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A13554 The progresse of saints to full holinesse described in sundry apostolicall aphorismes, or short precepts tending to sanctification, with a sweete and divine prayer to attaine the practise of those holy precepts / by Thomas Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1630 (1630) STC 23850; ESTC S1019 235,792 462

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the directions the Scripture doth afford us which be of two sorts and both of them within that in Iob 31. that because the eye is a most swift messenger unto the soule and most slippery as Iob make a covenant with thine eyes not to behold vanity And because all thy watching is too little for so quicke a member pray the Lord that he would turne away thine eye from beholding vanity Psal. 119.37 Wherein is this watch I. To pull away thine eyes from unallowed objects First beware of an hypocriticall deceitfull eye as in Prov. 6.12 there is one that twinkleth with his eye this is an eye quick-sighted to deceive his brother See thine eye be single as Christ teacheth that is such an eye as may discerne to doe that thou doest that it be just 2. by just meanes 3. doe it with all thy heart uprightly 4. within compasse of thy calling and if thou canst get this single eye the whole body will be likewise single II. There is a lustfull or an adulterous eye 2 Pet. 2.19 we reade of unchast persons that have eyes full of adultery First there be them that have eyes full of spirituall adultery gazing upon Popish pictures and images which they hang up in their houses as alluring harlots corrupters of the heart which is an opening of the doore to idolatry and a signe of a man willing to be deceived But the eyes of the Church are as doves eyes Cant. 1.14 chast and pure not gazing upon idolatrous pictures Secondly corporall adultery that delight in lascivious pictures filthy portraitures of naked men and women in whole or such parts as may incite the corruption of heart and feede it with contemplative adultery we neede bring no oyle to this flame the more lamentable it is that the Divell hath got such pictures into request in this wanton and unclean age for where can a man goe where he may looke off them which a manifest signe of adulterous eyes 2. Such are their eyes who are adulterous living pictures that so attire and disguise themselves to lay open their nakednes beyond all modestie to ensnare the eyes senses of others say not thou thinkest no hurt in it except thou be sure others thinke no hurt by it 3. Such are their eyes that reade lascivious and wanton bookes teachers of adultery and lewdnesse that frequent stage-playes with their beastly acts and actions wherein all gates and walls are cast open to the Divell beware of this eye by which death and poyson enters into the heart III. There is a covetous eye which is not satisfied with riches Eccles. 4.8 neither doth hee say for whom doe I thus labour this eye defraudes the soule of pleasure and is an evill sicknesse As Ahabs who was discontented with a kingdome for want of Naboths vineyard There be three things that never say enough the horse-leach the fire and the grave and adde the fourth a covetous eye which as Iobs Elephant Iob 40. thinkes hee can swallow the whole flood Iordan Let a covetous man have but a moate of dust or earth in his eye what trouble is it to him yet he thinkes to thrust a whole Country could he get it into his eye and see never the worse Take heed of this covetous eye there is no greater an enemy to faith and contentation or any good exercise than it is IV. There is an envious eye Matth. 20.15 Is thine eye evill because mine is good such an eye as Satan cast upon the happinesse of man when hee was fallen from his owne Take heede of this sore eye that cannot abide the light Basil saith that whereas many evills are in it yet onely one good thing goes with it it is the greatest plague to him that hath it V. There is a sleepy a dull and a negligent eye not open or quicke to behold with fruite and profit the noble workes and actions of God whereas God hath made the eye of a round figure and of quicke motion that it might easily move it selfe any way or every way in viewing the workes of God in beholding the afflictions of his people and the necessities of his brethren The second thing wherein we must be carefull in watching the eye is to labour to holde and fixe the eyes upon allowed and profitable objects As 1. God made our eyes to looke upward and hath given mans eye one muscle which the beasts eye wants that it should not fixe it selfe as theirs upon the earth yea hath compassed the eyes with browes and lids to fence them from dust and earth that though we looke sometimes on the earth yet the least dust or earth should not get into them Psal. 123.2 to shew that our eyes should be lifted up unto him and in seeing his creatures behold himselfe 〈◊〉 ●hem Esay 40.26 Lift up your eyes aloft and behold who created all these things the invisible things of God his power divinity and eternity were made visible to the very Gentiles by things created Rom. 1.20 And shall Christians onely looke on these things as they to make our selves inexcusable shall we looke upon the Sunne and not on him that made it 2. Let us fixe our eyes on the workes of God in and for his Church for the strengthening of our faith and confidence as Iohn 2.23 they that saw the workes of Christ Many of them beleeved in his name seeing the workes he did For the Lord doth nothing for or against his Church but according to his truth revealed in the word the Lord doth no worke in his Church either of judgement or of mercy but they are as it were the very commentaries of the Scriptures and therefore all the workes of God that wee can behold in or for his Church doe notably stirre up our faith in him 3. God hath allowed us our eyes to behold our brethren to behold their graces to see their good example to affect embrace and encourage them to imitate them to glorifie God for them thus our eyes should imitate the eyes of God which are upō the just to affect protect reward them Yea we must holde our eyes upon our brethrens misery to pitty releeve them we must not turne our eyes from our owne flesh as the unmercifull Priest and Levite did from the wounded man who were condemned by the pittifull Samaritan 4. Our eyes we●● given us not onely to be organes of sight but to be fountaines of teares in beholding both our owne sinne and misery and the sinne and wretchednesse of our brethren The Iewes eye beholding the brazen Serpent was a watery and mournefull eye because hee was stung by the Serpent so ours much more whose sting and paine is mortall and inward And can we beholde any creature and not see in it the expresse prints and markes of our owne sinne which still must adde to our griefe And for others Good Lot was vexed daily to see the uncleane conversation of the Sodomites and Davids
of salvation And besides for such as have opportunitie and leisure from their callings it must needs be an unanswerable sinne to neglect or contemne the offer of the meanes of their owne good while they can spend that or more time idly or sottishly or in gaming sporting vaine companionship complement or the like For here is not only a vaine sinfull expence of precious time but a prophane despising of the most sacred ordinance of God which is now as a prize in the hand of a fool but he wanteth heart Were there a true knowledge of Christ offered in the means he would be thankefully received at any time Were there any true love of Christ it would alwayes enioy him whom the soule loveth and delight at any time to beholde him through these grates but he loves him not on the Sabboth that hates him on the weeke-day Were there any hunger after Christ it would find the need of this bread of life on the week-day as hunger findeth need of foode for the body on the Saboth day hunger after Christ wold force him out of his tent to gather this Mannah in the due season of gathering if it were every day to be had Were there a true taste of Christ he would be as sweete to the soule one day as another Did ever man that truly tasted Christ on the Sabboth day preferre earthly things before him in the weeke-day or did ever man prosper by the meanes on the Sabboth that desp●sed them in the weeke-day Were there true sence of a mans selfe it would not suffer him to bee lesse holy any day than the Sabboth onely it must be more publikely expressed it would not suffer him at any time in the middest of his earthly businesse to be earthly-minded and much lesse to bee so wedged and rivited into earthly distractions as not to bestow an houre in a weeke when God offers a publike helpe to the winding up of his heart towards heaven The objections are idle and of idle men As that there is too much preaching If it be made by Preachers themselves I should marvaile the more because I never heard men of any other trade complaine of too much trading If of private men a man might waite to wearinesse before he should heare them complaine of too much money too much land too much gaine Which plainly evidenceth that Gods word is undervalued and rejected below base profits whereby men pull the brand of Esaus profanesse upon themselves preferring every measse of broth before the birth-right and exchanging with the Prodigall for very huskes the bread of their Fathers house But so much preaching bringeth preaching into contempt say some Yea but what infant contemnes the milke because it sucketh often every day or who contemnes his meate because hee eateth every day who falls out with his apparell because he puts it on every day or who despiseth his wealth because he increaseth it every day and is not Christ in his word propounded our foode our wealth our apparell and all in all unto us Let them also make us beleeve that the light of the Sunne is made contemptible because it shineth every day Or that Daniel brought prayer into contempt when he prayed thrice every day Or David when hee prayed seaven times a day Why may they not as well perswade us that the publicke prayers appointed foure dayes in a weeke brings publicke prayer into contempt as well as preaching once in a weeke But I have no leisure saith the rich man I have many weighty occasions and employments it is for poorer men who have no such distractions to runne after Sermons To whom our Saviour makes a full answer That one thing is more necessary than they all in comparison of which Mary neglects all other things and who dare say that Mary did more than she was bound to doe or that shee did heare