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A42831 Some discourses, sermons, and remains of the Reverend Mr. Jos. Glanvil ... collected into one volume, and published by Ant. Horneck ... ; together with a sermon preached at his funeral, by Joseph Pleydell ... Glanvill, Joseph, 1636-1680.; Horneck, Anthony, 1641-1697.; Pleydell, Josiah, d. 1707. 1681 (1681) Wing G831; ESTC R23396 193,219 458

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love to have others to handle it severely All this bad men may do upon the score of natural fear and self-love and the apprehension of a future judgement And now such convictions will naturally beget some endeavours A convinced understanding will have some influence upon the will and affections The mind in the unregenerate may lust against the Flesh as that doth against it So that 2. such a meer animal man may promise and purpose and endeavour in some considerable measure but then he goes not on with full Resolution but wavers and stops and turns about again and lets the law of the members that of death and sin to prevail over him His endeavour is remiss and consequently ineffectual it makes no conquests and will not signifie He sins on though with some regret and his very unwillingness to sin while he commits it is so far from lessening that it aggravates his fault It argues that he sins against conscience and conviction and that sin is strong and reigns 'T is true indeed St. Paul Rom. 7. makes such a description seemingly of himself as one might think concluded him under this state he saith vers 8. That sin wrought in him all manner of concupiscence vers 9. That sin revived and he died vers 14. That he was carnal and again sold under sin vers 20. That sin dwelt in him and wrought that which he would not vers 23. That the Law of his members led him into captivity to the law of Sin and vers 25. That he obeyed the law of sin If this be so and St. Paul a regenerate man was in this state it will follow that seeking and feeble endeavour that overcometh no difficulty may yet procure an entrance and he that is come hitherto viz. to endeavour is safe enough though he do not conquer This objection presseth not only against this head but against my whole Discourse and the Text it self Therefore to answer it I say That the St. Paul here is not to be understood of himself He describes the state of a convinced but unregenerate man though he speaks in the first person a Figure that was ordinary with this Apostle and frequent enough in common speech Thus we say I am thus and thus and did so and so when we are describing a state or actions in which perhaps we in person are not concerned In this sense the best Expositors understand these expressions and those excellent Divines of our own Bishop Taylor and Dr. Hammond and others have noted to us That this description is directly contrary to all the Characters of a regenerate man given elsewhere by this and the other Apostles As he is said to be dead to sin Rom. 6. 11. Free from sin and the servant of Righteousness Rom. 6. 18. That he walks not after the Flesh but after the Spirit Rom. 8. 1. That the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made him free from the Law of sin and death Rom. 8. 2. That he overcometh the world Joh. 5. 4. He sinneth not 1 Joh. 3. 6. He hath crucified the flesh with its affections and lusts Gal. 5. 24. Which Characters of a truly regenerate person if they be compared with those above-cited out of Rom. 7. it will appear that they are as contrary as 't is possible to speak and by this 't is evident that they describe the two contrary states For can the regenerate be full of all manner of concupiscence and at the same time be crucified to the Flesh and its affections and lusts one in whom sin revives while he dies and yet one that is dead to sin carnal and yet not walking after the flesh but after the Spirit sold under sin and yet free from sin Having sin dwelling in him and a captive to sin and obeying the Law of sin and yet free from the law of sin and death how can these things consist To tell us 'T is so and 't is not so and to twist such contradictions into Orthodox Paradoxes are pretty things to please Fools and Children but wise men care not for riddles that are not sense For my part I think it clear that the Apostle in that mistaken Chapter relates the feeble impotent condition of one that was convinced and strove a little but not to purpose And if we find our selves comprised under that description though we may be never so sensible of the evil and danger of a sinful course and may endeavour some small matter but without success we are yet under that evil and obnoxious to that danger For he that strives in earnest conquers at last and advanceth still though all the work be not done at once So that if we endeavour and gain nothing our endeavour is peccant and wants Faith or Prayer for Divine aids or constancy or vigour and so Though we may seek we shall not be able to enter But 3. an imperfect Striver may overcome