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A13547 The parable of the sovver and of the seed Declaring in foure seuerall grounds, among other things: 1. How farre an hypocrite may goe in the way towards heauen, and wherein the sound Christian goeth beyond him. And 2. In the last and best ground, largely discourseth of a good heart, describing it by very many signes of it, digested into a familiar method: which of it selfe is an entire treatise. And also, 3. From the constant fruit of the good ground, iustifieth the doctrine of the perseuerance of saints: oppugneth the fifth article of the late Arminians; and shortly and plainly answereth their most colourable arguments and euasions. By Thomas Taylor, late fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge, and preacher of the Word of God, at Reding in Bark-shire. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1621 (1621) STC 23840; ESTC S118185 284,009 494

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peace with God and onely is at rest in the signes and meanes of his reconciliation 2. It hath tranquillity and peace of conscience through sence of sinne not pardoned onely but healed in some measure This peace of conscience is the next thing to heauen and a very heauen vpon earth not when the conscience excuseth that a man hath not sinned but that his sinne being pardoned hee may goe and sinne no more 3. It hath peace with all men so farre as is possible with good men because of Gods Image and with euill because of his Commandement Obiect How can this bee seeing none are more conflicted with inward terrours and tentations or outward crosses and enemies Answ. This is true yet 1. In the world they may haue affliction in Christ peace their felicity is in Christ the Prince and procurer of it Psal. 25.13 Their soule shall dwell at ease if not their bodies 2. This peace is begun but yet imperfect as all graces bee the minde and will subdued to Gods minde and will but in part the flesh subdued to the mind and spirit but in part it can delight inwardly in the Law but seeth another law in his members rebelling against the law of his minde the Image of God we see but in part and cannot loue perfectly 3. This peace may be disturbed and interrupted for a time but the heart is then supported by patience vnder the crosse to the recouery of his peace 4. This peace cannot be abolished but perfected by troubles Your peace saith Christ shall none take from you Marke and consider the good man Psalm 37.37 the end of that man is peace A tree the more it is shaken with windes the better it is settled and rooted and so the trees of righteousnesse Now this peace is the portion onely of the Israel of God To these Christ had promised it namely the refreshing of soules Math. 11.28 To these he hath left it Ioh. 14.27 My peace I leaue with you But there is no peace to a wicked man saith the Lord. 1. None with God but onely a truce He dares liue in a state of enmity with God and bee still out in armes against him as a profest enemie Hee neither feeles nor feares sinne which is not peace but senslesnesse God in heauen proclaimeth peace he refuseth the conditions 2. None with himselfe but sometimes he is a terrour to himselfe that it is death to him to liue in such an estate witnesse Cain or Iudas Or if he be quiet and without accusation yet is hee without comfort which is but a dead sleepe of conscience which shall awake 3. None with others out of a peaceable disposition but being inraged he is fierce and cruell as Lions Esa. 11.6 Or as Ismael whose hand was against euery man and euery mans hand against him Yea he can cry out of Elias as a troubler of peace when it is himselfe and declaime against faction when himselfe is the onely factor The fifth spirituall grace is supplication or the gift of prayer the next to peace is accesse to the Throne of grace Rom. 5.2 For sinne shuts vs out of the presence of God And as Absalom might not come into Dauids presence till atonement was made by Ioab so Iesus Christ hauing made vp our peace with God we being shut out are admitted into presence nay of rebels not onely pardoned but honoured to become the Princes fauorites and familiars nay sons and children Now a good heart knowes 1. That as an Infant new-borne if it cry it is aliue if not it is still-borne so to send out strong cryes to the Throne of grace is a note of Gods Childe and a signe of the new-birth Rom. 8.26 Zech. 12.10 Therefore it comforts it selfe in crying 2. That it is bound by the Morall Law besides the Commandement of Christ and his Apostles to performe continually this part of worship to God namely by the affirmatiue part of the second Commandement which duty euen Adam in innocency free from sinne performed and needed to pray for perseuerance in the grace wherein he stood and else had he not kept the Law But a good heart seeing it selfe seazed on by sinne and the curse of the Law sees much more need in it selfe to performe this duty to the Lord and to it selfe 3. That this grace excellently vpholds the sweet society betweene God and a beleeuing soule For as strangenesse alienates and cooles the affections of friends whereas company and conference kindleth and inflameth them Euen so heerein as Iob saith chap. 22.21 wee acquaint our selues with God and grow into familiarity and fellowship with him He delights in vs while wee acknowledge him a God hearing prayer to whom all flesh must resort And the beleeuing soule hath exceeding comfort in his gracious answeres and supplies who is so ready to heare before we call and esteemes it no small grace that the Lord should not only admit it into his presence but set so easie a condition vpon his promises as for asking we shall obtaine them 4. It knowes that prayer being one of the chiefe Christian sacrifices the Lord will euer returne one token or other of his gracious acceptance For as the Legall sacrifices agreeable to Gods Institution were answered with a speciall signe of Gods approbation of the fire from heauen to consume them So will the Lord some way manifest his delight in these Christian sacrifices which himselfe compares to sweet Incense and Perfume yea to drops of honey dropping from the lips of the Church as from an honey-combe Cant. 4.11 And how can he but returne a comfortable answere on that which is so delightfull vnto him Therefore a good heart is carefull and frequent in this duty But not so much for the doing of it as to doe it well and therefore is carefull 1. for the mouer 2. the matter 3. the manner of his prayers 1. The mouer of prayer is not nature in the godly as it is in the wicked Nature teacheth that what we conceiue to be God is to be prayed vnto and the Heathen could pray to God as a Creator and Gouernour But the mouer in a good heart is the Spirit by which it cryeth Abba Father Rom. 8.15 True prayer is a proper action of the sonnes of God therefore Christ commanded vs in the entrance of prayer to say Our Father And it is the breath of the Spirit of God For he alone can leade vs into the sence of our wants He makes vs see the goodnesse of things that we craue He bends our affections and kindles our sacrifice without whom is no light or heat Let the Spirit remit but a little and the holyest men suppose Peter Iames Iohn shall bee fitter to sleepe than watch or pray in the very houre of tentation Math. 26.38 2. For the matter A good heart moued by the Spirit of supplication is most frequent and earnest 1. For things giuen by God in Christ
as Gods fauour Psalm 4 6. Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs. 2. For spirituall mercies able to satisfie the better part namely the soule of man as appeareth by the method of the Lords Prayer 3. For blessings proper to the Saints sauing faith sound repentance c. Lastly for mercies of continuance such as last both here and hereafter 3. The manner of true prayer standeth 1. In a faithfull eying and apprehending the promises A good heart will aske nothing but what God hath promised 2. In feruency and instance through sence of want and loue of Grace The Spirit of God stirres vp strong cryes and causeth a man to preuaile with God by wrestling as the Canaanitish woman 3. In repentance and humility seeing God heareth not sinners Ioh. 9.31 that is such as purpose to liue in knowne sinnes 4. Especially presenting them in the Name of Christ Ephes. 3.12 By whom wee haue entrance and boldnesse with confidence of faith And by the hands of Christ Reuel 8.3 who is the Angell at whose hands the Lord receiues the odours of the Saints This prayer forceth the Lord that hee craues dimission Exod. 32. Genes 32.26 where the father saith Domine quis te tenet Lord who holdeth thee that thou canst not get away Now thus an euill heart cannot pray For first it cannot pray in the Spirit because the Spirit is not there It can draw neere with the lips when the heart is remoued It cannot pray in humility because a proud heart neuer saw his wants It can say words of prayer and doe the action but without faith without affection And it is regardlesse of the promises and leanes on second causes Secondly the heart and tongue are at variance the prayer of the lip and the practice of the life at discord It can say Hallowed bee thy Name but sweare vainly falsly ordinarily profanely It can say Thy Kingdome come but persecute Preachers and Professors and abet Popery or profanenesse It can say Thy will be done but not by it selfe and when God hath reuealed his will it can be impatient fretfull c. It can say Giue vs this day our daily bread but be couetous vniust lye sweare depend on vnlawfull meanes not Gods allowance It can seeme to pray for pardon of sinne but not against the practice of sinne nor with repentance yea when they meane to liue and dye in sinne It can say Leade vs not into tentation but runne into euery snare all companies courses no corrupt fashion but it soone can become a leader in it But the prayer of the Spirit is no such thing it will indeed practise what it prayes Thirdly an euill heart either prayes not or speeds not What swarmes of Atheists are there who out of a gracelesse contempt of all Religion neglect this duty that whereas godly men are denominated such as call on the Name of the Lord 1. Cor. 1.2 these call not on God Psalm 14.4 And whereas the godly are such as thinke on the Name of the Lord Mal. 3.16 these seldome or neuer thinke on his Name but in oathes blasphemies and cursing Or if they will needs bee said to pray yet they speed not for first their persons are not acceptable Psal. 34.15 16. His eares are open to the righteous but his face is set against the wicked yea their prayer is turned into sin Psalm 109.7 Secondly they turne their eare from hearing the Law and so it is abominable Prou. 28.9 And they make no conscience of other duties or not ordinarily as if all the promises belonged to one duty Nay they pray to serue their owne turne not to returne duty of any kinde vnto God And if the subiect will not heare the Prince iustly doth the Prince reiect his suites Thirdly such a man prayes sometimes not continually in affliction diligently Hos. 5.15 In time of Lent superstitiously Lectures and Church-prayers are nothing so good out of Lent Or it can pray at leisure times but cannot set all aside for prayer to waite vpon it For some things it can pray Nimis ardenter saith Augustine too feruently that is for temporals as corne and wine and oyle onely or chiefly Hos. 7.14 But in spirituall things it is neither frequent nor feruent nor constant Fourthly the voyce of prayer is drowned with the voyce of sinne The voyce of Abels blood cryed downe the voyce of Cains prayer The voyce of Sodoms sinne the voyce of Abrahams intercession So of the voyce of couetousnesse malice iniustice drunkennesse filthinesse Fifthly it can wish for pardon of sinne and reconciliation with God but speeds not because it will not be reconciled with his brethren Math. 5.24 Leaue thy gift before the Altar goe thy way first bee reconciled to thy brother A wicked heart can send out of the same mouth both blessing and cursing can pray for blessing on himselfe and the plague of God on his neighbour Papists can be at their Beads and Masses ●or prosperity while they call for fire from hell to burne Parliaments Yea roughnesse and pride of spirit doe often preuaile against good men that they are disordered in their families their prayers interrupted 1. Pet. 3.7 Lastly he can seeme to pray whiles he is an enemy to prayer Hee cannot abide these long prayers and constant course of holy exercise in families Oh beware of despising any of Gods graces especially this of prayer in any of his children Their prayers keepe Gods vengeance from off thee esteeme them as basely as thou canst The fourth sort of Rules concerning the Spirit of God is for spirituall growth Wherein a good heart is knowne by many excellent qualities 1. It knowes that something in grace is still wanting and all is not giuen at once and so still humbleth it selfe in the measure receiued Phil. 3.13 2. It knowes that without growth that which is begun decayes the one Talent not increased is taken away Math. 25. 3. Seeing the bitter fruit of declining and the wofull example of many that fall away it is carefull not to bee plucked away with the errour of the wicked but grow in grace 2. Pet. 3.17 18. 4. Because the good heart being one of the Lords plants is fruitfull in euery part of the life but more fruitfull in the age Psalm 92.14 It prouokes it selfe more forward more forcibly 5. Because sound grace cannot rest in beginnings but growes to perfection and is crowned with perseuerance being like to the light of the Sunne which increaseth in brightnesse till high noone Prou. 4.18 Therefore it is most carefull to grow in sound grace the soundnesse of which growth is discerned two wayes First by out-growing the ordinary sinnes of the age of his calling of his speeches and former behauiours and auoyding as well the euils of his heart as of his life A childe comming to bee a man outgrowes all childish behauiour so the Child of God 1. Cor. 13.11 Secondly by growing
into and of it our Sauiour saith None shall take it from you It is like a little veine or spring which euer runneth whereas the ioy of an hypocrite which makes a greater show and noise then the other is like a great pond cleare at top muddy at bottome dried vp in Summer when is most need of the waters of comfort Secondly in outward opposition when men who cannot abide sincerity obiect to vs that all is hypocrisie and scorne vs for the things we doe when Ismaels scoffe vs for the blessings sake that from the world we haue small comfort and encouragement in our godly way now wee may finde comfort and peace in the sound constitution of our hearts 2. Sam. 6.21 Dauid being scorned by Michol for dancing before the Arke and called foole for his paines contemned that contempt for he did it in the vprightnes of his heart and would be yet more vile Paul teaching the strictnesse of Christian Religion to bring Christ into the hearts and liues of men was counted an heretike but professed After the way which ye call heresie doe I worship the God of my fathers Apply wee this to our selues A good conscience as a brazen wall feares not the arrowes of scorners and aduersaries Iobs innocencie will beare his aduersaries booke of accusations on his shoulder Thirdly in personall affliction this good heart ministreth great comfort 1. In inward temptation when Satan shall obiect as against Iob that thou art an hypocrite then which no temptation more assaulteth or infesteth the poore Christian looke what way thou canst not hearing not praying not fasting reading or almes can answere it but onely the sincere and inward disposition of an honest heart in all these He is molested with hypocrisie but not subdued by it So when Satan shall obiect the weaknesse of thy faith or the defects of thy obedience and that God cannot accept so broken and sinfull performances nothing can answere this dart but sincerity of heart manifest in true desires and endeuours which God accepteth beholding mercifully what a man hath not what he hath not Sincerity makes light things massie and ponderous where hypocrisie makes talents lighter then feathers So if he obiect thy heauinesse and vntowardnesse in prayer that thou prayest coldly and distractedly the only answere is God regards not the tune of the voyce the phrase of speach the sound of words or eloquence of tongue but the affection of the heart as in Moses Exod. 14.15 and Hanna 1. Sam. 1.17 2. In outward affliction onely a good and honest heart beares a man vp Iob in all his troubles had no other comfort Chap. 27.5 Vntill I dye I will neuer take away mine innocencie from my selfe When Abimelech was threatned for taking Sarah it was happy and comfortable to him that hee could say With a good and an vpright heart I did this Gen. 20.5 What a strength is it when afflictions take a man in his way and while with a good heart he goes about his businesse But if crosses come while a man is wandring or his heart rouing after vanity this disposition adds a sting to the affliction when the heart shall smite it selfe that it suffers as an euill doer Fourthly in respect of perseuerance in good a good heart onely ministreth comfort For as an Apple rotten at core must faile and perish seeme it neuer so beautifull so all graces shall wither that are not soundly fixed in a good and honest heart It is not leaues and showes without but soundnesse of sap and iuice within that makes the tree continue in fruitfulnesse One time or other the Word of God blasts the hypocrite as the fruitlesse Figge-tree and then how soone is it withered Inquire after his graces his zeale forwardnesse diligence ioy faith loue his place cannot be found his place in the profession shall be as empty as Dauids when Saul asked after him He that builds on the sand and in soundnesse of heart settles not himselfe on Christ the corner stone as our Sauiour said of the stately buildings of the Temple so may wee say of this man who held a beautifull place in the Church and shined in many graces See you all these things the time comes when a stone shall not be left on a stone the fall of his house shall be great and of the ruines of his graces wee may say as the Merchants of the riches of Rome Reuel 18.17 In one houre shall so great riches come to desolation But the vpright of heart shall neuer be ashamed Fiftly in the life time the Lord will doe them good that are true of heart Psal. 125.4 Hee will be mercifull to his defects that prepares his heart to seeke him though hee be not clensed according to the purification of the Sanctuary 2. Chron. 30.19 Hee will shew himselfe strong with the vpright heart chap. 16.9 Let them be neuer so weake in themselues Gods strength shall perfect all their weaknesses Let all the world condemne them yet he will iustifie them as true Nathaniels in whom is no guile In a word prosperity is their portion in this life 2. Chron. 31.21 Hezekiah in his workes sought the Lord and prospered Sixtly in his death this comfort shall neuer be shaken out of his heart when death shall sunder his soule and body it shal neuer seuer his heart from the soundnesse of it Hezekiah when sentence of death was passed against him the conscience of his honest and sincere heart comforted him Esa. 38.3 O Lord thou knowest I haue walked with an vpright heart c. At this time it will not comfort a man to haue done neuer so excellent workes but the manner of doing and his true endeuour shall comfort him Lastly in the day of Iudgement onely the good and honest heart shall lift vp the head before the Iudge of the world As a faithfull companion it will goe with vs before the Iudge and plead where no other Proctor can be admitted no other friend can appeare for vs. But how dare an hypocrite who hath nothing but chaffe and straw and stubble stand before the fire of that great Day which nothing but golden soundnesse and sincerity can abide No matter how thou canst gild thy selfe if thou beest not golden the fire shall consume thee But be thou the meanest creature that the whole earth can present before the Iudge with an honest heart that hast been faithfull and sincere in a little in the basest calling and estate that euer was any that Day shall preferre thee aboue hollow-hearted professours Preachers yea Princes For then it shall be better to vse Augustines comparison to be a little small finger that can doe no such seruice in the body if sound than to bee an eye of admirable quicknesse and vse for the guiding of the body if vnsound darke or ready to fall out of the head HAuing thus largely shewed the nature of this soyle of
with his Text and not with vs. Iust like the Epicures and Stoikes Act. 17.18 who said of Paul What will this babbler say He will teach vs some strange things to day And by such scoffes Satan comes to many and hinders their faith saluation For as those Heathen Stoicks and Epicures counted that the strangest Doctrine which taught Iesus Christ so doe Christian Epicures that which most directly leads vnto Christ. The third generall thing proposed is the end of Satans comming which as we heard is three-fold 1. To steale the Word out of the heart 2. To hinder the Hearers faith 3. To rob him of saluation For the first As birds follow the Sower to picke vp the seeds and graines that lie vncouered so the diuell haunts the Assemblies of Saints to steale away the Word preached where it is carelesly heard The Action of Satan is to steale and carry away the Word which is not his but belongs to others But not as other theeues to conuert it to his owne vse but onely that the right owners should not enioy it not to profit himselfe but to disprofit others As for the manner of his Action he stealeth that is closely and secretly takes it away He is a slye and priuie theefe As a theefe onely feares to be seene and discouered so Satan is loth to be seene and therefore takes vs at aduantage when we can least espy him He that stealeth stealeth in the night as they that are drunke are drunke in the night 1. Thes. 5.7 He takes vs in the night of our ignorance and in the sleepe of security and spoyles vs most when wee can least discerne it But whence doth hee steale the Word Answ. Out of the heart Because of his sly and subtill nature who being a spirit can easily and nimbly enter into the most secret closet of our brest And although he cannot directly know our hearts and thoughts which is Gods priuiledge yet by outward meanes he can giue a great guesse at the temper of them and as birds can easily finde when seede is vncouered and as easily picke it vp so Satan can easily see where mens care is not to couer and hide the Word in their hearts when they haue heard it And if he cannot by himselfe and by violence take the Word away if the owners will hold it yet he can and doth take it away by themselues and with their owne consent and good liking who neither were willing to giue it roome or sinke it deepe into their hearts nor to couer it with gracious affections nor had any great loue to it to looke after it as thinking themselues not a graine the worse when all this seed is gone And why out of the heart Answ. 1. Because hee knowes that the heart is the right furrow in which the Word can become fruitfull therefore hee vseth all his skill to keepe it thence or fetch it thence Hee cares not how much of the seede lie in the head or on the tongue so he can keepe it out of the heart For as we say The minde is the man so the heart leades the whole man and is the lodge either of God or the diuell 2. Because nothing but the Word puts him out of possession of the heart The strong man holds the hold till a stronger come If the Word as good seede once roote in the heart he must away Where Christ by his Word takes the heart the Prince of this world is cast out The Disciples by their powerfull preaching saw Satan fall downe like lightening from heauen It stands him therefore in hand to bestirre him and to turne himselfe to all his stratagems One principall whereof is that if he cannot hinder thee from the Word he may hinder the Word from thee or if he cannot hinder it from the eare he may from the heart or if he cannot intercept it from the heart by catching it he may defeat thee of it by stealing Note this stratagem and doe thy best to preuent it His second end is to hinder faith lest they should beleeue And why First he knowes the Word is the parent of faith Ioh. 17.20 Christ prayes for the Elect that they might beleeue through the Word of his Disciples And the Iaylor and all his house beleeued by hearing Paul Act. 16.31 Secondly he cannot but be an enemy to our faith and therefore winnowes vs as the Disciples that our faith may faile because faith 1. Makes vs the sonnes of God Gal. 3.26 2. Marries vs to Iesus Christ Hos. 2.20 3. Makes our hearts temples of the Spirit purifying the heart Act. 15.9 4. Makes vs free entrance to God by prayer to aske what we will and wee shall obtaine Eph. 3.12 And 5. It is our shield to resist all the darts of the diuell the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against it Thirdly if hee can keepe vs from faith the Word he knowes shall be altogether vnprofitable Heb. 4.2 and if he can keepe this weapon from vs he easily foyles vs and makes God also our aduersary because without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 Hence hee layes all his engines against our faith seeks by all means to root it out of the heart and out of the world if God would giue him leaue His third end is to rob men of saluation lest they should be saued First Satan knowes that the end of faith is saluation 1. Pet. 1.9 and that by preaching God saues them that beleeue 1. Cor. 1.21 If hee can keepe thee from faith he hath robbed thee of saluation Therefore if he cannot hinder the Word he will if he can possibly hinder faith Secondly Satan is a deadly enemy to euery mans saluation 1. Out of hatred for the euill angels by their fall lost the loue of God of his glory and of his Image and now hate whatsoeuer belongs to God 2. Out of enuie therefore hee is called in the Parable the enuious man Hee repines and enuies that man should stand in innocency which hee lost and therefore set vpon Adam and droue him by his tentation out of Paradise And he enuies more that any man should enioy the glory of heauen which himselfe can neuer recouer and therfore he layes all the blockes in their way that hee can deuise And as when Gods people were going to Canaan he stirred vp many armies of the Heathen against them to make them fall short of that good Land So now he raiseth armies of tentations and impediments to make vs fall short of that heauenly Canaan which hee knowes to bee a good Land and thinkes too good for vs. 3. Out of his contrariety to God himselfe He sees God carefull of his Church and children that as a good shepheard he vseth all meanes to saue and preserue them therefore hee cleane contrarily seekes to kill and destroy them and defeate them of that saluation which the Lord hath prepared for them And this seemes to be
