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A53117 The fall of man by sinne delivered in a sermon preached at the late solemne fast, Aug. 28, 1644 : wherein these three positions are briefly handled : 1. That all men are miserably fallen from God by sin, and are in a lost condition, 2. That we must see ourselves thus fallen, and utterly lost in ourselves, before we can convert and turn to God by repentance, 3. That formes of prayer may, in some cases be lawfully and warrantably used : published at the request of that truly religious and vertuous gentlewoman, mistris Elizabeth Barnham, wife to the worshipfull Robert Barnham, Esq. / by William Newport, Preacher of the word at Boughton Monchelsey in Kent. Newport, William, Preacher of the word at Boughton Monchelsey in Kent. 1644 (1644) Wing N940; ESTC R3278 14,865 30

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natural life into Adam at his creation Verily I say unto you the houre is comming and now is when the dead shall heare the voice of the Sonne of God and they that heare shall live For as the Father hath life in himselfe so hath hee given to the Sonne to have life in himselfe Joh. 5.25 26. That is to say spiritual life to conveigh to his members And the truth is that there is nothing that can raise us thus dangerously falne but the same power that raised Christ from the dead Ephes 1.19 20. And therefore we must have recourse to to him by prayer intreating him that he wil shew his power in raising us thus falne And though it bee true that unregenerate men cannot make a prayer that God shall accept as a good worke because they are bad and out of Christ yet they may make such a prayer as he wil in his mercy heare For hee feedes the very young Ravens that call upon him Psal 147.9 Thus of the former I come now to the latter Position viz. That men must see themselves thus falne and in a lost and undone condition before they wil turne to God by repentance Hence it is that the Prophets generally shew men their sinnes and the danger of them before they exhort men to that duty Thus the Prophet Esay shewed the Jewes first their deplorable state by reason of their sinnes before hee exhorted them to purge themselves from them Hee told them that they were worse then the Oxe or the Asse Esay 1.3 that they were like a man leprous from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foot that they were as corrupt as Sodome and Gomorrah before hee exhorted them to clense themselves by the teares of true repentance vers 16. And the same Prophet would have those that followed after righteousnesse that sought the Lord to looke first to the Rocke from whence they were hewen and to the hole of the pit from whence they were digged that they might see their original sinne the fountaine and their actual transgression Esa 51.1 2 3. the streames that issued from thence before he promises them any comfort and consolation And in another place calleth only those that thrist that is to say that are apprehensive of their want and misery by sinne To come unto the waters Esay 55.1 2. c. And our Saviour cals none to him for ease but those that feele their sinne a burthen Matth. 11.28 Men must first apprehend themselves sicke or at least in danger in regard of their health before they will seeke to the Physitian so men must first finde themselves sicke of sinne before they will repaire to the Physician of their soules The whole need not a Physician but they that are sicke I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Matth. 9.12 That is to say not those that are puffed up with an opinion of their owne righteousnesse as the Pharisees were but those that see their sins and see themselves to be in great danger by reason of them yea utterly undone by them The Reasons are two whereof the one respects sinners to be converted the other God to whom they are to convert and turne Reas 1 In regard of sinners such is the pride of their nature that they will not humble themselves and seeke to him untill they see themselves in extreame need of him and utterly undone without his mercy which they can never doe without a through sight of the hainousnesse of their sinnes This we may see in the example of the Prodigall whiles his portion lasted nay whiles he could any way subsist without his father though it were by swines meat he could be never brought to thinke of returning home but when hee was denied the huskes of the swine so that hee could by no meanes subsist without his father then hee resolved to returne home to him by weeping crosse and to say Father I have sinned c. Luke 15.16 17. Reas 2 In regard of God for hee will have men thus lost in their owne esteeme before grace bee shewed them in their conversion and acceptation that they may learne to price him and his grace when they doe enjoy them Wee can never know the worth of grace unlesse wee know the want of it And hence wee see that CHRIST calleth none unto him but them that finde their want of him If any man thirst let him come unto me and drinke Joh. 7.37 And let him that is a thirst come And whosoever will let him take the water of life freely Revel 22.17 Vse 1 This shewes the duty of Ministers in this regard which is to teach men the great misery they are in by reason of their sins that they are hereby the children of wrath and liable to eternall death that so they may turne to God for mercy and to this end to shew them the hainousnesse of their sins and the impossibility to be saved by the covenant of workes Thus doth the Prophet here Thou hast fallen c. And therefore Take unto you words and turne to the Lord and say unto him Take away our iniquity and receive us graciously And so doth the Apostle Saint Paul he tels us againe and againe that in the Law wee can see nothing but our sins and our wofull estate by reason of them By the Law saith he comes the knowledge of sinne Rom. 7.7 and he shewes that in the Law wee may reade our condemnation written in such faire characters that he that runs may reade it For faith he Moses describeth the righteousnesse that is of the Law that the man that doth those things shall live in them Rom. 10.5 and therefore he tels us that the Law is our schoole-master to drive us unto Christ Galath 3.24 Without all question it is necessary that we should see our sin and danger by reason of it or else we shal never come to Christ for remission and salvation 2. This should teach every one that desires to convert and turne to God by repentance to labour to see how farre he is falne from God by sin and in what misery he is by reason hereof and to this end he should view his heart and life not in the false glasse of his owne or others corrupt opinion or fancy but in the looking-glasse of Gods Law that will not flatter him that so hee may see the deformity and filth of the one and the obliquities and wanderings of the other and the just reward of both viz. eternall wrath and destruction Unlesse we all thus doe which Israel at the exhortation of the Prophet here wee shall never turne to the Lord our God wee shall never seeke him with earuestnesse as men undone without it for grace and mercy If thou Lord shouldest bee extreame to marke iniquity O Lord who shall stand but there is mercy with thee that thou mightest bee feared Psal 130.3 4. We must see our selves utterly undone in rigour of
