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

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not doing will continue as it hath brought already many fearful Judgements upon us unless by timely true Repentance it be cut off yea this very Word which God hath graciously ordained as the ordinary means of our Salvation if now heard unpractised will one day prove the savor of death to our eternal Condemnation Consider this therefore thou that centrest Religion in Formality consider it seriously as thou expectest Heaven or fearest Hell for being now premonished this very subject thou now readest stands on Record against thee to the great and terrible Day of Judgement To the profitable hearing of Gods word three things are required 1. A preparation before we hear which consists 1. In removing all impediments 2. In using all good helps and means to further us 2. A right disposition in hearing 3. The duties to be practised after hearing Rules of direction to be observed in preparation before hearing 1. We must be swift to hear James 1.19 by disburthening our selves of all impediments 2. We must lift up our hearts to God in Prayer that he would give us the hearing ear 3. The hearer must in hearing set himself as in the presence of God The lets and impediments hindring the effectual hearing of the Word which are to be removed and avoided before we come to the hearing of the same 1. Presumption when the hearer presumes of his own parts able to teach his Teachers And in this may be included Prejudication for we must take heed of all sinister affection to the Ministers person Luke 10.16 2. Troubled affections specially rash anger either against his Teacher or others for we must take special heed of corrupt affections as envy hatred malice guile anger and the like 1 Pet. 2.1 2. 3. The immoderate desire of riches and all worldly cares Mat. 13.22 4. Overcharging our selves with too much eating and drinking 5. Itching ears 2 Tim. 4.3 See the place 6. We must put off our shoes from off our feet that is the dirty and filthy affections of our souls Exod. 3.5 7. We must shake off the sin of Unblelief being fully perswaded that it is the Word of Truth 8. All carelesness and carnal security and come with thirsting souls 1 Pet. 2.2 9. We must take heed of dissentions and diversity of opinions about the Truth 1 Cor. 11.17 18. 10. Hardness of heart whereby the word is made as a dead letter effectual onely to our condemnation This is a fearful sin The helps and means to be used before the hearing of the Word 1. Godly meditation seriously to consider as we go and to meditate whither we are going 2. To meditate of the Corruptions we are most addicted to and of the Graces we most want 3. To consider to what end we go to hear to the word of God 4. Before we go we must resolve to suffer our selves to be reproved as well as instructed 5. We must use earnest and fervent Prayer 1. For the Minister that God would give him the door of utterance 2. For our selves that God would bless his word unto us 3. For others that God would bless his word unto them also Rules of direction to a right disposition the several duties required in the time of hearing 1. When the Word of God is in delivering every hearer must hear with judgement that is His own private judgement The judgment of the Minister The judgement of the Holy Ghost 2. Every hearer must have care that the Word of God be rooted and grounded in his heart like good seed in good ground 3. We must set our selves as in the sight and presence of God who seeth our very thoughts 1 Chron. 28.9 4. To hear with fear and trembling because it is not the word of any mortal man but of the ever-living God 5. With reverence not looking so much on the person of the Minister as on God speaking in him 6. With alacrity chearfulness and willingness 1 Chron. 28.9 Mat. 13. 7. With meekness and submission to whatsoever is delivered Jam. 1.21 8. With attention restraining our hearts from wandring from the delivered word Luke 19.48 9. We must fit and accommodate our selves to every part of the Sermon properly applying the same to our selves 10. We must hear with faith believing the word preached to be the truth of God himself Heb. 4.2 11. With constancy without tediousness not thinking the time long For the rooting of the word of God in our hearts there are four things specially required 1. A true and right understanding thereof 2. It must be mingled with faith Heb. 4.1 that is General to believe it Special to apply it 3. We must labor to be affected with the word 2 Chron. 34.27 4. The word of God must dwell plenteously in us Col. 3.16 The means to remove hard-heartedness in hearing of the Word 1. They must labor to be touched in heart with the sense and feeling of their Spiritual poverty and want of Gods favor in the pardon of their sins 2. To hear the word of God with an honest heart joyned with a constant purpose of not sinning 3. To be as careful to bring good affections as a good understanding The frequent and most common impediments that hinder the effectual and saving hearing of the word 1. Straying and wandring thoughts thereby making our selves but Idol-hearers 2. Undecent and unsavory gestures as a wandring eye gazing and gaping after every occurrent and occasion that offereth it self 3. Removing of the body not onely shifting and stirring it up and down but arising out of our places and removing to place other or beckening with our hands or nodding with our heads 4. Unreverent talking and uncivil laughing as if the place of Gods publike Worship were a Theatre for Sights or a place of Mart and Exchange where every one might single out Companions 5. A secure and sensless sleeping when we have drowsie ears and hearts 6. A careless coming and a shameless departing out of the Church and a seperating of our selves from the Congregation before it be dismissed and dissolved The duties required after hearing the word 1. It must be treasured up in our hearts and practised in our lives Psal 119.11 2. Serious meditation examination and application of what we have heard we must meditate on the Word with lifting up of the heart unto God 3. We must have experience of the Word of God in our selves Psal 34.8 4. Beside our Self-examination after we have heard the Word Psal 119.59 we must be obedient unto it and testifie our obedience Jam. 1.22 5. Godly conference touching the particulars of the Sermon This confirms the memory and helps very much to further knowledge and edification 6. We must use prayer unto Almighty God as well private as publike for a blessing on what we have heard 7. Above all we must constantly endeavor to practice what we have heard for onely they receive the blessing Luke 11.28 The causes of not profiting after hearing the word are chiefly of these
are not spoken circumscriptively as though God were contained in the Heaven or as though if the Heavens were not God could not be as the Inhabitants of the Earth cannot be when the Earth ceaseth for God was before all Heavens and Earth and Creatures but because his glorious Presence and Attributes are most eminently visible in Heaven and also to set forth his most mighty power Psal 115.3 he is by an excellency said to be in Heaven Heav'n is thy Throne Great God how then dare we Who but the Creatures of thy Footstool be Look Heaven-wards and cast an eye aloft Or lift hands to ' gainst which we have so oft This Charter thou hast seal'd us by thy Son The Priviledge of our Adoption Heav'n thy Throne Vanish distrust carnal fear Thou canst our Prayers grant as soon as hear But teach us by thy Spirit this holy skill To ask in Faith what answers to thy will §. 5. Hallowed be thy Name BY the Name of God is meant the whole worship of God or Gods Name is any thing that may be referred unto God in which he may be considered as his Word his Sacraments his Servants and his Works So that by the Name of the Lord we are to understand That whatsoever it is whereby the Lord is made known unto us according to his most glorious Attributes as Wisdom Power Justice Mercy c. and this may be either by his Titles his Word or his Works Now we must know That Gods Name cannot be more sanctified in it self then it is but the sanctifying of it that we here pray for is That it may be sanctified in us which may be when it heareth well by our walking worthy of this holy Name which is amongst us called upon and professed for contrariwise it is said to be blasphemed Rom. 2.24 And whereas thy Name O Lord is used as unholy by prophane worldlings vindicate and deliver it from such abuses and make us to stand for thine honor against such and provide for the preservation of the same from being used as a common thing working in all thy people an holy consent to hallow it together abstaining from all common unworthy usage thereof And open our eyes that we may know thee aright and may discern thy Power Wisdom Justice and Mercy and enlarge our hearts that we may sanctifie thee in them by making thee our Fear Love Joy and Confidence and open our lips that we may bless thee for thy goodness yea open our eyes that we may see thee in thy Works and strike our hearts with reverence of thy Name appearing in them and grant that when we use any one of them we may honor thee in our sober and sanctified use thereof This Petition comes in the first place because it is the end and scope of all the other for the end of all things must be Gods glory and it is placed before Thy Kingdom come to teach us That no man can be a true Subject of Gods Kingdom unless that in his heart he maketh principal account of Gods glory Thus the first of the three first Petitions in the Lords Prayer concerning God immediately concerns Gods glory it self The other two the means whereby Gods glory is manifested and enlarged amongst men For Gods glory is then manifested and his Name hallowed among men when his Kingdom doth come and his Will is done And this order of the Petitions that the first three concern Gods glory the other three our selves teacheth us how gracious the Lords is towards us sinful men allowing us if we come with one request for the advancement of his glory to come with another for our own benefit if with three for him with three for our selves also but first in order are his three for if we seek our selves first and chiefly we ask in vain The order of placing the Petitions concerning Gods glory first and then those concerning our selves teacheth 1. That God is absolutely to be respected and for himself but Man for Gods cause 2. That the first and main thing by the Lord intended in Creating all is his own glory and whatsoever is good for man is subordinate to this and onely so far forth to be sought after as it maketh for Gods glory 3. That the glory of the Lords Name is so dear unto him as that he did not onely make it his Mark in the Creation but in every particular duty done by man he setteth it still as his Mark as here in Prayer in giving the Law in the Gospel at the very Nativity of the Blessed One the Angels are heard lauding and glorifying God The Name of God signifieth 1. God himself Psal 116.13 2. Gods Commandment and Charge his Divine Will and Authority Mat. 28.19 3. The Divine Attributes Properties and Works of God in which signification it is here principally understood Holy signifieth 1. All the Properties of God for all the vertues of God are holiness 2. That holiness which is in his Creatures that is their conformity with God which is begun in the godly and is perfect in the Angels 3. The ordaining and appointing of things to holy uses The word of Hallowing is here taken in all these three senses To hallow or sanctifie is in Scripture used three ways viz. 1. Of us 1. When we hallow or sanctifie our selves and others that is when as touching external and outward things we prepare our selves and others to glorifie God 2. When we hallow and sanctifie God that is 1. When we acknowledge God to be holy or to be such as he hath declared himself in his word and works 2. When we profess God to be holy and so magnifie him according to his will both in minde and word as also in deed and works 3. When we refer the true Doctrine knowledge and profession of Gods holiness and likewise our Prayers and actions and even our whole life unto that end whereunto we ought and whether God hath commanded it to be referred that is to the glory and worship of God himself 2. Of God when he doth sanctifie others 1. Inwardly by his holy Spirit 2. Outwardly by his word which he effectuateth 1. By seperating them from their sins 2. By reviving and quickning them by his holy Spirit 3. By the continuing of both 3. Of Christ 1. Passively because 1. The word was ordained and consecrated by the Father to the Office of the Mediatorship 2. The humane Nature of Christ was consecrated out of that whole lump or mass that is was selected from among all Creatures to the union with the Word 3. His humane Nature was preserved from sin for the performance of the Mediatorship 4. Because Christ is hallowed and sanctified of us 2. Actively because he sanctifieth 1. Himself 1. As he is the Word the Word did sanctifie with his Father that flesh which he took by preserving the same from sin and by endowing it with all gifts 2. As he is Mediator he sanctified himself by his voluntary
with God set down in the first Epistle of John 1. Remission of sins 2. The sanctifying Spirit 3. Holiness and uprightness of heart and life 4. Perseverance in Knowledge and Obedience of the Gospel What is meant by Gods communicating himself to and dwelling among his Saints and people 1. The effect and efficacy of his Presence whereby he possesseth and governeth the Faithful which are his Temple to dwell in enlightning them to know and guiding them to practice his Will 2. That his Presence is perpetual permanent and continual 3. The maner of his Presence not by the infiniteness of his power as he is present with all his creatures to sustain and uphold them but by his Grace and gracious effects uniting us to Christ Regenerating us to be lively members of his body The presence of Gods grace is twofold viz. 1. Privately after a secret maner hid from the eyes of the world This is in crosses and tribulations wherewith God suffereth the Elect to be afflicted and exercised 2. Publikely when as God doth declare and manifest the presence of his grace in the Elect so as the wicked are compelled to acknowledge his Divine Power and Presence in them The Duties required of the Saints by vertue of their communion with Christ and among themselves viz. 1. Confidence in Christ Heb. 3.6 2. Subjection answerable to his maner of governing us Matth. 6.10 3. A cleansing of our selves from all filthiness of Flesh and Spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Cor. 6.15 4. A conformity unto the Image of Christ in true holiness and righteousness Eph. 4.24 5. Heavenly affections Col. 3.1 2. where our Head is there ought our heart also to be 6. Courage against death Luke 12.4 Heb. 11.35 seeing that in death we are Christs what cause have we to fear it 7. Love to the Brethren without which it is impossible to have any communion with the Saints 8. A mutual sympathy and fellow-feeling as fellow-Members of that body whereof Christ is Head Motives to be Spiritually united unto Christ viz. 1. The Excellency of it we shall live with him as our elder Brother perpetually in the heavens 2. The Profit of it we are freed thereby from Sin Hell Death and Damnation Rom. 8.1 3. The Necessity of it For 1. Without this Union we are strangers from God 2. All our Happiness and Salvation dependeth on it 3. Without it the Redemption by Christ doth us no good 4. We cannot be saved without it but must necessarily and unavoidably perish for ever The Signs to approve this Union are the effects of it viz. 1. To deny our selves 2. To mortifie the deeds of the flesh 3. To raise us to newness of life 4. To be weaned from this world and to seek Christ 5. To knit our selves in the Unity of Faith and Hope towards Christ and love towards men This Union of Christ with his Members and of his Members mutually among themselves is confirmed by many places of Scripture as Joh. 15.5 1 Cor. 6.17 12.13 1 Joh. 4.13 whence appears the gross absurdity of those men who fancy this Communion to be a Subsistence or personal being of Christs body among our bodies or of our bodies mingled with his which is also sufficiently refuted by that frequent comparison of the Head and the Members for those are coherent and grow together but are not in a mixture nor mingled one with another Whence also we may easily judge of that Communion which is in the Sacraments Rome makes this Spiritual Vnion A Carnal Corporal confusion The Worldling thinks this Holy Mystery A Paradox of too much Piety But all the Saints who sympathize in Faith Know what th' Apostle to the Corinths saith How by one Spirit we are all Baptiz'd Into one Body 1 Cor. 12.13 which must be agniz'd By all the Faithful for it paints The sweet Communion of the blessed Saints §. 11. The forgiveness of Sins BY which Article is understood That all our sins wants and imperfections Original and Actual as well in the committing of evil as in the omitting of good in thought word and deed are covered healed and released through the Righteousness of Christ imputed unto us which being apprehended by faith and applyed unto us doth not onely make them as if they had never been but also justifieth and dischargeth us causing us to appear blameless and spotless in the sight of God This forgiveness of Sins comprehendeth under it as it were in a short sum all the Mercies of God Isa 40.1 Psal 32.1 2.7 it being the Will of God which to the Faithful and Elect imputeth not any sin and therefore doth in like sort love them as if they had never sinned and delivereth them from all punishment of sin and giveth them Eternal life freely for the Intercession and Merit of Jesus Christ the Son of God our Savior and Mediator So that Remission of sins is from God onely the Ministers indeed and the Church are said to remit sins but onely as they are signifiers and declarers of Gods Remission when according to the Commandment of God the Church denounceth to the Repentant And one Neighbor remits Trespasses unto another as concerning the personal pardoning of the offence but God onely freeth us from the guilt of sin by his own Authority and that freely in respect of us though it cost Christ full dear Now the onely ground upon which we are perswaded of the forgiveness of our sins should be That we have Christ For he that hath the Son hath life This is the greatest of all the Promises in laying hold whereof the understanding must be rightly informed what ground a man hath to do it not in a confused maner without a clear knowledge of the progress of Faith and then it is the work of God onely to draw the will to take the Promises after that the understanding rightly apprehends them for both these are required in a justifying Faith From all which it appears That it is not a Doctrine of Pride and Presumption as the Synagogue of Rome teacheth to believe the Remission of our own sins for generally to believe that God forgiveth sin or that some men have their sins forgiven is no Priviledge of the Church but the common faith of the Devils James 2.19 All the Articles contain the confession of a special Faith and a particular application to our selves As I must believe God the Father to be my Creator the Son my Redeemer the Holy Ghost to be my Sanctifier so I am bound to believe the Remission of my own sins the Resurrection of my own body and that life everlasting shall be given to me This special Faith must be the Faith of us all Gal. 2.20 The forgiveness of our sins is known by these two signs viz. 1. By an humble and hearty Confession of our sins unto God wherein we must acknowledge all our main sins both Original and Actual our guiltiness before God and our just desert of Damnation for the
and Threatnings of God must be fulfilled for the certainty of them is unchangeable but they could not be fulfilled if the dead should not rise 2. The Mercy of God is perfect as which extendeth it self to the whole man and which will have us wholly saved therefore our bodies also shall rise again 3. The perfect Justice of God requireth that the same wholly whereby they sin should be punished with eternal pains but the wicked both in their whole body and in their soul do sin therefore their bodies also must be raised again 4. Christ is a perfect Savior because he hath saved and reconciled to God whole Man therefore our corrupt body also shall be raised by Christ 5. God is the God of the whole Man not of a part onely This Reason Christ useth against the Sadduces Mat. 22.31 6. God published his Law unto Man after the Fall therefore he will have man once keep it but that is not done in this life therefore it shall be done in the life to come and therefore men shall rise again The comfort we have by our Resurrection viz. 1. Our souls after they shall depart out of our bodies shal presently be taken up to Christ Luke 23.43 Phil. 1.23 2. Our flesh being raised up by the power of Christ shall be again united to our souls and shall be made like to the glorious body of Christ 1 Cor. 15.53 The use our Faith may make of the Resurrection 1. Our Faith may herein comfort us in all distresses whatsoever 2. It will mitigate the sorrow we entertain for the dead 3. It will lessen our fear of death while we believe a better life after death 4. It will make us swift to good works and to deserve well of those with whom we are to have eternal Society hereafter 5. It will withhold us from evil that we defile not our souls and bodies preserved by the Blood of Christ to live with God Angels and Saints Israels descent into the Red-Sea and the Lords deliverance of them thence The flourishing of Aarons Rod Ezekiels Vision of dead bones The Jews Captivity in and deliverance from Babylon and Jonahs preservation in and from the Belly of the Whale are all Types of the Resurrection And if the Doctrine of the Resurrection be shaken and overturned then all Religion is pulled up by the Roots let us therefore beware of such Vipers as lurk in the bosom of the Church There were even among the people of God Sadduces that taught that man perished wholly and that after death there should be no rising or returning to life but that he perished as the Beast Mat. 22.23 And in the Church of Corinth some were found which said There is no Resurrection of the dead 1 Cor. 15.12 Some have confessed indeed the Immortality of the soul so also did some of the Heathen but touching the Resurrection they have fancied it to be in this life and not after death as if the Resurrection were nothing else but Regeneration a dying to sin and rising again to newness of life or not unlike to Hymeneus and Philetus who said That the Resurrection was already past 2 Tim. 2.18 This Heresie for its continuance is not a little beholding to the Family of Love who hold that Heaven and Hell are in this life and no other Resurrection of the body or day of Judgement or coming of Christ then in this world Nor is it much less beholding to the Anabaptists who deny that the same bodies which now we have and shall lie in the dust shall ever rise again but hold That God at the second coming of Christ will make us new bodies This is to maintain a New Creation of new bodies and to deny the Resurrection of the former But all those Heresies we are to abandon and to let our Faith close with the Will of God revealed in his Word as we tender the benefit we expect by the Resurrection You that are crumbled into Dust or gave Your living Bodies to a fiery Grave Or say those Corps which should the Worms have fed The Fin-wing'd scaly Creatures nourished Converting Flesh to Fish Grant this and shall Those Bodies we may now just Nothing call Arise again 'T is so The Scripture saith They shall and Reason must give place to Faith Who could raise seed to Abraham of Stones Can re-incarnate Dust and rotten Bones § 13. And Life Everlasting Amen BY Life Everlasting is meant that ever-enduring happiness and all those joys which the Lord imparteth to all his Elect in the world to come not onely Life in but Joy not onely Joy but Riches not onely Riches but Glory and all these not in some measure but in excess not mixed but absolute without grief without want without dishonor not by intermission and fits but continually not after some long time to end but everlastingly This is the blessed estate of the faithful in the world to come without end or misery in joys unspeakable in body and soul that habitation or dwelling of God in Angels and Men by the Holy Ghost and the true knowledge of God his Will and all his Works kindled by the same Spirit in their hearts and true and perfect Righteousness and Wisdom that is a perfect conformity and correspondence of their will and powers and operations with the Minde and Will of God as also a joy resting on God and a sufficiency of all good things in God as touching both soul and body which shall never be interrupted hindred or have an end which is given to all the Elect and to them onely Joh. 10.28 Now as they are Elected so they are but chosen to Eternal life but as they are converted so they are in part admitted unto it and begin to be put into possession of it Thus the souls of the faithful departed do in a most happy and blessed estate tarry and wait for their full deliverance and Redemption in the Resurrection and Glorification of their bodies in the mean time resting from their labors being in the hand of God the true Paradice and Kingdom of Christ are received of him and gathered to the souls of the faithful which are perfected and to Abraham the Father of all which believe Whence this Article is added in our Creed to signifie That the just shall not rise again to misery or to a momentary felicity but to eternal blessedness The main difference betwixt our estate in this world and in the world to come being That here we must believe what we know but in part there we shall perfectly know whatsoever is to be believed The comfort which the faithful take in this Article of Everlasting Life is That forasmuch as they feel already in their hearts the beginning of Everlasting life 2 Cor. 5.2 3. it shall at length come to pass That after this life they shall enjoy full and perfect bliss wherein they shall magnifie God for ever which blessedness neither eye hath seen nor ear hath heard neither hath