sin in some Instances and yet in that do no great matter neither if he lies down and goes no further There are some sins we outgrow by age or are indisposed to them by bodily infirmity or diverted by occasions and it may be by other sins and some are contrary to worldly Interests to our credit or health or profit and when we have in any great degree been hurt by them in these we fall out with those sins and cease from them and so by resolution and disuse we master them at last fully which if we went on and attempted upon all the rest were something But when we stop short in these petty victories our general state is not altered He that conquers some evil appetites is yet a slave to others and though he hath prevailed over some difficulties yet the main ones are yet behind Thus the imperfect Striver masters it may be his beastly appetite to intemperate drinking but is yet under the power of Love and Riches and vain Pleasure He ceaseth from open debauchery but entertains spiritual wickedness in his heart He will not Swear but will backbite and rail He will not be Drunk but will damn a man for not being of his opinion He will not prophane the Sabbath but will defraud his Neighbour Now these half conquests when we rest in them are as good as none at all Then shall I not be ashamed when I have regard to all thy Commandments saith the Kingly Prophet Psal 119. 6. 'T is shameful to give off when our work is but half done what we do cast the greater reproach upon us for what we omit To cease to be prophane is something as a passage but nothing for an end We are not Saints as soon as we are civil 'T is not only gross sins that are to be overcome The wages of sin is death not only of the great and capital but of the smallest if they are indulged The Pharisee applauded himself that he was not like the Extortioners Adulterers and Unjust nor like the Publican that came to
pray with him Luk. 18. 11. and yet he went away never the more justified The unwise Virgins were no profligate Livers and yet they were shut out He that will enter must strive against every corrupt appetite and inclination A less leak will sink a Ship as well as a greater if no care be taken of it A Consumption will kill as well as the Plague yea sometimes the less Disease may in the event prove more deadly than the greater for small distempers may be neglected till they become incurable whenas the great ones awaken us to speedy care for a remedy A small hurt in the finger slighted may prove a Gangreen when a great wound in the Head by seasonable applications is cured 'T is unsafe then to content our selves with this that our sins are not foul and great those we account little ones may prove as fatal yea they are sometimes more dangerous For we are apt to think them none at all or Venial infirmities that may consist with a state of Grace and Divine favour we excuse and make Apologies for them and fancy that Hearing and Prayer and Confession are atonements enough for these Upon which accounts I am apt to believe that the less notorious Vices have ruined as many as the greatest Abominations Hell doth not consist only of Drunkards and Swearers and Sabbath-breakers No the demure Pharisee the plausible Hypocrite and formal Professor have their place also in that lake of fire The great impieties do often startle and awaken conscience and beget strong convictions and so sometimes excite resolution and vigorous striving while men hug themselves in their lesser sins and carry them unrepented of to their Graves The sum is we may overcome some sins and turn from the grosser sorts of wickedness and yet if we endeavour not to subdue the rest we are still in the condition of unregeneracy and death and though we thus seek we shall not enter 4. A man may perform many duties of Religion and that with relish and delight and yet miscarry As 1. He may be earnest and swift to hear and follow Sermons constantly from one place to another and be exceedingly pleased and affected with the Word and yet be an evil Man and in a bad state Herod heard John Baptist gladly Mark 6. 20. and he that received the seed into stony places received it joyfully Mat. 13. 20. Zeal for hearing doth not always arise from a conscientious desire to learn in order to practice but sometimes it proceeds from an itch after novelty and notions or an ambition to be famed for Godliness or the importunity of natural conscience that will not be satisfied except we do something or a desire to get matter to feed our opinions or to furnish us with pious discourse I say earnestness to hear ariseth very often from some of these and when it doth so we gain but little by it yea we are dangerously tempted to take this for an infallible token of our Saintship and so to content our selves with this Religion of the Ear and to disturb every body with the abundance of our disputes and talk while we neglect our own Spirits and let our unmortified affections and inclinations rest in quiet under the shadow of these specious services So that when a great affection