in body become like the glorious body of Iesus Christ when all fruites of sinne shall bee absent and no part of blessednesse wanting vnto it But can an euill or carnall heart thus reioyce which hath no part in Christ no portion among the sonnes of God no spirit but that which ruleth in the world no portion but on earth No their ioy is lower than so in their wisdome wealth strength in their Wiues Children cattell in honour pleasure lusts and sinnes The stranger enters not into this ioy Prou. 14.10 Thirdly a good heart seeing that Christ hath giuen himselfe wholly to it giues it selfe wholly to him For by vertue of the mutuall couenant made betweene Christ and the beleeuing heart and the spirituall contract and marriage Christ the true and louing husband of his Church giues himselfe and all his substance to the faithfull soule And she being allured by his louing and faithfull promises giues her selfe wholly to him in duty and affection Cant. 6.2 My welbeloued is mine and I am his He is mine not in common graces or generall fauours but in speciall and sauing graces by an inward and secret presence by a most neere and vndiuided coniunction For two persons to say they are man and wife onely because of some common fauours passed He did me a good turne gaue me such a gift c. is absurd It is the chamber and bed-presence secret and inward company that is a signe of marriage So say Christ is thine not by common fauours but when hee meets the soule with sweet refreshings and comes and lodgeth in thee by the faith of thy heart And I am his His Spouse and wife and haue giuen my whole selfe vnto him for heerein I see all my happinesse placed He communicates his nature to me euen the Diuine nature 2. Pet. 1.4 and changeth mine he makes his wife glorious Ephes. 5.27 Moses marryeth an Ethiopian and cannot change her colour But he makes me of a sinner a Saint of a Saint in earth a Saint in heauen He aduanceth my estate euery way hee being rich I cannot bee poore he communicates with me all his goods his righteousnesse his life his glory are all mine And he euer commiserates my estate as a louing husband doth his wiues in all my troubles he is troubled And therefore well said I I am his But an euill heart contracts it selfe to the world to the seruice of lusts as Ephraim followes after many louers Hos. 2.5 committing spirituall harlotry with all base suters and estranged from Christ. And Christ not being thine thou canst not say thou art his Fourthly a good heart prepares a roome in it for Christ to dwell in It knowes that in spirituall contract cohabitation is most necessary Ephes. 3.17 that Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith It knowes that Christ will dwell there not onely as a Master in his house ruling preseruing prouiding but as a Lord in his Temple It knowes that a common man will not dwell in an hog-sty much lesse will the holy Lord in any but an holy place It knowes also that Christ hath prepared for it a sweet roome in heauen And therefore it will fit it selfe as a sweet lodging for Christ still repairing the ruines and proceeding to full sanctification still beating out more lights because the light abides not darke corners sweeping out daily with the besome of mortification all lusts both of heart and life and watering the chamber with teares of repentance It receiues nothing in that may offend him or grieue his Spirit And as the Lords Temple perfumes it daily with the morning and euening sacrifices of Prayer and Praise Finally it trimmes and decks it selfe with graces that Christ may take delight to dwell and content himselfe there But an euill heart cares not where Christ lodgeth so he lodge not in it in the mouth or hand he may Neither cares it how nasty it lye it is alwayes sweet enough for the diuell and lusts and lookes for no better ghests like a Tauerne dore open to all ghests Fifthly a good heart conformes it selfe to Christ and will walke as he gaue example For it knowes the Scripture hath set him out not as a Redeemer only but as a patterne of good life and imitation And that there is almost no Christian duty vnto which we are not vrged by his example as humility Phil. 2.5 patience 1. Pet. 2.21 loue of the brethren Eph. 5.2 forgiuenesse of others Ephes. 4.32 fidelity in our function Heb. 3.1 2. beneficence to poore Saints 2. Cor. 8.9 and obedience both actiue and passiue Heb. 12.2 and constancy in profession 1. Tim. 6.13 Hence it is that as a seruant it striues to doe as his Lord according to his Lords own precept Ioh. 13.15 Whereas a bad heart will haue Christ a Sauiour not a samplar takes what benefit it can by his death but neuer lookes to his life to tread in his steps and protesteth he beleeues in Christ and he is his Lord but neuer conformes it selfe to his practice But no direction by the life of Christ no saluation by his death This is the disposition of a good heart toward Christ. III. It lookes vnto the Spirit of God in foure kindes of Notes 1. In respect of spirituall assurance 2. Spirituall worship 3. Spirituall graces 4. Spirituall growth For the first Because this heart is in vnion with Christ it hath the Spirit of Christ working the assurance of his adoption This is the heart into which God sends the Spirit of his Sonne crying Abba Father Gal. 4.6 that is hee assureth vs that wee are actually sonnes by grace who are no sonnes by nature And this assurance is first from the witnesse of the Spirit Rom. 8.16 which is a secret information of Gods loue and fatherly affection and a still voyce from heauen into the heart that God in Christ is become thy God And is euer met with a motion of the soule inspired by the same Spirit stedfastly resting it selfe in the fauour of God now a Father in Iesus Christ. This being witnessed by the Spirit to all Beleeuers we know his testimony is true being a Spirit of truth that cannot lye Ioh. 14.17 and being the searcher of the deepes of God 1. Cor. 2.10 Suppose thou hadst an Angell as Daniel chap. 9.23 and Mary Luk. 1.28 come from heauen to tell thee thou art greatly beloued of God this were a great priuiledge and confirmation But thou hast another manner of messenger than either Angell or Arch-angell speaking not to the eare but to the heart to testifie Gods affection and no child of God is deceiued in this witnesse Secondly this assurance commeth by the first fruits of the Spirit Rom. 8.23 These first fruits are the sweet graces of the Spirit which wee receiue in small measure in comparison an handfull of righteousnesse peace ioy c. But as by the first fruits in the Law the Lord who had giuen them
without which nothing can please God Heb. 11.6 No action speech almes prayer hearing preaching all without it is defiled and sinne and the labour lost 4. Faith is the comfort and strength of Christian life no loue no ioy in Christ before he bee beleeued and apprehended 1. Pet. 1.8 No hope for hereafter if faith beleeueth not no peace with God till wee bee iustified by faith Rom. 5.1 No boldnesse in prayer till by faith wee can call God Father no strength in tentation no ioy in affliction no comfort in death till faith haue gotten Christ his victory his strength his life then the bands of tentations afflictions and deadly things dismay him not 5. Faith opens heauen and makes way to see things within the Vayle to obtaine by the prayer of faith the wealth of heauen yea and the glory of heauen for the end of faith is saluation Whereas an vnbeleeuer shuts heauen against himselfe Reuel 21.8 Without shall bee vnbeleeuers If weaknesse of faith shut Moses out of earthly Canaan much more must want of faith shut men out of heauenly Canaan Therefore a good heart labours for soundnesse of faith and the rather because much faith is counterfeit and many things are taken for it and there is no better argument of a good heart than to cast out deceit from faith lest it be mistaken in so great a commodity 1. It hungers and thirsts after righteousnes aboue all things in the world sighes and grones vnder his ●owne wants feeles a want of Christ who onely can giue a perfect righteousnesse couer his imperfect 2. It is in some measure satisfied according to the promise For clasping fast the promises it comes to a true perswasion of Gods fatherly affection beleeues the remission of sinnes and comes confidently into his presence as a father appeased as the poore Prodigall Luk. 15.18 comes to his father with shame in his face and sorrow in his soule for sinne but yet with confidence in his heart that hee should not bee cast off and so was satisfied aboue his desire he would haue been but as a seruant but lo he is accepted as a sonne 3. This good heart not only beleeues the Word but rests on it to bee happy as the onely good tydings and most thankfully accepting the promises bindes it selfe as fast to God in duty as God hath bound himselfe to it in mercy 4. It will haue a faith to liue by such as shall bring in a new life into the whole man For faith being an instrument to vnite vs vnto Christ by it as by the bond of our vnion we receiue life and motion from Christ that now the heart is purified the conscience pacified the spirit of our minde renewed the will changed the affections altered the whole man moued and quickened to all good duties So in all occasions it will expresse the life of faith which shall now gouerne the whole life First in our labour and actions it makes vs diligent in the worke but leaue the successe to God Secondly in suffering for well-doing it vpholds it selfe with a patient expectance of a good issue and waiting the Lords leisure makes not haste Thirdly in prosperity and the middest o● blessings it vseth them with blessing but swells not by them trusts not in them but furthers his reckoning Fourthly in aduersity and temporall wants it saith with Abraham God will prouide it will vse no vnlawfull courses to helpe it selfe and lookes more for the staffe of bread than bread it selfe Fifthly in tentation it will rest on the naked promise it will goe against sence and feeling and apprehending nothing but wrath will reare vp it selfe to trust in Gods mercy Iob will trust still if the Lord should kill him Thus in euery thing the good heart may say I liue not now but Christ liueth in me Galat. 2.20 5. As euery life must bee maintained in naturall things so also must this life of faith Therefore a good heart will bee very diligent in the meanes of preseruing and increasing faith It will bee much in hearing the Word by which it is begotten and fed much in meditation and conference by which it is excited stirred vp much in prayer Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeliefe and as the Disciples Luk. 17.5 Lord increase our faith 6. It desires to come to the end of it and wisheth for the comming of Christ Reuel 22.17 The Spouse saith Come It waites for the hope of the glory of God Rom. 5.2 But an euill heart cares not for this faith vnfained 1. It contents it selfe with a name and supposition of faith not the thing or rests on knowledge hope or presumption of Gods mercy in stead of faith 2. It prizeth not remission of sinnes at a due rate thinkes it selfe neuer the richer for it holds it impossible to get assurance of it so neuer attempts it nay it sees the want of euery thing but faith 3. It cannot bee brought to labour seriously in the application of Christs merits and righteousnesse thinkes not application to be of the nature of faith or onely applies it for saluation not sanctification or change of the heart and life 4. It can talke of faith not liue by it cannot beleeue for lesser things as meate and drink but vseth vnwarrantable meanes much lesse for greater higher things cā thank God for prosperity but makes too much haste in aduersity 5. It dares make no profession of faith for feare of men like Nicodemus will doe nothing nor suffer nothing for Christ because it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is no substance in it 6. It can boast of sound faith with the best but it was neuer begot by the Word nor founded in repentance nor cherished with the meanes nor conflicted with sence of vnbeliefe nor workes any change nor cares for any but feares to come to the end of it it loues not the Lords appearance c. Therefore all this is a fancy not faith a dead carcase not the body of sauing faith by which the good heart liueth The fourth spirituall grace which is a marke of a good heart is sound pacification or peace in the holy Ghost 1. with God 2. with it selfe 3. with others 1. Peace with God is next to iustification by faith Rom. 5.1 And this is first through absolution that is sence of remission of sinnes for sinne onely breeds enmity and separation from God who is neuer pacified till sinne be forgiuen and then they can walke friendly together Secondly through acceptation by meanes of Christ apprehended the Prince of our peace and our Peace-maker Esa. 9.6 Ephes. 2.21 Now a good heart knowing that all happinesse stands in peace with God in whose fauour is life and that the wrath of this King is the messenger of death and what an vncomfortable thing it is for a Tenant at will to liue in the displeasure of his Landlord is most carefull to make vp his
bee heard pitied nor ended Lastly an euill heart can heare but not pray before-hand and so loseth all the power of the Word and the blessing which depends on prayer for Paul planteth Apollos watereth but God giueth the increase 1. Cor. 3.6 And Pauls preaching was fruitfull to Lydia because the Lord opened her heart Act. 16.14 The second meanes whereby true Religion is maintained are the Sabbaths and assemblies In respect whereof a good heart hath many markes and qualities 1. It knowes God hath appoynted both a certaine time and place for the publike exercise of Religion both for the preseruation of his worship which else would speedily run to ruine as also that the Church might be knowne and discerned as a City on the top of a Mountaine by the meeting of his people and that such as forsake it might iustly and inexcusably be damned it being so visible and sensible among them Now this being a morall and perpetuall Commandement written in Tables of stone a good heart dares not bring the guilt of violating it vpon it selfe by forgetting what God would haue vs remember or profaning what hee commands to keepe holy or vnhallowing the time or place which he hath blessed to holy vses Leuit. 19.30 Yee shall keepe my Sabbaths and reuerence my Sanctuary I am the Lord. 2. It knowes that the strict keeping of the Sabbath is a fashioning of vs to Gods Image who did all his worke in the six dayes and rested the seuenth To the Image of Adams holinesse in his innocency who obserued the seuenth day holy vnto God And to the image of the second Adam The Lord of the Sabbath who most absolutely kept the Sabbath fulfilling all righteousnesse And the good hart though it cannot attaine this perfection yet striues to recouer this Image 3. It knowes that as it is the Pale and preseruatiue of Religion and the heart of the Commandements as it is placed betweene the two Tables so it is the triall of Religion Whence it is vsuall in Scripture to put keeping of the Sabbath for the whole worship of God and the Prophets mentioning the decay of all Religion say the Sabbaths are polluted Lam. 1.7 and that hee that is an ordinary Sabbath-breaker is a man of no religion without God in the world The Iewes could say If this man were of God he would keepe the Sabbath Ioh. 9.16 And enemies and hinderers of sanctifying the Sabbath are called vnbeleeuers vagabonds and wicked fellowes Act. 17.2 5. 4. It knowes that fearfull iudgements linger and waite vpon that person or people that negligently or wilfully profane Gods holy Sabbath Neh. 13.18 Did not your fathers thus and our God brought all this plague vpon vs Yet ye increase the wrath in breaking the Sabbath Ezek. 20.13 God thinkes on such to powre out indignation vpon them Which is a fire that cannot be quenched Ier. 17. vlt. The bodily death for the breach of the Ceremoniall part did figure the death of the soule for the breach of the Morall part See Exod. 31.14 and 35.2 5. It knowes that God showres downe blessings spirituall and temporall of this life and a better on the heads of conscionable obseruers of the Sabbath Esa. 56.2 5. Blessed is the man that doth this that keepeth the Sabbath and pollutes it not Chap. 58.13 14. If thou make the Sabbath a delight thou shalt delight in the Lord that is in the sweetnesse of his Word and Ordinances thou shalt mount on the high places of the earth that is be exalted aboue all people in true honour and be fed with the heritage of Iacob that is enioy all the good things of the promised Land of heauenly Canaan Here are blessings internall externall eternall 6. It knowes that the carefull sanctifying of a Sabbath heere is the beginning of that euerlasting Sabbath hereafter when we shall be gathered vnto the Congregation of the first borne written in heauen and enter into that eternall Rest of which this is a shadow which who so begins not here God hath sworne he shall neuer enter into his rest Hence a good heart first remembers the Sabbath day to sanctifie it It will all the weeke prepare for the Sabbath and doe all his owne worke in the sixe dayes as God did his that hee may rest on the seuenth It will remoue all things that may hinder the sanctifying of it either in himselfe or in his family that all worldly businesse may bee buried for that day as Iacob buried his Idols before he went to Bethel the House of God It will remember it is a day of rest from all bodily labour which necessity or holinesse command not for Adam himselfe in innocency could not both keepe the Sabbath and walke in his vocation And that it is a Day of holy rest not of idlenesse a Sabbath of the Lord. If God had liked idlenesse saith Athanasius he would not haue commanded so many things to be done nor all the parts of his worship to bee doubled on the Sabbath as Numb 28.9 10. nor so many duties of it as the longest day is short enough for them Therefore euery good heart will rest from all his speciall calling and waite on the generall Master or seruant young or old the buyer and seller Neh. 10.31 All Carryers and Porters Ier. 17.21 Beare no burthen on the Sabbath day no not the Husband-man in haruest Exod. 34.21 Yea the Prince himselfe is not exempted but must be among them Ezek. 46.9 Secondly a good heart will keepe the whole Sabbath day which is the seuenth in respect of the sixe following namely the first day of the weeke as the Iewish was the seuenth in respect of the sixe going before namely the last of the weeke If thou hirest a seruant or labourer to worke a day doest thou not meane a whole day When God allowes thee sixe dayes are they not whole and is not the seuenth so too When God rested the seuenth day was it not the whole Therefore a good heart thinks not it hath sufficiently kept a Sabbath to heare Seruice or a Sermon in the fore-noone or after-noone and all day else doe what hee list No it will giue him the morning and giue him the euening too Psal. 92.2 It selfe would not accept of another the labour of one or two houres for a dayes worke and dares not offer it to God but will keepe the whole Sabbath either in Gods House or it owne in duties publike or priuate Ier. 17.22 Ye shall doe no worke but sanctifie my Sabbath Thirdly a good heart will make the whole man keepe the Sabbath For as man stands of two parts body and soule so the sanctifying of the Sabbath is twofold inward and outward which a godly heart is carefull not to diuorce and therefore 1. Preserues the outward man from seruile workes of the calling but specially from committing sinne which is the most seruile worke and most contrary to the sanctification of the
great enemies of the VVord and hinderances of saluation seuen reasons 220 Best Pleasures vnderualued fiue wayes 231 Phrases of Scripture seeming to impugne the perseuerance of Saints explaned 441 No Prayer against falling away implyeth that the Saints can fall away 440 Price of Gods VVord 12 Many goodly Professors fall short of saluation and why 119 Profiting in degrees of grace knowne by foure notes 402 Properties of Christian couetousnesse foure 204 Prosperity a Popish but a false note of the true Church 132 Properties of a good heart about the Sabbath fiue 331 Prouocations to good duties foure 358 Q Questions whether no worldly cares be allowed to Christians 176 How far worldly cares may be lawfull 177 Whether a man cannot be rich and godly 192 Question of perseuerance in grace handled at large 424 R Raigne of lusts thrusts downe the VVord three waies 151 Recusancy a dangerous sinne 6. reasons 35 Remedies against the choaking of riches foure 202 True Religion described at large in the true causes and effects of it 314 Religion truly imbraced by foure inward affections of a good heart 317 Receauing of Gods ministers is in foure things 340 Repentance stands in foure things 366 Riches compared to thornes in foure things 191 Riches are commonly great enemies to Religion and hinderers of saluation 192 Riches choake the VVord 1. Before hearing three wayes 194 Riches choake the VVord 2. In hearing 195 Riches choake the VVord 3. After hearing two waies 196 Riches full of deceytfulnesse 206 Riches deceiue men of fiue of the best things they haue or can haue 206 Riches how they deceiue men of saluation 209 Riches deceiue by sixe false promises 210 Riches falsely called profits being so vnprofitable in the most needfull things and times foure instances 213 Riches giuen by God for foure good ends 214 Riches are receits and so to be held three reasons 215 Riches true and vndeceiuable to be procured and of them foure instances 216 Riches in themselues the good blessings of God 3. reasons 192 Rooting in grace is in three things 124 Rules to try whether we continue to grow in grace foure 91 Rules of moderation in naturall and lawfull desires fiue 174 Rules how to carry our selues toward riches that they proue not thornes sixe 205 Rules to preserue vs from the deceytfulnesse of riches 5. 212 Rules in generall how to carry our selues through our pleasures fiue 238 Rules concerning perseuerance in grace foure 422 S Sabbath profaned by wicked men fiue wayes 335 Sacrifice of wicked men abominable foure reasons 288 Satan comes with men to the hearing of the word 3. reasons 47 Satan commeth to steale the word away 1. Inwardly three wayes 48 Satan commeth to steale the word away 2. Outwardly three wayes 51 Satannicall suggestions against the word fiue 50 Satan hath three ends in stealing away the word 52 Satan aymeth especially to steale the word out of the heart two reasons 53 Satan is a deadly enemy to mans saluation three reasons 55 Satan is there most where he is least suspected 170 Seed a resemblance of the word in sixe things 23 Seed of the Spirit what 282 Seed springeth vp in stony ground to three degrees 65 Selfe respects may make a man diligent in the meanes of saluation three instances 69 Seeking of God wherein it st●ndeth 272 Signes of sound humiliation three 290 Sinne thrusts vs vnder wofull misery fiue reasns 364 Singlenesse of heart is in fiue things 350 Softnesse of heart in three things 348 Soundnesse of heart comforteth 1. in life 2. in death 3. in day of Iudgement 378 The Sower is Christ who goeth forth to sow three waies 20 Spirituall worship is from Gods Spirit 1. inspiring 2. directing 3. assisting 285 Spirituall worship must be also from mans spirit qualified with sundry spirituall graces 286 The Spirits indwelling in the Saints assureth them of perseuerance 437 Sports many wayes abused 167 Supplication necessary to a good heart foure reasons 301 Suspect most danger in most lawfull things 171 Symplicity a bad excuse for bad hearing fiue reasons 41 Syncerity of heart how discerned 351 T Thorny Ground and bad hearers resembled in three things 148 Triall of sound prayer by 1. the mouer 2. the matter 3. the manner 302 Triall of sound fruits of grace by foure rules 385 Times vnseasonable for pleasure foure 247 V W Of true Vnderstanding of Gods word foure notes 43 In the Vse of naturall things euer ioyne a spirituall 174 Watchfulnesse of heart looketh to fiue things 355 True Watch against sinne in eight things 369 Men Wither in race foure wayes 95 Withering in grace dangerous in foure respects 100 To Wise vsing of pleasures foure rules 245 Wicked men are without peace 300 Wicked men loathing the liquor of the word hate the vessels and Ministers 342 Wicked men cannot pray many reasons 340 c. Witnesse of the spirit what 282 The Word diligently to be heard fiue reasons 3 Word as necessary to saluation as seed to the haruest 31 Word knowne to be fruitefull by foure notes 56 Word of God best after hearing fiue reasons 159 Word applied is the pruning knife of our pleasures as in the foure parts of it 230 Worldly cares argue impiety and folly 184 Z Zeale renewed knowne by foure notes 348 FINIS Be diligent to heare the Word Reas. 5. Ioh. 8.47 Heb. 10. Luk. 10.42 Be forward in hearing the Word Reas. 1. 2 3 Psal. 27.4 Psal. 84.1 4 Act. 10 33. Psal. 119.147 Apprehend all good opportunities within thy calling Christ spake in Parables for foure reasons Difficilis in Scripturis magna ingenia exercent Aug. in Psal. 140. The misery of a sencelesse hearers in fiue things Act. 13.46 2. Cor. 2. ●6 Non impertiendo malitiam sed non impertiendo gratiam Aug. The scope of this Parable Act. 16.14 Translate the booke of nature into the booke of grace Rom. 1.28 The Agent or Sower Difference betweene Christ his sowing and the sowing of his Ministers foure 4. Things make to fruitfulnes raine ●unbeames winds application of all to s●t ripen the seed All from Christ. 2. His action Christ goeth forth to sowe three waies 3 His intention The Word preached resembled to seed in sixe things Act. 26.29 Seede of Gods Word more excellent then all other seede in foure respects Reu. 14.6 The dignity of the Ministry The du●y and charge in foure things 1. They must goe foorth to sow 2 Not any but their Lords seed 3. All his seed 1. King 22 14. 4. To his aduantage Mat. 6.2 5. Prepare thy ground for this seed Receiue and retaine it Col. 3.16 Luk. 10.42 Bring answerable fruits to the seed Looke to the daily growth of it The Word preached as necessary to saluation as seed to an haruest 2. Cor. 9.6 Some harts and hearers compared to the high-way for 3. reasons Carelesse Hearers the worst Hearers Heb. 6.8 Against Recusants Ioh. 8.47 Ioh. 3.20 Against dispisers of the Word Against persecuters of the Word Motiues