onely because shee had nothing else to doe or that shee was blame-worthy whom our Lord commendeth in that for the love of the word shee did neglect all other things 2. It is not indeede want of leisure but want of love and taste of the word that makes this objection for love of any thing will finde time and leisure to enjoy it 3. It is not want of time for no man but hath much more time than he useth well and none but hath much time which he spendeth worse but want of judgement to give priority to things of greatest weight and worth Is any worldly businesse of greater importance than the seeking of Gods favour and the assurance of a mans owne salvation Would any employment never so weighty make a man wholly neglect for a weeke together all meanes of preserving his body and is any so necessary as to make us neglect the health and welfare of our precious soules or canst thou with reason be straiter to thy owne soule on the weeke day than the Lord is to thy body on the Sabboth day He allowes thee to consult with a Physitian for thy body in case of necessity even upon his sabboth and doest not thou allow thy selfe an houre among so many houres in a weeke to consult with thy spirituall Physitian for the helpe of thy soule Might a Iew make a journey on the Sabboth to consult with a Prophet and may not a Christian steppe out of his doores for counsell in the week-day Nay more may a Iew performe a worke of mercy to a beast on the Sabboth day as to helpe it out of a pit or to drive it to water and must not a Christian doe so much for his soule on the week-day as they for the body of a beast on the Sabboth 4. It is not want of time but want of well husbanding the time that gives rise to this objection for he that employeth his time wisely shall never need to complaine for want of time especially for the maine businesse of his life A good husband will be sure to set out time for the chiefe points of husbandry and so will a good husband for his soule but hee that trifles out his time in unnecessaries must needes want it in necessaries And indeede they be not such necessary duties as they are pretended which engrosse and eate out mens time but for the most part unnecessary and lombersome employments such as Christ reproves in Martha which for a great part of them might be pared off and parted with were men so wise as to lighten the overburdened ship for the safety of the passengers But if men will grapple and pull upon themselves all the employments they can any way reach and then complaine that they are so distracted with many things as that they have no time left for the one thing necessary It is all one as if a man should roule and moyle himselfe in the clay and then complaine that hee cannot get out his feete 5. Canst thou finde no time for the Lords worke what
of illumination faith regeneration heavenly life sense and motion and for the most part they are never more comforted than when they are most afflicted which argueth a spirituall and inward Comforter whose joy the world cannot take away This puts beleevers in minde of their honourable and happy estate who are become temples of the holy Ghost who never comes but with a full horne and hand of blessing The Centurion thought himselfe unworthy that Christ in his base estate should come in his house How much more unworthy are wee that this spirit of glory should come into our hearts See hereby what account is to be made of a poore Christian let his outside be never so base yet he is so glorious within as God himselfe delights to dwell in him As we make much even of a wooden coffer that is filled with golde and pearles and precious things And if wee make so much of a man that beares about him a reasonable soule and because hee hath Gods image on him how much more should we make of a Christian because of Gods Spirit What a shame is it to thinke highly of a man for land in the field for oxen in his stall for money in his chest and not for graces yea the spirit of God in his heart what a heavy judgement hangs over them who account these the very offscouring of the world against whom the very Pagans and Heathens shall rise up in judgement who whensoever they spoyled Christians yet spared their Temples because of the honour of God but these destroy the temples of the holy Ghost and God will destroy them 1 Cor. 3.17 Againe this serves for the comfort of poore Christians Art thou contemned God hath more honoured thee than the world can disgrace thee Art thou in prison Behold thou hast the God of liberty with thee yea in thee Art thou in banishment What care where thou dwellest while God dwells in thee What comfort canst thou want while the Comforter dwells in thy heart Doest thou feare falling away Be not dismayed the spirit of God in thy heart will never shift his dwelling He shall dwell with you for ever Christ commands his Disciples where they finde intertainment not to shift their host much lesse will hee ever shift himselfe where once hee enters but thy heart shall be as the Temple was called Beth-gnolam an house of eternity Thirdly let this teach Christians to looke to their hearts that they may be pure and cleane for so pure a Spirit The uncleane spirit delights in spirituall sluttishnesse and many with the harlot provide their bed and all things deckt for sinne and Satan In one end he findes a gorge of drunkennesse in another a wardrobe of pride in another a stewes of uncleannesse and there he inhabiteth and solaceth himselfe But Gods spirit is most pure and although he will dwell in a poore and homely house yet it must be pure and cleanly Let us therefore honour this guest with the best roome and fit our hearts for him let us wash this roome with teares sweepe it with repentance beautifie it with holinesse perfume it with prayers decke it with vertues and hang it with sincerity feare not to make it too pure or holy care not for the scoffes of precisenesse When a great Embassadour is sent from a strange Country what care is taken to provide him a fit house and to decke it with fit stuffe beseeming so great a personage Now the holy Spirit is sent as an Embassadour from the great God to thee then prepare thy heart for him sweepe out carnall desires and lusts fill it with good cogitations that it may yeeld him fit entertainment and contentment Lastly this teacheth men to examine their sonneshippe by the presence of the Spirit with them For as the presence of the soule discovereth it selfe by the life so by the life of God and Christ is the presence of the Spirit discovered Many men while they trade in sinne wallow in lusts and become voluntaries to lusts of swearing railing drinking or any foule sinne under the reigne of which they are bondslaves will yet stoutly pleade for themselves Alas we are flesh and blood and what can we doe But know silly man know that flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdome of God thou must be more than flesh and blood or thou art none of Gods For If any man have not the spirit of Christ the same is none of his Thou maist as well say thou art no childe of God For if yee be sonnes hee sends his Spirit into your hearts Gal. 4.6 If of Christs body you have Christs spirit deny thy selfe a Christian if sinne must reigne But to returne to the chiefe intent of this use none we see can be assured he is the child of God but by the presence of the Spirit Quest. How shal I know that God hath given mee the spirit of adoption Answ. This question is very necessary though some thinke they cannot know their sonneship others that they neede not and so neglect it For the possibility hereof As hee that hath life in him knoweth hee hath life because he can stirre feele move walke and goe so here also And as for the necessity of it marke what the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 13.5 Know yee not that Christ is in you namely by his Spirit unlesse ye be reprobates Now the markes of the Spirits dwelling with us are most of them inward not discerned by outward sence as the soule in the body is not seene or felt but discovered by the effects and operations The first is Conviction Ioh. 16.8 When the Spirit shall come hee will reproove the world of sinne And the Spirit of God rebukes sinne in us by working in us 1. sence 2. sorrow for sinne 3. an earnest desire of mercy 4. a loathing and leaving of sinne All which we may see in those converts Acts 2.37 when once the Spirit came They were pricked in their hearts and said Oh what shall we doe to be saved The second is Subjection for the Spirit dwells that is not onely abides but rules and commands and governes as the master of the house and notwithstanding the presence of the flesh still the Spirit hath the upper hand therefore wee must submit our selves to this great housholder here must be agreement in mindes and wills for if an house be divided against it selfe it cannot stand 2 Cor. 10.5 The worke of the Spirit is to cast downe high things exalted against grace and to bring every thought into the obedience of Christ by working selfe-deniall and a willingnesse to undertake whatsoever the word suggests and a constant delight in the law of God The third is Direction Ier. 31.31 the spirit of God writes the law in the hearts of beleevers and so brings in a new light and yet more Iohn 16.13 Hee shall leade you into all truth hee saith not onely This is the way