to hearing seizeth upon an evil man 't is odds but it doth him hurt it puffs him up in the conceit of his Godliness and makes him pragmatical troublesome and censorious He turns his food into poyson Among bad men those are certainly the worst that have an opinion of their being godly and such are those that have itching ears under the power of vitious habits and inclinations Thus an earnest diligent hearer may be one of those who seeks and is shut out And so may 2. He that Fasts much and severely The Jews were exceedingly given to fasting and they were very severe in it They abstained from all things pleasant to them and put on sackcloath and sowr looks and mourned bitterly and hung down the head and sate in ashes so that one might have taken these for very holy penitent mortified people that had a great antipathy against their sins and abhorrence of themselves for them And yet God complains of these strict severe Fasters Zach. 7. 5. That they did not Fast unto him but fasted for strife and debate Isa 58. 4. Their Fasts were not such as he had chosen to loose the bands of wickedness to undo the heavy burden and to let the oppressed free vers 6. But they continued notwithstanding their Fasts and God's admonitions by his Prophets to oppress the Widow and Fatherless and Poor Zach. 7. 10. Thus meer natural and evil men sometimes put on the garb of Mortification and exercise rigors upon their Bodies and external persons in exchange for the indulgences they allow their beloved appetites and while the strict Discipline reacheth no further though we keep days and Fast often yet this will not put us beyond the condition of the Pharisee who fasted twice in the week as himself boasted Luke 18. 12. And 3. An imperfect striver may be very much given to pious and religious discourses He may love to be talking of Divine things especially of the love of Christ to sinners which he may frequently speak of with much earnestness and affection and have that dear name always at his tongues end to begin and close all his sayings and to fill up the void places when he wants what to say next and yet this may be a bad man who never felt those Divine things he talks of and never loved Christ heartily as he ought 'T was observed before that there are some who have a sort of Devoutness and Religion in their particular Complexion and if such are talkative as many times they are they will easily run into such discourses as agree with their temper and take pleasure in them for that reason As also for this because they are apt to gain us reverence and the good opinion of those with whom we converse And such as are by nature disposed for this faculty may easily get it by imitation and remembrance of the devout forms they hear and read so that there may be nothing Divine in all this nothing but what may consist with unmortified lusts and affections And though such talk earnestly of the love of Christ and express a mighty love to his name yet this may be without any real conformity unto him in his Life and Laws The Jews spake much of Moses in him they believed and in him they trusted John 5. 45. His name was a sweet sound to their ears and 't was very pleasant upon their Tongues and yet they hated the Spirit of Moses and had no love to those Laws of his which condemned their wicked actions And we may see how many of those love Christ that speak often and affectionately of him by observing how they keep his Commandments John 14. 15. especially those
eternal Glories 'T is true indeed our own natural strength is small in proportion to the Difficulties we are to encounter but the Grace of God is sufficient for us 2 Cor. 12. 9. and we may do all things through Christ that strengthens us Phil. 4. 13. Nature is weak and imperfect but we are not left in the condition of meer nature For we are not under the Law but under Grace Rom. 6. 14. We are under the influences of the holy Spirit which will remove the mountains and plain the way before us if we take care to engage those aids by Faith and sincere endeavour For this we may be sure of that God will never be wanting to us if we are not so unto our selves So that the case as to our natural inability and the assistance of Gods Spirit seems to be thus A man in a Boat is carried from the Harbour he designs by the violence of the Current he is not able only by plying the Oar to overcome the resistance of the Tide but a gentle Gale blows with him which will not of it self carry him up against the Torrent Neither of them will do it single But if he hoist the sail and use the Oar too this united force prevails and he gets happily to the Harbour This methinks resembles our Condition we are carried down the Torrent of evil inclinations and Affections our own unaided powers are too little for that great force but the Holy Spirit is with us It breaths upon us and is ready to assist if we are so to use it and by the superaddition and ingagement of those blessed Aids there is no evil in our natures but may be overcome So that we have no reason to be discouraged at the apprehension of our impotence out of weakness we shall be made strong Heb. 11. 