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A13547 The parable of the sovver and of the seed Declaring in foure seuerall grounds, among other things: 1. How farre an hypocrite may goe in the way towards heauen, and wherein the sound Christian goeth beyond him. And 2. In the last and best ground, largely discourseth of a good heart, describing it by very many signes of it, digested into a familiar method: which of it selfe is an entire treatise. And also, 3. From the constant fruit of the good ground, iustifieth the doctrine of the perseuerance of saints: oppugneth the fifth article of the late Arminians; and shortly and plainly answereth their most colourable arguments and euasions. By Thomas Taylor, late fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge, and preacher of the Word of God, at Reding in Bark-shire. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1621 (1621) STC 23840; ESTC S118185 284,009 494

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men can run ouer these or any of them dayly and not humble themselues for them yea and reforme them they are withering apace I feare such a man will soone come to nothing 6. Hatred of Gods children and the way of iust men whether open or secret How can they keepe their greenenesse who cannot abide the greenenesse and graces of others but can be wittie in priuy girds and scornes of such as endeuour to preserue themselues from withering That these are withering see Psalm 129.6 They that hate Sion shall be as grasse on the house toppe which withereth before it come forth And whatsoeuer many conceiue of themselues this is certaine If thou auoyd society with Gods people and bee ashamed of them or fellowship with them in the Gospell if more perillous times come thou wilt easily wither and stand as Iudas with them that apprehend Christ. Vse Seeing so many great Professors wither away so dangerously let him that stands take heede lest hee fall 1. Cor. 10.12 See we men of so great illumination affection reformation as in this stony ground wither quite away How necessary then is that exhortation of the Apostle Heb. 12.15 Take heede that no man fall away from the grace of God and Chap. 3.12 Take heede of the euill heart of vnbeliefe to depart from the liuing God A necessarie exhortation for all the hypocrite because he is in danger of finall withering and shall perish in it and the lesse hee feares it his danger is not the lesse As also the sound Christian who though he cannot fall quite away because the Lord puts vnder his hand yet by fearing to fall he auoydes falling and being falne recouers himselfe againe Let euery godly man looke hee stand on firme ground for Reprobates may seeme to stand and be greene for a while Neither let any content himselfe that he heareth good Sermons or that hee reioyceth therein for the present For as we read Ioh. 5.35 Iohns hearers esteemed him a burning shining light and reioyced in his light but it was but for a season And this Text of ours tels vs that many heard our Lord himselfe and that with ioy yet withered away and Ioh. 6.66 many that had heard Christ and followed him for a time as if they had beene sound Disciples as the Text calleth them went away from him and walked no more with him Obiect There is no feare so long as we be Protestants and not Papists so long as wee professe the truth and denie the grosse points of Popery which cut men from Christ. Answer There is a two-fold withering one in iudgement the other in practice That in iudgement is two-fold either totall or partiall Totall when a man departs from the whole doctrine as they that turne from the truth of Christ and sup vp the whole filth of Antichrist Partiall when a man holds most truthes but departs from the sincerity of it And this ouerturnes many Protestants who will neither be Papists nor yet sincere Protestants but so farre iudge Religion woorth holding as they can gaine by it Withering in practice is either in profession or in action Thou mayest hold the profession of Religion and yet by persisting in wicked manners manifest thou acknowledgest not Christ thy Lord and that thy selfe art not of the truth Doe wee thinke Demas cast off the whole profession of Religion when hee forsooke the truth and exchanged it for the world Or did the Galatians turne Gentiles and quite forsake the profession of Christ when they turned to another Gospell Or did the Pharises or such as sinne the sinne against the holy Ghost wholly renounce the profession of Religion Oh then neuer stand vpon profession but vse the meanes to preserue thee from withering in iudgement or practice in whole or in part Quest. What be the meanes to keepe vs from withering Answ. 1. Get sound iudgement to discerne the truth from errour And this is obtained in the publique Ministerie If wee would not quench the Spirit we must not despise prophecie If we would not fall we must be grounded on the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles by priuate reading meditating and conferring of the Scriptures which notably begets and confirmes soundnesse of iudgement And by prayer which obtaines the Spirit who is called the Spirit of iudgement The Lampe failes without oyle And they that forsake the Assemblies shal finde their light of iudgement and vnderstanding to grow dimmer daily till they be wholly put out 2. Sound perswasion of the truth thou professest that thou mayest not please thy selfe that thou hearest the truth from the mouth of the Preacher or hast it in thy Bible at home no nor content thy selfe that thou hast it in thy mouth or discourse but that thou hast the experience of it in thine heart How doth experimentall knowledge fixe it selfe in the soule Let a man once taste the sweetnesse of Christ and his merits he can neuer be a Papist in the point of merit but he will detest his own works as drosse dung in comparison Let a man once come to the experience of Gods fauour and loue through his Christ it will be stronger then death no water can quench it hee shall not hang in a doubtfull suspence of his saluation or feare finall falling away hee shall be farre from wauering and much more from withering in these points Let a man once get experience of the sweetnesse of godly life of Gods blessing accompanying it of inward peace and tranquillity of minde of safety vnder the wing of God and the many priuiledges which goe with the carefull watch ouer the heart and life This man shall not easily fall from his fruitfulnesse nor be drawne to such sinnes as blast and ouerturne others by the rootes and that suddainly Whereas hee that holdes his Religion because the Prince holdes it will runne with the time and swimme with the streame the times and winds are not more mutable than he let the times change but a little his Religion is withered and gone Or if men hold holy Doctrines onely swimming in the braine and attaine vnderstanding rather to furnish their discourse than to guide their course and want the experience of God the sence of faith the breath and motions of heauenly life in the seate of life that is their hearts and soules they shall easily bid truth farewell if with conuenience they cannot hold it in their iudgement or hold it forth in their practice 3. Sound affection and loue to the truth vpholds from withering in it when the wise Christian esteemes the Pearle worth selling all to buy it Loue any thing better than Grace thou art gone Demas loues the world better and easily forsakes the Truth How many lights in the beginning of their profession haue been extinct by the world comming vpon them The profits pleasures and aduancements of it haue made them idle dissolute almost profane If thou wouldest auoide that fearefull Apostasie threatened
shall be great Vse 1. See hereby the nature and end of persecution it tries who are sound and puts a difference betweene such as peaceable and calme estate cannot distinguish In a faire and calme day Apples and Peares on a tree seeme all sound and good but a blustering storme or tempest makes difference betweene those that are sound and such as for want of moysture fall off iust so it is in the stormes of the Church Persecution is like a mighty winde which discerneth betweene wheat and chaffe that before lay quiet together in the same floore it shakes not the wheat but blowes away the chaffe And as the furnace consumes the drosse but refines the gold so doth the furnace of affliction We are now all shuffled together the hypocrite with the sincere-hearted Christian but to end this poynt with our Sauiours instance as the heate of the Sunne and summer discouers barren dry and stony soyle frō good ground so the scorching beames of persecution shall discouer barren husky and empty hypocrites from good and fruitfull Hearers And thou art that indeed thou art in triall A man in peace may personate and disguise himselfe as Ieroboams wife going to the Prophet seeme another but affliction for the Word will vncase him Peter was not the man in triall hee vaunted to be when he would dye with Christ. And the winter-weather of affliction for the Gospell will discouer who be the Swallowes that will take their summer in the Church but in the winter of it take them to their wings Vse 2. Let vs not take offence when wee see forward Professors offended at Christ and shrinke in triall but make account that some such must forsake vs. For all are not of the Church that are in the Church Some are tyed onely by a thred of externall profession to the members that are not vnited to the Head by the band of faith these must fall off and wither Let Hymeneus and Philetus two great lights fall away lose their shine in the firmament of the Church yet the foundation of God abideth sure And if we see some shrinke before the wetting and in dayes of peace and protection of the Gospell white-liuer'd and ready to deny their profession at the breath of a silly Damosell that the frowne of a Superiour a word of reproch a feare of change shakes off their leafie profession let vs not maruell if many of them would deny Christ in triall rather than dye with him Vse 3. Let him that standeth take heede lest hee fall And the rather because 1. Our nature is prone to defection or backsliding 2. Neuer was there more defection either in Doctrine or manners then at this day 3. When wee see others slide backe we are too soone moued and offended So as the best need continuall exhortation and admonition to beware they fall not away from the grace of God Else would not our Lord haue still beaten on this poynt with his Disciples who for all his warning of them when it came to the poynt forsooke him and fled Now the meanes to vphold vs in tryall from falling are these 1. Meditate much and often of such Scriptures as foretell persecution for the Name of Christ and call to minde the examples of such as haue valiantly endured the losse of temporals and ioyfully suffered the spoyling of their goods the forgoing of liberty and life for Christ c. Especially reade diligently the whole 11. Chapter to the Hebrewes 2. Cast the costs of thy profession Thinke it not enough to heare and receiue immediatly and reioyce yea and beleeue and grow But know thou must not onely beleeue but suffer for his sake The seed that is immediatly receiued must endure an hard and sharpe winter before it can come vp kindly He that forecasts onely the pleasure and ioy of his Religion and not the sorrow losses and crosses of it is like the foolish builder that thinkes hee can finish a building with so little charge as will scarce serue to lay the foundation Paul knew and made account that bonds and imprisonment abode him euery where and so must thou 3. Labour for soundnesse of iudgement and sincerity