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A91363 A little cabinet richly stored with all sorts of heavenly varieties, and soul-reviving influences. Wherein there is a remedy for every malady, viz. milk for babes, and meat for strong men, and the ready way for both to obtain and retain assurance of salvation: being an abridgement of the sum and substance of the true Christian religion; wherein the cause of our salvation, the way, the guide, the rule, the evidence, the seals, &c. and the connection of these points together, and dependancy of them one upon another: this I have endeavoured to do orderly, exactly, methodically, with much plainness and clearness. / By Robert Purnell. Purnell, Robert, d. 1666. 1657 (1657) Wing P4237; Thomason E1575_1; ESTC R209217 254,040 517

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differ in their defining it what it is yet in the essence or body of it they agree but before I can orderly come to speak of the several definitions that Christians give of it I must acquaint the Reader of the several sorts of love viz. there is a love natural c. and a love sinful c. and there is a love spiritual 1. There is love of pitty as in a Father to a sick and vitious son or one friend to another in misery or if you please there is 2. A natural love planted in the heart of man to love himself his children wealth and acquaintance Now the spiritual love that we shall speak of by and by doth set banks to the stream of natural love that it run not over either to over-love or over-grieve 3. There is a love of complacency So the Father is well pleased with an obedient son the husband with a vertuous wife the School-master with a towardly Scholar 4. There is a love of friendship when a man doth both honour and respect such and such good people and is so beloved of them again 5. There is a love of dependance when we love one upon whom all dependeth namely God whom also we love with a love of complacency and friendship being a full object free from all mixture of evil and altogether supernatural this supernatural love is that I intend to speak to and first of the nature of this love in which I shall take notice of the various judgements of many precious Christians in the definition of it although in the main they all agree 1. One saith it is an holy disposition of the heart arising from faith whereby we cleave to the Lord with a purpose of heart to serve him and to please him in all things 2. Another saith love is a grace wrought in the heart by the Spirit of God in perswading the party of Gods love to it and so the soul comes to love God because he did first love him 1 John 4. 19. 3. Others say it is a supernatural grace flowing from Faith instilled by God himself whereby through the mercy of God we see the great excellency of him and thereby are drawn to love and yield obedience to him 4. Others say it is an holy affection or act of the will or disposition of the heart whereby it cleaves or makes forward to some good that is agreeable to it self 5. Others say it is a spark of heavenly fire that puts all the affections into an holy flame Cant. 1. 7. Tell me O thou whom my soul loveth Isa 26. 9. With my soul have I desired thee yea with my spirit within me will I seek thee early He that planted the affections of love in our hearts may well call for his own and expect to gather the grapes of his own Vineyard Several sorts or kinds of Love BEsides what hath been spoken in the foregoing head there are several sorts and kinds of love as First there is a fleshly and carnal love which is altogether sinful Secondly there is a naturall ove as in a Parent to a child and one relation to another Thirdly there is a civil love such as one neighbour and friend hath to another Fourthly there is a religious love and that is twofold the one is subordinate to the other viz. First there is our love to God Secondly to his people as they bear his image First to God himself who is the very essence of love he is nothing else but love God is love neither should there be any thing beloved by us but as it either conveys love to us from him or else deaws up our affections to him there is also a love to our enemies required of us which we ought to be found in the practise of in obedience to the command of God and in love and pitty to their poor souls Mat. 5. 44. But that love that I shall treat of is that love spoken to in Scripture which is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost Rom. 5. 5. Of the springs of Love how it is begotten and encreased in us THE Lord tells us by Paul Rom. 5. 5. That the Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost he shews us that he loveth us that were of no worth and whilest we were in our sins that he dyed for us and then he doth shed the sense and feeling thereof abroad in our hearts whereby we come to taste and see how good and gracious the Lord is Psalm 34. 8. 1. Spring of love is this the Lord doth unveil himself a little to the soul whereby it sees his excellency viz. wisdom power riches beauty glory faithfulness and amiableness 2. Spring of love is this the soul having seen something of his excellency and so loves him not only because of that although he be most worthy of love but also because he hath cast his love upon us and so in the second place the soul comes to love Christ because he first loved us 1 John 4. 10 19. as fire begets fire so doth love beget love 3. Spring of love is this after the soul hath seen the worth of Christ and the love of Christ it comes in the next place to see that the love of all relations doth meet in the love of Christ and this doth raise up a Christian to love Christ with a supream love Love is as a Load-stone drawing the affections to love Christ as to one that is aimable and lovely famous and glorious spotless and matchless in his name in his nature in his offices in his graces in his gifts in his discoveries in his appearances in his Ordinances he is full of gravity majesty and mercy and glory he is the chiefest among ten thousand Cant. 5. 10. So the soul loves Christ for that incomparable goodness and natural sweetness that there is in him But others that see it not reject those gracious invitations reject the Kings Supper and think it strange that thou runnest not with him to the same excess of riot 4. Spring of love is this the Lord presents before the soul First his love in giving Christ Secondly the love of Christ in giving himself and this many times takes with a soul and makes it break forth in these or the like expressions O the love of God to sinners to give his son and not a servant his own son and not another his only son and not a second his only begotten son and not an adopted son that he should send and give him when he was not sought by us but freely given by him to us not friends but enemies c. In the next place consider the love of Christ in giving himself O how wonderful was his love to us it was not a love to the fallen Angels but to fallen man Oh what hath he undergone for us O that he that was equal with God should come in the form of a servant That he that the
but it is because they would be better fitted for their Bridegrooms coming besides the best have flesh as well as Spirit c. 2. Another property of love is this Love delighteth to speak well of the party beloved David abounded in love to God and therefore could never satisfie himself in speaking of and praising him Psalm 105. 3. Love is bountiful and seeks not its own as doth abundantly appear in this blessed portion of Scripture 1 Cor. 13. 4 5. 4. Another property of love is this it will put the whole man to work for the party beloved Memory Will Affections Tongue and Hand and all will fall to work when others stand frozen and benummed surely the heart that loves Christ is still drawing nearer and nearer to him aspiring towards heaven and thriving in the work of grace 5. And lastly love commandeth the affections of anger and fear it moderates the one and regulates the other What shall I say more of the properties of this love he that hath this love of God shed abroad in his heart doth look upon Christ as the chiefest among ten thousand and so speaks good of his name Psal 34. 8. O taste and see that the Lord is good c. In a word a soul comes to love him for himself because he is the object of love And so this man grieves when he is either dishonoured or slighted Of the motives or inducements to perswade us to get into and grow up in this Love THE motives to perswade us to make out after this love may be drawn from either the benefits that we shall get by it or from the hurt or danger in neglecting it To begin then with the last first 2 Cor. 16. 22. If any man love not the Lord Iesus Christ let him be cursed with a double curse c. 1 Iohn 4. 8. He that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love and if we know him not 2 Thes 1. 8. he will come in flaming fire taking vongeance on them that know him not Iohn 5. 42. These people have not the love of God in them Ioh. 8. 42. Iesus said to them if God were your father ye would love me c. 1 Iohn 3. 10. 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 Brorher in a word there is nothing that we say or do that will be accepted of the Lord without this love 1 Cor. 13. 1 2 3. Though I speak with the tongue of men and Angels and though I have the gift of prophecy and understand all mysteries and though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor and give my body to be burned and have not this love I am nothing c. In the next place let us consider the excellency of it and the benefits we shall get thereby First it is most like to God 1 John 4. 16. God is love and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God Again it is called by David a joyful blessed and pleasant thing Again it is recorded in Scripture as one of our evidences for heaven 1 John 3. 14. By this we know we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren and our love to our brethren is a sign of our love to God 1 John 4. 20. Lastly love will stand when all other graces will fail 1 Cor. 13. 8. Love never faileth ver 13. now abideth Faith Hope Charity these three but the greatest of these is Charity Of our love to the children of God the nature of it the tryals of it the means of attaining it and impediments that hinder it 1. OF the nature of it Christ is nothing else but love and there should not any thing be beloved by us but as it either conveys love from him or else draws up our affections unto him and our loving of his body the Church will effect both these The nature then of this love may be comprehended under these ensuing heads When we love them as such in whom we see the Image of Christ for their spiritual brother-hood 1 Pet. 2. 17. The godly for godliness sake for God in them Christians for Christianity for Christ in them the Saints for their Saint-ship for their Sanctity of person and conversation The spiritual children begotten for their Heavenly Fathers sake when grace is the principal load-stone of our affection when for this we love them more then for beauty sweetness of disposition birth breeding learning wi● gifts wealth honour c. And so love all such as we apprehend to be the children of God for he that truly loves one child of God as a child of God loves every child of God whether noble or ignoble rich or poor bond or free male or female for the same God the same Christ the same grace is as truly amiable in one as in another See Col. 1. 4. Hence we also come to love them most that are most gracious for where grace allures the affection the more grace there is in any person there is the stronger motive and allurement to love more Jesus loved all his Disciples John 13. 1. But John he loved eminently above all the rest John 21. 20. And so as grace grows in the same person true love towards him will grow proportionably Of the Tryals of our love to the brethren THere is a two-fold tryal or evidence of our love to the Lords people the one more internal the other ext●rnal ●●●st of the first of the inward evidences We ●●ad ● J●hn 3. 14. By this we know we have passed from death to life because we love the Brethr●n Now ●●r unfeigned love to them will appear by these ensuing things 1. If I would know whether I love the Brethren Let me exam●●● what my thoughts are of them love thinketh no evil 1 Cor. 13. 4 5. Now I can certainly tell what I do think of another although I cannot tell what he doth think of me So though I cannot certainly and infallibly tell whether another loves me yet I can certainly tell whether I love him or no his love to me is in his heart which I know not my love to him is in my heart which I know and no creature else 2. If I would indeed know if I love the brethren let me examine how I do stand affected to them in sympathizing with them when they be in misery Heb. 13. 3. Remember them that are in bonds as bound with them and them which suffer adversity as being your selves also in the body 3. When we are at distance from them what desires have we after them Phil. 1. 8. God is my record how greatly I long after y●● all in the bowels of Jesus Christ Now why doth Paul call God to record to prove the truth of his love to these Saints but because this love in his heart was known to none but to God and himself 4. What delight do we