24. If we imploy our Talent though it be but a very small one we shall have more Mat. 25. 29. And if we accept of those divine helps and use them what was before to meer natural consideration uneasie will be pleasant and sweetly relishing One of the greatest Difficulties in the way of Religion is to begin the first steps are roughest to those feet that have been unaccustomed to it The helps and manifold incouragements we shall meet with in the Progress will render it more agreeable and delightsome Those very toils will be grateful there is scarce any great sense of pleasure but where there is some Difficulty and Pain Even our Work it self will be Wages And 't is not only the End of Wisdom that is pleasantness but the very way Prov. 3. 17. So that though we are call'd upon to strive and to run and to fight which words import Labour yet we are not required to Quit our pleasures but to change the objects of them to leave the delights of Swine for those of Angels sensual for spiritual Satisfactions Thus all things encourage and invite us to strive God calls upon us and our own Interests call Christ Jesus came to engage us to this Work and the Holy Spirit waits to assist it If notwithstanding all this we sit still our Negligence will be inexcusable and fatal or if we arise and go a little forward and then lay us down to take our ease and rest our state in the judgement of one that knew will be worse more desperate and excuseless 2 Pet. 2. 21. I Conclude all then in the words of the Blessed Apostle 1 Cor. 15. Therefore my beloved Brethren be ye stedfast unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as ye know that your Labour is not in vain in the Lord To him be Glory and Honour henceforth and for ever Amen SERMON II. Catholick Charity Preach'd to the Lord Mayor and Aldermen OF LONDON The Third Edition SERMON II. OF Catholick Charity 1 Pet. I. part of xxii v. See that ye Love one another HOW many and how great have been the Feuds and still are of this tottering and broken Age there is no man here so happy as to be ignorant That such Strifes among Brethren are Unnatural and Diabolical and that 't is a lovely thing to see Christians live together in Charity and Love there is no Christian but will grant but how the fatal Evil is to be cur'd and the lovely thing is to be compast here 's the Knot here 's the Difficulty To endeavour the reconciling Extreams that are so divided looks like a design to perswade a friendship between the Winds and Waves 'T is very strange that Christians should be so at odds whose Religion is Peace and Love and the reasons of whose differences are so small in proportion to the degree of their Animosities Our GOD is One and we have the same common SAVIOUR we profess one GOSPEL and believe the same Creeds we have the same SACRAMENTS and the same fundamental ORDINANCES And since we are agreed in These what is there left that is worth the heat of a Dispute what that can justifie a Division Certainly it is not mens Principles that keep them so at odds there is somewhat more in the matter there is something wanting that would heal our Breaches and compose our Divisions Love would heal us if we would be healed Now in a general Combustion 't is every Christians Duty to bring what Water he can to throw upon the Flames especially it is the office of the Ministers of Peace to endeavour to promote it 'T is a plain subject but such are most necessary and this is most seasonable seasonable at all times but principally in these wherein 't is hard to discern by the practice of Christians that the Duty of Love hath any thing to do with Christianity And yet this is a vital grace of our Religion 'T is the Law and Gospel in a word for Love is the fulfilling of the Law and the Gospel is a Law of Love And 't is very strange and very sad that an Age which hath so much of light and faith in the pretence should have so little of Charity and love in the practice especially since that light which is from above is full of Benignity and Goodness and that Faith which is truly Divine worketh by love This is that which our Apostle recommends in the words and I have chosen it for my present subject In Discoursing it I shall shew you 1. The Necessity of the Duty 2. It s Extent 3. The Excellency of it and 4. propose some Means to assist us towards the attainment of this Generous and Catholick Spirit FOR the 1. The Necessity of the Duty the whole Scripture is so full and so express in enjoyning it that methinks I might be excused from a labour that would seem superfluous to one that knows the Gospel and not the practice of those that profess it But because the Christianity of most Christians is if I may so speak quite another thing from the Christianity of CHRIST it will be necessary to mind them what