any man in thought conceived it 1 Cor. 2.9 and which life we begin to live the soul entreth into it at the time of every faithful ones bodily death and the body also at the time of the general Resurrection for there is no sleeping of the soul as some dream neither any other place to keep it in nor ever was To believe everlasting life is to be assuredly and certainly perswaded 1. That after this life there shall be also a life wherein the Church shall be glorified and God magnified of her everlastingly 2. That I also am a Member of this Church and therefore partaker of everlasting life 3. That I also in this life have and enjoy the beginning of life eternal Life is three-fold 1. Of Nature wherein the good and bad promiscuously live together 2. Of Grace wherein onely the Sons of God in the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ live in this life it is the same with that death whereby they dye to sin 3. Of Glory in the blessed presence of God for ever Contrary to that death wherewith the bodies and souls of the wicked shall be tormented eternally That is Everlasting 1. Which hath neither beginning nor ending So God is everlasting 2. Which hath no beginning but hath an ending So the Decrees of God 3. Which hath a beginning but shall have no end as everlasting life Three degrees of eternal life 1. In this world when we begin to repent and believe in Christ and have true peace of Conscience 2. In death for that cuts off all sins both Original and Actual 3. When body and soul reunited go both together into everlasting Glory We may claim to our selves everlasting life by a double Right through Christ viz. 1. Because for us he hath fulfilled the whole Law 2. By Right of Inheritance for Christ being made ours we are the children of God Rom. 8.17 How far we are in this life made partakers of heaven and everlasting life 1. The purchase of it is made for Christ by his Blood hath purchased it 2. We have received the first-fruits of it as Peace of Conscience Joy in the Holy Ghost free access unto the Throne of Grace with confidence in Christ and the like 3. We are actually entred into the Kingdom of Grace which is the beginning and a part of the Kingdom of Glory 4. We have the earnest of the Spirit as a Pledge and Pawn till we come to the full possession of the purchased Inheritance 5. Christ our Head hath full and actual possession whereupon we being Members of his body are in him exalted and set in heavenly places In this life not onely we may but we ought also to be assured of everlasting life otherwise we shall never have it And we may thus by these infallible signs be assured of it viz. 1. By Faith by a full perswasion of the good will of God towards us 2. By the beginning of true Repentance 3. By the Peace of Conscience by a desire of and joy in God Eternal life is called a Rest and that for these two Reasons 1. Because then and there we shall Rest from all our works that is from our sins for then we shall sin no more but shall know God even as we are known 2. We shall Rest from all troubles and miseries of this life Rev. 14.13 hence it is called Abrahams bosom Luke 16.22 23. which in the faithful is even in this life begun by the outward Ministery of the Word and the inward Ministery of the Spirit the consummation whereof hereafter shall never be given to whom the beginning thereof that is Faith and Conversion hath not arrived in this life The life of Life Everlasting is the Beatifical Vision or the perfect Vision of God when Gods Elect shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.2 Yet that we be not deceived herein we must know that perfect sight is twofold viz. 1. Simple Perfect Sight when man sees a thing wholly as it is in it self and thus God is not seen by the minde of man 2. Comprehensive Perfect Sight when the creature seeth God so far forth as it is capable of his knowledge and thus shall men see God in the world to come perfectly and be filled therewith though they know him not wholly as he is in himself even as a vessel cast into the Sea may be perfectly full of water though it receive not all the water in the Sea The duties of this faith are these 1. Carefully to break off those sins the doers of which are expresly threatned that they shall never enter into the Kingdom of Heaven 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Gal. 5.19 2. To strive to enter and to walk on in the way that leadeth to everlasting life and never to go out of it to our dying day and this is the way of good works Joh. 5.29 3. To use the remembrance of eternal life as a salve against all sores as a Cordial to comfort our hearts against our greatest heaviness 4. To pray that this time might be hastned wherein we shall enter into life and even to rejoyce when we see it approach to any of us in particular Amen signifying verily certainly or undoubtedly is added for these Reasons 1. To shew that we do not in word onely believe those things whereof we have made confession but from our very hearts 2. Not waveringly but certainly and without doubting 3. Not as if we were secure for our firm and stedfast belief of these things but earnestly craving this Faith at the hands of God and thus it is as much as So be it Amen in the close of our Prayers as well as of this Confession doth not onely express our desire of the things we ask but also testifies our Faith in assurance of Receiving them according to our lawful desire So that it is not here to be taken as it is commonly onely for a bare assent of the people answering the Minister in the Congregation but as a declaration of Faith both in Minister and People Here words are of no use expressions vain The humblest fancy a presumptuous strain Bright Cherubins a Quill from off your Wings Might reach this Note which should the low-tun'd strings Of Mortal Tongues endeavor to express Would if 't were possible but strain it less And though the blessed Musick of your Quire We cannot understand we may admire Mean-while our Faith shall rest in Hope in this That know we shall when we enjoy your Bliss CHAP. V. §. 1. The Decalogue THe Commandments were given about Two thousand five hundred years after the Creation not that men were left all this time without Law for there was a Law written in their hearts Rom. 2.14 but to make that more plain which by the corruption of Nature was become very dim and much defaced so that as long as men have been there hath also been a Law although not expressed in words yet written in the heart wherefore if it be well observed we shall finde
we presently fall a committing the contrary Vice Hope is a sure and certain expectation of Everlasting Life Hope freely to be given for Christs sake and of a mitigation or asswagement of present evils and of a deverance from the same evils of this life and an expectation and looking for all Blessings necessary unto Salvation according to the Counsel and Will of God which Hope springeth from Faith for it is an expectation of such good things to come as God hath promised and Faith believed In expectation especially consisteth the very nature of Hope Rom. 8.24 If we hope we wait The proper object of Hope consisteth in good things herein it differeth from Fear These good things are not past nor present but to come neither are nor have been seen for Hope which is seen is no hope Rom. 8.23 They are such good things as God hath promised for true Hope is termed The Hope of the Gospel Col. 1.23 And such as Faith believeth for Faith is the ground of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 And By Faith we wait Gal. 5.5 Faith is the Mother Hope the Daughter Faith brings forth Hope and Hope nourisheth Faith for except a man hopes and waits for that which he believes his Faith will soon decay and according to the quality and quantity of Faith is the quality and quantity of Hope Thus Hope distinguisheth the Faith of Christians from the Faith of Devils and Reprobates and from Temporary Faith A man hath never Faith to believe but he hath Hope which makes him expect what he believes yet true Hope may be mingled with Fear for if there be nothing but Hope it is a sign that Hope is not good This lively Hope makes us labor for the accomplishment of what we believe it keeps our heads above the waves of Adversity without which of all men a Christian is most miserable 1 Cor. 15.19 it being simply and absolutely necessary to Salvation for where no Hope is there is no Faith And as it is true That no man can hope except he first believe the Promises so it is as true That Faith is necessarily upheld and nourished by Hope Faith is Hopes Foundation Hope Faiths Nourishment Faith believes the Promises Hope waits for the fulfilling of them Faith believeth and is perswaded of life Eternal Hope looketh when it shall be revealed for this cause Paul saith We are saved by Hope Rom. 8.24 The Love of God is a holy Disposition of the heart arising from Faith Love whereby we cleave to the Lord with a purpose of heart to serve him and to please him in all things which Love is so Necessary to Salvation as he that hath it not is in a cursed and damnable condition he is not in Christ if he do not love for there is a tye between all these Faith Repentance Love therefore they are used promiscuously And indeed if we Love not God we rob him for he bought us to be his that is to love him otherwise we rob God of our selves Now the way to Love God is To pray earnestly to acknowledge the power of the Holy Ghost to go to him and say Lord of my self I am not able to do it This acknowledgement of the power of the Holy Ghost is the way to prevail for unless the Holy Ghost kindle this fire of Love in us from Heaven we shall no more have it then cold water is able to heat it self Though the Preachers speak with the tongues of Angels yet shall we not be brought to love the Lord till he shew himself to us till he opens the cloud and shews us the Light of his countenance It was Moses his Prayer Shew me thy Glory that is thy Excellency which is exceeding glorious Moses asked not this to no purpose to satisfie his fancy for then the Lord would not have heard him but that by the better knowing the Lord he might love him the more for a principal means to the love of God is the knowledge of God and indeed therefore we love him not because we know him not This is the reason the Angels and the Saints love him most because they know him most and why in heaven when we shall be present with him shall we love him so abundantly but because we shall then know him face to face The Fear of God Fear is To acknowledge the infinite Anger of God towards sin his great Power to punish sin his Wisdom and Justice and that Right and Dominion which he hath over all Creatures which Fear is a great part of the Worship of God and one infallible Sign of the true Religion for that Religion is true wherein God is truly worshipped and that is but one and in it onely men shall be saved Which true Christian Religion is a Spiritual Band whereby men in a certain holy Reconciliation are made one with God and are kept in his Love and Fear that at length they may be made partakers of his heavenly Glory and of blessed Life And though all grant that to be the true Religion which hath been delivered by God himself yet which may be that Religion delivered from above will never be agreed on amongst men till our Lord Jesus returning to Judgement decide the Controversie Now we must not understand this Fear to be a servile Fear arising from a knowledge and an accusing of sin and from a feeling of Gods Judgement and Anger against sin and is a shunning and hatred of God and Punishment not of sin and is so much the greater how much the more certain expectation there is of everlasting Damnation and how much the greater despair there is of the Grace and Mercy of God But the Fear required in this Commandment is a Filial Fear such as Sons bear towards their Parents who are sorry for the anger and displeasure of their Father and yet notwithstanding are always perswaded of the love and minde of their Father towards them So that the Fear of God in the Regenerate in this life is an acknowledging of sin and the wrath of God and an earnest grief for the sins committed for the offending of God and for those calamities which by reason of sin both we and others sustain with an earnest desire of avoiding those evils by reason of the knowledge of that Mercy which is shewed unto us through Christ Mat. 10.28 Thus God alone is the proper object of Fear for what fear is due to man is due to him onely in and for the Lord whose Image he beareth more eminently by vertue of some Authority or Dignity pertaining to him which is to be feared And the extent of this Filial Fear of God is so large as without it other holy Duties cannot be well performed yea the whole Worship of God is often comprised under it Thus Mat. 4.10 Christ expresseth the Text Deut. 6.13 And thus Mat. 15.9 Christ expresseth the Text Isa 29.13 The Vices contrary to the Vertues in general contained in this Commandment
4. That he is Just To leave my wicked ways and to restrain my self from sin 5. That he is merciful To turn unto him by Repentance 6. That he is Omnipresent To carry my self as in his Presence 7. That he is Omniscient To keep my heart upright before him continually 8. That he is Infinite To stand in awe reverence and fear of him The Vices repugnant unto the knowledge of God viz. 1. Atheism which is the Acknowledgement of no God 2. Ignorance or not knowing the true God and his Will 3. Errors conceived or false Imaginations and Opinions of him 4. Prophaneness which is a Regardlesness of God and of his special Service 5. Magick Sorcery or Witchcraft in such as desire the help of it as well as in those who use it 6. Superstition Soothsaying Observation of Dreams Divinations Signs and Predictions or Foretellingof Wizards 7. All trust or confidence reposed in the Creature 8. Idolatry whether Inward when another is worshipped then that one true God or when the Worship of God is given unto Creatures by Praying unto them Trusting in them or Setting the heart upon them which kinde doth properly belong unto this First Commandment or Outward when though the true God is worshipped yet after another maner then God himself hath prescribed 9. The contempt of God which is to know those things of God which are true but not to be moved thereby to love him Were all the Wisdom of the East in one Compris'd Couldst thou discourse with Solomon From th'Isop to the Cedar or of ought In Heav'n Earth Hell Couldst thou foresee a Thought And so prevent it or by strength of Brain When 't is thought Argument it back again Hadst thou all Arts and Sciences refin'd Couldst joyn East to West or divide the Winde Wer 't thou for Wisdom the Worlds Nource or School And knew'st not God thou wer 't a damned Fool. §. 2. Of Faith or Trust in God THe second Duty required in this Commandment is To Trust in the onely true God and in him alone to put all trust and confidence Psal 20.8 This is Faith by which whosoever is united unto Christ the same is Elected Called Justified Sanctified and shall be Glorified Joh. 3.36 5.24 By this Faith is not meant an Historical Faith as to know and think all those things to be true which are manifested from above either by Voyce or by Visions or by any other maner of Revelation and are taught in the Books of the Prophets and Apostles and thus to be perswaded of them for the asseveration and Testimony of God himself firmly assenting to the truth of those things contained in the Scripture for the Authority of God that spoke them which Faith is good in it self but made ill yea sin by them that cannot apply it Thus Simon Magus is said to have believed Acts 13. By this Faith is not meant a Temporary Faith as to assent unto the heavenly Doctrine which is delivered by the Prophets and Apostles to profess it and to rejoyce in the knowledge thereof and to glory therein for a time yet not for any feeling of Gods grace towards them but for other causes whatsoever and therefore without any true Conversion and final perseverance in the Profession of that Doctrine for this kinde of Faith is led as in a string with the commodities of this world and with them doth live and dye By this Faith is not meant the Faith of working Miracles which is a special gift of working Miracles that is a certain perswasion springing from an especial Revelation and Promise of God whereby a man firmly resolveth That some extraordinary or miraculous Work and contrary to Nature shall come to pass by Gods Power which he hath foretold and would have to be done in the Name of God and Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 13.2 which Faith so flourishing in the Primitive Church ceaseth in those days for that the Doctrine is now sufficiently confirmed so sufficiently indeed as he that will not now believe without a Miracle may stand for a Wonder himself But by this Faith is meant Justifying Faith wrought in the hearts of the Elect by the operation of Gods Spirit grounded on Gods Promises whereby we do undoubtedly believe that God hath freely forgiven us all our sins applying Christ Jesus in particular to be our Savior and Redeemer From this Faith Gods people can never finally and totally fall away howsoever it may be sometimes shaken obscured and eclipsed so as it may not so manifestly appear at one time as at another and this Faith is incident onely to the Elect Acts 13.48 For it is a principal Grace of God whereby man is ingrafted unto Christ and thereby become one with Christ and Christ one with him Eph. 3.17 By this Faith in Christ we are partakers of the Merit of the Death and Resurrection of Christ so as it is Satisfaction for us and Forgiveness of all our sins a special grace or habit infused into the Soul by the Holy Ghost whereby we are enabled to believe not onely that the Messias is offered unto us but also to take and receive him as a Lord and Savior Thus Justifying Faith cometh not neither proceedeth or ariseth out of the instinct of Nature neither out of sense or experience neither out of Demonstrations or Reasons borrowed from Philosophy but it cometh and dependeth of a peculiar and supernatural Revelation or Divine Testimony it proceedeth from the Holy Ghost who kindleth it in our hearts by the Preaching of the Gospel Eph. 2.8 and confirmeth it by the use of the Sacraments Mat. 28.19 20. Now we are not said to be made Righteous through Faith onely or that we please God through the worthiness of meer Faith but because onely the Satisfaction Righteousness and Holiness of Christ is our Righteousness before God 1 Cor. 1.30 and we cannot take hold of it or apply it to our selves any other way then by Faith 1 Joh. 5.10 Yet Faith without Righteousness is Presumption as Righteousness without Truth is Hypocrisie And thus Faith is as it were an Addition of a New Light to Reason without which Reason is purblinde and begins to breed in the heart when the party begins to be touched in Conscience for his sins and hungers withal and thirsts after Christ and his Righteousness the first act of the understanding being to assent to the Truth contained in the Promises wherein Christ is offered and then the act of the Will to consent unto them that is to embrace them But before a man will be willing to take Christ the heart must be changed by God for none will take Christ upon Christs conditions till they be throughly humbled and have their hearts broken that know what the wrath of God is and have their Consciences awakened to see sin till they have been stung with a sense of their sins till they be heavy and have felt the weight of Satans yoke till then they will not come under the yoke
4. They served to be as an open confession of their Faith what God they served and in whom they believed and that they hated and detested the vanity and the Idolatry of the Gentiles 5. They were also a Testification of their thankfulness for sundry benefits received that thereby they might be taught to acknowledge from whence they came 6. They served for the maintenance of the Ministery and consequently for the furtherance of the worship of God Deut. 18.3 4. 1 Cor. 9.13 Under the Law the Priests as Priests 1. Were ordinary Ministers of the old Church 2. Were appointed by men 3. Were tyed to the Doctrine of Moses and the Prophets which they learned not from God immediately but mediately by men 4. They might erre in Doctrine and Counsels and did erre often when they departed from the Rule of the Prophets So that the difference between the Priests and the Prophets stands thus 1. The Priests were ordained out of one certain Tribe the Levitical but God raised up Prophets out of any Tribe 2. The Prophets were called extraordinarily and immediately by God himself and so received from him the Doctrine which they were to declare to men 3. They were so guided by the special motion of the Holy Ghost that they could not erre in that Doctrine which they uttered to men in the name of God but with the Priests it was otherwise In the Law as the Priesthood so the Priest was twofold 1. Signifying or typical who was a person appointed by God 1. To offer typical Sacrifices 2. To make intercession for himself and others 3. To declare to the people the Doctrine of the Law and the Promise of the Messias and true Sacrifice which was to come 2. Signified that is Christ of whom the most notable Type was the High Priest himself The things that were proper and peculiar to the high Priest onely 1. He alone entred into the Tabernacle called The Holiest of all or Sanctuary and that but once every year 2. His raiment was more gorgeous then the vesture of the other Priests 3. He was set over the rest 4. He onely was consulted with in matters doubtful touching Religion or the Common-weal 5. He did therefore govern and order some Counsels and Offices of the State and Kingdom and did see that all things were lawfully administred They that were under the Law were of three sorts viz. 1. Israelites which were of Abrahams posterity and were necessarily bound by the Law to observe Circumcision and the Ceremonies 2. Proselytes who of the Gentiles were converted unto the Jews and did more and more for confirming of their faith submit themselves unto Circumcision and the whole Ceremonial Law 3. Those of the Gentiles who were converted unto the Jews but did not observe the Ceremonies these embraced onely the Doctrine and Promises of God And unto the Gentiles and Proselytes it was free to keep or not to keep Circumcision and the Ceremonies Four special Sects among the Jews under the Law 1. The Essens who were like Popish Monks and Fryars which did seperate themselves from the people vowing and dedicating themselves to live in perpetual Sanctity 2. The Sadduces who did expound the Law according to the letter and syllable and withal denyed the Resurrection and Immortality of the Soul as appears Acts 2.3 8. 3. The Pharisees who did forsake the common Exposition of the Scribes and taught and framed a more exact and strict Exposition of the Law according to the Traditions of the Fathers These Pharisees were by office Scribes as appears by comparing Joh. 1.29 with ver 24. 4. Herodians who as some think were Courtiers who held and taught that Herod was the Messias The Church of Rome erreth grosly in Confounding the Law and the Gospel under pretence that the Precepts of both are the same for substance that both require righteousness both promise life threaten death both command faith repentance and obedience Put his opinion overturns true Religion and is erroneous for these Reasons 1. Adam in his innocency knew the Law but he knew nothing then of believing in Christ and though both require righteousness promise life and threaten death yet the maner is far different 2. Likewise they differ in the commanding of faith for the Gospel commandeth faith not as a work done as the Law doth but as an instrument laying hold on Christ Again the Law commands faith generally as to believe in God and to believe his word to be true but besides this the Gospel requires a particular faith in Christ the Redeemer whom the Law never knew 3. The Law commandeth not Repentance for the knowledge of the Law was in Adams heart when he needed no Repentance True Repentance therefore is a saving Grace wrought and commanded onely by the Gospel 4. Though obedience be commanded both by the Law and the Gospel yet not in the same maner The Law commandeth obedience every way perfect both in parts and in degrees and alloweth no other but the Gospel in Christ approveth imperfect obedience that is an endeavor in all things to obey and please God if it be without hypocrisie Again the Law commandeth obedience as a work to be done for the obtaining of salvation but the Gospel requires obedience onely to testifie our faith and thankfulness to God This is not the onely Error touching the Law there are certain people in the world living under a Christian Climate known by the Name of New-Libertines who say The Old Testament is abrogated others think us necessarily tyed to all the Judicials of Moses boldly affirming That the Laws Judicial of Moses belong as well unto Christians as they did unto the Jews Others have entertained an Opinion That Love was now come in the place of the Ten Commandments Others will not have Gods Law to be preached nor the Conscience of sinners to be terrified and troubled with the Judgements of God yea it hath been held How that it was utterly unlawful for the Elect so much as to think much less to speak or hear of the fear of God which the Law preacheth Now the common Objection of such men is That Christians are not ruled by the Law but by the Spirit of Regeneration according as it is said Ye are not under the Law but under Grace Again the Law is not given unto the righteous man therefore it is not to be taught in the Church of Christ But the Answer hereto is as ancient as the Error Christians indeed are not ruled that is are not compelled and constrained by the Law and fear of punishment unto whatsoever Discipline or Order like as are the wicked but yet they are taught and instructed by the Law of God what worship is pleasing unto God and the Holy Ghost useth the voyce of the Law to teach and incline them to an obedience not constrained or hypocritical but true or voluntary so that not onely the Law commandeth them what to do but the Spirit also of Grace doth