How to carry our selues to these thornes 6. Rules Heb. 13.16 Doct. Riches full of deceitfulnesse They deceiue men of 1. Gods Word 2. Their Religion 3. Their hearts 4. Sound iudgement Zech. 11.5 Act. 3.6 5 Of saluation Mat. 16.26 Riches deceiue by false promises of 6. things 5. Rules to preserue vs from the deceitfulnesse of riches 1. Esteeme them as they are indeed not as in mens esteeme 2. Take them from God For foure good ends Prou. 39. 3. Looke on them as receits 4. Looke beyond them on true and substantiall riches 1. Tim. 6.6 5. Pray for wisedome well to vse them The third sort of thornes are worldly pleasures All worldly pleasures not condemned 6. Reasons Doct. Earthly ioyes shrewd enemies to the Word and saluation Reasons 7. Non quae optima sed quae suauissima Iam. 4.1 Justi lib 1 Vse 6. Motiues disswading the pursuit of pleasures The vigill must goe before the holy-day the fast before the feast Dolor voluptas innicem cedunt Ereuior voluptas 4. Great dangers in worldly pleasures Aues vagae in easdem pedicas retiaque non incidunt Hieron Eccles. 11.9 Ita curandum corpus vt castiganaū 1. Cor. 9. vlt Gen. 47.9 Heb. 11.25 26. 7. Markes of a man in whom pleasures choke the Word Men vnder-value better pleasures fiue wayes Psal. 84.10 Exod. 5.4 17. The goodnesse of the giuer commends the gift ● Generall rules how to carry our selues thorow our pleasures 1. The person must be sanctified 2. The choyce for Matter Circumstances Kinde Non subtra●untur voluptates sed mutantur pijs August in Psal. 74. Ioy of Gods people is in 7. things Greg. 3. The manner of vsing our pleasure 1. Weanedly 2. Watchfully 3. Wisely August de ciuit Dei lib. 11. cap. 25. 4. Christianly 4. The season of pleasure Foure vnseasonable times for pleasure In Sabbato melius est arare quâm saltare 1. Cor. 12.26 5. The end of our pleasures Three ends which we must aime at in our pleasures Motiues thus to carry our selues through our pleasures Greg. Ioh. 15.1 Si debeo totum me pro me facto quid debeo pro me refecto Aug. Doct. Some ground which the Word falls vpon is good Reas. 1. 2 3 4 Act. 20.32 5 4. Comforts for a godly Minister who seemes to lose much labour Secundùm laborem non secundùm prouentum Not to looke what others doe but what our selues shuld doe The heart called good in two respects An honest hart why so called Doctr. Goodnesse of Hearers esteemed by goodnesse of heart Reas. 1. 2 Iam. 4.8 3 4 Caius Seius vir bonus sed Christianus 2. Meanes to attaine a good heart Graces required to a good heart are of 1. Action 2. Acceptation Creatio est motus à non ente simpliciter ad ens Ioh. 15.5 Pro. 20.9 Cant. 4.7 Ier. 17.9 Markes of a good hart reduced to 7. heads I. In respect of God a good heart hath 5. properties as 1. It desires neerer vnion with God 2. Seeketh him with the whole heart Ioh. 4.20 3. Standeth wholly to Gods approbation See Acts 20.33 Psal. 7.8 Psal. 37.6 1. Sam. 15.30 4. Resteth and reioyceth in God as his onely portion * Psa. 17.14 5. Aymeth directly at Gods glory in all his 1. Parts 2. Actions both 1. Naturall 2. Spiritual II. Jn respect of Christ a good heart hath fiue properties 1. Preferreth Christ aboue a thousand worlds 2. Reioyceth in Christ aboue all worldly ioyes Rom. 8.17 Ph●l 3.21 3 Giueth it selfe wholly to Christ who hath giuen hims●lfe wholly to it Esa. 63.9 4. Prepareth a sweet roome in it selfe for Christ to dwell in 5. Conformeth it selfe wholly vnto Christ. 1. Ioh. 2.6 III. In respect of the Spirit of God 4. Kindes of notes of a good heart 1. Kinde spirituall assurance from 1. The witnesse of the Spirit 2. The first fruits of the Spirit 3. The seale of the Spirit 4. The earnest of the Spirit 5. The liberty of the Spirit 2. Cor. 3.17 Psal. 51.12 No bad hart euer attained any of these which no good heart is without Act. 19.2 Monendo mouendo remouendo 2. Sort of rules concerning the Spirit is for spirituall worship Ioh. 3.6 From Gods Spirit 1. Inspiring 2. Directing 3. Assisting Esa. 1.12 Psal. 51.17 ● Sam. 1.15 and from our spirits 1. Contrite ● Cheerful 3. Sincere 4. Feruent 1. Tim. 2.8 Act. 2.3 Mic. 6.7 3. Sort in spirituall Graces 5. Humiliation in respect of 1. God 2. It selfe 3. Other things Ps. 126.5 6 Signes of soundnes of humiliation 3. Heb. 4.13 Exod. 5.2 2. Jllumination for which a good heart labours for 5. reasons Acts 17.23 6. Markes of soundnesse of knowledge Ioh. 13.17 Christ the Author and matter of wisedome to a Christian Luk. 7.35 3. Grace Justification by sound faith which a good hart cannot want for 5. reasons Mark 6.5 6. Soundnesse of faith manifested by 6. markes Math. 5.6 Hab. 2.4 How faith gouerneth the life in 5. things Esa. 28.16 Gen. 22.8 Mark 9.24 1. Tim. 1.5 4. Grace sound peace 1. With God 2 With it selfe 3. With others Godly most peaceable yet none more troubled 4. Reasons Gal. 6.16 Wicked men without peace Esa. 57.21 5. Grace supplication No good heart without this grace 4. Reasons Psal. 65.2 Sound prayer tryed by the 1. Mouer 2. Matter 3. Manner Zech. 12.10 True manner of prayer in foure things Heb. 5.7 An euill heart cannot pray 1. Thes. 5.17 The fourth sort in spirituall growth Soundnesse of growth knowne by two things 1. Outgrowing of sinnes 2. Growing ● all 〈◊〉 especially in Humility See Col. 1.9 Faith Rom. 12.21 Patience Obedience 1. Thes. 5.22 Heauenly-mindednes 6. signes of it Reu. 21.17 2. Tim. 4.8 Only a good heart thus groweth Luk. 9.62 Reuel 2.5 Vers. 19. Beware of this ordina●y fruit of Apostasie Markes of a good hart in respect of Gods Ordinances Eph. 4.4 5 1. It chuseth true Religion in the true 1. Causes 2. Effects Efficient Matter Deut. 4.2 Pro. 30.6 Reu. 22.18 Forme End 5. Effects of true Religion Religio à religando August 2. It Christianly imbraceth it in 1. Inward affections 1. Faith 2. Loue. Psal. 139.21 3. Joy 4. Constancy 2 Outward effects as 1. Promote it 2 Professe 〈◊〉 Act. 20.24 3. Adorne it Iam. 1.27 4. Suffer for it 5. Honoar the Professors of it How an euill heart carryeth it selfe in matter of Religion in 6. things Ioh. 7 48. Iam. 2.1 A good hart carefully imbraceth the ordinances of God 4. Reasons Cant. 2.9 Ioh. 4.24 Jt makes great conscience of the Word preached 3. Reasons Reu. 3.20 Ministerium Verbi vehiculum Spiritus 5. Speciall sauing graces wrought by the Word preached Act. 13.26 Conscionable hearing in fiue things 1. Pet. 2.2 An euill heart saileth fiue waies in hearing Ier. 6.17 2. Tim. 4.4 Psa. 50.17 Rom. 7.22 Numb 11.28 A good hart is very conscionable for the Sabbath 6. Reasons Mark 2.28 Heb. 4 3. 5. Properties of a good heart about the Sabbath 1. It remembers it
the Apostles ayme 1. Pet. 5.7 8. He cares for you but watch for the diuell who as a roring Lion seeketh to deuoure Vse 1. In that the diuell comes learne not to content thy selfe with comming to Church but see thy ende bee better than his yea contrary to his Hee comes with a purpose to hinder the power of the Word in thy heart to hinder thy faith and saluation Come thou with a purpose to set forward the power of the Word in thy heart to set forward thy faith and saluation Quest. How may I know that the worke of faith and saluation is set forward in mee by the Word Answ. 1. If it haue brought thee to the sight of thy sinne and the sence of thy danger by it This is the first effectuall worke of the Word as Christ first conuinced the woman of Samaria of her adultery Peter tels the Iewes Act. 2. that they had slaine Iesus Christ. 2. If the Law being a Schoolemaster to Christ haue sent thee out of thy selfe to apprehend the remedy of the Gospell as the Iaylor being cast downe said Oh what shall I doe to be saued Beleeue in the Lord Iesus said the Apostle and thou shalt bee saued Act. 16.30 31. This is the method of sound Ministery first truly to humble then to raise againe 3. If thou findest it a Ministery of the Spirit conueying the Spirit into thy heart for the consumption of corruption and repairing thee to a new life of grace Gal. 3.2 Receiued ye the Spirit by the workes of the Law or by the hearing of faith preached 4. If thou carriest it into thy soule as a light into a darke place 2. Pet. 1.19 to follow the directions of it and to guide thy wayes according to euery precept of it If now thou intendest when thou commest to bee led further into the sight of thy sinne led neerer vnto Iesus Christ to draw of his fulnesse led further into the sanctification of the Spirit and led as a blind man by the guidance of the Word certainely the Word is of power to set forward thy faith and saluation notwithstanding all Satans malice Vse 2. The diuell knowes that faith is by heareing and saluation by faith 1. I would our Popish Recusants knew so much so they would make a better vse of this knowledge than to withstand both faith and hearing 2. I wish our formall Protestants knew it who will scarce step out of dores to heare but in policy will heare so much as they may bee counted no Atheists or Papists but indifferent men as they be too indifferent whether they heare or no. 3. I wish they knew it who by reading at home will beleeue and bee saued by their eyes which are vnsufficient to breed faith For God hath giuen the sence of hearing this preeminence Rom. 10.14 How can they beleeue vnlesse they heare The sight is a sence of discipline but hearing the sence of faith 4. I wish our Atheisticall scorners who think they know so much as they contemne the Ministery that they knew as much as the diuell then would they not barre and excommunicate themselues so wilfully from the meanes of faith and saluation they would not turne away the eare if they knew that faith were dropt in by the eare 5. I would our carelesse and sleepy hearers knew it who shut the dore of faith lest they should bee saued Neuer will God open their hearts as Lydias by the Word who shut their eares 6. I wish they also would learne a lesson from the diuell who content themselues to liue in dry and barren places destitute of the meanes of faith and saluation as Lot who chose Sodom for the fruitfulnesse of the ground before Canaan and delight in the hills of Samaria among idolatrous Papists rather than in Sion Hill among true worshippers I am sure thou wouldest chuse to dwell with the Lord hereafter then chuse to dwell now where the Lord dwelleth In a word Let vs all perswade our selues of that whereof the diuell himselfe doubts not 1. That God hath appointed hearing for the engendring of faith For as by hearing the diuels voice we lost our faith and happinesse so the Lord hath appointed by hearing his voice againe as the most conuenient meanes to recouer our faith and saluation 1. Cor. 1.21 It pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue them that beleeue And he hath tyed faith and saluation to preaching both by precept and promise and tyed vs to them though himselfe be free We haue no other ordinary meanes 2. We would rate our selues if we should carelesly or wilfully lose our money or gold or slip the meanes of getting and encreasing them But behold faith is much more precious than gold 1. Pet. 1.7 and saluation far more precious than faith If it were a small thing to lose faith yet it is something to lose saluation more to lose it so wilfully Vse 3. Seeing Satan comes to Church to steale the Word know that thou neuer commest to Church but Satan an enemy a theefe comes with thee to rob thee of the Word of the treasure of faith and bereaue thee of life euerlasting Therfore deale with him as with a theefe 1. Suspect him trust him not onely a watchfull eye preuents an vntrusty fellow 2. Locke that thou hearest from him keepe the Word in a safe place vnder locke and key hide it in the middest of thy heart Psal. 119.11 couer this heauenly seed Motiues 1. Thus wee doe for our money wee are carefull of our Euidences Iewels Plate and things of worth let vs also esteeme the Word as Dauid aboue thousands of gold and siluer 2. Naturall wisedome teacheth a man if hee haue some speciall Iewels and knowes he hath theeues about him not to leaue them abroad or lay them in the way of a cunning theefe from whom he can scarce by all his care keepe them 3. Satan cannot steale if thou leaue not thy wealth abroad Therefore doe for the Word as for thy seed in thy field the Husbandman so soone as he hath cast it couers it with the Plough or Harrow and so preuents the picking vp of birds so must thou couer the seed of the Word in the furrowes of thy affections lay it deepe in the ground of thy heart by serious attention meditation conference practice Else if the seed lie on the ground vncouered vncared for these birds presently picke vp all to thy losse and sinne 3. If thou perceiue that this theefe hath stolne away the Word from thee follow him with Hue and cry repent thy sinne lament thy losse complaine to God pray thou maist recouer the losse and preuent the like for time to come Quest. How may I know the diuell hath robbed me of the Word Answ. 1. If after much plaine and powerfull preaching and hearing thou hast learned little Many will commend Sermons where the diuell gets all from them Many commend the Preacher
hee immediatly prepared to goe into Macedonia being assured the Lord had called vs vnto them 2. Examine thy desires in the matter of them which is twofold 1. In respect of God the chiefe Good 2. In respect of the Word the meanes to it For the first An hypocrite may desire happinesse as Balaam for selfe-loue but properly desires not the loue of God for it selfe See therefore that thy desire be rather of reconciliation then saluation rather to glorifie God then be glorified of him esteeming the light of his countenance better then life it selfe This is a pure and holy desire after grace and fauour aboue all things For the second 1. Thou must desire not the Word so much as God in his Word seeke after the liuing God in his Ordinances loue him in the Word who there shewes he loued thee first Many professe loue to the Word who loue not God 2. Desire the Word of the Kingdome for the Kingdomes sake For an hypocrite may desire the Word of the Kingdome for feare of hell 3. Desire the whole Word An hypocrite may desire some part of it the promises affect and rauish him but the conditions are distastfull Gods indulgences and recompenses please him wonderfully but restraints and impositions are burdensome and tedious Therefore see thou desire the conditions as well as the promises and loue the worke of the Word as well as the wages yea if there were no wages So cannot he 3. Examine thy desires in the end of them thus 1. An hypocrite may desire the Word for science sake not for conscience to puffe himselfe vp not to humble himselfe for discourse not for direction If thou desirest the Word to learne selfe-deniall to yeeld conscionable obedience in all things and to take the constant direction of it as Israel by the pillars in all their iournies thou art beyond any hypocrite 2. Hypocrites may desire the Word to bee like the children of God in happinesse but not in sincere obedience to meet them at the end and be saued but not to ioyne with them in the meanes or if they doe ioyne in the meanes it is by starts and fits for most part and vnconstantly See thy desire be to keepe the way as well as the end of it though it be all strawed with crosses and be as desirous of the means as of the end Especially desire the Word as a constant light direction comfort and strength For such are the grones and desires of the Spirit An hypocrite likes Heauen well but not the way to Heauen 4. Examine thy desires in the companions and qualities of them One is sence of want They proceed from a bruised heart as in the Conuerts Acts 2.37 and the Iaylor chap. 16.30 True desires are the breathings of a broken heart Another vndiuided companion of them is the Word they alwaies set a man forward to the Word of the Apostles to be instructed by them as in the former examples whereas an hypocrite will comfort himselfe and rest satisfied without the Word in blinde vngrounded hopes A third is vehemencie and feruencie they must not bee light or slight desires but a vehement thirst as Samsons almost ready to die as the Hart chased pants for water an hunger that would breake stone walls and contemne fire and water euen the vtmost perils more eager then any worldling can desire siluer and gold Hypocrites haue desires but faint not so earnest within as they seeme to be A fourth is the good affections that attend it as an earnest desire to repent to reforme both the heart and life to abstaine from lusts to keepe a good conscience before God and man in all things A fifth is constancy as a thirsty man desires drink till his thirst be quenched as Hannahs for a child till she had one so is the Christians till Christ bee formed in him and then to be still knit neerer vnto him An hypocrite may desire by starts and moods as Pilate desires to know what is truth Ioh. 18. but stayed not to know it He desires the good things of the Kingdome but they are held at such a rate as deads his desires as the young man They are cooled and quenched before he attaines the thing he seemed so earnestly to desire Doe thou see that thy desire bee not satisfied before thou get the thing desired euen Christ and his merits The more true taste thou gettest the more earnestly thou wilt desire him no rate will be too deare all things will be drosse and dung in comparison of him The sixth or last is growth in desires and endeuours Spirituall life stayes not in beginnings but riseth to a great measure of liuelinesse as a graine of mustard-seed 2. Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ. 2. Cor. 13.11 Be perfect desire perfection But an hypocrite faints in his desires the labour of vsing meanes is soone if not quite giuen ouer yet lessened and abated Get these desires of the Word thus qualified for the ground matter end and companions of them and then know to thy comfort that no Reprobate euer came so farre no bad ground attaines such desires II. Doe we heare that hypocrites who shall neuer be saued attaine a great measure of illumination and the knowledge of the mystery of Christ whereby they discerne and approue of the truth in Iesus Christ refuse and reprooue errours both in iudgement and practice and hauing escaped such as were wrapped in errours yet are entangled againe and ouercome whose latter end is worse than the beginning Then be carefull to try thy knowledge and illumination whether it be got beyond the illumination of hypocrites or no In foure particulars 1. In the matter of it thus 1. An hypocrite may know the story of Christs death and resurrection and the merits of them but neuer did any hypocrite know the vertue and power of his death and resurrection as the Apostle Paul desired Philip. 3.10 Obiect Why did he not know it and preach it before that time Answ. Yes he knew well the death and resurrection of Christ as also the vertue and power of them but he would feele in himselfe that power more and more standing in the death of sin and the life of righteousnesse This experimentall knowledge farre passeth the theorie and is the knowledge but of a few 2. An hypocrite may know in generall that Christ is a Redeemer and discourse excellently of the manner meanes and end and this swimmes in the braine But there is a particular knowledge with application to say with Iob I know my Redeemer liueth and Paul who gaue himselfe for me To this neuer Reprobate came If hee could speake it he knew not what he spoke he knowes and speakes onely in grosse Therefore see thy knowledge be distinct 3. An hypocrite may know Christ as God hath described him in the Scripture but not as he is made of God vnto vs wisedome
world are intangled againe therein as the dogge returning to his vomite and the Swine washed to her wallowing in the myre How many haue wee obserued so strict in their course that they could endure no sinne no nor the appearance of euill in themselues or others They seemed to hate the very garment spotted by the flesh Now they see many of the same things to bee more indifferent in which men may be more nice then wife Nay they are growne so strong as their stomacks like Ostriches can digest Othes Playes profane and wanton speeches in themselues and others Euery one sees them withering apace but themselues see it not Lastly how many out of their loue to Religion were formerly much and often in deare and costly duties for God for his Gospell and Saints as the Galatians who would part with their eyes to doe Paul good But now they can slinke away except the dutie be cheape and easie If good countenance to Religion or good words which are good cheape will serue the turne that they will affoord no more 4. Men wither in respect of meanes which should preserue their gifts and greenenesse Some haue made conscience of the Word preached and tasted the sweetnesse of it so as nothing could hinder them from hearing all the Sermons they could come at But now the man is nothing so sharpe set euery straw is a Lion in his way hee hath not so much leisure as he had or he hath a greater charge Whereas indeed hee onely hath not the same thirst and desire after Grace in the meanes of it but rather as an vnthankefull Israelite loathes the sweete Manna which at first was so precious Others were wont to pray much and often and that with such earnestnesse as if they had been right Israelites who were resolued to wrestle it out with God but now much of that labour is remitted the hand growes so heauie and so ready to fall downe that Aaron and Hur haue much adoe to support them Some were once diligent in instructing their families in reading the Scriptures with them in carefull watching ouer their behauior as if they had meant to haue gone thorow with Ioshua his resolution But now more then halfe the allowance of the family is taken away Thus as a man in decay casts off some of his traine and sets himselfe at a lower rate So hee that is withering in grace sets downe himselfe in iudgement affection practice and diligence in the meanes And this is the first generall thing proposed The second is the danger of such withering which we shall clearely see in foure particulars 1. In respect of God they are most hatefull seeing they can finde nothing more worthy forsaking then the good way and esteeme euery thing better worth keeping then Gods image and graces Therefore he stileth them Dogges and Swine 2. Pet. 2.20 and most vncleane beasts which his soule hateth as in whom his Spirit ceaseth to worke by illumination sanctification consolation and giueth way to the diuell 2. In respect of the Church they bring scandall to the weake and the scorne of the wicked vpon themselues and all Professors They wound the hearts of Gods children who in them are made vile to the World They open wicked mouthes to speake euill of the way of God Lastly they confirme and harden many in their libertine and loose courses 3. In respect of the sinne it selfe none more dangerous For first relapses wee say are farre more dangerous then first diseases Secondly Satan returning comes with seuen more wicked spirits then himselfe and so hee is for euer held vnder the power of Satan Thirdly this sinne is commonly punished with other sinnes which is Gods most fearefull stroke to which hee seldome giues vp his owne Fourthly it is in the degrees of the sinne against the holy Ghost and easily brings a man into that estate that there may bee left no sacrifice for his sinne 4. In respect of the iudgement that awaites and ouertakes this sinne First the house not founded on a rocke must fall and the fall is great and irreparable Matth. 7.37 Secondly the iudgement is certaine as which is already in part inflicted The talent is already taken away and nothing remaines but casting the vnprofitable seruant into hell-fire Matthew chap. 25. vers 28. The third generall thing proposed is Notes of a man withering in Grace And these are sixe 1. A resting in a common and generall hope of a good estate without desire or indeuour to seeke markes of certainty or speciall assurance in himselfe As a foolish Trades-man hopes his estate is good enough and beares his Creditors in hand it is so but hee is loth to cast vp his bookes or come to a particular view of it No surer argument of a man decaying 2. An opinion of sufficiency that hee hath Grace enough Hee will seeke no more because hee pleaseth himselfe in his present measure and hee that careth not to increase his stocke wastes of the principall And not to goe forward is to goe backward Therefore alwaies displease thy selfe in the measure of Grace alreadie receiued saith Augustine 3. A comparing of a mans selfe with those that are of lower and inferiour graces or meanes Our Fathers say some were saued with lesse adoe they heard but few Sermons and knew not what the precise fashion meant But what saith our Sauiour Luk. 12.48 Where men commit more more is expected Others come to Church as others doe and liue ciuilly and soberly yea haue as much knowledge as such and such of their ranke and they hope as much conscience too and are not very ambitious to steppe before others in this course But for the patternes of Scripture and the example of Saints registred for our imitation they thinke concernes not them because they cannot be Saints Here is a marke of a man withering and growing worse and worse who will not be drawne beyond them that are but a step beyond the worst because hee scornes the best examples as too singular 4. A shunning or slighting of Gods ordinances a willing excommunicating himselfe from the Assemblies when he list That mans strength is abating who fals from his meales Hee must eate that must liue And the plant that would not wither must draw moisture dayly Or if vsing publike meanes diligently hee neglect priuate hee is on the withering hand We cannot haue our ruinous hearts stand vpright further then we dayly repaire them The Word and Prayer dayly vsed are soueraigne meanes to heale dayly infirmities A sound Beleeuer whose leafe shall not wither is a tree standing by riuers of water 5. Secret sinnes ordinarily committed not bewailed not reformed and the same of such as men count small sinnes lesser oathes idle speeches rouing thoughts lashing out against Professors of Religion expense of time in excessiue gaming company keeping with naughtie and scornefull persons idlenesse in the calling or in the Sabbath If