in affection in receiuing the Gospell A sound iudgement in matters of faith to beleeue firmely and distinctly the truth of Religion must goe before vndanted confession 2. Cor. 4.13 I beleeued and therefore I spake Rom. 10.10 Wee must beleeue with the heart vnto righteousnesse before wee can confesse with the mouth to saluation This is the rooting and stablishing in faith which shall abide Then for the second sincere affection is onely blessed with continuance when we bestow the chiefe affection of our heart vpon it euen our principall loue and our chiefe ioy and delight For this is a cause why this bad ground failes not so much the dislike of Religion as the liking of other things better and the not receiuing of truth in the loue of it is a cause why many are giuen vp to beleeue lies 4. Purge thy heart from the raigne of corrupt lusts Weed out sinfull desires labour in mortification and selfe-denyall get further power to dye vnto sinne get out of the loue of the world and the things in it resolue against self-selfe-loue that in case of confession thy life may not be deare vnto thee Else shall not all thy wisedome or ciuility or learning keepe thee from backsliding For if the Apostles themselues who professed they had left all to follow Christ yet shrunke in tryall how shall they stand that come with hearts thrust full of the world and earthly desires 5. Labour to finde full contentment in the good things of the Gospell Thinke it full happinesse to enioy naked Christ. Esteeme peace of conscience aboue all worldly peace Account the fauour of God the ioy of the holy Ghost the sweet hope of the pleasures of Gods right hand and the treasures of a better world worth all thou canst giue in exchange and aboue all that may be compared with them This will make thee with the wise Merchant fell out thy selfe and forgoe all for the Pearle and goe away reioycing 6. Examine thy heart how it stands affected in lesser trials now in the peace of the Church If it shrinke in smaller trials I must not looke to trust it in greater If now it will not endure the threat of a Superiour the feare of losse the dread of dis-fauour If it now shrinke from good men because of their troubles and sufferings which are their crowne if thou canst ioyne with the times in disgracing men fearing God assure thy selfe if greater trials come thou shalt be giuen vp to greater delusion and Apostasie 7. Because to stand in persecution is a worke aboue naturall strength and ascribed to the holy Ghost to stablish men to this triall and strengthen them to all patience with ioyfulnesse Col. 1.10 We must pray the Lord not to leaue vs in tentation but preserue
with his Text and not with vs. Iust like the Epicures and Stoikes Act. 17.18 who said of Paul What will this babbler say He will teach vs some strange things to day And by such scoffes Satan comes to many and hinders their faith saluation For as those Heathen Stoicks and Epicures counted that the strangest Doctrine which taught Iesus Christ so doe Christian Epicures that which most directly leads vnto Christ. The third generall thing proposed is the end of Satans comming which as we heard is three-fold 1. To steale the Word out of the heart 2. To hinder the Hearers faith 3. To rob him of saluation For the first As birds follow the Sower to picke vp the seeds and graines that lie vncouered so the diuell haunts the Assemblies of Saints to steale away the Word preached where it is carelesly heard The Action of Satan is to steale and carry away the Word which is not his but belongs to others But not as other theeues to conuert it to his owne vse but onely that the right owners should not enioy it not to profit himselfe but to disprofit others As for the manner of his Action he stealeth that is closely and secretly takes it away He is a slye and priuie theefe As a theefe onely feares to be seene and discouered so Satan is loth to be seene and therefore takes vs at aduantage when we can least espy him He that stealeth stealeth in the night as they that are drunke are drunke in the night 1. Thes. 5.7 He takes vs in the night of our ignorance and in the sleepe of security and spoyles vs most when wee can least discerne it But whence doth hee steale the Word Answ. Out of the heart Because of his sly and subtill nature who being a spirit can easily and nimbly enter into the most secret closet of our brest And although he cannot directly know our hearts and thoughts which is Gods priuiledge yet by outward meanes he can giue a great guesse at the temper of them and as birds can easily finde when seede is vncouered and as easily picke it vp so Satan can easily see where mens care is not to couer and hide the Word in their hearts when they haue heard it And if he cannot by himselfe and by violence take the Word away if the owners will hold it yet he can and doth take it away by themselues and with their owne consent and good liking who neither were willing to giue it roome or sinke it deepe into their hearts nor to couer it with gracious affections nor had any great loue to it to looke after it as thinking themselues not a graine the worse when all this seed is gone And why out of the heart Answ. 1. Because hee knowes that the heart is the right furrow in which the Word can become fruitfull therefore hee vseth all his skill to keepe it thence or fetch it thence Hee cares not how much of the seede lie in the head or on the tongue so he can keepe it out of the heart For as we say The minde is the man so the heart leades the whole man and is the lodge either of God or the diuell 2. Because nothing but the Word puts him out of possession of the heart The strong man holds the hold till a stronger come If the Word as good seede once roote in the heart he must away Where Christ by his Word takes the heart the Prince of this world is cast out The Disciples by their powerfull preaching saw Satan fall downe like lightening from heauen It stands him therefore in hand to bestirre him and to turne himselfe to all his stratagems One principall whereof is that if he cannot hinder thee from the Word he may hinder the Word from thee or if he cannot hinder it from the eare he may from the heart or if he cannot intercept it from the heart by catching it he may defeat thee of it by stealing Note this stratagem and doe thy best to preuent it His second end is to hinder faith lest they should beleeue And why First he knowes the Word is the parent of faith Ioh. 17.20 Christ prayes for the Elect that they might beleeue through the Word of his Disciples And the Iaylor and all his house beleeued by hearing Paul Act. 16.31 Secondly he cannot but be an enemy to our faith and therefore winnowes vs as the Disciples that our faith may faile because faith 1. Makes vs the sonnes of God Gal. 3.26 2. Marries vs to Iesus Christ Hos. 2.20 3. Makes our hearts temples of the Spirit purifying the heart Act. 15.9 4. Makes vs free entrance to God by prayer to aske what we will and wee shall obtaine Eph. 3.12 And 5. It is our shield to resist all the darts of the diuell the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against it Thirdly if hee can keepe vs from faith the Word he knowes shall be altogether vnprofitable Heb. 4.2 and if he can keepe this weapon from vs he easily foyles vs and makes God also our aduersary because without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 Hence hee layes all his engines against our faith seeks by all means to root it out of the heart and out of the world if God would giue him leaue His third end is to rob men of saluation lest they should be saued First Satan knowes that the end of faith is saluation 1. Pet. 1.9 and that by preaching God saues them that beleeue 1. Cor. 1.21 If hee can keepe thee from faith he hath robbed thee of saluation Therefore if he cannot hinder the Word he will if he can possibly hinder faith Secondly Satan is a deadly enemy to euery mans saluation 1. Out of hatred for the euill angels by their fall lost the loue of God of his glory and of his Image and now hate whatsoeuer belongs to God 2. Out of enuie therefore hee is called in the Parable the enuious man Hee repines and enuies that man should stand in innocency which hee lost and therefore set vpon Adam and droue him by his tentation out of Paradise And he enuies more that any man should enioy the glory of heauen which himselfe can neuer recouer and therfore he layes all the blockes in their way that hee can deuise And as when Gods people were going to Canaan he stirred vp many armies of the Heathen against them to make them fall short of that good Land So now he raiseth armies of tentations and impediments to make vs fall short of that heauenly Canaan which hee knowes to bee a good Land and thinkes too good for vs. 3. Out of his contrariety to God himselfe He sees God carefull of his Church and children that as a good shepheard he vseth all meanes to saue and preserue them therefore hee cleane contrarily seekes to kill and destroy them and defeate them of that saluation which the Lord hath prepared for them And this seemes to be
it selfe with some good seed springing vp vnlesse it kill the weeds No more content thou thy selfe with the rising and mouing of some good affections vnlesse thou mortifie the bad and noysome Ierem. 4.4 Plough vp the fallow ground of you hearts and sowe not among thornes Secondly the Husbandman ploughes it againe that if any weeds peepe out he may roote them vp so carefull he is for his earthly commodity No lesse carefull should wee be if after grace receiued lusts will be still stirring to root them out Heb. 12.15 Take heed that no root of bitternesse spring vp and trouble you according to that in Deut. 29.18 Let there bee no root among you that bringeth gall and wormewood If there be any lust be it neuer so secret and hidden as a root or neuer so fixed and fastened as a root is spare it not nip it not off but plucke it vp by the roots be not content to bridle lusts but kill them satisfie not thy selfe with an absence of fleshly operation as if it were sanctification but onely with a slaying of it for if there be a liuing root within it will shew it selfe when the seed springs and soone ouertake it too Thirdly if after all this there be any weeds growing vp with the seed the Husbandman will bring in his weeding hooke into the field hee will not see a weed or thorne peepe but he will weede it out 1. Because he would haue his corne grow alone Wouldest thou haue the Word to thriue in thy soule Let it grow alone How speedily should a man rise towards heauen if the Word had the onely roome in his heart But 2. Because that is impossible either in the earth or our hearts he will bee sure by his hooke to set the seed aboue the weeds labour thou also to set the Word aboue thy lusts and contrary motions Quest. How shall I doe that Answ. 1. By daily exercise in the Word reading and meditating this discouers the weeds thornes 2. By daily prayer and confession of knowne sinnes this is a getting of the weeding hooke into our hands 3. By Christian humility and fasting this is the cutting off of lusts by which they daily wither and dry away this crucifies the affections and lusts 4. By auoiding occasions of sinne and sinners especially watching narrowly our owne inclinations 5. Keepe vnder the lusts of the flesh by the lusts of the Spirit Gal. 5.17 The Spirit lusteth against the flesh that is both in curbing and restraining euill motions and ingendring good cogitations motions and desires agreeable to the will of God Rom. 13. vlt. By putting on the Lord Iesus represse the lusts of the flesh Prou. 12.5 A godly man is said to haue right thoughts and chap. 11.23 His desires are onely good not