the pursuit whereof 3 things are to be observed 1. The gathering of the Doctrine 1. Out of the Coherence 3. Out of the drift 3. Out of the Division 4. Out of the words themselves 1. In the Sense 2. In the Meditating of them 2. The proof of the Doctrine which is either by 1. Reason taken out of the word 2. The Text it self 3. The use of the Doctrine which is 1. For Knowledge 1. To confute Falshood 2. To confirm Truth 2. For Conscience 1. To comfort the afflicted 2. To humble the proud The word of God must be preached with boldness Eph. 6.19 which is manifested 1. By an equal and impartial preaching of the word without respect of persons 2. By a declaration of the whole truth of God as occasion requireth concealing no part thereof for any by-respects of favor fear reward or danger Acts 20.27 3. By a grave plain free delivery of Gods word without affectation or popular applause Gal. 1.10 4. By reproving sin and that with authority Tit. 2.15 that transgressors may be ashamed and tremble 5. By despising all shame fear reproach and disgrace which by prophane and wicked persons may be brought upon the Ministers for performing their Calling as they ought Repetition of the same points that have been formerly handled is very expedient for these Reasons 1. Because men are commonly dull in hearing slack in coming weak in remembring and fow in practising 2. Because it is safe and sure for all hearers to have often repetitions many witnesses make sure work and confirm strongly and stedfastly the things taught Phil. 3.1 3. Because repetitions work a deeper impression in us and serve to beat it into the Conscience as well as into the understanding but the best repetition is when we make repetition of it to our selves by practising it The end and purpose of Gods instituting the Ministery of the word was 1. That God may be invocated and magnified in this life by mankinde not onely privately but also by the publike voyce of the Church 2. That the publike and ordinary preaching of the Doctrine the pouring out of prayers and giving of thanks and the use of the Sacraments may be an exercise to stir up and cherish faith and godliness as which without exercise doth easily through our infirmity wax cold 3. That men may provoke one another by their example unto godliness and to the magnifying and praising of God Psa 22.22 4. That there may be preserved and maintained a consent and agreement in the Church in the Doctrine and Worship of God Eph. 4.11 12 13. 5. That the Church may be seen and heard among men and may be discerned from the other Blasphemous and Idolatrous multitude of men and that the Elect may be gathered to the true Church and the Reprobate be left the more excuseless Rom. 10.18 6. That God may apply himself unto our infirmity by teaching men by men 7. That God may shew his love towards men in that he vouchsafes to admit them to be Ministers of that great and weighty work which also the Son of God himself did administer 8. That by this exceeding love of God to us sons of men we might be won in all humility and thankfulness to receive the word and in obedience to practise the same in our life and conversation Our obedience towards the Ministery comprehendeth 1. Reverence that is an acknowledging of Gods Order and Will in the ordaining and maintaining of the Ministery and in the gathering of his Church by it that is a declaration both in words and deeds of this our acknowledgement and judgement of the Ministery 1 Cor. 4.7 2. Love whereby we gladly both frequent divine Assemblies and hear and learn the Doctrine of the Church and wish well unto the faithful Ministers of the Church not onely in respect of that duty of charity which we owe but also in respect of the Ministery which they discharge 3. Obedience in those things which are belonging to the Ministery whereunto belong the works of love towards God and our Neighbor even the whole life of a Christian which is that Spiritual and Moral Sabbath 4. Thankfulness that is such duties as tend to the preservation and maintenance of the Ministery that it may be honestly provided for for God will have his ministery to be maintained to the end of the world 5. Lenity and moderation in bearing with such infirmities of the Ministers as do not enormously or manifestly corrupt or hinder the Ministery and hurt the Church by offence 1 Tim. 5.19 It is the duty of all men to further the work of the Ministery and by all means to promote it which may be done by these means 1. By commending to God by Prayer the Ministery of his own Ordinance and that he would send able Ministers where they are wanting Matth. 9.38 and continue them where they are and by our thankfulness to him for bestowing this gift on us which he hath denyed to many places and people 2. By repenting of those sins which may hinder either the obtaining or continuing of it Isa 62.7 3. By making a reverend use of this gift of God in being subject unto it governed and reformed by it Heb. 13.7 4. By lamenting the state of the Church which is destitute or deprived of this gift Psal 74.9 5. By providing in time of vacancy sufficient men whom God must chuse before we make choyce of Patrons shall one day answer to God for the souls of such as perish through their default 6. By acknowledging our selves unworthy of so great a blessing and by giving up our whole selves unto God for it To despise and resist the Ministry of the word or the Ministers therein is to despise and resist even God himself 1. Because they come not in their own name neither do they discharge their own Message they are no other then the mouth of God they come not from themselves neither for themselves their Authority and Calling is from God 1 Cor. 3.5 2. God doth account all things done to them in the execution of their Ministery as done to himself Matth. 10.40 Let their prophane Persecutors of these Times seriously consider hereof The greater our means are to prevent sin the more we offend if we reject those means 1. Because such sin against knowledge having the word to instruct them and their own consciences to convince them knowledge maketh every sin the greater Luk. 2.47 Joh. 15.22 2. Because it argueth obstinacy and hardness of heart and wilfulness which maketh the sinner the more sinful The parallel of the Ministery of the word and Salt as it is comparatively set down in Mat. 5.13 1. Salt will bite and fret being applyed the nature thereof being hot and dry so the Law being applyed doth rip up mens hearts to make them see their sins it doth fret and bite them by the curse thereof to cause them to renounce themselves 2. Salt makes meat savory unto our taste so the
Gospel being preached and men thereby feeling their corruptions like rottenness in their souls may by the blessing of the Spirit be thereby seasoned with Graces and so reconciled unto God and made savory in his sight 3. Salt preserveth meats from putrifaction by drawing out of them superfluous moistness so the Law and the Gospel being continually dispensed sin and corruption may be daily mortified and consumed both in heart and life and expelled thence like superfluous humors In this calling of the Ministery there be especially four kindes of unsavory Salt 1. The blinde watchmen that have no knowledge and dumb dogs that cannot bark Isa 56.10 that is such as either cannot or will not dispense Gods word for the salvation of mens souls 2. Heretical teachers who preach false and damnable doctrine such as doth not season but poyson and destroy the soul Deut. 30.1 2. 2 Tim. 2.17 18. 3. Such as teach indeed true doctrine but misapply the same sowing pillows under the elbows of the wicked having smooth tongues in respect of sin yet are full of close invectives against the better and godlier sort 4. Such who though they teach the truth and generally apply it well do yet lead scandalous lives whereby their unsavory conversation hindreth the seasoning vertue of the word There are six conditions required to the Calling of a Minister 1. That he feel within himself an inward Calling 2. That he be of a good Conversation 3. That he be of sound Doctrine 4. That he be apt to teach 5. That he be lawfully chosen of the Church 6. That he perform his Office diligently toward the flock committed to his charge The properties of godly Pastors 1. They must be diligent to know the state of their flocks and to take heed to their herds Prov. 27.23 24. 2. They must not be discouraged by the ungodly speeches and venomous tongues of wicked men thereby to grow negligent in their functions 3. They must not be afraid of the faces and frowns of men Ezek. 3.8 9. Jer. 1.17 4. They must wisely apply the word to the necessity capacity and understanding of all and giving to every one his portion of Spiritual nourishment in due season In like maner the duties and functions of Ministers are 1. Faithfully to propound and deliver the true and sound Doctrine of God that the Church may know and understand it 2. Rightly to administer the Sacraments 3. To go before and shine unto the Church by the example of Christian life and conversation 4. To give diligent attendance unto their flock 5. To yield their service in such judgements as are expressed by the Church 6. To take care that regard and respect be had of the Poor Ministers must have these three things in some measure at least 1. A care to win the people a desire to convert them and an earnest hunger and thirst after their salvation 2. They must labor earnestly to work their conversion and not cease or hold their peace when they see them untoward but hold on in a constant course 3. They must testifie their sorrow for their people mourn for the hardness of their hearts be heartily grieved to see their unprofitableness Why all Ministers must be proved tryed before they be admitted to this sacred function 1. Because they have the price of the blood of Christ committed unto them Acts 20.28 2. Because there are many subtile deceivers that transform themselves into Angels of light 2 Cor. 11.13 14. 3. The office of Deacons was a function of less duty in the Church yet they were not to be admitted without due tryal and examination Acts 6.3 4. It makes them the more regarded and better accepted ever as the Ministers of Jesus Christ and it will procure more authority to their person 5. It will shut the door of this sacred function against all insufficient and unworthy presumers that run before they are sent The Titles given to Ministers in the holy Scripture whence appears the excellency and the weighty charge of their Function The Salt of the earth The Builders of Christs body The co-workers of God The embassadors of Christ 2 Cor. 5.20 The stewards of the house Tit. 1.7 The fathers of the Church 1 Cor. 4.15 Fishers of men Mat. 4.19 The Ministers of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.6 The Builders of the Temple The Shepherds of the sheep Eph. 4.11 The Planters and waterers of the Garden 1 Cor. 3.6 7. The Watchmen of the City Ezek. 33.7 Heb. 13.17 The Trumpeters of the Host and Stars of the firmament Rev. 1.20 Dan. 12.3 The Ministers of the Word must be men of sobriety constancy piety humility patience stayedness wisdom judgement diligence courage gravity and moderation of all their affections 1. Because it appears they have many Titles given them in Scripture every one whereof carrieth some instruction and admonition with it to the Conscience 2. Because the Ministery is a high Calling of great importance and worthiness standing up not onely in the place of the people to offer up their prayers to God but in the room of God to declare his will to them 3. Lest their Calling be blemished and their Ministery reprehended if in their profession they adorn not the Gospel by their unblameable walking 4. Because they are to utter the word of wisdom whereby both themselves and their hearers shall be made wise unto salvation They ought principally and in the first place to look to themselves and that for these Reasons 1. Because unless they be doers as well as speakers they utter words with their own tongues that shall condemn themselves not unlike Vriah who carried about him a Letter to further and procure his own death 2. They cannot with comfort and conscience preach to others unless in their own persons they be practisers of those things they teach they may save others themselves they cannot 3. Such as are teachers and not doers do seduce the people pulling down by the left hand of evil life faster then they build up by the right hand of wholesom Doctrine They ought not to withhold the delivery of the word they must not give over though they see no fruit at all to proceed of their labors 1. Because they know not when God may be pleased to bless their labors and hear their prayers and save the souls of those that are rebellious against him 2 Tim. 2.24 25 26. 2. They have the example of God he is patient and beareth long with the vessels of wrath as Christ saith of Jerusalem Mat. 23.37 3. Because they shall have no less recompence if they be fonnd faithful in their Calling then if they had gained many thousand souls unto God 2 Cor. 2.15 4. He that holdeth not out unto the end makes all his former pains prove but lost labor and fails in the discharge of his Calling for the word may be the savor of life unto him though the savor of death unto others that carelesly neglect or obstinately resist the
Gods love towards us That we shall be heard for Christ the Mediators sake And it hath the chief place among Good Works yielding us the greatest testimony of our Salvation by enabling us to perform other good Duties Or thus Prayer is a Petition joyned with an ardent and earnest desire whether uttered in words or not uttered whereby we ask of the true God revealed in his Word those things which he hath commanded to be asked of him proceeding from an acknowledgement of our necessity and misery with humility repentance and confession of our own unworthiness made in true conversion unto God and in a confidence and sure trust in Gods Promises for Christs sake our Mediator For the right understanding of which Promises this Rule must be remembred That the Promises of God are not made directly to the work of Prayer but to the person that prayeth and yet not to him simply as he doth this good action of Prayer but as he is in Christ for whose Merits sake the Promise is accomplished whereby it is most evident That our Prayer is not the cause of the blessings we receive from God but onely a way and instrument in and by which God conveyeth his blessings unto his children in whom is required in Prayer a special particular faith to apply to themselves the Promise of God concerning that thing which they ask in Prayer which special faith we can never bring with us in Prayer unless we have a special saving faith whereby we believe our reconciliation with God in Christ So that the unfained desire of a touched heart is a Prayer in acceptance before God though knowledge memory and utterance to frame and conceive a form of Prayer in words be wanting Psal 10.17 for Prayer is not a work of the memory or a work of the wit but the work of a sanctified heart it is the work of Gods Spirit the very essence whereof consisteth in making known the inward desires 1 Sam. 1.15 Psal 62.8 always in the mediation of Christ by reason of the infinite Majesty of God and sinfulness of the creature with awful fear and inward reverence manifested with seemly words if it be oral Prayer befitting our matter not over-curious nor careless with reverent Psal 95.2 6. and humble gesture Ezra 9.5 6. to express which kneeling is most proper Paul useth it Eph. 3.14 Acts 2.30 if we cannot conveniently kneel then stand so did the poor humble Publican when he prayed Luke 18.13 other gestures when no necessity requireth argue little reverence less humility we must also come in assurance of faith to be heard and accepted Heb. 10.22 Jam. 1.6 which is strengthned by meditation on the Promises concerning such things as we pray for 2 Sam. 7.27 28. which full assurance as a lusty gale of wind carrieth our Prayers with full fail to heaven the desired Haven wavering and doubting like opposite uncertain winds carry them to some other place and so they return without speeding The supplicant must also be lowly in minde and holy in life Isa 1.15 the blinde man knew God heard not impenitents Joh. 9.31 he must have a true understanding sense and earnest desire of what he prays for in sincerity of heart and fervency of spirit Jam. 5.16 for Prayer ascends no higher then faith and fervor of Spirit carry it Yet notwithstanding which earnestness and fervency in Prayer it may be no true Prayer as the wicked mans prayer made in his extremity which is termed but howling Hosea 7.14 So a thief is earnest with a Judge to spare him but this is but carnal earnestness Thus God takes our prayers by weight not by number not by labor not by earnestness which is a thing that may come from the flesh but if it come from his Spirit he accepts it and then though we may have a secret answer to our prayers yet may we wait long before the thing it self be given us but then God continues a secret strength to us that we may wait and hold out yea though we never have any request in this world granted yet we must think this sufficient that we can and do pray unto God for by whose Grace have we alway continued in prayer but by the gift and Grace of God God indeed answers some sooner some later some he answers quickly and some he defers longer but importunity will prevail with him so as thou shalt have Christ and after thou hast him thou must look to the Priviledges thou hast by him onely remembring as the priviledges thou hast by him so the condition of after-obedience For Prayer is the means which God hath sanctified to unlock the closet of his Graces and he being the Fountain of all Blessings if we use not Prayer aright it may be truly said to us as the woman of Samaria spoke Joh. 4.11 Thou hast nothing to draw with and the well is deep from whence therefore canst thou have that living water yea what the Lord did miraculously to Stephen when he opened the heavens and shewed himself to the outward view that he doth ordinarily to the Saints in prayer he shews himself to their mindes and inward affections Touching the time of Prayer if it be the secret and lifting up of the heart to God called Ejaculation then pray continually pray without ceasing Eph. 6. but if it be a set and solemn prayer either in private or in the Congregation the Word of God appoints no precise hour for this kinde because now there is no difference between time and time in regard of Conscience for performing the worship of God and the duties of Religion the Lords-day onely excepted In the New Testament the distinction of days and hours is taken away Paul was afraid of the Galatians because they made difference of days times moneths and years in respect of holiness and Religion Gal. 4. And as touching the place of Prayer in regard of Conscience Holiness and Religion all places are equal and alike in the New Testament since the coming of Christ the house or field is holy as the Church and if we pray in either of them as we ought our prayer is as acceptable to God as that which is made in the Church for now the days are come foretold by the Prophet Mal. 1.11 which Paul expounds 1 Tim. 2.8 yet nevertheless for order decency and quietness sake publike prayer is to be made in publike places as Churches and Chappels appointed for that use But undenyable it is that all places are alike in respect of Gods presence and of his hearing for he is Omnipresent wheresoever a man hath occasion to pray there God is which concerns them to consider who make the Church a more holy place for prayer then other-where and therefore reserve all or most of their prayers till they come thither forgetting that wheresover two or three of the faithful are gathered together there God is in the midst of them for now difference of place in respect of Gods presence is
of right confession of sins in prayer to God 1. We must impartially confess to God to the best of our knowledge and remembrance our special and particular sins 2. We must set out our sins in their right colours making them appear vile and heinous as they are 3. It must proceed from the heart Jer. 31.18 hypocritical confession is no confession 4. We must confess our sins with an hatred of them for many hypocrites confess like Judas their particular sins but it is of custom without conscience or of passion without remorse or of fear without change whereas the sins that are in us should more grieve us then the Judgements that are upon us 5. Our confession must not be extorted or enforced but freely and willingly performed otherwise it is not true confession 6. In our confession this must be observed That we ought not so far to dwell upon the meditation of our sins that we forget the mercies of God and faith in his Promises and forgiveness of our sins 7. It belongeth to us and our confession ever to joyn prayer to God for the pardon of our sins without which all is vain 8. We ought so to confess our sins as that we have also a full purpose to leave and forsake them we may not think to finde mercy so long as we continue in that for which we crave it The vain repetitions in prayer condemned by our Savior Christ Mat. 6.7 comprehend many abuses in the maner of prayer viz. 1. Meer babling when words are used for prayer which contain neither requests unto God nor giving of thanks nor confession Such is the use of the Ave-Maria or the Angel Gabriels Salutation to the Virgin Mary yea the rehearsal of the Ten Commandments and of the Creed for Prayers is but meer babling 2. Ignorance in prayer as prayer in an unknown tongue and thus many sin that use the Lords Prayer without understanding of the words 3. Cold and dull praying when the lips draw near unto God but the heart not affected therewith 4. Superstitious prayers when as Gods worship is measured out by set numbers This opinion takes place with our common people for they think that God is served by the work done if the words be said they think all is well 5. Rash praying without due preparation when men pray onely on the sudden by the motion of the Spirit as they call it too many are of this minde as allowing no set form of prayer to any sort of people but however conceived prayer be most comfortable yet without due preparation of the heart it is most subject to vain repetitions 6. All vain and superfluous speech in any maner of Invocation wherein the heart is not affected according to the will of God Perseverence in prayer is grounded on Gods wise disposing Providence and is necessary to all faithful Christians for these Reasons 1. Because the Sacrifice of true prayer is a sweet and delightsom Sacrifice to God Heb. 13.15 16. 2. God thus tryeth the faith and patience of his Saints whether they can and will continue to wait upon him 3. By perseverance prayers move more earnest and fervent but as for cold prayers God will spew them out Rev. 3.16 4. God thus moveth his children to search their hearts to see if they can finde any cause in them why God heareth them not Jos 7.6 c. 5. God doth thus commend his blessings so much the more unto us for good things much desired oft craved long expected are the more welcome when they are obtained and we moved to be the more thankful for them Prov. 13.12 The Signs of extraordinary ardency in prayer are such as these viz. 1. Extraordinary distemper of the body thus was it with Christ Luke 22.44 and Nehemiah Neh. 2.2 2. Unusual motion of the parts of the body as in Hannah 1 Sam. 1.13 in Solomon 1 Kings 8.22 in the Publican Luke 18.13 and in Christ himself Mark 14.35 3. Deep sighing and groans as in David Psal 38.9 The sighs of the Spirit are inexpressible Rom. 8.26 4. Loud crying David roared all the day Psal 32.3 Christ cryed with a loud voyce Mat. 27.46 5. Often inculcating and repeating the same petition Thus did Christ Mat. 26.39 42 44. So did Daniel Dan. 9.18 19. This is far from babling or vain repetitions 6. Tears these Christ poured forth Heb. 5.7 So did the sinful woman Luke 7.38 yet tears simply in themselves are not acceptable to God but onely as they are Signs of true Prayer when they proceed from a broken heart and a contrite Spirit The faults or abuses in our prayers viz. 1. When we make our prayers unto any other then God or unto him in any other name then in Christ 2. When the power or grace of God is tyed to some certain prayers to a certain number or set form 3. When God is prayed to onely with the mouth without the heart 4. When any prays unto God with a vain opinion of his own righteousness 5. When any impenitent person or that laboreth not to amend his life prayeth 6. When a man prayeth without faith The duties required after Prayer viz. 1. A particular faith whereby he that prayeth must be assured that his particular request shall be granted 2. We must with patience and hope expect the fulfilling of our requests 3. We must use all good means whereby we may shun those things we pray against or attain to these blessings and graces we pray for we must do and practice that which we pray for and use all lawful means that we can to obtain it 4. We must take heed of fainting or growing weary but labor to persevere and hold out which implieth these three things viz. 1. When we cleave to Christ constantly 2. When we will take no denyal 3. When we are content to wait in prayer and not give over We are bound to desire the prayers of others for these Reasons 1. For the testification of the earnestness of our desire 2. To shew that we acknowledge a Communion of Saints which perform mutual duties one to another 3. We manifest a sense of our own weakness yea much humility 4. We maintain mutual love which consisteth not onely in offering and doing kindenesses but also in craving and accepting the like We are also bound to pray for others as well as our selves Because 1. Therein we acknowledge God to be not onely our own Father but also the common Father of others in which Christ taught us to say Our Father 2. Hereby we perform a duty of Love one of the most principal duties that be it is an act both of Charity and Justice they which neglect it sin 1 Sam. 12.13 3. There is no one thing wherein and whereby we can be more beneficial and do more good to any then in and by faithful and fervent prayer They are justly to be reproved who pray not for others and they are of three sorts viz. 1. Such as will take
and upbraideth not 6. To be a God true of his Promises therefore we crave the accomplishing of them 4. The necessity of prayer for it is the means which God hath appointed to obtain every good thing Mat. 7.7 Jam. 4.7 5. The utility or profit we receive by this duty of Prayer which is exceeding much and very beneficial to us many ways as 1. To obtain every good thing Christ hath passed his most certain and general Promise for it Joh. 16.23 2. To prevent Judgements threatned Jer. 26.19 and remove them being inflicted Jam. 5.18 3. To preserve nourish and strengthen in us all Spiritual graces Col. 1.9 c. 4. To obtain pardon and remission of sins Acts 8.22 5. To subdue in us the power of sin Psal 19.13 experience can well witness this to those that use prayer 6. To sanctifie all Gods creatures to our use and whatever we do 1 Tim. 4.5 usurpers are they that use them otherwise 6. The efficacy thereof for it prevaileth over all Creatures reasonable or unreasonable and of reasonable both visible as Man and invisible as Angels whether evil or good yea it prevaileth with God himself Examples of all which may be these Daniel by prayer stopped the mouthes of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Davids prayer turned Achitophels counsel into foolishness 2 Sam. 15.31 Thereby the Devil even when he is surest possessed is cast out Mat. 17.21 At Elisha's prayer a mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about him 2 Kings 6.17 By prayer Jacob had power over the Angel which was called The Angel of the Covenant Christ Jesus true God Hos 12.4 who therefore was called Israel because he prevailed with God Gen. 32.28 7. The great honor thereof whereby the Saints have a free access to the glorious Throne of Grace The Romish Church doth neither know nor teach nor practice the duty of prayer aright and that for these Reasons 1. They pray not in knowledge but in a strange tongue and allow of Ignorance as the Mother of Devotion 2. They commend doubting and speak against Assurance and so pray not in faith nor obedience 3. They pray not in humility for mercy for their sins for they think to merit by their prayers 4. They direct not their prayers to God onely in the name of Christ but to God and his Saints making the Virgin Mary their Mediatress In the close of all take this seasonable direction with thee touching praying for or against our Enemies We may lawfully pray against the evil cause that an evil man maintaineth but not against the person of that evil man Now if any extraordinary man hath truly and indeed the Spirit of discerning to judge whether Gods and his enemies be incurable and hath a pure zeal to Gods honor therein he may lawfully pray against such their very persons as David did in the 109 Psalm Prayer the Souls Incense sent by faith to God Attracts his Blessings and diverts his Rod It does acquaint us with the Lord and makes A trembling Terror cease th' Infernal Snakes It makes the weak victorious yea the Sun Stand still Go back It stays a Plague begun When th' Earth had in a Burning-Feaver layen Full three years space it caus'd a gracious Rain It wings the Soul for that Celestial good Which eye ear heart ne're saw heard understood §. 2. The Lords Prayer VVE must imitate and follow the matter and form of the Lords Prayer in all our prayers but are not so tyed to the very words of this Prayer but that we may freely use them or other words at our pleasure for our Savior himself oft-times prayed in other words and so did the Apostles neither is there such vertue as that by the bare repetition of them we can binde God to grant our requests or that we should never pray in other words But as the Ten Commandments contain all things to be done of us the Creed all things to be believed by us so the Lords Prayer doth comprehend all things to be asked by us of Almighty God Some think it is to be used onely as a Direction by which we may learn how and what to pray and that the words themselves are not to be used others think it the onely Prayer to be used at all times and upon all occasions The former opinion grounds it self on Mat. 6.9 the latter on Luke 11.2 The truth is the use of this Prayer is not onely to direct for matter or for words but for both but in praying the very words take heed lest the tongue run without the heart as it must needs do in those that ceremoniously rehearse them making haste to have done before they ever truly began Wherefore to pray these words rightly he that prayeth must in some convenient measure understand them and have his minde taken up with them in the uttering the heart still conveying it self into the meaning of every petition and if thus this Prayer be said it is well used alone or added to other prayer Now we must know That other prayers though differing from this in order yet if consonant thereto in matter may also be used by us for otherwise Paul in his Epistles would not have used such variety of order and maner in thanksgivings requests and deprecations for his Spiritual children for himself and for the whole Church So that though this order be generally to be followed yet neither is it always necessary nor yet is it a swerving from this Direction though some of these petitions onely be asked in some of our prayers and others be omitted But the error is when we go beyond the Rules here given us doting too much upon worldly things or having proud unfaithful or malicious hearts we make our prayers the labor of polluted lips In the Lords prayer are contained 1. A preface and therein a compellation Our Father wherein seven things are to be considered 1. Who is to be called upon that is God whom we are to call by the Name of Father wherein we must observe That Father here is not the Name of one Person onely but of the whole Essence 2. That God will hear such as call upon him because he is their Father 3. That he is able to grant and answer their requests for he is in heaven 4. Who ought and also are able to pray aright and they are the Sons of God 5. That Faith is here required for by Faith we become the Sons of God 6. Through whom we must pray that is in the Name of the onely begotten Son of God 7. The difference betwixt the prayers of Christians and of Turks or Jews for ours are made by faith in Christ 2. Six requests viz. 1. Hallowed be c. which is then done when the true knowledge and glory of God is celebrated by men 2. Thy Kingdom c. that is let thy Church be extended multiplied preserved enlarged and guided by thy Spirit 3. Thy will be c. which is then done when