men can run ouer these or any of them dayly and not humble themselues for them yea and reforme them they are withering apace I feare such a man will soone come to nothing 6. Hatred of Gods children and the way of iust men whether open or secret How can they keepe their greenenesse who cannot abide the greenenesse and graces of others but can be wittie in priuy girds and scornes of such as endeuour to preserue themselues from withering That these are withering see Psalm 129.6 They that hate Sion shall be as grasse on the house toppe which withereth before it come forth And whatsoeuer many conceiue of themselues this is certaine If thou auoyd society with Gods people and bee ashamed of them or fellowship with them in the Gospell if more perillous times come thou wilt easily wither and stand as Iudas with them that apprehend Christ. Vse Seeing so many great Professors wither away so dangerously let him that stands take heede lest hee fall 1. Cor. 10.12 See we men of so great illumination affection reformation as in this stony ground wither quite away How necessary then is that exhortation of the Apostle Heb. 12.15 Take heede that no man fall away from the grace of God and Chap. 3.12 Take heede of the euill heart of vnbeliefe to depart from the liuing God A necessarie exhortation for all the hypocrite because he is in danger of finall withering and shall perish in it and the lesse hee feares it his danger is not the lesse As also the sound Christian who though he cannot fall quite away because the Lord puts vnder his hand yet by fearing to fall he auoydes falling and being falne recouers himselfe againe Let euery godly man looke hee stand on firme ground for Reprobates may seeme to stand and be greene for a while Neither let any content himselfe that he heareth good Sermons or that hee reioyceth therein for the present For as we read Ioh. 5.35 Iohns hearers esteemed him a burning shining light and reioyced in his light but it was but for a season And this Text of ours tels vs that many heard our Lord himselfe and that with ioy yet withered away and Ioh. 6.66 many that had heard Christ and followed him for a time as if they had beene sound Disciples as the Text calleth them went away from him and walked no more with him Obiect There is no feare so long as we be Protestants and not Papists so long as wee professe the truth and denie the grosse points of Popery which cut men from Christ. Answer There is a two-fold withering one in iudgement the other in practice That in iudgement is two-fold either totall or partiall Totall when a man departs from the whole doctrine as they that turne from the truth of Christ and sup vp the whole filth of Antichrist Partiall when a man holds most truthes but departs from the sincerity of it And this ouerturnes many Protestants who will neither be Papists nor yet sincere Protestants but so farre iudge Religion woorth holding as they can gaine by it Withering in practice is either in profession or in action Thou mayest hold the profession of Religion and yet by persisting in wicked manners manifest thou acknowledgest not Christ thy Lord and that thy selfe art not of the truth Doe wee thinke Demas cast off the whole profession of Religion when hee forsooke the truth and exchanged it for the world Or did the Galatians turne Gentiles and quite forsake the profession of Christ when they turned to another Gospell Or did the Pharises or such as sinne the sinne against the holy Ghost wholly renounce the profession of Religion Oh then neuer stand vpon profession but vse the meanes to preserue thee from withering in iudgement or practice in whole or in part Quest. What be the meanes to keepe vs from withering Answ. 1. Get sound iudgement to discerne the truth from errour And this is obtained in the publique Ministerie If wee would not quench the Spirit we must not despise prophecie If we would not fall we must be grounded on the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles by priuate reading meditating and conferring of the Scriptures which notably begets and confirmes soundnesse of iudgement And by prayer which obtaines the Spirit who is called the Spirit of iudgement The Lampe failes without oyle And they that forsake the Assemblies shal finde their light of iudgement and vnderstanding to grow dimmer daily till they be wholly put out 2. Sound perswasion of the truth thou professest that thou mayest not please thy selfe that thou hearest the truth from the mouth of the Preacher or hast it in thy Bible at home no nor content thy selfe that thou hast it in thy mouth or discourse but that thou hast the experience of it in thine heart How doth experimentall knowledge fixe it selfe in the soule Let a man once taste the sweetnesse of Christ and his merits he can neuer be a Papist in the point of merit but he will detest his own works as drosse dung in comparison Let a man once come to the experience of Gods fauour and loue through his Christ it will be stronger then death no water can quench it hee shall not hang in a doubtfull suspence of his saluation or feare finall falling away hee shall be farre from wauering and much more from withering in these points Let a man once get experience of the sweetnesse of godly life of Gods blessing accompanying it of inward peace and tranquillity of minde of safety vnder the wing of God and the many priuiledges which goe with the carefull watch ouer the heart and life This man shall not easily fall from his fruitfulnesse nor be drawne to such sinnes as blast and ouerturne others by the rootes and that suddainly Whereas hee that holdes his Religion because the Prince holdes it will runne with the time and swimme with the streame the times and winds are not more mutable than he let the times change but a little his Religion is withered and gone Or if men hold holy Doctrines onely swimming in the braine and attaine vnderstanding rather to furnish their discourse than to guide their course and want the experience of God the sence of faith the breath and motions of heauenly life in the seate of life that is their hearts and soules they shall easily bid truth farewell if with conuenience they cannot hold it in their iudgement or hold it forth in their practice 3. Sound affection and loue to the truth vpholds from withering in it when the wise Christian esteemes the Pearle worth selling all to buy it Loue any thing better than Grace thou art gone Demas loues the world better and easily forsakes the Truth How many lights in the beginning of their profession haue been extinct by the world comming vpon them The profits pleasures and aduancements of it haue made them idle dissolute almost profane If thou wouldest auoide that fearefull Apostasie threatened
would be a Fountaine in the belly still springing vp to eternall life The latter namely the moisture of compunction is sound sorrow for sin and the sound exercise of mortification The Saints vsed to water their couch with these waters of teares and repentance Now these Hearers want not all sorrow for sinne nor want not something like it but they neuer carried this water nor admitted this moistnesse deepe enough the hardnesse of the rocke hindred the descent of these waters to the bottome it was too much paines to afflict themselues seriously their teares were soone dried vp their sorrow slight and themselues neuer truly humbled And therefore faile and come to nothing Vse It is no certaine marke of a childe of God willingly to heare Sermons nor to delight in the hearing nor to receiue the doctrine with ioy no nor in many things commendably to practise for a time All this is common to the Reprobate with the Elect. If Dauid count the testimonies of God the ioy of his heart Psal. 119.111 so Herod heares Iohn gladly and this bad ground receiueth the seede with ioy If they that are new borne againe taste the graciousnesse of the Lord 1. Pet. 2.3 so also they that after enlightning sinne beyond possibility of repentance taste the good Word of God and the powers of the world to come Heb. 6.4 5. And therefore we may not rest in hearing or reioycing or commending or obeying the Word vnlesse wee finde in our selues that which shall make vs able to hold out in all these that wee start not away or wither as this bad ground when triall comes Quest. What is it that wee must bring with our hearing to make vs hold out by which we may haue testimonie that we are the Lords and shall be found fruitfull in the haruest Answ. This Text warneth vs to prouide and make sure of three things 1. Sauing and distinct knowledge to walke by 2. Sound and stable rooting in faith and grace to stand by 3. Sufficient measure of grace still to grow by Quest. What is this knowledge Answ. It is not onely to know Christ a Sauiour but to know thy owne saluation by him And consequently thou knowest 1. The vilenesse of thy sinnes and thy neede of a Sauiour 2. The pardon of thy sinnes and the comfort of saluation 3. Thy owne change and conuersion and thereby the beginning of saluation 4. The voyce of Christ calling thee and the inhabitation of his Spirit guiding thee in all needfull duties to the end of the way which is saluation Q. How may I know I haue this sauing knowledge Answ. By these notes 1. If thou giuest thy selfe to be taught by the Spirit of God and leanest not to thine owne counsels For flesh and blood cannot reueale this wisedome but the Spirit of God Mat. 16.17 If thou wilt not beleeue or receiue any doctrine or opinion but what the Spirit out of the Word teacheth now thou hast sauing knowledge Carnall and deceitfull knowledge is alway measured by the scantling of reason of humane lawes and wisedome of praise and profit 2. If thy knowledge be not onely speculatiue but directiue leading not onely to vnderstand but to vndertake thine owne way when it is not onely a light in it selfe but a Lanthorne to thy feete and as a Sunne constantly shining for thy direction Now know the soundnesse of it if thou suffer it to leade thee against sense reason custome and allow it for thy guide in the smallest things as well as in great in secret as well as open 3. If thy knowledge lye deepe as hauing depth of earth not only lying in the head or on the tongue but in the heart And therefore Ierem. 31.34 it is said to be written in the heart and bowels Pro. 4.5 Let thy heart hold fast my words And easily may a man know if his heart hold this knowledge by the change it will worke there And that is the fourth note thus 4. Know sound and sauing knowledge by the effects especially three First whereas generall and confused knowledge puffeth vp and makes a man proud this makes him more humble by leading into the further sight of God and of himselfe Secondly whereas an hypocrites knowledge leaues him as earthly as it found him this changeth the man into it selfe and makes him heauenly-minded and to sauour the things of God as it selfe is from heauen and from God Hee is transformed into the same image 2. Cor. 3.18 as meate is turned into the substance of him that eateth Thirdly whereas an hypocrites knowledge may worke some ioy it seldome workes loue of God feare of God or trust in him But this changeth all affections It loues the Word as well as ioy The feare of God is the beginning of this wisedome And this knowledge carries the heart beyond all hypocrites in the affection of ioy in it as the chiefest and most desireable good Now get this knowledge thou hast gotten depth of earth This is constant settled against all contrary blasts This knowledge shall grow vp and haue much assurance when the frothy superficiall knowledge of hypocrites shal vanish as dew in the Sun or smoke in the winde Get this light it shall be as the Star to the Wise men to bring thee to Christ as the cloudie and fiery Pillar to the Israelites to bring thee to Canaan as the lightsome Lamps to the wise Virgins to bring thee into the Bridegroomes chamber The second thing required is to looke thou beest strongly rooted and grounded in the faith in loue and all the graces Ephes. 3.17 Col. 1.23 If ye continue grounded and stablished in the faith not mooued away from the hope of the Gospell where the Apostle shewes that true iustifying faith is the root of all vertues and that it onely keepes the heart vnmoouable in time of triall More specially looke to thy ground and rooting 1. In the doctrine of faith 2. In the grace of faith 3. In the exercise and profession of faith Beleeue God Beleeue in God Auouch both First settle thy selfe in the doctrine of Faith as one that must be built on the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Ephes. 2.20 Else thou laiest all the frame on a sandy foundation and laiest thy selfe open to be a prey to seducers Papists and Atheists And what other is the end of many common Protestants and Professors who were neuer busie in the true vnderstanding of their Principles of Religion If they see alterations of State and change of times or if deceiuers as Priests or Iesuites or Libertine teachers assaile them by subtilty of wit and cunning perswasions or if they see men of great note fall to errours in iudgement or profanenesse in life if many fall from loue of the truth How can they now withstand the blasts of these windes being at best but shaking reeds vnstable in their grounds how can they but fall as an house set on the
and cast the truth to the ground Then the Text addeth Thus shall he doe and prosper Loe Antiochus who is mad furious against the Church hath prosperous successe Doth this agree with Bellarmine And by this proposition Cain should haue beene the true Church not Abel whom he slew and Ismael of whom were twelue Dukes Gen. 25.16 not Isaac whom hee scoffed and persecuted My Lord Esau that hath foure hundred men at his heeles Gen. 33.1 and not Iacob who dares not looke his Lord in the face nor come neere him till he had bowed seuen times What outward prosperity had the Church in AEgypt in Babylon in the ten Persecutions for 300. yeeres together before Constantine Or how stands that assertion with our Sauiours prediction that true Christians should be appointed as sheepe for the slaughter Yea with our Sauiours condition who was the Head of the Church to whom the members are conformable He was borne in an obscure place liued despised among his owne a man of such sorrowes as neuer was any sorrow like his his pouerty such as he had not water to put in his head not a cottage to put his head in his death painefull shamefull accursed And such is ordinarily the afflicted and despised estate of his Church on earth Vse 2. Dreame not of a Religion pleasant to flesh if we will be truly religious for this is to deceiue our selues but make account of hatred and trouble in the world if thou meanest to keepe the Word For the Church being seated in the world which is the Kingdome of Satan it cannot be other then a very AEgypt or Edom to the Israel of God where that hellish Pharaoh raiseth all his power to pursue vs into the red Sea of terrors temptations and a thousand deadly dangers on euery side if we indeed set forth to Canaan Let vs therefore wisely cast our costs and recken our charges and weigh whether wee can contentedly suffer so much losse for the Word as it may cost vs. Vse 3. This shews vs the true cause why the world hates and persecutes godly men It will be ready to tell you they are pestilent fellowes and as seditious as Paul was as great enemies to Cesar as Christ was no good subiects as factious and schismaticall as Micah who will not speake as the 400. false Prophets The wicked of the world clamor against them as euill doers for so did they against their Head If he were not an euill doer we would not haue brought him to thee And what are they but a packe of dissemblers and hypocrites and neuer a good of them all But what Can the world that lieth in wickednesse hate and prosecute wickednesse indeed Why then doth she not hunt out open and outragious euils in any other sort of men Or doth she not loue her louers and reward most bountifully most prodigious euill men But if we will beleeue our Lord who was best acquainted with the worlds hatred he tels vs here that persecution is raised against them for the Words sake and that is the proper cause whatsoeuer other colourable cause be pretended for 1. The Word hath brought them to Christ whom they hate and therefore his members 2. The Word hath called them out of the world which loues onely her owne and hates them Iohn 15.19 3. The Word hath freed them from the conformitie and fashions of the world that now they cannot runne into the same excesse of riot therefore it speakes euill of them 1. Pet. 4.4 Contrary courses cause contrary affections 4. The wicked Cains of this World see their their owne workes euill and theirs to be good and therefore hate them 1. Iohn 3.12 The thing then which is hated and persecuted in good men is goodnesse the Name of Christ the Word of God soundly held out and stucke vnto And this must be so farre from discouraging good men whether Preachers or Professors who are most extremely hated as they must rather suspect themselues that their hearts are not sound or their courses not sincere when all men speake well of them Sound profession and persecution are inseparable and Luke 6.26 Woe to you when all speake well of you Vse 4. Not to condemne a Religion or refuse a Doctrine because it is persecuted and gaine said by many and by Great ones for this is a marke of true Religion and the condition of the Word of Christ Persecution saith our text comes because of the Word So as neither is that Religion which is so plausible to the world to be therefore embraced nor that which the world hates to be refused multitude being as false a note of the Church as the former externall prosperity Straite is the way that leads vnto life and few there be that finde it Therefore looke not on the blacknesse of the Church though the Sunne looke on her Cant. 1.5 for within she is comely Vse 5. To comfort those that are persecuted for the Word and well-doing First that the cause is good which the world persecutes so eagerly 1. Pet. 4.14 If ye be railed on for the Name of Christ blessed are ye for the Spirit of glory and of God resteth on you and is glorified by you Secondly behold Christ a partner and companion in thy suffering In all thy troubles he is troubled Hence it is called the reproch of Christ. Thou helpest Christ to beare his Crosse and he helpes thee Col. 1.24 I fulfill the sufferings of Christ. And conformity with him in the Crosse brings conformity in the Crowne If we suffer with him we shall also raigne with him Thirdly this fire of persecution may seeme to burne thee vp but shall not consume thee but onely purge and perfect thee Euery Christian resembles the bush which burned with fire but consumed not Exod. 2.3 Nay waite with faith and patience and according to Moses his prayer for Ioseph The good will of him that dwelt in the bush shall come on thy head Deut. 33.16 So much of the first Doctrine I proceed to the second namely that When persecution for the Word commeth many glorious Professors who ioy in it in the time of peace renounce and forsake it so the Text hath it In the time of tentation they goe away and Matthew They are offended immediately that is euen those Hearers which readily attended ioyfully receiued willingly beleeued and hopefully sprang vp these now goe away And whence goe they Answ. 1. From their affection and loue of the Word in the heart the root within is dried vp with this heat of the Sun 2. From their profession and confession of mouth their leafe also falleth 3. From externall reformation many of them losing their greennesse and apparantly withering and falling to earthlinesse or profanenesse and some to distaste the good way knowne 4. From their fellowship and communion of Saints for as they were neuer knit by faith vnto the Head so were they neuer by loue to the
shall be great Vse 1. See hereby the nature and end of persecution it tries who are sound and puts a difference betweene such as peaceable and calme estate cannot distinguish In a faire and calme day Apples and Peares on a tree seeme all sound and good but a blustering storme or tempest makes difference betweene those that are sound and such as for want of moysture fall off iust so it is in the stormes of the Church Persecution is like a mighty winde which discerneth betweene wheat and chaffe that before lay quiet together in the same floore it shakes not the wheat but blowes away the chaffe And as the furnace consumes the drosse but refines the gold so doth the furnace of affliction We are now all shuffled together the hypocrite with the sincere-hearted Christian but to end this poynt with our Sauiours instance as the heate of the Sunne and summer discouers barren dry and stony soyle frō good ground so the scorching beames of persecution shall discouer barren husky and empty hypocrites from good and fruitfull Hearers And thou art that indeed thou art in triall A man in peace may personate and disguise himselfe as Ieroboams wife going to the Prophet seeme another but affliction for the Word will vncase him Peter was not the man in triall hee vaunted to be when he would dye with Christ. And the winter-weather of affliction for the Gospell will discouer who be the Swallowes that will take their summer in the Church but in the winter of it take them to their wings Vse 2. Let vs not take offence when wee see forward Professors offended at Christ and shrinke in triall but make account that some such must forsake vs. For all are not of the Church that are in the Church Some are tyed onely by a thred of externall profession to the members that are not vnited to the Head by the band of faith these must fall off and wither Let Hymeneus and Philetus two great lights fall away lose their shine in the firmament of the Church yet the foundation of God abideth sure And if we see some shrinke before the wetting and in dayes of peace and protection of the Gospell white-liuer'd and ready to deny their profession at the breath of a silly Damosell that the frowne of a Superiour a word of reproch a feare of change shakes off their leafie profession let vs not maruell if many of them would deny Christ in triall rather than dye with him Vse 3. Let him that standeth take heede lest hee fall And the rather because 1. Our nature is prone to defection or backsliding 2. Neuer was there more defection either in Doctrine or manners then at this day 3. When wee see others slide backe we are too soone moued and offended So as the best need continuall exhortation and admonition to beware they fall not away from the grace of God Else would not our Lord haue still beaten on this poynt with his Disciples who for all his warning of them when it came to the poynt forsooke him and fled Now the meanes to vphold vs in tryall from falling are these 1. Meditate much and often of such Scriptures as foretell persecution for the Name of Christ and call to minde the examples of such as haue valiantly endured the losse of temporals and ioyfully suffered the spoyling of their goods the forgoing of liberty and life for Christ c. Especially reade diligently the whole 11. Chapter to the Hebrewes 2. Cast the costs of thy profession Thinke it not enough to heare and receiue immediatly and reioyce yea and beleeue and grow But know thou must not onely beleeue but suffer for his sake The seed that is immediatly receiued must endure an hard and sharpe winter before it can come vp kindly He that forecasts onely the pleasure and ioy of his Religion and not the sorrow losses and crosses of it is like the foolish builder that thinkes hee can finish a building with so little charge as will scarce serue to lay the foundation Paul knew and made account that bonds and imprisonment abode him euery where and so must thou 3. Labour for soundnesse of iudgement and sincerity in affection in receiuing the Gospell A sound iudgement in matters of faith to beleeue firmely and distinctly the truth of Religion must goe before vndanted confession 2. Cor. 4.13 I beleeued and therefore I spake Rom. 10.10 Wee must beleeue with the heart vnto righteousnesse before wee can confesse with the mouth to saluation This is the rooting and stablishing in faith which shall abide Then for the second sincere affection is onely blessed with continuance when we bestow the chiefe affection of our heart vpon it euen our principall loue and our chiefe ioy and delight For this is a cause why this bad ground failes not so much the dislike of Religion as the liking of other things better and the not receiuing of truth in the loue of it is a cause why many are giuen vp to beleeue lies 4. Purge thy heart from the raigne of corrupt lusts Weed out sinfull desires labour in mortification and selfe-denyall get further power to dye vnto sinne get out of the loue of the world and the things in it resolue against selfe-loue that in case of confession thy life may not be deare vnto thee Else shall not all thy wisedome or ciuility or learning keepe thee from backsliding For if the Apostles themselues who professed they had left all to follow Christ yet shrunke in tryall how shall they stand that come with hearts thrust full of the world and earthly desires 5. Labour to finde full contentment in the good things of the Gospell Thinke it full happinesse to enioy naked Christ. Esteeme peace of conscience aboue all worldly peace Account the fauour of God the ioy of the holy Ghost the sweet hope of the pleasures of Gods right hand and the treasures of a better world worth all thou canst giue in exchange and aboue all that may be compared with them This will make thee with the wise Merchant fell out thy selfe and forgoe all for the Pearle and goe away reioycing 6. Examine thy heart how it stands affected in lesser trials now in the peace of the Church If it shrinke in smaller trials I must not looke to trust it in greater If now it will not endure the threat of a Superiour the feare of losse the dread of dis-fauour If it now shrinke from good men because of their troubles and sufferings which are their crowne if thou canst ioyne with the times in disgracing men fearing God assure thy selfe if greater trials come thou shalt be giuen vp to greater delusion and Apostasie 7. Because to stand in persecution is a worke aboue naturall strength and ascribed to the holy Ghost to stablish men to this triall and strengthen them to all patience with ioyfulnesse Col. 1.10 We must pray the Lord not to leaue vs in tentation but preserue