that he is without euill desires sometime but he resists and fights against them and God imputes not that which he hates and repents of We see the soyle Now let vs see the hopefull successe of the seede in it The thornes grow with it Though there be a further growth of the seed in this ground then in the former yet at length it is as fruitlesse 1. Here are soft and tender hearts brought to the Word better prepared for the seed than the former 2. Here is a deeper rooting a further measure of vnderstanding a more vehement carriage of the affection vnto it in motions of ioy loue and delight a more settled purpose to follow the Word 3. Here is a further shew of fruits a standing in a glorious profession an hopefull sprouting and springing in the fruits of good workes and a longer hope thereby than before Yet these so softned so rooted so farre growne aboue many zealous Professors are ranged in the ranke of bad and fruitlesse Hearers for as it is in vers 14. Afterward they are choaked Doctr. The fruitfull and commendable Hearer is he that heareth for afterward Esa. 42.23 A bad Hearer can heare well for the present but afterward all is lost Prou. 4.18 The way of the righteous shineth as light that shineth more and more vntill perfect day They adde vnto their knowledge as men doe to their stocke and saue what they get and so grow abundantly rich in grace whereas he that spends as fast as he gets and onely maintaines the present with his gettings must dye a begger Many are the exhortations to lay fast hold on the Word and to lay it vp safe in the midst of the heart and to keepe it as a mans life Prou. 4.4 As a man that hath a Iewell will bee carefull to locke it vp in the safest chest he hath 1. Tim. 3.9 Keepe the mysterie of faith Reu. 3.11 Hold that thou hast hold that thou hearest As many are the dehortations that we negligently lose not the Word Heb. 2.1 We ought diligently to giue heed to the things we haue heard lest at any time we let them slip a Metaphore taken from riuen vessels that let all the liquor run out But here the more precious the liquor is the more must be the care of the vessels soundnesse 2. Pet. 2.21 Better not to haue knowne the way of truth then after the knowledge to depart from the holy Commandement Many are the commendations of them that were Hearers for after-times as of Dauid Psalm 119.11 I haue hid thy Word in my heart and of Mary who pondered Christs sayings and hid them in her heart Luk. 2.51 And as many are the dispraises of such leaking vessels who like the women 2. Tim. 3.7 are alwaies learning yet neuer come to knowledge and those Iewes Heb. 5.12 who for the time might haue bin teachers yet needed to be catechized in the very Principles Reason 1. From the nature of the Word which is in it selfe a perpetuall truth an euerlasting Gospell Heauen and Earth are most stable and firmely founded by God but not so stable as the least iot of Gods Word which shall not fayle or fall to the ground for euer And to vs it is a certaine rule a constant law and binder not for the present only but for all time future yea and for all eternity 2. This is a mayne difference betweene a godly man and an hypocrite Many things may affect an euill man for the present hearing of the Word Sometime he may heare a noueltie with great affection but as children delight in a new toy for an houre but presently contemne and lose it Sometimes the power of the Word makes an hypocrite tremble as Felix and grow to some promise with himselfe and perhaps to some purpose and resolution of amendment So Israel hearing the Lord speake in so terrible a voyce promise faire All that the Lord our God saith by thee if he will no more speake by himselfe we will heare it and doe it But the Lord saw there was no such heart in them Deut. 5.27 29. Sometime some affliction prepares them to heare and now while the iron is
c. Againe it will examine the Religion in the Effects 1. If it magnifie Christ the end of the Law and Gospell 2. If it bring Diuine consolation in life and death 3. If it binde to God from whom our sinnes had separated vs 4. If it bring forth obedience to the Morall Law in both Tables 5. If it be pure peaceable full of good workes Iam. 3.17 A good heart will not chuse a Religion wherein to be assured of Gods fauour of pardon of sinne of perseuerance is presumption nor that allowes S●ew-houses of bawdry or dispenseth with vnlawfull or incestuous marriages as the impure religion of Popery doth nor that which must bee set vp and held vp by violence blood massacres lyes equiuocations murthering of Princes or Gun-powder treasons for the Gospell is a doctrine of peace nor that which is an enemie to good workes as in Popery a man may bee as wicked as the diuell can make him so hee bee rich to buy pardons Thus a good heart is carefull in the choyce of true Religion and holy as from the holy God the obiect of which are holy things practised by holy men begun in Paradise continued by the holy Patriarkes described by holy Pen-men Moses the Prophets and Apostles and obserued in all ages by the Saints to whom it is deliuered Hauing thus carefully made choyce of true Religion a good heart doth Christianly imbrace it in regard of Internall affections Externall effects The inward affections are three 1. It firmely beleeues it and labours still to bee more firmly rooted and stablished in the faith Col. 2.7 The Scribes and Priests themselues confessed that the doctrine which is from heauen must be beleeued Luk. 20.5 2. It loues it feruently and hates all false religion contrary vnto it Reuel 2.12 15. The Church of Pergamus must not onely keepe the Name of the Lord but hate the Doctrine of the Nicolaitans which the Lord hates Dauid appeales heere to the Lord himselfe Loue I not them that loue thee and hate them that hate thee So a good heart will esteeme the enemies of Religion his owne enemies 3. It ioyfully imbraceth it and vndiuidedly cleaues vnto it Act. 16.34 The Iaylor reioyced that hee and his house beleeued The wise Merchant went away reioycing that hee had found the Pearle 4. And it cleaues with full purpose of heart to the Lord Act. 11.23 True Religion in the heart is inseparable most inuincible A good heart with Cyprian admits no deliberation in diuine things for the substance of Religion Good Ioshua will cleaue to the Lord though all the world goe away chap. 24.15 and the Disciples will not forsake Christ though multitudes doe Ioh. 6.68 69. The outward effects of a good heart toward true Religion are fiue 1. It will by all meanes promote it Abraham will teach his family Gen. 18.19 It will further the causes of it Cornelius calls his family and kindred to heare Peter Act. 10.24 Paul wisheth all that heare him that day as himselfe whole and entire Christians Act. 26.29 If Scribes Pharises hypocrites if Priests Papists Iesuites would as the diuell compasse sea and land to make one Proselyte and seuen-fold more the child of wrath than themselues how much more should a good man will a good heart for the conuersion of his brethren 2. It will professe and maintaine it openly boldly Dauid before Kings Psal. 119.46 Paul will professe his hope before Agrippa Festus Felix because it makes the conscience good and that ministreth boldnes It will come in the day to Christ not with Nicodemus by night It will professe with dangers and losse of sweetest things For nothing is so sweet to a good heart as the truth of God Paul held not his life so sweet and so the Martyrs 3. It will study to adorne and beautifie it in holy life expressing the power of it and walking according to the rules of it Tit. 2.9 Seruants must so walke as they may adorne the Gospell much more Gods seruants A good heart cannot talke of Christ but liue in Christ cannot with Iudas professe Christ his Lord and by loosenesse of life deliuer him to the scoffer and buffetings of his enemies A good heart knowes that true Religion is to bee esteemed by the life and conuersation Prou. 4.2 He that walketh vprightly feareth the Lord. Hee is truly religious that keepes himselfe vnspotted of the world 4. It will suffer the extremest losse rather than lose his Religion knowing that it is giuen to the Elect not onely to beleeue in Christ but also to suffer for his sake Phil. 1.29 For true Religion so fortifies the heart in the fatherly affection of God towards him in the loue of Christ Iesus in the assured care and prouidence of God and the sweet comforts of the holy Ghost euen in the middest of death as death it selfe is not formidable but a sweet and easie passage to Iesus Christ with whom to be is best of all This truth is confirmed by a cloud of witnesses euen all the glorious Martyrs that euer suffered in their Lords quarrell who for his sake counted their greatest losses their greatest gaine 5. It will honour and embrace all the Professors of Religion Psal. 15.4 the Citizen of Sion honours all that feare the Lord as wee see in the great change of the conuerted Iaylor toward Paul and Silas Act. 16.31 A badge of Christ and Christian Religion is to loue one another yea of one translated from death to life 1. Ioh. 3.14 It will pray for them and praise God for their graces It will encourage them and helpe them forward in the good way It will pitty and relieue their miseries It knowes the loue of God dwelles not in him that shuts vp his compassion 1. Ioh. 3.17 This an euill heart cannot doe 1. It neuer makes choice of Religion but takes the Religion he findes without further examination neuer lookes whether his Religion come so high as from Heauen but either superstitiously takes vp and continues a Religion from the forefathers and will not endure light because they liued in darknesse as one could not endure liberty because his father was in prison or Atheistically measures the Religion by the length of the Scepter or by multitudes authority of men that are with it or against it succession successe outward pompe c. The Pharises of our time say as those of old Doe any of the Rulers beleeue in him and the most haue the faith of God in respect of persons 2. His Religion bindes him not to God for it neuer loosed him from his lusts but suffers pride worldlinesse malice vncleannesse in thoughts speeches and actions hypocrisie and the like all vnmortified It pities some Agag some fat or darling sinne either of nature or custome It reioyceth and riseth by the reuenue of some sinne and vnlawfull profits It would binde God to it selfe not