obedience towards his Father in offering himself a Sacrifice for us 2. Us 1. By imputing his own Righteousness 2. By a real communicating of his holiness which is wrought by the Holy Ghost When we desire that the Name of God may be sanctified or hallowed we desire 1. That God would enlighten us with the knowledge of his holiness 2. That he would give us a minde to profess the same in words and deeds or that he would give us Faith and Repentance whereby we may glorifie him and sever him from Idols or prophane things or that he would new frame and regenerate us By Knowledge By Profession By Conformity 3. That he would give us a minde to profess that holiness of his Divine Name to his own praise and glory Again to hallow or sanctifie signifies 1. The purifying of a thing which before was corrupt and unholy Thus mystically it was shewed to Peter that God had sanctified the Gentiles Acts 10.15 2. The seperating of any thing common to an holy use Thus Aaron and his sons are said to be sanctified and their vestments and the vessels of the Temple 3. The acknowledging of a thing to be holy and declaring it by giving all due observance and respect thereunto so that the holiness thereof may be made more famous and notable among all men And thus in this sense we do pray Hallowed be thy Name whether we do speak of thy Titles behold thy Creatures and works of Providence receive thy blessings or be conversant in the exercises of thy Word and Sacraments or of any other Divine Ordinances Gods Name is generally sanctified or hallowed by us these five ways 1. That we sing his praises read his word and speak reverently of him 2. That in adversity he be praised of us both in heart and mouth 3. That so oft as need shall require we make a free confession of his Truth and lead a life agreeable to the same confession 4. That we pray unto him and from our heart give him thanks 5. That when it shall be necessary we lawfully swear by his Name More specially thus Gods Name is hallowed by us 1. In himself and that by three actions 1. When we conceive of God in our mindes and acknowledge him as he hath revealed himself in his Word 2. When we love the Lord above all fear him above all and put our whole trust in him in all estates 3. When we praise and laud the Name of God for his infinite goodness to us 2. In his word and that three ways 1. When we acknowledge the Wisdom Mercy and Power of God in it 2. When we have a reverent estimation of the Word in regard of Gods Image therein 3. When we use it in a sanctified and holy maner giving our selves to be ruled and guided thereby 3. In his Creatures by three special actions 1. When we acknowledge the wisdom of God and his powerful hand in every Creature 2. When we have a reverent estimation of the Creatures and use them in Christian sobriety in regard of the stamp of Gods power and wisdom which appeareth in them 3. When we sanctifie the moderate use of them by the Word and Prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 This Petition in the Lords Prayer as every one of the other containeth 1. A Supplication That we and all the people of God may glorifie the holy Name of God in our affections loving him with all our hearts with all our souls and with all our might fearing him above all and putting our whole trust in him in our Devotion with pure mindes lifted up to him onely to pray and in our speeches swearing rightly and reverently by his Name when we are required thereto and never making mention of him but with high reverence and in all our natural and civil actions 2. A Deprecation against the sins contrary to the said Duties as Self-love and of the world Fear of men Trust in the Arm of Flesh Corrupt worshipping of God Neglect of his worship Errors in speech to the dishonor of his Name Cursings Swearings Perjuries Neglect of Vows Giving Gods honor to Creatures Swearing by them also Errors in action and lastly all thinking or speaking unworthily of the Works of God by murmuring cavilling objecting against them or slighting them as things falling out by Chance or Fortune and for strength to overcome all these Corruptions we pray Hallowed be thy Name 3. A Thanksgiving which is for these Corruptions mortified and purged and for the contrary revived and setled to the praise of Gods Name when in deed and in truth we finde them to our comfort in some measure in our hearts and for his grace in other men by whom his Name hath also glory whilest they consent together with us in things tending to the honoring of God All which in this first petition may be abbreviated thus 1. The Supplication we pray thee Let thy Name be hallowed 2. The Deprecation we pray thee Let not thy Name be unhallowed 3. The Thanksgiving we thank thee for disposing us to the manifying and giving glory to thy grace and goodness and so Let thy Name be hallowed that is Suffer not Sin Satan or the World to raign in us but by thy Word and Spirit rule in our hearts giving us grace to be guided thereby in all our ways The wants which we bewail in this Petition 1. Our own and others pride of heart that we labor more for our own credit then Gods glory Luke 18.11 2. Our hardness of heart that we cannot as we ought see Gods glory in his Creatures Mark 6.52 3. Our unthankfulness for his many favors to mankinde above all creatures Psal 51.15 4. Our impiety that in our lives we dishonor God Psal 119.136 In this Petition we are taught earnestly to desire of God those Spiritual Graces which enable us to glorisie his Name in our selves and others which are these especially 1. The true knowledge of God as he hath revealed himself in his Word and Works 2. To sanctifie God in our hearts by loving fearing and trusting in him above all 3. The Calves of our lips which is a Sacrifice of praise to God for all his mercies Psal 50.23 4. To see Gods hand in all his Works how mighty wise just and gracious the Lord is 5. To reverence the works of God for his Mercy Justice Power c. appearing in them 6. To use all his Creatures reverently sanctifying the same unto our selves by the word and prayer As we pray that Gods Name may be hallowed so we must be careful to sanctifie the same in our Conversation For which end we must have regard to these three things 1. That our lives be unblameable not tainted with any sin Away therefore with Idolatry blasphemous Oathes cursed speeches with Sabbath-breaking and all other sins against the second Table 2. We must propound the right end of our life every day in our Calling and Conversation viz. Gods glory and not our own praise profit pleasure
to pray for it as children ravished with the desire of Gods glory Thus we pray not here to perform obedience equal in measure and degree of perfection to the obedience of the blessed Angels and glorified Saints in heaven but such as is like unto it for this note of Comparison here imports a likeness and resemblance not equality in doing the will of God chearfully without murmuring speedily without delaying generally without omitting sincerely without dissembling constantly without forbearing and perfectly without halting even as the Saints and Angels in heaven Now as many as truly be in Gods Kingdom cannot but thus immediately do Gods will for obedience to Gods will is an effectual sign that the kingdom of God is in us 1 Joh. 1.3 into which not every one that saith Lord Lord shall enter but such alone whose actions say Thy will be done Matth. 7.21 Gods will is either Secret or Revealed according to that of Moses The secret things of the Lord belong unto the Lord but 〈◊〉 revealed to us 〈◊〉 our children Yea we must know That Gods will is onely one considered in it self as God is one but for our understanding it may be thus distinguished 1. His absolute or secret will which is the will of his good pleasure whereby according to his eternal Counsel he determines all things what shall be done or what shall not be done and in what maner and is touching the number of those that shall be saved The Day of Judgement The time of the Jews Conversion The final confusion of Antichrist And particular estates of other men The particular afflictions and crosses appointed for us The day of our death and such like This absolute will extendeth over all Creatures and over all their actions Eph. 1.11 Mat. 10.26 and is hidden from us till he reveal it by the event which being his secret will because unknown and therefore uncertain to us we may not rashly presume on for in these things we here pray That we may rest contented in the Lords good pleasure 2. His revealed will being whatsoever is manifested in his word and works to be his will concerning both faith and practice This we are precisely to follow for here we pray that it may be answerably done as it is required Thy will that is not my will thy will onely not thine and mine also betwixt which two there is no proportion thy will both for matter and maner and thy will though contrary unto or against my will As it is in Heaven as by the Inbitants of heaven that are free from all temptations and discouragements When we say Thy will be done it is not meant of the absolute or secret will but of the revealed will of God and that for these Reasons 1. Because the Absolute will of God is alway done and cannot be resisted Isa 46.10 Rom. 9.19 but his Revealed will is generally transgressed by men who do that which seemeth good in their own eyes notwithstanding Gods revealed will to the contrary 2. Because a man may dissent from the absolute and secret will of God without sinning so be it he still submit himself to the will of God resting therein when it is revealed Thus Abraham prayed for the safety of Sodom yet submissively which God willed and decreed to destroy Gen. 18.23 27. and David for the life of his childe which God would have to dye 2 Sam. 12.16 24. and our Savior Christ for the removal of that Cup which God had absolutely decreed that he should drink of Mat. 26.39 yet submitting his will unto his Fathers with all chearfulness of obedience The special Branches of Gods revealed Will 1. The Conversion of a sinner Ezek. 33.11 and obedience to his Commandments 2. That we deny our selves and relye wholly on our Savior Christ for salvation Joh. 6.40 3. Our Sanctification in Soul in Body and in Spirit 1 Thess 4.3 4. That every one that lives in the Church of God beside his general calling of a Christian should have a particular Calling to live in wherein he must seek the glory of God in the good of others 1 Cor. 7.20 24. and love our Brethren Joh. 13.14 15. 5. To subject our selves unto the hand of God in all crosses and afflictions whatsoever Acts 21.14 to labor for the knowledge of Gods will Joh. 17.3 and for holiness of life Eph. 1.4 Hence it appears what the will of God signifies viz. 1. The Commandment of God Psal 103.21 2. Events or rather Gods Decree concerning Events Mat. 26.39 Isa 46.10 Be done There be two degrees of doing Gods will 1. Evangelical obedience prescribed in the Gospel that is a sincere endeavor according to all the power of grace that God hath given us to do the will of God and this especially is here meant 2. Legal commanded in the Law that is a perfect fulfilling of the Law and of Gods will but this is not attained to in this life Of perfections there are three kindes viz. 1. A perfection of Sincerity which was in Hezekiahs obedience Isa 38.3 2. A perfection of Parts which was in Zachary and Elizabeths obedience Luke 1.6 3. A perfection of Degrees which was onely in the first and second Adam and is now onely in the holy Angels In earth as it is in heaven which in this Petition our Savior Christ addeth 1. To prescribe and draw us a patern of obedience and example of perfection to imitate in likeness and resemblance though we cannot in equality which likeness stands in these four things especially 1. In chearfulness and willingness for the Angels readily obey Gods commands 2. In priority the Angels prefer to do the will of God before all other things 3. In speed and quickness without delay or slackness 4. In faithfulness and sincerity 2. That by this desire of perfection we may be assured that God will give us here the beginning and the perfection in the life to come That Gods wil may be done in this Petition we desire 1. That we may have grace to deny our selves our own wills and affections which Self-denyal consisteth of two parts viz. 1. That we may be ready to renounce all our affections which are disagreeing from the Law of God 2. That we may be ready to execute the will of God willingly submitting our selves thereto in all things 2. That Gods word may be Preached diligently and faithfully because his will is revealed therein and that God would incline and dispose our hearts towards his holy word that we may not onely know but obey Gods revealed will Psal 119.27,36 3. That Magistrates in a Commonwealth and Masters in a Family see to the practice of doing Gods will in the performance of the duty and calling both of all in general and of each in several that we may rightly and duly perform the duty committed unto us whether common or proper 4. That every one for himself may walk in the obedience of God without pride in prosperity and without murmuring in
our own Righteousness 6. Malice and thirsting after revenge when injury hath been offered us To prevent and avoid which we must consider 1. How much the Lord hath forgiven us for Christs sake 2. That both the Lord Jesus and all holy men have forgiven and prayed for their enemies the Devil alone is an implacable enemy 3. That the way of grace is thus stopped up and consequently the way of glory The Thanksgiving of this Petition is For illumination to see our sins for a sight and sense of our sins and for blindeness Spiritual expelled for Sanctification to turn us from sin for hard hearts mollified and for the extremes and bars of Grace Despair and Presumption removed for Justification to deliver us by the death of Christ from all sin for Love abounding where offences against us abound and for Malice banished and purged out of us that howsoever we sustain many grievous wrongs at the hands of men yet are we contented yea chearfully willing to forgive them all even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven us The Moral Law doth to Obedience binde The Vniversal Race of all Mankinde Which not perform'd by us we must endure The penal Statute of the Forfeiture ' Less he who as our blessed Surety stood Cancel the Obligation with his Blood This for the Faithful's done 't is now our part To Cancel to remit with all our heart Others their Debts that we for ours ne're may Be call'd t' Account at the Grand Audit-Day §. 10. And lead us not into Temptation but deliver us from evil THis Petition in order is immediately subjoyned after the other craving the pardon of sin to teach us That this is not the onely care of Christians to seek to have sins pardoned but for the time to come earnestly to strive against and resist it the Christian mans life being a continual warfare So that there be two Petitions for the soul but one for the body teaching us That our care for the estate Spiritual ought to be double to our care for things Temporal Lead us not into Temptation but c. that is Suffer us not to be tempted above our power or so that either we sin or wholly revolt from thee but strengthen us in our Temptations by thy holy Spirit and deliver us from evil as the cause thereof wherein we pray That the Lord would not suffer us to be carried away by the Temptations of the World the Flesh or the Devil to the committing of sin but that he would deliver us from the evil of all Temptations both of sin and damnation Lead us not into Temptation which we cannot bear so Augustine Redeem us from evil that we be not carried by Temptations so Calvin And we pray thus not that we may always be free which cannot be but that we may not be overwhelmed overcome and made subject to Temptations when we are by them assaulted But deliver us from evil that is Withdraw not thy Grace from us leave us not to our own lusts neither deliver us over to Satan to be hardned but in all assaults stand thou by us that our faith may not fail and deliver us from the evil both of sin and punishment So that the meaning hereof may be this O Lord we are every way subject to Temptations and by our sins we deserve to be left therein to the malice of Satan and to the power of our own Corruptions yet we beseech thee not to forsake us in any Temptation but give an happy issue thereto still upholding us by thy Grace Now here we must observe That God is said to lead a man into Temptation onely as Temptation is a punishment of sin and onely by permission leaving the party to himself and Satans malice for some former transgression For God tempteth no man to destroy him or to cause him to sin but to try and exercise his Graces in him wherefore this Petition which Christ taught us speaketh not simply of all tryal and manifestation of our faith and godliness unto which David offered himself of his own accord Psal 26. For God tempteth not to evil but man when he is tempted is tempted by his own evil concupiscence Jam. 1.13 14. The words themselves contain one onely Petition though some have thought otherwise consisting of two parts 1. The Petition it self Lead us not into Temptation or a Petition of delivery from a particular future evil 2. The Exposition thereof more general for delivery from all as well present as future evil There be two causes of temptations and consequently two sorts thereof 1. From God for the tryal of our faith godliness hope patience constancy and obedience by the Cross So God is said to have tempted Abraham Joseph Job and David This is good and holy when as God tempts a man which is an action of God whereby he proveth and tryeth man to make manifest unto man himself and unto others what is in his heart for God knoweth well enough before he tryeth him This is called Good both in respect of the Author which is God and in respect of the end which is the good of his servants And this we here pray not against 2. By the Devil our Flesh and wicked men which is every soliciting to sin which soliciting it self is also sin This is evil being a wicked motion allurement or perswasion arising partly from our own corruption and partly from the suggestion of the Devil whereby man is provoked to sin against God in the transgression of some Commandment Now by Nature man is prone to be tempted Gen. 31. Sin is a deceitful tempter Heb. 3.13 and Satan is a subtile cruel and diligent tempter 1 Pet. 5.8 And this is that we pray against in this Petition Temptations are of divers sorts viz. 1. Whereby God tryeth man 1 Kings 10.11 searching into his heart whether by affliction or otherwise for Reasons best known unto himself 2. Whereby man tempteth God as by murmuring and refusing to believe and to rest on his Providence without seeing evident present Signs of his goodness seeking after new miracles trusting in outward means prescribing God a time or maner of deliverance impatient at his corrections adventuring upon needless apparent dangers without warrant or burthening the faithful with vain and needless Traditions 3. Whereby man tempteth man seeking to circumvent him by trying him with politick devices Thus the Pharisees are said to have tempted Christ Mat. 22.18 4. Whereby man tempteth himself his corrupt heart alluring and drawing him to sin Jam. 1.14 5. Whereby the Devil tempteth man and provoketh him to sin From these two last Temptations of the Flesh and the Devil that is corrupt and evil motions of the minde we desire here to be delivered from the third we pray to be kept in the fourth Petition from the second in the second Petition From the first we pray not to be kept but rather that the Lord would try us and use all means he seeth best to
of God being mightier then all our Enemies which joyned with his Soveraignty and Goodness we need not fear though we were in the paws of Lyons or the mouth of the Grave 3. From his Glory which is the end or final cause of our Requests for we desire these things for his glory therefore will he grant whatsoever in our prayers may redound to his honor and glory 4. From the eternity of his Kingdom Power and Glory being for ever and ever therefore he cannot be weary of our prayers no time can period his goodness 5. From our confidence expressed in the last word Amen for the Lord will grant unto us whatsoever we believe shall be granted when we ask The Kingdom of God is twofold 1. The Kingdom of his Providence whereby he rules and governs all things in heaven and earth even the Devil and all his Angels and Instruments 2. The Kingdom of Grace whereby he governs his Church by his Word and Spirit and both these are here to be understood Further Gods kingdom in this place imports 1. That he is All-sufficient of himself to do all things whatsoever needing no help or instrument beside his Soveraign will Gen. 17.1 2. That he hath an absolute Soveraign Right Title and Interest to and in all things in heaven and earth 3. That he hath Soveraign Rule and Authority over all things in heaven and earth yea over Hell it self and all the powers and principalities thereof governing all things whatsoever as he pleaseth and bringing them into an absolute subjection The kingdom is here called God's and appropriated to him alone for these Reasons 1. To shew that God hath his Kingdom of himself and from himself alone thus the Kingdom of Grace and Providence are both his 2. To distinguish God from earthly Kings for though they have a Kingdom Power and Glory yet they have all these from God not of themselves and onely for a certain limited time but God hath them all of himself alone not from any other and that for ever and ever Thine is the Power that is Gods Power is his own of himself alone not received from any other to distinguish the true God from all Creatures who have it not of themselves but from God By power is meant an ability in God whereby he can do whatsoever he will For the better conceiving whereof observe these two things 1. That God is not onely powerful but even Power it self in regard of his Nature as he is Goodness Wisdom c. Angels and men are called powerful as receiving power from God but God onely is Power it self because his Nature is Infinite in power as in all his other Properties 2. That Power and Will in God are one and the same for our better conceiving of them they may be distinguished but in themselves they differ not for Gods willing of a thing is the effecting doing of it It is not so in us for we will many things that we cannot do but whatsoever God willeth that he doth By appropriating glory to God is here meant 1. That God hath made all things for his own glory Prov. 16.4 2. That whatsoever we ask are means of his glory Joh. 12.28 3. That the things we ask shall be referred to his glory 1 Cor. 10.31 The Reasons why Gods Kingdom Power and Glory is said to be for ever and ever 1. Because in themselves they are everlasting Psal 45.6 102.28 145.13 2. Because of us they should never be forgotten Psal 145.2 3. 3. To distinguish it from earthly Dominions all which have their periods both in Government and Governors Psal 119.96 Isa 40.6 4. To shew forth the dignity of Gods Church and his Children who have a Father whose Kingdom is everlasting and everlastingly shall raign with their Father in his Kingdom of Power Glory and Eternity Of this word Amen there is a double use 1. To express our desire and wish that we may be heard 2. To testifie our faith in the assurance of receiving those things that we crave both which are to be practised in prayer and are expressed by Christ Mat. 11.24 From the union of the word Amen with our Petitions we learn 1. That every childe of God may believe particularly and certainly the pardon of his own sins and endeavor to attain thereunto if as yet he cannot 2. That all prayer ought to be made in a known tongue for else the Assent and Affiance of the heart cannot be given together This Conclusion of the Lords Prayer thus conceived and understood is useful to us many ways 1. For a ground of trust and confidence in God in all distresses for as the Kingdom is his we are his Subjects and he is willing to help as the Power is his we are assured he is able to help us and as the Glory is his he will shew mercy to his people and hear their prayers Psal 50.15 2. To teach us that Prayer and Thanksgiving must alway go together 3. To shew us a way how to obtain our requests in prayer we must confess our own unworthiness and give all Praise Glory and Honor to God 4. To let the proudest of us know that God is to be feared above all Creatures 5. To move us to love God and to yield all chearful obedience to him The Reason why there is here mention made onely of these three Properties of God is as some think to point out the three Persons For the Kingdom is Christs 1 Cor. 15.35 Power the Holy Ghosts Rom. 15.13 19. and Glory the Fathers Rom. 6.4 though indeed we may not limit our conceit of them but understand them in prayer as of the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Godhead so of the Unity of the Godhead in the Trinity of Persons Our Father which in Heav'n art Thy Name still Be hallowed Thy Kingdom come Thy Will Be done in Earth as 't is in Heaven Give us This day our daily Bread And forgive us Our Trespasses as those forgive do we That Trespass against us And let 's not be Into Temptation led but deliver Vs from all evil For thine for ever The Kingdom Power and Glory is Amen The Kingdom Power and Glory is Amen CHAP. IV. §. 1. The Creed THe sum of those things which are to be believed are comprised in the Creed commonly called The Symbole of the Apostles because it is a token or profession whereby the Church with her Members is discerned from all her Enemies and from all other Sects This Symbole is a brief and summary form of Christian Doctrine or a brief sum or Confession of the Points of Christian Religion or Evangelical Doctrine the Articles whereof are the Square or Rule whereunto the Faith and Doctrine of all Orthodox and right believing Christians ought to agree This self-same Symbole is called also Catholick because there is but one Faith of all Christians and though there were new Symboles made as that of Athanasius of Nice of