of peace ariseth from a souls resting satisfied in Christs righteousness adding nothing to it Psal 71. 15 16 19 24. and Psal 119. 142. I will make mention of thy righteousness even of thine only for thy righteousness is an everlasting righteousness See Jer. 33. 16. the perfection of Christs righteousness is held forth unto us and alwayes lieth before us that we may be thankfull for it and peaceable with it and rejoyce in the bestower of it the Lord Jesus having spoken peace to the soul and acquainted the soul that he hath paid all his debts for it and that his sins which were so many shall be remembred no more then the soul begins to be filled with joy and peace in beleiving beholding and enjoying Christs righieousness which begets in the soul a perfect peace a precious peace a full and compleat peace and an everlasting peace 4. The next vein through which peace is conveyed to the soul is by our acquainting our selves with him Job 22. 21. Acquaint now thy self with him and be at peace thereby so good shall come unto thee now by thy acquainting thy self with him these things will fall in First thou wilt see that thou wast cast out to the loathing of thy soul and no eye pittying thee much less to relieve thee that then even then when man was ready to perish should be the time of love with God whereby he cast his skirt of compassion over him and said unto him again live Oh ye Heavens stand amazed and oh thou earth flesh and blood rejoyce and triumph for when there was no eye to pitty thee the arm of the Lord hath brought salvation by raising up a mighty one out of the house of his servant David even Christ the Lord the wondefull Counsellor the mighty God mighty to save the everlasting Father the Prince of peace who became man under the Law and obligation to obedience and not only so but also became our Surety for us to do suffer and fulfill that for us which we were no waies able to do for our selves The Covenant of works rested in and trusted unto can never work settled comfort and peace and quietness of heart let a man walk as exactly as ever flesh and blood can attain unto let him as confidently build on this foundation as he possibly may yet the heart will be still in suspition in doubt in fear uncertain what to trust unto but the Doctrine of grace rested in and trusted unto doth settle a soul in peace this is a sure Anchor for the soul to rest upon let waves swell and winds blow he retains a firm peace stand here and we are safe for ever Rom. 5. 1 2. 3. Thirdly This Doctrine is the Root and Spring of all Gospel obedience whatsoever men call obedience if it ariseth not from hence it is but forced and legal we must get up Gospel principles if we would keep up Gospel practises Wheresoever this Doctrine of grace is received and retained in the love and power of it it works these five things in the soul viz. Faith Love Fear Willingness and Chearfulness and from these five things as from five Springs doth all Gospel obedience arise 1. True obedience doth flow from Faith hence it is called the obedience of Faith Rom. 16.26 in the latter part of this Chapter we read of a mysterie revealed and what that mysterie was it was the Doctrine of Gods grace and the end why it was revealed was for the Obedience of Faith see Rom. 1. 5. 2. As Faith in Christ doth put the soul upon heavenly and spiritual actings so also love constrains them in whom it is to keep the Lords commandments John 14. 21 23. compared with Psalm 26. 3 4. If ye love me keep my commandments For thy loving kindness is before mine eyes saith David and I have walked in thy truth 3. As true obedience doth spring from Faith and Love so it is attended with an holy fear Psalm 119. 161. My heart saith David doth stand in awe of thy word Heb. 11. 7. Noah being warned of God touching things not seen was moved with fear and so prepared an Ark. 4. As Gospel obedience doth spring from Faith Love and Fear so it ariseth from a willing mind Psalm 27. 8. when thou saidst seek ye my face my heart answered Lord thy face will I seek as David had said O Lord it is thy great command seek ye my face my heart saith unto thee it is the desire of my soul thy command is become my request thy face Lord will I seek 5. As Gospel-obedience springs from Faith Love and fear and a willing mind so it is performed chearfully and delightfully Psal 40. 8. I delight to do thy will O God thy Law is in my heart as well as in thy Book What shall I say more a soul receiving believing retaining and standing in the true grace of God shall be every way furnished and supplyed with strength to perform any duty to exercise any grace to subdue any lust to resist any temptation to bear any affliction c. Sure if the bowels of mercy do not melt win and draw us Justice will be a swift witness against us And as the Branch cannot bear fruit except it abide in the vine John 15. 4. no more can ye except ye abide in me Gods free love manifested to us and by his Spirit shed abroad in us is the cause of our love to him 1 John 4. 10 19. And our love to him is the cause of our obeying him 1 John 5. 3. John 14. 15 21 23. we read in Jer. 31. 19. After that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh That is as if he had said after that thou hast wrought a gracious change upon my soul by thine afflicting hand out of thy love to me Heb. 12. 6. Or after I came to my self again Luke 15. 17 and considered seriously with my self how it was with me I was touched with repentance with sorrow and with shame for my former miscariages 4. Fourthly this Doctrine received and the heart therein established will be a stop and bar to keep out all floods of errour The floods of all errour flow in at the pipe of ignorance and especially ignorance of this very thing viz. The Doctrine of grace the errour of the Papists of building and resting upon works springs from their ignorance of this blessed Docrtine the errour of the Quaker springs purely from hence the errour of the Arminian springs in at the same pipe partly by works and partly by grace they not seeking salvation by grace but as it were by the works of the Law they stumbled and fell Rom. 9. 32. And all the unstability formality legality that there is at this day appearing amongst the Presbyterian Independant and Baptist or any other people professing godliness doth arise from their ignorance or their little knowledge in this great mysterie nay farther did you
grace but a sanctifying grace Acts 15. 9. 26. 8. the blood of Christ i● a pure blood as well as a precious blood It is a cleansing blood as well as an expiating blood So faith is a grace not only to acquit but also to purge and renew the person where it dwells It is not only an enlightening grace but it is also a conforming grace therefore we read that it doth ingraft us into the similitude of his death and in the fellowship of his sufferings and Resurrection Phil. 3. 10. Now then enquire is there vertue gone from Christ to make thy dark mind seeing thy stubborn judgement yielding thy proud heart humbling thy filthy heart cleansing thy hard heart relenting and mourning thy carnal affections to be heavenly thy sinful soul to be holy Read and well consider that in 1 Cor. 6. 9 10 11. 2. Where there is true Faith it will cause the party to make a curious narrow impartial diligent search into his own heart and soul to see what humility what self-denyal what sin abhorrency what love to Christ what delight to the Ordinances what zeal for Gods glory what contempt of the world what desires after the society of the Saints what sympathizing with them in their afflictions and if upon this search thou findest any impressions of grace any spiritual work any savouring savory distinguishing operations upon thy heart then the Spirit hath been there and begun to work the grace of Faith in thy heart 3. True Faith doth make the heart humble and lowly Have we pardon of sin why saith Faith the cause of this is Gods love Have we righteousness why saith Faith the cause of this is Christs merits Have we any gift why saith Faith the cause of this is Christs love So that the soul sits down and often saith O Lord O Lord in my self I am nothing nay of my self worse then nothing But what I am I am by grace all that I have is thine my bread my health my life my body my soul all is thine If any love if any mercy if any Christ if any grace if any comfort if any strength if any stedfastness if any performances if any good work if any good word if any good affection if any good thought why all is thine I have nothing but what I have received thou only art the cause I am less then the least of thy mercies and what is thy servant that thou shouldst look on such an one as I am thou madest me and thou boughtest me and thou calledst me and thou justifiest me and thou savest me 4. True Faith doth desire and endeavour after an increase Help my unbelief said the weak believing Father O Lord encrease our Faith said the Disciples there are yet many degrees wanting to faith either thou canst not be perswaded or not fully perswaded or not constantly perswaded but if the Faith be true and living it will bend after a rising 5. True Faith in Christ and a mournful heart for sin alwaies go together Zach. 10 12. They shall look upon me whom they have pierced and mourn c. there are two things that Faith will fetch up in the soul the one is love to Christ another is sorrow for sin 6. True Faith is fruitful James 2. 18. See Titus 3. 18. Although works do not cause Faith or Justification yet they do clearly manifest to others whether we have Faith yea or no. To close up this point let me acquaint the Reader that there are spiritual and inward characters of Faith which serve as evidences to him that hath it many of those I have hinted at under this fore-going head Secondly there are outward or more external signs of Faith and they consist in walking so in the sight of men that they may in charity judge of our Faith by our works then there are characters of a strong Faith and also signs of a weak Faith First of a strong Faith Rom. 4. 20. he staggered not at the promise through unbelief Mat. 8. 6 7 8. I have not found so great Faith in Israel Mat. 5. 22. O woman great is thy faith c. So there are characters of a weak Faith One is he will be hasty to be answered and be ready to suspect Gods favour and Christs love if he be not presently answered Another is he will be faint if delayed And so much for the characte●s or signs of Faith The benefits of living by Faith a Believers comfort hope joy and confidence should be in God the same at all times THE Lord hath various dispensations of providence as well relating to the outward as to the inward man Sometimes his way is in the whirlwind and sometimes he is in the small still voice and sometimes his foot-steps are in the deep waters and so his way is not known Nah. 1. 3. 1 Kings 19. 12. Psalm 77. 19. His dispensations are many times contrary the one to the other to day perhaps thou enjoyest peace strength riches and honor with health prosperity and many friends and tomorrow all these may be blasted to day God unbosoms himself unto thee and shines forth upon thee but in a moment he withdraws himself As blessed Job David and divers others experienced Now the reason why we should believe hope and rejoyce in God at all times are as followeth 1. Because a Believers happiness depends not upon his own doing but upon Christ who is of God made unto him righteousness sanctification c. who hath saved us and called us not according to our works but according to his purpose and grace c. 1 Cor. 1. 3. 2 Tim 1. 9 2. Because the state of a Believer in Christ as considered in him is a state of perfection he is clean from all sin by the blood of Christ they be removed from us thou hast cast all my sins behind thy back as far as the East is from the West so far hath he removed our transgressions from us seventy weeks are determined upon the people to finish the transgression and to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation and to bring in everlasting righteousness Col. 1. 28. John 17. 23. Heb. 10. 14. 1 John 1. 7. Isaiah 35. 8. 38. 17. Psalm 103. 12. Dan. 9. 24. Ezek. 16. 14. Hereupon the soul begins to rejoyce in God for he hath cloathed me with the garment of salvation and covered me with the robe of righteousness Our sins are laid upon Christ and his righteousness is ours hereupon saith God thou art all fair my love there is no spot in thee 3. Reason Why a Believers comfort hope joy and confidence should be the same at all times because that God who hath loved an everlasting love loves thee in his Son thou art not beloved for thy own sake or for any thing in thee but upon the account of the Lord Jesus in whom God is well pleased Believers are never the more just before God for their own integrity nor the
heaven of heavens could not contain should be cradled in a Manger and from his cradle to his Cross his whole life was a life of sorrows Oh that the Judge of all flesh should be condemned the Lord of Life put to death that he that was crowned with honour and glory should be crowned with thorns That that face that was white and ruddy should be spit upon by the beastly Jews and that tongue that spake as never man spake should be accused of blasphemy That those hands that swayed the Scepter and feet that were as fine brass should be nailed to the Cross He was tempted by the Devil reviled by the High Priests branded for a Babler Wine-bibber and Sabbath-breaker and Blasphemer all this he suffered for us out of love to us shall we not love him his true love to us will be satisfied with nothing but love again This is another Spring of love Of the Tryals of Love how it may be known WE read 2 Cor. 2. 8. And to prove the sincerity of your love if the Lord will this shall be my work in few words to lay down those spiritual experimental signs of this sincere unfeigned fervent love 1. The first character of this grace of love is this true love will be satisfied with nothing but love again what doth all avail as long as we may not see the Kings face 2. Those whom we love we often think upon our thoughts fasten on them Psalm 139. 17 18. How precious are the thoughts of thee unto me O God how great is the sum of them when I awake I am still with thee So that sleeping or waking his mind runs upon him try thy love of God by this if thou think not often of God thou lovest him not but if thou canst not satisfie thy self with profits pleasures friends and other worldly objects but thou must turn other businesses aside that thou mayest daily think of God then thou lovest him 3. Those whom we love we will not willingly offend no bars are so strong as love Sooner will the servant offend his master the son his father the wife her husband the subject his Protector then him whom he spiritually loves Friendship binds faster then any authority Jonathan will offend his natural Father rather then his spiritual brother David Joseph will offend his mistress rather then his God c. 4. Those whom we love we acquaint with our grievances and lay open our miseries to their bosoms their counsel we ask and from them we look for help 2 Chron. 20. 12. Jehoshaphat being opposed by his enemies to whom comes he to complain to none but to God whom he loved to whom comes Hezekiah 2 Kings 19. 14 15. to complain against Rabshakeh and Sennacherib to none but to God to whom went David to complain of the bitter words of Cush the Benjamite to none but unto God whom he loves Psalm 7. 