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A50480 En oligo christianos, the almost Christian discovered, or, The false-professor tried and cast being the substance of seven sermons, first preached at Sepulchres, London, 1661, and now at the inportunity of friends made publick / by Matthew Meade. Mead, Matthew, 1630?-1699. 1662 (1662) Wing M1546; ESTC R9895 121,691 343

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may attain to an outward sanctification and yet for want of the inward be no better then almost a Christian 20. And so I shall end this long pursuit of the almost Christian in his progress Heaven-ward with this one general conclusion A man may do all as to external duties and worship that a true Christian can and when he hath done all be but almost a Christian You must know all the Commands of God have an intra and an extra there is as may say the body and the soul of the command And accordingly there is an internal and an external worship of God Now the internal acts of worshipping of God are to love God to fear God to delight in God to trust in God c. The external acts of Worshipping God are by praying teaching hearing c. Now there is a vast difference between these internal and external acts of Worship and indeed such a difference there is that they distinguish the altogether from the almost Christian The sincere beleiver from the unsound professor and indeed in this very thing the main difference between them doth lie 1. Internal acts of Worship are good propter fieri the goodness doth adhere intrinsecally to the thing done a man cannot love God nor fear God but it will be imputed to him for a gracious act and a great part of his Holiness But now external acts of Worship are not denominated good so much from the matter done propter fieri as from the manner of doing them a man cannot sin in loving and delighting in God but he may sin in praying and hearing c. for want of a due manner 2. Internal acts of worship put a goodness into external it is our faith our love our fear of God that makes our duties good 3. They better the heart and greaten the degrees of a mans holiness external duties do not always do this a man may pray and yet his heart never the holier he may hear the word and yet his heart never the softer but now the more a man fears God the wiser he is Prov. 1.7 the more a man loves God the holier he is love is the perfection of holiness we shall never be perfect in holiness till we come to be perfect in love 4. There is such an excellency in this internal worship that he who mixes it with his external duties is a true Christian when he doth least but without this mixture he is but almost a Christian that doth most Internal acts of Worship joyned with outward sanctifie them and make them accepted of God though few external acts of Worship without inward make them abhorred of God though they be never so many So that though the almost Christian may do all those duties in Hypocrise which a true Christian doth in sincerity nay though in doing external duties he may out-do the true Christian as the comet makes a greater blaze then the true Stars if Eliah fast and mourn Baals Priests will cut their flesh Yet he cannot do those internal duties that the meanest true Christian can The almost Christian can pray but he cannot love God he can teach or hear c. but he cannot take delight in God Mark Job's query concerning the Hypocrite Iob 27.10 This is Christianorum pro pria virtus will he delight himself in the Almighty He will pray to the Almighty but will he delight himself in the Almighty will he take pleasure in God Ah no! he will not he cannot Delight in God arise from a suitableness between the faculty and the object now none more unsuitable then God and a carnal heart Delight arises from the having what we desire Haec prrpris est delectationis materia si cum habeas quae desideraveris defideratis perfruaris Pined in Loc. and from enjoying what we have how then can he delight in God that neither enjoyeth nor hath nor truely desireth God Delight in God is one of the highest exercises of grace and therefore how can he delight in God that hath no grace Why then should any Saint of God be discouraged when he hears how far the almost Christian may go in the way to Heaven when as he that is the weakest true beleiver that hath the least true grace goes farther then he for he beleives in and loves God Should the almost Christian do less as to matter of external duties yet if he had but the least true faith the least sincerity of love to Christ he would surely be saved and should the true Christian do ten times more duties then he doth yet had he not faith in Christ and love to Christ he would surely be rejected Oh therefore let not any weak beleiver be discouraged though Hypocrites may out-do them and go beyond them in duty for all their duties are done in Hypocrisie but your faith and love to God in duties is a proof of your sincerity I do not speak this to discourage any soul in the doing of duties or to beat down outward performances but to rectifie the soul in the doing of them 1 Cor. 12 31. As the Apostle saith covet earnestly the best gifts but yet I shew unto you a more excellent way so I say covet the best gifts