the Father because he is the Fountain as of the Divinity of the Son and of the Holy Ghost so also of those Divine operations which he worketh and performeth by the Son and the Holy Ghost Now that God is we know many ways but chiefly by our own Consciences accusing us for secret sins which cannot be but unto an infinite wisdom that knows the most secret thoughts of the heart such as is or can be neither Man Devil nor Angel but God onely All the Doctrine concerning God is either 1. Of his Nature which is taught in the Law and Gospel 2. Of his Will which is seen and made manifest in His Commandments His Threatnings His Promises 3. Of his Works which are The Benefits The Judgements of his Will which are to be beheld in the Creation Fall Restoring of Man The devils believe there is a God and tremble if any Atheist hath less faith then they and doubt the truth thereof he may believe it from these Reasons though as he is not worthy any so the truth hereof is above all 1. The beautiful and goodly order of Nature beheld in the Creatures and frame of the great body of the world Rom. 1.20 2. The preservation and government of the world created Acts 14.17 3. The Nature and excellency of mans minde the soul of man endewed with excellent gifts of Understanding and Reason 4. From the notions of general Rules and Principles naturally engendred in the minde of man yea the natural notion of this Principle That God is 1. Because every one hath experience hereof in himself 2. All wise men confess it 3. All Nations consent in it 5. From the terrors of Conscience which are stricken in the mindes of the wicked after that they have sinned 6. The punishments of the wicked which they suffer besides the torments of Conscience 7. From Bodies Politick which are wisely ordered and regulated by Laws 8. From the order and nature of efficient causes and from the final causes of all things 9. From certain and evident foretellings and clear significations of future Events 10. From heroical and noble instincts of minde For what Reasons the voice of Nature concerning God is not wholly to be rejected or contemned by reason of the insufficiency thereof 1. God will also out of the Church bridle the lewd and dissolute by the testimonies which their Conscience and punishments give of his will Anger and Judgement and according to them also will he have the maners of men regulated 2. He will have mans Corruption and his own Justice made more perspicuous and clear in punishing them who stubbornly withstand the known truth 3. He will by natural testimonies mens Consciences shewing the imperfection thereof have men stirred up to seek the true God in the Church Acts 17.26 27. 4. He will have also them who are converted to him to be more confirmed by the consent of Nature and the Word as the often alleaging of Natural testimonies in the Scripture declareth 5. He will the imperfection of Natural knowledge being considered have mens ignorance concerning God acknowledged and his mercy magnified who discovereth and openeth himself in his Word There is nor can be but one God for these Reasons 1. The sufficient testimonies of Miracles and Prophesies and other works 2. His own Authority and Majesty which admitteth no fellows 3. That which is greatest perfection can be but one for the whole is perfecter then any part thereof 4. There can be but one chief God but one Omnipotent but one Infinite 5. There can be but one chief Cause and more Gods would be unperfect or superfluous How God doth describe himself in Exod. 34.6 viz. 1. He is Jehovah that is he is a constant friend to whomsoever he is a friend he is alway the same that is I am that I am that is whatsoever the Lord was from eternity the same he is to eternity there is no change in him 2. He is strong that is Almighty that is he hath all Excellency in him and that in the highest degree 3. He is Merciful exceeding pitiful exceeding ready to forgive though our sins be many and exceeding great None so ready to forgive as God for if he were as man if he were not God could he bear with us as he doth Jer. 3.2 4. He is Gracious that is though there be no worth found in us yet he is ready to do us good Now to be gracious is to do things freely when there is no motive for Grace is nothing but freeness 5. He is Long-suffering that is though we provoke him out of measure he continues patient we cannot weary him out 〈◊〉 his mercy endures for ever though our sins are often repeated yet he as often repeats his Mercies 6. He is abundant in Kindeness that is though he be so great a God as he is yet he is exceeding ready to bear with us he is not harsh but ready to grant what we ask according to his will 7. He is abundant in Truth that is we shall finde him as good as his word he is engaged we have many Promises he hath made us nay abundant in Truth that is his performances exceed they run-over he will be better then his word whatsoever he hath said he will more then do it 8. He is a God reserving mercy for Thousands that is when any of us do him faithful service he cannot content himself to do good to our own persons but to our Children and to our Generation So Davids love extended not to Barzillai and Jonathan onely but to their posterity also 9. He is a God forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin Those three words are put in that we may know he forgives sins of all sorts and signifie That he is still and still forgiving Iniquity Transgression and Sin God is said to be 1. An Essence that is a thing which 1. Hath his Being from none but from himself 2. Is preserved or sustained of none but subsisteth by himself 3. Is necessarily 4. Is the onely Cause unto all other things of their Being 2. Spiritual 1. Because he is Incorporeal as being Infinite and Indivisible 2. Because he is Insensible as experience sufficiently manifesteth 3. Because both himself liveth and is the Author of all life both Corporal and Spiritual 3. Intelligent 1. Because he is the cause both of the minde of man and of the notions shining in it and also of the order which is in the nature of things and Common-weals 2. Because all intelligence or understanding of the Creature cometh from him both in respect of the faculty as in respect of the operation 4. E●ternal without beginning or end of Being Psal 90.2 and is so to us that we may oppose the certain hope of eternal blessings grounded upon his Eternity against the shortness of mortal life and against the frailty of mans condition 5. Other from all his Creatures which we must hold 1. Against Philosophers who will have the World or Nature
it self to be God 2. Against those who imagine the Creatures either all or some to spring from the very Essence or Nature of God deriving it self as they speak into others by propagation 3. That all prophane unworthy and idolatrous cogitations of God may be excluded 4. Because there can neither be nor be imagined any similitude between a finite and an Infinite Nature 6. Incomprehensible or Immense for 1. He cannot be comprehended in the cogitation of any creature 2. The Deity cannot be comprehended or circumscribed in place in space or any limits that is his Essence is Immense neither to be extended nor divided nor multiplied Therefore it is all every where one and the same 7. Most perfect in himself 1. Because he onely hath all things which may be desired to perfect felicity and glory 2. Because he receiveth no part of this most absolute felicity from any other but hath all things in himself and of himself and is alone sufficient to himself for all things 3. Because he is not for himself onely but also for the creating preserving guiding and furnishing of all and every Creature so sufficiently that he alone doth give to all of them all good things meet and necessary for them as well eternal and heavenly as terrene and temporal neither yet doth depart from any part of his power or his happiness 8. Unchangeable 1. His Essence and whatsoever is proper thereto cannot be augmented or diminished 2. His Nature and Will cannot be changed 3. Himself hath no need to transport himself from place 9. Omnipotent 1. That whatsoever he will or whatsoever not impairing his Nature or Majesty he is able to will he is also able to perform 2. That he is able to perform all those things without any difficulty or labor even with his onely beck and will 3. That all the force and power of working and effecting any thing is so in God onely that there is not the least ability or efficacy of any Creature but what he continually imparteth and preserveth at his pleasure The five Properties of God which ought to stir us up to obey him contained in the Exhortation to obedience annexed to the second Commandment 1. He calleth himself our God that is our Maker and Savior and the Author of all good things hereby advertising us what execrable unthankfulness it is to revolt from the true worshipping of him unto Idolatry 2. Mighty that is in power as well to punish the obstinate as to reward the obedient 3. A jealous God that is a most sharp defender of his own Honor wonderfully displeased with such a revolt from him or violate and impair his Worship and Honor. 4. He calleth himself A God which visiteth the sins c. whereby he encreaseth his anger to take vengeance of the Ancestors sins in their Posterity even to the fourth degree and descent if they partake with the sins of their Ancestors 5. He saith that He is a God which sheweth mercy unto Thousands c. here he extendeth his punishments unto the fourth Generation but his mercy unto Thousands thereby to signifie That he had rather shew Mercy then Anger and so by this means to allure us the more to love him and worthily excluded is that man who abuseth such Infinite Mercy The use we are to make of the description of God 1. As God is a Spirit let us worship him in Spirit and abhor Images and Idols 2. As he is a Spirit let us not be offended or stumble at this That we never see him calling it therefore into question whether he be or not when we are Spiritual we shall see him as he is Joh. 3.4 3. Let us acknowledge from whence we have our being and life Acts 17.28 4. As he is Infinite let us in no place adventure to sin on any vain conceit because it is secret for wheresoever we be God is present 5. As he is most Holy let us prefer Holiness as the greatest excellency without which no man shall see God 6. As he is onely wise let no man use his wit secretly and closely to contrive evil against his brother or by any unlawful policy to circumvent him 7. As he is most Just let no man presume to go on in sin hoping for mercy without repentance 8. As he is most Merciful let no man that is cast down for his sins despair 9. As he is Almighty let us fear him and put our whole trust in him in all times of danger and distress 10. As of whose days there is no beginning nor ending let us be humbled in the Consideration of Gods Eternity seeing our selves are so momentary The Attributes of God are the main Supporters of our faith as thus 1. His Holiness makes the believer approach before him in an utter abnegation of himself and in the mediation of Christ knowing that in himself he is all over polluted and defiled with sin 2. His Wisdom makes the Believer subject to God in all estates of prosperity and adversity even against his own sense and natural Reason knowing that God is wisest and best knoweth what estate is fittest for him 3. His Truth makes the Believer judge him who hath promised that which he believeth to be faithful and true he that believeth hath sealed that God is true Joh. 3.33 4. His Power makes the Believer assent to the possibility of performance of those Promises which God hath made to his children of things which seem impossible 5. His Mercy makes the Believer believe the pardon of his sins being fully perswaded that he is infinite rich in mercy otherwise he could not believe the pardon of his sins When we read in Scripture of eyes ears mouth face hands heart head arms and feet ascribed to God we must not imagine that God is like unto us or hath a bodily shape whereas he is a Spirit or that these parts are ascribed to him properly but only for our better capacity and understanding signifying unto us his gracious Attributes as by his eyes his Omnipresence by his mouth his Word by his hands his Providence by his arms his Power and by his face 1. The invisible Nature and Essence of God Exod. 33.23 which no mortal man can see and live 2. The Favor of God as also all his Benefits Deliverances and Graces Dan. 9.17 Psal 80.3 3. Revenge and Punishment and the signs of his Anger Lev. 20.3 4. The place of Gods Worship where his face and favor is perceived through delivery of the Doctrine of Godliness From this was Cain banished Genesis 4.14 Hereof David complains 2 Sam. 26.49 Now to believe in God Almighty is to be believe in such a one 1. Who is able to do whatsoever he will 2. Who doth all things even with his beck and word onely without any difficulty 3. Who alone hath power to work all things and is Author of that power which is in all his Creatures 4. Who is also unto me Almighty and both can and will
of Christ and then they will come in and be glad they have Christ though on Christs conditions Thus as the children of Israel being stung with fiery Serpents and that unto death were healed by looking unto the brazen Serpent erected by Moses so when we are stung by the old Serpent Sin and Death we must ever remember by Faith to look upon Christ Now we are said to Take Christ when we so take him as to bring him into our hearts to dwell there when we are knit to him and he to us But some men cleave to Christ not because they have any good ground but because they want Temptations to a contrary way therefore it is Gods usual maner when men seem to Take Christ and to believe in him to put them to the tryal to see what they will do whether their Faith will work or no For when to such as take Christ for love of the good things by him and not for love of his person other commodities are presented that are present and sensible and in their apprehension greater then those by Christ then they let Christ go again and their Faith proves uneffectual like those that marry not for Love but for Wealth the maner of these men is to seek mercy and not grace yet may we look upon our own advantages by Christ but not on that alone Thus when a man is drawn from God it is either by some offer of some great benefit or some great evil which he is put in fear of in both which Faith is that Vnum Necessarium to keep thee from sinning for it is Faiths office to guide our lives so as that we be not overcome by Adversity nor drawn aside from God in Prosperity Now that Faith that saves must be effectual Faith it is the effectualness of Faith onely that God requires that is if there be any effectualness in man that comes not from Faith God requires it not but if we labor to grow in Faith we shall be enabled to do the duties of New Obedience but if we have not the ground all that we do is but in vain Therefore when we finde any coldness weakness or languishing in the Graces we have encrease Faith and all other Graces will grow This effectual Faith is wrought or our Faith is made effectual by the Spirit of God it is not in our own power of our selves we are not able to believe if God himself put not his hand to the work no man is able to believe because naturally man hath a hard heart So for an holy life when we have believed and accepted the Righteousness that is offered us in Christ when that is done it is Gods part to frame and fit us for an holy life for after that a man is Justified by Faith Christ Sanctifieth him and it is he that carries him afterward thorough his whole life in a holy conversation And as Christ is thus made unto us Justification and Sanctification so is he made unto us Redemption also for he delivers us from the least evils as well as from Death Eternal and Hell it self yea there is no evil that the Saints are freed from but it is purchased by the Blood of Christ which is over and above some general works of Gods Providence that all men taste of Now though there be sufficiency in Christ to save all yet none have benefit by it but those that receive it as they ought that is as a Lord as well as a Savior We must therefore come to God as with a full heart so with an empty hand for Faith doth its work best alone for all that Faith hath to do is onely to Take from Christ that Righteousness which we want our selves And without this Faith God regards not the best Moral Vertues the Moral man what he doth he doth it of himself and through himself and for himself but he that doth what he doth by Faith doth it of Christ and through Christ and for Christ for we must receive all from Christ and do all for Christ and all by Faith Faith worketh in us a love to God and presenteth to him a perfect Righteousness and this Faith is the sum of the Preaching of Christ and his Apostles Now God requires no more but a Willingness in Earnest to come and take Christ he will make thee able afterward to do the rest for God never gives his Son to any but he gives them the Holy Ghost the Spirit of his Son also And we must know That Faith admits degrees and that every Christian ought to grow from degree to degree Rom. 1.17 for though the weakest Faith may be a true and so a Saving Faith yet if this small measure of Faith be not edged on with a longing fervency after fulness of perswasion and seconded with an assiduous serious endeavor after more perfection it is no sound and saving Faith but onely a counterfeit shew or deceiving shadow The least Assent to the least Belief of the Promises so it be sufficient to over-ballance the Scale of Doubting which is called the least degree of Faith brings us to Christ and make us willing to Take him and is Faith though it come not to the full degree though it hath some doubting some fears And afterward we shall be more fully and better perswaded which addes to the degrees For Faith though it be mingled with some doubtings and fears may be effectual though not perfect for there is a Doubting mingled with the best Faith so it be but such a Doubting as does not overcome it may stand with true and sound Faith If a man hath so taken Christ that still he is growing still his Faith is prevailing still overcoming these doubts and fears from day to day he is better and better resolved if it be thus still on the growing hand it is a saving and effectual Faith yea it is not Faith except it hath some Doubting except there be some fears some troubles within that resist this Faith and strive against it for there is no man that hath perfect Faith especially at the first or afterward so as to set his heart fully at peace So that it is said of Doubting in this case as we say of Thistles They are ill Weeds but it is a sign the ground is fat and good where they grow So Doubting as it is a thing that resists Faith is bad but it is a sign the heart is good where it is so that where there is no Questioning there is all Flesh And a man may have a saving Faith though he want the comfortable Assurance thereof in his own knowledge which is the reflect act of Faith For as some men have a perswasion of the forgiveness of their sins yet not savingly believe so a true Believer may have but a weak perswasion of the forgiveness of his sins but that Faith which is joyned with Love is infallibly true but disjoyned thence is false and the smallest Faith yea the weakest may
his Benefits 2. By the good that we shall get by it 3. That he shall not lose his labor if he do attempt it Now Faith onely applies the Promises with boldness but we are not affected with Spiritual Priviledges because we look on them with a general eye as matters of fancy and speculation because we see no such thing we have no feeling of them And the Promises of God are always to be understood with an Exception of the Cross of the godly and of the punishments and chastisements of such as depart from God and Sin or with a condition of perseverance in Faith and godliness When thou seest that thou hast put thy Seal to the Truth that thou believest the Promises and hopest in them then consider whether God hath put his Seal to thee Now we must know that there is a double Seal 1. Secret that is the Secret Witness that God gives to every mans heart as a Privy-Seal that God sets on it 2. A more Open one in life and conversation whereby he enables us to depart from iniquity 2 Tim. 2.29 Hope and Faith differ 1. In their Order Faith is first for it bringeth forth Hope Faith is the ground of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 2. In the kinde of Object Faith is of things past Heb. 11.3 and present Joh. 20.19 Hope onely of things to come 3. In their Nature Faith believeth the very Truth of Gods Promises and sealeth that God is true Hope waiteth till God manifest and accomplish his Truth In like maner Hope and Presumption differ Now Presumption may be these four ways 1. When men live in their sins without Faith and Repentance presuming of the Mercy of God and because God is merciful they take occasion to sin more freely 2. When men perswade themselves they hope in God when indeed they do not perswading themselves upon no ground That they live in expectation of the life to come being destitute of saving Knowledge Faith and Repentance 3. When men live in sin thinking afterwards to convert themselves when they list 4. When men presuming too much on their own power and strength even after Conversion think they stand so fast they cannot fall The Signs of found Hope 1. A purging of our selves to resemble God in purity 1 Joh. 3.3 2. True filial fear of God Psal 147.11 3. A weaning our selves from the most desireable outward things of this life and that for these Reasons viz. 1. They cannot possibly fill the unlimited desire of the Soul 2. They cannot secure the Conscience distressed with the apprehension of the Wrath of God or prevent his Judgements 3. They cannot stretch themselves unto Eternity 4. A Rejoycing for the Salvation in the last day and in this Joy a Delight in the means as the Word and Sacraments Prayer good and godly men c. Motives to labor for true Hope viz. 1. The Commandment of God and the Admonition to Hope so frequently multiplied in the holy Scripture Psal 42.5 43.5 37.34 7. 27.14 2. The Excellency of Hope for God himself is called The God of Hope Rom. 15.13 it is also called Blessed Hope Tit. 2.13 3. The Profit of this Grace of Hope as Piety 1 Joh. 3.3 Comfort in affliction Phil. 1.21 23. Blessedness Psal 146.5 4. The Necessity of it for without it we Christians were of all men the most miserable 1 Cor. 15.19 The means to attain unto Hope viz. 1. Diligent and fervent prayer to God Eph. 1.18 2. We must labor for a full perswasion of the Goodness Truth Fidelity and Power of God towards us Rom. 15.13 3. We must labor to have a true experience of Gods love and favor towards us 1 Sam. 17.31 unto 51. 4. We must put upon us the whole Armor of God Eph. 6.11 12 c. 5. We must be often conversant in Reading Hearing Conferring and Meditating on the Scripture Rom. 5.4 The Vices repugnant to Hope and forbidden in this Commandment viz. 1. Despair which is to esteem our sins to be greater then the merit of the Son of God and to refuse the Mercy of God offered in his Son the Mediator and therefore not to look for those Blessings which are promised unto the godly but to be tormented with an horrible sense and feeling of Gods wrath and with a fear of being hereafter cast away into everlasting pains and to stand in horror of God and to hate him as if he were cruel 2. A Doubting of the Blessings to come which are expressed in the Word as of everlasting life and of final perseverance This Doubtfulness neither stedfastly assenteth to the Doctrine of God nor altogether gainsays it but being floating and wavering hath a weak inclination now to one part and now to another 3. Carnal Security which is To live without thinking of God or his Will or of our own infirmity and dangers and without acknowledging or bewailing of our sins and without the fear of God and yet to promise unto our selves an indempnity from the anger of God and from punishment without Faith or Repentance Suppose the World a Sea on whose uneven Tempestuous Waves sails Man that 's bound for Heaven Whose Vnderstanding at the Rudder stands To dictate to the Will what she commands Th' Affections who Vsurper-like do sway Command and Rule that Power they should obay Whereby the Vessel oft miscarries and The Fraught of Graces swallowed in the sand When Romes Euroclidons from Hell are sent Faith's shipwrack'd ' less Hopes Anchor doth prevent §. 6. Of Love THe Love of God is a most upright affection of the Minde by which God is loved for himself and our Neighbor for God which Love is grounded on Gods love to us 1 Joh. 4.19 Indeed Love is nothing else but a disposition of the Will whereby it cleaves or makes forward to some good that is agreeable to it self yea all the Affections are nothing else but the diverse motions and turnings of the Will Now Love is that act of the Will whereby it turns it self to a thing as Hatred is that whereby it turns it self from a thing And the object of Love is somewhat that is good not that is True or that is Beautiful for this is onely the object of the intuitive understanding So that to love the Lord is not onely required That we be perswaded that he is well-affected to us That he is willing to receive us but also that we look on him as one that is suitable and agreeable to us And indeed that is the main the other will follow easily Hence men may have a perswasion of their sins forgiveness and yet want true Faith for that which begets not Love is not Faith Now a man may have that perswasion of Christ yet not love Christ as a Prisoner may of the Judge yet not love the Judge for love comes from some suitableness some agreeableness between the parties but when a man is humbled and looks on Christ and again is perswaded that Christ looks