good ground and therein both how it comes to be good ground and how it may be so discerned with Motiues thereunto we proceed now to the successe of the seed in it which is said first to bring forth fruits which fruits are in the second place described 1. by the plenty an hundreth fold 2. by the continuance with patience Doct. 1. The good heart is a fruitfull heart as good ground is fruitfull ground The good ground heere is called in Math. 7.17 a good tree and euery good tree brings forth good fruits and Math. 12.34 A good man out of the good treasury of his heart bringeth forth good things Here for the explaining of the Doctrine consider three conditions of these fruits 1. for the kinde 2. the season 3. the meanes For the kinde in generall they are the power of the Gospell in the whole man Phil. 1.27 and as all fruits comming of seede are of the same kinde and nature with the seed Not fruits of the flesh which are so ripe and rise euery where Nor fruits of ciuill righteousnes in dealing with men from which many conclude themselues good ground being voyd of piety knowledge and the feare of God Nor fruits of illumination by which men are able to vnderstand and speake sensibly of matters of Religion but care not how little they practise Nor fruits of the externall profession of Religion or externall reformation which are as faire leaues and greene blades that shall wither and faile For all these fruits wee haue found on the former bad grounds But these fruits are fruits of grace resembling the Author the Spirit of grace and thence called fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 and the seed the Word of grace Act. 20.32 and fruits of righteousnesse to the praise of God Phil. 1.11 and fruits in holinesse Rom. 6.22 In speciall these fruits are either inward or outward for a good man is first fruitfull within and as all other fruits so these come from a root within Inward fruits are 1. righteousnesse of nature by sanctification of the spirit soule and body 2. good thoughts and motions and purposes of heart these counsels of heart make a man praised of God 1. Cor. 4.5 3. Good desires longings and faintings after God and his graces Prou. 11.23 The desire of the righteous is onely good 4. Good affections as sorrow for sinne loue feare zeale patience compassion and tender-heartednesse and many such like in Gal. 5.22 23. Outward fruits are 1. good words sauory edifying pure and wholesome therefore in Prou. 10.31 the mouth of the iust is said to be fruitfull in wisdome and his lips to feed many as fruits do 2. good works are good fruits because they issue from the root of faith and charity because they please God as fruits the palate because they witnesse the life of faith as fruits the life of a tree and lastly because they profit others who are relieued and comforted as with most pleasant fruits Now wee may not thinke that onely building of Colledges Churches Hospitals great and bountifull Almes which a few can performe are good workes as is defined by the Church of Rome But those are good workes which euery Beleeuer can and doth performe within the compasse of his calling both generall and speciall such as mortification of sinne faithfulnesse diligence in the duties of Christianity and of the speciall callings mercifulnesse to the poore Saints or whatsoeuer else is commended in the Word or approued of God as acceptable fruits yea and rewarded be they neuer so meane and base in the eyes of men A cup of cold water shall not lose his reward For the season these fruits are ripe and timely differing from the blasted and withered fruits of the former grounds Wee haue seene sudden fruits as sudden flashes in the three former grounds and great Professors like Ephraim whose goodnesse was as the morning dew Hos. 6.4 We haue heard of them not whose leafe onely hath failed but the stalke and blade and all that made shew aboue ground or fed it within But this fruit giues not ouer till ripenesse and the soundnesse of it is discerned by the constancy and maturity For the meanes these fruits are produced to ripenesse by keeping the Word so the Text saith They keepe the Word and bring forth fruits Lose the Word and lose all fruits The former grounds kept the Word but not long enough they admitted it to lodge as a ghest for a night but not to dwel in them But Dauid voweth to keepe the Word euen to the end Psal. 119.33 and he would not keepe his life but to keepe the Word vers 17. This ground keepes the Word in the eare by hearing it in the memory in the heart Prou. 6.20 Binde it on thy heart in the hand practice in meditating and thinking on it in praying for blessing that it may bee a fruitfull Word and in constant striuing in new obedience And by these meanes it holds out and brings fruits to perfection Now euery good heart is thus fruitfull producing fruits answerable to the Gospell in due season vnto ripenesse by meanes of keeping the Word Act. 16.30 The Iaylor assoone as euer hee was conuerted what a number of good fruits produced he Now hee cries out of himselfe would faine know what he might doe to be saued Now he brings the Apostles forth of prison who had laid them in He washed the stripes that he had inflicted he set meat afore them brought them into his house heard the Word was baptized and reioyced that he beleeued and went to the Gouernours and got them quite released The like of Lydia vers 14 15. Nay a good heart let it haue neuer so small meanes or opportunity it will shew fruits The theefe conuerted of a barren malefactor is now become a fruitfull Professor The ground euen now ouergrowne with cursed weeds and brambles of hainous sinnes is now in an instant and almost for an instant fruitfull in confession of his sinnes in rebuking the sinnes of his fellow in giuing a sound testimony to Christ aboue all the Scribes and Iewes yea when his Disciples durst not and in earnest prayer to Christ for a little remembrance of him Reasons 1. Because the person is set into so liuely a stocke that he must needs bee incontinently fruitfull Whosoeuer is set into Christ were hee as dry as Aarons withered rod he shall presently bee changed into a flourishing and fruitfull tree Rom. 7.4 So yee brethren are ioyned vnto him that is raised from the dead that ye should bring forth fruit vnto God And because the Beleeuer is not onely set into Christ but abideth in him therfore he continueth fruitfull to the end Ioh. 15.4 2. Because the Beleeuer is now become Gods worke-manship in Christ Iesus created to good workes which God hath ordained for him to walke in Ephes. 2.10 And the Lord cannot faile of his end in his actions But as he commanded man created at
THE PARABLE OF THE SOWER AND OF THE SEED DECLARING IN FOVRE SEVErall grounds among other things 1. How farre an Hypocrite may goe in the way towards heauen and wherein the sound Christian goeth beyond him And 2. In the last and best ground largely discourseth of a good heart describing it by very many signes of it digested into a familiar method which of it selfe is an entire Treatise And also 3. From the constant fruit of the good ground iustifieth the doctrine of the perseuerance of Saints oppugneth the fifth Article of the late Arminians and shortly and plainly answereth their most colourable Arguments and euasions By THOMAS TAYLOR late Fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge and Preacher of the Word of God at Reding in Bark-shire Imprinted at London by Felix Kyngston for Iohn Bartlet and are to be sold at the signe of the gilded Cup in the Goldsmiths Rowe in Cheapside 1621. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVL MASTER WALTER BATEMAN Mayor of the Towne of Reding Master EDVVARD CLARKE one of the Masters of the Chancery and Steward of the same Towne Master IOHN SAVNDERS Iustice of Peace Master NICOLAS GVNTER late Mayor Master CHRISTOPHER TVRNER my especiall friend with all the rest of the Magistrates and Burgesses of the same Corporation Grace and plenty of peace from God c. RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL WE reade that when Obed-edom entertained the Arke of the Lord the Lord blessed Obed-edom and all that hee had because of the Arke of God That Arke was a signe of Gods presence and a type of our Ministery to which Iesus Christ hath tyed his speciall presence That Arke was graced with many miracles By it the waters of Iordan diuided themselues and gaue way to Israel to passe as on dry land By it the huge walls of Ierico fell downe to the ground By it Dagon the Idoll of the Philistims was throwne to the earth and dis-membred This our Euangelicall Arke is countenanced with as many and mighty miracles as euer that was It passeth all the Israel of God thorow the mighty flouds and impassable streames of afflictions and impediments that otherwise would stop them in their way to Canaan By it the huge walls of wickednesse and lusts euen all high thoughts lift vp against God and reared vp against heauen are throwne downe and cast to ground By it the adored Dagon of Popish Idolatry and superstition of errours heresies false-worship and ignorant conceits is cast vpon his face not able to abide the presence of the Arke and truth of God and a thousand such miracles are daily wrought by it in the conuersion of men From that Arke the Lord gaue immediate answeres and diuine Oracles From ours we haue as sure directions in all cases of faith and sound doctrine and also of Christian manners In that were the Tables of stone written with Gods finger In this are those Tables not laid vp but vnfolded and Christ the end of the Law included Before that was the Pot of Manna and the flourishing Rod of Aaron This exhibiteth Christ the Bread of Life and the Manna that came downe from heauen together with his Rod and gouernment which seemed quite cut off and withered in his death bur gloriously budding and flourishing againe in his powerfull Resurrection Now the way to meete wi●h blessing is to entertaine our Arke as Obed-edom did that For it was not the presence of the Arke but Obed-edoms reuerent entertainment of it that procured his prosperity No more is it the presence of a powerfull Ministery suppose by Christs owne person and presence but the kind and louing respect of it that may expect blessing from it This kind entertainment Obed-edom expressed in these particulars 1. He loued God himselfe first and for his sake the Arke of his presence Hee that loues not God can neuer entertaine the Arke and a sure signe of a man hating God himselfe is the hatred of a faithfull Ministery 2. Obed-edom embraced the Law of God with a reuerend affection and for the loue of that entertained the Arke in which the Law was preserued For if Obed-edom had violated the Tables of stone or broken the Rod of Aaron or mis-vsed the Manna he had been so frrre from being bettered by the presence of the Arke that it would haue proued his destruction No man can friendly embrace the Ministery that liueth in the ordinary violation of any of the Lawes of God or despiseth any of the rules by which Iesus Christ gouerneth his Church Yea for such a man to liue vnder a godly Ministery it rather furthers his Iudgement than any way procures his prosperity 3. Obed-edom entertaining the Arke entertained also the Officers of it hee brake not off the rings nor the barres in the rings by which it was carried to and fro No man can benefit himselfe by the Ministery that despiseth such godly Ministers who as the barres in the rings of the Arke propagate the Truth and carry the Word of saluation among the Nations This entertainment of the Arke of God hath promise of blessing to our selues and all that we haue It is true that Gods presence is not to bee desired for outward blessings but yet euen these are annexed often vnto it For godlinesse is neuer without some great gaine nor the doctrine of godlinesse so sory a ghest but it leaues some bountifull gratuity for kind and louing entertainment The Arke was neuer separated from the Mercy-seate to shew that Gods mercy is neere vnto him that affecteth Gods presence To you Right Worshipfull I commend this care of prizing Gods Arke set vp amongst you because I thirst after your prosperity Faile in this and you haue let out the vitall spirit of your Corporation which shall runne vpon rocks and ruine as the ships on a stormie Sea whose Mariners haue cast away their Card. Your wisdomes know what Gods Wisedome is plentifull in teaching that declining in goodnesse for most part bringeth a declination in the outward estate whereof Salomon had wofull experience whose departing from Gods wayes lost him ten parts of his Kingdome at one clap The dying speech of Phineas his wife is memorable that when the Arke was taken from Israel The glory is departed from Israel Many things I might heere moue in but I spare both you and my selfe seeing I can weakly speake vnto you Onely now I will turne precepts into praiers that as the dew from Hermon and Mount Sion did distill on the valleyes round about them so may this Towne by your prudent gouernment bee a patterne of piety charity and sobriety to the whole Countrey about you And as this famous Towne for pleasant situation and rich commodities for prudent gouernment and ciuill state but especially for the plentifull meanes of knowledge and grace is as a light set vp in a Candlestick as a Tower on the top of an hill and as a Beacon to the whole Countrey so your godly care may be so much the more to walk worthy your great