in thy estimation doe now seeme lesse and lesse dangerous if sometimes thou couldest not be comforted in the sence of sinne and the same sinne now move thee nothing at all thou couldst not abide cursed speaking in others now thou fallest to it thy selfe thou couldst not away with idle and gracelesse companions now thou canst now hast thou quenched the spirit 2. If thou be apt to rush into sinne once conquered thy strength is abated 3. If thou be unwilling to heare any of thy sinnes reproved the spirit is quenced because he rebuketh sinne 4. If the word and rodde preserve thee not from sinne the spirit is not present in thee 5. If after sinne committed thou doest not more hate it and sorrow for it than before thou lovedst it and rejoycedst in it if thou hast not a more constant care to avoid sinne than before yea if thou hast not a greater zeale in doing good know for a certaine that some sinne in thee or other is as water cast upon the spirit Fifthly and lastly examine thy selfe concerning the worke of Gods Spirit on thy affections thus If thy love of heavenly things be abated or be more to earth than to heaven if thy joy be troubled if thy conscience be perplexed with accusations if there be in thee an excessive feare of death or the like certainly the spirit is now quenched looke well unto it Object Alas I have found my affections more fiery than now they be I have had a great measure of zeale for God much indignation against sinne fervent affection in Gods service joy in God comfort in my selfe and in good duties but now it is not so with me I could never attaine the like affections as at first what may I thinke of my selfe Answ. We must wisely distinguish of the diffusing of grace from the decaying of it In earthly marriage love will be more vehement at first because lesse diffused but afterward is rather more extended than languishing so it is in the heate of grace But how may I know it thus 1. If thou be displeased that thou canst not get thy heart to the highest pitch of delight in grace 2. If thou still hungrest after grace and a further measure as one that hath tasted hony desireth more so having tasted of the spirit doest earnestly desire a greater measure of it 3. Stickest thou to the meanes in publicke and in private and wilt not be driven off still lying at the Poole where the spirit mooveth then discourage not thy selfe but goe on comfortably this small affection toward the Lord and his grace be it but as a graine of mustard seed it shall outgrow all choke weedes and master and kill whatsoever affections would overtop it So much for the second use Thirdly seeing negative precepts include the affirmative every Christian must hence be stirred up to stirre up the gift of God that is in him and not suffer it to decay 2 Tim. 1.6 A fit lesson even for Timothy himselfe For first the Spirit is ever working something in Gods children worthy the stirring up he is no where idle but still beautifying perfecting his own dwelling 2. Every Christian hath some graces to stirre up else were there no difference betweene him and a naturall man who wants the Spirit 3. No Christian hath any grace so perfect but it needes stirring up where growth is there is no perfection 4. Without stirring the fire dies so the Spirit for which cause the Apostle useth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blow up Quest. What meanes may wee use to blow up the Spirit Answ. 1. The word of God in the publicke and private use of it First the preaching of the word as it begets so it nourisheth grace The Ministry is instituted and gifts given to men not onely to lay to foundation of our happinesse but to build us up till we meet together in a perfect body Ephes. 4.11 12 13. Naturall food strengthens the body by the daily use of it spiritual food strengthens the soule by the continuall use of it Those that say they know as much as they neede or as much as the Preacher can tell thē never truly saw their great weaknesse for let any good conscience say if it neede not the word continually David a man of singular grace yet lay fouly in his sinnes till Nathan came and stirred him saying Thou art the man Despise Prophecy and quench the Spirit where vision faileth grace perisheth Secondly the word must be privately read and conversed in for such is the excellency and power of it that it transformes the minde conversant in it unto it selfe and to be affected as the pen-men were holily and graciously Besides it begets and furthers found judgement whereas others erre not knowing the Scriptures and it stirres up good affections and gracious desires Againe the word must be meditated on in private without which hearing and reading are to little purpose Psal. 1.1 Blessed is the man that meditates in the law of the Lord continually And here is mutuall helpe for hearing and reading doe feede meditation and meditation doth fasten them Why else hath God given man a reasonable soule but to meditate upon his word and workes Or why else hath he set apart a whole day in seaven especially for meditation if it were not a notable meanes to excite grace Or why else did our Lord take all occasions from the workes of God to teach and instruct us but for our example that we should tread in his holy steppes We see the first meanes 2. The Sacraments were instituted to strengthen our faith which in it selfe is weake and to keepe in continuall memory the covenant betweene God and us with the meanes thereof yea the very preparation to them includeth a speciall meanes of stirring up our graces of repentance of renewing our faith of obedience thankfulnesse and all the meanes of growth in the covenant And much more strength doth a good heart finde in the celebration of them Therefore to forbeare them of contempt argues no member of Christ and of negligence to forbeare is to cast ones selfe into the judgement of God 3. Prayer sets all graces on worke as faith in Gods promises charity toward our brethren hope which lookes for the performance of that we pray for humility in confession of sinnes and sense of wants thankfulnesse for supplies and leave to pray and by exercise in prayer wee get the spirit of prayer Luke 11.13 Our Father will not deny his Spirit to them that aske him 4. Company or commerce with the godly doth exceedingly sharpen our graces One candle lights another and one sticke of fire kindles another A lesser sticke may kindle a billet so the strongest Christian may receive furtherance from the weakest Paul himselfe might be comforted by the Romanes chap. 1.12 And when Silas came Paul burned in the Spirit But how can one coale alone by it selfe keepe it selfe glowing Yea evill men
I am Truth not Custome so Christians must frame themselves to Truth what ever the Custome be Custome we say is a tyrant but Truth must be our King and Guide and it is the part of a wise Christian to row hard against the streame of bad Customes wherof the world is full 2. For the example of great men it had beene good for Peter to have tryed the example of the Rulers in their dealing against Christ before hee had denied and forsworne him their example as little patronized him as themselves Well said Augustine Non debemus semper probare quicquid probati homines urgent sed judicium Scripturarum adhibere an illae probent We must not still approve whatsoever worthy men urge us unto but take with us the judgement of the Scriptures whether they approove it or no. 3. Suppose they be as good as great and as great as the Apostles yet must wee follow them no further than they follow Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 4. For the example of multitudes it is a good saying of the Father Wee are not to number the voices wee have on our side but to weigh them and it often comes to passe that the great part overcomes the better part And as I approove of Diogenes his wisdome who thought he should doe best when he did least what the common people did so I am sure out of the word that that course of life is most acceptable to God which is most contrary to the fashion of the world Quest. 4. What if any thing come with Authority and have the image and subscription of Cesar upon it must that be presently admitted without further question Answ. 1. Every soule must be subject to the higher powers and that for conscience sake but not without a conscience rightly enformed and guided onely so farre forth as God be not disobeyed nor his truth disparaged 2. We acknowledge with Tertullian and reverence the Emperour as one that is the second man under God and inferiour unto God onely And give unto Cesar the things that are Cesars but so as we give unto God the things that are Gods 3. It was the errour of the unbeleeving Iewes against Iason and the brethren Acts 17.7 These men doe against the decrees of Cesar saying there is another King one Iesus For wee may not doe against the decrees of Cesar yet we must say there is another King one Iesus whose decrees are of absolute authority and Cesars so farre as they crosse not his 4. No man blames his neighbour that brings a peece of money to the touch and weights though it have Cesars image and superscription upon it It is no disloyalty but wisdome and warinesse to try the Kings coyne there being so many slippes and counterfeits Thus wee see that nothing either in doctrine or manners can come so strongly armed with Civill or Ecclesiasticall Authority but it must passe the tryall before we can hold it as good and currant Now of the third generall Who must try all these things Answ. Our Apostle writeth to a whole Church and to every particular Christian in it Object What hath every Thessalonian without restraint granted him a power to censure and judge of Doctrines in all points of faith manners Is it not enough for a common man to give his consent to the Church and to beleeve as the Pastors beleeve Answ. Indeed so the Church of Rome teacheth and namely the Rhemists on 1 Ioh. 4.1 corrupting a most expresse text where the Apostle wisheth and commandeth every Christian to Try the Spirits But nothing is more plaine in Scripture than that people ought judicially to examine the Doctrine of their Pastors before they give it entertainment as afterward we shall more clearely proove But the Papists and the Rhemists on that place say Is it not absurd that every particular person by himselfe and of himselfe should take upon him to examine and controll Doctors and Doctrines I answer It were absurd if of himselfe or by himselfe onely hee should try them but for himselfe every Christian must and by such rules as God hath appointed to discerne whether a Doctrine be of God or no unto which not onely Doctrines of Pastors but of Councells Fathers and Popes are to be subjected unlesse we will take sowre for sweet and darknesse for light Hence it is that every Christian should have his senses exercised to discerne good and evill Heb. 5.14 That every man should abound with knowledge and judgement to discerne things that differ Philip. 1.10 That every man should be perswaded in his owne proper minde Rom. 14.5 And every sheepe of Christ discernes Christs voice and will not heare the voice of a stranger because he is able to try and discerne that too Iohn 20.4 5. The fourth generall remaines By what must this tryall be made Answ. Every triall is made by some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or direction We try the soundnesse of solid things by weights and the ballance of liquid things by liquid measures wee try figures by line and rule and the kindes of mettall by the touch-stone Wee must therefore finde out some weight or rule or touch-stone to try the soundnesse and kinde of Doctrines concerning faith or manners Now there can be no perfect ballance or exact rule for the tryall of all things but onely the word writted Esa. 2.3 The law out of Zion and the word from Ierusalem must be Iudge among the Nations and chap. 8.20 all appeales must be made to the law and the testimony or else there is no light to be had Christ himselfe for his doctrine stood to the judgement of Scripture Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures for they testifie of me And Paul subjected his Doctrine to the same rule Acts 28.23 And good reason For 1. The Scripture hath all in it that a sufficient rule should have It is 1. declarative 2. directive 3. explorative 1. It is of the nature of God who is the measure of all things and immediatly derived from him and so the first cause the rule of all that follow concerning Gods worship 2. It is full of direction for any thing that is to be beleeved or done as the Artificers rule directs his worke and hand 3. It is sufficient to try and proove all things when they are done as the touch-stone tries the mettall or the square tries the work squared In all which respects it is like the patterne shewed to Moses in the Mount after which he was to frame the whole Tabernacle and by which he might try it being framed That as nothing was in the Tabernacle which was not in the patterne so may nothing be with us which is not agreeable to the patterne of Scripture called the patterne of wholsome words 2. By what should causes be tryed but by the Lawes of the Body Civill where they doe arise But looke what the Law is in the Common-wealth the same is the
