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A14923 The soules progresse to the celestiall Canaan, or heavenly Jerusalem By way of godly meditation, and holy contemplation: accompanied with divers learned exhortations, and pithy perswasions, tending to Christianity and humanity. Divided into two parts. The first part treateth of the divine essence, quality and nature of God, and his holy attributs: and of the creation, fall, state, death, and misery of an unregenerated man, both in this life and in the world to come: put for the whole scope of the Old Testament. The second part is put for the summe and compendium of the Gospell, and treateth of the Incarnation, Nativity, words, works, and sufferings of Christ, and of the happinesse and blessednesse of a godly man in his state of renovation, being reconciled to God in Christ. Collected out of the Scriptures, and out of the writings of the ancient fathers of the primitive Church, and other orthodoxall divines: by John Welles, of Beccles in the County of Suffolk. Welles, John, of Beccles. 1639 (1639) STC 25231; ESTC S119607 276,075 406

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Angels Gal. 3.10 by the hand of a mediator not that the Angels did principally give the Law and appoint the covenant but that there service was to attend by the holy ministration Againe the Law was given by God by the hand of Moses in the presence of the Angels to give unto the Israelites because the Spirit of God had so sanctified Moses that hee was able to stand in the presence of God Exod. 20.18 19 the which the host of the Israelites could not doe but became astonished and exceedingly afraid at the voice of Gods thunders and therefore they desired Moses to negotiate betweene God and them they being not able to endure the presence of his Majesty Againe it was given by the hand of Moses because God would honour him above the rest of his brethren he having beene most industrious and constant in the service of God and therefore as God had by the hand of Moses given them deliverance out of Aegypt so by the hand of Moses hee would give them the covenants of his everlasting love Note and deliverance out of the bondage of sinne which grace was promised to all them that would live within the compasse of these lawes and is now given to all them that faithfully endeavour them though they faile in the maine performance therein Iohn 1.17 For the law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ Lastly the Law was given by name to the Israelites but in the purpose of God to all men all men being under the bondage of the Morall law of God the Law being able to judge and condemne all men Againe God gave it by name to the Israelites because they were then the choyce and select people of God for whom hee had done his wonders and to whom hee had promised a faire inheritance it also derived downe upon us and upon all posterities all men having entred into covenant with God to endeavour themselves in the faithfull keeping of his Commandements these circumstances are all necessarily considered in the maner of Gods delivering the Law From this may be generally observed that God in all his actions hath principall respect to holinesse and that no prophane circumstances assist him in his actions but as himselfe is most holy so his delight is in holy actions and hateth all prophanation both in matter and circumstance In the Law may generally bee observed an impossibility in the precise performance and keeping thereof no man being able An impossibility in the strict performance of the Law Acts 15.10 without favour to give a true account and to make an even reckoning with the Law the law being able to conclude us all under sinne it is an argument of Saint Peter now therefore why tempt ye God to lay a yoke that is the performance of the Law on the disciples neckes which neither our fathers nor we were able to beare Gal. 2.16 Saint Paul also to the Galatians concludeth an impossibility to be justified by the Law By the works of the Law no flesh shall be justified so that no man ought to repose his Justification in the Law Gal. 3.22 All men are judged by the Law yet every man ought to endeavour therein his utmost performance Secondly men are judged by the Law to be guilty and deservers of everlasting damnation This generall judgement of the Law against all flesh doth concl●de all men in the state of damnation no man being able to deliver himselfe from this judgement before the Law be fully satisfied which could not be done by other meanes then by the righteousnesse and death of Jesus Christ Gal 4.5 the Sonne of God and Redeemer of the World Seeing the severity of the Law of God Deut. 5 2. c. that no flesh can be saved by the workes of the Law therefore at the delivering of the Law when the Israelites promised Moses that they would doe whatsoever God should command them God seemes to expresse a passion of his love and to require lesse then the Law for the Law requireth a precise performance upon paine of damnation but God promised the blessing of his favour to all them that zealously endeavoured to keep the Law Vers 19. for howsoever no man can observe the ordinances of the Law Gal. 3.11 as thereby to be righteous and to deserve the promise yet did God accept the faithfull endeavours of men and supply their defects by the grace and operation of his holy Spirit Therefore God saith to Moses O that there were such an heart in them to feare me and to keepe my Commandements t●at it might goe well with them Deut. 5 29. and with their children for ever God is mercifull in his severest justice This doth prevent an objection which the wicked disobedient children might make against God and his Law seeing the Law of God doth require a greater duty then is in any mans performance and seeing that the Law doth condemne all them that faile in the least particular duty of the Law wherefore God might seeme to bee mercilesse in the severity of his justice God that made the Law is above the Law and their labour fruitlesse to attempt that which was unpossible both which are wickedly false for though the Law condemne every man yet God that made the Law is above the Law and d●th often grant his dispensation and pardon them whom his Law condemnes Secondly though no man can performe the Law yet all men may endeavour it the which endeavour being faithfull and industrious is accepted of Ood as if it were performance and this doth take from all men all matter of argument whereby they would excuse their disobedience He that endevours the Law hath the promise and neglect in their dutifull service to God for as is said though no man be able to doe the Law yet all men are able to endeavour it and this doth necessarily admonish all Christians in these times who presume over boldly on the liberty of faith that because Christ Jesus the Saviour of the world hath satisfied the justice of the Law Man must nor presume on the liberty of faith and wrought righteousnesse to all them that faithfully believe and apprehend his merits therefore they despise the workes of the Law holy and charitable exercises and repose themselves on the bare confidence of faith onely the which being altogether fruitlesse in the works of the Law A fruitlesse faith profiteth nothing is but presumption and vaine confidence and will dangerously deceive all them that affie therein for though Christ Jesus hath abolished the ceremoniall Law and satisfied the justice of the morall Law the which is availeable to all them that shall be heires of salvation yet his righteousnesse in observing the Law Christ hath not destroyed the Law but qualified it doth not destroy the substance of the Law and make it fruitlesse and uselesse but doth rather command our imitation
that as he hath performed the Law in all sincerity and righteousnesse so we should endeavour a strict imitation of his vertuous doings for such faith only hath the benefit of the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ as is proved by the testimony of holy life Workes the testimony of faith and hath the witnesse of vertuous living therefore it doth needfully behove all men carefully to endeavour in the exercise of the Law of God for though no man can be justified by the workes of the Law so no man can declare and approve himselfe to be justified but by the workes of the Law for it is God that doth justifie effectually faith doth justifie apprehendingly and good workes doe justifie declaringly Againe By the Law we may judge our selves the knowledge of the Law of God may give every man a true understanding of the state of his life whereby to know in what condition hee standeth whether in the favour or displeasure of Almighty God for the Law is the revealed Will of God to which all men owe conformity upon paine of grievous forfeit and therefore whosoever shall examine the behaviour of his life and compare his severall committings and omittings with the duties of the Law for all ought so to doe shall be well able to understand and judge himselfe The Law a patterne to a Christian life for the Law is the patterne of our lives to which wee ought to square our actions So then when wee find a dissimilitude betwixt the Law and our lives we cannot but judge our selves to be disobedient and rebellious to God and his Lawes and consequently to forfeit our soules to the state of damnation This judgement ought to cause humiliation in all men and so it will in them that God shall make gracious who when they know themselves to be in the disease of sin How the Law doth humble us and that the Law doth wound their consciences with guiltinesse and that themselves have a naturall pronenesse rather to cause then to cure their infirmities this maketh them to deny themselves and their owne power which is but weaknesse and with humblenesse to resort to the mercy and merits of Jesus Christ the Sonne of God and the Physician of our soules Christ the Physician of our soules who only hath beene able to satisfie the justice of the Law and who onely hath beene able to worke the Redemption of mankinde and to repossesse them of Gods favour who had lost it by their transgressions and this our Redeemer hath done by assuming our nature Christ hath fulfilled the Law for us that could not bearing our sins satisfying our contempts and finishing our neglects who in our nature hath fulfilled the Law for us that could not who hath triumphed over sin and made conquest of hell and by his death hath slaine death which but for him had seized our soules into everlasting condemnation Thus will the knowledge of the Law admonish us and thus it will remember us This knowledge presents our soules with matter of serious meditation wherein wee may have a full view of the miserable condition of our life what strength is in our nature what endeavour in our actions for when wee finde an impossibility of our dutifull and strict obedience to the Law wee shall then acknowledge our defects and the corruption of our