1. O Lord my God in thee do I put my trust save me from all them that persecute me c. 5. Those we love we take any small token kindly from them a pin from a friend is more esteemed then a pound from an enemy 6. Those whom we love we are willing to suffer or endure any thing for Iacob Gen. 29. 20. endured a tedious service for Rachel and it seemed but a few daies to him because he loved her so Pauls love to Christ made him not care for the passionate speeches nor affectionate tears of his friends he loved Christ more then either of them Acts 21. 13. compared with Iohn 21. 15. 7. Those whom we love we can bear any thing that comes from them we can endure their reproofs and their corrections the child can be contented to be struck by the Father that would not not take a blow of another Psalm 39. 9. I was dumb I opened not my mouth because thou didst it 8. That love that we bear to the people of God is a sure token of our love to God the image of God is graven in them and they that love God love those images of him that himself hath stamped and the more like they are to God the more they love them But not to love them is delivered as a note of the children of the Devil 1 John 3. 10. He that loveth not his brother is not of God 1 Iohn 4. 7. He that loveth not his Brother abideth in death See 1 Iohn 4. 20. 9. Those that we love we shall be often speaking of and praising them Psalm 47. 6. As he abounded in love to God so he abounded in praising him Sing praises to God sing praises sing praises to our King and see ver 7. What shall I say more doth thy heart stir after Christ art thou sick of love grieved if he be absent glad if present art thou very diligent to obtain the thing beloved love cannot abide delaies but would presently enjoy the thing loved love desires no wages but love again true love will constrain you to please him and put such necessity upon you to obey him that you cannot chuse but do it in some good measure 2 Cor. 5. 14. 10. And lastly with the love of God is alwaies joyned the hatred of sin Revelat. 2. 6. Thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitans which I also hate The love of God and the love of sin cannot dwell intensively at the same time in the same heart for the love of the one will prove the hatred of the other Mat. 6. 24. Jam. 4. 4. So love to God casts out servile fear 1 Iohn 4. 18 19. there is no fear in love but perfect love casteth out fear because fear hath torment he that feareth is not ●●de perfect in love love casteth out a sinful servile slavish fear whereby we slavishly fear either God or the creature Rom. 8. 15. Mat. 10. 28. this is the fear that true love casts out 1. Is this love of God shed abroad in thine heart by the Holy Ghost hast thou an experimental taste of Gods love Rom. 5. 5. 2. Hath this love of God effectually regenerated and renewed thee by the Spirit Titus 3. 4 5 6. 3. Hath this love of God adopted thee that thou art numbered amongst the sons of God 1 Iohn 3. 1 2. 4. Hath this love of Christ satisfied thee and made thee holy Col. 3. 12. 5. Hath this love of Christ brought thee to live the life of Faith Gal. 2. 20. 6. Doth this love of God and Christ sweetly constrain and even compell thee to be chea●●ully serviceable to him in thy place and calling 2 Cor. 5. 13 14 15 16. Of the Properties of this true Love 1. WHere there is love to God and faith in Christ it makes the soul long for and earnestly desire the appearing of Christ 2 Tim. 4. 8. There is a Crown of righteousness laid up for all them that love his appearing as when we love any we love their presence It is true sometimes good men are afraid to die
take in their company we are often in the company of those that we take no delight in Now do we indeed delight in the society of the Saints then we love them Psalm 16. 3 c. In a word such things as we love we keep with care possess with joy and loose with grief so much of the inward tryals of our love to the Saints Next of the external tryals of this love by which we may know that others do love us and by which they may know that we love them But these evidences are not so infallible as the other we read John 13. 35. By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples if ye have love one to another and how doth our love unto another appear but in these or the like things viz. 1. He that doth love his brother will be apt to reprove him when he doth ill and praise him when he doth well a friend can bear a sharp reproof from a friend c. 2. Another evidence of love is this we acquaint those whom we love with our miseries lay open our griefs and account it some ease to discharge some of our sorrows into their bosoms their advice we ask and from them we look for assistance 2 Cor. 8. 3. 3. Where love is in the heart it will appear in the tongue 1 Cor. 13. Love is kind but there is a great deal of verbal and complementary love with men forbidden in the Scriptures of truth saying love not in word and tongue but in deed and in truth 4. Another Character of love is this when thou hast some injuries offered thee thou wilt not soon be angry 1 Cor. 13. 4. love suffereth long 5. Where there is love unto another there will be endeavours to do good unto another not only to the body but also to the soul they will be apt to say as the woman of Samaria did to her neighbours when she had found Christ her self she cals them to him John 4. 29. Come see a man which told me all things that ever I did is not this the Christ Or as David Psal 66. 16. I will tell you what God hath done for my soul Of the means of attaining a true love to the brethren 1. COnsider the Lord loves them and ●ath received them then say to thy self shall I hate and reject those that he loves and receives how unlike shall be to God 2. Consider that the Lord commands thee to love them and it is thy duty so to do and wilt thou rebel against God in not doing thy duty but the quite contrary 3. Consider they be members of the same body children of the same Father heirs of the same promises as thou art Consider I say thy relation to them 1 Cor. 12. 27. For relation is the ground of affection 4. Labour daily to have a higher esteem of all the Saints and a lower esteem of thy self so by degrees shalt thou come to love them indeed Phil. 2. 3. Let nothing be done through strife and vain glory but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better then themselves 5. Eye the work of God in them the Image of Christ in them and the gifts and graces of his Spirit adorning them and then thou wilt quickly love them and that with a pure heart fervently 1 Pet. 1. 22. Of the impediments and hinderances of love 1. THe first impediment that doth hinder love which we should do well to beware of is this beware of persecuting them either with tongue hand or pen Acts 9. 4. Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Zach. 2. 8. He that toucheth them toucheth the Apple of mine eye saith the Lord. 2. Beware of pride Prov. 13. 10. Only by pride cometh contention 3. Beware of offending them Mat. 18. 6. 4. Beware of giving credit to evil reports for many times it is a lye also take heed of evil surmisings and groundless jealousies and all other things that makes head against love E●hes 4. 31. Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamour and evil speaking be put away from you with all malice Of the grace of hope the nature of it and the properties of it and encouragements to it and Characters of it IF any ask why I write of hope after love I answer because I find it so set down in the Scriptures written for our learning 1 Thes 5. 8. But let us who are of the day be sober putting on the breast-plate of Faith and love and for an helmet the hope of salvation Now first the nature of this hope may be thus That hope of the Gospel is a grace of God whereby we expect good to come patiently waiting till it come Rom. 8. 25. But if we hope for that we see not then do we with patience wait for it Look what the brest is to the child and the oyl to the lamp such is hope to the soul it lives upon the promises and every degree of hope brings a degree of joy into the soul Heb. 6. 18. It is built upon the truth and faithfulness of God 2 Tim. 2. 13. Or the hope of a Christian is built upon the love of Christ the blood of Christ the righteousness of Christ the satisfaction of Christ and the intercession of Christ and the free grace of God 1 Peter 1. 13. And upon the infinite power of God Rom. 4. 21. In a word true hope doth consist in Gods love in adoption and the truth of his promises and the power of performance 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know in whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him c. Or hope is that vertue whereby we expect all good things from God and so patiently attend in the use of his appointed means for all things that we need Psal 22. 4 5. and 37. 7. and that not only when we have the means but also when we want all apparent means as the Israelites did in the Desart c. Or true hope is a well grounded and patient expectation of the accomplishment of all those spirituall and eternal good things which God hath promised through Jesus Christ to all that believe and expect them Of the Properties of this hope 1. FIrst this hope as an inward principle works out pollution and corruption as being repugnant thereunto 1 John 3. 3. And every one that hath this hope in him purifieth himself as he is pure 2. Hope is alwaies more or less exercised about heavenly things viz. Sometimes it is exercised about the righteousness of Christ sometimes it is exercised about the love of God the Father in giving Christ sometimes hope is exercised about the word and promises Psal 119. 49 81 114. and Psa 130. 5. In thy word do I hope Hope in the promises will keep the head from aking and the heart from sinking in a word the promises are the ladder by which hope gets up to heaven and so hope in the
the Sentence is pronounced 1. The unspeakable pains they shall endure 2. Their companions what they shall be 3. The duration of this miserable estate Of the happy and blessed estate of the Godly after judgement 1. Their bodies shall be made glorious 2. Their Soul shall be far more perfect then it was in the state of innocency 3. Of the place where we sha●● be after the last judgment 4. In whose presence we shall be 5. Whether the Saints shall know one another 6. Whether they shall speak one to another 7. The varieties of joyes that there shall be in heaven 8. The duration of this blessed estate And lastly what the consideration of all this should teach us Reader do me that favour as to correct these greater faults that appear at first view for I have not opportunity to peruse it all And cover lesser faults with the mantle of love and let not the truth suffer through my weakness c. Errata Page 5. l. 1. r. 1 Iohn 5. 7. p. 22. l. 12. r. Ier. 32. 40. p. 23. l. 29. r. Iohn 6. 27. p. 25. l. 6. r. 2 Cor 5. 19. p. 29. l. 6. r. Heb. 13. 20 p. 29. l. 16. r. Inherent p. 36. l. 21. r. undertook p. 48. l. 11. leave out in p. 50. l. 5. r. use p. 55. l. 4 r. Iohn 1. 16. p. 61. l. 31. r. Eph. 28. p. 62. add the word that In l. 22. p. 72. l. 17. add the word he p. 73. l. 26. add the word the p. 73. l. 12. r. him p 84. l. 6 r. 1 Kings 8. 56. p. 91. l. 7. r. Col. 3. 10. p. 101. l. 17. add the word the p. 108. l. 4. r. Facility p. 122. l. 3. r. Tltu● 3. 8. p. 143 l. 15. r misery p. 175. l. 12 r. 2 Cor. 8. 8. p. 188. l. 28. leave out the word the p. 229. l. 14 r. call p. 24. l. 9. r. ●ph 3 14. p. 258. l. 16. r. deductions p. 260. l. 30. r. Col. 2. 12. p. 2●8 l 16. r. Rom. 4. 21. p. 295. r. 1 Chror 28. 8. p. 300. l. 24. leave out the word set p. 306. l. 1. r. Isaiah 58. 13. p. 330. l. 22. r. other p. 343. l. 19. place and after time p. 350. l. 17. r. Psal 45. 13. p. 356. l. 6. r. lohn 5. 45. p. 376. l. 29. add the word If p. 381. l. 27. r. of God p. 385. l. 5. put the before sincere p. 391. l. 8. r. and A LITTLE CABINET Stored with all sorts of Heavenly Varieties Of God the Father GOD is a Spirit having his being in himself and giving being to all things Ioh. 4. 24. Exod. 3. 14. In a word he is 1. Without composition 2. Infinite Psa 147. 5. 145. 3. Exod. 3. 14. 3. He is eternall Pro. 8. 20 22 23. Rom. 16. 26. 4. Incomprehensible Exod. 33. 22 23. 1 Tim. 6. 16. Isa 66. 1. 5. Unchangable Jam. 1. 17. Mal. 3. 6. He comprehends all things and is comprehended of nothing He is without beginning and end for by him and in him all things begin and end Act. 17. 28. For in him we live and move and have our being he is present in all places at all times beholding and seeing all things Prov. 15. 3. Psal 139. 4. Job 9. 11. 2 Chron. 16. 9. Jer. 23. 23 24. Two things in God 1. There is something incommunicable as infiniteness immensity eternity 1 Kin. 8. 27. 1 Tim. 1. 17. 2. There is something in God communicable as love and mercy Exod. 34. 6. Wisdom and Power Job 36. 9. Perfection glory and blessedness this God is to be known in the first Adam and in the second Adam in his ordinances and in his Saints Now we must know God otherwise we cannot 1. Desire him Joh. 4. 10. 2. If we know him not how can we obey him 3. If we know him not how can we have communion and fellowship with him 1 Joh. 1. 5 6 7. All nature is not able to teach us what God is in himself neither can man in nature comprehend him Job 36. 26. 1 Tim. 6. 16. Yet may he be known by his properties and actions God is a spirituall substance having his being of himself infinite great and good Ioh. 4. 24. 8. 58. Exod. 3. 14. 34. 6 7. Psal 145. 3 8 9. Of the Son THE Father Son and Spirit are but one essence or substance although distinguished into Father Son and Holy-Ghost 1 Ioh. 5. 7. In Christ two things are to be considered 1. His Person 2. His Offices 1. In his Person consider the two natures Divine and humane 1 Tim. 2. 5. Mat. 1. 13. He was to be God because the greatness of the evill could not be taken away but by himself the wrath of God being infinite it could not be taken away by any finite thing Again it must be finite for it could not stand with Gods justice to punish Christ for our sins if he had not our nature neither could it have been satisfaction for us if it had not been in our nature and stead so that Jesus Christ is very God and very man of the very substance of the Virgin Mary begotten by the Holy-Ghost The unity of the two natures in Christ is not the confounding of them for the Godhead remaineth infinite invisible incomprehensible the Body finite and visible Acts 3. 21. 1 Cor. 15. 26 28 29. As God is in Christ so he is infinite eternall Almighty wisdom goodness mercy truth Justice equall with the Father in being majesty and glory in whom the Father delights from all eternity his own and his only begotten Son promised before to Adam preached to Abraham and the Patriarchs typified in the Legall Sacrifices and prophesied of by Moses and all the Prophets pointed at by Iohn manifested in the flesh Justified in the spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles believed on in the world received up into glory 1 Tim. 3. 16. Let us get a distinct knowledge of this Christ without us and a sensible feeling of his vertues in us Of the Holy Ghost THE Father sent forth the Son and the Son sent forth the Holy-Ghost yet Father Son and Holy-Ghost was never separated one from the other As there is one God Father of all and one Lord Jesus Christ redeemer of the world so there is one sanctifying Spirit of grace and as it is the office of the Father to elect and the office of the Son to redeem so it is the office of the Holy-ghost to sanctifie those and only those whom the Father hath elected and the Son redeemed and as the Father doth love freely and the Son manifest that love so the spirit doth evidence that love to and in the souls of the Saints the Father loves a Christian as redeemed by Christ Christ looks upon him and loves him as given by the Father for him to redeem the Holy-Ghost seeing the love of the Father in choosing him and the love of the Son in redeeming