it selfe with some good seed springing vp vnlesse it kill the weeds No more content thou thy selfe with the rising and mouing of some good affections vnlesse thou mortifie the bad and noysome Ierem. 4.4 Plough vp the fallow ground of you hearts and sowe not among thornes Secondly the Husbandman ploughes it againe that if any weeds peepe out he may roote them vp so carefull he is for his earthly commodity No lesse carefull should wee be if after grace receiued lusts will be still stirring to root them out Heb. 12.15 Take heed that no root of bitternesse spring vp and trouble you according to that in Deut. 29.18 Let there bee no root among you that bringeth gall and wormewood If there be any lust be it neuer so secret and hidden as a root or neuer so fixed and fastened as a root is spare it not nip it not off but plucke it vp by the roots be not content to bridle lusts but kill them satisfie not thy selfe with an absence of fleshly operation as if it were sanctification but onely with a slaying of it for if there be a liuing root within it will shew it selfe when the seed springs and soone ouertake it too Thirdly if after all this there be any weeds growing vp with the seed the Husbandman will bring in his weeding hooke into the field hee will not see a weed or thorne peepe but he will weede it out 1. Because he would haue his corne grow alone Wouldest thou haue the Word to thriue in thy soule Let it grow alone How speedily should a man rise towards heauen if the Word had the onely roome in his heart But 2. Because that is impossible either in the earth or our hearts he will bee sure by his hooke to set the seed aboue the weeds labour thou also to set the Word aboue thy lusts and contrary motions Quest. How shall I doe that Answ. 1. By daily exercise in the Word reading and meditating this discouers the weeds thornes 2. By daily prayer and confession of knowne sinnes this is a getting of the weeding hooke into our hands 3. By Christian humility and fasting this is the cutting off of lusts by which they daily wither and dry away this crucifies the affections and lusts 4. By auoiding occasions of sinne and sinners especially watching narrowly our owne inclinations 5. Keepe vnder the lusts of the flesh by the lusts of the Spirit Gal. 5.17 The Spirit lusteth against the flesh that is both in curbing and restraining euill motions and ingendring good cogitations motions and desires agreeable to the will of God Rom. 13. vlt. By putting on the Lord Iesus represse the lusts of the flesh Prou. 12.5 A godly man is said to haue right thoughts and chap. 11.23 His desires are onely good not that he is without euill desires sometime but he resists and fights against them and God imputes not that which he hates and repents of We see the soyle Now let vs see the hopefull successe of the seede in it The thornes grow with it Though there be a further growth of the seed in this ground then in the former yet at length it is as fruitlesse 1. Here are soft and tender hearts brought to the Word better prepared for the seed than the former 2. Here is a deeper rooting a further measure of vnderstanding a more vehement carriage of the affection vnto it in motions of ioy loue and delight a more settled purpose to follow the Word 3. Here is a further shew of fruits a standing in a glorious profession an hopefull sprouting and springing in the fruits of good workes and a longer hope thereby than before Yet these so softned so rooted so farre growne aboue many zealous Professors are ranged in the ranke of bad and fruitlesse Hearers for as it is in vers 14. Afterward they are choaked Doctr. The fruitfull and commendable Hearer is he that heareth for afterward Esa. 42.23 A bad Hearer can heare well for the present but afterward all is lost Prou. 4.18 The way of the righteous shineth as light that shineth more and more vntill perfect day They adde vnto their knowledge as men doe to their stocke and saue what they get and so grow abundantly rich in grace whereas he that spends as fast as he gets and onely maintaines the present with his gettings must dye a begger Many are the exhortations to lay fast hold on the Word and to lay it vp safe in the midst of the heart and to keepe it as a mans life Prou. 4.4 As a man that hath a Iewell will bee carefull to locke it vp in the safest chest he hath 1. Tim. 3.9 Keepe the mysterie of faith Reu. 3.11 Hold that thou hast hold that thou hearest As many are the dehortations that we negligently lose not the Word Heb. 2.1 We ought diligently to giue heed to the things we haue heard lest at any time we let them slip a Metaphore taken from riuen vessels that let all the liquor run out But here the more precious the liquor is the more must be the care of the vessels soundnesse 2. Pet. 2.21 Better not to haue knowne the way of truth then after the knowledge to depart from the holy Commandement Many are the commendations of them that were Hearers for after-times as of Dauid Psalm 119.11 I haue hid thy Word in my heart and of Mary who pondered Christs sayings and hid them in her heart Luk. 2.51 And as many are the dispraises of such leaking vessels who like the women 2. Tim. 3.7 are alwaies learning yet neuer come to knowledge and those Iewes Heb. 5.12 who for the time might haue bin teachers yet needed to be catechized in the very Principles Reason 1. From the nature of the Word which is in it selfe a perpetuall truth an euerlasting Gospell Heauen and Earth are most stable and firmely founded by God but not so stable as the least iot of Gods Word which shall not fayle or fall to the ground for euer And to vs it is a certaine rule a constant law and binder not for the present only but for all time future yea and for all eternity 2. This is a mayne difference betweene a godly man and an hypocrite Many things may affect an euill man for the present hearing of the Word Sometime he may heare a noueltie with great affection but as children delight in a new toy for an houre but presently contemne and lose it Sometimes the power of the Word makes an hypocrite tremble as Felix and grow to some promise with himselfe and perhaps to some purpose and resolution of amendment So Israel hearing the Lord speake in so terrible a voyce promise faire All that the Lord our God saith by thee if he will no more speake by himselfe we will heare it and doe it But the Lord saw there was no such heart in them Deut. 5.27 29. Sometime some affliction prepares them to heare and now while the iron is
in the fire so these in the hearing but shortly after lose all the efficacy of the Word and become hardened as before Others stirred vp by the power of the Word to some good duty formerly neglected now grow to some resolution that no Lion in the way shall hinder them and purpose a man would thinke and themselues doe so vnfainedly a great change in themselues but shortly after proue like the sonne in the parable Math. 21.30 whom his father commanding to goe worke in the Vineyard he promised and likely he purposed he would but some other motion preuailing went not So wee haue many hearers many times in good moods but corruption of nature not subdued nor mastred which is not alwayes stirring alike watcheth the fittest time to resist the Word so as present purposes are seldome or neuer followed to practice and future performances Vse 2. Looke well to thy hearing for after-times that with knowledge thou mayest ioyne obedience and by the Word grow in grace as thou doest in dayes Content not thy selfe to heare with a soft heart or with a ioyfull heart if it bee hollow and rimie to let it slip Consider for motiues heereunto 1. That as God hath made our blood a carryer and conueyer of life thorow all the body so his Word to carry spirit and life thorow all the soule And lesse dangerous it is to breake a veine to let out all the blood and life of the body than to admit a clift in our soules that the doctrine of life and saluation should run out 2. The world casts nothing vpon him that is a waster and spend-thrift nor can hee be ruler of much that is not a faithfull keeper and sauer of little If thou sauest not that thou hearest nor layest it vp thou shalt neuer bee a rich man in knowledge faith comfort or experience 3. Nature teacheth to saue somewhat against a rainy day Consider what dayes thou hast to passe if prosperous if aduerse if sicke if sound if tentations on the right or left hand if life or death if whatsoeuer thou art naked without the Word without strength counsell comfort 4. A godly man will be a Christian at home as well as at Church and as Dauid walke vprightly in the middest of his house Meanes to heare for afterward 1. Be abundantly couetous to lay vp a good store for thy selfe against time to come Enlarge thy affections insatiably to gather all thou mayest This is a gracious and commendable couetousnesse 2. Esteeme it aboue all keeping more worth than much fine gold Psalm 119.127 Account it thine heritage and the ioy of thy heart vers 111. 3. Let it be in thy heart first treasure it there A man reserues his barne for his crop of wheat or other corne Wilt thou fill thy barne and garner with chaffe and stubble or wilt thou in stead of gold or pearles pester thy best cofer with drosse and pibbles which are heauie and cumbersome but of no price or value 4. Binde it on thy fingers Prou. 7.3 as a Ring that is euer in sight Practice is the best keeper of the Word The thornes sprang vp and choked it Now we are to intreat of the failing of the seed in this ground wherein because there is but little difference from the withering we spake of in the former grounds but that it proceedeth from other causes wee will therefore inquire into those causes as they are particularly and in order set downe in the 14. verse Cares Riches Pleasures These are described as the speciall thornes which choke the seed of the Word Whence note in generall what it is that lets vs from heauen not only the pursuit of vnlawful things but the abuse of lawfull It is not whoredome adultery theft murther Sabbath-breaking and the like that heere are said to choke the seede and hinder our haruest but the abuse of lawfull profits pleasures cares and desires Math. 24.38 As in the dayes of Noah they did eate and drinke and marry and giue in marriage vntill the day that Noah entred into the Arke c. What was it a sinne to eate to drinke to marry were these the things for which they were destroyed No but the abuse of these things they were so wholly in these as they securely cast off all admonitions and all prediction of iudgements these became thornes and choked all counsell and all the preaching of Noah and so their destruction was sudden not because it was not foretold but it was not beleeued or regarded Luk. 14.16 What was more lawfull than to buy a Farme and a yoke of Oxen or to marry a Wife But yet these shall neuer taste of the Supper not because they did these things but because they were so inordinate and intent on them that they refused the call to the Kings Supper And these three sorts of inuited ghests refusing the Kings gracious inuitation doe notably resemble and expresse these three sorts of thornes choking the Word the Farme noteth riches Oxen the cares of life and the Wife voluptuous liuing All which or any of them hinder men from the heauenly banquet So 1. Cor. 10.7 The people sate downe to eate and drinke and rose vp to play Reason 1. Sinnes in lawfull things are both more ordinary and lesse sensible both for the auoyding and preuenting as also for the recouery and repentance from them What a number of naturall and indifferent actions doth euery man goe ouer euery day into which creepe a number of sinnes because men take themselues free to doe as they list in them and onely content themselues in their liberty vnto the thing vnwilling to heare of any of Gods restraints or impositions in the manner or fruition of that liberty This poynt is very vsefull and therefore wee will giue some instances to shew how men doe infinitely abuse their lawfull liberties with the great hazard of their soules 1. In eating and drinking which is not onely lawfull but necessary Yet heere Christians offend exceedingly many wayes 1. When they eate not their owne bread 2. Thes. 3.12 2. When they eate without feare Iude 12. not before the Lord. 3. When they corrupt themselues in the creatures losing sobriety modesty chastity health and reason as the drunkard drownes his soule senses body and all 4. When they neuer taste the sweetnesse of God in the creatures more than beasts nor sanctifie themselues after feasting as Iob his sonnes 5. When they waste the creatures not remembring the afflictions of Ioseph Amos 6.6 2. What is more necessary than apparell decently to couer nakednesse to fence the body from iniury of weather and to put vs in minde of sinne But what a number of sinnes doe men and women put on with their apparell 1. For the matter which is not skinnes as Adams but stately and costly 2. For the manner while they take liberty to disguise themselues in strange attire and monstrous fashions shewing no other
in the way to heauen goe and boast of thy happinesse which hath made thee most vnhappy proud secure licentious and choked the good Word in thy heart I say to thee it had beene good for thee thou hadst neuer seene penny of thy wealth and that thou haddest liued in beggery all thy dayes For that might haue drawne thee neere God at least not haue driuen thee so farre from him Thou shalt curse the day that euer thou haddest a penny in thy hand or heart that euer thou dotedst vpon so base pelfe to make thee forget thy selfe and thy God so farre that euer thou didst so ouerload thy selfe with wealth and wrath For all thy present ioy in thy wealth because it keepes the Word out of thy heart will be as bitter to thee as wormewood when thou shalt see the same wealth keepe thy soule out of heauen which in earth kept the Word out of thy soule and thou shalt bewaile thy lost estate euerlastingly when thou shalt see that had it not been for thy wealth thou mightest haue been saued Vse 3. Obserue carefully these few rules against these thornes 1. If we must seeke them doe it not for themselues but to stop a gap 2. If we must meddle with them be afraid in touching them as Agur. 3. If we must hold them gripe them not nor clutch them hard for then they wound Thornes slightly held or laid in the open hand are harmelesse 4. Fence we our selues from them with loue of God feare of God loue of his Word and watchfulnesse ouer our corrupt desires 5. If wee bee beset with them let vs warily get out of this thicket and lighten our selues of them by glad and cheerfull imparting them when godly vses offer themselues 6. Let vs of these thornes gather figs by doing good with them and distributing for with such sacrifices God is well pleased Or rather turne them into sweet flowres of which make emplasters to supply the wants of the needy and delight the neighbours with the sweet smell of them We see how riches are chokers Now see how they are deceiuers Doct. The danger of riches is not more in choking goodnesse than in deceiuing and bewitching the heart that addicteth it selfe vnto them And therfore the Prophet calls them deceitfull vanities Psalm 31.6 For indeed they neuer choke till they haue first deceiued vs. This will better appeare by considering 1. Whereof they deceiue vs. 2. Whereby or how I. They are such deceiuers as pilfer not trifles or base things but without grace in the heart the best things we haue and might least spare 1. They deceiue vs of Gods Word this is in the Text and was proued before So in Ier. 2.31 O generation take heed to the Word of the Lord but the people say We are Lords we will come no more to thee And Chap. 22.21 I spake vnto thee when thou wast in prosperity but thou saidst I will not heare And in the Parable Math. 22.5 the Farme and the Oxen and Merchandise made the ghests make light of the inuitation to the Kings supper And is it a small thing to be robbed of this heauenly wisedome to which no treasure is comparable Prou. 3.14 which is more precious than all Pearles and all thou canst desire is not to be compared to her Yet prosperity makes men grow first lazy then lothers of the wisedome of God 2. Riches deceiue vs of our Religion 1. To erre from the faith 1. Tim. 6.10 2. To forget God Deut. 8.10 Beware when thou art full lest thou forget the Lord thy God Hos. 13.6 As in their pastures so were they filled and their heart was exalted therefore haue they forgotten me 3. To forsake God Deut. 32.15 He that should haue been vpright when he waxed fat spurned with his heele Thou art fat thou art grosse therefore he forsooke God that made him 4. They easily vnfit men for the seruice of God Heere many doe fondly delude themselues saying in their hearts Thus much wealth I will attaine vnto and when I haue done that I will addict my selfe to the seruice of God For commonly the effect of affluence and abundance is to say with Pharaoh Who is the Lord As in Ierem. 5.7 When I fed them to the full they rose vp like fed horses euery one neighed after his neighbours wife and committed most brutish sinnes 3. Riches deceiue vs of our hearts as great a deceit as any of the former while they draw our trust loue ioy and principall affections from God to them The rich man Luk. 12.16 is not charged that he got his goods wickedly but of trusting in them and putting too much hope in them Whence the charge is If riches increase set not your hearts vpon them Psalm 62.10 And thus with our hearts they deceiue vs of our time our labour our thoughts and indeuours all which they engrosse from God and from our selues 4. Riches deceiue vs of sound iudgement in three respects 1. In regard of themselues to thinke of them better than they bee yea to thinke basely of grace and the things of heauen in respect of the profits of this life This was a brand of profanenesse in Esau Gen. 25.32 What is this birth-right in comparison of the pottage So of all profane men who despise the blessing for the backe and belly and things of this present life and set more by an Oxe or two than by the Kings Supper A generall disease of most men esteeming riches the greatest blessing that is to be attained on earth and finding the sweetest contentment in them 2. In regard of our selues and our owne estate They commonly make a man thinke himselfe better than he is Hee can perswade himselfe he is highly in Gods fauour because hee is rich and hold himselfe contented with a false felicity which hinders him from seeking to better his estate Whereas not being of themselues good in their nature they cannot make him better that hath them and Salomon tels vs that these outward things befall alike to all Eccles. 9.2 How many delude themselues while they say If I were not a good man God would not blesse my labours so blessing themselues in their riches And many thinke they haue receiued their wealth of God and thanke God for all when God gaue them little or none of them but a great part of it is the diuels wages or the worlds wages for some seruice of iniquity And were not his iudgement blinded hee could not looke on his wealth but withall on his sinne and wretchednesse in getting and holding it and so indeed esteeme himselfe so much the worse by his wealth as he is indeed but not any whit the better 3. In regard of others they deceiue vs of true iudgement and discerning They make vs thinke such as inioy most wealth to be the happyest men and they most miserable that most want it Whereas wee cannot giue instance of more
preaching of the Gospell sounding in the eare The latter a drawing of the Elect vnto true faith by the mighty worke of Gods Spirit in the heart That brings men to knowledge profession externall reformation at farthest without inward change and renewing of the heart This inlightneth the minde distinctly to know the doctrine of saluation as it is laid downe in the Scripture and boweth the will to imbrace it readily ioyfully constantly and to beginne to obey it vnfainedly Now as there is some good ground we are in the next place to inquire what it is or how it may bee knowne And this ground is called here a good and honest heart Vsing a double Epithite either by way of exposition shewing that by a good heart he meaneth an honest heart or by way of collection noting a double grace both of inward purity and of externall fruits and reformation I. It is called a good heart in two respects 1. As emptied of bad qualities 2. As well qualified by grace 1. It is emptied of bad qualities being cleane contrary to all the bad disposition of the three former kindes of ground For the first ground neglected the seed and suffered birds to picke it vp but this keepes the seed The second receiued the seed but the Sunne withered the fruite that it continued not but this brings fruit with patience saith our text The third brings fruit but among thornes and so is choaked but this seed is cast in good ground freed from such choak-weeds and lusts So as being contrary to all the other it receiues willingly retaines constantly and perseueres fruitfully vnto the end 2. It is well qualified by grace as in our text 1. God hath made it of a cursed and barren earth good ground 2. It heares the Word beyond the other the former heard it but without desire this heares with study to learne and industry to vnderstand 3. It keepeth the Word in memory minde and practice the other heard but kept nothing because there was no fit place to keepe it in 4. It brings fruit in the other was some care to heare but here is a care of fruitfulnesse 5. It is carefull to proceed in grace to double and increase the measure of fruits from thirty to sixty and so to an hundreth fold but the other soone fall from their measure 6. It hath obtained by grace an inuincible fortitude against temptations and trials so as no feares or forces shall remooue them from the study of piety and fruits of grace for they bring forth fruits with patience as the other did not II. So also it is called an honest heart As good is a generall word excluding euill qualities and including good so honest also is a generall word and put for the whole approoued disposition of the soule containing both ciuill and religious honesty Ciuill honesty is inioyned Rom. 12.17 Prouiding things honest before all men that is in such grauity sobriety equity and comelinesse as may beseeme your persons auoyding lightnesse in speech and talke in deeds and actions in apparell and gesture in gate and behauiour For euen ciuill honesty is more than to be honest of a mans body euen to minde things honest and comely in the whole course and to walke in all things gracefully and seemely Phil. 4.8 It fights therefore against ciuill honesty and seemlinesse to see a Magistrate running after playes and gamballes like boyes a Minister carowsing and quaffing among boone companions an ancient man garish and light in attyre and youthfull fashions an ancient woman tricking her selfe and trimming like a wanton girle a young man frequenting Tauerns Innes and Ale-houses or lasciuious with the other sexe a young woman full of talke much in the streets or familiar with others than of her owne sexe But that is ciuill honesty when men in their places carry themselues before men as may winne reuerence and grace to their persons And yet that is the least part of the honesty heere meant There is further a religious honesty of the heart namely the inward purity integrity simplicity and sincerity of the heart when it is plaine and single as Nathanael A true Israelite in whom was no guile It is knowne by opposition to hypocrisie or guile it makes not a shew of goodnesse nourishing sinne within And it labours to produce things honest not before men onely but also before God 2. Cor. 8.21 From this ranke of honest-hearted persons are excluded 1. Debosht persons who hauing shaken off the feare of God and shame of men care not for but cast off all honesty both before God and men as the vniust Iudge Luk. 18.3 2. Ciuill honest men who walke honestly before men but care not for honesty of heart before God 3. Hypocrites who will seeme to be honest-hearted before God but neglect honest equall and approued carriage before men Doctr. The Lord esteemes the goodnesse of an Hearer by the goodnesse and honesty of his heart And this is the difference of a sound and elect Hearer from the reprobate and fruitlesse that the Word makes the heart of the one honest and faire and so keepes it but the other abideth stubborne and deceitfull still Dauid is commended in Scripture for a man after Gods owne heart because he hid the Word in a good heart Psalm 119.11 And Iosiah because his heart melted at the reading of the Law and Mary because she pondered things in her heart Reasons 1. As in all other parts of Gods worship so in this the Commandement calls for such an heart Prayer must proceed from this good and honest heart Psalm 119.10 With my whole heart haue I sought thee Praise must proceed from it Psal. 86.12 I will praise thee with my whole heart Repentance must be a turning with the whole heart Ierem. 24.7 They shall turne to me with their whole heart In a word all duties performed to God or man in the Ministery and seruile subiection must bee done heartily Phil. 1.8 Col. 3.23 2. Both the promise of acceptance and acceptance it selfe is with this condition The promise is in Ier. 29.13 Ye shall seeke me and finde me because yee shall seeke me with all your heart And of Iudah in the time of Asa it is said that they had sworne to the Lord with all their heart and sought him with the whole desire and the Lord was found of them 2. Chron. 15.15 Acceptance also and approbation from God is when the heart is single entire and true in good duties and the intents of them not reaching after priuate ends nor cunning in the secret carriage and contriuing of sinne or hollownesse Hee cannot abide a double heart a varying and a deceitfull heart nor a heart diuided betweene himselfe and the world that rests satisfied with the deed done but cares not whether it proceed from soundnesse or no. One property of sinners hatefull to God in their pretences is that they are double-minded and Ezek. 33.33 The Lord scornes
totall in all parts here is a new Creature 2. Cor. 5.17 as the old nature is a Leprosie spred ouer all parts This Creation is a renouation of the whole soule and man which for this worke absolutely depends on the Creator as euery creature doth And then God createth a good and honest heart 1. When the holy Ghost creates in the soule sauing faith by which a man is vnited as a member of Christ to the Head and applyeth to himselfe Christs righteousnesse For thus Faith is said to purifie the heart Act. 15.9 2. When the same Spirit inwardly mortifieth all corruptions in the soule minde will and affections and putteth in stead of them holy desires and good motions and renueth in the heart daily the Image of God which is the goodnesse and honesty of it Thirdly there must be the grace of heauenly Influence and Irrigation No ground can be good which hath not a fauourable aspect from the heauens so as both the shine of the Sunne and the showres and dewes of heauen may cherish and water it So our hearts are made good when the heauens answere the earth Hos. 2.21 that is 1. When Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse darteth the beames of his grace and fauour daily vpon our hearts to inlighten them with sauing knowledge and to warme and cherish them with influence of grace without whom wee can doe nothing nor haue any life in vs. 2. When the ground of our hearts is daily mollified and moystened by a three-fold moysture First of the blood of Christ daily sprinkled and applyed to the conscience For as the blood of beasts applyed to the roots of trees makes them more fruitfull so the blood of this Immaculate Lambe sprinkled on the roots of our hearts makes vs fruitfull Christians Secondly by the moysture of the Word of grace which as the raine from the clouds is euery way beneficiall to the ground of our hearts to mollifie them and keep them in fitnesse vnto fruitfulnes Ier. 31.33 God makes our hearts good by writing his Law therein Thirdly by the moysture of the Spirit of grace whose worke alone it is to apply y e two former namely the vertue of Christs blood and the power of the Word to the conscience for the clensing of the hart By which worke of his the heart of a dead and barren heart becomes more fruitfull than euer Egypt did by the inundation of Nilus But because all this grace of Action is imperfect in this life therefore that our hearts may become truly good and honest there needs also the grace of Acceptation The best ground is good but in part and No man can say his heart is cleane but much euill and guile will cleaue vnto it Yet where God hath begun a good worke and beholds a constant purpose of good resoluing against all sinne and to please him in all things he is pleased to behold onely the worke of his owne finger and to see vs onely in our Head in whom he beholds vs all faire and good imputing his goodnesse to vs and couering our remainders of euill in him Thus hee esteemed Nathaniel in whom great weaknesse appeared a true Israelite in whom was no guile Ioh. 1.47 that is none raigning none imputed And so hee esteemes vs also according to that we are comming vnto and shall attaine not by that we haue attained These are the Meanes whereby our hearts become good Now of the Markes whereby they may be knowne so to be And here because the heart of man is deceitfull aboue all things and euery one challengeth to himselfe a good heart which yet is giuen but to a few scarce a fourth part and a better gift is not giuen by God to the sonnes of men therefore wee will insist the longer to anatomize a good heart and discouer the seuerall passages and signes of it which in euery thing will discouer it selfe one way or other Turne it any way you will it is good and honest These Markes because they are many wee will in generall reduce them to seuen heads and consider this good heart 1. In respect of God 2. Christ 3. The Spirit of God 4. The Ordinances of God 5. It selfe 6. Good duties 7. Sinne and euill I. In respect of God it hath fiue excellent properties First it desires neerer vnion with God daily and all things shall set it neerer vnto God For it knowes that euery thing is so much the more good as it approcheth vnto the chiefe Good Dauids heart was a good heart and herein the goodnesse of it bewrayed it selfe Psalm 73.28 It is good for me to draw neere vnto God Whereas an euill heart flyes from God and keepes aloofe from him euen when it drawes neerest him in his worship Esa. 29.13 Secondly if it seeke God it will seeke him with the whole heart Psal. 119.10 which is a sound conformity of the inward and outward man directed in the seruice of God according to the truth of his Word And because it is hearty hee will vphold the worship of God and seeke him at all times morning and euening on weeke-dayes as well as on the Sabbaths out of Lent as deuoutly as in Lent not only when he is sicke but when he is well In all places in his owne house as well as in Gods House like Moses who was the same in Pharaohs Court as among Gods afflicted people In all companies a good heart is euer like it selfe and stands to God with whomsoeuer it conuerseth Paul is a good Confessor and Christian not only among the Disciples but euen those that count Religion heresie Act. 24.14 Nay it seeketh and serueth God alone if it can get no company as Ioshua c. 24.15 Whereas a bad heart doubleth with God and diuides it selfe betweene God and Mammon It can pretend seruice to Christ and blanch with Antichrist as those Samaritans that feared the god of the countrey because of the Lions and the God of the nations 2. King 17.33 It cannot pray at all times Iob. 27.7 but in affliction diligently Hos. 5.15 nor in all places neuer so kindly as when it stumbles into a Church as the Samaritans thought God would onely be worshipped in the mountaine It can frame and sort it selfe to all companies entertaine all practices either of Protestants or Papists please the most profane speake for and against good men and good things as the occasion serues Thirdly a good heart will onely and wholly stand to Gods approbation in that it doth or doth not Thus farre it lookes to men 1. To walke innocently and cut off occasion of scandall 2. To please his neighbour in that which is good Rom. 15.2 3. To acquit himselfe if hee may come to a iust Apologie and to the faces of accusers say as 1. Samuel 12.3 Behold I am here this day whose Oxe or whose Asse haue I taken c. But it lookes not to please man principally the first care