to give account of his faith and therefore must be able to expresse his owne faith Salomon records it as a part of extreame folly to be so credulous Prov. 14.15 A foole beleeveth every thing that is rashly gives credit and hearkens to every Deceiver But a prudent man takes heede to his steppes that is examineth and weigheth what he heareth and what he doth before he undertake it And Iob makes this the chlefe office of judgement Chap. 34.3 The eare tryeth words as the mouth tasteth meate Let us seeke judgement among us and let us know among our selves what is good And what difference is there betweene a wise man and a foole but that the foole wants judgement followes his fancy and is led by his senses and appearances without tryall Object Charity beleeveth all things 1 Cor. 13.7 Answ. 1. That is in other mens sayings and actions it beleeves the best but suspecteth his owne wayes most Prov. 14.8 2. It beleeveth not all things simply and indefinitely not errours and falshood but rejoyceth in the truth verse 6. 3. Not all things without tryall and discretion for then it should rejoyce in unrighteousnesse but after it hath tryed them 4. Nothing is contrary to charity that is agreeable to wisdome but with the judgement of charity there must goe a judgement of prudence Object 2. Is not this a disparagement to our Teachers and to the truth which should be freely embraced or how will this stand with mingling the word with faith Heb. 4.2 Answ. 1. Our Proverb is A man may tell money after his father not in distrustfulnesse as if he suspected he would deceive him for this were against duty and charity but in wisedome because he may unwittingly deceive and this is held no disparagement to his father no more is it to our spirituall fathers 2. The truth loseth nothing but rather gaineth by being tryed because it is more approved and justified than before as gold is no whit prejudiced but purged and refined by the fire Thirdly this Doctrine reprooves the preposterous courses of many men some of whom are unwilling to try any thing at all others try something but not by the right rule some in great matters nearely concerning them purposely abstaine from all examination as those in the 2 Pet. 3.5 they are willingly ignorant in matters both of judgement and practise thinking that while they hood winke themselves they may the more freely entertaine whatsoever makes for their pleasure profit or preferment some controversies they dare not looke into for feare the light should make them losers Some practises they would neuer bring to the tryall it is death for them to haue their usuries their affected games their strange fashions meddled withall or brought to the touch-stone they would stoppe both their eares or wish there were no tongue to touch their darling sinnes for feare they should be brought to dislike such profitable and pleasurable sinnes which to lose were to part with their hands and eyes These persons resemble that gluttonous Parasite who covered his tongue with a skinne that he might swallow any thing though never so hot they have covered their consciences with a seared skinne that they may take downe any thing insensibly without examination But here let us consider 1. what an expresse commandement we have for the duty Rom. 12.2 Proove what is the good and acceptable will of God and Eph. 5.10 Proove what is pleasing unto God Gal. 6.4 Let every man proove his owne worke Lam. 3.40 Let us search and try our wayes 2. How will it stand with wisdome to be curious in trisles and in every outward thing be it never so small and yet neglect the greatest Wee will try our meate our drinke our money our mettalls our beasts nothing shall come into our hands untryed But onely in the greatest things appertaining to God and good conscience we are altogether carelesse 3. There is nothing wherein a man may be so dangerously deceived as in matters of this nature To be deceived in counterfeit money or golde to be deceived with false evidences and titles of land is a great oversight but nothing in comparison of this the deceit here is in things eternall touching our rights and free-hold in heaven 4. Never had any man such dangerous cheaters about him to deceive him as wee have for their number power and subtilty all cunning enough to worke upon our simplicity Satan will surely sift and try us hee will winnow us as wheate Luk. 22.31 The world and all sorts of wicked ones lye in ambush to entise us Our owne deceitfull Delilah our owne flesh which is the nearest and most powerfull over us is most treacherous against our selves Every occasion without stirres up inward corruption We had need therefore try every thing offered unto us lest we take from these cheaters a boxe of counters for a box of gold 5. God observes and commends such as carefully try doctrines and courses Rev. 2.2 To the Church of Ephesus write thus I know thy workes and that thou hast examined them which say they are Apostles and are not but hast found them lyers 6. This is necessary to comfort our owne hearts in the many tryalls and scornes of evill men who will be ready to turne all our glory into shame and all our religion into hypocrisie and all our godly indeavours into precisenesse and faction We had neede try our wayes by the Rule that we may be able to outstand their imputations and contemne their contempt and scandalous falshoods So long as we holde our Rule we shall be ever able to appeale unto God and holde our innocency till we die let it be faction let it be schism yea heresie we shall boldly say In that way which they call heresie we will worship the God of our fathers Acts 24.14 7. There is a day of tryall for all things and a fire which shall try every mans worke of what kinde it is 1 Cor. 3.13 Let the fire of the word goe before the fire of the world let that try which is stubble hay and chaffe and which worke will abide There is a Iudge who one day will straitly examine what men now passe so slightly and he will judge our wayes then as the word now judgeth them If we would in tryall be approoved then we must now have our courses approoved by the same word which shall judge us at the last day Iohn 12.48 Fourthly this Doctrine reprooves such as would walke by a rule but not the right rule And these are diverse according to their diverse rules 1. Some will have corrupt reason to hold the scales and this ingrafted principle of naturall reason must be followed as the onely rule Men would captivate the commandement to their owne reason and limit the wisedome of God within the narrow bounds of their owne wisedome Naaman being commanded by the Prophet Elisha to wash seven times in Iordan was incensed and began to compare
discourses their idle complements their service of pleasure and unfruitfull spending of their time now they storme against the rule and the hand that holdes it here is a rule indeede that would make them as despised as he is despised of them that calls them from their vanities Our Ministery in generall holds in judgement the Scripture as the rule and that they ought to tie themselves to this rule but when this rule would tie them to instant teaching to carefull walking as examples to the flocke to prepare the people as a pure Virgin for Christ oh it tyes them too strait their conceits and gifts call them to higher things other affaires withdraw them as for diligent preaching they leave that to the inferiour sort that have nothing else to tend and no livings to trouble them But shall the word be a rule to our judgement and not to our practise Shall it be a rule for us and for our rights and shall it not be a rule for our duty and office Let all men know and consider first what a judgement of God it is to give up men to walk after the lusts of their own hearts as is noted of the Gentiles Ephes. 