Prosperity 2. It must be sincere and sound not feigned or hypocritical Rom. 12.9 3. It must be fervent increasing inwardly and shewing it self in the fruits thereof outwardly 1 Pet. 4.8 4. It must be constant holding out unto the end Heb. 13.1 5. It must not be for any private by-respects 6. We must love those that are our enemies and hate us Mat. 5.46 47. The signs of true Christian Brotherly love 1. If we love God unfeignedly with our hearts and labor to keep his Commandments 1 Joh. 5.2 2. If we love without servile and slavish fear for there is no such fear in love 1 Joh. 4.18 3. If we can forgive wrongs forget to revenge them and pray for them that did them 1 Cor. 13. 4. If it be not onely in time of Prosperity but when he stands in most need of our love if it be more manifest to our Brother in his adversity then in his prosperity Prov. 17.17 5. If it be not for outward respects but because they are the Sons of God 6. If it be not outward in shew onely but inward in the heart Motives perswasive or Reasons to inforce our love to our Brethren 1. Except we love our Brethren we do not love God and if not God he not us 1 Joh. 4.20 2. Except we have this love we know not God for God is love 1 Joh. 4.8 3. If we love not our Brethren we abide in death 1 Joh. 3.14 are none of Gods children 1 Joh. 3.10 but the Devils 4. He that loveth not his Brother is a manslayer neither shall he be saved 1 Joh. 3.15 5. Because God so commandeth us to love one another yea on pain of eternal death Heb. 2.2 The Vices repugnant unto the love of God viz. 1. The casting away of Gods love or the contempt and hatred of God which is through the alienation of our Nature from God and Gods Justice and by reason of an inclination thereof to sin therefore to flie and shun God accusing and punishing Sin 2. Inordinate love of our selves and of other creatures which is to prefer our Lusts or Pleasures or Life or Glory or any other thing before God and his Will and Glory and to be willing rather to neglect and offend him then to part from those things which we love 3. A feigned love of God an hypocritical counterfeit or self-respecting love whereby also we may here offend Now we cannot here ever offend in the excess because we never love God so much as we should Hail O thou lovely Grace whose rare feature When Faith and Hope vanish from the Creature Shall ever Lustre forth in Heaven be As now of Sweetness full of Majesty By thee the Graces all enamell'd are 'Mongst whom thou shin'st the Heart Attractive Star By thee the Saints are ever so inflam'd To be but warm th' are holily asham'd Sweet Flame perfume my Soul and in thy fire Ravish'd let me from whence thou cam'st aspire §. 7. Of the Fear of God THe last Vertue required in this First Commandment is the Fear of God which being formerly touch'd and though taken in a strict consideration was yet found to be a great part of the Worship of God and an infallible Sign of the true Religion We shall therefore in this place speak a word more of it onely in reference thereto Now whereas it is said to be a great part of the Worship of God it is understood chiefly and principally of the Inward Worship which alone is properly simply and of it self the Worship of God the Outward is not simply the Worship of God but onely so far forth as it is quickned by the Inward and grounded on it God is a Spirit his Worship is Spiritual This is the Worship of the Minde the Heart the Conscience the Will and Affections for Man by all these joyntly and severally performeth Worship and Service to his Creator and this is the Spiritual Worship of the Inward Man the Foundation of all true Worship of God whereas the Outward Worship is onely that whereby the Inward is testified outwardly by the speech and actions The Worship of God according to his Word consisteth in things which God either giveth us as his Titles and Works or requireth of us as Hearing his Word Prayer Sacraments Vows and Swearing in all which thou shalt fear the Lord thy God because he is the Lord Levit. 14.19 To which may be added Outward Adoration Confession not ordinary or Ecclesiastical Confession but such as is made before the Adversary and Fasting in all which the Fear of God which is taken for the whole Worship of God or for the general Obedience according to all Gods Commandments Prov. 1.7 This Fear which ariseth from a knowledge of Gods Justice and of his Power to punish sins from a consideration of of that Right and Dominion which he hath over all Creatures This Fear which is an acknowledging of sin and the wrath of God keeps the whole Man in a Religious Respect a holy Dreadfulness and in an awful Reverence of the great and mighty Majesty of Heaven and Earth commands him to walk as in the Presence of God that even his whole Conversation seems one undiscontinued holy and Religious Adoration The whole Worship of God may stand in these five particulars viz. 1. To Fear and Love him above all 2. To Believe in all his Promises without doubting 3. To Call upon him in all our necessities 4. To be Thankful unto him for all his Benefits which shews it self in these 2 things viz. 1. An Acknowledgement of the heart That our Souls and whatsoever we have is Gods and proceedeth from his Blessing alone 2. In a Consecration of our Bodies Souls Lives Callings and Labors to the honor and service of God 5. To be Obedient to all his Commandments The Worship of God consisteth in things that are 1. Perpetual which are 1. Confidence in God Prov. 3.5 22.19 2 Chron. 20.20 Psal 37.3 5. 2. Love of God Deut. 6.5 Joh. 22.5 25.11 Mat. 22.37 3. Reverence of God Mat. 4.10 Heb. 12.28 Deut. 6.33 10.20 2. Belonging to this life as 1. Hope in God Psal 37.7 62.5 6 7. Isa 38.18 1 Pet. 1.21 2. Fear of God Deut. 4.10 6.2 13. 10.12 20. 14.13 Rev. 14.7 The Heads of Inward Worship are two 1. Adoration whereby a man upon a vile and base estimation of himself subjects himself his Soul to the Glory and Majesty of God 2. A cleaving to God which is by Faith Love Hope and Inward Invocation Adoration is twofold 1. Religious in which Religion and godliness is exercised wherein are these two The Intention of the Minde The outward prostrating of the Body 2. Civil which fellow-Creatures give one to the other and this pertaineth onely to the Second Table Two principal grounds of Adoration in the heart 1. Abnegation or denyal of our selves when we esteem our selves to be meer nothing 2. Exaltation of Gods Majesty above all the things in
the world In Adoration are these four Vertues viz. 1. Fear which is a great part of the Worship of God and the comprehending Vertue of this Paragraph 2. Inward Obedience of the hidden man of the heart which standeth in these two things viz. 1. In yielding Obedience and subjection of Conscience to the Commandments Threatnings and Promises of God so as we are willing it should become bound unto them 2. When the rest of the Powers of the Soul in their place and time perform Obedience unto God 3. Patience when a man in Affliction submits his will to Gods Will and sweetly quieting his heart therein 4. Thankfulness of heart to God for all his benefits acknowledging him to be the Fountain of every good thing Two things whereby the Fear of Gods Worship is distinguished from all other Fears 1. It is Absolute for by it God is reverenced absolutely that is the fear we give to men is onely for God but we fear God for himself 2. It makes a man first of all to fear the offence of God and then the punishment for it is a fear of both but of the offence in the first place In the Worship of God we must not be led by our own Devices but by Gods Direction and that for these Reasons 1. God will be acknowledged to be the onely Law-giver the King of his Church and the onely Prophet to instruct it in the Will of God Jam. 4.12 2. There is a Promise of Blessing to them that serve him with a perfect heart and there is threatning of most heavy Curses and Judgements to come upon their Souls that worship him after the Commandments and Precepts of men Judg. 2.12 14 15. 2 Chron. 26.28 29. Rules touching the right maner of Gods Worship 1. Touching things that are to be done or not to be done we are not to judge by the false Rule of our own carnal and corrupt Reason but according to the sure Word of God by the Prophets and Apostles 2. We must not presume to adde somewhat of our own to the Ordinances of God in his Worship and account it too gross simplicity to cleave to the bare and naked Word and thereby make a mixture of his Religion with our own Invention 3. We must make it as indeed it is our Duty to study to acquaint our selves with the Scriptures Reading them with all diligence for the Word is a Christian mans true and perfect guide and in all doubts it is his Counsellor More special Rules for our Obedience to the Worship of God as himself hath prescribed 1. We must think our selves fools in the matters of God that we may be made wise 1 Cor. 3.18 2. To account God onely wise yea Wisdom it self 3. To adde nothing to the Word of the Lord which were to make our selves wiser then God himself 4. We must think nothing small or little in Gods service he took order for the least things in the Tabernacle and left them not Arbitrary Holy things must be handled Reverently and Religiously for these Reasons viz. 1. Because we have to do with God in matters of Religion 2. Because such as come without Reverence and due regard into his presence do lose the fruit and benefit of their coming The Mischiefs of a Toleration of any false Worship where the true Worship of God is Established 1. It sheweth a coldness in Gods Cause and little or no Zeal in defacing the Monuments of Idolatry which rob God of his honor when he will not have his glory given to any other 2. It nourisheth a Serpent in the bosom of the Church 3. It causeth uncertainty of Faith and Religion Doubt in men specially the weaker sort which side to adhere to 4. It maintaineth Confusion in Gods Worship and fostereth Schisms Troubles Seditions and Rebellions 5. It breaketh the sweet and comfortable knot of the Unity and Amity of Brethren it bringeth danger to the whole State and is directly against sincere Profession Josh 24.19 2.10 1. The Vices repugnant unto the Fear of God 1. Prophaneness Carnal Security Not to Fear God 2. Servile Fear which is to shun punishment without Faith without a desire of changing and amendment of life with a despair and shunning of God and with a separation from him It appears from what hath been said That the Fear of God being an awful respect of the Divine Majesty ariseth either 1. From Faith in the Mercy and goodness of God This is called Filial Fear The effects whereof are these 1. A careful Endeavor to please God 2. A careful avoiding of such things as offend the Divine Majesty of God Prov. 8.13 Job 1.1 2. From Diffidence when a mans heart doubteth of Gods Mercy and expecteth nothing but Vengeance and the fearful wrath of God upon him for sin whereupon nothing but horror and amazement seizeth all the faculties of his Soul This is Servile Fear Both which are grounded Rom. 8.15 The first was seen in Abraham Gen. 22 12. The second in Adam Gen. 3.10 And so the devils fear and tremble Jam. 2.19 The signs and Evidences of him that feareth the Lord 1. Where this Fear is there is the hatred of evil as of Pride and Arrogancy Prov. 8.13 A man that feareth the Lord dare not do unjustly Gen. 42.18 2. He is made pliable to Gods Will though he were obstinate before Acts 9.6 Isa 6.5 3. He trembleth at Gods Word Isa 66.2 5. Habbak 3.16 Amos 3.8 4. He feareth not man Mat. 10.28 Isa 51.21 Dan. 3. 5. He delighteth in Gods Commandments Psal 112.1 Psal 128. 6. He shall want no good thing Psal 34.9 112.2 The Means to attain to this holy Fear viz. 1. To renounce our own Wisdom Prov. 3.7 Rom. 8.7 and not to be swayed by our own Reason 2. To beg it of God because it is his gift Jer. 32.39 40. 3. To meditate upon Gods Judgements against sinners 2 Pet. 2. and also upon his Mercies Psal 130.4 For there is mercy with him that he may be feared Wouldst serve the true God in the Truth not part Gods Worship 'twixt Divinity and Art Nor smother what the Spirit blows nor strain A slavish Complement with Man whose Brain Whets his Invention how to cut and fit God Worship to the measure of his Wit Whose Devotion in zeal to Clergy-Pelf Gods stead set up the Dagon of himself Wouldst this abhor and in all things accord With Truth it self Then learn to Fear the Lord. §. 8. Of Ignorance HAving spoken of the Vertues required in this Commandment we come now to the Vices therein forbidden but because they are many as may formerly appear in the first Paragraph of this Chapter and this Book no Forrest but an Arbor we shall touch and but touch onely three of the chiefest of them viz. Ignorance Desperation and Pride Ignorance or not knowing of the true God and his Will is Not to know those things of God or to doubt of them which we ought to know by the
holy policy are to fortifie themselves against it because it springs from so fair and unsuspected a Fountain even from Zeal godly Duties and good Actions who are with much Humiliation and fervency of Spirit to pray and strive against it because it singles out the Chosen of God and takes up his seat in the sanctified Soul who are with wonderful care to countermine the sly insinuations wherewith it unavoidably windes it self into their hearts lest when they seem to disclaim Pride they prove proud that they are not proud who cannot be too secure of their Sentinels on the heart-guards because there is no profoundness of Knowledge no measure of Grace no eminency of Zeal can be exempted from hazard of Surprizal by this last and most cunning encounter of Satan by Spiritual Pride Great reason therefore hath the childe of God strongly to fence his heart with a gracious and unfained humility against this sin lest gazing on the dangerous speculations of his own worthiness the eye of his Conscience become blinde to his own Deficiencies Corruptions and Infirmities lest his Self-conceitedness and a vain over-valuing of his own Gifts and Vertues call the Truth of them into question and extinguish the life of Sincerity lest an adulterous self-liking of his own excellency be justly plagued with a scandalous fall into some gross sin lest this Viper nourished in the bosom of his Soul take unseasonable heat and warmth from his Zeal and endanger the whole frame of his New man Now the onely Soveraign means to preserve the life and vigor of Graces in the Soul and to keep thence this pestilent canker-worm of Spiritual Pride is with much earnestness and prayer to labor after and settle surely in the heart a true and undissembled Humility This kinde of Secret or Privy-Pride is not so properly a breach of this Commandment as the outward and more open Pride whose concomitant Companions and Branches are Envy Anger Impatience Indignation Self-will and Obstinacy Presumption Hypocrisie Boasting Ingratitude Contempt Disobedience Ambition and Curiosity as also a fained Modesty or Humility which is a double Pride being to hunt after the praise and commendation of Humility by refusing in shew and apparence and by denying of those things outwardly which yet a man secretly covets and in his minde attributes unto himself either truly or falsly This is Pride under a vail which if Plenty and Prosperity in outward things answer the expectation doth soon appear in its proper Peacockcolours to be nothing else but the very heighth and pinacle of all Pride and Arrogancy whose true Properties follow The properties of the proud man viz. 1. To ascribe his gifts not to God but to his own worthiness and ability and to refer his gifts and counsels principally to his own glory and therefore to stand in admiration of himself and his gifts 2. Not truly to fear God neither to acknowledge and bewail his own defects 3. To be always aspiring to some higher place and calling 4. To attribute to himself those things which he hath not to attempt things above his power and not belonging to his calling 5. To contemn and debase others in respect of himself to believe none but to covet to excel and be eminent above others 6. To be angry with God and Men to fret and fume against God when his desires and counsels are hindred and also to accuse God of Error and Injustice if Gods counsels agree not with the judgements and affections of men Pride is twofold 1. Inward in the soul which consists Partly in the Minde which is a corrupt disposition thereof whereby a man thinks himself to be better then indeed he is This was the proud Pharisees sin Luke 18.11 12. Partly in the Will which is an inward affection whereby a man is not contented with that estate wherein God hath placed him but desires a better This befel Adam and Eve and does most of their Posterity in every Age. 2. Outward which proceeding from the former shews it self in the effects in her proper colours by apparel gestures language actions and most vain phantastick self-conceits Inward Pride must be carefully avoided for these Reasons viz. 1. Because whatsoever outward good works the childe of God can do by Grace the same may a wicked man do through Pride and Hypocrisie as conceive a Prayer Preach the Word and Practice the outward duties of Repentance of Love and such like for Pride is a sin that will counterfeit Grace and man cannot discern it truly but God onely 2. Many other sins prevail in the wicked but Pride is the sin that troubleth the children of God and when other sins dye then will Pride revive yea it will rise as it were out of Grace it self for the childe of God may be proud because he is not proud proud of his Humility therefore Paul must be buffeted by the messenger of Satan lest he should be puffed up with the abundance of Revelations 2 Cor. 12.7 The way to avoid this dangerous sin of Inward Pride viz. 1. We must be careful to know the Pride of our own hearts for every man hath it in him more or less and the more we see it the less it is but the less we see it the more it is indeed for he that is most humbled is not altogether free from this Inward Pride 2. When we see our Pride we must labor to subdue it which may thus be done 1. By considering the Judgements of God upon this sin it poysoned Angelical Perfection and afterward occasioned our Parents casting out of Paradice and remember Herod who for this sin was eaten up of worms Acts 12. 2. We must search into our selves and labor to see our own wants and corruptions as our Blindeness of Minde Unbelief c. The want of feeling our wants occasions Pride 3. We must meditate upon the Death and Passion of Christ and how can a man think that Christ endured that bitter Passion for and yet not be humbled with the sight of his sins which had a part in the cause thereof Reasons taken from the state of the Regenerate Soul why the childe of God should fence his heart against Spiritual Pride viz. 1. The consideration of our deficiencies even in our most religious duties and best performances 2. The consideration of our own forwardness to march under Satans Banners and our base unworthy vassallage therein before our Regeneration 3. The consideration of the bottomless depth of Gods bounty to us which hath raised unto us whatsoever gifts we have 4. The consideration of the danger which may happen to the whole man by giving entertainment to Spiritual Pride for either it may perswade us to embrace some groundless singularity of unwarrantable Opinions or by Gods just Judgement draw upon us a deadness of heart a dulness of zeal an intermission of the operations of Grace or the like inconveniences The three Errors which did deceive the Pharisee does many other proud persons 1. His
when he counterfeits godliness his dissembling of Piety makes every sin he commits leave a double blot of guilt on the painted Sepulchre of his Soul Without Integrity and Uprightness of heart our Prayers hearin of Sermons partaking of the Sacraments or the performance of any other holy Exercises doth nothing avail If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Isa 1.15 Sincerity is as Salt that seasoneth every work the life and substance of all other Graces without it the best things are no better then sins against God but to such as are pure in heart he is good and gracious Psal 79.1 125.4 5. Hence it is that men in this Age hate the Saints under pretence that they are the Hypocrites and this hath been the Devils policy against all holy men in all Ages David was said to be a subtile man to deceive others Paul was reckoned the great Impostor of the world nay Christ himself was called a Deceiver And indeed no man speaks against Religion or hates Religion under its own notion under its own name but somewhat else as Hypocrisie indeed such as have not Grace themselves cannot possibly judge of Grace in others Now in the state of Formal Hypocrisie may concur immunity from notorious sins all natural and moral Perfections admirable variety of Learning Policy and all other acquired Ornaments of the Minde an outward performance of all duties of Religion some measure of inward illumination a resemblance or shadow of the whole body of true Regeneration and a perswasion of being in the state of Grace even thus far a man may go in the profession of Christian Religion and yet for want of true sincerity be a stranger from the power of Faith and from the life of godliness yea though a man were a moral Saint an Angel among the Pharisees absolute in all other Perfections yet without the inward power of Grace to give them the life of sincerity he is but a spectacle of commiseration to Angels and Men. The difference betwixt this Moral civil man and the Hypocrite is onely this That the Hypocrite doth much of the First Table little of the Second but the Civil man doth much of the Second Table little of the First neither doth what he doth in sincerity both do what they do in Hypocrisie yea though Moral Honesty and outward Righteousness be in themselves good and in a kinde necessary yet by accident are many times a strong bar to keep men from the power of godliness and unfeigned sincerity for resting therein and not stepping forward they content themselves with a probable error of being in the state of Crace and with a plausible passage unto eternal Death for he which reacheth but to civil Honesty comes far short of being in Christ and consequently of true happiness Thus the two main Engines whereby the Devil deludes the world and ensnares the Souls of Unregenerate men are Civil Honesty and Formal Hypocrisie Hypocrisie is either 1. In works commanded of God but not done after that maner which God requireth 2. In works not commanded of God yet done for ostentations sake as all superstitious and humane Traditions which appertain not to the edifying of the Church The causes or Reasons that many profess God that serve the Devil 1. Pride or Self-love which so overcometh their hearts and blindeth their eyes that they cannot see their wickedness or judge of themselves and their own Misery as they should 2. Because the heart of man is so deceitful he can speak with his Tongue what he meaneth not in his heart beguiling with lying lips and a double tongue Hypocrisie is threefold 1. Privy Hypocrisie by which a man maketh profession of more then is in his heart This kinde of Hypocrisie ariseth from Spiritual Pride and sometimes mixeth it self even with the fairest and most sanctified actions of Gods dearest children soonest insinuating into the holiest heart 2. Gross Hypocrisie by which a man professes that which is not in his heart at all and so deceives others but not his own heart This most properly is Hypocrisie 3. Formal Hypocrisie by which a man doth not onely deceive others but also his own heart with a false conceit and perswasion that he is in a happy state The Reasons why the gross Hypocrite is more miserable and of less hope then the open sinner 1. Because he sins against the light of his Conscience which maner of sinning makes him incapable of saving Graces 2. Because by his outward profession he so dazles the eyes of men that he bars himself of those Reproofs and wholesom Admonitions whereby the open sinner is many times reclaimed humbled and converted 3. Because all publike Reprehensions and Admonitions from the Ministery he posts over from himself to the open sinner as not belonging to himself 4. Because he is justly obnoxious to an extraordinary measure of Gods hatred and indignation and weight of vengeance The unhappy issue of the Formal Hypocrite 1. A cursed Security wherein he slumbers to eternal destruction 2. A wretched Opposition to more sincerity then he findes in himself 3. A searedness deadness and benummedness of Conscience 4. An Impatiency of having his Formality censured by the Ministery of the Word 5. A Neglect of a more sound search into the state of his Soul Reasons moving the Formal Hypocrite to think well of himself and his own state good 1. A comparing himself with those which are more sinful 2. A prejudice which he conceives from the imputation which the world layeth upon the children of God 3. An outward Success in worldly matter much plenty in outward things 4. A Misconceit of Gods Justice and a straining and a racking of his Mercy beyond his Truth and Promise 5. A Misapprehension of the Opposition in the passage of Grace 6. A Misobservation upon the Death and Ends of other men A performance of outward Duties of Religion without the power of Grace upon the Soul and an universal Sanctification in all the faculties thereof cannot produce any sound comfort in the heart or acceptation with God and that for these Reasons 1. Because the iniquity defect or exorbitancy of any particular of one circumstance maketh an action evil but an absolute integrity of all concurrents is required to make a good work acceptable to God comfortable and profitable to a Christian 2. Because except our Righteousness exceed that of the Scribes and Pharisees we shall not enter into the kingdom of Heaven 3. Because the principal and holiest Exercises the most solemn and sacred actions of Religion without sincerity and Sanctification of heart are but as the cutting off a Dogs neck and the offering of Swines blood which Truth ariseth out of Isa 1. Mic. 6. Hag. 2. Psal 50. and many other places Hypocrisie though long covered will be at last uncased and that for these Reasons 1. Because it is like a wound healed outwardly but festering inwardly and therefore at last the corruption cannot but break