not eat lest I die the devil saith ye shall not die upon this the woman did eat and gave to her husband and he did eat and thus through Satans temptations our father and mother rebelled against our God Oh father Adam what hast thou done For through it wast thou that didst sin yet thou art not fallen alone but we all that came of thee as being then in thee we are infected by thee and so are become Satans conquest out of whose hands there is no redemption unless the Lord Jesus Christ come down from heaven and lead captivity captive and open the prison doors and let the prisoners go free all Adams posterity are pertakers of his sin and misery Of Providence IF we look upon Gods providence in some few particulars only we shall wonder seeing Joseph disgraced and imprisoned David persecuted Christ arraigned and condemned Paul accounted one of the worst of men Innocent Naboth stoned true Churches as in Hesters time ready to be swallowed up Many things may fall out by Gods providence contrary to our desires that are not contrary to our good 1. Consider that God takes notice and knoweth all things 2. He upholdeth and governeth and disposeth of the world so as it pleaseth him 3. This providence reacheth to every thing so that the smallest things are governed and upheld by him 4. That of all creatures God hath most care and respect to man 5. We are to consider that the good or evil that befals a bad or good man or woman is not without but by Gods providence 6. That God doth whatsoever pleaseth him in heaven and earth 7. God in his ordinary providence maketh use of means and yet he is free to work without above and against them as he pleaseth 8. As the providence of God doth reach to all creatures in all things so after a more speciall manner he taketh care of his Church and people and disposeth all things to the good thereof God can look sowrly and chide bitterly and strike heavily even when and where he loves dearly Abraham Job Jacob and David Moses Ieremiah Ionah Ioseph Paul and many others met with many things that were contrary to their desires and endeavours that were not contrary to their good God hath a continuall care over all his creatures once made sustaining and directing them with all that belongeth to them and effectually disposeth of them all to good ends Ephes 1. 11. Rom. 11. 36. Ier. 23. 23. Col. 3. 11. Psal 139. 2. 119. 91. Of Mans recovery GOD who at first made man in his own Image and made him Lord of the creation endued him with wisdom knowledge and understanding above all other creatures and made him for so noble an end as to serve him here and reign with him hereafter man soon fell from his blessed state yet was not the love of God obliterated but more abundantly manifested in sending his dear Son to take our nature and yield obedience to his righteous law make satisfaction for our transgression and to bring in an everlasting righteousness and to make proclamation to us that his Father so loved the world that he gave him his only begotten Son that whosoever believed in him should have everlasting life Iohn 3. 16. And whosoever did come to him should in no wise be cast off Iohn 6. 37. Adams righteousness from which he fell was but a righteousness of the creature but the righteousness of Christ is the righteousness of the Creator Adams righteousness was a mutable righteousness that might be lost a righteousness that might be sinned away but the righteousness of Christ is an everlasting righteousness that cannot be sinned away Prov. 8. 18. Dan. 9. 24. Psal 119. 142. Of Vocation or effectuall calling VOcation is Gods acquainting men with his gracious purpose of salvation by Christ and so inviteth them to come unto him Heb. 2. 14. and so revealeth unto them his Covenant of grace Mat. 11. 27. 16. 17. John 14. 21. Psal 25. 14. and so bringeth them out of darkness to light Acts 26. 18. So God becomes in Christ their Father he doth not only outwardly by his word invite but inwardly also and powerfully by his spirit allure and win their hearts to cleave to him inseparably unto salvation Psal 25. 14. 65. 4. Acts 2. 39. Or effectuall calling is the work of Gods spirit in us whereby he doth first convince us of our sins and misery enlightning our minds in the knowledge of Christ and renewing our wills he doth perswade and invite us to embrace Jesus Christ freely tendred to us We read that many were called to the wedding but they made their excuses and most of those that came were compelled to come in Luke 12. 23. the Lord doth force none by violence but draw them by perswasions The Gospel cals many outwardly that after perish eternally Our vocation depends upon Gods election not upon our preparations how was Paul disposed and affected when Christ called him God is for us in predestinating us God is for us in calling us God is for us in justifying us God is for us in glorifying us if God be thus for us who can be against us he hath predestinated us before we were he hath called us when we were averse to him he hath justified us when we were sinners he will glorifie us and cloath us with his own righteousness That we may be neither drawn enticed or forced from our Religion let us build upon a right foundation IT is impossible that any soul should enjoy a firm and setled peace whose confidence towards God is grounded upon conditionall promises or his own best and choicest performances For the wanting in himself the condition of the one and not yeilding a perfect exact universall perpetuall obedience to the other the Law will be condemning Conscience accusing and the heart misgiving and all proclaiming that there is still in all thy duties imperfection something polluted and something defective so that thy most spirituall duties are not wound up to command they are all tainted with disproportion to rule and beleprosed with spots so that it is in vain to expect a bed of rest in the barren wilderness of our own performances for that bed is shorter then that a man can stretch himself on it and the covering is narrower then that a man can wrap himself in it Oh the spots the blots the blemishes that are to be seen upon the face of our fairest duties so that we may say with the Church Isa 64. 6. all our righteousness are as filthy rags which if rested upon will as certainly undo us and everlastingly destroy us as the greatest evill that can be committed by us the consideration of this was the cause of those words Hos 14. 3. Neither will we say any more to the works of our hands ye are our gods For in thee the fatherless find mercy Jer. 3. 23. Truly in vain is salvation hoped for from the Hills and from the
their infidelity 3. Means to get into this Covenant endeavour to believe for although faith be not an instrument to procure it yet it is to receive justification and salvation which is freely given us by Jesus Christ and so peace in the soul doth come by believing God is the Author and giver of peace Christ the Prince and promiser of peace the Spirit the worker and sealer of peace and the Gospel the word and ground of peace and the Ministers the messengers of peace and this blessed Covenant is sometimes called a Covenant of peace but if thou endeavour to believe and canst not consider God doth not take men into Covenant because they believe and are holy but that they might believe and be holy in this Covenant he doth promise faith and holiness to men and through it he doth convey it to them and this Covenant being without conditions it doth give a man the greatest encouragement to believe and cast himself into the arms of Christ and to put on a strong confidence of inheriting the precious promises seeing that in their accomplishment they depend not upon works and conditions on our part let us then do as Benhadads servants did 1 King 20. 31 32 33. Yea let us resolve with the woman of Canaan not to be beaten off with any discouragements this act of faith is stiled a taking the kingdom of heaven by force Job 13. 15. though he slay me yet will I trust in him see 2 King 7. 4 5. 4. Dwell much upon the consideration of those promises that God hath made viz. To bring men into the bonds of the Covenant and to work a willingness and an ability to receive what he gives to believe what he saith and to observe and do what he commandeth What shall I say more would we indeed get into this Covenant then the work we have to do is twofold 1. To get a Title to Gods love 2. To get assurance that we have a title the first is done by consideration and believing the second is done by examination and diligence to make our calling and election sure Object But you have said before that there is no condition of this Covenant on mans part and now you put men upon the use of means to get into this Covenant now I would fain know what difference there is between means and conditions are they not as one Answ Every means is not a condition though every condition be a means Now Gods order and method in bestowing the blessings of the Covenant upon a person or a people is in the use of means in Exek 36. there are some sixteen promises one after another made to the people without any condition on the peoples part Be it known saith the Lord to them not for your sakes but for my own names sake I will do this for you but I will hand these mercies to you in the use of means verse 37. I will yet for this be enquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them And surely mistaken is Mr. Samuel Richardson that saith in his book called the Saints desire pag. 46. that there is no means to be used by man to get an interest in this Covenant or to partake of it 1. Break your Covenant with your old sins and your lusts or else God will not enter into Covenant with you Mat. 6. 24. 2. Come with an humble submission to yeild up thy self to the obedience of the will of God If any will be my disciple he must deny himself 3. Come before God in the name of a Mediator and make a Covenant with him by his sacrifice Psal 50. 5. 4. By faith look at the gracious invitations of God and consider his readiness and willingness to enter into Covenant with us 2 Chron. 30. 8 9. John 6. 39. The eighth thing to be enquired into is this when may a man or woman be said to be in this Covenant 1. A Man or woman old or young is then properly actually and expresly in Covenant with God when God hath come to it in a promise of the Gospel so that the soul doth feel it self under the power of the promise then it begins to know he is in Covenant so the Lord in and through this Covenant brings a poor soul to see and seeing to admire the superabundant riches of his free grace and love and so humbly and thankfully embraceth the same and the heart thus wrought upon exceedingly desires that such kindnesses of God might not slip out of mind but that the consideration of this soul-ravishing heart-melting grace and loving kindness might carry him forth stedfastly to believe and dearly to love cheerfully to honour and obey this God of mercy in soul body and spirit so long as the Sun and Moon endureth so the soul begins to be carried forth out of self unto God and in God alone finds rest and satisfaction 2. Faith and works doth evidence our being in the Covenant faith doth evidence it to our selves and works to others but faith and works do evidence no otherwise then organically as it is an organ or instrument by which we do apprehend it 3. Then may a man be said to be in the Covenant when he doth find his soul carried forth to a secret resting relying leaning staying and hanging upon Christ alone for life and happiness 4. A man may be said to be in this Covenant when he doth find within this frame of spirit Oh that I had more of God that I were filled with Christ oh that I had his righteousness to cover me his grace to pardon me his power to support me his wisdom to counsell me his loving kindness to refresh me and his happiness to crown me 5. Again a man may be said to be in this Covenant when in some good measure a soul doth come to see that Christ did legally interpose and put himself between God and man to mediate and intercede for them and so voluntarily became obedient unto his Fathers will and by undergoing bearing and suffering the warth and curse due to him for his sins And so Christ took away the sins reconciled him to God redeemed him from the Law and delivered him from the wrath to come 6. A man may be said to be in this Covenant when he doth freely accept of free pardon and a surety under the Gospel Gospel grace neglected is the great condemnation of the world how mindfull should we be of the Apostles counsell Receive not the grace of God in vain that is receive it not only in word but in power as it is a quickning spirit or spirit and life not begetting a form only of a profession but as changing and transforming into the Image of God and altering the inward disposition of the heart 7. A man may be said to be in this Covenant when he finds in himself a conscientious improvement of the word of God for self purifying the word hath a purifying faculty in it John 15.
