope of this Kingdom which we here pray for must swallow up all the sorrows that earthly calamities can bring upon us Luke 12.32 4. We must all labor in our places and callings to bring one another into this kingdom one neighbor another and one friend another Ezc. 18.30 5. Hence we must learn every day to prepare our selves to dye for by death our souls enter into the glory of this Kingdom which we pray may come unto us whence appears the monstrous hypocrisie of the world whose practice flatly contradicts their prayer Of this Petition 1. The Supplication is for the continuance of Gods gracious Providence over his general kingdom and of all good means and furtherances of his special kingdom his Church 2. The Deprecation is against all impediments and lets of Gods general kingdom as Anarchy Tyranny wicked Laws c. and against all hinderances of his special kingdom as Toleration of Idolatry Heresie Ignorance Idleness Infidelity Impenitency Hardness of heart c. 3. The Thanksgiving is for the Lords exercising his kingdom in the right ordering of the world punishing the wicked rewarding the godly spreading the glorious beams of his Word enlarging his kingdom for worthy Magistrates and faithful Ministers for Faith and all Spiritual graces In this glass we read the superstitious vanity of ignorant souls The rotten hypocrisie of formal Professors The cursed Rebellion of prophane worldlings The Antichristian Tyranny of Idolatrous Papists All which as we tender the Soveraign Power of Christs Scepter the Prerogative of his Royalty and the eternal happiness of our own Souls let us carefully avoid as by making it the language of our hearts so the loyalty of our whole lives to practice Thy Kingdom come A new-hatch'd old-laid Heresie appears That here on Earth yet full One thousand years Christs Kingdom is to come and triumph shall With all his Saints in Pomp Majestical Fond Dreamers Call ye this Terrestrial Which figures that which is Spiritual Raign in our hearts O Lord Protect augment Thy Church This is thy proper Regiment Cast down thine Enemies Compleat the sum Of thine Elect So let Thy Kingdom come §. 7. Thy Will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven THis Petition in order followeth Thy Kingdom come to shew That where Gods kingdom is set up his will is endeavored after and preferred always and not our own will It depends indeed on both the former Petitions for Gods Name is hallowed when his will is done and his kingdom comes when by doing his will we testifie our selves his obedient Subjects Wherein we desire that we and all the people of God upon earth may as readily obey Gods will as the Angels and Saints in heaven So that this Petition is propounded in a Comparison the former part whereof respects the grace of Obedience which we pray for the other the right maner of performing it wherein we must note That this particle As doth not betoken the degree but the kinde of doing Gods will which is the beginning of performing Gods will with continuance and encrease thereof not the Consummation perfection and full accomplishment thereof which yet we are to desire here that at length we may obtain it which though it be impossible in this life yet are we
Pet. 1.12 much more doth it concern us to be diligent searchers out of this mystery in the Gospel 2. The Angels are maintainers of true Religion and of the worship of God for the Law was given by Angels Gal. 3.19 they brought the Apostles out of prison to preach the Gospel they are enemies to Idolatry Rev. 19.10 Herein also let us be their followers 3. The Angels were always nigh unto Christ at his Nativity Luke 2.9 10. in his temptation Mat. 4.11 in his Agony Luke 22.43 in his Resurrection Mat. 28.2 and Ascension Acts 1.10 And so should we perform unto Christ all the service we can 4. They are alway praising and lauding the Name of God so should we labor to have our hearts enlarged for his glory and our mouthes filled with his praises 5. They be serviceable for our good if we be Gods children though they be far better then we are Heb. 1.14 So must we imploy our selves in soul body calling credit and all we have for the good of men 6. They are joyful when sinners are converted from sin unto God Luke 15.10 and are grieved when men by sin dishonor God the like affections should be in us for in the world to come we shall be like the Angels in heaven in glory Mat. 22.30 This patern of Angelical obedience here propounded for our imitation must teach us 1. To acknowledge and bewail the natural hardness deadness and untowardness of our hearts in yielding obedience to the will of God 2. To bewail the want of sincerity and faithfulness in doing Gods will our maimed and defective obedience shews how far we come short of this Angelical example Many content themselves with the outward service of the body and never regard the inward worship of the heart and others have respect to outward duties of piety that concern God but for uprightness and mercy towards men they little regard This the Angels do not This Angelical example informs our judgement what honor we are to give to the blessed Angels namely the honor of imitation and not of any divine worship for when John would have worshipped the Angel he forbade him saying See thou do it not worship God Rev. 19.10 From all which let us be perswaded to begin our heaven upon earth by resembling though not equalling the Angels in obedience that so with them and all the Host of Heaven we may sincerely say Thy will be done in Earth as it is in Heaven How many say Gods will be done and yet The Idol of their own Will-worship set In stead thereof How many vainly say In Prayer what they practice to unpray Or with the words conclude the work as though The will of God were done by saying so Help Lord for of our selves we proudly draw Back from thy Will and make our own a Law Assist us by the Spirit of thy Son To keep thy Law then shall Thy will be done §. 8. Give us this day our daily bread UNder the name of Bread by that usual figure Synecdoche our Savior Christ compriseth not onely all corporal blessings and such as are necessary for this life but also the profitable use of them Give us that is Bestow bless and sanctifie all temporal necessary good things unto us Sanctifie all outward comforts unto us which by reason of sin stand accursed that they may not be a destruction to us in the use of them as we deserve Bestow uphold continue and maintain that which thou hast given us Bless make prosperous and wholesom our meats and drinks for the strengthning of our bodies and refreshing our Spirits so as we may be enabled in the strength of thy blessing to serve thee in our Callings as thou hast commanded This day that is we desire not such abundance for so long a time as whereby our dependance upon thee should be cut off but to be content with things necessary for the present and to wait upon thee for the future from day to day Daily bread that is Bread for our substance such as Nature doth require to uphold it no dainties or costly feastings but onely necessary food and cloathing whereby the substance of our bodies may be continued and not pine away Our daily bread that is not the bread the clothes the substance of another but such things honestly gotten by our labor through Gods blessing upon us according to the Apostle 2 Thess 3.2 And the wealthiest in the world may not think himself too rich to beg this daily bread for he knows not ere the day pass to what extremity with Job he may be brought This Petition followeth immediately Thy will be done because to have things necessary for our maintenance is a stay and help unto us the more chearfully to do the will of God and keeps us from unlawful enterprizes and because the Rule of seeking things temporal must not be our own but the will of God So likewise this Petition in order is placed before this Forgive us our Trespasses not for that the things of this life are to be sought before those that concern the life to come for this is forbidden Joh. 6.27 but to provide against our infirmities whereby we distrust God for food raiment and worldly deliverances when we profess that we believe in him for the remission of sin and deliverance from damnation and to provide for the strengthning of our faith touching things eternal by ascending from these his gifts below wherein we taste of his goodness daily By which order we are taught to consider the corruption of mans Nature which ought in the first place to seek things Spiritual but because we live rather by Sense then by Faith we do principally desire things corporal Again hereby appears Christs mercy unto man in that by this order he descendeth to our infirmity who rather depend on him for the pardon of our sins then trust him for our provision in this life which argues we are but of little faith Matth. 9.5 Lastly by this order we are taught to depend upon him for the forgiveness of our sins for when we see that he is here so careful for our bodies he will doubtless be more careful to provide for the good of our souls Rom. 8.32 The Reasons why in this Petition Christ addeth This day 1. To meet with our distrustfulness and covetousness and to reclaim us from both these vices 2. That we should depend on him onely as yesterday so this day as this day so to morrow and for ever 3. That the exercise of faith and prayer may be always continued in us The Reasons why Christ calleth it Daily bread 1. Because he will have us daily to desire as much as may for every day suffice us 2. Because he will bridle our raging and endless lusts and desires for we are not to be inordinately careful for any thing but to depend upon Gods Providence 3. Because he will have us to know That as we expect daily our supportance from God
our discharge in this life that we be not tormented in the life to come The Reasons why sin is called a Debt to man 1. Because we owe love which is thereby broken Rom. 13.8 2. Because we owe punishment for doing wrong Judg. 1.8 3. Because we owe satisfaction for the wrong done Lev. 6.4 These words As we forgive our debtors are added for these Reasons 1. That we may rightly desire remission of sins that is with faith and repentance a sign and token whereof is the love of our Neighbor 2. That when we finde in our selves true faith and repentance we may so have a certain argument and comfort in us that we are of the number of them to whom remission of sins is promised and that therefore we shall doubtless obtain the same All offences that are done to us of others may be reduced to these three Heads 1. Such as do onely displease us but bring no loss or hurt to us 2. Small injuries such as do not onely displease us but withal bring some little hurt to us either in our life goods or good-name 3. Greater injuries such as are not onely offensive to our persons but withal do prejudice our life and bring a ruine upon our estates both in goods and good-name The forgiveness between man and man is fourfold viz. 1. Of Revenge that is when we requite not evil for evil either by thought word or deed This belongeth to all men 2. Of private Punishments when men return not punishments for injuries done by way of requital though we cannot forgive wholly and perfectly yet we may truly and sincerely 3. Of Judgement when we judge not an injury done to be an injury 4. Of Satisfaction when it is due for some hurt done Now man is said to forgive man when he doth pardon either the wrong done Gen. 50.21 or the punishment appointed for the wrong 2 Sam. 19.23 or the satisfaction which the offender is bound to make Luke 7.4 or all of them as occasion is offered Mat. 18.32 The conditional words of this Petition are useful to us many ways viz. 1. To inform us that asking of pardon and testimony of Repentance go together he that receives the one must express the other for where God gives pardon there also he gives grace to repent and mercy is not granted but on condition of repentance Acts 2.37 38. 2. To teach us to forgive our brethren every day to renew our repentance and to humble our selves and to let us know That we are bound to forgive all persons Gol. 3.12 all sins Prov. 10. and at all times Mat. 17.22 when men offend us and that fully 3. To afford us a notable sign of pardon of sin namely our forgiving of and mercy to our brethren 4. To admonish us to beware of the common sin of this Age which is desire of revenge spite and grudging for if we forgive not we pray in effect that God would not forgive us yea we curse our selves 5. To discover unto us the gross hypocrisie of our Nature for so oft as we make this Petition we make profession of reformation of life in new obedience for this one branch of brotherly Reconciliation here professed doth presuppose our Conversion from all sin since true Repentance for one sin cannot stand with a purpose to live in any other 6. To stir us up to hunger after love mercy gentleness meekness and to endeavor to practice the same continually living in peace 2 Cor. 13.11 laboring to make peace Mat. 5.9 and shewing all tokens of love to our adversaries that they may assure themselves we have wholly forgiven them 7. To shew us the way how to keep true peace of conscience for ever for when we are at one with God and man we have a blessed peace and this is by calling upon God for the pardon of our sins every day and by following after peace with men in the practice of forgiveness and reconciliation which is never sincere without repentance 8. To acquaint us That no man living in malice can say the Lords Prayer as he ought to do Mat. 5.24 and that is a sign of grace to forgive Mat. 17.32 9. To exclude from pardon all such as persecute the Saints of God till they repent and practice as they pray in this Petition By this Petition we are taught 1. To bewail our carnal security going on from day to day in sin without thought of the debt thereby 2. To relye and settle our hearts in all estates in affliction temptation and death it self on the meer mercy of God in Christ by faith in his Blood for the pardon of our sins 3. Not to lie down in the sins we daily commit but renew our estate by true humiliation and repentance which consists in daily examination confession contrition supplication and conversion 4. To use this Petition as a remedy against despair which must not embolden any to sin presumptuously for the Lord hath said he will not be merciful to that man Deut. 29.19 5. That no man possibly can fulfil the Law for the Apostles themselves were commanded to ask pardon for sin every day whereby it is plain they could not fulfil the Law much less can we 6. In all godly maner to endeavor after what we pray for for it is gross also hypocrisie daily to ask the pardon of sin and still to continue in the daily practice thereof 7. Not onely to pray for the pardon of our own sins but of our brethrens also whereby we are taught that the good estate of their souls should be dear and precious to us In the Supplication of this Petition we pray for what soever tendeth to the forgiveness of our sins as 1. The knowledge of our sins without which the tongue may pray for pardon but the heart cannot Thus many poor and miserable souls ignorantly deceive themselves 2. Grace to acknowledge our sins for he that hides them shall not prosper Prov. 28.13 and all that know them do not confess them or else some way justifie themselves 3. Grace to be truly humbled for sin and that in the sense of Gods curse due for it else we are still in our sins and cannot pray to speed 4. Justification through the death and blood-shedding of Christ Rom. 4.25 That Christs righteousness may be made ours and our sins laid upon him for his mercies sake 5. Love and charity towards our brethren that God would give us a heart to be reconciled to them pardoning their offences against us The Deprecation of this Petition is against all things that may shut up Gods mercy and goodness from us as 1. Blindeness of minde and ignorance of our inward estate which is through ignorance of the Law 2. Hardness of heart which keepeth from repentance 3. Despair of Gods mercy and goodness which driveth from God to the Devil 4. Presumption which is the promising of happiness to ones self on false ground 5. Continuance in sin and the least opinion of