HIS was that they may be perswaded to conform theirs unto it and though mens understandings are convinced already that Charity is their Duty yet there is but too much need to represent some of the vast heap of injunctions that make it so to incline their Wills I shall therefore briefly lay together a few of the chief instances of this kind that you may have the distincter sense of the reasons of your Duty and from them the most powerful motives to enforce it In order to this let us consider in short the Injunctions of Christ and the teachings of his Apostles Our Saviour urgeth it as his New Commandment John 13. 34. and inculcates it again under the obliging form of his Command John 15. 12. He makes it a distinguishing note of his Disciples John 13. 35. and enjoyns them to love their Enemies Mat. 5. 24. He mentions it as the great qualification of those on his Right hand that shall be received into his Kingdom Mat. 25. 34 35. and the want of it as the reason of the dreadful Curse pronounced upon those miserable ones on the Left at the solemn Judgement ver 41 42. St. Paul calls Love the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13. 8 9 10. and sets it in the first place among the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22. yea reckons it five times over under other Names in the Catalogue viz. those of Peace Long-suffering Gentleness Goodness Meekness ver 22 23. He advanceth it above all Gifts and Graces 1 Cor. 13. above the Tongues of Men and Angels ver 1. and above Prophecie and Mysteries and Knowledge and Faith ver 2. And the beloved Disciple St. John who lay in the Bosom of his Dear Lord and seems to partake most of his Spirit is transported in the commendation of this Grace He tells us that God is love 1 John 4. 7. and repeats it again ver 16. He makes it an Argument of our being born of God and Knowing Him ver 7. and the want of this an evidence of not Knowing God ver 8. He counts it the mark of Discipleship a●d the contrary a sign of one that abideth in Death 1 John 3. 14. He calls him a Murtherer that hates another ver 15. and a Lyar if he pretends to Love God and loveth not his Brother 1 John 4. 20. In fine he out-speaks the greatest heights of Praise when he saith God is Love and he that loveth dwelleth in God and God in him 1 John 4. 16. I might represent further that we are commanded to Love without dissimulation Rom. 12. 9. to be kindly affectioned one towards another ver 10. to put on the Breast-plate of Faith and Love 1 Thess 5. 8. to be pitiful and courteous 1 Pet. 3. 8. to provoke one another to love and to good works Heb. 10. 24. to serve one another Gal. 5. 13. to love as Brethren 1 Pet. 3. 8. We are minded of Christ's New Commandment 1 Joh. 3. 23. and of the Message which was from the beginning That we should love one another ver 11. and are urged by the consideration of Gods loving us 1 John 4. 1. Thus the Apostles exhort and teach and they Pray that our Love may abound Phil. 1. 9. and 1 Thess 3. 12. and give solemn Thanks for it when they have found it 2 Thess 1. 3. And now considering the expresness of all these places I cannot see but that any Duty of Religion may be more easily evaded than this and those who can fansie themselves Christians and yet continue in the contrary Spirit and Practice may conceit themselves religious though they live in the constant commission of the greatest sins And if such can quiet their Consciences and shuffle from all these plain Recommendations and Injunctions they have found a way to escape all the Laws of God and may when they please become Christians without Christianity For the evidence I have suggested to prove the necessity of this Duty doth not consist in half Sentences and doubtful Phrases in fancied Analogies and far-fetcht Interpretations but in plain Commands and frequent Inculcations in earnest Intreaties and pressing Importunities in repeated Advices and passionate Commendations And those whom all these will not move are Incapable of being perswaded against their humour or their interest to any Duty of Religion So that though I see never so much eagerness for an Opinion or Heat for an indifferent Circumstance without the conscience of Christian Love I shall never call that forwardness for those little things Zeal or Religion Yea though those warm men should sacrifice their Lives to their beloved Trifles I should not think them Martyrs but fear rather that they went from one Fire to another and a Worse And in this I have the great Apostle to warrant me who saith Though I give my body to be burned and have not Charity it profiteth me nothing 1 Cor. 13. 