ever read or from any true Christian hear that any man or woman that was acquainted with and in some good measure established in this Doctrine of grace infected with and overcome by these floods of errour that doth now swarm among us Oh how doth Satan pollute and defile the souls and judgements of men with Christ-dishonouring and soul-undoing opinions viz. That Ordinances of the Gospel are poor carnal low things wholly denying some and slighting the rest saying that the Scriptures are not the Word of God nor the ground of Faith nor the Rule of life nor a true Judge in differences and controversies also denying interpretations and expositions of the Word which is 1. First By God commanded 1 Cor. 14. 1. 2. This was practised by the godly Matth. 1. 23. 3. This is profitable for the unfolding of obscure places Neh. 8. 8. Now these and the like things the Lord in his Word doth call ungodliness because it in part or in whole denies what he hath commanded and opens a door for men to do the contrary Now for a remedy herein let every Christian study pray and enquire for and stand in the grace of God See that blessed place 1 Peter 5. 12. Exhorting and testifying that it is the true grace of God in which ye stand or wherein ye stand Agreeable is this text to the former Rom. 5. 2. By whom we have access by Faith into this grace wherein we stand now their standing in this grace did fence them from all false doctrines and erronious opinions Papists and Arminians which hold a falling away from grace know not the difference between the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace their errour is this they teach as a principle of Religion that those that are adopted sanctified and planted into Christ may fall away and perish this Doctrine is contrary to the whole tenor of the Covenant of Grace injurious unto God and uncomfortable unto the Saints it would shake the foundation of Gods election if those that are once sanctified should fall away and perish for those only whom he knew before those only doth he sanctifie now if he hath in mercy drawn us to himself it is a sign he hath loved us from everlasting Jer. 31. 3. our calling and sanctification is according to his purpose Rom. 8. 28 30. 2 Tim. 1. 9. and those that are sanctified justified and called are all first chosen and thence faith is called the Faith of Gods elect Titus 1. And those that are sanctified are said to be chosen unto it Eph. 1. 3 4. so that the foundation of Gods election standeth sure and so our state in Grace is sure also as being built on that foundation which cannot be removed and this doth Christ make good in that speech of his Mat 24. where speaking of the strong delusions which many should be deceived withall he saith that those deceivers should shew forth such signs and wonders that if it were possible they should deceive the very elect if it were possible but that they cannot do the elect cannot perish c. 5. This Doctrine is the main support of a soul under all tryals when all things fail Gods grace and free love doth never fail I will not leave thee nor forsake thee saith the Lord Heb. 13. 5. compared with Joshua 1. 5. 1. Gold and Silver may fail yea all earthly treasures do make themselves wings and flieaway and the labour of the Olive may fail Hab. 3. 17. 2. Our nearest and dearest friends may fail Job 19. 14. 2 Tim. 4. 16. 3. Our eyes may fail Psalm 119. 123. mine eyes fail for thy salvation and for the word of thy righteousness 4. Our tongues may fail Isa 41. 17. 5. Our strength may fail Psal 31. 10. My strength faileth because of mine iniquity 6. Our flesh and our heart may fail us Psal 73. 26 My flesh and my heart faileth but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever 7. Our spirits may fail us Psal 143. 7. Hear me speedily my spirit faileth me hide not thy face from me But now saith the Lord although the labour of the Olive may fail and thy nearest and dearest friends fail and thine eyes fail and thy tongue fail thy strength fail and flesh and heart fail yet I will be with thee I will never fail thee as thou mayst see by what I have left written for thy learning in these following Scriptures Josh 1. 5. Josh 21. 45. 23. 14. 1 King 8. 56. Heb. 13. 15. Yea search the whole Scripture and enquire of all the Saints whether I did ever fail any one soul that did put his trust in me thus thou mayest see that a Believer is blessed only in a help without him not within and all his assurance confidence and comfort doth flow to him from the fountain of free-grace through the channel of faith and not of works believing himself happy for what another even Christ hath done for him not for what he hath done or can do the joy of a Believer would alwaies be unspeakable did he alwaies apprehend his happiness in and by Christ alone In a word the pure glorious matchless and spotless righteousness of Christ is a souls righteousness and resting place when the soul finds that he wanders no more from mountain to hill as formerly he did Whoever you are that read these lines search whether you are gotten into this rest if not with all speed get into this resting place for Satan is walking about as a roaring Lyon and though he cannot rob a Christian of his Crown yet he will do what he can to rob him of his comfort and peace to make his life a burden and an hell to him to cause him to spend his daies in sorrow and mourning sighing and complaining in doubting and questioning saying in these or the like words surely I have no interest in Christ my graces are not true my hope is but the hope of an hypocrite my confidence is but presumption and my enjoyments are but delusions Then when a soul is thus beweldred and troubled the Lord many times discovers his free grace and love and that expells ignorance and slayeth the souls enemies and by this love the Lord draweth the soul to himself in love again Gods way of support of a soul in trouble and tryal is a way of love therefore he saith Behold I will allure her and speak comfortably unto her Hos 2. 14. his love is free full and eternal I will saith he love them freely Hos 14. 4. I will draw them with the cords of a man with the bonds of love Hos 11. 4. And so the soul comes to have great joy and pleasure Psal 16. 11. No misery as hunger cold nakedness pain grief or weariness shall much disquiet the soul it will rest fatisfied in God alone in this rest there is tranquility in tranquility contentment in contentment joy in joy variety in variety security in security eternity
to think of the back parts of Christ and wait for a time to come behind him in a throng that they may not be seen to touch the hem of his garment You know when a pump is drie men use to fetch a Bucket of water and pour it into the dry pump and then they fall to pumping and by vertue of the water poured in there comes more water up and by continual pumping they fetch out abundance So our hearts many times are dry there is no sap no moisture no life the vertues of Christ must first be poured in before you can get any thing out Wherefore stand we labouring and tugging in vain O stay no longer go to Christ it is he that must break thy rocky heart in a word we must consider Christ as freely given us by the Father before we can believe the life of grace This Doctrine speaks out with open mouth the exceeding freeness and riches of Gods grace as will appear if we consider 1. That God is first in seeking after us to draw us into Covenant with himself we seek not him but he seeks us we chuse not him but he chuseth us we wait not on him he waits to be gracious to us we beseech not him he doth beseech us to be reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5. 20. John 15. 16. and 1 Joh. 4. 19. So that he is found of them that seek not after him because he first reveals and offers himself in mercy to us Isa 65. 1. 2. Consider the time wherein the Lord doth seek to us and take us by the hand to bring us into Covenant with him and then we shall find that when we are most averse and backward and have least thought of seeking after him then it is that he seeks us thus the Lord called Saul when he was persecuting raging and breathing out slaughter against the Lord and against his Saints then the Lord takes him by the hand and enters into Covenant with him Acts 9. and so it was with those mockers Acts 2. 13 37. Here were no dispositions and preparations on their part but free and unexpected grace from God 3. Compare those that are taken into Covenant with those that are left out for all are not taken in Ephes 2. 12. And this also will make it manifest it is Free grace by which any are taken in Rom. 3. 22 23. We have all sinned and there is no difference no reason therefore in us why one is taken into Covenant and not another but only free grace in God God owes nothing to any man he may truly say to all I do thee no wrong Mat. 20. 13. Thou hast as much as I owe thee So then it must needs be free grace to those that are taken in apply John 14. 21. Mat. 11. 5 25. Nay sometimes God chuseth the worst and takes in the most unworthy and leaves those that are better then they viz. Paul a chief of sinners 1 Tim. 1. 15. Publicans and Harlots Mat. 21. Mary Magdalen possest with seven Devils these were taken in and the righteous generation as they were reputed which justified themselves and were justified by others were left and passed by The reasons why the Lord would have his Covenant to stand upon this foundation of free grace are these 1. To be a ground of hope to such as see themselves unworthy of acceptance with God if the grace of the Covenant were not free such unworthy ones could have no hope 2. It is the glory of grace to be freely communicated Isa 55. 1. Come and buy without mony it darkens the glory of grace to have it bestowed upon worthy ones Be it known unto you saith the Lord not for your sakes I bestow this but for my own names sake 3. That vain man may not boast 4. That our mercies and blessings may be sure to us Rom. 4. 16. Our salvation is by grace to the end that the promise might be sure to all the seed implying thereby that if it depended never so little upon works we could not be so sure of it Oh the rich mercy the great love exceeding riches of his grace great goodness tender love great mercy multitude of loving kindnesses Oh then not unto us O Lord not unto us but to thy name be the praise it is enough for us that we have life let grace alone have all the praise and glory and let every one that readeth these lines endeavour to imitate this free grace of God which is shewed to us First Loving the Lord not for his gifts and rewards but with a free love as he hath loved us and serving him with a free spirit and a willing mind Secondly Let us be free in doing good unto all men even to such as have deserved nothing though they be aliens and strangers and such as we never hope to receive any good from yet freely to do them good even where we look for nothing again as God hath done to us Luke 14. 12 14. 10. As this Covenant and grace is free so it is sure and certain to be performed it cannot it will not fail those that rest upon it The Covenant and promise of grace are built upon the unchangable purpose of God which is a foundation remaining sure and cannot be shaken 2 Tim. 2. 19. Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure having this seal the Lord knoweth them that are his Tit. 1. 2. The Lord is said to have promised eternal life before the world began So then it is free and it is sure and the freeness of it doth prove the sureness of it it is free that it might be sure so here it is sure because it is free nothing can hinder free grace from giving eternal life to whom it will So that the accomplishment will every way answer their expectation and hope thus said David 2. Sam. 23. 5. God hath made with me a Covenant perfect in all points and sure and in Isa 55. 3. The promises of the Covenant are called the sure mercies of David the promises of free grace are not yea and nay various and uncertain but they are Yea and Amen sure to be fulfilled there shall not fail so much as one word of all that good which God hath promised to do for his people See Joshua 21. 45. and 23 14. and 1 King 18. 56. The stability of grace is compared to the firmness and unmoveableness of the mighty mountains Isa 54. 19 And to the unvariable course of the day and night Jer. 33. 20. So that it is as ea●e yea more easie for the mountains to remove out of their places and the course of day and night to cease as for the Covenant of grace to fail God hath given us many pledges to assure us of the certainty of it 1. His word is gone out of his mouth he cannot alter it Psal 89. 2. He hath written it to make it more sure and what he hath written is written never to be bloted out