2.3 Secondly the rule chargeth us to affect all things in God and for God nothing above him nothing against him nothing like him Thirdly to feare the departure from the rule as the greatest evill because that is onely simply evill 5. Some depend upon the persons of some great men whom they reverence and holde in admiration What are not such and such great men and learned men in high degrees and preferments yet they doe thus and thus they are of another judgement and practise too and if it were not right they would not doe it And so they dangerously compare themselves with wicked men digest their oathes vanity pompe But consider first what a plague it is for great men to be carried along by flatterers who rivet them in their wickednesse by applauding them As Dionisius the Tyrant had flatterers about him who like dogges would licke up his spittle and commend it to him to be as sweete as Nectar Secondly no example can make that good which the rule judgeth evill Thirdly all persons must be tryed by the rule not the rule by any person Even the Apostles must be followed so farre as they goe by rule and follow Christ no further This is the difference betweene the Papists and us they receive no Doctrine no nor the Scriptures but so farre as warranted by Fathers and Councels we receive no Fathers nor Councels but so farre as they are warranted by the Scriptures For Let God be true and every man a lyer Is this our judgement and shall we slippe from it in our practise Fourthly there is no more compendious way to lose the truth than to walke by this rule of examples If truth had gone by persons who would not have taken part with 400 false Prophets men in great favour with the King and Queene all against one poore Micaiah esteemed the Kings enemy yet he alone held the rule This was the cause that puld all the Iewes into the guilt of Christs death they admired their Rulers and Rabbies as great and learned men having the key of knowledge and so easily and freely consented to that fearfull sinne which the Sunne was ashamed to beholde Fifthly in all imitation of men we must follow the light side of the cloud not the darke side for why are the falls of Saints else recorded but to shew that all examples are defective and measurable by the rule Sixthly the onely perfect example of our rule was Iesus Christ whom we must follow we are commanded to be perfect not as Abraham Moses David c. but as our heavenly Father whose absolute perfection shineth in his Sonne who is the ingraven Image of his Fathers person Now as the best picture must needes be that which is drawne from the lively face rather than that which is drawne out of another picture so must this which wee take from Iesus Christ himselfe who was the true idea and counterpaine of our Rule here described 6. Some make Successe their rule and walke by that as they that say If my course were not good God would not blesse me as he doth and if I sinne God would not be silent or if I sinne and God be silent he either sees not or regards not or will spare me and I shall ever escape reckoning Whereas first the rule telleth us Psal. 50. These things hast thou done and I held my peace but I will reproove thee and set thy sins in order before thee And Eccles. 9.2 The same event is to the good and the bad to him that sweareth and him that feareth an oath Many runne to witches and sorcerers and thinke it warrantable from the successe they finde some reliefe and some help and God would give no such successe if it were unlawfull Whereas it is just with God that such as runne to the Divell shall meete with the Divell to their further delusion Others runne to stage-playes and enterludes because they teach some good lessons and may edifie as well as Ministers by Sermons Oh profane mouthes who have cast away the rule which is farre from sending them to the stewes to learne chastity or to Atheists to learne religion or to learne vertue and good manners in the schoole of vices where things are expressed and acted which ought not to be named among Christians Secondly this rule telleth us that Gods patience shall not violate his justice nor forbearance is no payment hee will not beare the sword in vaine Thirdly no man easily forgets his owne name the Lord will not forget his justice but must returne to every man according to his owne workes Fourthly as thou hast thy time so surely will God have his when thy measure is heaped up and thy Epha is full although thou maist thinke with Agag the bitternesse of death is passed yet the Lords sword will come and hew thee in peeces Against all these crooked and distorted rules the Scripture shewes first that Christianity is no ranging course or a running at randome but a life led by rule Secondly this rule is expresly set downe Phil. 3.16 So farre as we are come let us proceede by one rule Thirdly there is a promise to all that walk according to this rule Gal. 6.16 As many as walk by this rule peace shall be on them mercy and on all the Israel of God that is the rule of Gods word which is to Christians as the pillar of the cloud and of the fire to the Israelites Fourthly it is evill to them that forsake this rule As a sonne left unto himselfe is the shame of his Father So the sonnes of God running their owne wayes and despising the counsells of God are a shame to their Father a reproach to their Fathers house the Church a dishonour to their profession and
thy selfe the Agent thou art a plaine infidell yea worse than an infidell there being no cure but by faith in the Divell thou hast runne out of thy calling hast cast off the yoake of God and by the hand and helpe of the Divell hast avoided the hand of God for the present to the scandall of thy brethren and the wounding of thine owne soule II. Many addict themselves to many sports and recreations on the Saboth day Oh the Saboth was made for man and not man for the Saboth c. But bring this to the forenamed Rules 1. Where hath God commanded it Sure we are hee hath commanded the sanctification of the Saboth day which is the whole and parts Is this to sanctifie a day to the Lord 2. Whether maketh more for Gods glory in whose sight we are Saboth-dayes duties or recreations whether dare wee pray rather for blessing and successe upon in which have we more comfort and would have God to finde us in 3. Whether beseemes a Christian better who is commanded to cease from his ordinary calling and lawfull vocation because they destroy the Saboths rest and much more sports and play lesse necessary whether is recreation for rest or labour Whence wee conclude that howsoever on the Saboth wee may and must rejoyce yet our rejoycing must be that of the Iewes Nehem. 8.12 that they understood the Law namely in things spirituall and holy III. Others worke and thinke they may in their callings in the morning and evening of the Saboth as some of our tradesmen and shop-keepers Bring this common practise to this Rule 1. Gods word is expresse Thou shalt doe no manner of worke Ier. 17.21 2. Hast thou God in thy presence he rested from all his worke 3. Doth it beseeme that profession which is heavenly Savours it of heavenly contemplation or base earthlinesse 4. Art not thou runne out of thy way seeing thy calling on the Saboth is wholly to cease from thy calling and doe no worke but workes of mercy and such as serve to preserve the Ministery and Gods worship 5. Is not the example as wicked as the action and the hurt to others more than the advantage to thy selfe 6. The Psalme for the Saboth directly meetes with this objection Psal. 92.1 It is a good thing to praise the Lord in the morning and to declare thy truth in the evening and in the night season 7. If a man plow and thresh on the Saboth day hee is counted a profaner of it an Atheist and so he is and why not hee also that labours at the racke or in the mill or the boate Alasse the profanesse of our dayes that he that is drunke diceth cardeth or sweares on the Saboth is counted honest and religious enough and those that passe their Saboth worse than beasts which though they can do nothing to sanctifie their rest yet doe they nothing to profane it are applauded whilest conscionable observers of it are scorned IV. For resorting to stage-playes and frequenting of places of idle resort and unlawfull games which would men bring to the Rule they should not be so frequented as they be 1. Gods word is that such filthinesse ought not to be named among Christians much lesse acted and that we ought to passe away all our time in feare and trembling 1 Pet. 1.17 2. God is there present to take account of every idle word and there is the passing of nothing but idle and hurtfull words against God and man and an holding of mens eares to them many houres together 3. Wouldest thou willingly he should take thee at a play or at cards or dice when hee comes to judgement 4. For one speciall circumstance Are not men there in womens apparell contrary to Deut. 22.5 5. For thy selfe thou art neither in thy generall nor in thy speciall calling and therefore art out of the way of Gods protection 6. For thy brethren as thou maintainest the Players or gaming houses or alleyes in an unlawfull calling so thou offendest others by thy example especially if thou beest a Master or Magistrate that abettest such ungodly and unlawfull courses thou sinnest by example against duty and decorum Oh let unthrifts so spend their time and not thou who shouldest punish and represse them V. The last instance concerneth our fashioning our selves in our apparell and behaviours both to the strange fashions of other countries or the fantasticall fashion of our owne 1. Gods word is Zeph. 1.8 I will visite the Princes and the Kings children and all such as are clothed with strang apparell How hath God visited the late strange fashion and coulor of yellow ruffes both in the deviser and first wearers on which God hath cast speciall reproach that in scorne not only chimney-sweepers but hang-men in their office taken it up which yet some will not be warned by 2. Whether doth thy conscience tell thee that thou art assured that strange and fantasticall fashions make thee as comely in Gods eye and to Iesus Christ whose spouse thou professest thy selfe to be And whether darest thou say thou glorifiest God by them Art thou sure thy conscience is neither erronious nor doubtfull 3. For the circumstances hast thou an eye to adorne thy profession with thy body Or doth it beseeme the profession of holinesse to runne through all lightfashions The Apostle 1 Tim. 2.9 commands wome● to aray themselves with modestie and good works as women professing the feare of God And garments should expresse the hidden man of the heart and shew the sober fashion of our minds and not the vain fashions of forrein Countries 4 For thy own person do these fashions argue thee to be a beleever whose cheif care is to adorne the soule Or canst thou thinke the Lord Iesus can be put on together with such fashions 5. For thy brethren how doest thou scandalize them offending some provoking others and bringing a blott of levitie upon thy selfe whose good name should bee a precious oyntment and whose course in this behalfe should favour of grace and gravitie sutable to the gravest presidents of good and godly women and the most sober of thy ranke and degree Object Some will be ready to turne off all this which hath ben sayd replying thus Alas man you are too precise your selfe and you would have vs so too wee cannot put on our clothes without you nor take any recreation without your leave no nor yet with it Answ. According to the text Try all things And can he be too strict or curious that must try every thing even the least Let me see that man that thinkes himselfe exempted from this precept or any of his wayes No no there is a strict Tryall and account behind and hee shall best fit it that is strictest in Tryall afore-hand Hold that which is good THis precept is aptly knit to the former and informeth us what we should doe after we have examined and tryed the truth and hath in it 1.