hee immediatly prepared to goe into Macedonia being assured the Lord had called vs vnto them 2. Examine thy desires in the matter of them which is twofold 1. In respect of God the chiefe Good 2. In respect of the Word the meanes to it For the first An hypocrite may desire happinesse as Balaam for self-selfe-loue but properly desires not the loue of God for it selfe See therefore that thy desire be rather of reconciliation then saluation rather to glorifie God then be glorified of him esteeming the light of his countenance better then life it selfe This is a pure and holy desire after grace and fauour aboue all things For the second 1. Thou must desire not the Word so much as God in his Word seeke after the liuing God in his Ordinances loue him in the Word who there shewes he loued thee first Many professe loue to the Word who loue not God 2. Desire the Word of the Kingdome for the Kingdomes sake For an hypocrite may desire the Word of the Kingdome for feare of hell 3. Desire the whole Word An hypocrite may desire some part of it the promises affect and rauish him but the conditions are distastfull Gods indulgences and recompenses please him wonderfully but restraints and impositions are burdensome and tedious Therefore see thou desire the conditions as well as the promises and loue the worke of the Word as well as the wages yea if there were no wages So cannot he 3. Examine thy desires in the end of them thus 1. An hypocrite may desire the Word for science sake not for conscience to puffe himselfe vp not to humble himselfe for discourse not for direction If thou desirest the Word to learne selfe-deniall to yeeld conscionable obedience in all things and to take the constant direction of it as Israel by the pillars in all their iournies thou art beyond any hypocrite 2. Hypocrites may desire the Word to bee like the children of God in happinesse but not in sincere obedience to meet them at the end and be saued but not to ioyne with them in the meanes or if they doe ioyne in the meanes it is by starts and fits for most part and vnconstantly See thy desire be to keepe the way as well as the end of it though it be all strawed with crosses and be as desirous of the means as of the end Especially desire the Word as a constant light direction comfort and strength For such are the grones and desires of the Spirit An hypocrite likes Heauen well but not the way to Heauen 4. Examine thy desires in the companions and qualities of them One is sence of want They proceed from a bruised heart as in the Conuerts Acts 2.37 and the Iaylor chap. 16.30 True desires are the breathings of a broken heart Another vndiuided companion of them is the Word they alwaies set a man forward to the Word of the Apostles to be instructed by them as in the former examples whereas an hypocrite will comfort himselfe and rest satisfied without the Word in blinde vngrounded hopes A third is vehemencie and feruencie they must not bee light or slight desires but a vehement thirst as Samsons almost ready to die as the Hart chased pants for water an hunger that would breake stone walls and contemne fire and water euen the vtmost perils more eager then any worldling can desire siluer and gold Hypocrites haue desires but faint not so earnest within as they seeme to be A fourth is the good affections that attend it as an earnest desire to repent to reforme both the heart and life to abstaine from lusts to keepe a good conscience before God and man in all things A fifth is constancy as a thirsty man desires drink till his thirst be quenched as Hannahs for a child till she had one so is the Christians till Christ bee formed in him and then to be still knit neerer vnto him An hypocrite may desire by starts and moods as Pilate desires to know what is truth Ioh. 18. but stayed not to know it He desires the good things of the Kingdome but they are held at such a rate as deads his desires as the young man They are cooled and quenched before he attaines the thing he seemed so earnestly to desire Doe thou see that thy desire bee not satisfied before thou get the thing desired euen Christ and his merits The more true taste thou gettest the more earnestly thou wilt desire him no rate will be too deare all things will be drosse and dung in comparison of him The sixth or last is growth in desires and endeuours Spirituall life stayes not in beginnings but riseth to a great measure of liuelinesse as a graine of mustard-seed 2. Pet. 3.18 Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ. 2. Cor. 13.11 Be perfect desire perfection But an hypocrite faints in his desires the labour of vsing meanes is soone if not quite giuen ouer yet lessened and abated Get these desires of the Word thus qualified for the ground matter end and companions of them and then know to thy comfort that no Reprobate euer came so farre no bad ground attaines such desires II. Doe we heare that hypocrites who shall neuer be saued attaine a great measure of illumination and the knowledge of the mystery of Christ whereby they discerne and approue of the truth in Iesus Christ refuse and reprooue errours both in iudgement and practice and hauing escaped such as were wrapped in errours yet are entangled againe and ouercome whose latter end is worse than the beginning Then be carefull to try thy knowledge and illumination whether it be got beyond the illumination of hypocrites or no In foure particulars 1. In the matter of it thus 1. An hypocrite may know the story of Christs death and resurrection and the merits of them but neuer did any hypocrite know the vertue and power of his death and resurrection as the Apostle Paul desired Philip. 3.10 Obiect Why did he not know it and preach it before that time Answ. Yes he knew well the death and resurrection of Christ as also the vertue and power of them but he would feele in himselfe that power more and more standing in the death of sin and the life of righteousnesse This experimentall knowledge farre passeth the theorie and is the knowledge but of a few 2. An hypocrite may know in generall that Christ is a Redeemer and discourse excellently of the manner meanes and end and this swimmes in the braine But there is a particular knowledge with application to say with Iob I know my Redeemer liueth and Paul who gaue himselfe for me To this neuer Reprobate came If hee could speake it he knew not what he spoke he knowes and speakes onely in grosse Therefore see thy knowledge be distinct 3. An hypocrite may know Christ as God hath described him in the Scripture but not as he is made of God vnto vs wisedome
16.9 2. A pure and holy ioy is more in God himselfe and Iesus Christ than in all holy and heauenly things beside and in all other things for them Therefore the godly are said to make the Almighty himselfe their delight Iob 27.10 as the hypocrites doe not neither can doe It is a ioy of saluation but in the God of our saluation that hath couered vs with a robe of righteousnesse Esa 61.10 An hypocrite may delight in holy things but for nouelty or vaine-glory in vttering such knowledge as others haue not or selfe-loue or the like 3. Sound ioy is more in the time and things to come than for the present An hypocrites ioy is for the present and in the present it is sudden as the Text saith incontinently it receiues the Word with ioy and soone abates And in present things a conceit of a present good at least in appearance but in good things that are further off v.c. in Gods electiō or eternal life it reioiceth not so much because there is euer more sence than faith in it 3. Examine thy ioy in the measure and degree of it The ioy of the regenerate in holy things is the chiefe ioy Psalm 119.72 Thy Law is better vnto mee than thousands of gold And Psal. 137.6 If I preferre not Ierusalem to my chiefe ioy In hypocrites it neuer exceeds the ioy in the world the profits and pleasures and aduancements of the world doe more comfort and affect their hearts than the ioy of the Word and therefore they forsake the Gospell for them The wise Merchant sels all for the Pearle and goes away reioycing Math. 13.46 The Martyrs ioyed more in the Word than in riches honours liberty life or all the world 4. Examine thy ioy in the companions of it which are of two sorts First holy affections three in number 1. Feare and reuerence Sound ioy is neuer dis-ioyned from true feare of God Psal. 2.11 Reioyce before him with trembling Phi. 2.12 Worke out your saluation with feare and trembling 2. Loue of grace aboue all things Dauid neuer danced so as before the Arke because he loued Gods presence And Simeon was neuer so ioyfull as when hee had Christ in his armes because hee loued him 3. Sorrow to see the Word not kept Psa. 119.136 Mine eyes gush out with riuers of water because they keepe not thy Law And indeed sound ioy comes out of sound sorrow for sin Ioh. 16.19 Ye shall sorrow the world shall reioyce but your sorrow shall be turned into ioy Lots righteous soule was vexed with the vncleane conuersation of the Sodomites 2. Pet. 2.7 Secondly there are certaine holy graces attending it 1. Humility It issues from true humiliation in the sence of his owne infirmity The ioy of an hypocrite is proud because he sees not sinne or not all sinne and promiseth and assureth that to it selfe which the Word doth not 2. Regeneration The ioy of an hypocrite is a ioy of illumination not of regeneration as a man reioyceth in the sight and light of the Sunne but not in the sence of comfortable heate quickening and reuiuing by it The one reioyceth to heare of a Pearle the other to haue it 3. Faith attends the ioy of the regenerate therfore it is called the ioy of faith The hypocrites ioy is a ioy of affection not of faith He reioyceth to conceiue of rare nouelties and deepe mysteries but not as deeply rooted in himselfe 4. Righteousnesse attends it An hypocrites ioy is alwayes ioyned with the raigne and delight of some sinne See thy ioy take righteousnesse for his companion and dis-ioyne not them whom the holy Ghost hath ioyned Rom. 14.17 Know if the loue of one sin raigne if thy ioy marre not the taste of carnall ioyes if it thrust not downe the rule of the loue of the world yea if it imbitter not the rellish of earthly delights thy ioy is vnsound 5. The last grace is Constancy and continuance it is an euerlasting consolation 2. Thes. 2.16 And of this ioy Christ hath said You shall reioyce and your ioy shall none take from you Ioh. 16.22 Yea this ioy increaseth according to the increase of grace and continuance of meanes It holds in aduersity in persecution in life in death and is most vnspeakable and glorious in heauen But the ioy of hypocrites is a blaze at first and soone out it is suddenly and irrecouerably lost a little persecution or triall turnes all into sorrow and heauinesse but at their death and afterward not a sparke remaines So as Iob said truly The ioy of the hypocrite is but for a moment If thou finde that thy ioy is thus qualified no hypocrite falling from his ioy need dismay thee thou art beyond his farthest reach Thou hast drunke of the Well of consolation and shalt neuer thirst againe The stranger neuer enters into this ioy IV. Hearest thou from the Text that a wicked man may grow vp