cover to be much in duties much in prayer much in hearing c. But yet I shew you a more excellent way and that is the way of faith and love pray much but then beleive much too Hear much read much but then love God much too Delight in the Word and Ordinances of God much but then delight in the God of Ordinances more And when you are most in duties as to your use of them Oh then be sure to be above duties as to your resting and dependance upon them Would you be Christians indeed altogether Christians oh then be much in the use and exercise of ordinances but be much more in faith and dependance upon Christ and his Righteousness when your obedience is most to the command then let your faith be most upon the promise The professor rests in his duties and so is but almost a Christian but you must be sure to rest upon the Lord Christ this is the way to be altogether Christians for if ye beleive then are ye Abrahams seed and heirs according to the promise And thus I have answered the first query to wit how far may a man go in the way to Heaven and yet be but almost a Christian 1. He may have much knowledge 2. He may have great gifts 3. He may have a high profession 4. He may do much against sin 5. He may desire grace 6. He may tremble at the Word 7. He may delight in the Word 8. He may be a Member of the Church of Christ 9. He may have great hopes of Heaven 10. He may be under great and visible changes 11. He may be very zealous in the matters of Religion 12. He may be much in prayer 13. He may suffer for Christ 14. He
ΕΝ ΟΛΙΓΩ ΧΡΙΣΤΙΑΝΟΣ THE Almost Christian DISCOVERED OR The False-Professor Tried and Cast Being the substance of Seven SERMONS first preached at Sepulchres London 1661. and now at the inportunity of friends made publick By MATTHEW MEADE Luk 16.14 And the Pharisees who were covetous ' heard all these things and they derided him Vers 15. And Jesus said unto them ye are they which justifie your selves before men but God knoweth your hearts For that which is highly esteemed amongst men is abomination in the sight of God London Printed for Tho. Parkhurst at the three Crowns in the lower end of Cheapside over-against the great Conduit 1662. To the Congregation at Sepulchres that were the Auditors of these Sermons Grace and Peace be multiplyed Beloved WHat the meaning of that providence was that called me to the occupation of my Talent amongst you this Summer will be best read and understood by the effects of it upon your own souls The kindly increase of grace and holiness in heart and life can onely prove it to have been in mercy where this is not the fruit of the word there it becomes a judgement The word travels with life or death salvation or damnation bringeth forth one or other in every soul that hears it I would not for a world were it in my power to nake the choice that my labours which were meant designed for the promotion of your immortal souls to the glory of the other World in a present persuance of the things of your peace should be found to have been a Ministration of Death and Condemnation in the great day of Iesus Christ Yet this the Lord knoweth is the too common effect of the most plain and powerful Ezek. 47.11 Preaching of the Gospel The waters of the Sanctuary do not always heal where they come for there are mirie and marish places that shall be given to salt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is elsewhere in Scripture rendered barrenness Ps 107.34 he turneth a faithful land 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into barrenness so that the judgement denounced upon these miry and marish places is that the curse of barrenness shall rest upon them notwithstanding the waters of the Sanctuary over-flow them Jude 12. It is sad but certain that the Gospel inflicteth a death of its own as well as the Law or else how are those trees in Jude said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 twice dead plucked up by the roots Yea that which in it self is the greatest mercy through the interposition Rom. 5.8 of mens lusts and the efficacy of this cursed sin of unbelief turneth to the greatest judgement as the richest and most generous Wine makes the sharpest Vinegar Our Lord Christ himself the choicest mercy that the bowels of a God could bless a perishing World withal Ioh. 3.16 whose coming himself bearing Witness was on no less errand then that of eternal life and blessedness to the lost and cursed sons of Adam Ioh. 10.10 Yet to how many was he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a stone of stumbling Isa 8 14. and a rock of offence Yea a gin and a snare and that to both the houses of Israel the onely professing people of God at that day in the World And is he not a stone of stumbling in the Ministry of the Gospel to many professors to this very day upon which they fall and are broken When he saith Mat. 11.6 blessed is he whosoever shall not be offended in me he doth therein plainly suppose that both in his person and Doctrine the generality of men would be offended in him Not that this is the design of Christ and the Gospel but it comes so to pass through the corruptions of the hearts of men whereby they make light of Christ and stand out against that life and grace which the