our own Righteousness 6. Malice and thirsting after revenge when injury hath been offered us To prevent and avoid which we must consider 1. How much the Lord hath forgiven us for Christs sake 2. That both the Lord Jesus and all holy men have forgiven and prayed for their enemies the Devil alone is an implacable enemy 3. That the way of grace is thus stopped up and consequently the way of glory The Thanksgiving of this Petition is For illumination to see our sins for a sight and sense of our sins and for blindeness Spiritual expelled for Sanctification to turn us from sin for hard hearts mollified and for the extremes and bars of Grace Despair and Presumption removed for Justification to deliver us by the death of Christ from all sin for Love abounding where offences against us abound and for Malice banished and purged out of us that howsoever we sustain many grievous wrongs at the hands of men yet are we contented yea chearfully willing to forgive them all even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven us The Moral Law doth to Obedience binde The Vniversal Race of all Mankinde Which not perform'd by us we must endure The penal Statute of the Forfeiture ' Less he who as our blessed Surety stood Cancel the Obligation with his Blood This for the Faithful's done 't is now our part To Cancel to remit with all our heart Others their Debts that we for ours ne're may Be call'd t' Account at the Grand Audit-Day §. 10. And lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from evil THis Petition in order is immediately subjoyned after the other craving the pardon of sin to teach us That this is not the onely care of Christians to seek to have sins pardoned but for the time to come earnestly to strive against and resist it the Christian mans life being a continual warfare So that there be two Petitions for the soul but one for the body teaching us That our care for the estate Spiritual ought to be double to our care for things Temporal Lead us not into Temptation but c. that is Suffer us not to be tempted above our power or so that either we sin or wholly revolt from thee but strengthen us in our Temptations by thy holy Spirit and deliver us from evil as the cause thereof wherein we pray That the Lord would not suffer us to be carried away by the Temptations of the World the Flesh or the Devil to the committing of sin but that he would deliver us from the evil of all Temptations both of sin and damnation Lead us not into Temptation which we cannot bear so Augustine Redeem us from evil that we be not carried by Temptations so Calvin And we pray thus not that we may always be free which cannot be but that we may not be overwhelmed overcome and made subject to Temptations when we are by them assaulted But deliver us from evil that is Withdraw not thy Grace from us leave us not to our own lusts neither deliver us over to Satan to be hardned but in all assaults stand thou by us that our faith may not fail and deliver us from the evil both of sin and punishment So that the meaning hereof may be this O Lord we are every way subject to Temptations and by our sins we deserve to be left therein to the malice of Satan and to the power of our own Corruptions yet we beseech thee not to forsake us in any Temptation but give an happy issue thereto still upholding us by thy Grace Now here we must observe That God is said to lead a man into Temptation onely as Temptation is a punishment of sin and onely by permission leaving the party to himself and Satans malice for some former transgression For God tempteth no man to destroy him or to cause him to sin but to try and exercise his Graces in him wherefore this Petition which Christ taught us speaketh not simply of all tryal and manifestation of our faith and godliness unto which David offered himself of his own accord Psal 26. For God tempteth not to evil but man when he is tempted is tempted by his own evil concupiscence Jam. 1.13 14. The words themselves contain one onely Petition though some have thought otherwise consisting of two parts 1. The Petition it self Lead us not into Temptation or a Petition of delivery from a particular future evil 2. The Exposition thereof more general for delivery from all as well present as future evil There be two causes of temptations and consequently two sorts thereof 1. From God for the tryal of our faith godliness hope patience constancy and obedience by the Cross So God is said to have tempted Abraham Joseph Job and David This is good and holy when as God tempts a man which is an action of God whereby he proveth and tryeth man to make manifest unto man himself and unto others what is in his heart for God knoweth well enough before he tryeth him This is called Good both in respect of the Author which is God and in respect of the end which is the good of his servants And this we here pray not against 2. By the Devil our Flesh and wicked men which is every soliciting to sin which soliciting it self is also sin This is evil being a wicked motion allurement or perswasion arising partly from our own corruption and partly from the suggestion of the Devil whereby man is provoked to sin against God in the transgression of some Commandment Now by Nature man is prone to be tempted Gen. 31. Sin is a deceitful tempter Heb. 3.13 and Satan is a subtile cruel and diligent tempter 1 Pet. 5.8 And this is that we pray against in this Petition Temptations are of divers sorts viz. 1. Whereby God tryeth man 1 Kings 10.11 searching into his heart whether by affliction or otherwise for Reasons best known unto himself 2. Whereby man tempteth God as by murmuring and refusing to believe and to rest on his Providence without seeing evident present Signs of his goodness seeking after new miracles trusting in outward means prescribing God a time or maner of deliverance impatient at his corrections adventuring upon needless apparent dangers without warrant or burthening the faithful with vain and needless Traditions 3. Whereby man tempteth man seeking to circumvent him by trying him with politick devices Thus the Pharisees are said to have tempted Christ Mat. 22.18 4. Whereby man tempteth himself his corrupt heart alluring and drawing him to sin Jam. 1.14 5. Whereby the Devil tempteth man and provoketh him to sin From these two last Temptations of the Flesh and the Devil that is corrupt and evil motions of the minde we desire here to be delivered from the third we pray to be kept in the fourth Petition from the second in the second Petition From the first we pray not to be kept but rather that the Lord would try us and use all means he seeth best to
further our Sanctification The four degrees of Temptation by which it proceedeth till it bring a man to destruction unless it be cut off Jam. 1.14 15. 1. Suggestion when the minde conceiveth a wicked thought put in by Satan or arising from natural corruption 2. Delight when the evil thought conceived and for a time retained in the minde descendeth to the heart and there pleaseth the will and delighteth the affections 3. Consent when the will yields to the evil motion and the heart resolves to practice it 4. Perfection when a Sin is often committed and by custom becomes as it were ripe whereupon follows destruction Now a man is led into temptation when he is left of God to an evil motion suggested into his minde so as he gives consent unto it and goes on to the practice of it To be led into Temptation is to be possessed and held by the Temptation after it hath assaulted us For in every Temptation there be two actions viz. 1. One of God whereby in his just Judgement he leaves a man to himself or to the malice of Satan 2. Another of man himself whereby being left of God he enters into the midst of the Temptation as it were plunging himself into it How the Lord is said to lead into Temptation 1. By withdrawing his Grace without which every man falleth and is not able to stand in the day of Temptation Psal 119.8 2. By leaving a man to his own lusts by which as by a violent Torrent he is carried quite away Rom. 1.24 3. By delivering over unto Satan for the punishment of former notorious Sins to be hardned as in Pharaoh and Saul The Reasons for which the godly may be led into temptation 1. To keep them under that they be not proud of Gods Grace 2 Cor. 12.7 2. To winnow the chaff of Sin from Gods Corn Luke 22.31 3. That Gods power may appear in mans weakness 2 Cor. 12.9 4. That his mercy may be seen in keeping them from a final fall Luke 22.32 5. That they may be like Christ their Head Rom. 8.17 6. That they may acknowledge that all strength is from God 2 Cor. 3.5 7. That by this they may know themselves to be Gods children who alone are so tempted that they recover in Temptation Psal 37.24 How many ways God is said to tempt man 1. By afflictions as he did the Israelites Deut. 9.3 2. By Commandment as he did Abraham Gen. 22.1 3. By prosperity as he did David 2 Sam. 12. 4. By offering objects as he did Eve Gen. 3. The Graces to be desired of God which are helpful against Temptation viz. 1. Spiritual heed and watchfulness to prevent Temptations and to avoid the occasions thereof 2. Grace to pray in the time of Temptation that God would lessen and moderate the violence and force thereof 3. That in Temptation God would be so far from withdrawing his Grace from us that he would then adde Grace to Grace even new Grace unto the former 4. That in continuance of Temptation when it abideth long upon us God would strengthen us to hold out 5. That he would give us patience to bear the irksomness the trouble of it 6. That in the end of it God would give a comfortable issue for his glory and our own good The Christian Armor against Temptation 1. Truth or verity whereby a man professeth true Religion and endeavoreth himself in the practice of all the duties of Religion in sincerity his speeches and his actions are suitable proceeding from an honest heart that truly meaneth whatsoever the tongue uttereth or himself practiseth 2. Justice or Righteousness when a man leads his life unblameably and uprightly 3. The preparation of the Gospel of Peace that is when we finde our affections so cleave unto Christ that by way of thankfulness for the glad tidings of Salvation by Christ revealed in the Gospel which promiseth pardon of Sin and life everlasting by Christ we can deny our selves take up our Cross and follow him 4. The shield of Faith by which a man lays hold on the Mercy of God in Christ for his salvation and under it shrowds himself against the fiery darts of Satan 5. Hope by which we wait for that salvation which we apprehend by Faith Remedies against Temptation to Covetousness 1. We must meditate That God hath taken upon him to be our careful Protector Psal 23.1 2. That this Sin is the root of all Evil and that every covetous man is an Idolater Col. 3.5 3. That our life stands not in abundance Luke 12.16 and that Christ and his Disciples were poor Mat. 8.2 4. That we shall carry nothing with us Job 1.21 and that we must give account of our getting Luke 16.2 5. That it will hinder us in the service of God Luke 14.18 19. and make us unwilling to dye Eccles. 41.1 6. That our riches may suddenly be taken away from us Prov. 23.5 or we from them 7. That rich men come hardly to heaven Luke 18.24 and many woes denounced against them Amos 6.1 Remedies against Temptations to Pride 1. We must meditate That we must not be proud because we have all things of gift 1 Cor. 4.7 2. That God resisteth the proud 1 Pet. 5.5 and that we are but dust and ashes Gen. 18.27 3. That pride hindreth a greater largess of Grace Luke 18.24 and that it cast Angels out of Heaven into Hell 2 Pet. 2.4 4. That if it be in Apparel I have more need to be humbled for my shameful nakedness Gen. 2.25 5. That Christ left me an example of humility Mat. 11.29 but pride argues me a Son of the Devil for it is Signum Reproborum Hieron 6. That pride is the causer of contentions Prov. 13.10 and that by it we make others to contemn us Esth 3.2 Remedies against Temptations to Adultery 1. We must meditate That God sees us Prov. 5.21 and will punish us Gen. 20.3 2. That we are members of Christ 1 Cor. 6.15 and our bodies the Temples of the Holy Ghost 3. That Adulterers shall not inherit heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 they seldom repent Prov. 7.26 27. 4. That for the whorish woman a man is brought to a morsel of bread Prov. 6.26 5. That we wrong the Church and Commonwealth by obtruding on both a bastardly generation for neither without evidence know their true children 6. That as thereby we endanger our souls so we decay our bodies and when we are dead our memory is more rotten above ground then our carcases under it leaving behinde an inexpungeable blot Prov. 6.32 33. Remedies against Temptations to Gluttony and Drunkenness 1. We must meditate That Solomon commands us at great Tables to put our knives to our throats Prov. 23.1 That we thereby abuse our own bodies Luke 21.34 The good creatures of God Eph. 5.18 and that which might do good to the poor Mat. 14.4 5. 2. That by them we are made unfit for Gods service 1 Cor. 10.7 and that these sins