which are the windows of the heart 2 Pet. 2.14 Isa 3.13 3. Of the Ears when we listen unto unchaste talk and shew no dislike to nor hatred of it 4. Of the Tongue when we take delight in unchaste speeches and filthy Ribaldry by which the hearts of others are corrupted and our own manifested to be so before Eph. 4.29 1 Cor. 15.33 5. Outward in Fact and this is called Sin finished whereunto all the former are as steps or degrees and in the end bring it forth as an end which they have conceived The hainousness of this sin of Adultery may appear by these particulars viz. 1. We sin against God by withstanding his Will in prophaning the holy Ordinance of Matrimony by making the members of Christ the members of an Harlot most ungraciously defiling those bodies which should be the Temples of the holy Ghost converting them into Stews 2. We sin against our Neighbor because this sin is not committed alone but we draw others to it also 3. We sin against the Wife or Husband of the married party by a most ungodly particular wrong 4. We sin against the fruit of our own body whom we brand with a Note of perpetual infamy Gen. 21.10 5. We sin against our own Families which are ruined by being defiled Beggery waits on Lust Job 31.12 6. We sin against the Places Societies and Kingdom where we live because we defile the Land and cause it to vomit out the Inhabitants Gen. 34.27 7. We sin against the Church of God by hindring the propagation thereof and causing it to be evil spoken of by others 8. We sin against our selves because we make our bodies the instruments of Sin and Satan infecting them with loathsom diseases here and plunging them together with our Souls into Hell hereafter 9. It is a sin committed against each person of the Trinity as 1. Against the Father whose Covenant is broken Prov. 2.17 2. Against the Son whose members are made the members of an Harlot 3. Against the Holy Ghost whose Temple is defiled and polluted 1 Cor. 6.19 10. The hainousness of this sin appears by the fruits thereof viz. 1. The Alienation of conjugal Affection which ought to be inviolable 2. The Devastation of the goods and estate of the Family 3. Provocations to unnatural wishes and practices of clandestine Murther 4. If not a gauling terrifying conscience then a seared one a hard heart a reprobate sense 5. The procuring of many loathsom diseases to the body 6. The execution of the fearful Judgements of God denounced against it if unrepented Adultery though never so secretly committed is surely punished of God and that for these Reasons viz. 1. Because the wrath of God is kindled against all such unclean persons Eph. 5.6 2. Because it appears to be a most grievous sin worse then Theft Prov. 6.31 32. 3. Because it defileth the Land not onely persons and houses but whole cities and countreys till all are become abominable Lev. 19.29 4. Because of our calling being Redeemed by God to serve him in purity and holiness all our days 1 Thess 4.3 4 5 7. The Reasons and Motives to avoid Fornication and lust viz. 1. Our Bodies are the Lords and must be serviceable unto him the body is not for fornication but for the Lord 1 Cor. 6.13 2. We thereby make void the glorious work of our Redemption The Lord for the body 1 Cor. 6.13 but Fornication and Sanctification can never stand together 3. Those Bodies shall Rise again not to glory but to shame if we here defile them with beastly lusts 1 Cor. 6.14 4. The Members of Christ that is the bodies of the faithful may not be made the members of an Harlot 1 Cor. 6.15 by profession we seem to be the members of Christ but by unchaste lust we pull our hearts from Christ and knit them to an Harlot 5. This sin is against the body whereas other sins are without the body 1 Cor. 6.18 but the Fornicator both useth and abuseth his own body and leaveth a proper blot and stain upon it making it both the instrument the subject and the object of sin 6. Consider the state and condition of mans heart by effectual calling it is the dwelling place and Temple of the Holy Ghost but by unclean lusts we make it a cage of all unclean Spirits Our body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost and destruction is threatned to the defilers of this Temple 1 Cor. 3.17 So that a Fornicator is also a Sacrilegious person 7. We are wholly Gods and not our own to do what we list or to dispose of our selves 1 Cor. 6.19 20. 8. We all desire to see God and to know his love in Christ for our comfort in this life and Salvation but without holiness and purity of heart we can never see God Heb. 12.14 9. If we suffer our hearts now to burn with fleshly lust we make an entrance in them for the burning of Hell fire for ever for these two alway go together Burning lust and Hell fire unless Repentance come between General Preservatives against this sin or the way to prevent Adultery viz. 1. To consider the near Union betwixt God and us so great is his Love as that he hath married us to himself and made us his Spouse therefore is he most jealous over us and in the very instant of impurity or uncleanness casts us off as the members of an Harlot 2. To consider that God is holy and pure and the Devil an unclean Spirit to whom he is joyned in fellowship that sinneth by uncleanness 3. To tye and binde our selves by Covenant and Vows from the occasions which as sparkles of fire do light upon the tinder of our corrupt Nature Job 31.1 4. Set a watch over thy heart that lustful thoughts proceed not thence Prov 6.25 5. Shut thine eyes Job 31.1 that they wander not after the beauty or properness of any ones person or on lascivious Pictures or on any other like allurements 6. Stop thine ears that they listen not to any enticements of others Prov. 7.21 7. Lock fast thy Tongue that it utter no unchaste and corrupt communication Eph. 5.3 4. 8. Seal up thy Lips that they delight not in wanton kisses Prov. 7.13 9. Manacle thy Hands that they use no wanton dalliance Prov. 6.29 10. Fetter thy Feet that they carry thee not near the place where filthiness may be committed Prov. 7.25 11. Have a care of thy company that thou be not defiled with others wantonness and uncleanness Eph. 5.7 12. See to thy Dyet that it be not inordinate and luxurious Gen. 19.33 13. Moderate thy Apparel that it be not garish and lascivious Ezek. 23.6 15 40. 14. Mis time not thy precious hours that they be not vainly and idly spent 2 Sam. 11.2 Special Preservatives for single persons against this sin viz. 1. To beat down the body and bring it into subjection to abstain from such meats and drinks as inflate and provoke to
truth of heart be added and where truth of heart is there will be Truth of speech and action for sincerity in the heart will keep the Tongue from lying and the carriage of a man from dissimulation and deceit This Truth of Judgement is directly opposed to Error 2. Of Heart which is the singleness and sincerity thereof whereby a man seeketh to approve himself to God the Searcher of all hearts and to be accepted of him This is opposed to Hypocrisie whether open or secret 3. Of Speech which is an Agreement of the words of a mans mouth both with his minde and also with the matter which he uttereth Eph. 4.25 This is opposed to lying when a man speaketh against his Minde and Conscience and to Falshood when a man speaketh contrary to the thing it self 4. Of Action which is a plain faithful and honest dealing in all things whether we have to do with God or Man when men neither make shew of doing that which indeed they do not or of doing it otherwise then they do This was it Christ commended honest Nathaniel for Joh. 1.47 and is opposed to Dissimulation and Deceit Motives to stir up in us a desire of Truth viz. 1. The Excellency of it it maketh us like God himself for he is the Lord God of Truth Psal 31.5 his Son is Truth Joh. 14.6 17. his Holy Ghost the Spirit of Truth Jam. 1.18 his Word the Word of Truth Psal 19.9 and his Promises Commandments Judgements Ways and Works all Truth Psal 119. 2. The Necessity thereof for without it no Grace can be of any use therefore the Scripture commendeth Faith unfeigned 2 Tim. 1.5 Love without Dissimulation Rom. 12.9 and Wisdom without Hypocrisie Jam. 3.17 3. The Benefit of Truth for the least measure of Grace seasoned with it is acceptable to God and in that respect very profitable to us There is no greater Ornament or Beauty to Religion then Soundness and Evidence of Truth This is the very Glory and Crown thereof as for Antiquity Universality Unity Uniformity Succession Consent Multitude Pomp Revenues and the like being separated from Truth are but vain glosses or so many Pearls in a blinde eye to make it so much the more deformed This is it made the Martyrs so valiant David a man after Gods own heart Nathaniel so gracious in Christs eyes Job so couragious patient and constant and Paul so unconquerable Truth is a comeliness in every thing God is the God of Truth no Lye can stand Vnpunish'd by his All-Revenging hand Who calls God Witness to what is not true Stile him we may The Crucifying Jew And does what in him lies to make thereby The God of Truth the Author of a Lye We say the Lye deserves the Stab Are men So tender of their Credit much more then Jealous is God of his who will not take The Lye of Creatures for his Honors sake The Tenth Commandment Thou shalt not Covet thy Neighbors House thou shalt not Covet thy Neighbors Wife nor his Servant nor his Maid nor his Ox nor his Ass nor any thing that thy Neighbor hath TO Covet is to think inwardly and also to desire any thing whereby our Neighbor may be hindred albeit there ensue no assent of the Will to commit that evil And by Coveting here is to be understood That not onely evil actually committed is sin but harboring in the heart although it never cometh into act So that this Commandment is as it were added for the explaining of the former because the more ignorant people seeing no punishments inflicted for evil affections would not otherwise have thought them to be sins And it might be added to convince every man of Sin for we all bear in us Lust the tinder of Vice And this coveting what is anothers doth always argue a minde either lustful or not contented which is against all true Piety By the words House Wife Maid Ox c. the Commandment is illustrated as by an Argument drawn from the distribution of the Objects of Concupiscence Whence it is apparent That onely evil concupiscence is condemned in this place Gol. 3.5 for there is a good concupiscence or desire as of Meat and Drink and that of the Spirit Gal. 5.17 So then here are rehearsed the Objects of all Lusts for the most part whereby we are stirred up to the transgressing of any Commandment of the latter Table In the other Commandments not onely wicked deeds but also counsels and deliberate consent of the Will is forbidden but in this is required somewhat more namely that we be not tickled with any kinde of Lust although our Will consent not yea also though it be against it For here are forbidden all first motions of the Minde unto sin springing from Original Sin though no consent be yielded unto them and we are here commanded to keep our very hearts and mindes free from evil motions and thoughts against any of the Commandments of God and to be well contented with our own Thus the motions unto sin forbidden in this Commandment spring from Original Sin or the flesh in us other evil motions we are subject unto that are suggested by the Devil which are not our sins unless by consenting we make them so And the Duty here commanded is our thorough Sanctification not onely in deed but even in heart and thought also as in 1 Thess 5.23 the parts whereof are Mortification the putting off the Old Man which is corrupt through deceiveable lusts Eph. 4.24 and Vivification the putting on of the New Man which after God is created in Righteousness and true Holiness Joh. 3.5 otherwise called Regeneration or a New-birth The Sum of this Commandment forbiddeth all sins before consent and resolution all sins without us as Adams sin and all sins within us as the effect of the former The Scope and end of this Commandment is a Rightness and Inward Obedience of all our affections towards God and our Neighbor This Commandment is added to be a Declaration of the former and that Universal because this is spoken of the whole in general and is added to be as a Rule or Level according to which we must take and measure the inward Obedience of all the other Commandments Hereby not onely corrupt inclinations are sins but the thinking of evil is sin Unto this Commandment is Original sin or Concupiscence repugnant which is an inordinate appetite and a corrupt inclination and proneness in the Minde Will and Heart contrary to God and desiring those things that God forbiddeth in his Law which ensued upon the Fall of our first Parents Every Breach of this Commandment may be termed Covetousness Now covetous men the more they devour the more they covet like the Grave or the Barren Womb Prov. 30.14 15. like Dropsie men or Pharaohs lean Kine Thus Ahab that had a Kingdom at command covets a petty Vineyard which costs poor Naboth his Life and Living but withal covetous Ahab purchased more then he coveted the
the former and are proper onely to the sanctified Servants of God such are Faith Repentance Regeneration and other fruits of Election These shall never be quite lost The gifts pertaining to salvation are also of two sorts viz. 1. Simply Necessary without which a man cannot be saved such are Faith and Sanctification which is begun in this life where though it come not to full perfection contrary to the Anabaptists Dream yet can never be wholly lost 2. Others less Necessary not always going with Faith but sometimes onely and sometimes are separated for a time from it of this sort are a plentiful feeling of Gods favor boldness in Prayer joy in the Holy Ghost and a full assurance of Salvation these being not absolutely necessary nor always found in them though onely proper to them may for a time be wholly lost in the best and most approved Servants of God The outward familiar general and easily discernable marks of Difference betwixt the state of saving Grace and formal Hypocrisie viz. 1. The power of Grace doth beget in a Regenerate man a watchfulness care and conscience of smaller offences of secret sins of sinful thoughts of appearances of evil of all occasions of sin of prophane company of giving just offence in indifferent actions and the like The unregenerate Hypocrite takes not these things much to heart 2. The power of Saving Grace doth subdue and sanctifie our affections with a conscionable and holy moderation so that they become serviceable to the Glory of God and for a more resolute carriage of good causes and zealous discharge of all Christian duties but the bridling of Passions in the Formal Hypocrite is not so much of Conscience as of artificial Policy for advantage and by the guidance of Moral discretion 3. Every childe of God by the power of Saving Grace doth hunger and thirst after all those means God hath appointed or offers for his furtherance in the way to Heaven and doth make a holy use of whatsoever is publikely or privately laid upon him for his amendment therefore he continually profits and proceeds in Sanctification by his Word his Judgements and his Mercies by the exercise observation and sense whereof he grows sensible in heavenly knowledge Faith Humiliation Repentance Thankfulness and all other Spiritual Graces But the Hypocrite so far onely regards them as they further his Temporal Happiness or as his neglect of them may by consequence threaten danger to his worldly estate As the gifts of Gods Spirit are twofold so the Grace of God in Man is also twofold viz. 1. Restraining which bridleth the corruptions of mens hearts from breaking forth into outward actions for the common good that Societies may be preserved and one man may live orderly with another 2. Renewing which doth not onely restrain the corruption but also mortifieth sin and renews the heart daily more and more and the least beginnings of Grace be they never so weak are accepted of God provided they be not fleeting but constant and setled How God saveth men viz. 1. By giving of the first Grace which hath nine several actions or God gives this first Grace by nine operations but the first four are indeed no infallible fruits of Grace for so far a Reprobate may go 1. The outward means of Salvation as the Ministery Crosses c. 2. A consideration of the Law of God 3. A consideration of our particular peculiar sins 4. A smiting of the heart with legal fear 5. A stirring up of the minde after the Promises of Salvation in the Gospel 6. A kindling in the heart some sparks of Faith 7. Faiths victory by invocation over Doubting Distrust and Despair 8. A quieting of the Conscience touching the Souls Salvation 9. Grace to endeavor to obey Gods Commandments by New-Obedience 2. By giving of the second Grace which is nothing else but the continuance of the first Grace given as God doth by his Providence in preserving what he created at the beginning Among all the Graces of God which are many the principal the most special and necessary to Salvation are Knowledge Faith Repentance Hope and Charity and when God begins to kindle any seeds or sparks of Grace in the heart that is a will and desire to believe and grace to strive against Doubting and Despair at the same instant he justifieth the sinner and withal begins the work of Sanctification in him Again there are two ways or Covenants whereby God offereth Salvation to men viz. 1. Of Works by which Adam had been saved had he stood in his Innocency 2. Of Grace which is a Board given us against Shipwrack This Covenant of Grace is twofold viz. 1. Absolute and peculiar as onely to the Elect Jer. 31. Ezek. 36. the choycest of all the gifts of Grace being to have Grace to accept of Christ for though Christ be offered to all yet God intends him onely to the Elect and such as to whom he gives power grace and ability by Faith and Repentance to accept him Though the Papists say but most falsly That his intention is the same to all to Judas as to Peter and that all have sufficient grace to receive him 2. Conditional that is to all men as if you believe you shall be saved All they who are sanctified have the true Testimony of the Spirit known from carnal Presumption 1. By the Means whereby the true Testimony of the Holy Ghost is wrought ordinarily as Reading Hearing Prayer Meditation use of the Sacraments c. 2. By the Effects and Fruits of the Spirit as Prayer Invocation c. The Testimony of the Spirit is wrought two ways viz. 1. By clearing the Promises shining into our hearts by such a light as makes us able To Discern them To Believe them To Assent unto them 2. By an immediate voyce by which he speaketh immediately to our Spirits so that a man shall never be so perswaded as to have any sure or sound comfort by the Ministery of the Word be it never so powerful till there be a work of the Spirit which having done its work upon us our understandings are presently enlightned our desires ravish'd and our conversations reformed for sanctified Knowledge holy Affections and good Actions are never disjoyned The Properties whereby the joy of Spirit differeth from carnal joy 1. The joy of Spirit is brought forth of sorrow for sin and for the want of Christ 2. It is the fruit of Righteousness that is flowing from Christ believed to be made unto us by God Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption 3. It is founded in the holy use of the Word Sacraments Prayer and in the practice of Christian Duties 4. It is so fixed and rooted in the heart that it cannot be removed 5. It is eternal abiding in the minde not onely now but for ever The Battel of the Flesh and Spirit 1. The Flesh is puffed up with Ignorance and love of the World but the Spirit is endued with the Knowledge Love and Fear
By Consent or Assistance so Saul in keeping the garments of them that stoned Stephen 4. By Provocation this Paul forbids Eph. 6.4 5. By Negligence or Silence of this too many Ministers are guilty 6. By Flattery when men sooth up others in Sin 7. By Connivance or slight Reproof so Eli in rebuking his Son 8. By Participation so such as are Receivers of Thieves are guilty of Theft 9. By Defending another in his Sin Why the Infirmities of the Saints are recorded in Scripture viz. 1. Not to disgrace them but to keep us from a vain opinion of our selves that we presume not on our own strength 2. To make us the more careful to look to our steps that we slip not as they did for fear we cannot rise as they did it is easie to fall but hard to rise 3. Having faln as they did we should by their Example learn to rise as they did having like Sins we should have like Repentance that we may have like Forgiveness Now the Sin against the Holy Ghost whereof he is the object not in regard of his Essence or Person but in regard of his Office or Operation consisteth of these Degrees viz. 1. A rejecting of the Gospel Heb. 8.29 2. A spightful rejecting thereof under which are comprised Malice and Hatred of Heart Blasphemy of the Tongue and Persecution 3. A spightful rejecting of the Gospel against Knowledge Heb. 10.26 4. A spightful rejecting thereof after Knowledge against Conscience 5. A wilful Gainsaying and Opposition against the inward Operation and supernatural Revelation of the holy Ghost 6. A despighting of the Spirit in such things as he revealeth to them for their own good This unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost is distinguished differeth from many other sins which come very near unto it viz. 1. From many things against Knowledge yea and against Conscience also for they may be without malice of heart which this cannot be the Elect may fall into them but not into this David and Peter sinned against Knowledge and also against Conscience 2 Sam. 11. Matth. 26.70 2. From many sins committed on Malice against Christ and his Gospel which may be done out of Ignorance 1 Tim. 1.13 As Paul did before his Conversion 3. From Blasphemy and Persecution which may be done also in Ignorance or in Passion 2 Cor. 16.10 4. From Denial of Christ which may be done out of Fear like Peter or other like Temptations 5. From Apostacy from the Faith and Profession of Religion which also may be done not out of Malice but through the Violence of some Temptation like Solomon 1 Kings 11.4 5 6. And the Levites in Captivity who though barred from the Holy Things yet were admitted to do other Services in the Temple Ezek. 44.10 c. whereby it is manifest they fell not into this unpardonable Sin 6. From Presumption and Sinning with an high hand as Manasseh did 2 Chro. 33.13 7. From Hardness of Heart from Impudency and committing Sin with Greediness for so did the Gentiles which had not the Gospel Supernaturally revealed to them 8. From Infidelity and Impenitency yea from final Infidelity and Impenitency whereinto all the Reprobate fall which is not perfectly committed till Death but the Sin against the Holy Ghost is sooner otherwise in vain had Saint Johns Caveat been concerning the not praying for them 1 John 5.16 This Sin against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable not simply in regard of the Greatness and Hainousness of it as if it were greater then the Mercy of God and Sacrifice of Christ but rather in regard of that Order which God hath set down and that fixed Decree and Doom which he hath both established and revealed And though God is not bound to render man a Reason of his Orders and Decrees yet it hath pleased him to make known some reasons thereof in his Word for the better satisfaction of mens mindes and justification of his own proceedings 1. Because it is impossible that they who sin against the Holy Ghost should be renued again unto Repentance Heb. 6.4 5. 2. Because they utterly renounce and quite reject the onely Means of Pardon which is Christ Jesus offered in the Gospel Heb. 10.29 3. Because they have wittingly so wholly cast themselves into Satans power and utterly renounced to have to do with God having as it were subscribed to be Satans and ever to be with him and on his side being certified in their hearts that they are wholly forsaken of God and shall be damned And thereupon they like the damned in Hell blaspheme God whom they have renounced and with spight oppugn the Gospel through an inward hatred of God the Author of Christ the Matter and of the Holy Ghost the Revealer thereof Seeing this Sin against the Holy Ghost is not committed without malice of the Will we must know that of this malice of the Will there be two Degrees viz. 1. Particular when a man wittingly and willingly sinneth against some particular Commandment as Acts 7.51 The Jews were stiff-necked and always resisted the Holy Ghost that is the Ministery of the Prophets in some things not in all 2. General Malice when a man is carried wittingly and willingly to oppugn all the Law of God yea Christ himself true Religion and Salvation by Christ and so reverseth all the Commandments This is the sin against the Holy Ghost And this being a general and universal Apostacy of this degree the Apostle saith If we sin willingly after we have received the Knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for Sins Heb. 10.26 The chief Points considerable in this Sin against the holy Ghost viz. 1. The Name it is called a Sin against the Holy Ghost not because it is done against the Person or Deity of the Holy Ghost for so he that sinneth sinneth also against both the Father and the Son but it is so called because it is done contrary to the immediate Action namely The Illumination of the Holy Ghost 2. The Efficient Cause of it which is a purposed and obstinate Malice against God and against his Christ 3. The Object namely God himself and the Mediator Christ Jesus for the Malice of this Sin is directed against the very Majesty of God himself and against Christ Heb. 10.29 4. The Subject in which it is This Sin is found in none at all but such as have been enlightned by the Holy Ghost and have tasted of the Gift of God Heb. 6.5 6. 5. The Elect cannot commit this Sin and therefore they who feel in themselves a sure Testimony of their Election need never to despair 6. This Sin cannot be forgiven not because it is greater then Christs Merit but because after the Commission thereof it is impossible for a man to repent 7. It is very hard to know when this Sin is committed because the Root thereof lurketh inwardly in the Heart That we may ever abhor the very thought of sin consider feriously these two most cursed
fruits and effects thereof viz. 1. It converted happy and blessed Angels into cursed and damned Spirits for the Devils by Creation were good Angels as Powerful Wise Quick Speedy Invisible Immortal c. as any other Angels equal in every respect but inferior in no respect to the very best Angels Now when they fell they lost not their natural Substance and essential Properties thereof no more then man lost his when he fell For as man remained to be not onely Flesh and Blood but also a Living yea and a reasonable Creature after his Fall So the Devil remained to be a Spirit Invisible Immortal Quick Speedy c. as before onely the Quality of his Nature and Properties is altered from Good to Evil. Now the things which especially make them seem so terrible are Their Power Malice Subtilty Sedulity and Speed for where Malice is strengthned by Might Might whetted on by Malice both Malice and Power guided by Craft Craft and all stirred up by Diligence Sedulity and Speed the Enemy is prevalent Be wise therefore Watch and Pray stand fast in the Faith Yet know that the Devil is not able to do whatsoever he will for this is proper onely to God whose Power is Infinite but the Devils Power is a created Power and therefore limited within bounds of a Creature yea he is not able to do any thing simply above or directly against that course which the Lord hath ordained unto his Creatures which is commonly called The course of Nature for God hath tied all his Creatures thereunto and hath reserved onely for himself who is the sole Lord of Nature power to alter it as pleaseth him But the extraordinary power of the Devil consisteth in this That he can do any thing that is within the compass of Nature and may be effected by Natural means as the violent moving of the Air causing of Tempests and Storms Thunder and Lightning troubling the Seas the causing of Earth-quakes throwing down Buildings rooting up Trees entring into Bodies both of Men and Beasts casting them into Fire and Water grievously vexing and tormenting them inflict sore Diseases on them possess them make them Lunatick Deaf Dumb Blinde stir up Wrath Pride Covetousness Lust and the like Passions in men He knows the dispositions of men and accordingly layes baits for them he can darken their Understandings and cause much Anguish in their Soul and Conscience he can inrage Man against Man Kingdom against Kingdom Subjects against Princes Princes against Subjects and so cause whatsoever mischief can be caused which the whole World may witness by too woful Experience As touching the Nature of Devils they are Spiritual Substances they were created Spirits and Spirits they still remain to be their Fall hath not altered their Substance but the Quality of it for else could not that Nature and Substance which transgressed be punished Grosly therefore do they erre who Think and Teach That they be nothing else but bad Qualities and evil Affections which arise from our Flesh If because they are Spiritual things they should be no Substances but onely Qualities then neither should the Souls of Men nor good Angels be Substances for these are termed Spirits Eccles 12.7 Heb. 1.14 Spiritual things may be as truly and properly Substances as Bodily things And as for the Devils the Actions which they perform the Places where they are the Power wherewith they are endued and the Pains and Torments which they suffer evidently shew that they are plainly and truly Substances And we may know that in Hell there are both degrees of Torments and degrees of Devils for there is one Head of wicked Spirits called Beelzebub or The Devil who hath innumerable wicked Angels ministring unto him as may be gathered Matth. 25.41 where Hell is said to be prepared for the Devil and his Angels And it is not unlike that they are more in number then all the men upon the Earth for where can any man be in this Life but some wicked Spirit will be ready to tempt him to sin And though the Evil Motions arise from our own Corruption yet the Devils help is never wanting to bring them into Action which confutes the folly of our common people who never dread the Devil but when he appears unto them in some horrid shape they think he is never neer them but when they see him but it is far otherwise and there is more Reason to fear his Temptations then his Appearance for this is not so terrible to the Sight as his Temptations are hurtful to the Soul And this fearful Fiend this cursed Spirit this damned Devil had not been at all had it not been for Sin 2. It occasioned Adams Fall by his disobedience whereby himself and all his Posterity forfeited that Happiness wherein they were created and incurred a most fearful punishment which is Threefold viz. 1. In this Life as the painful Provision of the things of this Life proneness to Diseases shame of Nakedness pains in Childbirth trembling of Conscience in the Soul care trouble hardness of Heart and madness Deut. 28.28 Subjection to the power of Satan Damage to the Temporal estate Deut. 28.29 And the loss of that lordly Authority which man had over all the Creatures 2. Temporal death or a change like unto it Rom. 6.23 3. After this life eternal destruction from Gods exceeding glorious Presence Presume not to commit that Sin in secret which thou wouldst not before men for all secret Sins hidden to men are known to God for these Reasons viz. 1. Because it is impossible that any thing in Heaven or Earth should hide us or our works from his knowledge 't is not the darkness of the night nor the secrecy of the place nor the politique contrivance of any act can conceal us from his Knowledge and Omnipresency his All-seeing Eye Psal 139.9 10 11. 2. Because it is the Office of God and an essential Property attributed unto him to be the Searcher of hearts Gen. 6.5 1 Chron. 28.9 Jer. 17.10 Thus he saw the secret Sacriledge of Achan the Hypocrsie of Ananias and Sapphira and the Treachery of Judas In Original Sin consider 1. The Cause which is Adams Fall partly by the subtile Suggestions of the Devil partly through his own Free-will and the propagation of Adams corrupted Nature to his Seed and Posterity 2. The Subject thereof which is the Old Man with all his Powers Minde Will and Heart 1. In the Minde Ignorance of God and his Will 2. In the Will Rebellion against the Law of God 3. The Effects thereof they are 1. Actual Sins 1. Inward as ungodly Affections 2. Outward as wicked Looks prophane Speech and ungodly Actions 2. An Evil Conscience which bringeth the Wrath of God Death and Eternal Damnation To the Sin of Adams Fall there were three things concurring viz. 1. Gods Permitting not by instilling into him any evil or taking from him any ability to good but by suffering Satan to tempt him 2. By