and rise vp to a farre degree of profession and reformation yea that an hypocrite may outwardly performe all that true Christians can doe and leade his life so seemly so innocently as how euer he shall neuer come to heauen by it yet his paines shall bee lesse in hell where it shall bee easier for some than for others Hearest thou this Then what great need is there that euery one of vs who would not at length proue reprobate ground should try our growth in our profession and standing not contenting our selues with a forme of godlinesse which now goes for good Christianity denying the power of it 1. Examine thy growth from what roote it is two wayes First an hypocrite springs from no root but onely the old Adam and whatsoeuer is of flesh saith Christ is flesh But sound growth in profession or reformation is from a new creation a tree of righteousnesse the planting of the Lord transplanted out of the old stock of old Adam and new rooted into the second Adam by spirituall regeneration and from this Root all acceptable growth riseth according to our Sauiours speech First make the tree good c. Secondly all the growth of an hypocrite is from an heart which at best restraineth some euill but neuer changed vnto good But sound growth is from an heart renewed a soule mortified a pure heart and good conscience 1. Tim. 1.5 2. Examine thy selfe in what fruits thou growest The best fruit of an hypocrite is in externall things and by externall things As first by education he may grow in ciuility and in morall vertue which many thinke Religion enough This was the righteousnes of the Heathens of the Scribes and Pharises Secondly by the meanes of saluation he may grow to an externall holinesse v. c. hee may grow in knowledge in hopes and confidence in zeale in many outward seemly duties and rest in these or in some other things in stead of some inward graces which would better bestead him But a sound
degrees For the word implieth the manner of their falling Neither is it a falling away in part or for a time as the Disciples and Peter in the time of Christs Passion but a finall falling away from all their graces from which falls is no returne or rising And therefore neither is this a withering of persons truly iustified or a fall from iustifying faith which they neuer had as Papists would haue vs beleeue but from temporary faith of hypocrites as the Text is most plaine calling them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Here consider foure things 1. How men wither away in grace 2. The danger of withering 3. Notes of a man withering 4. The Vse and Application of all For answere to the first Men euen great Professors in the Church wither foure wayes 1. In iudgement 2. In affection 3. In practice 4. In the vse of the meanes In Iudgement when they fall off the grounds of sincerity and truth whereof they were once perswaded as many who decline and for by-respects are carryed from the truth which they once embraced such as Demas who forsooke the truth to imbrace the present world Thus did the Galatians wither and by little and little fell to another Gospell at first in part and through weaknesse afterward in whole and by obstinacy Such were Hymenaeus and Philetus who once held the truth concerning the doctrine of Resurrection but in short time erred concerning the faith saying that the Resurrection was already past and destroyed the faith of many 2. Tim. 2.18 As this was prophecyed of these latter ages so our eyes haue seene the same abundantly verified in numbers who in these later times haue departed from the faith and giuen heed to spirits of errours and doctrines of diuels 1. Tim. 4.1 I will not speak of such learned men as in Queene Maries dayes fell from the truth of the Gospell which themselues had professed and defended such as Bonner Gardiner c. But numbers now in this Light are declined and darkened in comparison of their owne light As for example 1. Our Doctrine a long time hath been that our Iustification is by faith onely without workes naturall morall yea or of grace according to the Scripture Rom. 3.28 But how haue many withered in this maine Article who now will haue workes dipt in the blood of Christ come into the matter of Iustification so that Christ is but halfe a Iesus halfe a Sauiour 2. The common iudgement was that Gods Election and Reprobation are absolute depending onely vpon Gods will and pleasure according to the Scripture Ephes. 1.4 5. But how generally are men withered and gone from this truth as if their wits were now to be refined by Arminius concluding them to be conditionall depending vpon mans willing or nilling to receiue the grace of God How doth the Doctrine of vniuersall Redemption and grace creepe abroad euery-where as a Gangrene teaching that effectuall and sufficient grace is offered to all and euery one by which they may repent and beleeue if they will 3. The receiued truth was wont to bee that the Pope is that Antichrist and Rome Babylon as the Iesuites themselues confesse and therefore we haue done well to separate from them How many are withered from this truth and are loth the Pope should bee that notorious Antichrist but the Turke rather who neuer yet sate in the Temple of God and haue deuised a new Rome or Sea for him onely discouered by Popish Geographers 4. The common iudgement heretofore was that Christ is present in the Supper sacramentally to the faith of the Receiuer But now many are withered and now Christ must be present there after a manner not to be questioned or disputed 5. The common iudgement of Protestant Diuines was that our Religion differed from Popery in substantiall and essentiall poynts But many are gone from that and now we differ but in circumstances and there needs but a small modification in most poynts betweene vs An English yea or a Popish Cassander might bring vs together though heauen and earth shall come as soone together as these two Religions agree in the fundamentals Time would faile to speake of the generall withering in iudgement in the doctrine concerning the strict obseruation of the Sabbath which some thinke alterable and obseruable at the will and pleasure of the Christian Prince though it were written by Gods owne finger in Tables of stone as no alterable Law was So concerning Christs locall descending into hell in his soule Concerning the restoring of Auricular confession with separating some abuses onely in the manner Concerning the needlesnesse of so much preaching as if the honour of the Ministery were to thrust downe the exercise of it And lastly concerning a mans falling wholly and finally from Grace who is truly iustified and sanctified Thus are numbers of men tost with the waues of contrary doctrines to whom the truth is yea and nay now this now that according to their occasions now they are resolued now vnresolued 2. Men wither in affection falling from their first loue from the heate and zeale for God and goodnesse which once they had As old men that are withering grow cold and chilly abated of their heat and vigor which they had in their state strength How haue many who seemed once feruent in spirit and most forward maintainers of Religion now cooled their affection and come to a state of indifferency if not of neutrality framed themselues to such a moderation as will iust serue the scantling of the time the Law their owne profit preferment and reputation Yea some that are fearefully gone from their first loue commend their owne wisedome in it they were they say forward and foolish in the heate of youth to speake against this or that but now they see their errour and admire their present stayednesse and the golden meane which they haue attained till all affection to goodnesse bee expiring and gasping Some that formerly were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 burnt in spirit against superstition profanenesse Othes Sabbath-breaking c. are growne key-cold the sway of times hath been as water cast vpon the coales of their affections or in some hath beene as bellowes to blow vp an anguish and distempered heate for the contrary Some that haue giuen the right hand of fellowship to godly brethren and haue taken them into their bosome for the Image of God and his graces can now looke asquint on them and dis-affect them as men too farre on the right hand whereas they being in the same way they were these be gone not further from them than from themselues 3. Great Professors wither in practice as the Galatians chapter 5. verse 7. did runne well but something letted them and cast them backe Haue not many made themselues trespassers in destroying what they seemed to haue builded How haue many begunne in the spirit but end in the flesh who hauing escaped the filthinesse of the
sand and the fall is great how needfull therefore is it for vs to bee fully settled and rooted in our grounds of Religion Quest. How shall I know I am thus rooted in the Doctrine of faith Answ. By a spirit of discerning which enlightens the minde and supplies euen to simple ones a sharp insight and cleernesse of iudgement through vse of the Word in all needfull matters of saluation For faith brings in the Spirit which leads into all truth and the eye-salue still cleering the sight more and more 2. By building our hearts on this foundation and that is by beleeuing it for thus it is a foundation not in it selfe onely but vnto vs when by faith we are coupled and knit vnto it 3. By growing vp on that foundation and yeelding obedience vnto it This note our Sauiour giues Math. 7.24 He that heareth these words and doth the same is a wise builder that layes his house on a Rocke c. Secondly looke well to thy rooting in the grace or gift of faith Content not thy selfe with any thing but onely that faith which is called vnfained 1. Tim. 1.5 and the faith of the Elect Tit. 1.2 This is the faith by which the iust shall liue Hab. 2.4 Quest. What is the rooting in the grace of faith Answ. It is a sound worke of Gods Spirit whereby the heart attaines a true assurance and perswasion of remission of sinnes and the fauour of God in Christ. A worke of the Spirit because no man is borne a Beleeuer but new borne A sound worke for true faith is no empty or windy thing but a subsistence and ground without hollownesse and deceit as all the speciall workes of Gods Spirit in the hearts of the Elect are A true assurance and perswasion because many are deceiued by a temporary faith by blind hopes of mercy at the last by colours either of ciuill honesty or religious performances are misse-led with the example of such as they admire for wisdome place or power and mistake a conceit for faith that because they be not so ill as they were wont to be they be as good as they need be But this man out of good grounds riseth to good assurance Quest. How may I know my selfe soundly rooted in the gift of faith Answ. By fiue notable effects of it 1. Sound affection to Iesus Christ prizing him aboue all the world and counting all but dung in comparison in so much as our life is not deare vnto vs but as Paul wee dare dye for him And this affection is alway ioyned with affiance in Christ or holding fast our assurance by him For as God will still owne his people euen in the furnace in the deepest trouble so must they owne him Zech. 13. vlt. yea when Christ may seeme to withdraw and neglect them as the woman of Canaan Abraham rested in the naked promise and beleeued aboue hope Rom. 4. so must we not hasting to euill meanes in the want of good Esa. 28.16 He that beleeueth shall not make haste 2. If it purge and renue the heart from all kinde of sinnes especially secret and inward Till faith come the heart is full of raigning guile and deceitfulnesse and hollownesse cannot