not be too many The duties to be performed by us in believing the holy Catholique Church 1. To renounce and abandon all wicked Societies because we profess fellowship with Saints betwixt whom and these there is no agreement 2. To be companions of Saints viz. of such as be of an holy life and not to think it a disgrace to be holy and pure and to be of a good and pious life separate from the prophane multitude 3. To walk in the light of Gods holy Word by vertuous living because of our fellowship with Christ and through him with God the Father for God is light 1 Joh. 1.7 4. To do good unto all but especially to those of the houshold of faith in being like-affected towards them not onely in distributing our temporal but spiritual goods 5. To be comfortable in all our Sufferings because our Head is not without a sympathy and feeling of our miseries and will not suffer us to be tempted beyond what we are able 6. To have heavenliness within us by leading an heavenly life whilest we live upon earth because there is a communion betwixt us and the Saints in heaven When Tyrants Storms of Persecution raise And when Religion blows too many ways When Rome 's Euroclydon does roar like Hell And that Whores Cup doth to a Deluge swell This is that Ark which when the Floods abate Doth land the Faithful on Mount Arrarat Truths Pillar wreath'd with Innocence and Love Whose Stems below and Basis is above Christ's black yet comely and beloved Spouse His own true Vine thrice happy are the Boughs §. 10. The Communion of Saints THe Communion of Saints is that holy and sweet fellowship which all the Members of Christs Church have with their Head Christ Jesus and one with another whether they are Believers here or departed Nor is this the least of Christs benefits bestowed on the Church by the Holy Ghost For herein all the Saints have the same Reconciliation the same Redemption the same Righteousness the same Sanctification the same Salvation by and for Christ All the Saints have the same benefits common which are necessary to Salvation Eph. 4.4 And all the like special gifts though not all a like measure but are so distributed to every Member as that some excel others in gifts and graces in the Church for the gifts of the Holy Ghost are diverse and to every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ Eph. 4.7 The chief part of the Communion of Saints is the union or coherence of all the Saints that is of the whole body of the Church with Christ the Head and of his Members among themselves which is wrought by the Holy Ghost even by the same Spirit who dwelleth in Christ the Head and in all his Members So that to believe the Communion of Saints is to believe That the Saints of which number I must needs certainly be assured my self to be one are united by the Spirit unto Christ their Head and that from the Head gifts are poured down unto them both those which are the same in all necessary to Salvation as also those which being diverse and diversly bestowed upon every one are requisite for the edification of the Church And that they are by the same Spirit likewise united among themselves The mystical union between Christ and every true Believer is not onely in regard of soul but of body also which being once knit shall never be dissolved but is eternal whereupon the dying dead rotten and consumed body remaineth still a Member of Christ abideth within the Covenant and is and shall be ever a Temple of the Holy Ghost Touching which union in regard of the soul Christ dwelleth therein or in the heart of every true Believer as the soul in the body and acts the soul as the soul acts the body without whom the soul is dead to all goodness So that if thou finde that thou art no more able to pray nor no more able to do any duty then thou wast before that thou livest in thy lusts as much as ever thou didst that thou hast not that new heart that new Spirit that new affection which the Scriptures speak of then be sure that Christ dwelleth not in thy heart thou hast no communion with him or his Saints The Union of Christ and the Church is a great Mystery Eph. 5.32 not to be measured with the line of our own Reason which can never fathom the depth thereof a Secret that could not be opened but by Divine Revelation nor being opened can be conceived but by the illumination of the Spirit Thus though it be above our capacity yet being revealed we must believe it as we do the mystery of the Trinity of Christs Eternal generation of the Personal Union of his two Natures of the Proceeding of the Holy Ghost and the like So that in our Meditation of this Mystery we must conceive no carnal no earthly thing of it because it is a Mystery it is altogether Spiritual and heavenly From the natural Union of our head and body and from the Matrimonial Union of man and wife we may by way of resemblance but help our understanding in the Union of Christ and his Church but notwithstanding the comparisons we may not draw the Mystery it self to any carnal matter for it is onely and wholly Spiritual This plainly discovereth the strange folly of the Papists who make our Union with Christ meerly carnal conceiving it to consist in a corporal commixion of Christs flesh with ours in which conceit there is a great deal of gross absurdity no great Mystery Now the maner of our Union with Christ is not by being united onely to his Humane Nature but by being united to Christs Person God-Man For as his Divine Nature in and by it self is incommunicable so the Humane Nature simply considered in and by it self is unprofitable for the Deity is the Fountain of Life and Grace which through the Humanity of Christ is conveyed unto us And though he be in heaven and we on earth yet this Union being supernatural and Spiritual there needeth no local presence for the making of it the Spirit of Christ being conveyed into every of the Saints as the soul into every part of the body makes the Members one Mystical Body their Head What the communion of Saints signifies 1. The Union of the Church with Christ and of his Members among themselves 2. The communion or participation of all Christs benefits 3. The distribution of special gifts bestowed on some Members for the good of the whole body 4. An obliging or binding of all the Members to imploy and refer all their gifts to the glory of Christ their Head and to the Salvation of the whole Body and of every Member mutually The faithful are called Saints in three respects 1. Imputatively that is in respect that Christs sanctity and holiness is imputed unto them 2. Inchoatively that is in respect that
with God set down in the first Epistle of John 1. Remission of sins 2. The sanctifying Spirit 3. Holiness and uprightness of heart and life 4. Perseverance in Knowledge and Obedience of the Gospel What is meant by Gods communicating himself to and dwelling among his Saints and people 1. The effect and efficacy of his Presence whereby he possesseth and governeth the Faithful which are his Temple to dwell in enlightning them to know and guiding them to practice his Will 2. That his Presence is perpetual permanent and continual 3. The maner of his Presence not by the infiniteness of his power as he is present with all his creatures to sustain and uphold them but by his Grace and gracious effects uniting us to Christ Regenerating us to be lively members of his body The presence of Gods grace is twofold viz. 1. Privately after a secret maner hid from the eyes of the world This is in crosses and tribulations wherewith God suffereth the Elect to be afflicted and exercised 2. Publikely when as God doth declare and manifest the presence of his grace in the Elect so as the wicked are compelled to acknowledge his Divine Power and Presence in them The Duties required of the Saints by vertue of their communion with Christ and among themselves viz. 1. Confidence in Christ Heb. 3.6 2. Subjection answerable to his maner of governing us Matth. 6.10 3. A cleansing of our selves from all filthiness of Flesh and Spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Cor. 6.15 4. A conformity unto the Image of Christ in true holiness and righteousness Eph. 4.24 5. Heavenly affections Col. 3.1 2. where our Head is there ought our heart also to be 6. Courage against death Luke 12.4 Heb. 11.35 seeing that in death we are Christs what cause have we to fear it 7. Love to the Brethren without which it is impossible to have any communion with the Saints 8. A mutual sympathy and fellow-feeling as fellow-Members of that body whereof Christ is Head Motives to be Spiritually united unto Christ viz. 1. The Excellency of it we shall live with him as our elder Brother perpetually in the heavens 2. The Profit of it we are freed thereby from Sin Hell Death and Damnation Rom. 8.1 3. The Necessity of it For 1. Without this Union we are strangers from God 2. All our Happiness and Salvation dependeth on it 3. Without it the Redemption by Christ doth us no good 4. We cannot be saved without it but must necessarily and unavoidably perish for ever The Signs to approve this Union are the effects of it viz. 1. To deny our selves 2. To mortifie the deeds of the flesh 3. To raise us to newness of life 4. To be weaned from this world and to seek Christ 5. To knit our selves in the Unity of Faith and Hope towards Christ and love towards men This Union of Christ with his Members and of his Members mutually among themselves is confirmed by many places of Scripture as Joh. 15.5 1 Cor. 6.17 12.13 1 Joh. 4.13 whence appears the gross absurdity of those men who fancy this Communion to be a Subsistence or personal being of Christs body among our bodies or of our bodies mingled with his which is also sufficiently refuted by that frequent comparison of the Head and the Members for those are coherent and grow together but are not in a mixture nor mingled one with another Whence also we may easily judge of that Communion which is in the Sacraments Rome makes this Spiritual Vnion A Carnal Corporal confusion The Worldling thinks this Holy Mystery A Paradox of too much Piety But all the Saints who sympathize in Faith Know what th' Apostle to the Corinths saith How by one Spirit we are all Baptiz'd Into one Body 1 Cor. 12.13 which must be agniz'd By all the Faithful for it paints The sweet Communion of the blessed Saints §. 11. The forgiveness of Sins BY which Article is understood That all our sins wants and imperfections Original and Actual as well in the committing of evil as in the omitting of good in thought word and deed are covered healed and released through the Righteousness of Christ imputed unto us which being apprehended by faith and applyed unto us doth not onely make them as if they had never been but also justifieth and dischargeth us causing us to appear blameless and spotless in the sight of God This forgiveness of Sins comprehendeth under it as it were in a short sum all the Mercies of God Isa 40.1 Psal 32.1 2.7 it being the Will of God which to the Faithful and Elect imputeth not any sin and therefore doth in like sort love them as if they had never sinned and delivereth them from all punishment of sin and giveth them Eternal life freely for the Intercession and Merit of Jesus Christ the Son of God our Savior and Mediator So that Remission of sins is from God onely the Ministers indeed and the Church are said to remit sins but onely as they are signifiers and declarers of Gods Remission when according to the Commandment of God the Church denounceth to the Repentant And one Neighbor remits Trespasses unto another as concerning the personal pardoning of the offence but God onely freeth us from the guilt of sin by his own Authority and that freely in respect of us though it cost Christ full dear Now the onely ground upon which we are perswaded of the forgiveness of our sins should be That we have Christ For he that hath the Son hath life This is the greatest of all the Promises in laying hold whereof the understanding must be rightly informed what ground a man hath to do it not in a confused maner without a clear knowledge of the progress of Faith and then it is the work of God onely to draw the will to take the Promises after that the understanding rightly apprehends them for both these are required in a justifying Faith From all which it appears That it is not a Doctrine of Pride and Presumption as the Synagogue of Rome teacheth to believe the Remission of our own sins for generally to believe that God forgiveth sin or that some men have their sins forgiven is no Priviledge of the Church but the common faith of the Devils James 2.19 All the Articles contain the confession of a special Faith and a particular application to our selves As I must believe God the Father to be my Creator the Son my Redeemer the Holy Ghost to be my Sanctifier so I am bound to believe the Remission of my own sins the Resurrection of my own body and that life everlasting shall be given to me This special Faith must be the Faith of us all Gal. 2.20 The forgiveness of our sins is known by these two signs viz. 1. By an humble and hearty Confession of our sins unto God wherein we must acknowledge all our main sins both Original and Actual our guiltiness before God and our just desert of Damnation for the
same 2. By the rightly pacified Conscience which is done by Faith in the heart And the Peace here meant is such a Peace as cometh after War after conflicts for sin after knowledge of Gods displeasure with thee after the sense hereof and after all this a knowledge of Reconciliation again Now many in an evil estate live and dye peaceably but deceive not thy self that is onely because they were never acquainted with the Doctrine of Justification and Sanctification because they never saw the danger for to be sure that I am free from a danger and not to know a danger is all one and doth breed a like confidence and security Thus as it is a great mercy to have a true and sound Peace so to have a Peace not well grounded and bottom'd is the most dangerous Judgement in the world That thou mayest therefore the better judge whether thou hast this Sign of the forgiveness of thy sin know That this Peace is threefold 1. With God properly called Reconciliation God in Christ at one with Man Man through Christ at one with God 2. With our selves when the conscience sanctified ceaseth to accuse and the affections subject themselves to the enlightened minde 3. With our Christian Brethren Arguments to perswade us of the forgivenes of our sins if we come unto Christ 1. By the Scripture-expressions so frequently ratifying this Truth 2. By Christs Practice when he was on earth 3. Otherwise Christs Blood should be shed in vain 4. By the Example of others pardoned 5. Else no flesh should be saved 6. God should not else be worshipped and served 7. By the infiniteness of Gods Mercy The universality of Gods Promises touching the forgiveness of sins is threefold 1. Without exception of Time for At what time soever a sinner shall repent him of his sins I will put away his iniquity saith the Lord. 2. Without exception of sins for Albeit your sins were as scarlet they shall be made as white as snow Isa 1. 