nature when we examine the particulars of our life and compare them with our duties we shall acknowledge the neglect of our endeavours and that wee have failed not onely in the maine performance of the Law of God which our nature could not performe but in our desires and carefull endeavours to doe well The effects in the Reprobate issuing from the meditation of the Law which our nature might And from this meditation doth necessarily follow one of these two effects in the Reprobate and gracelesse it causeth desperation and a hopelesse distrust of their salvation for when the divell and their consciences expose before them the justice of God the severity of his Law and the infinite measure of their offence the extreme terror and sense of their wickednesse doe so confound their understandings that often they execute upon themselves torment and death despising and despairing of the mercy of Jesus Christ in whom if they had reposed trust The effect of grace in the Regenerate believed and apprehended his righteousnesse their sins had not beene imputed neither had their soules perished But in the children of grace this meditation doth produce a contrary effect for when they by the Law understand the misery whereinto their sins have brought them it causeth in them a wonderfull degree of feare but not desperate for though the divell presents their sinnes in most ugly formes and urge them to a desperate apprehension yet the Spirit of God in thē doth withstand this temptation God supporteth the Elect against temptation and giveth them holy motions to devise the meanes of their salvation presenting them in their spirituall sorrowes with the mercy and merits of Jesus Christ then giving them grace to understand the mysterie of his death and the promise of the imputation of his righteousnesse which when the grieved sinner understandeth he allayeth and mitigateth his sorrow and affieth in the mediation and merits of Jesus Christ his Redeemer The divers effects of the Law Thus the Law produceth contrary effects in contrary spirits it damneth the Reprobate without hope it condemneth the Elect but not damneth them but instructeth and giveth him hope them it judgeth without mercy these it teacheth admonisheth and bringeth them unto Christ therefore though the Law condemne us Resolution let it not condemne our hope for though wee cannot our selves performe the righteousnesse of the Law yet there is one hath done it for us our Lord and our Saviour Jesus Christ in whom let us confidently repose our hope and respire new life The worke of Faith because we know that his righteousnesse is ours by imputation and that our sins were nailed upon his crosse and suffered death with him when he wrought our redemption Let us therefore enlarge our love without limits to this our Saviour who for our salvation hath beene pleased to undergoe so great a travell Let us admire the admirable degree of his love that for our sakes did descend from his Majesty to take and dignifie the basenesse of our nature Christ hath freed us from the judgement of the Law let us with unspeakable joy meditate his most holy sufferings whereby we are released from the condemnation of the Law let us despise our selves and our owne righteousnesse and apprehend him the onely staffe of our confidence let us never despaire because we know our Redeemer liveth the hope of our salvation but in all the extremities of our life and in all the sorrowes of our conscience To whom repentant sinners should resort let us resort to Jesus Christ the Physician of our soules let
Justification to be in the workes of the Law and doth absolutely ascribe it to the power of faith in Christ and he giveth a reason of this doctrine for saith hee If righteousnesse be by the Law Gal. 2.21 then Christ dyed without cause So then the very cause why Christ died was that righteousnesse might be imputed and apprehended by faith to all them that believe seeing that by workes it is impossible and therefore saith the Prophet David Psal 32.1 Blessed is he whose unrighteousnesse is forgiven Verse 2. and whose sinnes are covered Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no sinne so hee thinketh them most righteous that have their unrighteousnesse forgiven them and them most holy that have not their sins imputed unto them Rom. 4. The fourth to the Romanes the whole Chapter is an earnest and sufficient proofe of this argument and doctrine where the Apostle laboureth by direct evidence to satisfie all doubt as if hee had fore-knowne the stiffe and unreconcileable oppositions of these times against this doctrine of Justification in which Chapter he maketh Abraham his instance in whom there was as much cause of boasting and as much righteousnesse as in any other particular save Christ Jesus onely yet he there proveth that Abraham upon whom God had founded his peculiar people was not justified by the righteousnesse of his workes but that this faith was imputed unto him for righteousnesse and for proofe alleadgeth Scripture Gen. 15.6 And Abraham believed the Lord and hee accounted that to him for righteousnesse so that the matter of our justification is the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ onely and the meanes of apprehending it is onely by faith This doctrine howsoever it is made strong and unresistable by many testimonies of holy Scripture and though it be zealously maintained by men of great learning and religious judgement yet it hath endured violence and suffered disgrace both by ignorance and envie this age maintaining such oppositions of error as the ignorance of former times first occasioned therefor● at this day this argument of justification is one of the maine controversies of the world the one maintaine justification by faith onely the other by workes that defending truth this opposing it and though a faithfull man would be willing to quarrell in defence of faith Note Psal 91.4 faith being our shield of defence against all gaine-sayers sin and the dwell yet know not how to give addition of strength to them that have already exceedingly travelled in this manifest truth and whose faithfull paines have maintained this quarrell with valour and victory against all opposition neither is it in the purpose of this businesse to dispute questions of truth but to deliver truth as it is by admonitions and plaine teachings to men of simple easie understanding for whose Christian good these paines are principally taken whose simplicity might most easily be confounded in the intricate search of cunning arguments for these respects And because all contention and strife of words is in the hatred of my nature I will as I finde it written downe sparingly deliver my selfe in a large argument and strike onely one blow at the enemy of faith that I may bee knowne to be an enemy of that enemy and that by a familiar proofe I may instruct the knowledge of them that are lesse learned For they that deny justification by fayth and approve it by works would frame this argument from the testimony of Saint James Jam. 2.17 c. who speaking of a generall faith doth utterly disable it from the office of justification and therefore he saith that Faith without workes is dead in it selfe for as the body without the spirit is dead even so faith without workes is dead also Therefore say they that the Apostle concludeth that of workes a man is justified and not of faith onely To this is answered it is most true that fruitlesse faith is dead neyther can justifie and that good workes are the spirit and soule of a living faith for as the body without the soule is not a living man but a dead carcase so faith without workes is not living is not saving nay is not true faith but onely beares a generall name and with Saint Iames wee may conclude against all such faith But if there be a faith that hath a necessity depending of good workes as necessarily as the soule to the body and the fruit to the tree and that this faith declare it selfe to bee plentifull in good actions the fruits of a living faith we may then with Saint James conclude against them for hee doth not as they doe disinable all faith in the worke of justification but onely that faith which is dead Note and without workes So both opinions imply a necessity of workes the one as the cause of justification and the other as an effect in them justified It were easie to be large in numbring authorities and in reporting such distinctions and shifts as the deceived use in supporting their erroneous opinions they are but inventions therefore without respect wee will passe them over Note but advise the Christian Reader to beware of both extreames and modestly and moderately to understand the meanes of his justification that his zeale carry him to no extremity but to the vertuous meane onely and not to ascribe all to fayth and nought to workes but to give them both their necessary respects for as wee are not justified but by fayth so our fayth is not justified but by our workes for if our works be not faythfull our fayth working we are not justified neyther can be saved For when it is said that fayth onely justifieth it is meant and not denyed that charity is joyned with that fayth which justifieth being inseparably united unto it but that onely fayth and not charity is the meanes by which we embrace Jesus Christ our justification righteousnesse As for example the fire hath heate and light which qualities cannot bee severed in that subject Note yet the fire burneth by heate only and not by light now if they will reason say if the heate of the fire only burn Similitude then it burneth without the light of the fire but that it cannot do such is their reason against justification only because it cannot be separated from charity Likewise though the parts of mans body bee joyned together and one is not without another in a perfect body yet the eye onely sees and the eare onely heares and every part hath his distinct office and so hath faith and charity Thus may the seeming difference betweene Saint Paul and Saint Iames bee reconciled Heb. 11. but such fayth and workes as Saint Paul meaneth justifie us before God but such fayth and workes as Saint Iames meaneth justifie us before men but God doth justifie effectually fayth doth justifie apprehendingly and good workes doe justifie declaringly that is we doe declare our selves by our workes