A contrite and an humble spirit such as Hannahs A woman of a bruised spirit for in such sacrifices God delighteth Because this hath griefe for want of grace and present corruption and a thirsting after God and the Well-springs of grace to which the promise of acceptance is made 2. It must be a ready and cheerfull spirit Exod. 25.2 and 35.5 The Lord will haue none to offer toward the Tabernacle but whose heart was free and whose spirit made him willing Gods Spirit being a free Spirit makes the spirit of a Beleeuer free also Hee loues a cheerfull giuer a free will-offering 2. Cor. 9. 3. It must be a sincere and innocent spirit voyd of guile and hypocrisie voyd of raigning sinne offering his worship not for shew and ostentation not couering deceit and hollownesse with a shew of holinesse For well it knowes that God requires pure hands to be lifted vp euery where and that one sinne suffered in the soule ingrosseth and eateth vp all the inward worship due to God as the seuen leane Kine did eate vp the fat 4. It must be a feruent and zealous spirit not worshipping coldly nor perfunctorily Our tongues naturally are tyed or frozen and cleaue to the roofe of our mouth but the Spirit makes vs speake with new tongues with fiery tongues with heat and feruency in prayer praises and all the parts of Gods worship Thus is God onely and truly worshipped from a good and honest heart which onely is the Temple of the holy Ghost In this Temple the Arke of the soule keepes the Manna the Word of God In this Temple the sweet Incense of praises is daily offered vpon the Altar of a pure heart In this prayers are preferred which are the breathing of the Spirit not onely for vs but in vs crying Abba Father In this the candle of faith euer burneth before God and neuer goeth out In this lastly wee haue the Oracle of God counselling vs and his Mercy-seate couering vs. But an euill heart cannot performe spirituall worship cannot pray or praise or confesse because it wants the Spirit It neuer thinkes it needs helpe to pray or serue God which is the hardest worke of a Christian neuer done without helpe from heauen It can sometimes easily speake of God hardly vnto him or to him can vse many words of prayer but wants the sigh●s and grones excited by the Spirit Any language is readier to it than the language of the Spirit It can content it selfe with the deed done and neuer care for the Mouer or manner whereas no sacrifice did euer please God without fire from heauen kindling it It can performe bodily worship offer a thousand Rammes and ten thousand riuers of Oyle yea and the first borne of his body but cannot offer his heart nor part with his deare sinnes It is vncheerfull and heauie in such parts of Gods seruice because there wants an internall mouer he is driuen from without not drawne or led by the Spirit within and is as a Fish out of his element Prayer and Sermons are too long too many and euery thing too much this way It can pretend zeale and forwardnesse but it is in some superstitious and formall deuotions and in the meane time bee most zealous against the power and sincere practice of true piety In a word Of all the seruice and sacrifice of wicked men Salomon saith Prou. 15.8 It is an abomination to the Lord. For 1. The sacrifice is an vncleane beast and hatefull Tit. 1.15 To the vncleane all is vncleane 2. They lay it not on the Altar that is tender it not in Christs mediation 3. They want fire and feruency zeale and affection to put to it 4. They lay not their hands on the head of the Calfe confessing in the sense of sinne their owne vnworthinesse and guiltinesse How can God accept a seruice wanting these foure things The third sort of Rules concerning the Spirit of God is for Spirituall Graces These in soundnesse are a sure signe of a good heart I will instance in fiue The first is humiliation and sound inward sorrow as there is cause what way soeuer it lookes 1. If it looke to God it sees him infinitely prouoked who yet is great yea infinite in power and iustice therefore falls downe lower and oftner than Iacob before Esau to procure compassion Againe it sees that a broken and contrite heart is a sacrifice of Gods delight Psalm 51.17 It sees Gods eye euer vpon it and hath an awfull sence of his presence It sees the method of the Lord who first smites and then heales who neuer comforts such as neuer mourned nor promised a ioyfull haruest but to a sorrowfull seed-time It sees the Lord ready to dwell in a contrite soule Esa. 57.15 to grace it 1. Pet. 5.5 and to glorifie it for humilitie goes as an Vsher before honour And therfore it humbleth it selfe vnder the mighty hand of God 2. If it looke into it selfe it sees iust cause of humiliation it hath sight of his vnworthinesse sence of temptation a slauish subiection vnder a law of euill and in daily sinnes matter of daily humiliation It sees a gulfe of corruption lie so deepe as it is still in examination of the sinnes and debts and can neuer finde out the broken estate But for those it findeth it confesseth freely and yeelds it selfe into the Creditors hand and beholding his insufficiency to pay and discharge craues pardon and remission as for life and death 3. If it looke on any other thing all increaseth his humiliation It abaseth it selfe vnder all creatures sees no Toad so vile as it selfe is lesse then the least mercy but exalts Christ and his merits aboue all that heart can thinke and thinkes it happy if as a dogge it might gather crummes vnder the Lords Table It is thankfull for small things and content with any thing And the soundnesse of this grace bewrayeth it selfe 1. In that it mournes not so much for offending God a terrible Iudge as a mercifull Father not so much for feare of hell as for loue of God and Heauen 2. There will be smitings of heart for all sins small sinnes as well as great Dauids heart will smite him for cutting Sauls lappe as if he had cut his flesh and for numbring the people as if he had murdred them It will startle at vaine oathes as at periury at adulterous words as actions for secret sinnes as open because all are open to him whom we deale withall yea for faylings in good duties as well as for open and foule euils 3. Seeing tendernesse of heart is a notable meanes to preserue the goodnesse of it the good heart is soone awakened after sinne committed Iosiahs heart melted at hearing the Law read One word of Nathan to Dauid brought him to confession And it is no sooner awakened than humbled and not raised but by serious repentance But is an euill heart thus humble or rather is
in all graces as a child in all parts or a tree in all the branches as 1. In knowledge A childe being ignorant of all things growes first to a confused vnderstanding of things and then to more distinct So the Child of God vtterly ignorant of the things of God comes first to a generall vnderstanding of ●hem and afterward to a more distinct as the blinde man Mark 8.22 haui●g his eyes opened first saw men walke like ●rees and after●ward like themselues so the Beleeuer first sees t●e things of God confusedly but after comes to bee more expert in the Word of righteousnesse more resolued in poynts of doctrine more perswaded and settled in sound iudgement and able to walke by distinct and particular direction 2. In faith Rom. 1.17 Righteousnesse is reuealed from faith to faith that which was a graine of Mustard-seed riseth to a tree that faith which is weake and lowe riseth to a talnesse and fulnesse It growes vp from present things to future Psal. 23. vlt. ascends from the meanes to the promise growes to affiance in Christ as well without meanes as with them yea against meanes Rom. 4.18 wherein Abraham was a father of many beleeuing children Iob can trust when God is killing him as our Lord called God his God when he felt himselfe forsaken 3. In loue both of God and men As for God the more sins are found out and forgiuen the more loue abounds Many sinnes were forgiuen her therefore she loued much Luk. 7.47 The weake loue of the Disciples before Christs death afterward proued strong that they who fled from him could dye with him A little sparke of this Diuine loue growes to a great flame and much water cannot quench it nor flouds drowne it it is stronger than death Cant. 8.6 7. It growes to a great diligence in his seruice to great hatred of what hee hates and great liberality for his sake Againe loue of men growes in a good heart and aboundeth more and more 2. Thes. 1.3 It growes from louing of friends to louing of enemies from couering one or two offences to couer a multitude of sins frō forgiuing small offences to forgiue great offences vpon repentance and that not seuen times but seuenty times seuen times It growes from louing their bodies to louing their soules most dearly and from compassion to the body to mercy toward the soule in helping it out of sin Yea it growes to ouercome euill with goodnesse 4. In patience A child at first can beare but a little burthen so the Child of God but as hee growes stronger he beares more He growes to endure great losses and yet giue glory to God as Iob to beare great and long tentations waiting a good issue to suffer not onely small wrongs but the greatest that euill men can inflict without the least reuenge to endure not only words and scornes and threats and small losses but all kindes of persecution for the Truths sake Math. 5.15 It walkes from strength to strength Psal. 84.7 and growes at last not to thinke much of the fiery triall 1. Pet. 4.12 5. In obedience First in negatiue Commandements It growes in the reformation of former lusts to account the honey-sweet pleasures of sinne as bitter as gall From the hatred of some sinnes it growes not to retaine the loue of any sinne but auoids all that it knowes to be sinne It growes yet further from auoyding euill to auoyd the very appearance of euill and the occasions It growes in the victories against daily sinnes and subdues them as Israel the Canaanites one after another yea and destroyes the body of sinne Rom. 6.5 Nay it growes from dying to sinne to rise out of the graue of sinne and stand vp from the dead Ephes. 5.14 Secondly in affirmatiue Commandements A good heart growes to haue respect to all the Commandements Psalm 119.6 From a small measure to a fulnesse of good workes Act. 9.36 From seruing Mammon to the seruing of God and now doing Gods worke first then the owne Math. 6.33 To doe vprightly not in the land of vprightnesse onely Esa. 26.10 But as Lot euen in Sodom in the Land of wickednesse in discouragements and losses It growes from well-doing to continuance in well-doing and so seeketh glory Rom. 2.7 yea to a resolution not to depart from any thing that the Lord shall command all the dayes of his life Deut. 4.8 9. Lastly it growes from weaknesse and vnskilfulnesse to dexterity and readinesse in the practice of all duties and vertues to the Masters best aduantage as one expert in the trade of godlinesse 6. In heauenly-mindednesse many wayes First a good heart growes daily more sundred and diuorced from the world from eager affecting and pursuing to neglect and contemne the things of it now can buy as not possessing and vse the world as not vsing it 1. Cor. 7.30 And it growes to seeke first the Kingdome of God and then other things yea from desires of the world to desire deliuerance from it Secondly it growes from seeking honour among men to seeke the honour from aboue Ioh. 5.44 and to loue the praise of God more than of men chap. 12.43 Thirdly from speaking of things below to speake of things aboue 1. Ioh. 4.5 Now according to the abundance of a new heart they speake with new tongues in a new language of heauenly Canaan as Christ after his resurrection spake of things belonging to the Kingdome of God Act. 1.3 Fourthly from earthly wisedome to heauenly he was wise in his trade or in a good bargaine now hee growes wise in the matters of God and his Religion a wise Merchant who will purchase the best commodity Hee growes also in wisedome to discerne the season of grace and day of saluation Fifthly from seeking Gods fauour to seeke his presence Psa. 27.8 My heart said I will seeke thy face It is now of the generation of them that seeke the face of God Psalm 24.6 Lastly from seeking his presence in grace to seeke his presence in glory desiring preparing and praying for the appearance of Christ The Bride saith Come and the title of Beleeuers is They loue the appearing of Christ. Thus is a good heart neuer weary of increasing the stocke of grace no more than worldlings of gathering wealth and is carefull to grow from knowledge to affection from affection to action from action to profession from profession to zeale and in all is still heauenly couetous An euill heart may make a little shew but growes not like a body in an Atrophy feedes and eates but prospers not is in a consumption still For 1. it is vnsettled and vngrounded not rooted or stablished in the faith but as children carried away with euery toy so these with euery waue or winde of doctrine any seducer or libertine teacher may take away his Crowne A very easie thing to make him esteeme the Doctrine of godlinesse and the practice of it but
it selfe to God 3. It hath no care commonly of his grounds of Religion and so runnes 〈…〉 still is wauering and 〈…〉 in what Religion he meanes to 〈…〉 betweene God and Baal and sees no 〈…〉 betweene true Religion and Pope●● 〈…〉 of one trumpet would make them as forward Pap●●●s as now they are Protestants 4. It can pretend Gods glory and Gods ends but intend the owne ends Herod pretends to come and worship Christ but intends to kill him Iezabel can make Religion a pretext for her foulest fact of murdering an Innocent so can Papists finely in ordine ad Deum and to promote the Catholike cause raise Massacres c. 1. Sam. 2.22 Women professing great sanctity by comming to the Temple polluted themselues with wicked Priests It were a sinne to say so of holy Popish Priests and their pure Nunnes 5. It will haue a Religion for fashion or shew but loue it not promote it not no not in their owne families scarce professe it for present reproach or after-claps but zeale and forwardnesse were madnesse as Festus said to Paul and to become an hatefull Puritan They frame not their actions to the rules of Christian Religion but are loose vnsauory earthly in all their courses they will lose nothing for it Christ shall lose the glory of Heauen for them and so farre they like their Religion but they will not lose crummes of earth for his sake 6. An euill heart can make a profession of Religion and scorne the Professors reuile them as a packe of hypocrites But our Sauiour packs such out of his number saying They that are with vs cannot lightly speake euill of vs Mark 9.39 Now of the markes of a good heart in respect of the meanes by which this true Religion is vpheld And first of the Word and Sacraments The equity of carefulnesse in these stands in these reasons 1. Because a good heart cannot heare God himselfe speake nor enioy such neere and immediate fellowship with him as it desires it is most glad to enioy him through the grates of the Word and Sacraments to heare him speake by his Messenger to reade his letters and be enriched with such pledges of his loue which therein he includeth to his sonnes and daughters Thus doth a faithfull Spouse to him absent whom her soule loueth 2. Because these Ordinances proceed from the holy Spirit of God and are meanes appoynted for the sanctification of the Elect a good heart will neuer heare or reade the Scriptures nor speake of them but with great reuerence It dares not profane the sacred Scriptures vsing them vainely or wickedly as in iests playes charmes neither dares it come to the Sacrament without due examination preparation instruction correction or strength and consolation in the course of Christianity 2. Tim. 3.16 3. Because the good heart sees his continuall need it is carefull in the continuall vse of the means of grace It sees hardnesse of heart still stealing on it It discernes spirituall weaknesse and fainting of soule It feeles many conflicts of the flesh against the spirit It is acquainted with the thrusts and temptations of Satan It sees the health of the soule stand in these refreshings and the strength of the heart decaying without them as the body doth without repayre And therefore it still relieues it selfe by the Word Sacraments Prayer and the like Psalm 119.28 My heart melteth for heauinesse raise me vp according to thy Word vers 92. Had it not been for thy Word I had perished in my trouble 4. Because it conceiues God a Spirit and his Ordinances spirituall therefore in performing these it neuer contents it selfe with the outward deed alone but especially aymes at soundnesse and sincerity in the manner of doing Psalm 119.80 Let my heart be vpright in thy statutes All is out of sence and conscience not for shame fashion custome law or vaine ostentation But now in speciall for the Word preached A good heart makes great conscience of it as is great reason 1. Because it sees the Word preached only able to bruise a stony heart to tame melt and cause to tremble a secure heart as Felix Esa. 66.2 that trembleth at my Word Acts 16.24 The Iaylor came trembling and shiuering as hauing a strong Ague in his conscience Also it is of power to open a shut conscience as Dauids by Nathan 2. Because the preaching of the Word reueales the vnsearchable riches of Christ Ephes. 3.8 and brings into acquaintance with him This is the hammer by which Christ standing at the dore of the heart knocks and if any open he comes in and suppes with him Christ not onely inuites him to a feast but feeds him with his owne flesh and blood and he with Christ that is a fruitfull Hearer of the Word entertaines Christ calls him as the Church Cant. 4.16 to a feast in his Garden to eate of his pleasant things Christ is feasted when he tastes the sweet fruits of repentance faith mortification and obedience wrought by the preaching of the Word Nay it makes vs of neere kindred with Christ his father his mother his brethren and sisters Luk. 8.21 3. Because the Word preached brings in the Spirit of God with his sauing graces being the chariot of the Spirit by which hee rides gloriously into the hearts of Beleeuers God who can giue his Spirit without it ordinarily doth not He could haue taught Cornelius without Peters so tedious a iourney but Cornelius must attend Peters Ministery and while Peter was yet speaking the holy Ghost fell on them all Acts 10.44 But see it in speciall sauing graces first illumination is by preaching Acts 8.31 The Eunuch cannot vnderstand without an interpreter he must ioyne himselfe to Philip. Secondly faith comes by hearing Rom. 10.14 and by the foolishnesse of preaching God will saue them that beleeue 1. Cor. 1.21 Neither can actuall faith be without some measure of actuall knowledge Thirdly the feare of God is wrought by preaching Rom. 8.15 the spirit of feare is wrought by the Ministery of the Law shewing sinne distinctly the curse due to it and our owne guiltinesse And by the Gospell is wrought that childlike feare by the spirit of adoption by which now we feare to offend God as before to be offended and reuenged on by him Fourthly peace of conscience and a sweete ioy in God is wrought hereby Psalm 51.8 Let me heare the voyce of gladnesse that the broken bones may reioyce Lastly the Word preached brings in not onely this life of grace but that of glory Act. 11.14 Send for Peter to Ioppa and he shall speake words whereby both thou and thy house shall be saued And therefore is it called the Word of life and saluation In these and other regards a good heart is a conscionable Hearer 1. It prepares it selfe as a fit casket or storehouse to lay the Word in conceiuing it the most precious iewell and richest pearle in all the world
Dauid hid the Word in his heart Psalm 119.11 2. In sence of it owne want and the worth of the Word it preserues an appetite and hunger after the preaching of it As the babe sucks greedily the milke so it will feed heartily on this Bread of life It will be at paines for it as a babe will cry after the brest It will heare diligently without omission intermission or delay It will waite at the gates of wisdome as Cornelius for Peter Act. 10.33 We are all heere ready to heare whatsoeuer is commaunded thee of God 3. Because God speakes not to the eare onely but to the heart this heart will heare as well as the eare If God say Seeke my face the heart will make eccho and answere Thy face Lord will I seeke Psal. 27.8 4. This heart makes the whole man heare and receiue the Word first the inner man shall delight in the law Rom. 7.22 The iudgement shall esteeme it aboue thousands of gold and siluer the minde shall attend it the heart shall beleeue it the memory shall keepe and treasure it the affections shall cleaue to it and the conscience submit to it secondly the outward man shall be as conformable The eare shall heare it with reuerence the mouth shall speake and professe it the hand shall practise it and the whole man be submitted to the obedience of it as in sound health the nourishment is carried to all parts 5. This heart embraceth the whole Word saying of all as the Prophet Mic. 2.7 Is not my Word good to him that walketh vprightly First it loues the Word which reuealeth sinne accuseth and condemneth it both because it discouers sinne to be repented of and forsaken as also because it leades the sinner to Christ and sets him faster to him Secondly it applies the whole Word to it selfe as well for conuiction as consolation You shall euer see a good heart more smitten with the sharpe threatnings of the Word than they to whom they belong Meate that must nourish must goe into the stomake and bowels so must the Word that must profit vs passe thorow our affections either to humble or direct or comfort vs. By this triall many that bragge of the goodnesse of their hearts may see themselues farre off For first an euill heart cares not how farre it bee estranged from God As it flies his presence and eye so his Word also which passeth sentence on him and iudgeth him afore-hand desires no acquaintance either with God or his Word Many say as the people to Ieremy The Word of the Lord in thy mouth we will not heare The Popish Recusant stops his eare and will heare no voyce The Atheist as hee denies God in his heart so hee denies his presence to the meanes Both of them refuse fellowship with God barre out the Spirit of God and his sauing graces and wilfully debarre themselues of faith which is dropt into the heart by the eare and of the life of grace and glory Secondly an euill heart can come to heare but brings not an hearing eare But it brings 1. an heauie eare or deafe rather as many who cast themselues asleepe who would be ashamed to sleepe if a man but a little better than themselues should speake vnto them An argument of a sleepy and dull heart And can we thinke God will open that mans heart who will not open his owne eare Or 2. it brings an itching eare that cannot abide wholesome doctrine Hardly can any Minister please them hee is either too Legall in his threats or too Euangelicall in generall promises or his life too austere or too remisse Iohn fasts and hath a diuell Christ eates and is a glutton Or if the doctrine be quicke and powerfull then inquire if he bee not a Puritan for if impure wretches once so stile him then may hee be aduised better than to trouble himselfe with such a mans doctrine Or 3. it brings a stopped eare when in hearing the heart goeth after lusts or is stopped with ignorant conceits as that no such good is to bee gotten in Sermons or it were pitty all should bee true that the Preacher saith or the world was better when was lesse preaching or few great men loue preaching or frequent it much or it is no great wisedome to bee so forward as some and none are worse than such as runne after Sermons Cares also and lusts and pleasures choke and stop the passage of the Word into mens hearts that they heare it as a story or a tale but are no more moued with it than if they were stockes and stones the most dreadfull threats of vengeance pricke them not at heart Thirdly an euill heart can heare sometime with diligence and delight but will heare to know not to practise delights in contemplation but hates reformation delights in the promises of the Gospell not in the precepts of the Law or if it doe yet not in an vniuersall practice inward and outward For it is an vnfailing rule An euill heart cannot delight in the Law of God touching the inner man Oh how hard it is to binde the thoughts to conformity with Gods Law Nay a loose heart cries out of too much precisenesse Fourthly an euill heart can heare sometimes carefully but neuer truly apply For the promises and comforts of God it is readyest to apply them to it selfe which belong not to it for God feeds the impenitent with iudgement this is the part of such an heart but it lets that alone As for rebukes it heares or abides none it is loth to bee drawne to a Sermon that rebukes his darling sinnes as the people of Israel was to come neere the Mount Heb. 12.19 While it heares it is filled with wrath and enuie Luk. 4.24 saying Physician cure thy selfe yea it is ready to burst for anger as Stephens aduersaries Act. 7.54 And for afterwards they hate him to the d●ath that rebukes sinne in the gate and abhorre him that speaketh vprightly Amos 5.10 Hee is their enemy that tells them the truth as Ahab said of Micaiah I told you he neuer prophesied good but euill and to Eliah Hast thou found me O mine enemie And if Christ himselfe should neuer so wisely rebuke them they would lay hands on him or runne to the Rulers as Ioshua to Moses Master forbid them to prophesie In one word An euill heart pretending sound loue to preaching is an vtter enemy to sound preaching To whom I say Is Gods Word an aduersary to thee So is God himselfe Doth the Word iudge and condemne thee So shall the Lord for euer condemne thee except thou timely repent And thou that canst not endure the threatning of iudgement goe on in thy sinnes thou shalt indure the iudgement threatned eternally stop thine eare against the cries of Gods Word against thy sinnes this Word shall take hold on thee and thou shalt cry out for euer against thy sinnes and selfe and thy cry shall not