of those sins which go before 2. In the immoveable and perpetual Order of Gods Judgement an Evil Conscience 3. Temporal and Spiritual Evils as Temporal Death and indeed all the Calamities of this life 4. Eternal Death which is the Effect of all sins as they are sins Two Helps to withstand Sin 1. Labor for Spiritual Wisdom to be able to discern the Policy of Satan 2. Labor for Spiritual Strength to withstand all his Provocations Three degrees of curing the Disease of Sin in us 1. To know our Sickness the dangerous Malady of Sin 2. To know the Remedy for it which is Christ 3. To apply the Remedy as we ought by Faith Of the contagious Infection of Sin we are to make this wholesom Use as an Antidote against it viz. 1. We must labor to come to the knowledge of our sins and to be touched with a feeling of them for till then we can never pray for Mercy as we ought from the great Soul-Physitian 2. We are put in minde to confess our sins and uncleanness that so we may be washed by him that purgeth us for If we acknowledge our sins he is merciful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.9 3. We must know by what means God useth to sanctifie us it is by the Blood of his own Son for the Blood of Christ purgeth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 Heb. 9.14 4. We must seek Mercy while it is offered unto us when our hearts are terrified for sin Let us have recourse to the Fountain of his Blood which can never be drawn dry Isaiah 55.6 7. Psal 51.1 2. 5. We must buy of Christ White Garments to clothe us and to cover our deformity Rev. 3.18 that the filthiness of our nakedness may not appear 6. We must forsake our sins and walk in the statutes of God Isa 1.16 17. Ezek. 20.18 19. if we bring not forth the fruit of obedience we wallow in our mire 7. If God hath given us Grace to stand we must pray him to give us also Grace to continue and persevere unto the end 8. We must walk circumspectly and forsake the Company of the Wicked and society with them 2 Cor. 6.16 Avoid all occasions and inducements to sin to abstain even from the appearances of evil Again to be preserv'd from Sin use these Remedies viz. 1. With thy Eyes ever behold God present and ever have his fear before thee 2. With thy Ears ever hear that terrible voyce sounding Arise ye Dead and come to Judgement 3. With thy Hands be ever exercising that which is good 4. In thy Heart ever hide the Word of God and meditate continually thereon 5. With thy Tongue and Lips ever bring some honor to God and Edification to the hearer in all that proceedeth from them knowing God hears even our Thoughts 6. With thy Feet stand in the Courts of Gods House but offer not the Sacrifice of Fools 7. With thy whole Man render thy self serviceable to thy Creator and see thou keep thy Body holy as becometh the Temple of the Holy Ghost For forsaking of Sin observe these Rules viz. 1. It must not be for a short time for a fit or a season but for ever renouncing all Right Title Interest and Propriety therein 2. We must alienate our selves for ever not onely from some but all our sins the most pleasant the most dear the most profitable sins 3. It must be a forsaking in deed and not an exchanging of one sin for another Means sanctified of God to keep us from Sin viz. 1. The Ministery of the Word Thus he sent Jonah to the Ninevites Jon. 3.4 Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12.1 And the Prophets to the Israelites continually 2 Chro. 36.14 15. Acts 2.37 38. 2. The Benefits and Blessings of God many and great daily and continual This should be an Argument prevalent to disswade us from sin and invite us to serve the Living God Prov. 10.12 3. He hath bestowed upon us his own Son the greatest Blessing in Heaven or Earth for a greater cannot be promised of God or comprehended of Man Rom. 8.31 John 3.16 If the serious Consideration of this will not move us to repent of sin nothing in the World will 4. The Corrections and Chastisements which are laid upon us Psal 89.31 32. Job 33.16 Yea upon others also which should be as so many warning pieces to call us to Repentance Isai 26.9 5. Private Admonitions and Exhortations yea Reproofs and Threatnings of Judgement when the former will not serve Levit. 19.17 Prov. 9.8 6. The inward Motions and Inspirations of the Holy Spirit which he stirreth up in our Hearts 2 Sam. 24.10 Psal 16.7 Let us make much of them lest he withdraw them and give us over to our selves The Use of the Doctrine of Sin viz. 1. That seeing sin is so great an Evil we praise the Justice of God who so severely punisheth it and not think to extenuate it but endeavor to avoid the least 2. That acknowledging the remnant of sin in us we despair not but flie to the Mediator 3. That we may discern our selves from those in whom sin reigneth and that sin against the Holy Ghost 4. That we lay not the cause and fault of our sins on God when it is and ever was in our selves 5. That seeing there are degrees of sins and punishments we take heed of adding sin to sin 6. Let us return perpetual praise to God and his Son our Lord Jesus Christ who from sin and the fearful punishment thereof hath ransomed all penitent Believers by his Spirit converting them from Sin to Good Works which follow XII A Good Work is a Duty commanded of God performed by a Regenerate person and done in Faith aiming therein at the Glory of God and the good of Men I mean not the Popish meritorious Works but such as are the Fruits and Effects of a Living and Effectual Faith so called not that they are without imperfection even the best of them but because from the true Believer God is pleased to accept of them as good yet he accepts them not seem they never so good no farther then he findes Faith in them and yet accepts he the gift be it never so small for the givers sake if he believe in him Thus Works of Justice Temperance and the like cannot be called Godliness or good Works except they rise from Faith because indeed it is not done to God for further then a man doth a thing out of Faith he doth it not to God For to do a thing out of Faith is nothing else but when out of perswasion of Gods love to me I do this thing meerly for his sake whom I have chosen to whom I give my self one that I know loves me and therefore though there were no reward for it I would serve him This is a Work of Faith insomuch as that Almsdeeds Martyrdom or the like may not be called Good Works if they
excellency of Gods Gifts 7. If our Works should merit Christ should not be a perfect Savior nor Heaven purchased for us by his Blood onely which now to affirm is To Crucifie him worse then the Jews did Good Works cannot justifie us for these Reasons viz. 1. Because our best works yea the works of the Saints are not perfectly good and pure and that for these Reasons viz. 1. We do many things we should not and omit many things we should do 2. We mingle evil with the good we should do or we do good but we do it ill The thing done may be good but not the maner of doing it 3. The Saints which do good works do many things which are sins in themselves and so deserve to be outed of Gods favor Deut. 27.26 4. Because there is not that degree of Goodness in these good works that proceed from the Saints which ought to be or as God requireth 2. Though they were perfect yet are they due and debt so that we cannot satisfie by them 3. They are Temporary and bear not proportion with Eternal Blessings 4. They are Effects of Justification therefore no Cause thereof 5. They are excluded that we might not have whereof to glory 6. If they were part of our Justification our Consciences should be destitute of stable and certain Comfort 7. Christ should have dyed in vain and have risen in vain not to our Justification if we could have been justified by Works That justifying Faith which is required in every good work hath a double use in the causing thereof 1. It gives the beginning to a good work renewing the Minde Will and Affections of the worker whence the work proceedeth as pure water from a cleansed Fountain 2. It covereth the wants that be in good works for the best work done by man in this life is imperfect but hereby both the person of the worker is accepted and the imperfection of his work covered in the sight of God All these are excluded from being good works viz. 1. Which are sins in themselves and repugnant to Gods Law and his VVill revealed in his most sacred VVord 2. VVhich are not repugnant to the Law neither in themselves good or evil but which may yet by an accident be made good or evil 3. VVhich are good in themselves and commanded by God but yet are made sins by an accident in that they are unlawfully done or not as they ought to be How the works of the Regenerate and Unregenerate differ viz. 1. The works of the Unregenerate proceed not from Faith as those of the Regenerate do 2. The works of the Unregenerate are not joyned with an inward Obedience and therefore are done dissemblingly and are meer Hypocrisie but it is far otherwise with the Regenerate 3. As the works of the Unregenerate proceed not from the right cause so are they not referred to the chief end which is Gods Glory but in both these the works of the Regenerate are rightly and truly qualified Though the works of the most Regenerate yea his best works are good onely in part not perfectly because he is not wholly Spirit and no Flesh yet God approves of them And therefore we must again consider Good VVorks two ways viz. 1. In themselves as they are compared with the Law and the rigor thereof and so they are sins because they answer not to that perfection which the Law requireth for there be two degrees of Sin viz. 1. Rebellions which are Actions flatly against the Law 2. Defects when a man doth those things the Law commandeth but faileth in the maner of doing and so mans best works are sins 2. As they are done by a person Regenerate and reconciled to God in Christ and so God accepts of them for in Christ the wants of them are covered The Benefit of putting and keeping on the Holy Spiritual Brest-plate of Righteousness which is Good VVorks viz. 1. It keepeth us from being mortally wounded for so long as we retain a true purpose and faithful endeavor answerable thereto we shall never give our selves over to commit sin and iniquity 2. It bringeth great Assurance of our Effectual Calling and Spiritual Union with Christ yea even of our Election and Salvation Eph. 1.4 1 Joh. 2.29 3. It procureth us a good name in Gods Church while we live 2 Cor. 8.18 and a blessed Memory after we are dead Prov. 10.7 4. It confirmeth the Truth of Religion and so it may be a means to win such as are without 1 Pet. 3.1 to strengthen those that stand 1 Thess 1.6 7. and to stir up all to an holy emulation 2 Cor. 9.2 5. It doth highly honor God and occasion others to glorifie him Mat. 5.16 That we may be moved to the doing of Good Works and to live righteously observe here the blessed fruit and issue thereof as it is declared in Scripture viz. 1. Generally that the Lord loveth Righteousness Psal 11.7 that verily there is a Reward for the Righteous Psal 58.11 that Blessings are on the head of the Righteous c. Prov. 10.6 2. Particularly for the Righteous person himself viz. 1. In this Life the eyes of the Lord are upon the Righteous Psal 34.15 God will grant their desire Prov. 10.24 he delivereth them out of all trouble Psal 34.19 they shall never be forsaken Psal 37.25 they shall flourish like a Palm-tree Psal 92.12 c. 2. At their Death when they have hope Prov. 14.32 and are taken from the evil to come Isa 57.1 3. After Death their Memorial shall be blessed Prov. 10.7 in everlasting remembrance Psal 112.6 4. At the Resurrection they shall go into Life Eternal Mat. 25.46 They shall shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of their Father Matth. 11.43 5. For their Posterity The Generation of the Righteous shall be blessed Psal 112.2 Their seed shall not beg their bread c. Psa 37.25 XIII REpentance is a constant turning from all sin unto God or an inward sorrowing and continually mourning for sin joyned with Faith and Humiliation and both inward and outward amendment It is an aversion or turning from all a mans sins and a reversion or turning again unto God with all our Hearts Or Repentance is an unfained sorrow for and hatred of sin with an earnest Love of Righteousness by the which we are continually stirred up to abhor our Vices and are moved to do good Works not for fear of punishment or hope of reward but for that love we bear towards God that with a joyful heart we are moved to his Obedience and with grief go astray from his Commandments A Godly sorrow whereby a man is grieved for his sins because they are sins is the beginning of Repentance and indeed for substance it is Repentance it self So a desire to repent and believe in a touched Heart and Conscience is Faith and Repentance it self though not in Nature yet in Gods acceptation for in them that have Grace God accepteth the will for the
yet be a sound true and saving Faith it is not the difference of degrees and measure that takes away the nature of it For Faith in regard of the extent of it admits degrees not because the Habit is encreased but because the Revelations and Objects are more and therefore those poor Christians that are yet ignorant may have a true habit and as true a Grace in the heart And though a man be more conversant in the Scripture knows more then they hath more Revelations and in that sense though he hath a greater Faith then the other yet the other hath a like precious Faith with him in regard of that Grace Nor do Infirmities break the Covenant betwixt God and those that have once taken Christ and have true Faith though in the least degree Now in Taking Christ the stronger the Will is by how much stronger Assent the Minde and Understanding gives to those Truths which concern Justification delivered in the Scripture And we must labor to believe hard things like Abraham or easie things propounded with slender Arguments like Nathaniel for if we believe in difficult cases God will make us with facility to believe them another time We must labor for the extent of Faith for the multitude of Revelations to be filled full of Faith as Barnabas is said to be and this is by studying the Word much for therein will God reveal this This Faith is the Mother of all Sanctifying Graces for by it we are ingrafted into Christ and so live the life of Faith the life of God the fruits of Faith are almost infinite for all the several and distinct branches of Piety and Charity if they be rightly performed are fruits of Faith And where there is a true Faith there is a secret perswasion wrought in the heart whereby God assures us that he is ours and we are his for we may know and be assured that Christ dyed for us and Redeemed us in particular if we can finde in our selves that we have true Faith in Christ and true Repentance for all sins And we may be assured of our Vocation if through the Mystery of the Word seconded and made powerful by Gods Spirit we are quite altered and changed from our former evil lives and have attained unto Faith and Repentance And we may be further assured That we are Redeemed and are the children of God if we finde that we have the Spirit of God dwelling in us which if we want we are none of Gods which if we have it will appear by the fruits of the Spirit in us for as Exercise begets Health and we are made fit by Health for Exercise or as Acts beget Habits and Habits are means to exercise those Acts so Assurance grounded upon the Promise enableth enlargeth and encreaseth Sanctification and Sanctification encreaseth Assurance but first see Faith and then the other as fruits of it Now Faith is wrought in us thus The Spirit comes and shews Christ to us and not onely the profit we have by him but the beauty and excellency of him it shews us what Grace is and makes us love it and then shews us Mercy Out of this we come to long after Christ and to say I would I had him Now to this work he addes a second Christ comes and tells a man I will have thee he comes and shews himself discovers himself and speaks plainly to him I am willing to marry thee Now the longing Soul hearing those glad tidings embraces the motion and the work is done We may know whether this Faith be wrought in us by reflecting upon our own hearts and considering what actions have passed through it for the works of Faith are manifest And we must use Faith in comforting our selves for whatsoever Christ hath by Nature we have it by Grace when we have Faith if he be a Son we are Sons if he be an Heir we are Heirs c. yea Faith makes a man regardless of all earthly things Those that have Faith are able to use it of themselves but many have it that do not use it and though God doth work in us all the work of Faith as it is received yet know He doth not work in us onely but by us he makes us Instruments yea we shall be called to an account for the Talent of Faith if we have it and use it not and if we use it not we shall have little enough o● it for the using of it is that which strengthneth Faith and makes it effectual Now that we are saved by Faith appears from these places of Scripture Joh. 3.16 Rom. 1.16 3.28 Eph. 2.8 Mark 16.16 Rev. 21.8 2 Thess 2.11 12. Gal. 3.7 9. Luke 7.50 Yet know That a man is not saved by Faith simply as it is Faith for it doth not in its own nature merit Salvation but it is said to save us in respect of its Object which is Christ not as it is a gift quality or property but as it is an Instrument to apprehend and apply this Object so that we are saved by Faith as an Instrument not for Faith as a Cause So Faith alone is said to justifie us but that Faith which is alone without other Graces doth not justifie us neither were ever any justified by Faith without Works For Faith is not onely a Perswasion that our sins are forgiven but also a thorough Repenting that our sins may be forgiven not onely a Perswasion that the Promises are true but a Holiness of living that we may have a share in those Promises not onely a Perswasion that the Scripture is true but an Obedience to Gods Will revealed therein not onely a Perswasion that Christ dyed for my sins but also such an uprightness of walking as that I crucifie him not again by my Lusts for Faith doth not onely work a good meaning in us but it doth work power in us to do good and to mortifie our affections for where Christ dwells indeed he gives power against sin and that by his Spirit and where the Understanding is fully convinced the Will and Affections follow Faith and the Desire of satisfying Lusts cannot stand together and he that trusts not God for Earthly things cannot trust him for matters of Salvation for if we have Faith in the main we will have it in particular cases We are said to Believe three maner of ways viz. 1. We believe one God that is we believe that there is a God 2. We believe God that is that God is true touching his Promises These two ways Infidels yea the Devils believe and tremble 3. We believe in God that is according to those Promises to put our whole trust and hope in God In the Doctrine of the Church mention is made of four sorts of Faith 1. Historical when men believe the Bibles History This saves not James 2.19 2. Temporary when men believe onely for a time neither doth this save 3. Miraculous proceeding from special Revelation which is now out of use
4. Justifying this is the true faith and this saves Historical Faith being an Assent of heart to the Truth of Gods Word is twofold 1. Infused which is wrought in us by the illightning Spirit of God and staying it self upon his Authority immediately relying thereon 2. Acquired which is produced by the light of Reason Discourse and created Testimony This is that which may be found in Devils Again Faith is twofold viz. 1. Legal when we believe the Promises or more specially the Threatnings of the Law which we are bound to believe 2. Evangelical when we believe the Promise of the Gospel applying it to our selves For the right understanding of Faith what it is these things are chiefly requisite to be known and seriously to be considered viz. 1. The principal Efficient Cause thereof which is the Holy Ghost Eph. 2.8 2. The Instrumental Cause that is the Preaching of the Word and use of the Sacraments 3. The Formal Cause that is a certain Knowledge and a sure and full Considence in Christ 4. The Object of it that is whole Christ and his Benefits promised in the Word 5. The Subject wherein it remaineth of Place where it is which is the Understanding the Minde and Will 6. The Maner how it Justifies viz. As an Instrument 7. The Actions of it which are these principally viz. To Reconcile or Justifie To Pacifie the heart To Purifie or Sanctifie 8. The Final Cause thereof which is 1. The Glory of God 2. Our Salvation Saving Faith comprehendeth these three things viz. 1. Knowledge or the right conceiving of the necessary Doctrines of true Religion especially of those which concern Christ our Redeemer 2. Assent when a man knowing this Doctrine doth further approve of the same as wholesom Doctrine and the Truth of God directing us aright unto Salvation 3. Application when we conceive in our hearts a true perswasion of Gods Mercy towards us particularly in the free pardon of all our sins and for the Salvation of our Souls Or thus In Justifying Faith these six things are necessarily required viz. 1. A true understanding of Gods Word so far as is necessary to Salvation Rom. 10.14 2. An Inward Assent and Consent unto the Word Joh. 17.17 Rom. 7.16 Isa 1.19 3. A Profession of the Word and true Religion not for any sinister respect Rom. 10.9 10. 4. An Approbation Joy Delight Love and affecting of this Word 5. A true and sound Application of Christ to our own particular selves Heb. 10.22 6. A continual Declaration of our Faith by the continual practice of good works Jam. 2.26 The order which God useth in working Faith viz. 1. He worketh on the understanding enlightning it by his Word as in all Fundamental necessary Points of Christian Religion so in these two especially 1. In the Misery of a natural man which the Law discovereth 2. In the Remedy thereof which the Gospel revealeth 2. He worketh on the Will and thereon also two especial Works viz. 1. In regard of mans Misery as to be pricked in heart grieved in soul for sin and wounded in conscience 2. In regard of the Remedy to desire above all things in the world one drop of the infinite Mercy of God and to give all to have Christ How the Holy Ghost worketh Faith viz. 1. By enlightning the minde that it may understand the Word 2. By moving the Will that it may assent unto the Word once understood 3. By putting an efficacy in the Law for though the Law be fit to humble a man yet is it no worker of Sanctification 4. By shewing the excellency and riches of Christ 5. By assuring us that these things are ours As in Faith there must be 1. The Understanding to apprehend Christ 2. The Will to accept and lay hold on him So therein are these things required 1. To know the Promises of Righteosness and Life Eternal by Christ 2. To apply the Promise with the thing promised which is Christ unto our selves How to apply Christ truly to our selves 1. Lay a Foundation of this Action that is in the Word and in the Ministery of the Word 2. Practice upon this Foundation that is to give our selves to the exercise of Faith and Repentance which stands in Meditation of the Word and Prayer for Pardon when this is done God gives the sense and encrease of his Grace When we resolve to Take Christ God gives us power and ability thereto but the rejecting of Christ is the greatest sin and none shall be so much laid to our charge at the Day of Judgement Let these Considerations move us to Take Christ 1. The Danger in not taking him 2. The Benefit in taking him 3. The Certainty of having him The things which must concur in the Will to receive take Christ viz. 1. There must not be Error Personae this excludes ignorant men that take not Christ indeed but in their own fancy 2. There must be the right Form of taking him as a renouncing of all things else This must be observed Christ must be taken onely and alone 3. There must be a compleat Will concurring to this Action which excludes all wishers and woulders 4. There must be a deliberate Will which excludes those that onely in a good mood would take Christ 5. The Will must be true and free excluding servile Fear in perillous Necessities or at times of Death c. It is the Righteousness of Faith by which alone men can be saved now in the time of the Gospel which Position may be opened by the Answers made to these six Questions viz. 1. How this Righteousness of God saves Ans As Adams Unrighteousness condemns 2. How it is offered to us Ans By free gift as the Father gives his Land 3. To whom it is offered Ans To all that will accept it 4. Vpon what Qualifications Ans None as proexistent 5. How it is made ours Ans By Faith applying it to our selves 6. What is required of us when we have it Ans 1. To love Christ 2. To Repent 3. To part with all for him 4. To suffer for him 5. To do for him The reasons why the Righteousness of God is ours by Gift viz. 1. That no man might boast in himself but he that rejoyceth may rejoyce in the Lord. 2. That men may learn to depend upon God for it who will have no man challenge it as due for it is a meer Grace Rom. 4.16 3. That it might be sure to all the Seed even to Gentile as well as to Jew There is a double consideration to be had of Faith viz. 1. As it works As a Quality and so it hath nothing to do with Justification 2. As it Receives As an Instrument So it justifies and that not by altering the nature of sin that is by making sin to be no sin but by taking away the efficacy of sin that it doth not condemn us Daniels Lyons were Lyons still though God at that time took their fierceness from them