and hid himselfe from Gods presence If therefore wee compare his sin to the Commandements of the Law wee shall find it to be a direct breach of some and a consequent breach of all For Gods first Commandement saith Exod. 20. Thou shalt have no other Gods but mee Adams sin by the eating of the forbidden fruit by the temptation and perswasion of the divell doth contradict the Commandement of God and saith Nay but my wife and I will both be gods Gen. 3.5 Againe Caine the second man he committed murther and thereby directly broke the sixt Commandement which when God and his conscience made him to understand Gen. 4.8 hee made a most desperate acknowledgement of his sin Vers 13. so that the Law being nothing but a reasonable duty which the creature oweth to his Creator there was therefore a generall knowledge of this Law in the reasonable nature of man at his creation and so to the succession of them of the old world unto the time that the Law was given to Moses by the ordinance of Angels Gal. 3.19 the old world then from Adam to Moses were not lawlesse and free from the service of the Law but had the law of nature for their direction which being grounded upon reason was even the very same with the law of the ten Commandements and the law of the ten Commandements before it was given to Moses was in the ages before going commonly transgressed and that law did both judge and condemne them the which law God gave man when he gave him his nature every man having the knowledge of this law in the naturall use of his reason This was the state of the old world before Moses all sinned and all were judged by the law of nature Now when iniquity began to raigne and be strong in the hearts of men and that their conscience became senslesse of sin neither would they admonish and judge their transgressions then God thought convenient to publish to mankinde this law binding the consciences of men to a strict and dutifull observation of every particular statute of the law Baruch 4.1 denouncing the judgement of condemnation to all them that transgresse against the least breach and particular of those Commandements A second reason why God ordained the Law Reason 2 was that men might rightly understand themselves and thereby know in what degree of holinesse they were because that men are often partiall in their owne judgement and willingly blinde themselves in the view of their owne calamities wherefore then serveth the Law Gal. 3.19 it was added because of transgressions that by the Law men might know wherein they have transgressed A third reason of the ordination of the Law is Reason 3 to provoke men to endeavour themselves with all diligence in a holy course to travell in godly exercise and to avoid both evill actions and idlenesse the Law giving every man sufficient matter of imployments wherein he is bound to spend his houres 4. Esd 9.31 his daies nay his life in the carefull service of his God For behold I sow my Law in you that it may bring forth fruit in you and that yee may be honoured by it for ever Fourthly the reason that the Law was given Reason 4 is that by the severity thereof we might be disciplined and made fit for the mercy of the Gospell for the judgement of the Law will humble us make us understand our misery Gal. 3.24 and provoke us to implore mercy for by the documents and directions of the Law wee are led to salvation in Jesus Christ wherefore the Law is our Schoolemaster to teach and bring us to Christ that wee might be made righteous by faith in him Lastly the Law was given for the glory and Majesty of God that all the world might judge of his infinite mercy to mankind In this respect that notwithstanding all men are judged and condemned by the law of nature and by the Law of his Commandements yet in the greatnesse of his love hee is content to forgive the trespasse and the judgement therefore due unto mankind Gods admirable mercy and finally to entertaine these transgressors his enemies into the bosome of his mercy giving them Mercy in stead of Justice and eternall life Rom. 5.20 when they deserved death and damnation 21. Moreover the Law entered thereupon that the offence should abound neverthelesse Where Sinne abounded there Grace abounded much more that as Sinne had raigned unto death so might Grace also raigne by righteousnesse unto eternall life through Jesus Christ our Lord and this is an admirable degree of love in God that he will decline or lay by his Majesty and to miserable wretched nay sinfull creatures exercise his Mercy in restoring and advancing us that have so highly offended his Majesty and abounded in transgressions for these causes was the Law given and delivered to man Deut. 27.26 The matter of the Commandements God thereby commanding every mans absolute obedience upon forfeiture of his soule to the paines of everlasting condemnation In the Law of the ten Commandements is to be considered the substance which is the matter of the Law and the circumstance which is the manner of the delivering it The matter is contained in ten Commandements the first foure teacheth us directly our duty to God the six last our duties to our neighbour In the manner of giving the Law we may principally consider these circumstances First the principall giver of the Law God Secondly the servants attending this office the Angels Thirdly to whom it was given to Moses Fourthly for whom it was given for the children of Israel who were then the people of God and by consequence to every people that professe themselves the servants of God these are the maine particulars in the circumstance of giving the Law First Exod. 20.1 Exo. 19.18 c. God was the principall authour of this worke to give it countenance and authority for who dare quarrell his worke and the operation of his hands therefore did God himselfe speake all the words of the Commandements he also spake in a fearefull and terrible manner to gaine the businesse a fearefull estimation Vers 9. he spoke in the hearing of the people that they might know it was Gods owne act and to prevent the distrust they might have in his servant Moses Secondly the Angels attend this holy service to declare the most excellent Majesty of God who in all his occasions is served and attended by an infinite number of that excellent nature Againe the Angels were there because they are most desirous of the good of mankind Heb. 1.14 Luke 15.7 10. and doe willingly attend the service of our salvation having joy among themselves in Heaven at the conversion of a sinner they were also to be witnesses betweene God and his people that the covenants might remaine established for ever therefore S. Paul saith The Law was ordained by the
God allure us by easie meanes and faire promises to everlasting life which the Law denieth to all men no man being able to satisfie the justice of the Law If it be objected then that the grace of the Gospell doth destroy the workes of the Law because that mercy is given of grace and not of desert it is answered that the Gospell doth not destroy the workes of the Law and the substance thereof but onely doth mitigate the rigour and severity thereof As God when he preserved Daniel in the Lyons denne hee did not destroy the Lyons but onely shut their mouthes and bound their power that they might not hurt Daniel Dan. 6.16 so he did not destroy the Law but onely restraine the violence thereof from hurting his Daniels that is his faithfull servants and as when King Darius tooke Daniel from the denne and cast in his accusers the Lyons power was no longer shut up Dan. 6.24 but had the mastery and devoured them their wives and children no more shall the reprobates avoyd the condemnation of the Law notwithstanding the promise of the gospell and the new covenant of grace Because no man hath the benefit of mercy but hee that first is the child of faith therefore the great King of all the world shall take his faithfull Daniels his Elect from the power of the Lyons the Law but leaveth the reprobate in the state of their destruction Thus much in generall of the Gospell and the difference betweene that and the Law and them that lived under the bondage of the Law and us that now live in the liberty of the Gospell the purpose of the Gospell is the salvation of man And therefore the Angell that was the first preacher of the gospell told the shepheards that hee brought them tydings of great joy Luk. 2.10 indeed a greater could not be then to bring them tydings of their salvation The matter of the gospell is the life the death and the doctrine of Jesus Christ for they are the onely meanes by which wee attaine to the favour of salvation Esay 43.11 his doctrines were directions his life examples and his death was and is life eternall to all them that apprehend him by a lively faith In the circumstance of the gospell is principally considered First God who of himselfe and of his owne election without any cause in man did enter this covenant of grace being moved onely by the pleasure of his owne most holy will and by his owne gracious love to his creatures for so saith the Holy Ghost God so loved the world Iohn 3.16 that he gave his onely begotten Sonne that whosoever believed in him should not perish but have everlasting life Whereby it is evident that the love of God was the onely cause that moved him to this effect for God can glorifie himselfe aswell in the damnation Gods love to man is the moving cause of the covenant of grace as in the salvation of men For hee needeth no addition of honour that is infinite both in greatnesse and goodnesse but as his mercy is most eminent over all his attributes so in this new covenant of the Gospell hee doth give us the greatest demonstration of his mercy that can be in giving his only begotten Son to die on the Crosse for the redemption of mankind In every word there is a passion of love infinitely beyond all comparison wherein it seemeth that God doth as it were put off his Majesty and descend himselfe in his care to pity and redresse the ruined state of sinfull man his enemie Secondly in the person of Christ who is the cause both moving and finishing the covenant of the Gospell there is matter of most worthy and admirable consideration For Christ is not onely to bee understood as the instrumentall cause whereby this covenant of grace betweene God and man was effected but also as the first moving cause and deviser thereof it being impossible to assigne him offices without his appointment hee being equall to God the Father and the holy Ghost and they having all but one divinity undivided This the unbelieving Jewes could not comprehend and therefore they derided Christ when he said Before Abraham was Iohn 8.58 I am not knowing that hee was God equall and coeternall with the Father and was begotten before all beginning It is therefore most wonderfull in the person of Christ that hee being Lord of all the world that he would leave the bosome of his Father and for a time to put off the presence of his divine Majesty and to take our nature upon him in humility Strong witnesses of the love of Christ towards us and in a base estate to undertake not onely to satisfie the Law and to make good our defects but also to beare the displeasure of his Father and to suffer the malice of wicked men to prevaile against him even to his death and that he hath endured all this for the sinnes and good of man a creature that by sinne had brought himselfe in disgrace and heavy displeasure with God and which is most of all that hee hath done all this by his owne appointment without either command or direction there being no power above him by whom he could