Gods part as well as their owne When Min●sters are diligent in doctrine careles in life they hold some good but not all Private men that carry themselves soberly and civilly and are fully content with the name of honest men holde some good but they reforme not their family nor walke religiously in the midst of their houses and so are farre from holding all good This is in matter of practise So in matter of judgement The truth and every part of it is our birth-right saith Cyprian wee must not lose a foote of it but hold the least truth Many hold fast the maine grounds and articles of religion but in things of lesser moment are altogether regardlesse as Bishop Latimer thought at first that the cause of the Sacrament was rather to be dissembled than suffered for but considering better that hee must holde all that is good himselfe happily suffered in it Nay we must not onely hold truth in sense but even the words wherein the Spirit of God hath conveyed it to us not departing easily from them for wee shall finde what great mischiefe hath oppressed the Church by taking liberty to depart from the very words of Scripture and in stead of them using other improper speeches to expresse the same thing As for example The Fathers used to expresse the Pastors of the Church by the name of Priests whereupon the Romish Church builds and backes her order of Priesthood Doctour Fulke in his sixth chapter of his defence of the translation against Gregory Martin hath these words It is a folly to thinke that a sacrificing office externall can be established in the new Testament which never calleth the Ministers thereof Sacerdotes or Priests They often call the Table of the Lord an Altar and the celebration of the Supper a Sacrifice and gave a reasonable good sence but had they kept to the words of the Scripture they had prevented much mischiefe springing thence For the Romanists make advantage of their speeches wrested out of their sense to set up that blasphemous doctrine of the sacrifice of the Masse And the word Masse what Papist knowes whence it comes being neither Hebrew Greeke nor Latine nor taken from any other language of any Nation but raked out of the bottomlesse pit without all signification unlesse it agree with our English word masse that is an heape a lumpe a chaos of blasphemies and abominations The like of the word Pope a strange unknowne and mysticall name the learned Papists knew it not but confounded themselves in the Etymologie of it some from Pape the interjection of admiration some from Papa which Latine children used to call their fathers by answering to our infants dad some from the Romane abbreviation of Pater Patriae expressed by pa pa and a pricke betweene some from the Siracusans word Papas signifying a father Such follies and ridiculous and childish dotages are they faine to wander in to seeke and finde their holy father the Pope who as himselfe is a beast rising out of the earth in whose forehead is written MYSTERIE so his name is mysticall and from men not from heaven not from the Scriptures yet is the name as ancient as Cyprian and used by the Fathers Wherein we may see how dangerous it is as Beza observes to decline from the word an hayre-breadth and not to hold all that is good even the least An arrow set a little awry at first makes a great errour before it fall at the marke How happy had it beene if the ancient Fathers otherwise godly and learned men had held them to the very names termes and proper words of Scripture rather than by departing therefrom have opened a flood-gate to Antichrists delusions who as Satan creepes in the darke and getting in his toe will shove in his bulke for give sinne an inch it will take an ell and so of the Man of sinne 4. Rule Hold most carefully the chiefe good things for so men doe in earthly matters Now there be three things worth most care in keeping 1. Gods favour presence and loving countenance Psal. 4. Lord lift up the light of thy countenance upon us let others keepe corne and wine keepe thou this feare sinne most of all as that which would most dangerously robbe thee 2. Thine owne sincerity uprightnesse and first love Iob 27.6 I will never lose my innocency till I die 3. The Crowne of life is promised to him that is faithfull to death Hold the kingdome fast in the meanes and so strive as thou maist obtaine As the Martyrs who apprehended it through fire and flames 5. Rule Hold all that is good stiffely and stoutly against with-holders and opposers for a man shall never hold good if he doe coldly approove it Hold it as one firmely glued to it for so the word signifies Rom. 12.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cleave to that which is good things glued are not easily disjoyned God hath by this phrase glued every Christian to every truth in judgement and practise and no man must separate himselfe from it Tit. 1.9 Holding fast the faithful word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contra 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against gain-sayers Take hold with both hands against hereticks tyrants false-teachers flatterers that have laid hold to snatch it from us or as men in perill of drowning lay fast hold upon any thing they can catch to save themselves and will not let it goe 6. Rule Hold the truth constantly to the death whatsoever the issue be Rev. 2.25 Hold fast that thou hast till I come as the renowned Saints and Martyrs who have rather parted with their lives than their depositum 2 Tim. 1.14 Let us therefore labour to see into every truth and seeing it let us hold it As that famous souldier Cynegrius held the shippe first with his right hand till that was cut off then with his left hand till hee lost that too and last of all with his teeth till his head and body were severed So let us resolve every one with himselfe That which I see to be good I will holde it so long as I live or breathe my hands my heart and soule shall cleave unto it I will carry it to heaven with me The second thing proposed is the meanes of holding that which is good I. If wee would hold things approoved to be good let us avoid carefully such things as would hinder us in holding them And they are of two sorts 1. Some shut out good things 2. others thrust them out or choake them The former are 1. Presumption of our owne wisdome and knowledge Humility stands porter at the doore of discipline Psal. 25.9 God teacheth the humble Ier. 13.15 Heare and give eare and be not proud Men of conceits will heare whom they list but an humble man will receive good even from the meanest though it be an earthen vessell Naaman from his servant and Iob from his hand-maid 2. Distempered affections as rash conceit
doe them Happy is that man that his conscience tells him that his will is now framed to Gods will and in regard of Evangelicall obedience which stands in true purposes and endeavours hee may say since the time of his calling unto the grace of the Gospell with the Apostle Acts 23.1 I have lived in all good conscience untill this day 3. It must be a peaceable conscience in that hee hath done or not done it is at peace with God and with it selfe This is when it excuseth the person aright both for his person and for his actions First for his person as now reconciled justified accepted Secondly his actions as having a true desire and endeavour to please God in all things Now the conscience being truly peaceable it riseth up to be truly joyfull which makes the heart merry and cheerefull as a continuall feast neither wants he any good cheare that hath it Prov. 15.15 Nor wants hee good company that hath a good conscience he can rejoyce alone without all other company or comforts The heart is held up in absence of all worldly comforts and in presence of all worldly evills and none can take away the joy of it 4. It must be a watchfull not a sleepy conscience a waking not a remorslesse conscience 1. It watcheth against all sinne both to be committed and as a faithfull monitor pulls the Master backe As also for sinne already committed and smites with remorse and biting as David I have done very foolishly Object But doth not a bad conscience shew some remorse after sinne what else did Iudas Answ. Yes but with this difference 1. A bad conscience hath some scratch on the outside and sometimes a deeper gash and an incurable wound but it never goes on to godly sorrow as a good conscience doth 2. It seekes not to the remedy but sinkes under the burden the wound bleedes to death as in Iudas Secondly a good conscience watcheth to all good duties and occasions desirous to please God in all things and at all times according to the conscience enlightened This pure clearing peaceable and waking conscience is necessary to an unblameable and renewed spirit Thirdly seeing the true evidences of the purenesse and holy temper of the spirit are holy and well guided thoughts wee must