3. Thus of the First Head the Necessity of the duty I Come to the II. the Extent Our Love ought 1. To be extended to all Mankind The more general it is the more Christian and the more like unto the Love of God who causeth his Sun to shine and his Rain to fall upon the Good and upon the Evil. And though our Arms be very short and the ordinary influence of our kindness and good will can reach but to a very few yet we may pray for all men and desire the good of all the world and in these we may be charitable without bounds But these are not all Love obligeth us to relieve the Needy and help the Distressed to visit the Sick and succour the Fatherless and Widows to strengthen the Weak and to confirm the Staggering and Doubting to encourage the Vertuous and to reprove the Faulty and in short to be ready in all the offices of Kindness that may promote the good of any man Spiritual or Temporal according to the utmost of our power and capacity The good man is Merciful to his Beast and the Christian ought to be Charitable to his Brother and his Neighbour and every man is our Brother and every one that Needs us is our Neighbour And so our Love ought to extend to all men universally without limitation though with this distinction II. That the more especial Objects of our Love ought to be those that agree with us in a common Faith Gal. 6. 10. that is All Christians as Christians and because such Whatever makes our Brother a Member of the Church Catholick that gives him a title to our nearer affections which ought to be as large as that Our Love must not be confin'd by names and petty agreements and the interests of Parties to the corners of a Sect but ought to reach as far as Christianity it self in the largest notion of it To love those that are of our Way Humour and Opinion is not Charity but Self-love 't is not for Christ's sake but our own To Love like Christians is to Love his Image
the Father And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Kings are from God says the Heathen And a greater than both acknowledgeth Pilate's power to be from above The Scripture intitles God to all the Royal adjuncts and both Christian and Heathen Antiquity agree in this with the sacred Oracles 1. The Kings person is said to be God's Great deliverance giveth He to HIS King 2 Sam. xxii 51. and He shall give strength unto HIS King 1 Sam. ii 10. Yea I have said ye are Gods saith the Text and consonantly Plato calls the King 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a kind of God among men And as the name of God is called upon his person so also is it 2. upon his Throne Then Solomon sate upon the Throne of the Lord as King instead of DAVID his Father 1 Chron. xxix 23. And saith the Queen of Sheba Blessed be the Lord thy God which delighteth in thee to set thee on HIS Throne 2 Chron. ix 8. To a like sense also is that of Nestor to Agamemnon in Homer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jove lent thee thy Scepter and Jurisdiction 3. The Kings Titles also relate him to God viz. those of Gods Anointed and his Servant The former given even to Saul 1 Sam. xii 3. and Cyrus Isa xlv 1. and the later to Nebuchadnezzar Jer. xxv 9. The same also Athanasius gives to Constantius the great Favourer of the Arrians 4. The Kings power likewise is from God There is no power but of God and the powers that are are ordained of God saith the Apostle And the Pythagorean 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath given him Dominion Upon which account also Themistius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God sent Regal Power from Heaven And that a Kingdom is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Divine Good is the assertion of Plato and the confession of Cyrus All the Kingdoms of the Earth hath the Lord of Heaven given me 2 Chron. xxxvi Yea and Tiberius acknowledgeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our Kingdom is from God And Daniel minds Nebuchadnezzar The God of Heaven hath given thee a Kingdom Power and Strength and Glory Dan. ii 27. And Athanasius in his Prayer for Constantius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou hast given this Kingdom to Constantius thy servant These I think are testimonies enough to prove that Kings wear Gods Image and Authority And therefore Menander calls the King 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God's living Image and the Pythagorean 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The King is the Figure of God among Men. But besides all this there is evidence enough in the nature of the thing to prove that Kings have their Power and Authority from God and are no Substitutes of the People which I thus inferr God made the World and consequently the World is his and his alone is the Right to Govern it But he being of such immense perfections that our Frailty cannot bear his immediate converses 't is necessary that he rule us by men like our selves and put the Sword into the hands of Creatures of our own make This he doth and hence it follows that they that Rule are Gods Substitutes and no Creatures of the People For the People have no power to Govern themselves and consequently cannot devolve any upon another Upon the whole I conclude that the same Commands and Authority that oblige us to obey God bind us to revere those that so signally wear his Image and he that disobeys the Vice-Roy affronts the Soveraign He that resists resists the Ordinance of God saith the Apostle and who can lift up himself against the Lords Anointed and be guiltless saith David in the case of Saul And thus I