bee commanded This incomparable love of God is able to astonish a Christian meditation and to make a man admire and say with holy David Lord what is man that thou hast such respect unto him Psal 144.3 or the sonne of man that thou so regardest him This doth strongly relieve our faith against all diffidence shewing that our salvation hangs not like a meteor in the ayre but is firmely fixed upon the love of God in Christ Iere 31.3 32.40 2 Tim. 2.19 and it furthereth our spirituall joy in that it teacheth us that the love of God is constant and his decree concerning our welfare eternall And it also eclipseth the pride of the heart shewing that Gods dignation and not mans dignity his favour not mans faith his mercy and not mans merite is the fountaine and foundation of mans felicity Thirdly is considered The Ministers ●n the office of the Gospell the officers in the holy ministration of the gospell by whose faithfull endeavour and vigilance the spirituall graces of the gospell are distributed to the children of faith for whose sakes the covenant of grace is given the first officers in this kind were the twelve Apostles of purpose chosen by Christ Jesus himselfe that they might bee the faithfull witnesses of the whole passage of his life and that after his ascention they might plant in mens hearts a knowledge of the gospell by their prayers preachings and godly exhortations to dispose the holy seed of grace in their hearts whom God should make capable to entertaine it with profit These holy labourers being assisted by the holy Ghost travelled in Gods husbandry with such alacrity as that the Gospel in their times spread it selfe into very large
and I shall speake and let the earth heare the words of my mouth for I will publish the name of the Lord and ascribe honour unto our God Acts 13.26 Yee men and brethren children of the generation of Abraham and whosoever amongst you feareth God to you is the word of this salvation sent Psalm 34. Come yee children and hearken unto mee and I will teach you the feare of the Lord. O praise the Lord with mee and let us magnifie his name together A perfect Table to finde readily all the branches contained and treated of in the first and second Part of this Booke OF the Essence of God what God is in his Essence and how he is to be understood in his holy attributes so farre as he hath revealed himselfe in holy Scripture for otherwise no man is able to define what God is page 1 Of the majesty greatnesse and quality of God page 19 Of divine directions declaring the variable state and misery of man from the time of his creation to the time of the Gospel or the new Covenant of Grace page 30 Of the creation of the world page 34 Of the Angels their nature their office their fall page 40 Of man his first beginning page 51 Of the state of mans innnocency before his fall page 58 Of originall sin the fall and apostacy of man page 64 Of the Divells trecheries and how to prevent him page 74 Of the morall law of God the ten commandements page 77 Of the purity of conscience page 89 Of the accusations of conscience page 91 To avoyd security page 102 Of the knowledge of mans corruption and state of misery in this world and the miserable state and condition in the life to come without we be renovated by Christ. page 105 Of the meditation of the misery of the body and soule in this life page 109 Of the meditation of the misery of man after death which is the fulnesse of cursednesse page 116 Of the meditations of the grievousnesse of the torments of Hell p. 120 The Branches contained in the second part of this Booke OF the Covenant of the Gospell or the Covenant of grace pag. 127 Of the incarnation of the word Christ pag. 141 Of Christs Nativity pag. 150 Of Christ Iesus the summe or compendium of the Gospell pag. 154 Of the Crosse of Christ and his holy sufferings for our sins pag. 164 Of repentance or sorrow of the soule for sinne pag. 168 Of the two Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper pag. 182 Of the Lords Supper the institution of Christ pag. 184 Of the preparation to the receiving of the holy Communion of the Body and Blood of Iesus Christ pag. 199 Of the ordinance of Christ concerning the translation of the holy and blessed Sabbath pag. 205 Of Christs ascension pag. 208 Of the comming of the holy Ghost pag. 210 Of the love of God pag. 213 Of the properties of Charity and true love to our Christian brethren pag. 217 Of Gods eternall election and predestination pag. 222 Of mortification pag. 234 Of Regeneration pag. 246 Of Sanctification pag. 255 Of Justification pag. 262 Of Faith pag. 267 Of Hope pag. 294 Of Patience pag. 301 Of Prayer pag. 313 Of Afflictions pag. 326 Of generall rules directing a Christian in a godly life pag. 336 Of Gods glory pag. 347 Of the uncertainety of mans life and the expectation of death pag. 351 Of temporary death and of the severall state of salvation and damnation pag. 355 Of a sweet contemplation of the beatificall joyes of Heaven and of heavenly things and the blessed state of a regenerated Christian pag. 364 The Conclusion pag. 373 Esay 40.3 A Voice cryeth in the Wildernesse of this wicked world prepare the way of the Lord make straight the path of our God in the Desert Esay 58.1 Cry now as loud as thou canst leave not off lift up thy voyce like a Trumpet and shew my people their offences and the house of Iacob their sinnes Psal 36.1 My heart sheweth me the wickednesse of the ungodly that there is no feare of God before his eyes Vers 4. He imagineth mischiefe upon his bed and hath set himselfe in no good way neither doth he abhorre any thing that is evill Esay 59.2 3 4. But your mis deeds have separated you from your God and your sinnes hid his face from you that he heareth you not for your hands are defiled with blood and your fingers with unrighteousnesse your lips speake leasing and your tongues set forth wickednesse no man regardeth righteousnesse and no man judgeth truely every man hopeth in vaine things and imagineth deceit conceiveth weaknesse and bringeth forth evill Vers 7. Their feet run to evill and they make hast to shed innocent blood their counsels are wicked counsels harme and destruction are in their waies Ierem. 9.8 Their tongues are like sharpe arrowes to speake deceit with their mouth they speake peaceably to their neighbour but privily they lay waite for him And like as a net is full of birds so are their houses full of that which they have gotten with falshood and deceit Ier. 5.27.28 hereof commeth their great substance and riches hereof are they fat and wealthy and are more mischievous then any other they minister not the law they make no end of the fatherlesse cause yea they judge not the poore according to equity They are corrupt Psal 53.2 4. and become abominable in their doings there is not one that doth good no not one For though they can say the Lord liveth yet they sweare to deceive Ier. 5.2 Their throate is an open sepulchre Psal 14.5 with their tongues have they deceived the poyson of aspes is under their lips Their mouthes are full of cursings and bitternesse their feet are swift to shed blood Vers 6. For when ye have stollen Ier. 7.9 murdered committed adultery and perjury when yee have offered unto Baal following strange and unknowne gods shall ye be punished Have they no knowledge that they are all such workers of mischiefe Psal 14.7 8. eating up my people as it were bread destruction and unhappinesse is in their waies and the way of peace have they not knowne Should I not punish these things Ier. 5.29 saith the Lord should I not be revenged of all such people as these be Heare thou earth also behold I will cause a plague to come upon this people Ier. 6.19 even the fruit of their owne imaginations for that they have not beene obedient unto my words and to my law but abhorred them Psal 28.4 5. Reward them according to their deeds and according to the wickednesse of their owne inventions recompence them after the works of their hands and pay them that they have deserved Eccles 8.11 Because now that evill workes are not hastily punished the heart of man giveth himselfe over unto wickednesse Esay 5.14 Therefore gapeth hell marvellous wide
us enquire for him at the mercy of his Father let us enquire at his owne righteousnesse let us seeke him in his holy sufferings let us seeke him at the crosse of his death and when wee have there found him let us expose our griefe and implore his favour let us shew him what the Law hath done unto us what wounds and how dangerous it hath given our soules How to implore his favour let us therefore confesse our sins and professe our faith let us also promise to correct the errors of our life let us carefully endeavour every circumstance he hath commanded us and being thus rectified in our resolution let us reach our particular hand of faith to our salvation How to apprehend Christ apprehend him and apply him to our wounded conscience and by this blessed meanes satisfie the justice of the Law and restore our soules Of the purity of Conscience IN every thing thou takest in hand have a care of thy conscience if the Divell incites thee to any sin stand in feare of thy conscience for thy conscience within thee condemneth thee if thou art afraid to sin in the presence of men let thy conscience much more deterre thee from sinning the inward testimony of thy conscience is of more efficacy then the testimony of men for though thy sins could escape the accusation of all men yet can they never escape the inward witnesse of thy conscience Reve. 20.12 the register of thy conscience shall bee in the number of those bookes that shall be opened at the day of judgement the conscience is a great volumne in which all things are written by the finger of truth The damned cannot deny their sinnes at the day of judgement because they shall bee convinced by the testimony of their owne conscience they cannot flie from the accusation of their sinnes because the tribunall of the conscience is at home and with them a pure conscience is the cleare glasse of the soule in which she manifestly beholds God and her selfe this booke of thy conscience should indeed be written according to the copy of the booke of life Christs Gospell is the booke of life Reve. 13.4 Phil. 4.3 let the profession of thy faith be conformed according to the rule of Christs doctrine and let the course of thy life be conformed according to the rule of Christs life thy conscience cannot but bee good if there be purity in thy heart truth in thy tongue and honesty in thy actions these will avoide the judgement of thy conscience in which one and the same shall bee both defendant and plaintife witnesse judge tormentor scourge and executioner what escape can there be where it is the witnesse that accuseth thee and where nothing can be hid from him that judgeth thee what doth it profit thee to live in all abundance and plenty and to be tormented with the whip of conscience the fountaine of mans felicity and misery