Sabbath the Lord cannot abide the Sabbaths when the hands are full of blood Esa. 1.13 But the Sabbath that he chuseth is to loose the bands of wickednesse 2. It bindes the tongue to holy speeches If euery idle word must bee answered for much more idle speeches on the Sabbath which is a double sinne A good heart must not speake his owne words nor a vaine word Esa. 58.13 It cannot giue reines to the tongue to direct worldly busines to make reckonings to prattle of other mens businesse to busie it selfe in the world or worldly affaires to talke of newes as the Athenians or sports and pleasures nor things lawfull on other dayes A good heart out of a better store will speake of better things 3. It watcheth ouer the inner man rests his affections in Sabbath-duties and makes it his delight suffers not his thoughts to roue Esa. 58.13 Thou shal● not thinke thy owne will For the Lord requires the whole heart soule strength and minde Luk. 10.27 In one word A good heart will care to occupy his mind mouth tongue eare hand and foot as God would haue them Fourthly it will not onely keepe the Sabbath strictly it selfe but see it kept of all within his power A Magistrate of a good heart will compell all within the gates of the City thereunto Ier. 17. ●0 Heare ye Kings ●eare no burthens that is suffer not others A good Magistrate would set no Fat 's on the Sabbath nor Racks by suffering others nor buy and sell by suffering others nor drinke and sweare or play away the Sabbath by suffering others all whose sinnes become his by his conniuence Neh. 13.15 A father of a good heart will command and compell all his children as Abraham He will not suffer them to play and sport when they should be at diuine seruice but where he is taught they shall bee when he prayes they shall when he heares they shall and to him they shall giue account of their hearing A Master of a good heart will see his seruant serue his Master in heauen as he serues him the sixe dayes He cannot send him on errands and trifling businesse running and riding to serue his owne turne and leaue God vnserued but as hee will not haue him neglect his affaires in the sixe dayes so not Gods seruice on the seuenth but keepe him in to the duties of that Day Obiect We cannot keepe in our seruants and children that Day Ans. 1. You can finde meanes other dayes to hold them to your owne businesse 2. If they will haue liberty this Day giue it them for all the rest for Dauid would not haue a wicked person in his house Psal. 101.4 5. but hee that is a seruant of God shall be my seruant Fifthly a good heart holds it selfe bound to ioyne with the Assemblies of Gods people to frequent the House of God and serue and seeke him to come on that Day to Church the Schoole of God to heare and learne his will and the Market of God to make prouision for the soule for all the weeke following It dares not forsake the fellowship as some Heb. 10.25 It mournes when vrgent occasion absenteth it lookes toward the Temple hungers and earnestly desires the fruition of such a blessing Psalm 42.2 It esteemes one day in Gods House aboue a thousand elsewhere Psal. 84.10 such sweetnesse it tasteth in his Ordinances Word and Sacraments Lastly being sensible of Gods presence according to the promise where two or three are gathered together in his Name it comes not but first puts off his shooes because this is holy ground and lookes to his feete Eccles. 4.17 that is prepares his affections to come with feare and reuerence with ioy and cheerfulnesse heed and watchfulnesse faith and holinesse before that great Presence Now an euill heart first neuer prepares for the Sabbath though it will not bee vnprouided for a Market-day yea it can dispatch his businesse to set it selfe loose for any lust The Iewes had a preparation to the Sabbath and Ioseph of Arimathea came the day before the Sabbath and begged the body of our Lord and buried it before the Sabbath to free himselfe from the action and care of it Secondly it can defraud the Lord of his Day or the greatest part of it and holds it selfe loose after euening exercise to what it list as if himselfe would giue his seruant leaue after that time to cast off his seruice Thirdly it makes no conscience of profaning the Lords Sabbath many wayes 1. Doing his owne will not the Lords his owne worke not the worke of the Sabbath selling wares within the shop and without running vp and downe with them and other workes of the calling whereas the Commandement is Thou shalt doe no manner of worke 2. Turning the Lords Rest into idlenesse as the fruitlesse spending of it both within dores and abroad in many vaine exercises 3. Profanely turning it into the plaine seruice of the diuell by Ales gaming drinking and accursed riots in exercises heathenish and hellish Is it a sinne to open a shop window and none to game swill and sweare Is the Sabbath appoynted to cleanse thy soule from sinne and darest thou most soule and moyle thy selfe that day aboue other 4. Iangling away the day in company with idle chat any words are ready but of God and to God or if alone holding profane and vnsauory thoughts free enough to driue out the meditation of God his Word and workes 5. Profaning it in their children or seruants whom they suffer to bee vaine and idle or force them not to Gods seruice or which is worst force them by commandement or example to pollute it for some Masters and fathers are like Pharaoh who laid the heauiest taskes on the Lords Day aboue all the weeke and then increased the burthens when Israel spake of going to serue the Lord. Fourthly an euill heart can easily withdraw it selfe from the Assemblies as seeing no beauty no presence of God without all reuerence of the Sanctuary whereas the Iewes might not tarry at home from the Synagogue nay some Fathers say probably that Christ himselfe came still to the Synagogues that he might obserue the Law which hee came to fulfill But this wilfull excommunication without repentance goes before casting out of the great Congregation in heauen Lastly it can vpbraid others for precise and curious who are strict keepers of the Sabbath and cannot go with their neighbours drinking reuelling and vsing profane pastime It can obiect great and learned and rich and noble that like not such precisenesse in keeping the Sabbath But we haue God going before vs in precept and his owne example sanctifying the Sabbath If we follow example he is most vn-erring and aboue them all in wisedome nobility c. The third meanes wherby true Religion is maintained are Ministers and Pastors In respect of whom a good heart hath many eminent markes and excellent qualities For
heart will I giue you and a new spirit c. so called 1. Because it hath put off the old malice and corruption 2. Because there is a renouation in all the faculties as 1. The minde is renewed in knowledge Col. 3.10 It is giuen to this heart to vnderstand the mysteries of the Kingdome Math. 13.11 While it was an euill and old heart it might attaine a naturall knowledge or an historicall knowledge or a morall knowledge generally to discourse of Diuine things but altogether vnfruitfull making him a little the wiser but neuer the better But heere is a new knowledge beyond the story or theory a practicke knowledge and experimentall of the vertue and power of Christs death Phil. 3.10 full of mercy and good fruits Iam. 3.17 2. The renewed conscience is an vn-diuided companion of a good heart for whereas before the minde and conscience were defiled Tit. 1.15 either senslesse or raging now the heart sprinkled from an euill conscience Heb. 10.22 becomes a pure and good conscience excuseth and imboldeneth before God ceaseth all accusation and condemning is peaceable tender waking and indeuours to keepe the goodnesse of it before God and all men alwayes and in all things Act. 24.16 Heb. 13.18 3. The will is renewed It was as heauie as a Beare to the stake to pray heare obey It was as a slaue in fetters vnder the bondage of sinne and Satan It ranne after lusts as after sports no sugar so sweete as the pleasures of sinne But now it is carryed according to the motion of a good Spirit after God It willingly obeyes the Commandement It hath a free Spirit and now being drawne by God runnes after him Cant. 1.3 4 The affections are renewed as in foure instances 1. Loue. It is a signe of a good heart to loue goodnesse first the chiefe good and best of all God himselfe whom before he hated deadly and hee loueth God for himselfe not for his benefits onely Secondly he loueth goodnesse not onely in the fountaine but in all the streames Hee loues the children of God not for sinister ends of profit credit kindred but for the image of God in them He loues Gods Word not for knowledge onely but for direction and reformation In a word he loues that most which hath most goodnesse 2. Ioy is not carnall in base and inferior things as formerly but the ioy of a good heart feeds it selfe on things most excellent for kinde and continuance For kinde in God himselfe who is his glory and in the shining of his countenance Psalm 4.6 7. in the sweet taste of his Word aboue honey aboue pearles in the purchase of the pearle it goes away reioycing in the prosperity of the Church which it preferres before his chiefe ioy in heauenly and spirituall exercises Col. 3.3 in the assured hope of resurrection Psalm 16.9 and in the expectation of Christs comming to his eternall redemption These are things most excellent in kinde to be ioyed in and the wicked enters not into this ioy Then for continuance a good heart reioyceth in things of most continuance for the perpetuating of his ioy Ioh. 16.22 Your ioy shall none take away from you The third affection is feare renewed Before it feared not God but this watchman of the soule being absent it became a spoyle and prey to the diuell and lusts But now it feares God yet not as a slaue but as a childe not as a Iudge but a Father And this feare of God begets another feare of sinne and the feare of falling keepes it from falling and finall defection Blessed is the man that thus feareth alwaies It is a signe of some goodnesse in the heart worth watching and keeping The fourth renewed affection is zeale feruency Before it was most zealous against zeale now it is truly zealous 1. In earnest and affectionate desires after Gods glory his House his worship the zeale of Gods House consumed Dauid Psalm 119.139 2. In thorow-hatred of the corruptions of his owne heart against which hee wrestles and cries out as Paul Rom. 7.24 Vehement fire soone ouermasters drosse and stubble 3. In contending and warring against the profanenesse and wickednesse of the world and corrupt times Paul earnestly grieued to see men fall from God Rom. 9.2 and Lots righteous soule was vexed daily with the vncleane conuersation of the Sodomites and Christ mourned for rebellious Ierusalem Luk. 19.41 Which is alwaies ioyned with an endeuour by all possible meanes to bring them backe againe as Elijah prayed for Israel 1. King 18.37 Matth. 18.12 4. In an ardent loue and defence of such as feare God delighting in things and persons that are sincere and most affecting the most grace Matth. 12.48 Psalm 16.3 Thus haue I giuen a taste of the newnesse of a good heart which is his first property The second is softnesse a good heart is soft and sensible The best heart indeed hath some hardnesse but it is sensible of it for 1. It sees still a burden of sinne and an heauy load of corruption within left nay it sees more euill in it selfe then in all other Grace within as a straite line is the measure of it selfe and that which is crooked 2. It sees to bewaile the hardnesse and distemper of it selfe with much bitternesse and sorrow and many complaints Esa. 63.17 O Lord why hast thou hardned our hearts against thy feare Ah miserable man that I am who shall deliuer me from this body of death These are the common complaints of the godly how they are toyled with their slownesse of heart to beleeue with earthlinesse of heart finding themselues chayned to the loue of earth with frowardnesse of heart when they cannot heare or beare reproofes Prou. 17.20 And in all these they are more seuere because they are more sensible of their owne lusts than any other 3. It still striueth against this hardnesse and prayes for a soft heart Esa. 63.17 Why hast thou hardened our hearts Oh return c. And the poore man in the Gospell I beleeue Lord helpe my vnbeliefe Whereas an euill heart goeth on neither seeing nor suspecting nor willing to see the euill of it till it be growne to the hardnesse of a stone to which it is compared Ezek. 11.19 because there is no life no humour no aptnesse to softnesse more than in a stone And so going on in hardnesse comes to bee Adamantine which is the hardest and inuincible stone Zech. 7.12 The third property of a good heart is cleannesse euery good heart is a pure and cleane heart Psalm 51.10 Create in me a cleane heart O God Math. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart Obiect Can any man say his heart is cleane seeing in many things we sin all and if we say we haue no sin or foulenes we lie and our owne clothes will defile vs Answ. The best heart hath much foulenesse and frailty What a heape of sins of
a good heart is fruitfulnesse It is the Christians Treasury or store-house producing good things Math. 12.35 fruitfull in diuine and heauenly meditations as Dauid in the Word and workes of God and his owne workes in feruent and effectuall prayers being the Temple of the Spirit in sauory and gracious speeches tending to edification Ephes. 5.4 The lips of the iust feed many also in charitable and helpfull duties toward his brethren to shew workes of mercy and strengthen the weake-hearted as Zacheus and Peter But an euill heart is barren and as fruitlesse as filthy his imaginations are onely euill continually God knoweth their thoughts to be vaine 1. Cor. 3.20 their speeches vnsauory as out of a sinke within vniust vnfaithfull golden promises leaden performances their actions and fruits like the trees most wicked at the best vaine or worldly Truly said Salomon Pro. 10.20 The heart of the wicked is little worth and as worthlesse are his speeches and actions the most of them wicked the best vaine and friuolous Labour therefore for such an heart as acknowledgeth the seed-time and season and in this season is diligent in sowing and dispersing seeing the surest way to keep seed is to sowe it not to saue it at home and such as is fruitfull in euery season as ground receiuing blessing of the Lord. The sixth property of a good heart is watchfulnes extended many wayes 1. It watcheth it selfe most carefully Pro. 4.23 Keepe thy heart with all diligence because as he keepes his soule he keepes his life chap. 19.16 While others watch that nothing issue out into words and actions to disgrace them this will watch to let and leaue nothing within 2. It watcheth against sinne both before and in and afterward Before sinne to auoyd occasions appearances and beginnings of sinne as Ioseph shunned not only the act of vncleannesse with his Mistrisse but her company Gen. 39.10 Mat. 26.42 Watch and pray lest ye enter into tentation the first entrance is pernicious Eue should not haue been led by the Serpent to look on the forbidden fruit if she would not lust and taste it Dauid would haue his eyes turned away from vanity as well as his heart Psa. 119.37 and Salomon counselleth not to goe neere the doore of the Harlot Pro. 5.8 For as a bird keeping aloft is free and safe but cannot come neere the snare without danger so heere The good heart cannot giue it selfe leaue to run into infectious places knowing the inclination of nature to bee taken How carefull are they that haue Gun-powder in their houses that no fire or candle come neere it yet our nature is as Gun-powder to the sparke of tentation 2. It will preserue his watch in occasions of sinning Gen. 39.6 Ioseph was faithfull when no account was taken No difficulty for him to be true that was neuer trusted to be sober where is no drinke or for a woman to bee chaste whom none lookes after But to withstand euill when it is offered vrged forced vpon him this is strength this is Religion If any sinne assault the good heart more strongly he flies to the Antidote as we for our heart against poyson because the life is shut vp in it 3. It will watch against sinne though good men doe it will not be drawne to sinne for any mans pleasure but reproue them rather Ephes. 5.10 as Paul reproued Peter himselfe for the dissimulation Gal. 2.14 4. It will doe no euill though the greatest good might come of it Rom. 3.8 because it knowes no sinne is eligible and not euents but causes can make a thing good In sinne the good heart watcheth in part is not on a sound or dead sleepe but as of children we say Their hearts are asleep though their eyes be halfe open so on the contrary Gods children haue their eyes asleepe but their heart waketh Cant. 5.2 there is no full purpose consent or will After sinne it watcheth both to rise by repentance as Dauids heart smote him for numbring the people and to auoyd the like snares for time to come lest it become a slaue againe 3. It watcheth his graces first to keepe them as one that must giue account of his talents As the Iaylor lockes vp the prisoner lookes the doores bee fast and hath an eye to the windowes that nothing be let in to let him out So heere Iob 31.1 Secondly to perfect them and increase the best gifts as one most couetous to adde to his stocke It neuer hath grace enough carefully watcheth all opportunities to doe himselfe good sets out with the first in his race of Christianity and striues to keepe before Thirdly to exercise them in all opportunities of well-doing it seeketh good Amos 5.14 to further his reckoning and will doe good within his calling whateuer euill may follow on it and is carefull in the matter of doing good of due circumstances called Rom. 16.19 wisedome to doe well 4. It watcheth his whole conuersation both alone and with others and frames his life so as it be led soberly and honestly without scandall 1. Cor. 10.32 iustly without deceit or guile 1. Thes. 4.16 peaceably without strife so farre as is possible Rom. 12.18 Heb. 12.14 humbly without pride or swelling Col. 3.12 boldly in good causes resoluing not to giue Gods cause away to wicked men nor basely for priuate ends stoope to honour vngodly persons which makes them scorne him and his Religion the more Neuer praise the wicked but contemne their dispraises and scornes His words may passe as a vaine blast against a godly man when his heart is afraid of him his conscience admires him With others hee watcheth his communication to season his speach with the salt of grace for edification to refraine his tongue from scandalous hurtfull and sinfull speach Psa. 34.13 and hold it to true and acceptable knowing that hee who keepeth his mouth keepeth his soule Pro. 22.23 vpholding good speach and by it good men and good things So also for his company 1. A good heart watcheth to auoyd needlesse society with euill men Pro. 23.20 If they be scorners and will not be corrected it will shunne them lest it be corrupted as a man that meanes to keepe his clothes cleane will auoyd Colliers and Chimny-sweepers It knowes euil company is as an infectious ayre and will carrie himselfe to such as to plaguie persons pittie them pray for them relieue them supply them with food and Phisick to preserue their life but will not come among them because of infection 2. It watcheth in all company to receiue all good offered and offer all that will be receiued neuer to consent to any euill but bee an example of the Religion hee professeth 1. Thess. 1.7 5. It watcheth for the comming of Christ 2. Pet. 3.12 and therefore finisheth the worke in hand remembring his account the miserie of the neglect and shutting out of such as forget their latter end Whereas an euill heart puts off the
grace farthest from a good heart These are the Notes of a good an honest hart of which I will say to you as the Lord himselfe sometime said of the Israelites Deut. chap. 5. vers 29. Oh that there were such an heart in you to feare your God and keepe his Commandements alwayes that it might bee well with you and with your children for euer Now hauing spoken 1. of the Meanes whereby the heart becomes good 2. of the Marks whereby it is knowne so to be we come in the third place to the Motiues which is the last thing in the description of this last soyle I. Onely such an heart keepes the Word to saluation Fusty vessels are not fit for the precious liquor of sound and sauing knowledge and the graces of the Spirit The Law is spirituall and the place where the Lord layes it is in the spirit and heart of his Elect in whom onely he hath wrought a care to keepe it Psal. 119.11 I haue hid thy Word in my heart that I might not sin against thee The Lord hauing written his Law in Tables made choyce of y e Arke to lay vp the same safe Exo. 25.16 Thou shalt lay in the Arke the Testimony that I shal giue thee Now this Arke must be ouerlaid with pure gold both within and without signifying that the godly heart which must keepe the Word must be sincere within and without and euery other heart but the good and honest will shake the Word out one time or other hence Dauid prayeth Psal. 119.80 Let my heart bee vpright in thy statutes that I be not ashamed II. God esteemeth the goodnesse of our works by the goodnesse of the heart Ier. 17.11 I the Lord try the hearts to giue to euery man according to his work Hence many workes of ciuill men glorious and beautifull to the eyes of men are hatefull to God because they flow from the filthy puddle of a corrupt heart For as an euill action for matter can neuer bee made good by a good intention of the heart so a good action for matter can neuer be good in acceptance from an euill and deceitfull heart If the spring be corrupt so are all the streames Hence also God esteemeth good duties perfect when the heart is sincere because what is wanting in the manner and measure of obedience is supplyed by soundnesse and made vp by the goodnesse of the ●●art and therefore in Scripture vprightnesse and perfection are put one for another The widowes mite was in it selfe very light but putting her heart to it made it ponderous Adde thy heart to thy mite and it shall be accepted as a Talent Hence the Scripture saith God iudgeth not as man we iudge from without God from within we proceed from the effect to the cause hee from the cause to the effect wee iudge the heart by the worke hee the worke by the heart we looke first to the sacrifice and then to Abel hee first hath respect to Abel and then to his sacrifice Hence we see a mite in sincerity accepted and a Talent from hypocrisie reiected III. Without this good and honest heart thou losest all thy labour all thy graces all thy hopes all thy expectation If they come not from a pure heart he that is pure looks with pure eyes reiects them all If thou beleeue not from the heart Rom. 10.10 it is vanishing and temporary If thou liftest not vp pure hands in prayer that is the prayer of a pure heart suppose thou diddest weare thy tongue to the stumps and thy knees horne-hard thou losest all thy labour therefore Paul describeth true worshippers 2. Tim. 2.22 to be such as call on the Lord with a pure heart If thy loue be in word and tongue and not in truth thy heart cannot assure thee that thou art of the truth 1. Ioh. 3.18 19. If thou doest not from the heart obey the forme of doctrine deliuered Rom. 6.17 all thy obedience is lost without recompence without acceptation yea abominable Finally whatsoeuer we doe doe it heartily vnto the Lord and not vnto men Col. 3.23 The kernell of all duties lyeth within in the true disposition of the heart without which all is as an empty shell which when it comes to cracking and opening the hypocrites hope faileth See we not in the Day of Iudgement many shall pretend great matters done in preaching or prophecying in the Name of Christ and casting out diuels in the same frequenting Christs presence Wee saw and heard thee in our str●ets and so expecting some great reward for so great and glorious workes But not being sound at heart all these things are no better esteemed then working of iniquity and recompenced as hatefull sinnes Depart from mee ye workers of iniquity for all the sacrifices of an hypocrite are abominable his very prayers abominable Esa. 1. Bring no more sacrifices but wash you clense you and then come let vs reason together Esa. 58.3 The Iewes vrge God with their fasting and yet are sent away empty IV. A good heart is the essentiall difference or distinction betweene a godly man and an hypocrite whosoeuer wants it shall receiue his portion with hypocrites The Pharises make cleane the out-side A good Christian heares his Master say Thou hypocrite first make the in-side cleane As the hypocrites religion is made but a couer or cloke so he vseth it as a cloke to cast on and off as hee list And as men make their clothes so doth hee his religion so it be some fine stuffe without they care not what base lining they put in But the sound Christian is as the Kings daughter Psal. 45.13 all glorious within like a late fashion of great men lining russet or base Clokes with Taffatie or Veluet cleane thorow or like the hangings of the Sanctuary without course Badgers skinnes within fine linnen embroydered Exod. 26.1 14. The hypocrite desires to seeme either onely or principally the sound Christian desires to be acceptable Saul when hee knew Gods minde in reiecting him yet honour me saith he before the people 1. Sam. 15.30 the sound Christian knowing the minde of God in electing iustifying and sanctifying him endeuours both liuing and dying to be indeed acceptable vnto him An vnfaithfull and euill heart that departs from God hath faire showes goodly greene leaues a kinde of faith ioy profession and will giue God euery thing but a good heart which gift he only calls for which because hee with-holds hee shall neuer speed so well as a sound Christian who can giue nothing but true desires of a changed and sincere heart V. The whole comfort of a Christian vnder God is in a sound honest and good heart As first all inward comfort 2. Cor. 1.12 This is our reioycing euen the testimonie of a good conscience that in all simplicity and godly purenesse we haue had our conuersation This ioy is the ioy of Gods people which the stranger enters not