3. He hath sealed it with his own seal and so it is become as the Laws of the Medes and Persians which alter not 4. He hath sworn to make it good in every part of it Psal 89. 3 35. Heb. 6. 17 18. 5. He hath given us the vertues or earnest of the Spirit 2 Cor. 1. 22. 6 Christ the Mediator and Testator of it hath confirmed it by his own blood Heb. 9. 16 17 18. This Covenant is said to be everlasting First in respect of the promise made to Christ for us which was done before the foundation of the world Tit. 1. 2. Secondly as being to continue from everlasting to everlasting though the Covenant in respect of our own personal entring into it is made with us now in time and hath a beginning yet for continuance it is everlasting and without end it is never to be broken if once made in truth 2 Chron. 13. 5. It is called a Covenant of salt because it corrupteth not it faileth not as things that are salted use to last and continue hence it is that all the blessings of the Covenant are said to be everlasting forgiveness of sins is everlasting being once forgiven they are never remembred any more Jer. 31. 33. The peace and joy which comes thereby is everlasting your peace shall no more be taken from you and your joy is everlasting Isa 35. 10. Our salvation is an everlasting salvation Isa 45. 17. Our life is an everlasting life Joh. 3. 16. Several strong reasons why the Saints should walk holily notwithstanding the Covenant is free and justification is free and salvation it self is of grace not of works ALthough our qualifications doth not cause Gods love yet we might question whether God did love us if we were not qualified Some men will be ready to say if the Covenant of grace be thus every way free in those several particulars and if we are so freely justified by grace without works qualifications and conditions on our part we may live as we list c. To which give me leave to lay down the grounds and reasons why all men ought to walk holily and humbly in this present world and that for these ten strong reasons 1. Because the Lord hath commanded us in his word to do justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with our God Mic. 6. 8. 2. Because the Lord the Mighty God is glorified thereby Mat. 5. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your Father which is in heaven 1 Pet. 2. 12. That they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God 3. Although the Covenant of grace is free and we are justified freely by grace yet we are to walk holily and without blame before him in love Ephes 1. 4. John 15. 16. Because it is the end of our election 4. Because it is the end of our Redemption 1 Pet. 1. 18. Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold from your vain conversation but with the precious blood of Christ 2 Cor. 5. 15. He dyed for us that they which live should not live unto themselves but unto him which died for them 5. Because it is the end of our Vocation 1 Pet. 1. 15. But as he which hath called you is holy so be you holy in all manner of conversation 1 Thes 4. 7. God hath not called us unto uncleanness but unto holiness 6. Because it is the end of our Creation Eph. 2. 10. Created in Christ Jesus unto good works which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them 7. Because if our conversation be not answerable to our profession we walk 1. Unworthy of God Col. 1. 10. and 1 Thes 2. 12. 2. Unworthy of the Gospel Phil. 1. 27. 3. Unworthy of our Vocation Ephes 4. 1. 8. The Saints should endeavour to out strip in all good things because they be the salt of the earth the light of the world a City set upon an hill that cannot be hid Mat. 5. 13 14. 9. Because of the great dishonour that we shall bring to God if we do not walk holily we cause his name to be blasphemed we crucifie Christ afresh and cause the way of truth to be evil spoken of and grieve the Saints and harden sinners c. 10. Because the end of our lives and the dissolution of the world is at hand Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness See 1 Pet. 4. 3. 2 Pet. 3. 11. I know no further reasons unless it be these that I shall but name viz. First it is the way in which God hath appointed men to walk in as in Ephes 2. 12. Secondly that we may declare our selves to be the children of our heavenly Father as in 1 Pet. 1. 14. and Mat. 5. 45. Thirdly that we may be profitable to our brethren Tit. 3. 8. compared with 1 Pet. 3. 1 2. Fourthly that we may adorn the Gospel and stop the mouths of wicked men who will condemn sin in a professour although they will approve of it and delight in it themselves Fifthly because God will give unto every man according to his works Mat. 16. 27. Sixthly a Christian should walk holily that so he might give a check convince and put to shame and silence ungodly men 1 Pet. 2. 15. For so is the will of God that with well doing you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men I might had I time add some motives to these undeniable reasons to put those that read these lines upon holy walkings as First he that doth order his conversation aright shall see the salvation of the Lord Psal 50. 23. 2 Pet. 1. 11. For so an entrance shall be administred to you abundantly Secondly it will be a great incouragement to others to walk so too 2 Cor. 8. 7. compared with verse 3. Thirdly it will be very profitable to thy self not only afterwards but in the present tence Psal 19. 11. And in the keeping of them there is great reward Of sanctification or a holy conversation according to a Gospel Rule But in all our actions and holy walkings let us be sure we have an eye upon these three things viz. 1. We must act from a right ground or principle 2. We must act by a right rule by precept rather then from example 3. We must be sure we have right ends low base ends spoil the highest undertakings 1. We must act from a right ground or principle there be three principles from which men do act two of them are too low and beneath a true Christian to act from viz 1. A natural principle from which the Phylosophers and heathens did many commendable things 2. Many men act from a legal principle as the Papists Quaker and Arminian these do many things that are commanded but not as it is commanded and so with God not accepted
that it may seem unto himself an unreasonable thing once to question whether his heart be right or the action good even in those actions wherein he came short both of the matter ground form and end Quest Cannot a natural man do an action that is good Answ A man by nature may do an action that is good for the substance thereof as appears Dan. 4. 27. But he cannot do that which is truly and spiritually good Mat. 7. 18. A corru●t tree cannot bring forth good fruit Jer. 13. 23. Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye do good that are accustomed to do evil See also Rom. 3. 10. Prov. 15. 8. and 21. 27. Quest Why cannot he do that which is spiritually good 1. Because his person is not accepted Gen. 4. 4. compared with 1 Pet. 2. 5. 2. Because his person is not sanctified so the actions he doth proceed not from a good root viz. Faith and the spirit of sanctification 1 Tim. 1. 5. Jam. 4. 3. 3. Because he doth it not to a good end 1 Cor. 10. 31. Col. 3. 17. Phil 1. 16. Object You have been speaking to us of the principal from which the rule by which and the end to which we should act and of our remissness and defection herein but pray if you can tell us by what power we shall do all these things I find my self altogether unable to do these things and I read in Scripture that the way of man is not in himself it is not in man to direct his steps Jer. 10. 23. And Paul tels us from the Lord that we are not sufficient as of our selves to think so much as one good thought and that it is God that worketh in us both to will and to do Answ Strength to perform any duty to exercise any grace to subdue any lusts to resist any temptation to bear any affliction c. Is derived only from Christ viz. 1. Consider that either he hath already enabled thee to do the thing commanded for he hath given a talent or talents 1 Cor. 12. 8 9 10. Rom. 12. 6. compared with Mat. 25. from ver 15. to 28. 2. Consider that many times the Lord conveyes a power together with the command to enable thee to do the thing commanded So when he bid Lazarus to come forth he conveys a power together with the command and he came forth so again in Luk. 5. 24. he commanded the man that was sick of the palsie to take up his bed and walk and conveys a power together with the command whereby ver 25. he did immediately arise took up his bed went to his house and glorified God so again in Ezek. 2. 1 2. And he said unto me Son of man stand upon thy feet and I will speak unto thee and the Spirit entred into me when he spake and set me upon my feet and I heard him that spake unto me c. 3. When the Command lyeth before thee if thou findest no power in thy self already given to thee neither any power conveyed to thee together with the Command then bring the precept to the promise and search what there is in the promise answering to that which the precept requires and so to sue out by prayer the blessing of the promise that we may be enabled to do the duty of the precept Precept it is mans duty to believe Mark 1. 15. Promise the Covenant holds forth believing as a free gift Ephes 2. 8. Prayer sues it out Lord help my unbelief Precept It is mans duty to wash and be clean Isa 1. 16. Promise It is Gods promise to sanctifie and cleanse us Ezek. 36. 25. Prayer It is the business of prayer to sue out this promise wash me and I shall be clean Psa 51. 7. It is mans duty to repent and turn to God Act. 17. 30. The promise holds forth repentance as the gift of God Act. 5. 31 2 Tim. 2. 25. Prayer sues it out turn thou me and I shall be turned Jer. 31. 18. It is required of man as a duty to make him a new heart Ezek. 18. 31. It is Gods promise to give a new heart Ezek. 36. 26. Prayer riseth up sutable to the promise Psal 51. 10 Create in me a clean heart O God and renew a right spirit within me It is mans duty to love God Mat. 22. 37. Promise It is Gods Covenant to circumcise the heart to love him Deut. 30. 6. Prayer works out in the strength thereof that God would direct the heart to love him 2 Thes 3. 5. It is mans duty to fear God Deut. 10. 12. It is Gods promise to put his fear into our hearts Jer. 32. 40. Prayer seeks for it Psal 86 11. Vnite my heart to fear thy name It is mans duty to draw neer to God Jam. 4. 8. It is Christs promise to draw men unto him John 12. 32. Prayer falls in sutable hereunto Can. 1. 4. draw me we will run after thee It is mans duty to walk in Gods Statutes Psal 119. 4. It is Gods promise to enable him so to do Ezek. 36. 27. Prayer works up accordingly Psal 119. 5. O that my waies were directed to keep thy Statutes It is mans duty to be strong in the Lord Ephes 6. 10. It is Gods promise to make him strong Psa 29. 11. Prayer fetcheth strength from him Psal 86. 16. Give thy strength to thy servant It is mans duty not to depart from God Heb. 3. 12. It is Gods promise to his people that they shall not depart from him Jer. 32. 40. Prayer answers hereto O let me not wander from thy commandments Psal 119. 10. I might instance in all or almost every thing required of us that there is a promise left us and to many precepts there is two or three promises the one to enable us the other to reward us and all to encourage us to do our duty Behold all ye whose faces are Sion-ward here is a new and living way paved with promises A way of strength to the upright wherein they may walk from strength to strength till they appear before God in Sion Let no discouraging thoughts concerning the difficulty of the work which is set before you possess your hearts so as to hinder your application to it and cheerfull progress in it A yoak we are commanded to take upon us but such as is made most easie to bear because that God which layeth it upon us hath promised to strengthen supply and support us he who is righteous in commanding is gracious in promising let us be strong in believing and fervent in praying and our work will be our meat our duty our delight and God will let us see that he hath either the Castle of providence or the Ark of a promise or the al-sufficiency of his own grace for a retirement of his people in the greatest storms and tempests Paul and Silas said to the Jaylor Act. 16. 30 31. Believe on the Lord Jesus