3. Without exception of person for Whosoever shall depart from his wicked ways and turn unto God he will receive him The Duties to be performed of us in believing the forgiveness of sins to the faithful viz. 1. To pray unto God earnestly every day above all things of this world for the pardon of our sins because this is so great and wonderful a grace 2. To love the Lord and our Savior Jesus Christ with all our hearts and with all our might because God is the Author of this great grace Christ Jesus hath merited the same for us 3. To break off all our sins by Righteousness and not continue any longer therein because we have been enough endangered through sin and are still in the same danger if we continue in it 4. Not to have in any account the Popes Indulgence for sins but to abhor his Blasphemous Pardon for them seeing this is in Gods power onely Four Grounds of possibility of Pardon be the sin never so great 1. That the Mercy of God is infinite yea above all his Works 2. Men of years living in the Church of God and knowing the Doctrine of Salvation shall not be condemned simply for their sins but for continuing and lying in them 3. It pleaseth God many times to leave men to themselves and to suffer them to commit some sin that woundeth Conscience but yet we may not hence think that he is the Author thereof but our own depraved Nature 4. The Promises of God touching Remission of sins and life eternal in respect of Believers are general and in regard of all and every man indefinite This Doctrine of forgiveness of sins doth teach us 1. To acknowledge our selves before God to be grievous sinners to have godly sorrow for them and to seek pardon by daily Prayer for the forgiveness of them 2. To have a circumspect care and fear not to offend God at any time yea a most earnest desire to please him better then we have done Psal 103.3 4. Joh. 5.14 3. To return all praise and thankfulness to God for this so infinite Mercy which appeareth in nothing more then in the forgiveness of our sins 4. To shew back again our love toward our heavenly Father according to the measure of his love towards us the greater sins he hath pardoned the greater love should be returned 5. That the receiving of this Mercy from God must work in us mercy towards our brethren Luke 6.36 Eph. 4.32 Col. 3.13 The sum of this Article may be this Remission of sin is Gods Will not imputing to the Elect to all of them and to them onely their sins but Christs Righteousness which Remission of sins is the work of all three Persons of the Deity granted for Christs Intercession and Merit but freely in respect of us and is received by Faith through the working of the Holy Ghost upon our Conversion and Repentance You that are skill'd in Physiognomy Have ye observ'd in men Condemn'd to dye How to the life they do resemble Death Or 's if they liv'd by Artificial breath But travelling to their Execution say A Pardon overtakes them in the way How then the Scene is alter'd they survive Themselves and seem to be now twice alive Draw the Curtain Reade The Gospel saith The Pardon 's seal'd and it is ours by Faith §. 12. The Resurrection of the Body THe Resurrection of the Flesh is a restoring of the substance of our Bodies after Death even of the same matter whereof they now consist and a reviving and quickning of the same bodies with life incorruptible by the same Immortal Soul whereby they now live which God will work by Christ in the end of the world by his Divine Vertue and Power which restoring also shall be of the Elect unto the Eternal Glory of God but of the Reprobate unto Eternal Pains Thus although the body after death lie rotting in the Grave yet at the last day it shall be raised again by Gods great Power and being joyned to the Soul shall stand before Gods Judgement Seat to give account of all it hath done whether good or evil and be rewarded accordingly When Christ as Man for thus onely he can remove from place to place his Godhead ever filling all places shall come down visibly and openly with great Glory and Troops of Angels about him to Judge those that shall be then living for the world shall be full of people even to the hour of his coming and then the Dead being raised out of their Graves even all from the first Adam shall be joyned with the living who shall onely in stead of dying be changed and thus all people together of all Countreys and Nations shall be presented before his Tribunal to receive Sentence according to the Equity yea and Justice of his Gospel whether of Absolution to pass into the Kingdom of his Father or of Condemnation into the Kingdom of Hell with the Devil and his Angels for ever Now though amongst those
consisteth partly in the duties of Superiors towards their Inferiors and so of the contrary of which duties as also of Civil order comprised under them is spoken in the Fifth Commandment partly in the duties of one Neighbor towards another which are ratified in the rest of the Commandments 2. Internal which consisteth in the internal affection of the heart being the very uprightness of mens affections towards their Neighbor which is to be included and understood in all the former Commandments and is prescribed in the Tenth and last Commandment In what respect the Second Table is said to be like unto the First viz. 1. As touching the kinde of the chief Worship also in respect of the Ceremonial which are not the chief Worship of God 2. As touching the kindes of Eternal Punishment because the transgression of both Tables meriteth eternal punishment 3. As touching the unseparable coherence of the Love of God and our Neighbor which love of God is declared and exercised by our love to our Neighbor The Reasons for which obedience is to be yielded to the Second Table 1. That in this Obedience God himself may be worshipped and our love towards him shewed by our love towards our Neighbor for his sake 2. That by the love of our Neighbor our conformity with God may appear 3. That the Society of Mankinde may be preserved which was ordained of God for the celebration and magnifying of his Name Certain Rules concerning the substance and meaning of the Decalogue in general and for Expounding the Commandments viz. 1. The Moral Law or Decalogue is to be understood according to the Interpretation of Scripture not according to the sense or judgement of man onely or of Moral Philosophy 2. The Decalogue requireth in all the Commandments obedience both external and internal chargeth the understanding heart and affection commandeth perfect obedience not in parts onely but also in degrees not onely in all the duties but also in the degrees of these duties 3. The obedience of the First Commandment must be the motive or final Cause of our obedience towards the rest of the Commandments otherwise it is not the Worship of God but hypocrisie whatsoever we do 4. We must above all things consider the drift or end of each Commandment for the end of the Law sheweth the meaning thereof and by the end we shall judge aright and easily of the means 5. We must know that the same vertue is often in a diverse respect commanded in diverse Commandments that is the same vertue is required for performing of obedience unto many Commandments 6. In Affirmative Commandments commanding Vertues are comprehended the Negative forbidding the contrary Vices so likewise in Negative Commandments are comprehended the Affirmative Vertues 7. We must take heed that we restrain not the Commandments and take them too straitly for in the General all the Specials and in the chief Special the next allyed Specials and in the Effect the Causes be contained So that under one kinde manifest are all of like sort whether commanded or forbidden yea and the Means whereby the things are done are also commanded or forbidden 8. The Obedience or Commandments of the Second Table yield or give place to the Obedience or Commandments of the First Table The Commandments of the First Table are absolutely to be kept and for themselves the other of the Second Table are to be kept for the First Though they are alike as concerning the kinde of Moral Worship the kinde of punishment and as concerning their coherence or connexion 9. Every Negative Commandment doth binde always and at and unto all times Every Affirmative Commandment doth onely binde always but not at and unto all times also 10. Howsoever the least Commandment is not so small but the breach thereof deserveth Eternal Death yet the breaches of some Commandments are greater and more heinous then of others 11. There is so near a relation betwixt all the Commandments of the Moral Law that whosoever observeth all saving onely in one point is guilty of all James 2.10 Because one and the same is the Author of them all 12. To the breach of every Commandment there is annexed a curse although it be not expressed The use of the Commandments 1. To lay open our Miseries Rom. 7.7 9 13 14 18. 2. To whip us to Christ Gal. 3.24 3. To be our Guide in all things that we are to do when we are come to him Mat. 19.17 18. There are certain Libertine Antinomies who contend That the Law is not to be taught in the Church of Christ misinterpreting the Sacred Text to cloke their Rebellion against the Law of God with a pretence of Obedience to the Spirit of Regeneration But this Heresie was long since refuted Mat. 5.17 Rom. 3.31 The Law 's voyce was Thunder the Tables Stone Break one and all who keeps not all keeps none Most sweetly tun'd they to each other are In Practice then thou may'st not make them jar Obedience they do for each other call A joynt Obedience is requir'd in all But who can keep the Law Who 's just an hour Frail Man hadst thou a Will where is thy Power Though since the Fall this is thy power above Yet is the Law fulfill'd by Christ and Love The First COMMANDMENT §. 1. I am the Lord thy God Thou shalt have no other gods but me THerefore thou shalt have Me that Jehovah which have manifested my self in the World by my Creation Preservation and Government thereof that Jehovah which have declared my self in my Church by the Participation and Manifestation of my self to be the true God that God alone Therefore Thou shalt have none other gods that is beside me the onely true God neither shalt thou have them before me that is in my sight that is in thy heart or elswhere Now not to have the true God is either to have no God or to have more Gods or another then the known God or not to acknowledge God to be such unto us as he is manifested Likewise not to trust in God and to subject and submit our selves unto God in true humility and patience not to hope for all good things from him alone not to love and fear him for we are here commanded to have the Lord for our God that is to love him above all to fear him above all to put our whole trust in him and to make our prayers to him alone And he onely hath no other gods who is so dead to the world and doth so adhere to God that he is neither puffed up with Riches nor cast down with Poverty nor swelled with Honor nor pined with Ignominy nor made joyful by Life nor afraid of Death but this sufficeth him That he hath God knowing his Savior disdain'd both Riches and Glory and Pleasure and Life The Preface of this Commandment belongeth to the whole Decalogue and the Commandment it self is mixed with a Negative Prohibition and an Affirmative Command The Duty
yet be a sound true and saving Faith it is not the difference of degrees and measure that takes away the nature of it For Faith in regard of the extent of it admits degrees not because the Habit is encreased but because the Revelations and Objects are more and therefore those poor Christians that are yet ignorant may have a true habit and as true a Grace in the heart And though a man be more conversant in the Scripture knows more then they hath more Revelations and in that sense though he hath a greater Faith then the other yet the other hath a like precious Faith with him in regard of that Grace Nor do Infirmities break the Covenant betwixt God and those that have once taken Christ and have true Faith though in the least degree Now in Taking Christ the stronger the Will is by how much stronger Assent the Minde and Understanding gives to those Truths which concern Justification delivered in the Scripture And we must labor to believe hard things like Abraham or easie things propounded with slender Arguments like Nathaniel for if we believe in difficult cases God will make us with facility to believe them another time We must labor for the extent of Faith for the multitude of Revelations to be filled full of Faith as Barnabas is said to be and this is by studying the Word much for therein will God reveal this This Faith is the Mother of all Sanctifying Graces for by it we are ingrafted into Christ and so live the life of Faith the life of God the fruits of Faith are almost infinite for all the several and distinct branches of Piety and Charity if they be rightly performed are fruits of Faith And where there is a true Faith there is a secret perswasion wrought in the heart whereby God assures us that he is ours and we are his for we may know and be assured that Christ dyed for us and Redeemed us in particular if we can finde in our selves that we have true Faith in Christ and true Repentance for all sins And we may be assured of our Vocation if through the Mystery of the Word seconded and made powerful by Gods Spirit we are quite altered and changed from our former evil lives and have attained unto Faith and Repentance And we may be further assured That we are Redeemed and are the children of God if we finde that we have the Spirit of God dwelling in us which if we want we are none of Gods which if we have it will appear by the fruits of the Spirit in us for as Exercise begets Health and we are made fit by Health for Exercise or as Acts beget Habits and Habits are means to exercise those Acts so Assurance grounded upon the Promise enableth enlargeth and encreaseth Sanctification and Sanctification encreaseth Assurance but first see Faith and then the other as fruits of it Now Faith is wrought in us thus The Spirit comes and shews Christ to us and not onely the profit we have by him but the beauty and excellency of him it shews us what Grace is and makes us love it and then shews us Mercy Out of this we come to long after Christ and to say I would I had him Now to this work he addes a second Christ comes and tells a man I will have thee he comes and shews himself discovers himself and speaks plainly to him I am willing to marry thee Now the longing Soul hearing those glad tidings embraces the motion and the work is done We may know whether this Faith be wrought in us by reflecting upon our own hearts and considering what actions have passed through it for the works of Faith are manifest And we must use Faith in comforting our selves for whatsoever Christ hath by Nature we have it by Grace when we have Faith if he be a Son we are Sons if he be an Heir we are Heirs c. yea Faith makes a man regardless of all earthly things Those that have Faith are able to use it of themselves but many have it that do not use it and though God doth work in us all the work of Faith as it is received yet know He doth not work in us onely but by us he makes us Instruments yea we shall be called to an account for the Talent of Faith if we have it and use it not and if we use it not we shall have little enough o● it for the using of it is that which strengthneth Faith and makes it effectual Now that we are saved by Faith appears from these places of Scripture Joh. 3.16 Rom. 1.16 3.28 Eph. 2.8 Mark 16.16 Rev. 21.8 2 Thess 2.11 12. Gal. 3.7 9. Luke 7.50 Yet know That a man is not saved by Faith simply as it is Faith for it doth not in its own nature merit Salvation but it is said to save us in respect of its Object which is Christ not as it is a gift quality or property but as it is an Instrument to apprehend and apply this Object so that we are saved by Faith as an Instrument not for Faith as a Cause So Faith alone is said to justifie us but that Faith which is alone without other Graces doth not justifie us neither were ever any justified by Faith without Works For Faith is not onely a Perswasion that our sins are forgiven but also a thorough Repenting that our sins may be forgiven not onely a Perswasion that the Promises are true but a Holiness of living that we may have a share in those Promises not onely a Perswasion that the Scripture is true but an Obedience to Gods Will revealed therein not onely a Perswasion that Christ dyed for my sins but also such an uprightness of walking as that I crucifie him not again by my Lusts for Faith doth not onely work a good meaning in us but it doth work power in us to do good and to mortifie our affections for where Christ dwells indeed he gives power against sin and that by his Spirit and where the Understanding is fully convinced the Will and Affections follow Faith and the Desire of satisfying Lusts cannot stand together and he that trusts not God for Earthly things cannot trust him for matters of Salvation for if we have Faith in the main we will have it in particular cases We are said to Believe three maner of ways viz. 1. We believe one God that is we believe that there is a God 2. We believe God that is that God is true touching his Promises These two ways Infidels yea the Devils believe and tremble 3. We believe in God that is according to those Promises to put our whole trust and hope in God In the Doctrine of the Church mention is made of four sorts of Faith 1. Historical when men believe the Bibles History This saves not James 2.19 2. Temporary when men believe onely for a time neither doth this save 3. Miraculous proceeding from special Revelation which is now out of use