therefore they were guilty of original sin Looke as ignoble and leprous parents beget none but ignoble and leprous children and as of serpents can come nothing but serpents so of polluted parents come onely polluted children for who can bring a cleane thing out of an uncleane not one Job 14.4 And this originall filth is called sometimes Lust Rom. 7.7 sometimes the law in the members vers 23. the body of sinne vers 24. and the old man Ephes 4.22 And this is the sourse and fountaine of all our actuall sins and cause of all our fals Let no man say when he is tempted I am tempted of God for God cannot be tempted with evill neither tempteth he any man But every man is tempted when he is drawne away of his owne lust and entised Then lust when it hath conceived bringeth forth sinne and si●● when it is finished bringeth forth death James 1.13 14 15. Many put their greatest miscarriages upon the devil the devil owed them a shame and now he hath payed them when as the chiefe cause of all our fals lyes in our own hearts The devill can but suggest and sollicit he cannot compell us to sin if he did not plow with our owne heifer work on our own corruption he could do us no hurt And so long as this seed of all iniquity remaines in mens hearts they would commit sin if there were no devill to tempt them to it Vse 1 This informes of two things 1. Since we have falne and so falne as hath been shewed by our sins this discovers to us our great misery by reason of sinne and iniquity We have falne by it to our undoing to our destruction from God from blisse to misery falne not only to the breaking of our bones with David but to the breaking of our necks with Iezebel faln so as that wee have lost life spiritual life eternal by our fal and are in a lost dead and undone condition without infinite mercy We have deprived our selves of all ability to serve our God and have made our selves slaves to the devil We have made our selves children of wrath and fit for nothing but to fry in hell for all eternity We have plunged our selves from the top of our felicity to the gulfe of endlesse misery We think them unhappy that fall from honor to contempt from wealth to beggery O how unhappy are wee that have falne by our sins from God to the devil from the highest blisse to the lowest infelicity And in this case we are not able to helpe our selves nor to desire helpe nor to see our selves to want helpe unlesse God be pleased to give us eyes Few men though they are thus falne and thus miserable wil be brought to believe it 2. This shewes against the patrons of Free-will and universall grace that man hath no power to see light when presented to him unlesse God give him eyes no power to believe in Christ and to embrace him unlesse God give him an heart no power to do any spirituall work unlesse God give life strength and ability Rom. 7.18 I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing Hence David prayes for the opening of his eyes Psal 119.18 Lord open thou mine eyes that I may see the wonders of thy Law And Saint Paul desires light from God in the behalfe of the Ephesians That the eyes of your understanding being enlightened yee may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints Ephes 1.18 And so for the Colossians he prayes That they might be filled with the knowledge of Gods will in wisedome and spirituall understanding Coloss 1.9 And he shewes us that the act of beleeving is Gods gift To you it is given not only to beleeve but likewise to suffer for his sake Philip. 1.29 And that the will to any good is wrought in us by God himselfe 'T is God that workes in you to will and to doe of his good pleasure Philip. 3.13 Not that God doth force the will for then 't were no will but that he doth sweetly incline it ex nolentibus volentes facit of unwilling hee makes us willing to repent beleeve and obey The will is free from coaction or impulsion but not from servitude Men in state of nature sinne freely that is to say they are not constrained to it and yet they sin necessarily too for they cannot doe any thing without sin Quest. But is God just then in punishing men that sin necessarily so that they cannot avoid it Answ I do not say that men are necessitated to commit every particular sin that they are guilty of for from outward acts of sinne and uncleannesse men in state of nature have power to abstaine but this is that which I affirme that they can doe nothing but either materially or formally 't is a sin for they are out of Christ and therefore must needs faile in every act either in matter manner or end Neither can God be charged with injustice in punishing wicked men that sin necessarily because they have voluntarily lost their liberty and drawn this necessity of sinning upon themselves God made us free-men wee made our selves slaves Eccles 7.29 Vse 2 Since we are thus dangerously falne we should be exhorted to labour to rise again by repentance and by faith in Christs bloud This is the Prophets inference here O Israel returne to the Lord thy God for thou hast falne by thine iniquity Since thou hast falne from God by sin therefore returne to him againe by repentance And this wee are moved to on the same ground by the Apostle Ephes 5.14 Awake thou that sleepest stand up from the dead and Christ shall give thee light And Christ himselfe hath the same inference in his Epistle to the Church of Ephesus Remember from whence thou art falne and repent Revel 2.5 Object But possibly you will say What would you have dead men doe if our fall be such that wee have spiritually slaine our selves by it how can wee raise our selves from this death to life by repentance Answ 1 Though of your selves you cannot repent or beleeve yet you can come to the Word which is the instrument to worke faith and repentance to convert you from sin to God the Law of God is perfect converting the soule Psal 19.7 The Gospell preached is Gods mighty power to salvation Rom. 1.16 Saint Paul was sent to the Gentiles To turne them from darknesse to light from the power of Satan unto God Act. 26.18 And therefore we should settle our selves under the meanes and bring tractable hearts with us willing to be new formed and new moulded by this Word 2. We should pray to Christ to enliven us by his Spirit for al spiritual life comes from him Hence he is called the life Joh. 14.6 the life causally because he breathes the breath of spiritual life into the soules of his at their regeneration as he did