hold out but faith purifieth and garnisheth the heart as a Temple So faith and inward purity grow together 3. If it keepe the heart humble and hungring For it is a light in the bowels causing a man daily to see his sinne more cleerly and to seeke pardon for it in Christ casting it out daily by confession and godly sorrow and still it hungers after righteousnesse insatiably 4. If it be ioyned with good conscience These two goe vndiuided Now a good conscience being perswaded of Gods loue in Christ first excuseth the man that his sinnes are pardoned and then in way of thankfulnes hath respect to all the Commandements and endeuoureth obedience to all Also it hateth feareth and auoideth all sinne because it offendeth God 5. If it be a shield enabling thee to withstand the tentations of Satan and such as runne with thy owne naturall inclinations now it is well grounded That faith which shall stoutly withstand all sinne in time of prosperity shall preuaile mightily against all troubles in time of triall But if thy faith giue thee vp to bee led away to vanity or any ordinary preuailing sinne now in the time of peace suspect it trust it not for time of triall Such as fall from the Religion of God when times of change come being led away either by the seduction of deceiuers or persecution of Tyrants are such as shall finde by examination that the faith they pretended was neuer of power against some knowne sinne and so was neuer strongly rooted in Christ. This faith thus qualified is strongly rooted Cast it into the fire it will come forth purer than gold 1. Pet. 1.7 And when the best faith of hypocrites forsaken of carnall helps on which it stayed it selfe shall proue drosse and be consumed this faith shall set the Christian on a rocke safe in the middest of stormes and waues of aduersity Thirdly looke to thy rooting in the profession and holding forth of thy faith For faith well rooted will breake forth in confession profession and defence of Gods truth 2. Cor. 4.13 I beleeued and therefore I spake and Act. 4.20 We cannot chuse but speake say the Apostles Quest. How may I know I am soundly rooted in the profession of faith Answ. 1. If policy or feare hinder thee not from the profession of the truth by day Many cast themselues into the night with Nicodemus as if it were a worke of darknesse to professe the light Common faith holds it no wisedome to be so forward pulls in the tender horne if any scornes losses or oppositions be abroad Carnall reason swayes against it Master pitty thy selfe it shall not bee so vnto thee Carnall friends easily perswade a man not to bee too busie The feare of a chaine or the wrath of superiours quite blast it 2. If by these cold and pinching times thou abate not thy affection or loue to God his Word and his children 3. If thou gettest courage yea and aduantage by opposition as a strong tree is stronglier rooted for shaking winds Whereof we haue an example Ierem. 36.32 When the profane King had burnt the Booke Ieremiah caused the same to be written againe with many moe words The more euill men oppose holy Doctrine concerning holy life and the worship of God for matter manner time c. the more godly men will iustifie and maintaine it This confession is an acceptable thing to Iesus Christ and honourable and Christ lookes for it Math. 9.28 saying to the two blind men Doe you beleeue that I can doe it Not that hee was ignorant of their faith but for them that were present he would haue them confesse him plainly shewing that it is not enough to beleeue with the heart but confession
and cast the truth to the ground Then the Text addeth Thus shall he doe and prosper Loe Antiochus who is mad furious against the Church hath prosperous successe Doth this agree with Bellarmine And by this proposition Cain should haue beene the true Church not Abel whom he slew and Ismael of whom were twelue Dukes Gen. 25.16 not Isaac whom hee scoffed and persecuted My Lord Esau that hath foure hundred men at his heeles Gen. 33.1 and not Iacob who dares not looke his Lord in the face nor come neere him till he had bowed seuen times What outward prosperity had the Church in AEgypt in Babylon in the ten Persecutions for 300. yeeres together before Constantine Or how stands that assertion with our Sauiours prediction that true Christians should be appointed as sheepe for the slaughter Yea with our Sauiours condition who was the Head of the Church to whom the members are conformable He was borne in an obscure place liued despised among his owne a man of such sorrowes as neuer was any sorrow like his his pouerty such as he had not water to put in his head not a cottage to put his head in his death painefull shamefull accursed And such is ordinarily the afflicted and despised estate of his Church on earth Vse 2. Dreame not of a Religion pleasant to flesh if we will be truly religious for this is to deceiue our selues but make account of hatred and trouble in the world if thou meanest to keepe the Word For the Church being seated in the world which is the Kingdome of Satan it cannot be other then a very AEgypt or Edom to the Israel of God where that hellish Pharaoh raiseth all his power to pursue vs into the red Sea of terrors temptations and a thousand deadly dangers on euery side if we indeed set forth to Canaan Let vs therefore wisely cast our costs and recken our charges and weigh whether wee can contentedly suffer so much losse for the Word as it may cost vs. Vse 3. This shews vs the true cause why the world hates and persecutes godly men It will be ready to tell you they are pestilent fellowes and as seditious as Paul was as great enemies to Cesar as Christ was no good subiects as factious and schismaticall as Micah who will not speake as the 400. false Prophets The wicked of the world clamor against them as euill doers for so did they against their Head If he were not an euill doer we would not haue brought him to thee And what are they but a packe of dissemblers and hypocrites and neuer a good of them all But what Can the world that lieth in wickednesse hate and prosecute wickednesse indeed Why then doth she not hunt out open and outragious euils in any other sort of men Or doth she not loue her louers and reward most bountifully most prodigious euill men But if we will beleeue our Lord who was best acquainted with the worlds hatred he tels vs here that persecution is raised against them for the Words sake and that is the proper cause whatsoeuer other colourable cause be pretended for 1. The Word hath brought them to Christ whom they hate and therefore his members 2. The Word hath called them out of the world which loues onely her owne and hates them Iohn 15.19 3. The Word hath freed them from the conformitie and fashions of the world that now they cannot runne into the same excesse of riot therefore it speakes euill of them 1. Pet. 4.4 Contrary courses cause contrary affections 4. The wicked Cains of this World see their their owne workes euill and theirs to be good and therefore hate them 1. Iohn 3.12 The thing then which is hated and persecuted in good men is goodnesse the Name of Christ the Word of God soundly held out and stucke vnto And this must be so farre from discouraging good men whether Preachers or Professors who are most extremely hated as they must rather suspect themselues that their hearts are not sound or their courses not sincere when all men speake well of them Sound profession and persecution are inseparable and Luke 6.26 Woe to you when all speake well of you Vse 4. Not to condemne a Religion or refuse a Doctrine because it is persecuted and gaine said by many and by Great ones for this is a marke of true Religion and the condition of the Word of Christ Persecution saith our text comes because of the Word So as neither is that Religion which is so plausible to the world to be therefore embraced nor that which the world hates to be refused multitude being as false a note of the Church as the former externall prosperity Straite is the way that leads vnto life and few there be that finde it Therefore looke not on the blacknesse of the Church though the Sunne looke on her Cant. 1.5 for within she is comely Vse 5. To comfort those that are persecuted for the Word and well-doing First that the cause is good which the world persecutes so eagerly 1. Pet. 4.14 If ye be railed on for the Name of Christ blessed are ye for the Spirit of glory and of God resteth on you and is glorified by you Secondly behold Christ a partner and companion in thy suffering In all thy troubles he is troubled Hence it is called the reproch of Christ. Thou helpest Christ to beare his Crosse and he helpes thee Col. 1.24 I fulfill the sufferings of Christ. And conformity with him in the Crosse brings conformity in the Crowne If we suffer with him we shall also raigne with him Thirdly this fire of persecution may seeme to burne thee vp but shall not consume thee but onely purge and perfect thee Euery Christian resembles the bush which burned with fire but consumed not Exod. 2.3 Nay waite with faith and patience and according to Moses his prayer for Ioseph The good will of him that dwelt in the bush shall come on thy head Deut. 33.16 So much of the first Doctrine I proceed to the second namely that When persecution for the Word commeth many glorious Professors who ioy in it in the time of peace renounce and forsake it so the Text hath it In the time of tentation they goe away and Matthew They are offended immediately that is euen those Hearers which readily attended ioyfully receiued willingly beleeued and hopefully sprang vp these now goe away And whence goe they Answ. 1. From their affection and loue of the Word in the heart the root within is dried vp with this heat of the Sun 2. From their profession and confession of mouth their leafe also falleth 3. From externall reformation many of them losing their greennesse and apparantly withering and falling to earthlinesse or profanenesse and some to distaste the good way knowne 4. From their fellowship and communion of Saints for as they were neuer knit by faith vnto the Head so were they neuer by loue to the