Lord Iesus by his blood so dearly purchased and is by the Preaching of the Gospel so freely tendered the wilful refusal whereof will as surely double our damnation as the acceptance thereof will secure our eternal Salvation Mat. 11.23 Oh consider it is a thing of the most serious concernment in the World how we carry our selves under the Gospel and with what dispositions and affections of heart and soul seasons of grace are entertained this being taken into the consideration to make it weight that we are the nearer to heaven or to hell to salvation or damnation by every ordinance we sit under boast not therefore of Priviledges injoyed with neglect of the important duties thereby required Remember Capernaums case and tremble as many go to Heaven by the very gates of Hell so more go to Hell by the gates of Heaven in that the number of them that profess Christ is greater then the number of them that truely close with Christ Beloved I know the Preaching of the Gospel hath proselyted many of you into a profession but I fear that but few of you are brought by it to a true close with the Lord Christ for Salvation I beseech you bear with my jealousie for it is the fruit of a tender love to your precious souls most men are good Christians in the verdict of their own opinion but you know the Law alloweth no man to be a witness in his own case because their affection usualally out-acteth conscience and self-self-love baulketh truth for its own interest The heart of man is the greatest impostor and cheat in the World God himself adjusts it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Supplante tivum cor prae omui Jeremy 17.9 The heart is deceitful above all things Some of the deceits whereof you will find discovered in this treatise which sheweth you that every grace hath its counterfeit and that the highest profession may be where true conversion is not Ezek. 13.22 Mat. 12.20 The design hereof is not to break the bruised reed nor to quench the smoking flax not to discourage the weakest beleiver but to awaken formal professors I would not sad the heart of any whom God would not have made sad though I know it is hard to rip up the dangerous estate and condition of a professing Hypocrite but that the weak Christian will think himself concerned in the discovery And therefore as I Preached a Sermon on sincerity among you for the support and encouragement of such at the end of this so I did purpose to have Printed it with this but who can be Master of his own purposes that is as I am under such daily variety of providences your kindly acceptation of this will make me a debter for that The dedication hereof belongs to you on a double account for as it had not been Preached but that love to your souls caused it so it had much less been Printed but that your importunate desire procured it and therefore what entertainment soever it findeth in the World yet I hope I may expect you will welcome it especially
themselves in the wounds of Christ and by his stripes fetch in healing to their souls Thirdly There is a faith that is seated in the understanding but not in the will this is a very common faith many assent to the truth They beleive all the attributes of God that he is just holy wise faithful good merciful c. But yet they rest not on him notwithstanding They beleive the Commands are true but yet do not obey them they beleive the promises are true but yet do not imbrace and apply them they beleive the threatnings are true but yet do not fly from them Thus their faith lies in assent but not consent they have faith to confess a judgment but none to take out execution by assent they lay a foundation but never build upon it by application They believe that Christ died to save them that beleive and yet they beleive not in Christ that they may be saved Ro. 10 10. 1 Cor. 15.17 Oh my brethren it is not a beleiving head but a beleiving heart that makes a Christian VVith the heart man beleives to righteousness without this our faith is vain we are yet in our sins Fourthly There is a faith without experience many beleeve the Word upon hearsay to be the word of God but they never felt the power and vertue of it upon their hearts and consciences Now what good is it to beleive the truth of the Word if a mans conscience never felt the power of the word what is it to beleeve the truth of the promise if we never tasted the sweetness of the promise We are in this case like a man that beleeves the description others make of strange Countreys but never travelled them to know the truth or as a Patient that beleives all the Physician says but yet trys none of his potions We beleeve the word because we cannot gainsay it but yet we have no experience of any saving good wrought by the Word and so are but almost Christians Fifthly There is a faith that is without brokenness of heart that doth not avail to melt or soften the heart and therefore is not true faith for the least true faith is ever joyned with a bending will and a broken heart Sixthly There is a faith that transforms not the heart Faith without fruit that doth not bring forth the New creature in the soul but leaves it in a state of sin and death This is a faith that makes a man a fond Professor but not a sound beleever he