have dispatched the first viz. Resistance affronts the authority of God with which Kings are invested as I think I have made evident from testimony and the nature of the thing Secondly RESISTANCE is opposite to the Spirit of RELIGION Religion is of a calm and pacifick temper like that of its Author whose voice was not heard in the street It subdues our passions and governs our appetites it destroys our pride and sordid selfishness it allays the tempests and speaks down the storms of our natures it sweetens our Humours and polisheth the roughness of our tempers it makes men gentle and peaceable meek and compliant This was the Spirit of the great exemplar of our Religion this was the genius of his Doctrine and his Practice He commands the payment of all Duties to Caesar He acknowledgeth Pilates Power to be from above He commands his Disciples to pray for their Persecutors He permits them to flie not to oppose He rebukes Peters violence to the High Priests servant and the revenge of the Disciples when they called for Fire from Heaven He paid Tribute submitted to the Laws of the Sanhedrim and to that unjust sentence against his life This was his temper and the Apostles who lived among his enemies and theirs and met with severity enough to have sowred their Spirits and exasperated their Pens to contrary resolutions and instructions Yet as true Followers of their dear Lord they faithfully transmit to us what they had learnt from him viz. That we should obey those that have the rule over us submit to every ordinance of man pray for Kings and all in authority submit to Principalities and Powers and to obey Magistrates And those Noble Spirits of the first Ages after who began to be Martyrs as soon as to be Christians who lived in the Fire and went to Heaven wrapt in those Flames that had less ardor than their love These I say amidst the greatest and fiercest Fires that Cruelty and Barbarism had kindled paid the Tribute of a peaceable and quiet subjection to their Murderers and made unforced acknowledgements of the right they had to their obedience Nor do we ever read of any attempts they made to free themselves by resistance though as Tertullian saith they were in powerful numbers mingled in their Villages and in their Cities yea in their Castles and in their Armies Yea there is an illustrious instance of passive obedience in the Thebaean Legion whose tenth man being executed for not offering Sacrifice to Idols they quietly submitted to the cruelty And a second Decimation being commanded by Maximiniam the Author of the first one of their great Commanders an excellent Christian perswades them to suffer it with the same patience because it was not with their Swords they could make their way to the Kingdom of Heaven but by another kind of Warfare And now if after all this and infinitely more that might be said on this subject for men to pretend Religion and plead Scripture for Rebellion is impudent and shameless an affront to Religion and a Lie in the face of Conscience And those that cannot discern those great lines of their Duty which are set upon the High places and shone upon with a full beam and yet can find sin in little harmless circumstances which nothing hath forbidden but
that Spirit to which they are most opposite Thus when warm and brisk Sanguine presents a chearful Scene and fills the imagination with pleasant dreams these are taken for divine illapses for the joys and incomes of the Holy Ghost When heated Melancholly hath kindled the busie and active fancy the Enthusiast then talks of Illuminations New Lights Revelations and many wonderful fine things which are ascribed to the same Spirit But when Flegm predominates and quencheth the Fantastick Fire rendering the mad man more dull lumpish and unactive then the Spirit is withdrawn and the man under spiritual darkness and desertion And when again choler is boiled up into rage and fury against every thing that is not of the Fantastick cut and measure this also is presumed to be an holy fervour kindled by that Spirit whose real fruits are Gentleness and Love Thus then doth the Devil devise to disgrace the Spirit of God and its influence by those numerous vile and vain pretensions which he thinks a likely means to extirpate the belief of the agency of the Spirit and to render it ridiculous But again 4. Satan deviseth against Gods own glory by designing against his worship Which he doth by endeavouring to destroy its reverence under pretence of Spirituality God requires to be glorified in body and in soul which are his and Satan sets the worship of one against the other that he may destroy both Thus when under the Law Religion required the Pomp and Solemnity of external Rites and Usages the subtle designer drives it on in that method so far that at last the Spirit of Religion was lost in the ceremony and the life and substance in the circumstance But when Christianity came into the world to abolish that ceremonial oeconomy in order to the establishing a more spiritual frame of Worship then doth