son and said Father I am not worthy to be called thy son 3. We should keep our Iustification distinct and not go to reason out our Iustification from our Sanctification but we should look to Jesus Christ the Rock upon which a Christian should build his soul 4. We should alwaies keep up and keep distinct our Justification as the spring and way to Sanctification for the fruit of Justification is peace joy boldness and strength to do the will of God all this doth come in from Jesus Christ in a way of believing and not from Sanctification for as we are not to conclude our Justification from any effects of Sanctification so we are not to conclude that apprehension of Justification to be from God which takes us off the means waies and rules of Sanctification therefore although they be distinct in these four forementioned heads yet they agree and go hand in hand in these ensuing things 1. They go together in these he that is justified doth as earnestly desire Sanctification and holiness as he doth heaven and happiness 2. He doth as well desire that is justified by Christs righteousness to chuse Christ as a King to rule over him as a Saviour to save him 3. They go together in this respect also a soul is not content with the apprehension of his Justification unless he finds some measure of and growing up in Sanctification 4. They go together as doth appear by this the man that is truly justified he doth make as much care and conscience to practise holiness as ever he did to get Christs righteousness 5. They go together in this respect also every discovery of Christ and his righteousness to the soul for Justification doth fit and heighten the souls resolution for Sanctification and holiness 6. A man may be said to keep his Justification and Sanctification together when he doth trust his soul in the hands of Christ for salvation and makes it his work to die to the world and to honour Christ in the world 7. When a soul hath found out Christ for his Justification he doth make it his great business to be conformable to him in his conversation Phil. 3. 10. being made conformable to his death Now if any ask 1. Why a soul should keep his Justification and Sanctification distinct in some things 2. Why in other things we should keep them together 3. How a soul should come to keep his Justification and Sanctification distinct and yet to keep them together Then I answer 1. Why a soul should keep them distinct to which I answer 1. Because the Spirit of God is distinct in laying down these things in the Scrptures viz. in exhorting us to come without money and without price and if we walk in darkness and see no light yet to trust and stay our selves upon him because he doth love us freely and pardon us graciously and is found of them that sought him not 2. Because otherwise our souls can never be truly established rooted and built up in him Isaiah 7. 9. Eph. 3. 17. Col. 2. 7. he that doth mix Justification and Sanctification together can never be established 3. We should keep them distinct that so we might give God the whole glory of our Justification and salvation Quest 2. Is why we should in other things keep them together Answ 1. That we might glorifie God before the world its true a soul doth most glorifie God by believing but he doth more glorifie God before the world by his holy conversation Matth. 5. 16. John 15. 8. 2. Because holiness and sanctification is the way in which the Lords people shall be saved I do not say that this is the way by which but the way in which salvation is manifested 2 Pet. 1. 10 11. 3. The next reason why we should keep them together is because thereby we shall stop the mouths of wicked men 1 Peter 2. 15. For so is the will of God that with well doing you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men 4. We are to keep them together because this is the will of God that all that do profess his name and lay hold on his Mercy should live holily 1 Thes 4. 3 4. For this is the will of God even your sanctification that every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and holiness 5. We are to keep up Sanctification as well as Justification because thereby the Lord will stop the mouths of wicked men at the last day saying Come ye blessed of my Father you have done thus and thus for me and mine Matth. 25. 34 35. Quest 3. Is how should a soul come to keep his Justification and Sanctification distinct and yet keep them together Answ 1. Meditate much on the free love of God when we were in our blood he was in his love freely to love us and graciously to justifie us and then in the second place the soul will say within it self shall I sin against him that hath freely justified me No no how can I do this great wickedness and sin against God 2. Dwell much upon those engagements that God hath put upon us in the many great things that he hath done for us Titus 3. 3 4 5. For we our selves were sometimes foolish disobedient deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures living in malice and envy hateful and hating one another but after that the kindness and love of God our Saviour appeared not by works of righteousness which we have done c. Ver. 8. These things I will that thou affirm constantly that they which have believed in God might be careful to maintain good works 3. Think much upon the littleness of our work or services we can do to him and the unspeakable things that he hath done and promised to do for us what a disproportion there is between his mercy to us and our obedience to him the one is like the Ocean Sea the other as a grain of mustard-seed the one infinite the other finite the one as a great mountain that fills the whole earth the other as a Pepper-corn 4. Dwell much upon the great difference there will be between those that make it their work to keep up their Faith and obedience and those that do not at the coming of Christ the one he will bless and make them sit down to meat and will serve them see that blessed place Luke 12. 37. The other hath neither Justification nor Sanctification the Lord will cut them asunder and will appoint them their portion with unbelievers Luke 12. 46. O what remains then but that we labour to distinguish between our Justification and our personal Sanctification The first is quite out of our selves consisting in the imputation of Christs righteousness inherent in him who sits at the right hand of God far above the reach and sphear of sins activity and is therefore perfect and compleat yea the foundation of all blessedness the latter is in our selves and therefore weak and
our selves to be justified from our sins by faith in the blood of Christ is the cause of our love to Christ 1 Joh. 4. 10 19. 6. Our love to Christ is the cause of our obeying of Christ 1 Joh. 5. 3. For this is the love of God that we keep his commandments so again Joh. 14. 15. If ye love me keep my commandments See the 21. and 23. ver 7. In our obedience to him he doth manifest these things to us that we have right to the tree of life Rev. 22. 14. Blessed are they that do his commandments that they may have right to the tree of life and may enter in through the gates into the City that is in the obedience he shall have the manifestation of that 2 Pet. 1. 11. For so an entrance shall be administred unto you abundantly into the everlasting Kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ And so he is manifested to be the Author of salvation to all them that obey him Heb. 5. 9. Behold obedience to God is the way of conveyance to us so it is a lively evidence to others that we are the Lords Joh. 13. 35. By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples because our faith which is the evidence of things not seen to us is proved to others to be true by its works Jam. 2. 18. Behold here is the Lords going downward from the causes to the effects now we must go upward from the effects to the causes 1. God shews us what is our duty and puts us upon doing it and for the doing of it those that behold it and hear of us judge us to be true Christians 2. In the doing of it God manifests himself more and more to our souls in the keeping of his appointments there is great reward for so an entrance is administred to us abundantly 2 Pet. 1. 11. 3. The cause of our obedience is our love to God If ye love me keep my commandments 4. The cause of our love was our seeing that God did love us first 1 Joh. 4. 10 19. 5. The cause of our faith in Christ is the preaching of the Gospel Rom. 10. 17. 6. The cause of the preaching the Gospel to us was Christs dying for us 7. The cause of Christs dying for us was Gods great love of pitty to us-wards even when we were dead in trespasses and sins Ephes 2. 4. So then Gods love was the cause of sending his son o deye for our sins Christs dying and rising again is the cause of the Gospe●s being preached The preaching of the Gospel is the cause of our believing Our believing is the cause of our justification from sin the knowing of our selves free from sin by the blood of Christ is the cause of our love to Christ our love to Christ is the cause of our obeying of him and in onr obedience is the manifestation more and more conveyed to us So by our obedience others have some evidence of our faith in Christ Mans life is or should be guided by these vertues 1. FAith whereby we believe in and lay hold on God for something promised 2. Hope and that is either for pardoning mercy or for glory 3. Charity whereby we love God as the only good and his people and our enemies in obedience to his command 4. Prudence 1. In our hearts to guide our thoughts 2. In our mouths to order our speeches 3. It should be in our words to grace or adorn our actions 4. In the intelligence to understand things present 5. Prudence to guess at things to come 6. Prudence to recal matters past 5. Temperance which moderates our desires and brings the Appetite under a rule of reason that it may not exceed the rule of moderation 6. Perseverance which continueth in doing and suffering valiantly 7. Justice which giveth every man his due without self-love fear or ranckor it binds us to give due to God to our parents and kindred verity and equity in all that we do in order to our duty herein 1. Sense perceiveth 2. Imagination representeth 3. Understanding formeth 4. Wit deviseth 5. Reason judgeth 6. Memory preserveth 7. Intelligence apprehendeth 8. Contemplation in the prosecution perfecteth Several Divine Sentences First of Christ HE that was the Son of of God became the son of man that we who were the sons of men might become the sons of God He was made sin for us that knew no sin that we might be made the right●ousness of God in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. The more vile Christ made himself for us the more dear he ought to be unto us therefore let us beware of Christ-dishonouring and soul-undoing opinions All good things are in Christ eminently perfectly and eternally Faith in the blood of Christ the witness of the Spirit of Christ a sense of feeling and the love of Christ and the hope of reigning with Christ are the only things to be desired Christ is as well the fountain of common gifts as of saving grace A true Christian cannot find fulness in the creature nor sweetness in sin nor life in any Ordinance without Christ he will weep over other mens weaknesses and rejoyce at their graces We must lean more upon Christ and less upon our own strength lest with Peter we rest upon some old strength and fall before a new temptation Christ can heal a soul speedily perfectly freely and eternally Oh that Christ should shed his blood for those sins that we never shed one tear for A true Christian doth labour for unity in the Church as well as purity he loves to see Christs coat without rent as well as without spot Phil. 3. 15. Christ did admit his spouse into the garden sweetly though she kept him out of her house sluggishly What a poor soul doth for Christ sincerely that our precious Saviour takes sweetly though it be done ill he doth accept it well Nay though we carry our selves in our choicest performances very weakly yet he doth carry himself towards us very sweetly and doth accept of that which we do kindly although done in much infirmity let us enter into his service and we shall soon experience his sweetness Christ doth weigh the heart of the giver more then the value of the gift and delights to see his people give cheerfully though they cannot give bountifully Let us give over measuring his mercy by the narrow scantling of our dark understandings though difficulties may arise and Christians hearts may fail yet the work of Christ shall go on c. Of affliction for sin in Sentences GOD is as severe in punishing as he is gracious in pardoning his house of correction is his School of instruction God had one Son without corruption but no Son without correction he had one Son without Sin but no Son without Sorrow A Soul may be dearly beloved although soarly afflicted sin and punishment are linked together if thou wilt be sinful thou must be miserable Oh what is the state of a man