is in his minde what then doth it profit a man in a burning feaver to lie in a bed of gold what doth it profit a man to enjoy all outward felicity and to be tormented with the firebrands of an ill conscience as much as we regard everlasting salvation so much let us regard our conscience for if wee have not a good conscience we have not faith and if we have not faith we have not the grace of God and if wee have not the grace of God how can wee hope for everlasting life as the judgement of thy conscience is such judgement thou mayst expect from Christ Sinne whilst it is in the action doth blind the minde and like a thicke cloud doth obscure the brightnesse of true judgement but at length the conscience is roused and gnaweth more grievously then any accuser There are three judgements the judgement of the world the judgement of thy selfe and the judgement of God and as thou canst not escape the judgement of God neither canst thou escape the judgement of thy selfe although thou mayst sometime escape the judgement of the world nothing can hinder thy conscience from seeing all thy actions What excuse then can save thee when thy conscience within thee doth accuse thee Note the peace of conscience is the beginning of everlasting life for by Gods judgement and thine owne thou shalt be either saved or fall everlastingly the conscience is immortall as the soule is immortall and the punishment of hell shall torment the damned as long as the accusation of conscience shall endure no externall fire doth so affect the body as the inward fire doth inflame the conscience the soule tormented is eternall and so is the fire of conscience eternall no outward scourge is so grievous to the body as these whips of conscience are unto the soule Avoid therefore the guilt of sinne that so thou mayst avoyd the torment of conscience blot out thy sinnes out of the booke of thy conscience by true and hearty repentance that they be not brought forth and read at the day of judgement against thee that so thou mayst avoyd the feare of Gods dreadfull sentence against thee mortifie the worme of conscience by the heat of devotion that it doe not devour thee and beget eternall horrour extinguish the heate of this inward fire by the teares of repentance 2 Tim. 4.7 that so thou mayst attaine to the joyes of heavenly happinesse Grant O Lord that we may fight this good fight keeping faith and a good conscience that at length we may come safe and sound into our heavenly Countrey to our eternall joy and endlesse comfort Of the accusation of Conscience EVery man that would prevent the dreadfull danger of Gods generall judgement must in this life while he hath time arrest his owne soule examine his particular actions and by the evidence of his conscience judge himselfe and his transgressions against the Law of God 1 Pet. 4.17 Prov. 11.3 c. for as Gods judgement doth begin at his owne house because his principall care is for his owne the Elect so should men judge themselves and have principall care to examine their owne particulars and as Saint Paul saith When we are judged we are chastened of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.31 32. because wee should not bee condemned with the world So likewise we must judge our selves lest we be condemned with the world for as the Israelites because they wanted judges became idolaters Iudges 17.6 Eccle. 18.19 so our lives when they are not examined and judged by our consciences wee become remisse disobedient idolatrous and desperately runne on with licentious and lawlesse appetite in the common and curious committing of sinne And this necessary judging of our selves is well knowne to our reasonable soules who when we have committed sinne provoke our conscience to accuse and judge us as if without this judging of our selves wee could not prevent the judgement of God By judging of our selves we prevent the heavy judgement of God the manner
it so in contending for this spirituall garland Heaven it cannot but be an extraordinary degree of content and spirituall pleasure to be named in the ranke of best deservers And as malefactors that suffer publique punishment for their offence esteeme the shame more then the paine of their corrections so ought all men to feare the shame they must endure The booke of conscience cannot be defaced but onely by the precious blood of Christ when their conscience disgraceth them before so great a presence as will be at the generall day of judgement For let all men be perswaded that all their faults are so written in the booke of their conscience that there is no meanes to obscure their knowledge and to raze them out neither will the conscience though it bee our owne bee corrupted to connive and dissemble with God but even to our owne faces it will produce all our sinnes whose memory is not blotted out by the righteous blood of Jesus Christ the Sonne of God 1 Pet. 3.21 and seeing the witnesse of our conscience is the evidence whereby wee are all judged either to life or death wee all ought most carefully to avoyd the doing of ought that may offend our consciences Not to offend our conscience but rather to live in feare and awe of conscience because our eternall state dependeth upon the report and accusation of our owne conscience This ought to prevent all unconscionable actions in us and to move a dread in us to have a detestation of every sin because when we have committed sinnes wee have hired so many witnesses against our owne soules to urge our eternall condemnation The silent conscience will be most terrible and loud at the day of judgement Customary sinning duls the sence of conscience Lastly seeing that that conscience which in this life is most silent will notwithstanding at the day of judgement bee most terrible and clamorous it admonisheth all men not to rebell against their conscience and to runne on without checke in the committing of sinne but rather to yeeld themselves to the correction of their conscience left by their customary sinning they dull the sence of conscience and so runne on the race of all unlawfulnesse for though the reproofe of conscience bee very terrible to him that rightly understands it yet ought it to bee carefully apprehended and respected as a moving cause to reformation and repentance and let no man incourage himselfe with common example that because the common sway of mens actions respect greatnesse more then goodnesse and craft more then conscience that this can warrant any ones imitation but rather wheresoever we see unconscionable dealing if in our friends wee ought to admonish them and tell them of their fault if in our enemies we must hate the sin but pity the sinner and labour if it be possible The office of charity his conversion but not his imitation and this direction is both wisedome and charity for he that is wise shall be armed and not harmed by ill example and he that is charitable will doe all the good he can and wish the good he cannot doe Let us therefore constantly endeavour to reduce to memory the severall actions of our life past let us then compare them to the duty of our conscience Good conscience is in hatred with sin and thereby understand in what degree of sinne we are what our conscience shall approve let us continue what it condemneth let us hate be it our pleasure be it our profit be it our neerest or our dearest sin if our conscience call it sin let us despise it let there be nothing shall make us alter or suspend this resolution let us be constant in the love of conscience what we have done amisse let us reforme it by conscience what we have to doe let our conscience judge it lawfull before wee doe it if our conscience presents us profit let us despise it if it be not honest if pleasure and not lawfull let us loath it let us undertake no action nor entertaine no favour but by the direction of conscience in every judgement and in all our actions To consult with conscience let us consult and be led by the rule and voyce of conscience if the world commend a sin and our conscience condemne it let us condemne the world and commend our conscience let us credit our conscience more then common example because our conscience must judge us and not example if our conscience accuseth us secretly of sin wee shall certainly know there is cause let us not silence our conscience from all reproofe let us only avoid the cause of reproofe sin and that carefully when our conscience shall urge us the Law our sins and the condemnation of the Law we have deserved let us not despise our conscience nor despaire mercy but direct our hearts and our eyes of faith to Jesus Christ the strength of our salvation Rom. 5.1 by whose favour wee shall both satisfie the Law and our conscience the hope and comfort we have in his righteousnesse will quiet the trouble of our conscience and hee that hath reconciled God and us will also reconcile us to our conscience Conscience that did accuse will comfort and make it that was our accuser our comforter This direction I propose to my selfe and doe perswade all men as I propose and purpose that in all our actions and consultations we judge nothing convenient that is not lawfull and nothing may be thought lawfull but that which hath the warrant of a good conscience To avoid Security COnsider thou devout soule what a matter it is to be saved and thou shalt easily shake off all security at no time and in no place is there security neither in Heaven nor in Paradise much lesse in the world Genes 3.17 An Angell fell in the presence of the divinity and Adam fell in the place of pleasure Adam was created after the Image of God and notwithstanding hee was deceived by the trecheries of the divell Solomon was the wisest of men 1 King 3.12 and 11.3 and yet his wives turned away his heart from the Lord. Judas was in the Schoole of our Saviour and did every day heare the saving Word of that chiefe Doctor Luk. 22.3 and yet was hee not safe from the snares of Satan hee was plunged headlong into the pit of covetousnesse and desperation and so into the pit of perpetuall punishment David was a man according to Gods owne heart 1 Sam. 13.14 and was unto the Lord a most deare sonne and by murther and adultery 2 Sam. 12.6 7. hee became the sonne of death Where then and when is there security in this life Relie with an assured confidence of heart upon the promises of God and thou shalt be safe from the invasions of the divell There is no security in this life but in the life to come there is no securi●● in this life but