beleives the truth Ephes 4.21 but not as it is in Jesus for then it would change and transform him into the likeness of Jesus Isa 56.9 He beleeves that a man must be changed that would be saved but yet is not savingly changed by beleiving Thus while others beleive to salvation he beleeves to damnation for his web shall not become a garment neither shall he cover himself with his works Heb. 6.4 Now then if a mans faith may be but temporary or may lie onely in generals or may be seated in the understanding onely or may be without experience or may be without a broken heart or without a new heart surely then a man may have faith he may taste of this heavenly gift and yet be but almost a Christian 17. A man may go further yet He may possibly have a love to the people of God and yet be but almost a Christian every kind of love to those who are Saints is not a proof of our Saintship Pharoah loved Joseph and advanced him to the second place in the Kingdom and yet Pharaoh was but a wicked man Ahab loved Jehoshaphat and made a league with him and married his daughter Athaliah to Jehoram Jehoshaphats Son and yet Ahab was a wicked wretch But you will say this seems to contradict the testimony of the Scripture for that makes love to the Saints and people of God a sure proof of our regeneration and interest in life eternal 1 Joh. 3.14 We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren Nay the Spirit of God putteth this as a characteristical distinction between Saints and sinners in the tenth verse In this the children of God are manifest and the children of the Devil whosoever doth not righteousness is not of God neither he that loveth not his brother By brethren we do not understand Brethren by place those who are of the same Country or Nation such are called Brethren Rom. 9.3 Act. 7 23 25. Nor do we understand Brethren by race those who are descended of the same parents such are called brethren Matth. 1.2 Philemon 16. But by Brethren we understand brethren by grace and supernatural regeneration such as are the children of God and these are the brethren whom to love is a sure sign that we are the children of God Sol. To this I answer That there is a love to the children of God which is a proof of our being the children of God As for instance when we love them as such for that very reason as being the Saints of God when we love them for the image of God which appeareth in them because of that grace and holiness which shineth forth in their conversations this is truly commendable to love the godly for godliness sake the Saints for Saintship sake this is a sure testimony of our Christianity The love of grace in another is a good proof of the life of grace in our selves There can be no better evidence of the Spirit of Christ in us then to love the image of Christ in others For this is a certain truth that a sinner cannot love a Saint as such An Israelite is an abomination to an Egyptian Iohn 15. 1fi Gen. 3.15 There is a contrariety and natural enmity between the two seeds between the children of the World and those whom the Father in his eternal love hath chosen out of the World Simile simili gaudet It is likeness which is the great ground of love now there is the highest dissimilitude and unlikeness between an unregenerate sinner and a child of God and therefore as a child of God cannot love a sinner as a sinner In whose eyes a vile person is contemned Psal 15.4 he may love him as a creature he may love his soul or he may love him under some relation that he stands in to him Thus God loves the damned spirits as they are his Creatures but as fallen Angels he hateth them with an infinite hatred So to love a sinner quatenus a sinner this a child of God cannot do so neither can a sinner love a child of God as a child of God That he may love a child of God that I grant but it is upon some other consideration he may love a person that is holy not the person for his holiness but for some other respect As 1. A man may love a child of God for his loving peaceable courteous deportment to
of Christ It is bad being at peace till Christ speaks peace nothing can truely pacifie conscience less then that which pacifies God and that is the blood of the Lord Christ Now the almost Christian quiets conscience but not with the blood of Christ it is not a peace flowing from Christs propitiation but a peace rising from a formal profession not a peace of Christs giving but a peace of his own making He silences and bribes conscience with a forme of godliness and so makes it give way to an undoing foul destroying peace he rocks it asleep in the Cradle of duties and then it is a thousand to one it never awaketh more till death or judgment Ah my brethren it is better to have conscience never quiet then quieted any way but by the blood of Sprinkling a good conscience unquiet is the greatest affliction to Saints and an evil conscience quiet is the greatest judgment to sinners 5. It is dangerous to be almost a Christian in respect of the unpardonable sin the sin that the Scripture saith can never be forgiven neither in this World nor in the World to come Mat. 12.32 I mean the sin against the holy Ghost now such are onely capable of sinning that sin as are but almost Christians A