holy policy are to fortifie themselves against it because it springs from so fair and unsuspected a Fountain even from Zeal godly Duties and good Actions who are with much Humiliation and fervency of Spirit to pray and strive against it because it singles out the Chosen of God and takes up his seat in the sanctified Soul who are with wonderful care to countermine the sly insinuations wherewith it unavoidably windes it self into their hearts lest when they seem to disclaim Pride they prove proud that they are not proud who cannot be too secure of their Sentinels on the heart-guards because there is no profoundness of Knowledge no measure of Grace no eminency of Zeal can be exempted from hazard of Surprizal by this last and most cunning encounter of Satan by Spiritual Pride Great reason therefore hath the childe of God strongly to fence his heart with a gracious and unfained humility against this sin lest gazing on the dangerous speculations of his own worthiness the eye of his Conscience become blinde to his own Deficiencies Corruptions and Infirmities lest his Self-conceitedness and a vain over-valuing of his own Gifts and Vertues call the Truth of them into question and extinguish the life of Sincerity lest an adulterous self-liking of his own excellency be justly plagued with a scandalous fall into some gross sin lest this Viper nourished in the bosom of his Soul take unseasonable heat and warmth from his Zeal and endanger the whole frame of his New man Now the onely Soveraign means to preserve the life and vigor of Graces in the Soul and to keep thence this pestilent canker-worm of Spiritual Pride is with much earnestness and prayer to labor after and settle surely in the heart a true and undissembled Humility This kinde of Secret or Privy-Pride is not so properly a breach of this Commandment as the outward and more open Pride whose concomitant Companions and Branches are Envy Anger Impatience Indignation Self-will and Obstinacy Presumption Hypocrisie Boasting Ingratitude Contempt Disobedience Ambition and Curiosity as also a fained Modesty or Humility which is a double Pride being to hunt after the praise and commendation of Humility by refusing in shew and apparence and by denying of those things outwardly which yet a man secretly covets and in his minde attributes unto himself either truly or falsly This is Pride under a vail which if Plenty and Prosperity in outward things answer the expectation doth soon appear in its proper Peacockcolours to be nothing else but the very heighth and pinacle of all Pride and Arrogancy whose true Properties follow The properties of the proud man viz. 1. To ascribe his gifts not to God but to his own worthiness and ability and to refer his gifts and counsels principally to his own glory and therefore to stand in admiration of himself and his gifts 2. Not truly to fear God neither to acknowledge and bewail his own defects 3. To be always aspiring to some higher place and calling 4. To attribute to himself those things which he hath not to attempt things above his power and not belonging to his calling 5. To contemn and debase others in respect of himself to believe none but to covet to excel and be eminent above others 6. To be angry with God and Men to fret and fume against God when his desires and counsels are hindred and also to accuse God of Error and Injustice if Gods counsels agree not with the judgements and affections of men Pride is twofold 1. Inward in the soul which consists Partly in the Minde which is a corrupt disposition thereof whereby a man thinks himself to be better then indeed he is This was the proud Pharisees sin Luke 18.11 12. Partly in the Will which is an inward affection whereby a man is not contented with that estate wherein God hath placed him but desires a better This befel Adam and Eve and does most of their Posterity in every Age. 2. Outward which proceeding from the former shews it self in the effects in her proper colours by apparel gestures language actions and most vain phantastick self-conceits Inward Pride must be carefully avoided for these Reasons viz. 1. Because whatsoever outward good works the childe of God can do by Grace the same may a wicked man do through Pride and Hypocrisie as conceive a Prayer Preach the Word and Practice the outward duties of Repentance of Love and such like for Pride is a sin that will counterfeit Grace and man cannot discern it truly but God onely 2. Many other sins prevail in the wicked but Pride is the sin that troubleth the children of God and when other sins dye then will Pride revive yea it will rise as it were out of Grace it self for the childe of God may be proud because he is not proud proud of his Humility therefore Paul must be buffeted by the messenger of Satan lest he should be puffed up with the abundance of Revelations 2 Cor. 12.7 The way to avoid this dangerous sin of Inward Pride viz. 1. We must be careful to know the Pride of our own hearts for every man hath it in him more or less and the more we see it the less it is but the less we see it the more it is indeed for he that is most humbled is not altogether free from this Inward Pride 2. When we see our Pride we must labor to subdue it which may thus be done 1. By considering the Judgements of God upon this sin it poysoned Angelical Perfection and afterward occasioned our Parents casting out of Paradice and remember Herod who for this sin was eaten up of worms Acts 12. 2. We must search into our selves and labor to see our own wants and corruptions as our Blindeness of Minde Unbelief c. The want of feeling our wants occasions Pride 3. We must meditate upon the Death and Passion of Christ and how can a man think that Christ endured that bitter Passion for and yet not be humbled with the sight of his sins which had a part in the cause thereof Reasons taken from the state of the Regenerate Soul why the childe of God should fence his heart against Spiritual Pride viz. 1. The consideration of our deficiencies even in our most religious duties and best performances 2. The consideration of our own forwardness to march under Satans Banners and our base unworthy vassallage therein before our Regeneration 3. The consideration of the bottomless depth of Gods bounty to us which hath raised unto us whatsoever gifts we have 4. The consideration of the danger which may happen to the whole man by giving entertainment to Spiritual Pride for either it may perswade us to embrace some groundless singularity of unwarrantable Opinions or by Gods just Judgement draw upon us a deadness of heart a dulness of zeal an intermission of the operations of Grace or the like inconveniences The three Errors which did deceive the Pharisee does many other proud persons 1. His
Whosoever is angry with his Brother unadvisedly shall be culpable of Judgement In this Commandment we are forbidden 1. All Murthering of our selves or others and all approbation hereof in others either by Command Counsel Consent or Concealment 2. All Injurious Actions tending to the prejudice of our Neighbors life as Quarrelling Oppression unskilful Practice of Physick and the like 3. All Railing and Reviling Speeches Reproach Slanders Mocks evil Counsel and such like 4. All murtherous Desires and Affections of the Heart as Anger Hatred Malice and Envy he that hateth his Brother hath a Sword hid in the sheath of his Heart 5. A wilful Neglect of the Necessity and Danger of our Neighbor 6. All Cruelty towards the Creature which sheweth a murtherous minde In this Commandment God chiesly requires these things viz. 1. That we hate no man much more that we hurt not by words or deeds but to be of a peaceable minde and disposition 2. That if we be offended we avenge not our selves but suffer the injury patiently leaving vengeance unto God Rom 12.19 3. That we oresee Mischiefs and before they come prevent them 4. That we should go to him with whom we are at variance and be quickly reconciled to him 5. After that we have diligently done our duty if our Adversary do obstinately refuse Reconciliation that we forgive and labor to forget the Injuries done unto us that we leave not to love our Adversary to pray for him and in all things to pleasure him Mat. 5.44 The Lord doth challenge to himself the Office of Revenging for these three Reasons viz. 1. Because being our chief Lord the offence especially is done against him when injury is done unto any 2. Because he doth much better know the greatness of the injury then doth he that is injured for he pierceth into the hidden and most secret thoughts 3. Because he alone hath the chief power to avenge injuries as he shall know to be right and expedient which we cannot do This Commandment is also broken by unnatural practices on ones self such as are 1. The Practice of the Popish penance-mongers not unlike the Idolatrous Baalists who to move their Idol to hear them cut themselves with knives and lancers till the blood gushed out upon them 1 Kings 18.29 2. The Practice of Gluttons Drunkards Unchaste persons Voluptuous who to satisfie their corrupt humors impair their health and shorten their days 3. The Practice of such who by Quarrels cause their slesh to be wounded and their lives to be taken away 4. The Practice of such who bring themselves into danger of life for Lucres sake and of such as by Felony Treason and the like cast themselves upon the Sword of the Magistrate 5. The Practice of them that give the Reins to Grief Fear Wrath and other the like violent Passions so as thereby they weaken their bodies and shorten their days 6. The Practice of Self-Murtherers who end their days in a most horrible sin depriving themselves of the time place means and benefit of Repentance The hurting as well of our selves as of others is here forbidden because the causes why God commandeth us to have regard of anothers life are the same in us As 1. The Image of God in man 2. The likeness of Nature and our Original from our first Parents 3. The greatness of the Price and Ransom wherewith Christ purchased all the Members of the Church 4. The conjunction of Christs Members As a man may be said to kill himself 1. In Whipping himself as the Jesuits 2. In Wounding of himself 3. In Refusing the means of help So we are said to preserve our lives 1. In time of Danger by slying from one place to another Matth. 10.23 2. In time of Sickness to use all lawful means of Recovery 3. In hostile Assaults by defending our selves with our best force 4. In time of Health by using lawful Recreations at lawful times The killing of other men is 1. Indirectly as Oppression by Usury Letting out of Land on such hard terms as the painful Laborer cannot live by it where things are so made as men may take harm by them the keeping of harmful Beasts all dangerous Pastimes and when Children begotten in Fornication or Adultery are committed to them to keep that have no care of them 2. Directly as of set purpose when maliciously and advisedly one killeth another or otherwise when at a sudden variance a man is killed The life of other men may be thus preserved viz. 1. By Alms-deeds where Necessity doth require it and Wages where Right commands it Deut. 24.14 2. By helping or rescuing a man that is casually or wrongfully in any danger as Obadiah hid the Prophets in a Cave to save them from Ahab and Jezebel in the time of Persecution 1 Kings 18. and by helping those that are oppressed with wrong Prov. 24.11 3. By Patience Meekness preventing Quarrels The parts whereof are these 1. Soft Answers when any means be used to provoke us Prov. 15.1 2. A staid and even temper of Affections whereby we are not suddenly moved or for trisling matters 3. A Disposition alway to interpret such things as are done against us in the best sense we can 4. A love of Peace and seeking it with all men as much as may be Rom. 12.8 5. A minde content for the love of Peace sometimes to depart with a mans own Right 4. By timely Interring the dead bodies of Christian people and removing all other things we know may be prejudicial to the life of our Neighbor Cautions and Conditions to be observed in defending our selves against unlawful violent Assaults 1. We must not thirst after blood nor be willing to take away either life or limb 2. We ought to the utmost of our power to strive to free our selves from the Assaults that there be no blood shed if it be possible using all good and lawful means we may in favor of life 3. We ought so to behave our selves that we rather defend then offend and seek more to save our own lives then take away another mans 4. If we can no way escape the hands of the Oppressor by flying or calling for the help of the Magistrate it is lawful so far to stand in our just defence as that we should chuse to kill rather then to be killed for now God seems to put Justice into our own hands The kindes of killing are two viz. 1. Voluntary when a man killeth of set purpose and intent to which we must refer those that give command counsel or help unto the Murtherer for he that commandeth is the principal Agent and the Murtherer is his Instrument Again it is voluntary Murther to strike another though with purpose onely to wound if death follow thereon And that also which is committed by a Drunken man for his Will is free though Sense and Reason be blinded And this kinde or purpose to kill is twofold viz. 1. With Deliberation and fore-desire of