carefully looke to our thoughts and cogitations Here 1. Choose them so as thou be sure thy heart be a receptacle of holy thoughts examine them whence they come and whither they goe and by examination thou shalt finde some vaine and evill thoughts these thou must hate all of them Psal. 119.113 And if thou hatest them put away the evill of your thoughts and Ier. 4.4 Let the wicked forsake his thoughts knowing that evill thoughts are as damnable as evill actions Acts 8.22 pray if thy thoughts may be forgiven which implies guilt Some thou shalt finde wandering roving thoughts which must be taken up as vagrants and corrected lest as Dinah thou be defiled and corrupted with fleshly lusts passe them away quickly Some other thou shalt find idle thoughts but unnecessary send them away harbour no idle thoughts nor yet cast them out without censure and disgrace Some are perhaps lawfull but lesse necessary put these of till another time that the more necessary may take up the roome Some are unruly thoughts rising up against against God or men thoughts of infidelity of revenge dishonourable thoughts against Gods servants and ordinances all such disordered and proude thoughts must be brought into the subjection of God 1 Cor. 10.4 2. Watch them well being so infinite so quick and nimble and in so secret a place being also so slippery so soone interrupted and corrupted by idlenesse by society loosenesse of senses roving of affections unallowed objects therefore set a sharpe eye upon them and seeing that will not serve bring them under Gods eye keepe them close to God for as the husbands eye and presence is the best way to preserve the wives chastity so the heart betrothed to God carrying it selfe in his sight is not easily polluted with strange and uncleane lusts To enforce this watch know it differenceth from an hypocrite First an hypocrite can watch over words and actions in respect of man but a godly man watcheth over his thoughts onely the true sanctified man makes conscience of the tenth commandement for the government of his thoughts and desires Secondly it differenceth from a wicked man who dare not act many evils but none so foule but hee dare insatiably minde and contemplate them Here is a difference whereas wicked men are most carelesse of their thoughts the godly have most complained of them Rom. 7. and then have beene most truly comforted in them whiles the conscience of thoughts hath beene a true triall of their sincerity 3. Labour to feede thy thoughts 1. with the sweetest 2. with the most necessary objects First the sweetest objects are heavenly things Col. 3.1 Seeke the things which are above Iesus Christ and his merits the happinesse of heaven and the chiefe good which is God himselfe O how might the minde be fed and ravished with these contemplations what sweetnesse might a man sweeten and season the dayes of his vanity withall if he would minde heavenly things and thinke on the way thither Is it not a description of ancient beleevers to thinke on his name Mal. 3.16 Secondly the most necessary profitable thoughts are 1. to thinke often of our sinnes both to call to minde some sinne past unrepented as also to prevent some sinne thrusting in 2. To thinke on good duties to excite to some duty neglected and to apprehend occasion and season of some offered unto us 3. Of the vanity of this life and our departure hence 4. Of Gods comming to judgement and our finall account and reckoning Prov. 14.22 To them that thinke on good things shall be mercy and truth Now whereas some thinke thoughts free and others conceit liberty and impossibility and most no necessity of this guiding the conscience and thoughts To them I say First as thoughts be so are words and actions out of the heart commeth thefts adulteries therefore rectifie these Secondly good thoughts are evidences of the Spirits presence being his immediate motions wee of ourselves not able to thinke one good thought 1 Cor. 2.5 Thirdly God will call them to strict account and in judgement make inquisition after them their thoughts shall accuse or else excuse one another Rom. 2.15 Fourthly even good thoughts are recompenced David had but a thoughts to build the house of God and God rewarded it with building him an house and stablishing him a kingdome 2 Sam. 7.16 and Psal. 32. I thought I would confesse my sinne and thou forgavest me all The Prodigall thought to returne and his father thought to meete him Thus carry thy thoughts begin the day with holy thoughts and meditations which is a sweete seasoning In the night call them in to thinke of God
pleasures of it too well Demas forsooke the truth to embrace the present world Iudas by the same corrupt affection fell from the Apostleship Ioh. 12.41 Many chiefe Rulers beleeved Christ but durst not confesse him because of the Pharises for they loved the praise of men more than God Oh that we did not so cleerely see the strength of this lett in these dayes wherein so many baulke the way of holinesse and fall backe almost to open profanesse because they neither see many men nor great men yeeld approbation or countenance to such strict courses 2. Shunne lewd society and familiarity with profane persons if we would not fall from our owne stedfastnesse 2 Pet. 3.17 18. there is not more strength in any infectious pestilencious ayre to poyson the body than in this poysoned ayre to kill the soule Society with gracelesse men is a very blasting of grace fire is not more apt to burne than we to learne their wayes 4. The labour and paines of holinesse and mortification makes many weary of the good way but consider it is not in vaine to serve the Lord and there is profit in walking humbly before him thy paines shall be abundantly recompenced a small measure of holinesse with an upheaped measure of happinesse Every man will be contented to swallow much paines for a little earthly profit and is the state of heaven worth no labour 5. Persecutions drive many away much seed which comes up faire when the sunne of persecution ariseth withereth away But against this wisdome must cast the costs and prepare to defray the charges of this great building and the same Sunne that dries and burnes up the shallow seede shall set and ripen ours Many heare holinesse reviled and spoyled of her vaile and value they heare this sect every where spoken against and would as farre forget themselves as Peter to heare that voice Thou art one of them and perhaps renounce Christ and profession and all for if even the very Disciples of Christ and all they leave him and fly when afflictions comes neare Matth. 26.56 what marvell if they that want soundnesse shrinke in the wetting 1. But here remember and looke upon Christ Heb. 12.2 who endured such speaking against of sinners not for himselfe but for thee lest thou be weary 2. Hee that is now ashamed of Christ Christ will one day be ashamed of him and then he that will no● beare the reproach of a blast of words for him shall be filled with an everlasting reproach before men and Angells 3. Sound judgement esteemes it the greatest honour to be highly dishonoured for Christ and his causes Matth. 5.12 Blessed are yee when men revile you and speake all manner of evill against you for my sake rejoyce and be glad great is your reward in heaven Object I could better endure mens words but I shall also sustaine great losse if I should be so precise I should lose my custome trading and profits Answ. Wilt thou receive a religion and not know it to be truth or knowest it to be so and wilt not be ready to confesse and professe it according to thy place and calling even in the middest of the different conceits of men 2. The Saints knowing this to be truth did for it joyfully suffer the spoyling of their goods 3. Put together in the ballance the losse of the world and the losse of thy soule and consider whether is fitter to save if thou cāst not save both For the losse of the world is an abundant recompence promised by a sure pay-master but what recompence is there for the losse of the soule Matth. 