man soone espyed and if you come once to be noted you may be no small loser by it So rich men wil say Your doctrine is good and I would the times would beare it and wee might bee allowed to follow it but I haue many eyes vpon me c. 2. They hinder the practice and obedience of the Word as we shall see in some instances 1. The Word perswades to humility and lowe conceit of our selues But riches doe swell vp the heart with lothsome pride and make a man thinke of himselfe so much better than of another as he hath gotten wealth perhaps by wicked meanes aboue others wheras wealth well gotten makes no man better but ill gotten farre worse How contumeliously did Nabal vse Dauid 1. Sam. 25 Because hee was wealthy he was proud and haughty 2. Gods Word perswades to trust and confidence in God who is our life and the length of our dayes onely of power to doe vs good But wealth easily perswades the heart to make gold the hope Holy Iob disclaimes this practice of a wicked man Chap. 31.24 If I said to the wedge of gold Thou art my confidence If I reioyced because my substance was great or because my hand had gotten much c. it had been iniquity for I had denyed God aboue The rich mans riches is his strong Tower in his conceit hee thinkes himselfe well-walled and intrenched within his wealth and rests vnder the shadow of the wing of his wealth which hee is not content to haue vnlesse it haue him his heart and trust 3. Gods Word perswades to workes of charity and mercy and to be rich in good workes But loue of riches choketh this Word shuts vp the bowels of compassion against his brother shrinkes vp the hand that should open and stretch it selfe to the necessity of the Saints suffers not to honour God with our riches nor to prouide for our selues any other wealth but that in earth Thus the miserable man hath riches while he liues and when he dies they are goods neuer doe good before 4. Gods Word teacheth to leaue our riches for Christ and that naked Christ is wealth enough But loue of the world chokes that Word and makes vs for an handfull of the world to forsake Christ and the holy profession as we see in the young man who went away heauily because hee had great possessions Iudas must haue thirty pieces more than hee could gaine by his Master The like of Demas 5. Gods Word teacheth to restore ill-gotten goods as by vsury deceit oppression lies c. Zacheus so soone as he was conuerted restored foure-fold But the loue of the world choketh this Word and hindreth obedience worldly men part with vnlawfull profits as with their ioynts nay will rather part with their soules 6. Gods Word teacheth that euery man should maintaine himselfe and his family in a lawfull and honest course of life and not to esteeme that penny his for which he may not praise God as the giuer But this Word is choked in a number both Ministers of iustice and Ministers of the Gospell and Trades-men that receiue a great deale of wealth from the diuell and not from God in a number of vnconscionable courses And especially they that liue by wicked and vnlawful Trades Dicing-houses filthy houses Play-houses and such places of idle and hellish resort which one not vnfitly calls The diuels house of Office And such Victuallers Vintners and Ale-sellers as suffer brutish creatures to wash away their reason and discretion so they may licke away their money as if it were not a foule sinne to liue on the foule sinnes of others Thus riches choke the obedience of the Word and suffer not a man to serue God or obey his Word further than serues his owne commodity Vse 1. Take notice of that vanity with Salomon Eccles. 5.13 who obserued riches reserued to the hurt of the owners Men haue giuen them the name of goods as if there were no danger in them or euill to the possessor by them who yet we see may easily dispossesse himselfe of Christ and saluation by them How many haue we seene while they were in lowe estate in the world humble gentle meeke forward and zealous who now in prosperity are growne fat proud disdainfull and slothfull in spirituall things How many in their lowe estate were diligent Hearers profitable conferrers of the Word carefull obseruers in sanctifying the Sabbath fruitfull instructers of their families But now the world is come in vpon them and the businesse of it thrusts in and the poore man that cannot serue two Masters at once is gone backe and growne lazie yea and at length lothing that good Word the sweetnesse of which he hath tasted and decreased in the Spirit as fast as he increased in the flesh As the Moone neuer suffers Eclypse but in the full So these in their fulnesse suffer the earth to come betweene them and their Sunne who in their wane were safe enough Heere for our further instruction we will consider two things 1. The Markes of a man in whom the world choketh the Word 2. The Remedies I. The Markes are fiue 1. In his whole desires hee is more earnest after goods than after grace Psalm 4.6 Who will shew vs any good This is the speech of many But a few say Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs. The blessing of Esau the fat of the earth most men desire most But the blessed dewes of heauen and sauing grace in the meanes are as refuse wares not asked after Tell a man of a good bargaine or a good purchase he will giue you both his eares he will bestirre himselfe and his onely feare is to bee preuented Tell him of the bargaine of heauen and of the purchase of that inheritance among the sanctified yea saith he God send vs that inheritance aboue all but if God send it not he will neither bee at paines nor cost for it If God should put many of vs to our choyce whether we would haue wisdome or wealth or long life or power ouer enemies wee would scarce with Salomon chuse wisedome in the first place but would either haue wisedome vvith an inheritance or an inheritance vvithout vvisedome 2. His speeches vvill bevvray him in vvhom the vvorld choketh the Word For as he chiefly sauours the things of the vvorld and affects them so out of the abundance of the heart his tongue runnes chiefly on them 1. Ioh. 4.5 They are of the world therefore speake they of the world Follovv this man from a Sermon you shall marke that presently being out of the Church he falls into discourse of vvorldly matters and earthly things as if the Word heard vvere not vvorth speaking of his earthly heart is carried naturally to his center Follovv him from a Play or from the Market you shall heare him tell the vvhole story accurately and articulately from poynt to poynt or discourse as he comes
Christ is sanctified and seasoned in the shame of Christ for thee 6. He that is ashamed of Christ while he was in his lowest abasement Christ will be ashamed of him in his glory And besides thou that oughtest not to be ashamed of him in his abasement darest thou now in his glory and aduancement 4. Meditate much and often on the comforts of another life and that Christ makes it a signe of blessednesse when wee suffer persecution for well-doing and Math. 5.12 Reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen euen so great as the afflictions of this present life are not worthy the glory that shal be reuealed 5. Accustome thy selfe to conquer thy lusts as 1. ignorance which hinders from seeing the excellency of the Gospell 2. pride lest the disgraces of Religion cast thee off as we see in men vnmortified 3. passion and head-strength of naturall corruption which makes men impotent and impatient see Heb. 12.1 4. earthly and couetous desires that thou maiest still be easily weaned from the world the desire and vse of it 6. Labour for the helpes of patience as 1. sound iudgement in the truth allow it a deepe rooting 2. sound faith which ministers boldnesse Psalm 116. I beleeued therefore I spake 3. true hatred of sinne to indure any sorrow rather than sinne and admit the greatest sorrow rather than commit the least sinne So much of the first Doctrine The second is this The blessing of the fruitfull Christian is because hee brings forth fruit with patience hee shall perseuere vnto the end Or Truth of grace is blessed with continuance Wherein this good ground is distinguished from all the three former whose best fruits at last came to nothing Esa. 40.31 They that waite on the Lord shall renew their strength as the Eagle they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not faint Psalm 112.6 The righteous shall neuer be moued Hence the Scripture compares the faithful to trees planted by riuers of water whose moysture being indeficient their leaues fall not off which liuing Water is Christ apprehended by faith of which whosoeuer once drinketh he neuer thirsteth more because there is in him a Fountaine springing vp to eternall life Ioh. 4.41 This Doctrine being both of old and of late opposed we must 1. open the nature of perseuerance which the Aduersaries at this day would obscure and 2. confirme and prooue it by arguments which they would elude The former by a short description of it Perseuerance is a singular or speciall gift of God by which the sauing grace of Christ is so preserued in the heart of the true Beleeuer as that he neither wholly nor finally falls from it but abides vnchangeable in that estate of grace It is a speciall gift of God Ephes. 3.14 16. I bow my knees vnto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ that ye might be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man Phil. 1.6 He that hath begun the good worke will performe it vntill the Day of Christ. Heb. 12.2 He is the author and finisher of our faith Where note the errour of Arminians who denie perseuerance to bee truly and properly called the gift of God but the sole action of man and the proper cause of it the will of man for so they write Voluntas proxima sola est perseuerationis causa physica as if the will doth not therefore perseuere because God maketh it so to doe who is the God of all grace 1. Pet. 5.10 and worketh in vs both to will and to doe Phil. 2.13 By which the sauing grace of Christ is preserued in the heart of the true Beleeuer Where are three things considerable 1. The obiect sauing grace 2. The subiect a true Beleeuer 3. The meanes of perseuerance preseruation of grace 1. The obiect of perseuerance is the sauing grace of Christ for the question is not of seeming graces or common graces as illumination externall reformation temporary faith and the like but of true and sauing faith loue holinesse fruits of election and of effectuall vocation wrought by the Spirit not restraining but renewing Arminians denie that Gods Election is any cause or foundation of perseuerance yea or of calling to saluation they denie any such principle of heauenly life by effectuall vocation they denie that there is any substantiall difference betweene the faith holinesse righteousnesse of them that shall be saued and that temporary which damned Apostates had but onely induration and continuance Quite contrary to the Scripture which tells vs of semen manens 1. Ioh. 3.8 9. seed remaining in vs of an ingraffed word Iam. 1.21 of an oyntment which abideth 1. Ioh. 2.21 of an immortall seed 1. Pet. 1.23 and a fountaine of water springing to eternall life Ioh. 4.14 2. The subiect of perseuerance is the true Beleeuer one truly iustified and sanctified for looke what grace soeuer an hypocrite hath he may and shall lose it totally and finally We doubt not but hypocrites may fall from the whole profession of faith and afterward persecute it as Iulian But the question is of true Beleeuers and all the examples of hypocrites falling away touch not the question 3. The meanes of perseuerance is that sauing grace is preserued in the heart of the true Beleeuer Wee denie not but grace in respect of it selfe as in Adam and in respect of the subiect the Elect is subiect to change and may as easily be quite shaken out of the heart as the grace of creation out of Adams But this sauing grace is preserued not by the Beleeuer himselfe by his owne watch and care though not without it but partly by the priuiledge of spirituall life flowing from Christ who is risen from death and dieth no more partly by the promise of God who is faithfull in his whole couenant Ierem. 32.40 partly by the protection ayde and custody of God whose power preserueth his to saluation 1. Pet. 1.5 partly by Christs intercession and prayer and partly by meanes appointed to preserue that sparke of heauenly life the Word Ministery prayer exhortation c. For these are certaine rules 1. That neither the promise of perseuerance on Gods part nor the assurance of it on mans doe hinder the meanes or make exhortation and prayers vnfruitfull as Arminians teach vs but rather imply and include them Luk. 22.46 Christ had told Peter hee had prayed his faith should not faile but yet exhorts him withall to watch and pray who dare say it was idle though Peter might be certaine of perseuerance Marke the same argumentation in 1. Ioh. 2.27 28. 2. Conditions hinder not the certainty of the promise For the Lord will vphold them to all conditions requisite Hee that makes them perseuere to the end makes them perseuere in the meanes 3. Conditions hinder not the absolute both promise and performance For the same thing may be both absolutely promised because it shall certainly be accomplished and with