true beleiver cannot the work of grace in his heart that seed of God abiding in him secures him against it 1 Joh. 3.9 compared with the 5. Chap. 16 17 18. Act. 7.51 The prophane open ignorant sinner cannot though he lives daily and hourly in sin yet he cannot commit this sin for it must be from an enlightned mind every sinner under the Gospel especially sins sadly against the Holy Ghost against the strivings and motions of the Spirit he resists the holy ghost but yet this is not the sin against the holy Ghost There must be three ingredients to make up that sin 1. It must be wilful Heb. 10.26 if we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remains no more sacrisice for sin 2. It must be against light and convictions after we have received the knowledge of the truth 3. It must be destinatâ malitia Blasphemia in s●iritum sanctum ea est qua quis dest nata ma itia contra proprum anime sui sensum spiritus sancti grattam virtutem deique gloriam oprugnat Luc. Brugens in Mat. 12. in resolved malice Now you shall find all these ingredients into the sin of the Pharisees Mat. 12.22 Christ heals one that was possessed with a Devil a great work which all the people wondred at v. 23. But what say the Pharisees see v. 24. This fellow casteth out Devils by the Prince of Devils now that this was the sin against the holy ghost is clear for it was both wilful and malicious and against clear convictions they could not but see that he was the Son of God and that this work was a peculiar work of the Spirit of God in him and yet they say he wrought by the Devil Whereupon Christ charges them with this sin against the Holy Ghost v. 31.32 now these Pharisees were a sort of great professors compare this with Mark 3.28 29 30. whence I gather this conclusion That it is the professor of Religion that is the subject of this sin Not the open carnal sinner not the true beleiver but the formal professor Not the sinner for he hath neither light nor grace not the beleiver for he hath both light and grace therefore the formal professor for he hath light but no grace Here then is the great danger of being almost a Christian he is liable to this dreadful unpardonable sin 6. This being but almost a Christian subjects us to apostacy he that gets no good by walking in the ways of God will quickly leave them and walk no more in them this I gather from Hos 14.9 Who is wise and he shall understand these things prudent and he shall know them for the ways of the Lord are right and the just shall walk in them but the transgressors shall fall therein The just shall walk in them he whose heart is renewed and made right with God he shall keep close to God in his ways But the transgressours shall faell therein the word in the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 peshangim from a word that signifies to prevaricate so that we may read the words thus The ways of the Lord are right and the just shall walk in them but he that prevaricates that is a Hypocrite in the Ways of God he shall fall therein An unsound heart will never hold out long in the ways of God Joh. 5.35 He was a burning and a shining light and ye were willing for a season to rejoyce in that light Job 27.10 For a season 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for an hour a short space and then they left him It is a notable question Job puts concerning the Hypocrite Will he delight himself in the Almighty will he always call upon God He may do much but these two things he cannot do He cannot make God his delight He cannot persevere in duties at all times and in all conditions Pro. 24.16 Deut. 33.27 He will be an Apostate at last the scab of Hypocrisie usually breaks out in the plague soar of Apostacy Conversion ground is standing ground it is terra firma but a graceless profession of Religion is slippery ground and falling ground Julian the Apostate was first Julian the professour I know it is possible a beleiver may fall but yet he rises again the everlasting arms are underneath but when the hypocrite falls who shall help him up Eccl. 4 10 Salomon saith Wo to him that is alone when he falls that is without interest in Christ why wo to him for he hath none to help him up if Jesus Christ do not recover him who can David fell and was restored for he had one to help him up but Judas fell and perished for he was alone 7. This being but almost a Christian provokes God to bring dreadful spiritual judgement upon a man Barrenness is a spiritual judgment now this provokes God to give us up to barrenness when Christ found the fig-tree that had leaves but no fruit he pronounces the curse of barrenness upon it Never fruit grow on thee more Mat. 21.19 and so Ezek. 47.11 The miry places thereof and the marish places thereof shall not be healed they shall be given to salt 2 Thes 2.10 11 12. A Spirit of delusion is a sad judgement why this is the almost Christians judgment that receives the truth but not in the love of it because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved for this cause God shall send them strong delusion Lu. 19.42 To lose either light or sight either ordinances or eyes is a great spiritual judgment why this is the almost Christians judgment he that profits not under the means provokes