limits and building upon the foundation of the rocke Christ they have erected such a frame as shall remaine to all posterity these holy Ministers were the conducts whereby God did conferre his spirituall waters of life into all the parts of the world who spreading themselves in their painfull travels over all the knowne world spred the Gospell as they went and left in every place where they came a memory of their Lord and Master Jesus Christ After them succeeded others in their example who both taught the Gospel and confirmed it with the testimony of their death these are the holy officers in the administration of the Gospel and all that live in the Church and are truly of the Church of God in their office and in their example shall with them receive the wages of faithfulnesse Lastly is considered to whom the benefits of the Gospel appertaine and that is to the Elect namely such as are most industrious in the faithfull execution of the Law For as it is said God hath not given the Gospel to destroy the Law but to preserve it and revive it that men may be allured by the sweet promises of the Gospell to endeavour with alacrity and hope in the exercise of the Law Joh. 14.15 and therefore Christ himselfe saith If you love me keepe my Commandements that is endeavour to keepe them with all diligence for he that is carelesse in the service of God is not to hope that God will be carefull of his salvation this is proved in the Parable of the labourers in the Vineyard the Master of the Vineyard is God the Vineyard is the world the labourers are the faithfull and painfull Christians Mat. 20.1 c. their wages is the benefit of the Gospel so that not the lookers on but the labourers in Gods Vineyard shall receive the wages of everlasting life These considerations are most weighty in the generall understanding of the Gospel to which is added this admonition that it behoves every man carefully to esteeme worthily and reverently of the Gospel of Jesus Christ because God doth judge the contemners thereof to be guilty of the deserved and eternall damnation 2 Thes 2.10 11 12. and that if God present them the meanes to communicate with the benefit of the Gospel that they then neglect rather all the profits in the world then the rich treasure of the Gospel for it is that one thing that is onely necessary and availeable to salvation and that pearle of price for which wee are advised to sell all that wee have to purchase it for he that hath that precious Jewell Mat. 45.46 hath sufficient wealth and hee that hath all things but that hath nothing if hee hath not that for if one man had that all men have he nothing had unlesse he also had a soule alas what will it advantage a man to win the whole world and lose his owne soule and what enlargement can he desire that hath the hidden treasure of the Gospel in his heart whereby hee hath continuall comfort and thereby is led in the path to his Salvation This doth generally remember all men the admirable degree of Gods favour to man-kind that notwithstanding our apostacy from the favour and service of God and our continuall trade of sinning which might incense the justice of God to destroy us at once and for ever yet doth he continue himselfe in his owne kind a loving God and a father compassionate 2 Pet. 3.9 Pitty in God is most naturall who inclineth rather to pitty then to punish our infirmities therefore did the Almighty God take from man the burthensome condition of the Law and promise him everlasting life upon much more easie conditions the which grace and love of God doth challenge from all men a dutifull thankes to God who hath taken from their neckes the unsupportable burthen of the Law giving a greater liberty and ease in the worke of their salvation Secondly it doth admonish all men carefully to apprehend the grace of the Gospell and not to neglect the present and the pretious opportunity that God hath given them because he that shall breake this Covenant of grace shall doubtlesse forfeit the estate both of body and soule unto eternall damnation for this Covenant of the Gospel as it is the greatest of all the favours of God so it is the last and that being neglected there is no other to be hoped for Thirdly seeing the Gospell doth not destroy the substance of the Law but onely mitigateth and sweetens the severity thereof by a gracious dispensation from the extremity of justice it behoveth all men to be equally as carefull in the performance of the duties of the Law as if there were no other Covenant but the Law to judge them The Law makes us fit for the Gospell Gal. 3.24 for there is no man fit for the grace of the Gospell but hee that is first disciplined and schooled in the Law of Gods Commandements therefore is the Law said to be a Schoolemaster to bring us to Christ by faith because it doth humble us in the knowledge of our infirmities Fourthly seeing the purpose of the Gospell is the salvation of man it behoveth all men to respect the Gospel as they would their salvation and labour by all meanes not onely to advance the prosperity thereof but also to resist the cause that may occasion the slander or disgrace of that sacred Word and Profession Fifthly seeing the matter of the Gospel is the story of the words and workes of Jesus Christ our Saviour while hee was upon earth it do●h bind every mans conscience to have a reverent and confident opinion of the truth thereof and that all men labour by all convenient meanes to maintaine the memory and reputation of those sacred writings the which are onely able to guide us without errour in the right way of our salvation And seeing that God of his owne favour without any deser● of ours which were falne from him enters this Covenant of grace binding himselfe in the surety of his most sacred Word to give salvation upon the easie conditions of the Gospel to all those that walk in the sincerity thereof through the merits of Jesus Christ who did please to appoint himselfe to take our sins upon him and to descend his Majesty in great humility to establish our salvation in the merits of his holy workes this should move all men to give thanks for so great benefits and to live in godly conversation Sixthly seeing the officers appointed and chosen by Jesus Christ himselfe for the ministration of the Gospel were the holy Apostles and after them the godly and reverend Martyrs in the primitive Church by whose diligence the Gospel spred it selfe over all the knowne world this doth admonish all them that either are Ministers of the Gospell or that have power to make them what choice and care is to be had of their uprightnesse and godly conversation and what
diligence is required of their spirituall travells all which ought to fashion themselves as neere as they can to the example of the holy Apostles Lastly The promises of the Gospell belong to the faithful onely seeing the promises of the Gospell belong to the faithfull onely that is industrious in the service of the Law this ought to provoke all men to contend in godly exercise to exceede one another and to stirre up their frozen and dead desires with the hope of the promise of the Gospel and that they thinke not the Law burthensome being now made easie by the grace of the Gospel and therefore to travaile in the duties of the Law with alacrity and spirituall comfort having their confidence and eyes of faith upon the promise of Christ made in the Gospel Thus if men dispose themselves and their affections they shall find the great and happy difference betwixt Mount Sinai and Mount Sion the Law and the Gospel The difference betweene Mount Sinai and Mount Sion in both which the gracious may finde comfort but with great inequality for unlesse wee be throughly perswaded that our salvation doth flow from the fountaine of Gods mercy and acquaint our selves with eternall election which God hath set forth in the holy Scriptures the schoole of the holy Ghost wherein as nothing is omitted necessary to bee knowne so nothing is taught but that which is expedient for man to know The ministers of Gods Word must therefore beware that they doe not keepe the faithfull from that which the Scripture delivereth unto them lest they seeme maliciously to defraud them Ephes 1. of that which God doth afford unto them or reprove his Spirit as if hee had revealed things fit for some considerations to be revealed The Word is a sure rule to direct our understanding and it is the chiefest point of sobriety in us when wee learne to make God our schoole-master and then to leave learning when hee leaves teaching and when hee leaves speaking wee should leave inquiring hee which curiously pries into Gods secrets runnes himselfe into an inextricable labyrinth and findes not that wherewith his curiosity may be satisfied Religion is not an indifferent thing but wholly to be imbraced and constantly professed The Gospell therefore being a covenant betweene God and our soules our care should be rightly to understand this covenant lest by mis-understanding and false construction we breake the covenant of grace and so runne our selves into a dangerous hazzard Let us therefore search the sence of the mysteries of the holy gospell and if they exceed our understanding let us compare them with the holy writings of the Prophets and Apostles if they exceed our capacity let us consult with the learned expositions of reverend fathers of the Church if all these satisfie not let us daily resort to the servants of this ministration and by diligent observing their sermons expositions and spirituall exhortations we shall both learne what is the covenant we have entred with God and the meanes we must use to keep that covenant and when wee have obtained this forwardnesse 1 Tim. 4.1.2 and hope of better knowledge let us carefully avoyd the dangerous inchauntments of heretiques schismatiques and all false teachers let us beware and not taste of their poyson though they present it in cups of gold let their bayte make us suspect their hookes and their faire and holy pretences their foule and wicked purposes for having found the Lord Christ which is all truth and hath sealed his covenant with us let us preserve that truth from defacing and laying that for our foundation let us build thereon the whole frame of our life and fashion all our actions by the rules of the gospell as the example of Christ hath commanded us that so wee may keepe covenant with our God and obtaine the promise of the gospell which is the salvation of our soules and then with holy Iacob Gen. 45.28 let us boast of our happinesse and say unto our soule wee have enough wee desire no enlargement Againe when wee meditate the matter of the gospell that is the words and workes of our Saviour Christ then it should move us to a reverend esteeme of the story of the gospell and make us delight to exercise our time in the often reading and conferring thereof for if they that have estates of temporall possessions be most carefull to preferre such evidences and writings as is delivered them for their security and assurance and often times spend a great part of their wealth and labour to confirme and continue such estate and such evidence shall we not then much more spend our best diligence and meanes to keepe covenant and understand rightly the writings of the holy Gospel which are the deeds and evidences betweene God and us touching the everlasting state of our soule and carefully to keepe such covenants as give us claime and interest in the