is free or at least freed from fleshly concupiscence the Body is chaste when it putteth not into execution the concupiscences of the flesh 1 Thess 4.3 4 5. 1 Cor. 7.34 Marriage is the main help to keep our bodies chaste Now Marriage is a lawful and indissoluble conjunction of one man and one woman justified by God that we might know him to detest all impure lust That also we might therein chastely serve the Lord and that especially it might be a means whereby mankinde might be multiplied and God gather thence afterwards unto himself a Church Lastly that it might be a Society and fellowship of Labors Cares and Prayers The Breach hereof is the foul sin of Adultery which beside the fearful exclusion without Repentance from the Kingdom of Heaven occasions jealousie the frenzy of the Soul which is a grief of minde arising from hence That another is judged to enjoy that which we desire to have wholly and properly as our own and none besides us to possess any part with us Or it is an affection proceeding from fear to have that communicated to another which we challenge and covet to retain as peculiar and proper to our selves alone Beside this unhappy sin of Adultery that venomous sin is the poyson of Marriages whereby the estimation of Parents the reputation of Children and the honor of whole Families stand in hazard to be forfeited for as God is the Author of Marriage so he is the Revenger of the breach thereof But shame keeps some from those unclean practices and grosser acts of filthiness who yet inwardly boil in speculative Wantonness and Adulteries of the heart Ask thy Conscience whether thou art one of them if so remember That no Adulterer shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven and repent yea the Fornicator and every unclean person is also thence excluded all Vices contrary to Chastity or of any affinity with them being here forbidden in forbidding Adultery for by one Special the rest that are of near affinity with that are understood and and where the Cause is forbidden there also is the Effect and so the contrary Now the end and scope of this Commandment is the Preservation of Chastity and Wedlock In this Commandment are two parts viz. 1. God forbiddeth Adultery and therein not onely the too familiar company of man with woman out of marriage but also all kinde of filthiness by which man may be defiled all affections of concupiscence and whatsoever stirreth up unto lust and nourisheth it 2. He commandeth Chastity In this Commandment are prohibited 1. The lust of the heart or the evil concupiscence of the flesh Mat. 5.28 Col. 3.5 2. Burning in the flesh which is an inward fervency of lust whereby the godly motions of the heart are hindred over-whelmed and as it were with contrary fire burnt up 1 Cor. 7.9 3. Strange pleasures about generation prohibited in the Word of God the which are many viz. 1. With Beasts Lev. 18.23 2. With the Devil as Witches do by their confession for why may not a Spirit as well have society with a Witch as to eat meat 3. With one and the same Sex Lev. 18.22 This is a sin which they commit whom God hath given over to a reprobate sense Rom. 1.26 27. It was the sin of Sodom Gen. 19. where it was so common that to this day it is termed Sodomy 4. With such as be within the degrees of Consanguinity or Affinity prohibited Lev. 18.6 5. With unmarried persons This sin is called Fornication Deut. 22.28 29. 1 Cor. 10.8 6. With those whereof one is married or at least betrothed This is Adultery Deut. 22.22 3 4. 7. With man and wife They abuse their liberty if they know each other so long as the woman is in her flowers Ezek. 22.10 Lev. 18.19 Ezek. 16.8 or using Marriage-bed intemperately thereby committing Adultery even with his wife 8. Nocturnal Pollutions which arise of immoderate dyet or unchaste cogitations going before in the day Deut. 23.10 Onans sin Gen. 38.8 was not much unlike these 9. Effeminate wantonness whereby occasions are sought to stir up lust Gal. 5.19 4. To appoint some light or Sheet-punishment for Adultery such as that Romish Synagogue doth For it is nothing else but to open a gap for other lewd persons to run into the like impiety Occasions of lust prohibited in this Commandment are these viz. 1. Eyes full of Adultery 2 Pet. 2.14 2. Idleness This occasioned Davids sin with Bathsheba 2 Sam. 11.2 3. Riotous and lascivious Attire 1 Tim. 2.9 Isa 3.16 unto 23. 4. Fulness of bread and meat which provoke lust Ezek. 16.49 Luke 16.19 Rom. 13.13 5. Corrupt dishonest and unseemly talk 1 Cor. 13.33 Such are vain Love-Songs Ballads Interludes and Amorous Books 6. Lascivious Representations of Love-matters in Plays and Comedies Eph. 5.3 4. 7. Undecent and unseemly Pictures 1 Thess 5.22 Abstain from all appearance of evil 8. Lascivious Dancing of man and woman together Mark 6.22 9. Company with effeminate persons and unlawful Divorces All the sorts of lust repugnant to this Commandment may be referred to these several kindes 1. Those that are contrary to Nature and of the devil recited Rom. 1. as confounding both kindes and Sexes and unnatural abusage of Sexes 2. Those which proceed from our corrupt Nature As 1. Incest that most abominable crime of unnatural lust 2. Double Adultery when both persons are married persons 3. Simple Adultery when the one party is a married person 4. Simple Fornication when they are both unmarried 3. Corrupt Inclinations from which though good men are not wholly exempt yet do they not so yield unto them as to take delight in them but they take all occasions whereby they may withstand them and the grace of Resistance is humbly desired of them Adultery consisteth 1. In consent and minde alone As to lust after things 1. Belonging to the body as excess of Apparel Meat or Drink as may stir up to lust and idleness 2. In the minde it self 2. Beyond consent when action follows Adultery is either 1. Contrary to Nature which is either 1. Confusion of kindes as filthiness with Beasts 2. Confusion 1. Of Sexes as man with man woman with woman 2. Of Blood which is Incest 2. According to Nature and is either Fornication when both persons are single unmarried or unbetrothed Adultery when one of them is married or at least betrothed Incest is in the degrees 1. Of Consanguinity which is 1. In a Right Line as Son with Mother and so upwards 2. In a Collateral Line as Brother with Sister 3. In an Overthwart Line as Son with Aunt and so upwards 2. Of Affinity There is the same prohibition of this as of Consanguinity so it may be called an indirect confusion of Blood as for a man to marry his Wifes Sister The several kindes of Adultery viz. 1. Of the Heart Mat. 5.28 This never suffers a man to serve the Lord with a pure conscience 2. Of the Eyes
which are the windows of the heart 2 Pet. 2.14 Isa 3.13 3. Of the Ears when we listen unto unchaste talk and shew no dislike to nor hatred of it 4. Of the Tongue when we take delight in unchaste speeches and filthy Ribaldry by which the hearts of others are corrupted and our own manifested to be so before Eph. 4.29 1 Cor. 15.33 5. Outward in Fact and this is called Sin finished whereunto all the former are as steps or degrees and in the end bring it forth as an end which they have conceived The hainousness of this sin of Adultery may appear by these particulars viz. 1. We sin against God by withstanding his Will in prophaning the holy Ordinance of Matrimony by making the members of Christ the members of an Harlot most ungraciously defiling those bodies which should be the Temples of the holy Ghost converting them into Stews 2. We sin against our Neighbor because this sin is not committed alone but we draw others to it also 3. We sin against the Wife or Husband of the married party by a most ungodly particular wrong 4. We sin against the fruit of our own body whom we brand with a Note of perpetual infamy Gen. 21.10 5. We sin against our own Families which are ruined by being defiled Beggery waits on Lust Job 31.12 6. We sin against the Places Societies and Kingdom where we live because we defile the Land and cause it to vomit out the Inhabitants Gen. 34.27 7. We sin against the Church of God by hindring the propagation thereof and causing it to be evil spoken of by others 8. We sin against our selves because we make our bodies the instruments of Sin and Satan infecting them with loathsom diseases here and plunging them together with our Souls into Hell hereafter 9. It is a sin committed against each person of the Trinity as 1. Against the Father whose Covenant is broken Prov. 2.17 2. Against the Son whose members are made the members of an Harlot 3. Against the Holy Ghost whose Temple is defiled and polluted 1 Cor. 6.19 10. The hainousness of this sin appears by the fruits thereof viz. 1. The Alienation of conjugal Affection which ought to be inviolable 2. The Devastation of the goods and estate of the Family 3. Provocations to unnatural wishes and practices of clandestine Murther 4. If not a gauling terrifying conscience then a seared one a hard heart a reprobate sense 5. The procuring of many loathsom diseases to the body 6. The execution of the fearful Judgements of God denounced against it if unrepented Adultery though never so secretly committed is surely punished of God and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the wrath of God is kindled against all such unclean persons Eph. 5.6 2. Because it appears to be a most grievous sin worse then Theft Prov. 6.31 32. 3. Because it defileth the Land not onely persons and houses but whole cities and countreys till all are become abominable Lev. 19.29 4. Because of our calling being Redeemed by God to serve him in purity and holiness all our days 1 Thess 4.3 4 5 7. The Reasons and Motives to avoid Fornication and lust viz. 1. Our Bodies are the Lords and must be serviceable unto him the body is not for fornication but for the Lord 1 Cor. 6.13 2. We thereby make void the glorious work of our Redemption The Lord for the body 1 Cor. 6.13 but Fornication and Sanctification can never stand together 3. Those Bodies shall Rise again not to glory but to shame if we here defile them with beastly lusts 1 Cor. 6.14 4. The Members of Christ that is the bodies of the faithful may not be made the members of an Harlot 1 Cor. 6.15 by profession we seem to be the members of Christ but by unchaste lust we pull our hearts from Christ and knit them to an Harlot 5. This sin is against the body whereas other sins are without the body 1 Cor. 6.18 but the Fornicator both useth and abuseth his own body and leaveth a proper blot and stain upon it making it both the instrument the subject and the object of sin 6. Consider the state and condition of mans heart by effectual calling it is the dwelling place and Temple of the Holy Ghost but by unclean lusts we make it a cage of all unclean Spirits Our body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost and destruction is threatned to the defilers of this Temple 1 Cor. 3.17 So that a Fornicator is also a Sacrilegious person 7. We are wholly Gods and not our own to do what we list or to dispose of our selves 1 Cor. 6.19 20. 8. We all desire to see God and to know his love in Christ for our comfort in this life and Salvation but without holiness and purity of heart we can never see God Heb. 12.14 9. If we suffer our hearts now to burn with fleshly lust we make an entrance in them for the burning of Hell fire for ever for these two alway go together Burning lust and Hell fire unless Repentance come between General Preservatives against this sin or the way to prevent Adultery viz. 1. To consider the near Union betwixt God and us so great is his Love as that he hath married us to himself and made us his Spouse therefore is he most jealous over us and in the very instant of impurity or uncleanness casts us off as the members of an Harlot 2. To consider that God is holy and pure and the Devil an unclean Spirit to whom he is joyned in fellowship that sinneth by uncleanness 3. To tye and binde our selves by Covenant and Vows from the occasions which as sparkles of fire do light upon the tinder of our corrupt Nature Job 31.1 4. Set a watch over thy heart that lustful thoughts proceed not thence Prov 6.25 5. Shut thine eyes Job 31.1 that they wander not after the beauty or properness of any ones person or on lascivious Pictures or on any other like allurements 6. Stop thine ears that they listen not to any enticements of others Prov. 7.21 7. Lock fast thy Tongue that it utter no unchaste and corrupt communication Eph. 5.3 4. 8. Seal up thy Lips that they delight not in wanton kisses Prov. 7.13 9. Manacle thy Hands that they use no wanton dalliance Prov. 6.29 10. Fetter thy Feet that they carry thee not near the place where filthiness may be committed Prov. 7.25 11. Have a care of thy company that thou be not defiled with others wantonness and uncleanness Eph. 5.7 12. See to thy Dyet that it be not inordinate and luxurious Gen. 19.33 13. Moderate thy Apparel that it be not garish and lascivious Ezek. 23.6 15 40. 14. Mis time not thy precious hours that they be not vainly and idly spent 2 Sam. 11.2 Special Preservatives for single persons against this sin viz. 1. To beat down the body and bring it into subjection to abstain from such meats and drinks as inflate and provoke to
fleshliness and in case of fleshly motions to pray heartily against them 2. To abstain from the company of women in private or alone or in the dark 3. If notwithstanding those means thou canst not contain but art troubled with fleshly motions then fly to Gods Ordinance of Marriage 1 Cor. 7.1 For the word is express that No Fornicator or unclean person shall enter into the kingdom of heaven 1 Cor. 6. Special Preservatives for married persons against this sin 1. To dwell together the one not separate from the other 2. So to carry themselves towards one another as those whose bodies are not in their own power but mutually in one anothers power and to follow the Apostles Rule 1 Cor. 7.3 3. To contain at times of extraordinary devotion by mutual consent 4. When women love to be at home governing the house as the vertuous wife is described Prov. 30. 5. When the man esteemeth best of his own wife above all other women covering her infirmities by love and the wife doth likewise of her husband for such mutual fervent love is a singular preservative from the strange woman Prov. 5.18 For the government of the eyes to avoid Adultery there be two special Rules viz. 1. We must open and shut our eyes in obedience to God Prov 4.24 25. 