and sweet fruits Let God and man gather them and taste them For what comfort is in a fruitlesse condition by which a man must know first that the Word of God for all his hearing was neuer rooted in his soule for then it had beene fruitfull in grace It is no barren seed where suffered to root Secondly that he is an vnbeleeuer while he professeth all the Articles of Christian faith and liues among Christians For faith worketh by loue and is fruitfull Thirdly that hee is destitute of the loue of God which affection if it swayed the heart it would vnite it to the thing loued in all duties of piety If it loued God it would keepe his Commandements Ioh. 14.15 It would constraine him to fruitfulnesse 2. Cor. 5.14 Fourthly that hee is lyable to that deadly and irrecouerable fall that hypocrites come vnto whose foundation being in the sand the fall of that house is great such are the fruitlesse Hearers who heare and doe not Math. 7.24 Lastly that hee is euer vnder that heauie curse which is neuer farre off him Heb. 6.8 The earth that drinkes in raine and brings bryers and thornes is neere vnto cursing and the end is to be burned Obiect But we are fruitfull Christians We come to Church and delight to heare good Sermons We commend our Preachers loue some good men speake against common abuses pray in our families repeat Sermons reforme some euils in our selues and ours Answ. But beware you deceiue not your selues with leaues for fruits as all this is in many It is with many Christians as the Fig-tree cursed by Christ so flourishing as it deceiued Christs owne expectation whereupon it receiued sentence Neuer fruit grow on thee henceforth Therefore looke to thy selfe and to thy fruits 1. See thou bee a branch of the Vine 2. Know the truth as the truth is in Christ to cast off all sinne to resist all lusts to forsake all knowne euils 3. Walke as Christ walked 1. Ioh. 2.6 Is thy life thy actions speaches yea and thoughts squared to the Word Endeuourest thou to know further and practise the whole will of God reuealed Doest thou all duties in true purpose and constitution of heart bringing euen thoughts which are thought so free into conformity with the Word This is to be a fruitfull Christian. All other blazes and showes will but bring thee to the end of an hypocrite An hundreth fold From the fruits of the ground which is good wee come to the measure Our Lord following his comparison noteth the profiting and prosperity of the Word in a good heart by the increase of seed cast into good ground which increaseth sometimes an hundreth fold Neither speaketh our Sauiour by Hyperbole or excessiue speach but according to the maner of the best ground in Canaan which brought an hundreth fold increase Not to speake of other stories of Herodotus who writes of the Countrey of thy Cynipians that it brings three hundreth fold nor of Plinie writing of Blazacium a Countrey in Africa where the people for euery bushell of seed receiued 150. fold increase the Scripture Gen. 26.12 sheweth that Isaac sowed in Gerar a barren Countrey in comparison of Canaan and receiued an hundreth fold increase Quest. Doth euery good ground bring increase an hundreth fold Answ. No as this Euangelist shewes that there were three sorts of vnfruitfull Hearers so the other compared with this shew that there are also three sorts of fruitfull Hearers for Matthew and Marke say that the good ground bringeth fruit some an hundreth some sixty and some thirty fold Therefore all bring not an hundreth fold Quest. Why doth our Sauiour mention three degrees of fruitfull ground Answ. 1. Some of the Fathers as Augustine and Ierome say it was to note a difference betweene virgins widowes and married persons some as Theophylact apply it to Anchorites Monkes and Laickes An idle conceit as if any outward estate cōmended a man to God more then other who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no respecter of persons or as if Abraham Isaac Iacob Lot Moses Peter Iohn both married and some of them secular men did not as well bring forth an hundreth fold as any of their Vestall Virgins 2. The Rhemists in their Annotations on Math. 13 haue a brainlesse deuice applying it to the difference of merits in this life and of rewards in the life to come that virgins merit here and shall obtaine there an hundreth fold widowes sixty married persons thirty As if any estate or person could merit at all Or as if our Sauiours intent had beene to shew the difference of the Saints glory in heauen and not of Hearers in earth But 3. Our Sauiour of purpose in the other Euangelists mentioneth the 3. degrees of fruitfull Hearers for 3. reasons First to note the free disposition of Gods grace and powerfull working who euen in such as in whom the Word is fruitfull tyes not himself to a certain measure but distributes to euery one according to his good plesure For as in the same field the soile the Sun the ayre the seed the seasons are the same yet in y e fruitfull seeds some bring more tilloes some fewer some but ten graines some 40. some 60. according to the blessing of God So in this spirituall husbandry wherein the Lord is as in all other things a most free Agent bound to no lawes or obseruations Secondly to comfort encourage himselfe his Disciples Ministers who though they lose much labor in the 3. bad grounds yet y e good ground makes amends in which none are fruitlesse but if they bring not an hundreth fold yet they may 60. or 30. and if there be but a few that bring an hundreth fold they shall abundantly recompence the barrennes of many grains Thirdly to comfort strengthen such as haue not nor can attaine this hundreth fold though their endeuours be true and earnest Those that haue not attained the highest measure of grace but are in the middle sort of Christians nay suppose them in the lowest formes who bring thirty fold fruits are not to bee despised Christ neuer quenched smoking flaxe Himselfe here honours them with the name of good ground as well as those of the hundreth fold And as the Husbandman if hee see a graine bring an eare that hath neuer so few cornes in it farre vnder 100. or 60. or 30. hee reiects not nor scornes it but is glad of it and carries it into the barne So the inferiour Christian who hath soundnes with the smallest measure is esteemed of Christ and much set by Hee that had but two talents and gained but two heard as well Euge bone serue Well done good and faithfull seruant as hee that had gayned ten Math. 25.23 Quest. But why doth our Sauiour here speake only of the hundreth fold the highest degree of fruits Answ. To set before vs the ayme and scope of euery good Hearer teaching vs that A Christian man must not content himselfe
not 2. Christs prayer was heard which was not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not that his Faith should not faile in part but not vtterly and altogether vanish So Chrysostome non dicit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For by Christs care and fauour it was that Peters Faith did not altogether vanish He failed in confession not in affection His Faith was not ficta fayned therefore not fracta broken It was concussa non excussa shaken but not shaken off Corde tenuit illum quem voce denegauit saith Gregory He denied Christ with his mouth but held him still in his heart Wee graunt Peters Faith wounded not dead his confession oppressed with feare not wilfully reiected his sinne miserable not mortall or deadly in Thompsons sense 6. Ground taken from Gods continuall being with the Elect their in-being in Christ and the Spirits in-being in them First the presence and ayde of God in trials will not suffer them to bee tempted aboue that they are able 1. Cor. 10.13 God is continually present with his Esa. 46.4 in sixe troubles and in seuen in their passage thorow fire and water and to this end that they be not drowned and ouercome but to supply both strength and euasion Obiect In that place God promiseth say they sufficient strength to ouercome all temptations but onely to them that are waking yet God abides faithfull in forsaking them that forsake him Answ. 1. But the question is Whether is God faithfull in this promise of preseruing them in Faith and in not suffering any tentation to befall aboue their strength or whereof he will not giue a good issue And if he be whether they shall forsake him whom hee forsaketh not 2. The whole Word is giuen not to them that sleepe but them that wake But who is it that makes vs awake and keepes vs waking but the Lord Psal. 121.4 Or who calls vs out of our beds but he Cant. 5.2 Secondly their in-being in Christ preserues them as liuing members of a liuing Head who therefore is called the sauiour of his body Eph. 5.23 Obiect This is true of his members so long as they be liuing louing dutifull obedient members Answ. 1. There is no elect person and regenerate but is a liuing member for the Head preserueth life in euery member 2. He that made him a member being no member can and doth restore and recouer him though sicke vnsound and hurt dealing with his members as wee doe with ours who tender and wrap and make much of sore and weake members not considering them as full of corruption but as members Ioh. 6.37 Whatsoeuer the Father giueth me commeth to me and he that commeth to mee I cast not out Obiect True if hee alway come to Christ but hee may depart and goe away of himselfe Answ. No Christ shewes in the 40. verse what he meanes by not casting out namely hee shall euer abide in my fellowship and family for I will effect that hee shall haue eternall life Againe Ioh. 17.12 Whom thou hast giuen mee I haue kept that not one of them is perished and Iude 1. Such as are called and sanctified are also preserued of Iesus Christ. But how is he preserued that departs and goes away Thirdly in whomsoeuer the Spirit dwelleth hee must needs perseuere in grace so long as hee dwels there but the Spirit dwels alway in the Elect after conuersion Ioh. 14.16 17. I will pray the Father and he shall giue you another Comforter that hee may abide with you for euer Which cuts off their thred-bare answere of So long as the Spirit dwels and also their distinction of abiding for a time and for euer Whosoeuer hath the Spirit of God is borne of God and whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not that is so as sinne recouer his raigne and power The reason is because the seed of God abideth in him 1. Ioh. 3.9 that is either the Spirit of God whose vertue is a principall efficient or the Word whereby as an instrument we are regenerate and begotten to God Obiect True so long as they are borne of God and so long as the seed abideth in them they sinne not Answ. So Bellarmine answereth Non potest lethaliter peccare quamdiu perseuerat filius Dei changing the casuall particle of the Apostle quia into a conditionall quamdiu So Thompson also cha 20. But the Apostle is expresse against their absurd euasion He is alwayes borne of God because the seed of God abideth in him and is in him for euer Nay his natiuity of God keepes him that he cannot fall from God finally and returne into the Kingdome of Satan againe so chap. 5.18 Hee that is borne of God sinneth not but preserues himselfe and the wicked toucheth him not that is hath power giuen him of God whereby to preserue himselfe that Satan touch him not in his Free-hold or snatch him backe againe to death and destruction These are some of the grounds by which this comfortable Doctrine is confirmed with which to auoyd prolixity I will content my selfe Now for the manifold Obiections which are made against it I will endeuour to preuent them all in some fewe Conclusions The first is this No precept to beware of falling away no promise to perseuerance no commination or threatning against Apostates doth proue that a true Beleeuer can fall away wholy or finally For the former where we are exhorted to beware of falling away from the grace of God Heb. 3.12 and to take heed that standing we fall not 1. Cor. 10.12 and where blessednesse is promised to him that feareth alwaies Pro. 28.14 none of these exhortations to so great diligence and feare and watchfulnesse argue such an absolute defect in all them to whom they are giuen and in whom they are found but agree with certaine perseuerance as meanes with the end the cause with the effect Because 1. They are deliuered to hypocrites as that in 1. Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinks he stands take heed lest hee fall because they wanting Faith deceiue themselues with a vaine presumption and opinion of Faith and fall away But what is this to the sound Beleeuer 2. If they be deliuered to the godly who may also grieuously fall from Faith and other graces they proue not they can fall from true sauing grace at least in the habit and gift but onely in the measure degree and parts all which they ought to maintaine and preserue But one thing it is to fall another to fall away One thing to fall from the first loue another from all loue 3. No feare of falling impeacheth the certainty of not falling away Our Lord Iesus himselfe feared and fasted and prayed forty dayes and forty nights before his temptations that in his example we might see that our feare is not then frustrate when perseuerance is certaine 4. Meanes of perseuerance and not falling away cannot be certaine proofes of falling away but rather against
treateth whereby we destroy so farre as is in vs and plucke him from Christ but if hee be a true Beleeuer the mighty hand of God vpholds him perhaps not from falling but from falling away 2. Christ is said to dye for a man two wayes 1. Improperly and generally for the whole visible Church for whom his death is sufficient 2. Properly truly and specially for the faithfull and Elect to whom it is effectually applyed in the vertue and merit of it Many of the former may bee destroyed none of the latter 3. Members of Christ are so two wayes 1. In the iudgement of charity and of the Church all outward members of the Church are to be reputed redeemed and iustified till by their Apostasie they declare themselues hypocrites for whom Christ neuer dyed 2. In the iudgement of certainty he dyed not for all and euery one Now the weaknesse of the argument appeares euidently That because some fall away for whom Christs death is sufficient therefore they may to whom it is effectuall or because some who in the iudgement of charity onely are redeemed fall away therefore such as are certainly redeemed by his death may 2. Pet. 1.9 We reade of one who was washed but forgets he was purged from his old sinnes Answ. There is a twofold washing One outward by the water of Baptisme by externall profession and outward reformation as Simon Magus The other inward true and reall by the blood of Christ applyed by the Spirit and faith by meanes of the Word and by the waters of sanctification And accordingly there is a twofold purging one reall and existent the other in opinion profession and iudgement of ones selfe and others The former being truly washed cannot forget their purgation as the latter may One drop of that water springeth vp to eternall life But it is no good argument Some professing cleannesse and purity fall away therefore such as are cleane indeed some washed with outward water therefore such as are baptized with the holy Ghost and fire Heb. 6.4 and 10.26 Some that are inlightened and taste of the good Word of God and are partakers of the holy Ghost and are sanctified by the blood of the Couenant fall away and cannot bee renewed by repentance Therfore Elect persons may fall away finally Answ. 1. In generall None of all these phrases implyeth true Regeneration Besides the Apostle speakes of hypocrites and such as sinne against the holy Ghost not of any true Beleeuer 2. In speciall and to the particulars Some that are inlightened fall away But this is of knowledge in iudgement not in affection of knowledge in the braine not in the heart of bare illumination without thorow-renouation or reformation of science without conscience experience practice What a great measure of knowledge had Demas Iudas and Iulian attained by which they seemed to haue cleane escaped such as are wrapped in errour And yet they were againe intangled in errour the greatest errour being to know and not to doe Now what argument is this It is possible for some truly inlightened to fall away therefore for some truly regenerate They taste the heauenly gift and the good Word of God and yet fall away Answ. By tasting may be vnderstood two things 1. An approbation in iudgement seeing in some measure the excellency of the gift Ioh. 4. but this in generall not in speciall in others not in himselfe as Balaam and Agrippa 2. An inclination in the affection rauished with that excellency as the bad ground receiued the seed with ioy and hearing and seeing the happinesse of the Saints wish and desire to partake of it if by wishing they could winne it but deale as hard Chapmen who see a commodity and their owne need of it and prize and cheapen it but will not giue so much as it must cost them and so goe away without it Balaam wished to dye the death but would not liue the life of the righteous And the young man in the Gospell was loth to sell all and so went away without saluation Whereas a sound Beleeuer will sell all with the Disciples and account all but losse or dung with Paul and exchange the treasures of Egypt with the Crosse of Christ as Moses Thus the hypocrite onely tastes the gift and feedeth not but the Elect feed on the Bread of life and drinke of the water of the Well of life vnto life eternall Now this is no good argument because some that taste doe fall away therfore so may he that feedeth on Christ. They that are partakers of the holy Ghost and sanctified by the blood of the Couenant fall quite away Hypocrites are sanctified by the blood of the Couenant 1. in respect of profession not of the power of holinesse 2. in respect of externall communion with the members of the Church in the Word and Sacraments not of inward society or sanctification 3. in respect of the application of the blood of the Couenant not by the Spirit but by the meanes but diuersly from that to the Elect To the Beleeuer truly by faith and to his saluation To the hypocrite in outward shew and appearance in opinion in the iudgement of charity onely and to his greater condemnation 1. Cor. 11.27 They are also partakers of the holy Ghost that is excellent gifts of the holy Ghost as 1. the spirit of feare howling for sinne and sorrow wishing the sins had neuer been committed as in Cain and Iudas but alwayes want the Spirit of loue 2. Externall reformation in great measure as Herod did many things but kept one Herodias 3. Feruent zeale for the Lord as in Iehu 2. King 10.16 but for a start at the beginning and for the sinnes of others not the owne 4. Holy motions with which the Spirit inspires them and often purposes and promises to follow them as Saul had many But 1. they neuer haue any but common gifts not the speciall gifts of faith charity true repentance proper and peculiar to the Elect 2. Though they haue the gifts of the sanctifying Spirit yet not the gifts of Sanctification 3. They neuer come to be sanctified throughout in body and soule and spirit 1. Thes. 5.23 nor to be throughly changed into the Image of God 2. Cor. 3.18 Now this is a weake argument Because some hauing the gifts of the sanctifying Spirit fall quite away therefore some also that haue the gift of sanctification They that taste of the powers of the life to come fall away This tasting also is incident to hypocrites and standeth in two things 1. Thoughts and meditations of the life to come 2. A powerfull working and forcing of the heart to looke somewhat that way and to doe something seeking to enter Yet they shall neuer enter 1. Because they onely taste not digest these meditations to follow them home 2. Because if they performe any thing they doe it not purely not for Gods glory but themselues not for loue of God but selfe-loue Gods glory and seruice
regard of Christ. 276 Reioyceth more in Christ than in all worldly ioyes 4. reasons 277 Giueth it selfe wholly to Christ who hath giuen himselfe wholly to it 278 Maketh in it selfe a sweet roome for Christ and how 279 Conformeth it selfe wholly to Christ. 280 Carefully embraceth Gods ordinances 4. reasons 321 Maketh great conscience of the Word preached 3. reas 322 Is very conscionable of the Sabbath sixe reasons 329 Honoureth the Ministers of God foure reasons 337 It will be helpfull to them foure wayes 341 It doth good duties wisely fiue reasons 359 It doth them humbly three reasons 360 It doth them heartily three reasons 361 It doth them abundantly foure reasons 361 It doth them vniuersally three reasons 362 It doth them constantly fiue reasons 363 It carryeth it selfe against sinne in fiue actions 365 It is a fruitfull heart foure reasons 383 It is the essentiall difference betweene a good man and an hypocrite 374 It is called an honest Heart and why 262 It seeketh approbation from man three wayes 273 An euill Heart affecteth God more in his gifts than in himselfe 275 An euill Heart for all his shewes groweth not 4. reasons 311 An euill Heart faileth fiue wayes in hearing 326 Senslesse Hearer his misery in fiue things 13 Hearers duty towards the seed of the Word in 4. things 28 Hearers and hearts compared to the highway-ground in three things 33 Carelesse Hearers the worst of hearers 34 Hearers compared to stony ground in fiue things 62 Bad Hearers may goe farre in Christianity as in foure steps or degrees 66 Bad Hearers moued to heare for foure reasons 67 A good Hearer heareth for afterwards three reasons 156 Foure sorts of Hearers reproued 161 Heauenly mindednesse discerned by sixe signes 310 Conscionable Hearing is in fiue things 324 Helpes to cast our care vpon God fiue 187 Helpes to the patient enduring of the Crosse sixe 416.418 To Hold out in grace prouide three things 122 Hinderances of spirituall growth 5 preserued by patience 408 Sound Humiliation looketh 3. wayes at once 289 Hypocrites why they goe so farre three reasons 71 Hypocrites fall from fiue things 136 Hypocrites why they fall from all goodnesse foure reasons 137 I Ignorance now excuselesse 18 Illumination necessary to a good heart for fiue reasons 291 Illumination tryed to be sound by foure rules 80 Instances of such as come short of them who fall short of saluation 71 Instances of most lawfull things vnlawfully abused seuen 165 Instances of most needfull cares thrusting downe vnneedfull fiue 188 Instances how riches hinder the practice of the Word sixe 196 Ioy examined in the 1. Ground 2. Matter 3. Measure 4. Companions 85 Ioy of Gods people in seuen things 240 K Kinds of good fruits sundry Inward Outward 380 Knowledge if sound hath three ends 81 Soundnesse of Knowledge examined by fiue rules of triall 88 L Lusts compared with thornes in fiue things 147 Lusts of any kinde cherished spoyle the worke of the Word for foure reasons 149 M Manna compared with the Word in sixe things 1 Manner of true prayer in foure things 303 Right Manner of vsing pleasures in foure things 244 Markes to know an hard heart by sixe 114 Markes of a man soundly rooted in the profession of faith three 128 Markes to know distrustfull cares by fiue 177 Marks of a man in whom the World choketh the Word fiue 199 Markes of a man in whom pleasures choke the Word seuen 231 Markes of a good heart in generall reduced to 7. heads 272 Markes of soundnesse of knowledge sixe 292 Markes of sound faith sixe 295 Markes of a good heart in respect of it selfe sixe 345 Marriage abused how 167 Marriage betweene God and man neuer broken 427 No certaine Marke of the child of God willingly and ioyfully to heare Sermons 121 Matter of spirituall prayer especially for three things 303 Meanes to lay the Word in our hearts sixe 61 Meanes of a soft heart fiue 116 Meanes of sound moysture fiue 126 Meanes to vphold vs in triall seuen 142 Meanes to keepe our hearts as good ground in good kilter three 153 Meanes to set the Word aboue the weeds of lusts fiue 154 Meanes to lay vp the Word for afterward foure 162 Meanes to heare for afterwards foure 163 Meanes to rid our selues of carking cares foure 186 Meanes to attaine goodnesse of heart two in generall 268 Meate and drinke many wayes abused 165 Ministery the dignity of it 25 Ministers must goe forth to sow three reasons 26 Ministers must sow onely their Lords seed and all their Lords seed 27 Ministers sent for foure ends 338 Meanes to keepe men from withering sixe 106 Motiues to carefull hearing foure 40 Motiues to watch against Satan in hearing three 59 Motiues to labour for soft hearts foure 116 Motiues to lay vp the Word for afterwards foure 162 Motiues to rid our selues of worldly cares fiue 183 Motiues to moderation of mind in seeking and hauing riches fiue 203 Motiues disswading the pursuit of pleasures sixe 225 Motiues to carry our selues Christianly through our pleasures three 251 Motiues to sincerity of heart three 354 Motiues to get the goodnesse of heart fiue 371 Motiues to aspire to the highest pitch of grace fiue 398 Motiues to prouide our selues of patience three 411 Moysture of grace the kinds 120 Moysture of grace is of 1. Vnction 2. Compunction 123 N Newnesse of heart in foure principall faculties 345 Notes to know whether Satan hath robbed thee of the Word or no three 60 Notes of a man withering in grace sixe 101 Notes of sound knowledge foure 122 Notes of a man rooted in the doctrine of faith three 125 Notes of a man soundly rooted in the grace of faith fiue 126 Notes of a good heart in respect of the Spirit of God reduced to foure kinds 281 O Obiections against diligent hearing the Word answered foure 4 Obiections against the pers●uerance of Saints most of them preuented and answered 438 Obiect of perseuerance 420 Occasions of doing good to be apprehended 7 Many Offended at the Word sundry wayes 138 Offence not to be taken when we see great Professors offended at the VVord 141 Outward effects of a good heart in respect of true Religion fiue 317 P Patience necessary to fruits of grace sixe reasons 407 Patience what 405 Patience strengtheneth a Christian three wayes 412 Parables what with their distinction 9 Parable of the seed hath a twofold scope 16 VVhy our Sauiour spake so much in Parables 4. reasons 10 Peace with God and man a fruit of the Spirit 298 Persecution differeth from other sufferings in three things 128 Persecutors in dreadfull estate three reasons 38 Persecution inseparable from Christian profession if sound foure reasons 128 Persecution compared to the scorching of the Sunne in foure things 131 Persecution distastfull to nature 136 Persecution tryeth who are sound 140 Perseuerance what it is 419 Pleaders for some one sinne or lust answered 153 Pleasures earthly not all condemned sixe reasons 218 Pleasures