possession of a Kingdome Shall men give their substance to Lawyers to maintaine their beggerly possessions on earth beggerly indeed in respect of Heaven though it were the possession of the whole earth and shall we neglect the covenants of everlasting life and may have Law without money let us never doe it Note let us never give testimony of such madnesse let them labour their earthly possessions that will but let us labour the possession of Heaven let them waste their substance on Lawyers wee can have Law and Lawyers much more reasonable Let the Prophets and Apostles be our Counsellors their hands will not be corrupted their judgement cannot erre let us therefore affy in their confidence and endeavour as they direct us Lastly when we meditate upon the particulars of the story of the Gospel let us despise all other histories in comparison of them and the old Testament for the writings of men commonly labour vaine vile and unworthy arguments and those of them that travell in a good cause yet are they defective either in matter or forme but the Gospell and other holy Scriptures being written by the direction of Gods holy Spirit they are nor onely holy in their matter but excellent in their forme and most able to give the desirous Reader infinite variety of content Therefore when wee desire to read of Majesty and great action of Empire warre conquest government policy and infinite other of this kind that depend on greatnesse we may finde both stories and examples in the Scriptures many and unmatchable If we desire to read the stories of mercy love peace humanity civill action and the rest that depend on goodnesse every page in the Gospel can furnish us either with some story or some example of that kind if wee desire to read of wonders and miracles of most admirable credence they are in the Scripture most frequent yet most true in other writings not common yet commonly false Therefore let the holy Scriptures and especially the holy Gospell which is the covenant of our
Majesty and to take our nature into his divinity Hebr. 2.9 whereby he became subject to a temporall death and in that respect a little inferiour to the Angels his owne creatures Secondly The respect Christ had of sinfull man it was an act of wonderfull goodnesse and love because the end thereof had not respect to any meanes that might enlarge the honour and felicity of Christ himselfe in whom all true honour and happinesse consisteth in an infinite measure but had onely respect to poore and sinfull man that by this meanes he might repossesse the favour of God from which he cast himselfe by his owne disobedience and rebellion Object Now if it be demanded that seeing the nature of man is so poysoned with hereditary sin as that all the children of men have a naturall corruption derived on them the which like a generall leprosiie deformes the ancient beauty of our nature and presents us in ugly formes before the Majesty of God how then could Christ take such nature so deformed without imputation of sin and without fouling the exact holinesse and sincerity of his divine nature It is answered Answ 2 Cor. 5.21 that Christ tooke our nature nay all our nature upon him yet not those staines Christ tooke our nature but not the corruption of our nature nor that corruption wherewith sin had deformed our nature for though sin be derived naturally upon us yet is it not of the Essence of our nature but a defect of our nature and an accidentall deformity which happened to our nature since our first creation and not given to us when God first gave us our nature but after it was given and all those staines and deformities which are naturally bred in us in the wombe and at our conception were all voided and absent at the incarnation of our blessed Saviour the holy Ghost sanctifying and preparing the sacred Virgin Mat. 1.18 c. ordained for that holy office and purpose whereby she was only made able to derive her nature with her issue Immaculate without sin without spot without corruption but not without infirmity and this sacred deriving of a sanctified nature from the blessed Virgin is not to be considered as the act or power of the holy Virgin but of the holy Ghost who being God coequall with the Father and the Sonne The holy Ghost the principall mover in sanctifying the blessed Virgin was able to separate our nature from corruption and so to sanctifie the sacred Virgin that her nature might be derived as innocent and spotlesse as God had created it therefore it is necessary and infallibly true then that Christ tooke our whole nature ●pon him even our infirmities and avoided onely sin which accidentally did happen to our nature the which being not of our nature Ephes 5.30 but in our nature and there●●●e the holy Scripture saith that Christ Iesus was like 〈…〉 all things sinne onely excepted Secondly is to be considered what Christ did and suffered whilest he lived in our nature which was the time of his personall and visible conversing with men here on earth What Christ did suffer for us is comprehended in this that hee lived righteously in the duties of the Law and in exact obedience to the Commandements of God and this was necessary in the office of our redemption which Christ had undertaken to finish for us for it was not possible to make God the Covenant of grace Christ did satisfie our contempts before our contempts against the Law were satisfied which Christ by his active and passive righteousnesse did fulfill for us when he lived in a precise conformity to the Law of God by his passive righteousnesse when he suffered punishment for the sins of his people whereby the Law and the Justice of God had satisfaction for all our former contempts committed against the divine Majesty of God and his Lawes The Gospel is the onely true history of the life of Christ it shall not need to report the particulars what our Saviour Christ did and suffered in the time of his conversing with men on earth the Scriptures of the Gospel is best able to give satisfaction wherein is registred not all his life but so much as the wisedome of God hath thought convenient for a Christian knowledge wherein is evident The power and patience of Christ that Christ continually did both exercise his power and his patience his power was exercised in doing good his patience in suffering evill what he did it was for the redemption of man and what hee suffered was for the sin of man Christ both dyed and suffered that man might not suffer Thirdly it is to be considered what Christ did by suffering when he dyed in our nature What Christ did by suffering for us Christ when he dyed in our nature did by death overcome death and by suffering did an act of admirable power and infinite glory both his power and his glory were declared in the conquest he made of sin hell and death enemies to our nature and had wasted the sonnes of Adam but now themselves wasted and vanquished for ever by one sonne of Adam 1 Cor. 15.54 The Victory of Christ over sin hell and death death and hell are the servants of sin the originall or first cause thereof is sin whom sin marketh death destroyeth his body hell tormenteth his soule yet is sin death and hell swallowed up in victory by one Christ who in the forme of man offering up himselfe a sacrifice to God his Father hath reconciled God and man by his own righteousnesse God and man leading into perpetuall captivity the ancient enemies of our nature sin hel and death sealing the new covenant of grace with the crosse of his death whereby he hath opened the gates of heaven and removed all difficulties that might let and hinder us in our passage or progresse to everlasting happinesse This Doctrine whereby to know the sonne of God in his two natures his Divinity and Humanity united in one Christ is most necessary in the knowledge of every Christian it being the maine foundation of Christian religion The necessity of knowing Christ whereupon all piety and faith is grounded for he that understandeth not Christ in his natures and offices cannot apprehend and apply him for his salvation because his assuming our nature and the execution of his offices are the onely meanes of our salvation without which God would not be pleased neither could the Law be satisfied and therefore this generall knowledge doth generally belong to all men and that upon necessity Secondly seeing the Sonne of God was content for our sakes to undergoe so great a travell and for our sakes to unite our farre unequall and most unworthy nature to his divinity wee ought for his sake to refuse no travell that may advance his honour or expresse our thankefulnesse for his infinite favours done for us and by whose onely meanes our soules
doe shrinke away at time of temptation is no true faith nor their love true which doth love to day and hate to morrow or hate upon every sleight occasion neither is it true patience to be patient for a season Note and after a while to change their patience into impatiency for the truth of vertues cannot stand without constancy Patient abiding is constancy to suffer and susstaine all adversity This patient abiding is the vertue and constancy to suffer and sustaine all adversity with patience it is impossible that any man can be voyd and free from the disposition of anger but by impatience wee be overthrowne though wee be but sleightly assaulted and thereby are driven from the purpose of godlinesse righteousnesse and truth but the parts of true repentance be the calmenesse which is not stirred to anger the assured looking for Gods ayd and helpe is the constant abiding in that which is right just true and good and the vertue to suffer and sustaine all troubles and adversities by these parts patience is made perfect and in the faithfull man there cannot one of them be wanting without the hinderance of the whole true patience is commanded unto us in holy Scripture Rom. 5.3.4 as to the Romans Rejoyce in tribulations knowing that affliction worketh patience and patience triall and proofe hope whatsoever things be fore written they be written for our learning that we may have hope through patience and comfort of Scriptures Gal. 5.22 and to the Galatians the fruit of the spirit is love joy peace patience gentlenesse goodnesse faith against such there is no Law and to the Thessalonians 2 Thes 1.4 5. In so much that wee our selves doe glory of you in the Churches of God for your patience and faith in all your afflictions tribulations and persecutions which ye suffer that yee may be counted worthy of the kingdome of God for which yee also suffer Luke 8.15 and our Saviour Christ himselfe commending patience unto us saith that the seed which fell upon the good ground be they which with a pure and good heart doe keepe it and bring forth fruit through patience againe Luke 21.19 through patience saith hee you shall possesse your soules Againe by the Scriptures we are advised counselled and admonished to patience as to the Corinthians 2 Cor. 6.4 5 6. Let us be have our selves saith