Satan turn with the Tyde and puts on the semblance of a Zealot for Spirituality which he prosecutes so far till at last in the Gnosticks and other aiery Hereticks he had run Religion out into meer empty Fantastick Notionality In like manner where in these latter ages the world hath been disabused and hath detected the vanity of the formal outside Religion of Rome There doth the designer fall in with the Current sets up for a Reformer and mightily contends for the Spirituality of Worship He gets into the Pulpit and there with hot and sweating zeal he crys up the purity the purity of Religion and never leaves canting on the subject till he hath fired mens tongues against every matter of decency and order as formal and Antichristian And when he is shut out of those high places he creeps into corners and inflames the Spirits of the zealous and the ignorant against all harmless circumstances of Reverence and Decorum And so far hath he prevailed in this device as to drive those of warm affections and weak heads from all due external Reverence to God and things Sacred For these well-meaning people being frighted by the terrible noise of Popery Antichristianism Superstition things they have learnt to hate but not to understand boggle and fly off from every thing their furious Guides have marked with this abhorred Character And thus a rude and slovenly kind of Religion hath made its way into the world and such a sordid carlesness in matters of divine worship that should a stranger come into the assemblies that are acted by this Spirit He could not by their carriage imagine what they were a doing and that they were about holy Offices would perhaps be one of the last things he could conjecture Thus bold and sawcy talk hath crept into mens prayers under the pretence of holy familiarity with God nauseous impertinent bawling under the cover of praying by the Spirit and all kind of irreverences in external demeanour under the shelter of a pretended Spiritual worship And thus the design of Satan is successfully carried on in the world which is to subtilize Religion till he hath destroyed it To make it invisible that he may make it nothing And this is another way whereby be betrays those who are Ignorant of his Devices And thus I have dispatcht the first General viz. Satans Devices against Gods glory From which I descend to the second viz. Satans devices against the Peace of the Church which while it stands in its main and united body is like a mighty mountain unconcern'd in the tumults in the air while the blustering winds and tempests assault but cannot prejudice or disorder it And therefore the Designer endeavours to divide what he cannot deal with in its knit and combined strength He strives to crumble it into Sects and Atoms that this mountain may become an heap of Sands which he may blow up and down and scatter with his winds and so at last become a plain before him For which Design he hath two main instruments and Devices viz. 1. Pharisaical Pride under the cover of Religious strictness And 2. Intemperate Heat under the notion of Holy and Divine Zeal These are the chief Engines for the dividing purposes 1. Then he hatches and fosters a Spirit of Pride and Sectarian Insolence a sure and fatal Divider under the specious pretence of Religious strictness For where he perceives he cannot succeed in his designs of debauching the world and propagating open prophaneness and Impiety He shifts his shape puts on the cloathing of light and wraps himself in a Cloak spun of strict and severe pretensions and in this habit puts himself among the proud and conceited Professors These he and their own vanity gild and adorn with all the glorious names and priviledges of the Gospel and when they have incircled their heads with their own Fantastick Rays and are swoln in their imaginations with a tympany of ridiculous greatness They then proudly contemn all but their darling selves under the notion of the formal the moral and the wicked and scornfully pity the poor and carnal world that is all that are not arrived to their conceited pitch and elevation and now having thus dignified themselves and debased others they herd together draw the Church into their little corners and proudly withdraw from the Communion of others who have less conceit though more Christianity They bid us stand off lest we pollute them with our unhallowed approaches and having made us as the Heathen and Publican they cry Come out from among them The true Church Soundness of Judgement Purity of Doctrine and of worship if we will believe them is confined to their Gange just as it was to the corners of Africa of old when their friends the Gnosticks were there Thus they swell and swagger in their fantastick imaginations till some other Sect as well conceited as themselves endeavour to take their Plumes from them and to appropriate these glorious Prerogatives unto their own party and then they bustle and contend Here 's the Church crys one nay but 't is here crys another till a third gives the lye to them