love thereof they willingly parted with much of their earthly goods and possessions to lay up treasure in heaven Abraham and Sarah left their own country and possessions to look for a City whose maker and builder is God Heb. 11. 10 15 16. David preferreth one day in this place before a thousand elsewhere Psal 84. 10. Elias earnestly besought the Lord to receive his soul into his Kingdom and went willingly though in a fiery Chariot King 19. 4. Saint Paul having once seen heaven continually desi●eth to be dissolved that he might be with Christ Phil. 1. 23. Saint Peter having espyed but a glimpse of eternal glory in the mount wished that he might dwel there all the dayes of his life Mat. 17. 4. saying Master it is good for us to be here c. Christ a little before his death prayeth his Father to receive him into that excellent glory Joh. 17. 5. And the Apostle witnesseth Heb. 11. 2. that for the joy which was set before them they endured the cross and despised the shame 1 Pet. 5. 4. and when the chief Shepheard shall appear ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away c. this eternal condition admits of no change or alteration decay or consumption waste or diminution mans eternal condition admits of no comparison revocation or conclusion c. What use we may make of all these precious things 1. EXcellent arguments may be drawn to pres-Christians to a holy life 2 Pet. 3. 11. see ing then that all these things must be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and godliness and ver 14. Wherefore seeing ye look for such things give diligence that ye may be found in him in peace It is our duty to live in a continual expectation of the coming of the Lord Jesus with our loins girt and our lamps burning for blessed is that servant whom his master when he cometh shall find so doing 2. Consider that here is a fountain opened for Christian comfort and ground for patience in all troubles that there shall be an end a Christians hope shall not be cut off if in this life only we had hope we were of all men most miserable 1 Cor. 15. 19. But here lyes the comfort and patience of true Christians theywait for another world and they know it is a just thing with God to give them rest after their labours 2 Thes 1. 9. and a crown after their combate 2 Tim. 4. 8. and after their long Pilgrimage an everlasting habitation 2 Cor. 5. 1. Be patient saith the Apostle and settle your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh James 5. 8. 2 Pet. 2. 9. When they that have sown in tear shall reap in joy Psal 126. 5. 3. Consider that assurance of that blessed state may be attained in this life we know faith Paul 2 Cor. 5. 1. That if our earthly house of this tabernacle be destroyed we have a building not made with hands eternal in the heavens these things saith John I have written unto you that ye may know that ye have eternal life 1 John 5. 13. I am sure saith Job 19. 25 26 27. that my Redeemer liveth and he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms destroy this body yet shall I see God in my flesh whom I my self shall see and mine eyes shall behold when I awake saith David I shall be satisfied with thy Image Psal 17. 15. 4. The consideration of this should provoke us to be such as may be made meet for this inheritance of the Saints in light and to endeavour to attain and retain the earnest of the Spirit whence we may be alwaies able to say we are confident and willing rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord 2 Cor. 5. 8. and to fill the soul with strong consolation against the sufferings of life and the fear of death and to work an answerable conversation that whether absent or present we may so walk as we may be accepted of him 5. The consideration of this should put us upon a patient waiting for and a longing expectation of our change which draweth on a pace and not to put that off as most do to the last year and when that is come to the last moneth of that year and then to the last week of that moneth and then to the last day of that week and then to the last hour of that day and then to the last minute of that hour and so time shall be no more and we shall not find repentance although we seek it with tears 6. Consider that the cause of our salvation and so of our glorious condition is Gods meer love and favour without any merit of ours Luke 12. 32. It is our Fathers good pleasure to give us a Kingdom Joh. 3. 16. God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son Ephes 2. 8. By grace we are saved through faith and not of our selves it is the gift of God Rom. 6. 23. everlasting life is the gift of God and though eternal life be called a reward yet it is not of merit but of mercy let this be grounded in our hearts that the Kingdom of heaven is not a stipend of servants but an inheritance of Sons which they only obtain that lay hold on his mercy Romans 5. 8. compared with 1 Tim. 6. 12. and 19. 2. Now as hath been said as the love of God is the cause of our salvation fo Jesus Christ is the way Joh. 10. 9. Joh 14. 6. 3 The holy Spirit is the guide in that way as in Joh. 16. 13. 4. The Scriptures of truth is the rule Gal. 6. 16. Isa 8. 20. 5. The evidence of this salvation is faith Heb. 11. 1. It is true the instrumental cause offering and proclaiming salvation is the Gospel but the instrumental receiving and applying it is faith and the cause sealing it inwardly to our souls is the Spirit of God the external and instrumental seals thereof are the two confirming Ordinances Baptism and the Lords Supper 6. The anchor of this salvation is hope Heb. 6. 19. 7. The effects of this salvation is love to God because he loved us first and a holy conversation if ye love me saith Christ keep my commandments and they that have believed in Christ must be careful to maintain good works which are found and required in the way to the Kingdom but they are not the cause of reigning Of the end of the world THE consequents of the last judgement is life eternal in heaven or hell and the end of the world having finished the former let me point to the latter and I have finished what I intended we read Mat. 24. 3. that Peter James John and Andrew Mark 13. 3. came to Christ and desired him to satisfie them in these three questions 1. Concerning the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple 2. Concerning
ibid. 4. The seat of faith p. 110. 5. The ground of faith p. 111. 6. The springs of Faith p. 112. 7. Of the hinderances and lets of faith p. 114. 8. Motives to believe p. 116. 9. Of the evil of unbelief p. 118. 10. Characters of true faith p. 120. 11. The benefits of living by faith p. 123. 12. How we should keep up faith at all times p. 126. Of the flesh p. 318. G. OF God the Father p. 1. Of God the Son p. 2. Of God the Holy-Ghost p. 4. Of Gods decrees p. 5. It is mans duty to get a title to Gods love and to get assurance that he hath a title p. 404. Of the time when the place where the persons to whom the Gospel is to be preached p. 214. Of the gifts and graces of the Spirit p. 194. H. OF the Holy-Ghost p. 4. Of the grace of hope p. 186. 1. Of its nature what it is p. 187. 2. Of the properties of this hope p. 188. 3. Of the encouragements to hope p. 189. 4. Of the difference between a well grounded and a presumptuous hope p. 190. Of attentive hearing p. 228. Several strong reasons why we should walk holily p. 85. I. OF justification by grace p. 58. 1. This Doctrine is the foundation and basis of all Christian Religion p. 60. 2. This Doctrine is the inlet to all true peace and comfort p. 61. 3. This is the root and spring of all Gospel obedience p. 65. 4. This Doctrine is the great stop and bar to keep out all floods of error p. 67. 5. This Doctrine is the main support of a soul under all tryals p. 70. 6. This is the great Doctrine by which Satans kingdom is overthrown p. 72. 7. This is the great Doctrine that Satan doth most war against either to pervert or corrupt p. 74. 8. This Doctrine is the hardest piece to be learned it being supernatural p. 76. 9. This Doctrine doth speak forth with open mouth the exceeding riches and freeness of Gods grace p. 81. 10. And as this grace is free so it is sure and certain it will not fail those that rest upon it p. 83. Of the last judgement p. 440. 1. The signs that go before it ibid. 2. What is meant by it p. 441. 3. Of the place where the Lord will judge the world ibid. The person who it is that shall judge the world p. 442. Of the time how long the judgement shall last p. 443. Out of what the people shall be judged p. 444. The day of judgement will be a great day p. 445. Of the blessed condition of the godly after judgement p. 453. Of the sad condition of the wicked after judgement p. 450. Of the place where the Godly shall be after judgement p. 454. Of justification and sanctification how they differ and wherein they agree p. 101. Of the variety of joyes that there shall be in heaven p. 459. What use to make of it p. 463. K. OF Knowledge p. 157. 1. Of the Knowledge of God p. 158. 2. Of the knowledge of our selves p. 159. 3. The properties of true knowledge p. 460. 4. How one believer differs from another in knowledge p. 162. 5. What great measures of knowledge a man may attain unto and yet be without saving knowledge p. 163. L. OF the grace of love to God p. 170. 1. Of the nature of it ibid. 2. Of the kinds or degrees of it p. 172. 3. Of the springs of this love p. 173. 4. Of the trials of it how it may be known p. 175. 5. Of the properties of this love p. 179. 6. Of the motives to perswade us to get into and grow up in this love p. 180. Of our love to the children of God 281. 1. The nature of it what it is ibid. 2. Of the trials of our love p. 182. 3. Of the means of attaining this love p. 185. 4. Of the impediments and hinderances of it p. 186. The difference between the Law and the Gospel p. 301. Mans life is or should be guided by these seven vertues p. 339. M. OF man p. 11. Of mans fall p. 13. Of mans recovery p. 16. What man is by nature p. 319. Of mans own righteousness p. 320. Mercies and deliverances are many times nearest to us when we ●●ink they are farthest off p. 332. O. OF the standing Ordinances of the Gospel p. 199. Of obedience p. 166. How to approve the present opportunity p. 04. P. OF providence p. 14. Of the Ordinance of preaching 1. What preaching is p. 208. 2. Who they are that ought to preach p. 209. 3. The manner how the Preacher is to preach p. 211. 4. Of the time when the place where the persons to whom the Gospel is to be preached p. 214. 5. What a Minister is to preach p. 216. 6. Which is first to be preached the Law or the Gospel p. 217. 7. How the gift of preaching may be attained p. 219. 8. Whether the Minister may receive mony or wages yea or no. p. 227. 9. Of attentive hearing of what is preached p. 228. 10. How to remember what is preached p. 230. 11. How to try all and hold fast that which is good p. 231. Of prayer and supplication p. 332. 1. The nature of it what it is ibid. 2. Whom we are to pray unto p. 345. 3. For whom we are to pray p. 235. 4. What extraordinary prayer is p. 236. 5. Of the necessity of prayer p. 238. 6. The posture to be used in prayer p. 240. 7. Of the place where we are to pray p. 241. 8. Of the time in which we are to pray ibid. 9. Motives to encourage us to pray p. 242. 10. Means to be used to obtain the gift of prayer p. 243. 11. Of the hinderances of prayer p. 344. 12. Several sorts of prayer never answered p. 245. 13. How many wayes the Lord doth answer prayer p. 246. Of collection for the poor another standing Ordinance of the Gospel p. 272. 1. What it is to give to the poor ibid. 2. Who they are that ought to give p. 273. 3. How much they are to give p. 274. 4. To whom we should give ibid. 5. What order to be observed in giving to the poor p. 275. 6. With what affection we must give ibid. 7. How many waies a man is said to give p. 276. 8. What fruit to expect of these duties ibid. Of the Lords Prayer and the several petitions therein contained p. 311. Of the pollution and misery of the soul in this life p. 390. How to improve the present opportunity p. 404. 1. Store up a stock of faith p. 408. 2. Store up a stock of promises p. 409. 3. Store up a stock of prayers ibid. 4. Gather up all thy evidences and spiritual experiences and keep them in thy mind and heart p. 410. 5. Live every day as thy last day p. 409. 6. Make thy will in time of health p. 411. Whether there be any such thing as the personal reign