S. Paul in all things as the Ministers of God in much patience in troubles in necessities in straits and dangers and so forth and to the Ephesians Ephes 4.1 2. I which am in bonds for the Lord beseech you walke worthily in the vocation whereunto yee be called with all weekenesse and humblenesse with patience forbearing one another in love therefore put you on saith hee Col. 3.12 13. as the holy welbeloved and chosen of God the bowels of mercy gentlenesse humblenesse sobernesse and patience forbearing and forgiving one another even as Christ forgave you Againe 1 Tim. 6.11 follow after righteousnesse godlinesse faith love meekenesse patience exhort rebuke them saith he with all patience 2 Tim. 4.2 Tit. 2.2 and to Titus Advise the elder men to be watching grave sober sound in faith in charity in patience and to the Hebrewes Take heed that yee faint not Heb. 6.12.15 but be yee followers of them which through faith and patience inherit the promises and through patient abiding hee obtained the promise 2 Pet. 5.6 7. and Peter saith hereunto apply all your endeavours and declare your faith in your vertue and in your vertue knowledge and in your knowledge temperance and in your temperance patience and in patience godly life in your godly life brotherly love and in your brotherly love charity to all men thus wee may see how wee are commanded and admonished in the new Testament to patience as also there be many places in the old testament wherein the great vertue of patience is highly commended unto us especially in the Psalmes of David and the Proverbs of Salomon all which be to this purpose set forth that wee should be moved and stirred up to the study of true patience by the commandement and authority of Gods Word that wee being exercised and tryed thereby wee may constantly without feare or fainting persevere and continue in the course of holy exercise and godly life Psal 91.14 c. and after long continuance have the reward of eternall life Now will I call to remembrance some of those holy Fathers in which the godly person may as it were in a glasse behold and consider the patience of the holy Saints and appoint himselfe ever to endeavour and follow the same And first and before all and farre surpassing all others the example of patience God is in God himselfe who in his infinite mercy and goodnesse Whereas wee have deserved his indignation malligrace and curse towards us doth bring forth his Sunne upon both the good and the evill that hee suffereth and directeth the times and seasons the services of the elements the increase of all things that are bred to serve the turnes and use of the wicked and the unworthy as well as the worthy and godly and in his long suffering bearing with the wicked and unworthy whereas of his just judgement Christ he might destroy them all at once but the mirrour of example of Gods patience is shewed unto us in Christ our Saviour whose whole life doth represent unto us a wonderfull degree of patience in all points and thereunto wee ought all of us to frame our selves as many as doe glory of his name and doe shew to be Christians and professors of his faith and Religion 1 Pet. 2 20 21 22 23. For Saint Peter saith If you doe abide and continue patiently in well-doing there is grace and favour with God for thereunto you be called for Christ also suffered for us leaving in an example to follow his steppes which committed no sinne neither was there any guile found in his mouth who spake no evill when he was evill spoken of when he suffered he threatned not but yeelded the revenge to him which judgeth righteously Wee should follow the example of Christs patience not onely in his sufferings but in his upright living also and in patiently abiding the afflictions laid upon us for our uprightnesse and other waies And thus wee be moved and provoked unto true patience both by the examples of our heavenly Father and of Christ our Saviour his onely begotten by the following of whom wee shall declare our selves to bee the children of God Let us therefore follow the bright shining vertue of God according to the proportion of his heavenly grace such a one was Noah who living in the middest of the malice of the most wicked and corrupt world Noe. Gen. 6.5 8 c. being armed with the vertue of patience continued in the trade of godly life and innocency untill the end and proceeded
absolute act which admits neither increase nor decrease yet that man receives his pardon by such a faith or such a perswasion of faith as is not alwaies one but is sometimes stronger and sometimes weaker ebbing and flowing like the salt waters sometimes appearing and sometimes hidden like the sunne with a thicke mist or a duskie cloud Now our justification may be perceived and knowne three waies First by the suggestion of Gods Spirit Secondly by faith which is a certaine assurance of perswasion of Gods love in Christ Now a man may assure himselfe of faith if hee love God for God himselfe 1 Tim. 1.5 and his neighbour truely as himselfe for love accompanies faith as the light doth the sunne indeed it proceeds from faith for as one saith Gregory Such as is our faith such is our love a man may assure himselfe of a justifying faith if he doe strive against his doubtings and with an honest heart doe will to believe and unfainedly desire to bee reconciled unto God and withall doe use constantly the good meanes that God hath ordained to beget and increase it in himselfe Gal. 2.16 c. for God accepts the will to believe for faith it selfe and the will to repent for repentance the reason hereof is plaine for every supernaturall act presupposeth a supernaturall power or gift and therefore the will to believe and repent presupposeth the power and gift of faith and repentance is in the heart for a man may come to be assured of his justification by certaine infallible signes and tokens of it as when we see our selves by the righteousnesse of Christ of the free grace of God redeemed from death delivered from hell and freed from the fearefull condemnation of the wicked there is a joy most unspeakeable and glorious wherewith our hearts must needs be ravished The second is the peace of conscience while sin and the guilt of sinne remained there was no peace nor quietnesse to be found but feare within terrors without and troubles on every side But when our sins are once nayled to the crosse of Christ and forgiven us Note then the winds are laid the waves are settled the sea is calmed the soule is quieted and imparked within the pales of peace Againe wee may know that our peace is good and that our justification is past with God if wee shall find a promptitude and nimblenesse in our selves to doe that which is good For when a man doth finde favour from God for the forgivenesse of his sins then the love of God constraineth him that joy which hee receiveth and putteth new life into him Greenham and enforceth him to the performance of those things which are pleasing unto God then his understanding is enlightened his judgement is reformed his affections are bettered his joyes are in heaven his desires are to Christ-ward his progresse to Canaan his course to Ierusalem and his anger is consumed upon his owne corruptions For wee must know that when God doth impute righteousnesse unto us to prevent our damnation by sin then he doth also infuse righteousnesse into us to hinder the domination of sin therefore Saint Paul sath 1 Cor. 1.30 that Christ is made unto us righteousnesse wisedome sanctification and redemption and he tels his Corinthians 1 Cor. 6.11 that they are washed sanctified and justified so then hee that circumciseth the fore-skin of his heart by true repentance hee that warreth against his owne lusts and truely striveth to serve the Lord in all his precepts he may know for certaine that God hath cut the cords of his sins and buryed them all in the blood of Christ but let the ungodly and uncircumcised heart know that so long as they addict themselves to their knowne enormities without repentance they are not of the Kingdome of Christ neither are they clothed with the robes of his righteousnesse but covered with the rotten rags of their owne wickednesse for those that are in Christ Rom. 8.1 2. walke not after the flesh but after the spirit they that are his have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof Gal. 5.2 but to live and continue in sin is to take sin downe from the crosse and to put life and spirit into it Luther For as one saith that a man may try and know whether hee be incorporated into Christ or not by this that as a man feeleth his heart cheered and sweetened by the sense and feeling of Gods promises and favour grounded and setled in his heart so such a man as no man is but he that is justified hath forthwith regard of his neighbour Note Lev. 19. Jam. 2.8 and helpeth him as his brother careth for him lendeth him giveth him comforteth and counselleth him yea hee is grieved if there be none towards whom hee may be serviceable hee is patient tractable and truely friendeth all men he doth not esteeme the temporall pleasure and pride of this life he judgeth no man he defameth no man he interpreteth all things for the best and when hee seeth not the matter goe well with his neighbour as that hee fainteth in faith waxeth cold in love hee prayeth for him hee reproveth him he is sorely g●ieved for him for any thing committed against God or his neighbour and all this proceedeth from the root and juice of Gods grace for that the bountifulnesse love and goodnesse of Christ hath sprinkled and replenished his heart with sweetnesse and love that it is a pleasure and a joy for him to doe good to his neighbour and is grieved for his sins as Samuel for Sauls 1 Sam. 15.35 by these and such like workes of grace a man may come to a certaine knowledge of his justification which how well worthy it is of our knowledge they can best tell which feele most the comfort of it and let no man thinke it impossible to be discerned by man because it is performed by God without man For though it be acted by God in heaven yet it produceth many notable graces in man upon the earth by which it may be perceived as a Vine by her grapes or as a Lampe by her light Besides Regeneration and Justification have such relation and neerenesse one to another as that they seeme to be almost but one act caused and effected at one instant of time for when we are regenerated then are we justified and when wee are justified wee are then regenerate and not before These two offices in our salvation being distinguished rather by their names then by any speciall marke of difference in their severall executions Againe the Apostle in his Sermon at Antioch Acts 13.38 concludeth saying Be it knowne unto you yee men and brethren that through this man Christ Vers 39. is preached unto you the forgivenesse of sinnes from which yee could not be justified by the Law of Moses by him every one that believeth is justified so that hee absolutely denyeth the power of