2. We must look to Gods Glory make our eyes not the weapons of any sin but the instruments of Gods Worship and Service This we shall do if we imploy them thus viz. 1. In beholding Gods creatures in heaven and earth and in them we may see Gods Glory Wisdom Mercy Power and Providence and thence glorifie God 2. In beholding Gods Judgments very wisely and narrowly that therein we may see his Justice Wrath for sin and so be humbled and terrified from sin 3. In beholding of the Elements of Gods Sacraments especially the Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper which be visible words wherein we may see our Savior Christ as it were crucified before our eyes 4. In using them as instruments of Invocation by lifting them up to heaven to testifie the lifting up of our hearts to God This use of the eyes Nature teacheth us for whereas other creatures have but four Muscles in their eyes whereby their eyes are turned round about Man hath a fifth Muscle whereby his eye is turned upward toward heaven The Vertues of this Commandment viz. 1. Chastity which is a vertue preserving the minde and body from uncleanness agreeing with the Will of God and avoiding all lusts forbidden by God all unlawful companies and inordinate copulation and all the desires occasions causes and effects either in single life or in wedlock This is one of the chiefest vertues that makes preserves the Image of God 2. Modesty or shamefac'dness which is a vertue abhorring all filthiness joyned with a grief shame and sadness either for some former uncleanness or for fear of falling into any hereafter and having a purpose and desire to fly not onely uncleanness it self but also the occasions and tokens and signs of uncleanness This vertue is required unto chastity as a furtherance and cause and also as an effect consequent and sign thereof 3. Temperance which is a vertue observing the mean agreeable to Nature Honesty Mediocrity and order of persons places and times according to the Law of God and Rule of Nature in things concerning the body as in meat drink recreations and apparel This vertue is required unto chastity as a cause without which we cannot be chaste There is a twofold Chastity viz. 1. Of the single life which is with all carefulness and fasting and prayer to keep their mindes and affections and bodies in holiness 2. In Marriage when the pure and holy use of wedlock is observed Heb. 13.4 Rules for the Preservation of Chastity viz. 1. The minde must be filled with godly meditations and the Word of God must dwell plenteously in our hearts that there may be no room for these wicked desires to enter 2. We must often give our selves to the spiritual exercises of Faith Repentance and New Obedience as publike and private Prayer often meditating hearing and reading Gods Word and the like 3. We must use Sobriety in Recreations Company Meat Drink and Apparel for ungodly lusts are kindled fed and nourished by too much pampering of the body 4. We must alway be doing some good thing either in our general calling of a Christian or in our particular calling for Satan takes advantage by our idleness 5. Men and women must not privately converse together without warrant so to do either from their general or particular Calling for this is the main occasion of Temptations Remember what the Apostle saith Evil conversings corrupt good maners 1 Cor. 15.33 6. Reject not Marriage which was instituted by God for these Reasons viz. 1. The means of multiplying Mankinde 2. The gathering of the Church 3. The Image and Resemblance between God and the Church 4. That loose and wandring lusts might be avoided 5. That there might be a Society and Fellowship of Labors and Prayers That Marriage may be a lawful conjunction and this sin thereby avoided these things are required 1. That Matrimony be contracted by consent of both parties 2. That there be adjoyned also the consent of such others as are required 3. That honest Conditions be observed 4. That there be no Errors committed in the persons 5. That it be contracted between such persons as are not forbidden by the Law of God as between whom the degrees of Consanguinity may be no hindrance To preserve purity and chastity in Wedlock these Cautions are profitable viz. 1. Contracts must be in the Lord and with the faithful onely Mal. 2.11 2. Both parties must separate themselves in the time of the womans disease and at appointed Fasts Ezek. 18.6 1 Cor. 7.5 3. Wedlock must be used rather to suppress then to satisfie the corrupt concupiscence of the flesh and especially to enlarge the Church of God 4. It must be used with Prayer and Thanksgiving 1 Tim. 4.3 4. He breaks this Commandment 1. That thinks an unchaste thought tending to Adultery or any sin of that kinde 2. That looks on a woman to lust after her Mat. 5.28 or that useth wantonness 1 Cor. 6.9 3. That commits Incest Lev. 18.22 or Sodomy 1 Cor. 6.9 or fornication or adultery 4. That useth Marriage-bed intemperately or lieth with a menstruous woman Ezek. 18.6 5. That is given to idleness wears wanton Attire 1 Tim. 2.9 or useth provocations to lust Gal. 5.9 6. That useth light talk and reading of Love-books 1 Cor. 15.35 that frequents lascivious places Eph. 5.3 that delights in wanton Pictures 1 Thess 5.23 that useth the mixt Dancing of men and women Mark 6.22 or keeps company with light and suspected persons Prov. 7.22 7. That makes Marriages of yong children or neglects to dispose his children in marriage in convenient time 1 Cor. 7.36 or that punisheth Adultery with small punishments 8. That
is a part of mans body and yet receiveth no nourishment They who are effectually called are onely the Elect for whom God Electeth them he calleth in the time appointed for the same purpose This Calling of the Elect being nothing else but a singling and a severing of them out of this vile world and the customs thereof 2 Thess 2.13 14. to be Citizens of the Kingdom of Glory after this life Eph. 2.19 And this severing or chusing of the Elect out of the world is then performed when God by his holy Spirit endueth them with true saving Faith Col. 2.7 Joh. 15.19 This effectual Calling to Christ and to his Gospel in which the Elect are onely called is a benefit and effect of our Predestination because it is by the Purpose and Grace of God which is given us in Christ 2 Tim. 1.9 Rom. 8.30 it is not Universal to all for Christ is Hidden Manna Rev. 2.17 therefore effectual Vocation is definite and particular and those onely whom God had before predestinate them he called Rom. 30. So many as were ordained to life everlasting believed Acts 13.48 that is were called unto the faith It is not given to all to understand the mysteries of the kingdom Mat. 13.11 These things are hid from most of the wise of the world and revealed unto Babes Mat. 11.25 All therefore are not called effectually The Calling of God is threefold viz. 1. Gods general Calling whereby he calleth all men to Repentance by the Gospel and so to life Eternal Rom. 8.30 11.29 2. His particular Calling when he calleth and assigneth men to some particular estate and duty in Family Church or Common-wealth 3. God calleth some men to some private personal Duty which he designeth not to others but to be done by them alone Such a Calling had he assigned him that would needs be perfect Go sell all that thou hast c. And to Abraham when he called him to leave his Countrey his Kindred his Lands and Possessions c. Heb. 11.8 For the better conceiving of the Nature of Effectual Vocation consider these 6 Points viz. 1. The Ground and Foundation of it namely Gods eternal free Election of us unto life Everlasting 2 Tim. 1.9 2. The means thereof both Preparing Instrumental 1. The Reading of the Scripture serving to beget a general Historical Faith 2. Afflictions in Body Goods Name Friends or otherwise tending to humble a man and prepare his heart as soft ground 3. The denouncing of Gods Judgements and Threats of the Law 4. The Preaching of the glad Tidings of the Gospel which is the most principal and effectual means of this special and effectual Vocation 2 Thess 2.14 3. The Persons that are called those are mentioned Rom. 30. namely those whom he had before predestinated 4. The Time of this Calling The particular time of any mans Calling is not revealed but laid up in the Secret Counsel of God in whose hands Times and Seasons are some at the Sixth hour some at the Ninth and others at the Eleventh c. Defer not therefore but accept the Acceptable time 5. Wherein this effectual Calling doth consist viz. both in the outward and inward Calling especially in the inward when the heart is pierced Psal 40.6 from stone changed into a heart of flesh made tractable and plyable Ezek 11.19 a heart like that of Lydia's Acts 16.15 6. The Excellency of this Calling being a great work as was the Creation of man at first Rom. 4.18 2 Cor. 4.6 yea this effectual Calling goes beyond the work of our Creation for here a man is taken out of the first Adam and set into the second in the Creation God onely called things that were not as though they were but here God calls not onely things that are not but things that would not and refuse to be To raise a man out of the Blood of Christ is more then to raise Eve out of Adams side to raise a dead Soul from the death of Sin far more glorious and powerful then to raise a dead body from bodily death to raise a man to supernatural life far greater then to a Natural onely The means whereby God executeth this effectual Calling viz. 1. The Saving Hearing of the Word of God that is when the Word preached comes savingly to one dead in his sins and does not so much as dream of his Salvation Ezek. 16.6 Isa 55.1 John 1.12 Rom. 7.7 1 Joh. 2.27 Acts 16.14 Psal 40.6 2. The Mollifying of the Heart which must be bruised in pieces that it may be fit to receive Gods Saving Grace offered unto it Ezek. 11.19 The heart is mollified by the Spirit of God and bruised by the knowledge of the Law of Sin and the Punishment due for Sin by a feeling of the Wrath of God for the same sins and by a holy desperation of a mans own power in the obtaining of eternal life Acts 2.37 3. Faith which is a miraculous and supernatural Faculty of the heart apprehending Christ being applied by the operation of the Holy Ghost and receiving him to it self Joh. 1.12 The main duty of a Christian Calling are most chiefly these 1. Invocation of the Name of God in Christ Acts 9.14 1 Cor. 1.2 2. As much as possible we can to further the good estate of the true Church of God Psal 122.6 3. That every one become a Servant to his Brother in all the duties of Love 1 Cor. 9.19 Gal. 5.13 4. To walk worthy that Calling whereto God hath called us Eph. 4.1 The use we are to make of Gods Calling viz. 1. Seeing we are called of God himself in the Ministery of the Word we must labor to joyn the inward Calling with it which is higher then that by having first a grief because we cannot believe next a ready minde then an endeavor to believe and lastly a sorrow because we believe no more and fail so much in the Service of God 2. We must walk worthy of our Calling being holy in our conversation as he that hath called us is holy and there must be the same end of our lives which is of Gods Calling that is to bring us to Heaven The end of our being in the world is to be called out of the world VI. JVstification is that benefit whereby God doth pardon and forgive us all our sins for Christs sake and doth acquit us and absolve us from the guilt of them and doth accept us as Righteous before him in Christ So that Justification is the Absolving of a sinner believing in Christ from sin and the guilt thereof and the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ unto him and the Acceptation to Life Eternal freely for the Merits of Christ with application of Christ on our part by Faith The Papists say That Faith and Works both are required to Justifie we say That nothing is required but Faith and that Works follow Faith They say Faith and Works we say Faith onely but it must be an effectual Faith
of God 2. The Flesh striveth to follow its own pleasures and wicked affections but the Spirit giveth it self to this one thing That it may obey God and set forth his Glory 3. The Flesh is full of distrust and impatience but the Spirit humbleth it self under the mighty hand of God resteth in his Mercy and fashioneth it self unto his Will 4. The Flesh holdeth us down in these earthly things but the Spirit lifteth us up into heaven The Spirits defensive weapons to fight with the Devil in the combat of the Flesh viz. Eph. 6. 1. The Girdle of Verity that is Constancy in the Doctrine and Truth of God 2. We must stand fast having our loyns girt about with Verity which is to be grounded in the setled Truth of Gods Word without inconstancy 3. We must put on the Breastplate of Righteousness which is a setled purpose not to displease God in any thing though never so seeming good in it self 4. We must have our feet shod with the Preparation of the Gospel of peace which is a constant resolution to profess the Truth should it cost us all the world can yield us 5. Above all to take the shield of Faith which is such a Faith as relieth wholly on God in Christ with particular application which will quench the fiery darts of the wicked 6. To take the Helmet of Salvation which is to stand assured that our Salvation is sealed up unto us which assurance will enable us to withstand all the assaults of the Devil The Spirits offensive weapons to fight with the Devil in the combat of the Flesh viz. 1. We must get the Sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God wherewith our Head and Captain Christ did repel the Devil 2. We must Pray with all maner of Prayer and Supplication in the Spirit and watch thereunto with all perseverance The maner how we must behave our selves in this combat of the Spirit with the Flesh viz. 1. Kill sin in the very conception otherwise it will grow from motion to liking from liking to consent from consent to action from action to custom from custom to hardness of heart and thence to the heighth of all impiety 2. Be sure to put no confidence in thine own strength 3. Believe not the Devil though he bring Truth in his mouth 4. Be careful ever to make resistance to it either by weakning the ability of sin by taking away all occasion to sin and by making a holy Covenant with every Member and Faculty of Soul and Body never to admit it or else by opposing the contrary vertue to sin 5. That thou be careful never to compare the pain of Resistance with the pleasure of Sin but rather the gripings of Conscience with the pain of Resistance 6. Thou must be careful to finde out the subtilties devices and sleights of the Devil by which he doth assault thee very cunningly 7. When once thou hast given the Devil the foil the Flesh will be the less able to assault thee and thou the more able to resist it but then be sure still to stand well upon thy guard and keep diligent watch The weapons whereby Satan labors to wound our fervency and faithfulness in the duties of Holiness and to hinder the entire exercise of the Graces of Sanctification viz. 1. Prosperity and freedom from discomforts and misery thereby to beget in our hearts worldliness and security the two great and dangerous Consumptions of Spiritual Life the one makes us insensible of Gods Mercies and our own Happiness the other of Gods Judgements and our own Misery 2. By fasteniug upon us unchearfulness and unprofitableness in the means of the preservation of Grace by making us cold and negligent or onely formal or cursory in the daily examination of our Consciences and in the exercise of holy duties whereby there ever follows a languishing and decay of the Life of Grace 3. By casting us upon ungodly and prophane company which hath a secret bewitching power to transform others into their own fashions and conditions yea to make them sometimes to condemn their former forwardness and zeal in the service of God 4. By putting into our heads some inordinate plot and forecast for preferment and greatness and then farewel zeal farewel Gods children yea his Service yea and himself too for we then think we mis-time our imployment if we make bold to borrow any from Policy to bestow it on Religion The Signs whereby the Son of God may be discerned from a childe of the Devil 1. Truly to believe in the Name of the Son of God 2. An hearty desire and earnest endeavor to be cleansed of his corruptions 3. The love of a true Christian because he is a true Christian The true Testimony of our Conscience may be discerned thus viz. 1. By the grief of heart for offending God called Godly Sorrow 2. By a resolute purpose of the heart and endeavor of the whole man to obey God in all things 3. By savoring the things of the Spirit that is by doing the works of the Spirit with joy and alacrity of heart The working and property of saving Grace vouchsafed peculiarly to Gods Children which doth translate them from the corruption of Nature to a state of supernatural Blessedness may be thus conceived understood viz. 1. It seats it self in the heart 2. It is dispersed over all the powers and parts both of Soul and Body over all the actions and duties whatsoever that are required of man 3. It softneth and changeth the heart and purgeth the inmost thoughts 4. It awakes the Conscience and makes it tender and sensible of the least sin 5. It sanctifieth the Affections and conforms the Will unto the Will of God 6. It illightens the Understanding with Saving Knowledge 7. It stores the Memory with many good lessons for Comfort Instruction and Direction 8. It seasoneth the speech with Grace 9. It so rectifies and guides all a mans Actions that they proceed from Faith warrantable out of Gods Word accomplished by good means and wholly directed to Gods Glory 10. It kindles in us a desire and zeal for the Salvation of the Souls of others especially of all those that any way depend upon us The Signs of the Sanctified or the Signs whereby all men may certainly know whether they are Sanctified Regenerated and shall be saved viz. 1. A Separation of themselves from wicked and prophane men and a purging themselves from the sins of the Times 2 Tim. 2.21 2. The Integrity of Soul sincerity and uprightness in heart in the whole course of Gods Worship Job 1.8 3. A reverent hearing and careful practising of Gods Word and a keeping of his Covenants Exod. 19.5 4. A Soul-ravishing delight in his Word with often and fervent Prayer 5. A Love to Gods Children and a zeal of his Glory 6. A Denial of our selves and a patient bearing of the Cross with profit and comfort 7. Faithfulness in our Callings with a just and