16.26 Nay if thou shouldest venture and give thy life for thy profession if God call for it it is no lesse than thou oughtest who oughtest to strive unto blood Hebr. 12.4 and yet this greatest losse were the greatest gaine Thus to lose thy life is to save it and to save it in this case were to lose it III. Procure to our selves and exercise the helpes of perseverance and keepe them neere us as our continuall companions And for this end First let the word of God be deepely rooted in our hearts for this is a speciall preservative from declining Psal. 119.102 I declined not from thy statutes for thou didst teach me Now the word sundry wayes keepes us As first by inlightening us to see our way both to chuse the right way and decline the wrong Psal. 119.105 Thy law is a light and lanthorne to our paths Secondly by comforting and incouraging us in the good way Rom. 15.4 Through consolation of the Scripture wee receive our hope Thirdly by preventing sinne in us Psal. 119.11 I have hid thy word in my heart that I might not sinne Fourthly by keeping out of sin and redressing our way Psal. 119.9 Secondly labour to preserve in thee a love of grace and holinesse let thy scope be in all the meanes of holinesse to gaine not knowledge and illumination onely but sound affection also to grow up in this as well as in that For first as a tree low and deepe rooted is stablished and continued in fruitfulnesse so when faith and grace is deepely rooted in the affection of the heart there will be perseverance Secondly it is not good words good actions or good knowledge that holdes out but good affections will Thirdly what other is the cause of so generall backsliding in the world which is the proper punishment of not receiving the truth in the love of it 2 Thess. 2.11 Thirdly feare God This is a wellspring of life to make us escape the snares of death Prov. 14.27 and 19.23 Anchora mentis pondus timoris Feare holds the heart steady as the anchor the shippe and joyne thy selfe to such as feare God delight in such as excell in vertue and grace these are able to encourage strengthen direct uphold raise and comfort thee in thy difficulties wearinesse and weaknesse and set thee forward not by their gifts onely but by their example Fourthly be instant in prayer for perseverance so our Text teacheth for it is the Lord that both beginneth and finisheth his owne worke hee not onely sets us in the way but leades us in the way and at length brings us into Canaan Fifthly looke still to the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ as a good servant hold thy selfe in expectation of the appearing so the Text Luke 12.36 Blessed is that servant whom the Master shall finde so doing Doest thou expect him from heaven and is not thy conversation there doest thou expect his comming in glory and meetest not him in grace lookest thou for him as thy head and wilt thou not as a member holde an happy union and fellowship with him expectest thou thence a Saviour and continuest thou not unto the end seeing onely such shall be saved Matth. 10.22 Now the motives to the meanes of perseverance First this is a true signe of a true friend of God who loves at all
Nay perhaps those that have built an Arke to save others as Noahs Carpenters shall be drowned themselves Yea more a man may defend the word as Iulian and receive within him the seede of the word and bring forth some fruites as the bad ground did and all this is like effectuall calling Thirdly by ineffectuall calling a man may come to see his sinne to sorrow and grieve for it to confesse his sinne be humbled for it ashamed of it to acknowledge his estate to be nought and preferre the state of the godly before his owne yea wish and desire to change estates with them as Balaam He may crave pardon of his sinne desire the prayers of Saints as Pharaoh and Simon Magus He may refraine himselfe in many sinnes as Haman He may fast and rent his clothes and lie in sackcloth as Ahab He may doe many things at the direction of the word as Herod for Iohn and yet be in the gall of bitternesse And is not this like effectuall calling Fourthly by ineffectuall calling a man may attaine to some kinde of faith can beleeve Christ a Saviour can get a perswasion that Christ redeemed him can taste some sweetnesse as if hee drew vertue from Christ can rejoyce as in a good estate as the stony ground received the seede with joy Luke 8.13 And some that being not onely enlightened but taste of the good word and power of the life to come shall quite f●ll away Hebr. 6.6 And some we reade of denying the Lord that bought them that is both in their owne profession and perswasion and in the charitable judgement of others This is so like effectuall calling as no man but would thinke them sheepe of Christ as themselves doe but are not Fifthly by ineffectuall calling a man may partake of the Spirit of God and be in some sort sanctified by the blood of the Covenant Heb. 10.29 Hee may attaine unto many excellent graces as joy in hearing sweete gifts in praying power in preaching a kinde of love of God humility under the hand of God as Ahab a reverencing of good men as Herod reverenced Iohn a seemely externall worship of God bounty and freenesse to uphold the worship of God and not sticke at thousands of rammes and rivers of oyle Vnto a fiery zeale for the Lord of hoasts and upholding his worship as Iehu who seemed a servant that could not abide his Masters dishonour but departed not from the sinnes of his fathers All which a man would thinke belongs to sound and effectuall calling This likenesse therefore of the one with the other makes effectuall calling the more hardly discerned Now therefore seeing this outward and ineffectuall calling brings us not into grace with God without the inward 2. Seeing it is common to good and bad Matth. 22.9 Call in all you finde 3. Seeing it is unprofitable as what profit had Ismael of his Circumcision Esau in Isaacks family or Iudas in Christs family being profane 4. Seeing to be in the Church and not of it is to deprive himselfe of the chiefe priviledges of the Church which is remission of sinnes and life everlasting We must therefore labour to finde in our selves such sure markes of effectuall calling as yet were never found in hypocrites that wee may be sure our calling is sound and saving proper to the elect a note and forerunner of eternall glory Quest. What are these markes Answ. 1. A discerning of the voice of him that calleth this implies hearing For hee that heareth not Gods word is not of God Ioh. 8.47 But besides hearing First here is a spirit of discretion putting difference betweene truth and errour good and evill Cant. 2.8 It is the voice of my welbeloved and Ioh. 10.8 My sheepe heare my voice and a stranger they will not heare Secondly there is a perswasion of him that calleth Gal. 5.8 which is beyond hearing called the hearing eare which hypocrites want Thirdly there is a yeelding unto the perswasion that it passe not without some such effect as is not to be found in any hypocrite The faithfull have an oyntment given them and see Christ in his voice comming every day nearer them than other It is the voice of my welbeloved Beholde hee comes leaping over the mountaines skipping over the hills See this in some instances The Lord pleaseth to speake and utter his voice sundry wayes outwardly and inwardly 1. Outwardly 1. In the ministery of the word and Sacraments 2. He calleth by the voice of his mercies and corrections 2. Inwardly by the still voice of his Spirit to the conscience Now wee shall see effectuall calling answers all these I. If God speake in the ordinary meanes and Ministery an heart effectually called heareth the word not onely to know it but to be directed by it not onely to consent to the truth of it as hypocrites and Divels may but to approve and like it to receive it not into the eare onely but into the affection and not into the affection of joy onely as the hypocrite but of love feare trembling and the rest and not into the affections onely but into the conscience whereby they let it in further and allow it a deeper rooting than any hypocrite can doe And therefore in the one it is an illumination like a blaze soone extinct againe in the other it is a cleare light and lampe that carries them along into the bride-chamber In the one it is like a sodaine flash of lightening as soone gone as come in the other it is like the Sun-shine that shines all the day long for direction and comfort For the parts of the word the Law and the Gospell If God speake in the Law an heart effectually called heares that voice not onely to see his sinne and sorrow for it which an hypocrite may but to hate his sinne to loathe it and leave it yea not to leave many or all but one all but our Herodias but to forsake even the most beloved and bosome sinnes Hee heares the voice of God in the Law as a rule of life not onely to restraine corruption but to drive him out to sound renovation and reformation Hee heares the voice of the Law to get out of his estate of nature and to get into the state of the godly not at death onely as Balaam but in his life and to apprehend so the end of godlinesse as he useth the meanes to compasse it whereas an hypocrite aimes at the end but either passeth over or slubbers the meanes If God speake in the Gospell an heart effectually called heareth that voice offering grace and pardon to it which because it is weary and laden this voice is as flagons of wine to revive his soule ready to faint in him but an hypocrite being not seriously humbled heares carelesly The former heares this voice as an instrument of saving faith by which he beleeves Christ not onely a common Saviour but his in speciall not to wish onely