Joh. 6.63 4. The Word and the Ministery of the Word are as instruments which the Lord is pleased to use in this blessed work Jam. 1.18 The Difference betwixt Regeneration and Creation viz. 1. In our Creation Christ was onely a Worker but he is the very Matter of our Regeneration we are of his Flesh Eph. 5.30 2. The Relation that then was betwixt Christ and Man was Creator and Creature but here the Relation is Head and Body We are members of his Body Eph. 5.3 so that the Bond is now much nearer 3. The Being which then we had was from Adam but the Being which now we have is from Christ being flesh of his flesh Eph. 5.30 4. That Being was but Natural this is Spiritual for that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit Joh. 3.6 5. Man might then wholly fall from that estate wherein he was as indeed he did and yet Christ remain as he was Now it cannot be so for the Saints fall not totally and finally O the Riches of Gods Mercy who might justly have left fain Man as he did the evil Angels The Difference between one and the same work in the Regenerate and Unregenerate being sin in the one not in the other and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the Regenerate are reconciled to God the Unregenerate are not 2. The Regenerate work to the Glory of God the other quite contrary 3. In both of them the work is imperfect but the one is covered by Christs Righteousness the other not 4. The work of the godly is joyned with a beginning of Obedience but the work of the ungodly with Sin reigning Of Regeneration or the New-Birth there be four degrees viz. 1. The birth of a pure and holy Minde hating Sin and loving the Law Rom. 7.16 2. A stirring and moving in holy Duties which is a ceasing to do evil and a learning to do well doing the Duties of Piety towards God and of Love towards Man Psal 34.12 3. An earnest desire of Food whereby this new life may be maintained 1 Pet. 2.2 4. A growing up towards mans estate in Knowledge and Holiness 2 Pet. 3.18 The purifying of the Heart in the Regenerate is by a twofold action of the Holy Ghost 1. By creating in the Minde a Saving Faith which unites a man unto Christ and as a hand applieth Christs Purity that is his Obedience to the Heart Acts 15.9 2. When a man is in Christ the Holy Ghost purgeth and purifieth the Heart inwardly by mortifying all the Corruptions in the Minde Will and Affections and by putting into it inward Holiness whereby the Image of Christ is renewed Joh. 15.2 We may know whether our selves be Regenerated by the signs thereof or these fruits of the Spirit 1. A true touch of Conscience for our sins both Original and Actual 2. A godly sorrow and grief of Heart for offending and displeasing God by our Transgressions 3. An earnest desire or true Spiritual hunger and thirst after Christ and his Righteousness testified by our constant and diligent use of those means the Word Prayer and Sacraments wherein God gives Grace and assurance of Mercy 4. An unfeigned turning unto God from all sin by new Obedience having a constant purpose of heart not to sin and a godly deavor in life to please God in all things X. COnversion is a change or mutation of a corrupt Minde Life and Will into a good stirred up by the Holy Ghost through the Preaching of the Gospel in the Chosen on which ensue Good Works or a life directed according to all the Commandments of God This Conversion of a sinner is not the change of the Substance of a man or of the Faculties of the Soul but a renewing and restoring of that Purity and Holiness which was lost by Mans Fall with the abolishment of that Natural Corruption that is in all the powers of the Soul This is the work of God and of him alone who doth it not first in one part then in another but the work both for the beginning continuance and accomplishment is in the whole man and in every part at once specially in the Minde Conscience Will and Affections yet this Conversion is not wrought all at one instant but in continuance of time and that by certain measures and degrees though in the very first act and degree of Conversion the sinner is both justified adopted and incorporated into the Mystical Body of Christ Now we must know That man willeth not his own Conversion of himself by Nature either in whole or in part but by Grace wholly and alone because of the want of that Original Righteousness which was in man by Creation as also now by reason of his proneness and inclination to that which is evil and to nothing that is truly good Gen. 8.21 Rom. 8.7 for all Natural Free-will of man in things Spiritual is directly excluded Phil. 2.13 yet mans Will hath a work in doing that which is good not by Nature but by Grace for when God gives man power to will good things then he can will them and when he giveth him a power to do good then he can do good and he doth it for though there be not in mans Conversion a Natural co-operation of his Will with Gods Spirit yet is there a Supernatural co-operation by Grace enabling man when he is to be converted to will his Conversion 1 Cor. 15.10 Thus we see that man willeth his Conversion in the act thereof but yet it is God that worketh that will in him it is not of himself as the blasphemous Idolaters affirm which here offering it self to our consideration may not be thought any great digression to speak a word or two thereof This liberty of the Will is a Power Right or Ability proper unto a reasonable Nature to will any thing to chuse or refuse any object represented unto it by the Understanding and to move it self by her own proper motion without any constraint or violent compulsion from any external cause Free-will before the Fall was a fitness or aptitude in man to chuse good or evil after the Fall in man unregenerate a proneness onely to chuse evil in the Regenerate a mixt aptitude partly to do good partly evil in the Glorified to will good onely Now the state of the principal Question about Free-will is this Whether as man averted himself from God and corrupted himself so on the other side he be able of his own strength to return to God and to receive Grace offered by God and to amend himself And further Whether the Will of man be the first and principal Cause why some are converted others persist in their sins as well of the converted as not converted others are more others less good or evil some after one maner some after another doing good or evil Now the erroneous Adversaries to this Question answer it thus That so much Grace is both given of God and left by Nature to all men that
excellency of Gods Gifts 7. If our Works should merit Christ should not be a perfect Savior nor Heaven purchased for us by his Blood onely which now to affirm is To Crucifie him worse then the Jews did Good Works cannot justifie us for these Reasons viz. 1. Because our best works yea the works of the Saints are not perfectly good and pure and that for these Reasons viz. 1. We do many things we should not and omit many things we should do 2. We mingle evil with the good we should do or we do good but we do it ill The thing done may be good but not the maner of doing it 3. The Saints which do good works do many things which are sins in themselves and so deserve to be outed of Gods favor Deut. 27.26 4. Because there is not that degree of Goodness in these good works that proceed from the Saints which ought to be or as God requireth 2. Though they were perfect yet are they due and debt so that we cannot satisfie by them 3. They are Temporary and bear not proportion with Eternal Blessings 4. They are Effects of Justification therefore no Cause thereof 5. They are excluded that we might not have whereof to glory 6. If they were part of our Justification our Consciences should be destitute of stable and certain Comfort 7. Christ should have dyed in vain and have risen in vain not to our Justification if we could have been justified by Works That justifying Faith which is required in every good work hath a double use in the causing thereof 1. It gives the beginning to a good work renewing the Minde Will and Affections of the worker whence the work proceedeth as pure water from a cleansed Fountain 2. It covereth the wants that be in good works for the best work done by man in this life is imperfect but hereby both the person of the worker is accepted and the imperfection of his work covered in the sight of God All these are excluded from being good works viz. 1. Which are sins in themselves and repugnant to Gods Law and his VVill revealed in his most sacred VVord 2. VVhich are not repugnant to the Law neither in themselves good or evil but which may yet by an accident be made good or evil 3. VVhich are good in themselves and commanded by God but yet are made sins by an accident in that they are unlawfully done or not as they ought to be How the works of the Regenerate and Unregenerate differ viz. 1. The works of the Unregenerate proceed not from Faith as those of the Regenerate do 2. The works of the Unregenerate are not joyned with an inward Obedience and therefore are done dissemblingly and are meer Hypocrisie but it is far otherwise with the Regenerate 3. As the works of the Unregenerate proceed not from the right cause so are they not referred to the chief end which is Gods Glory but in both these the works of the Regenerate are rightly and truly qualified Though the works of the most Regenerate yea his best works are good onely in part not perfectly because he is not wholly Spirit and no Flesh yet God approves of them And therefore we must again consider Good VVorks two ways viz. 1. In themselves as they are compared with the Law and the rigor thereof and so they are sins because they answer not to that perfection which the Law requireth for there be two degrees of Sin viz. 1. Rebellions which are Actions flatly against the Law 2. Defects when a man doth those things the Law commandeth but faileth in the maner of doing and so mans best works are sins 2. As they are done by a person Regenerate and reconciled to God in Christ and so God accepts of them for in Christ the wants of them are covered The Benefit of putting and keeping on the Holy Spiritual Brest-plate of Righteousness which is Good VVorks viz. 1. It keepeth us from being mortally wounded for so long as we retain a true purpose and faithful endeavor answerable thereto we shall never give our selves over to commit sin and iniquity 2. It bringeth great Assurance of our Effectual Calling and Spiritual Union with Christ yea even of our Election and Salvation Eph. 1.4 1 Joh. 2.29 3. It procureth us a good name in Gods Church while we live 2 Cor. 8.18 and a blessed Memory after we are dead Prov. 10.7 4. It confirmeth the Truth of Religion and so it may be a means to win such as are without 1 Pet. 3.1 to strengthen those that stand 1 Thess 1.6 7. and to stir up all to an holy emulation 2 Cor. 9.2 5. It doth highly honor God and occasion others to glorifie him Mat. 5.16 That we may be moved to the doing of Good Works and to live righteously observe here the blessed fruit and issue thereof as it is declared in Scripture viz. 1. Generally that the Lord loveth Righteousness Psal 11.7 that verily there is a Reward for the Righteous Psal 58.11 that Blessings are on the head of the Righteous c. Prov. 10.6 2. Particularly for the Righteous person himself viz. 1. In this Life the eyes of the Lord are upon the Righteous Psal 34.15 God will grant their desire Prov. 10.24 he delivereth them out of all trouble Psal 34.19 they shall never be forsaken Psal 37.25 they shall flourish like a Palm-tree Psal 92.12 c. 2. At their Death when they have hope Prov. 14.32 and are taken from the evil to come Isa 57.1 3. After Death their Memorial shall be blessed Prov. 10.7 in everlasting remembrance Psal 112.6 4. At the Resurrection they shall go into Life Eternal Mat. 25.46 They shall shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of their Father Matth. 11.43 5. For their Posterity The Generation of the Righteous shall be blessed Psal 112.2 Their seed shall not beg their bread c. Psa 37.25 XIII REpentance is a constant turning from all sin unto God or an inward sorrowing and continually mourning for sin joyned with Faith and Humiliation and both inward and outward amendment It is an aversion or turning from all a mans sins and a reversion or turning again unto God with all our Hearts Or Repentance is an unfained sorrow for and hatred of sin with an earnest Love of Righteousness by the which we are continually stirred up to abhor our Vices and are moved to do good Works not for fear of punishment or hope of reward but for that love we bear towards God that with a joyful heart we are moved to his Obedience and with grief go astray from his Commandments A Godly sorrow whereby a man is grieved for his sins because they are sins is the beginning of Repentance and indeed for substance it is Repentance it self So a desire to repent and believe in a touched Heart and Conscience is Faith and Repentance it self though not in Nature yet in Gods acceptation for in them that have Grace God accepteth the will for the