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A54457 The sole and soveraign way of England's being saved humbly proposed by R.P. R. P. (Robert Perrot); Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673.; Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1671 (1671) Wing P1647; ESTC R27158 240,744 392

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the joy and comfort of them more than countervail the other there being no comparison between them but the one exceedingly transcending the other As the sufferings of this present Rom. 8. 18. time are not worthy to be compared with the glory to be revealed hereafter so neither are they to be compared with spiritual mercies here as for God to turn us again to himself to pardon our sins to cause his face to shine to vouchsafe us his favour and his comforts and consolations What sufferings or afflictions will not these comfort and support under or what other wants will they not more than countervail what are the world's frowns to God's smiles the world's troubles to God's peace the world's sorrows to God's joyes the world's afflictions to God's consolations the world's pressures to the pleasures of God's presence or its burdens to the rest which that affords what are its Bitters to God's Sweets its Gall and Wormwood to the Wine of his Love Cant. 1. 2. Let him kiss me with the Kisses of his mouth for thy love is better than wine and v. 4. we will remember thy love more than wine yea 't is better than life and in it even in death it self there is life And hence is it that the Apostle speaks what is a Paradox to the men of the world troubled but not distressed as sorrowful yet always rejoycing as having nothing and yet possessing all things as dying and yet behold we live live in the light of God's countenance in his sight as Hosea 6. 2. and we shall live in his sight where indeed only the Soul truly lives and there it may live even in death and have light arise to it even in darkness and see light in the greatest obscurity and this light I mean the light of God's countenance it giveth Songs even in the night as it did to Paul and Silas when thrust into the inner prison and their feet made fast in the Stocks yet God's gracious presence did so cheer their spirits and put such joy into their hearts that even at midnight they brake forth in praises to God Acts 16. 25. And at midnight Paul and Silas prayed and sang praises to God and the prisoners heard them they did not onely pray but sing prayses and sung so loud that others heard them the prisoners heard them they were awaken'd by them And what did they think of them surely they thought they were not well in their wits to sing at such a time and in such a place and in such a condition who having been beaten and many stripes laid upon them were cast into prison yea thrust into the inner prison and their feet made fast in the stocks and yet now to sing O if God cause but his face to shine if he lift but up the light of his countenance it will make a man sing at any time in any place in any condition it will turn a prison into a Pallace and a dungeon into a Paradise This made David to have his Psalms yea Michtams i. his golden Psalms or as the Dutch render it his golden Jewels Aureum ornamentum aut insigne exputissimo auro factum it signifies what is made of the best and finest gold so called because of their singular preciousness and excellency in the saddest places and in the saddest outward condition as when the Philistins took him in Gath when he fled from Saul in the Cave when Saul sent and they watcht the house to kill him c. See Psalm 56 57 59 the Titles Moses Psalm 90. 14. prays O satisfie us early with thy mercy i. e. with thy loving kindness vouchsafe us thy favour that we may rejoyce and be glad all our dayes This is enough to make the people of God rejoice and be glad all their dayes be they never so dark and gloomy evil and perillous As we have received mercy sayes the Apostle we faint not 2 Cor. 4. 1. The Lord tels Moses Exod. 33. 14. My presence shall go with thee and I will give thee rest Though Moses was to go through a wearisome wilderness and amidst a wearisom people yet the Lord's presence should give him rest We may go any where with him he will be an hiding place from the wind and a covert from the tempest as rivers of water in a dry place as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land Isa 32. 2. Vse 1. Of Reproof to those who when miseries and calamities are upon themselves or the Nation look after the removal of them but not after Spiritual mereies they are very earnest and sollicitous that God would take away their ourward plagues remove his judgments but not that God would take away their sins and turn them again to himself and cause his face to shine But so God will but do the other free them of their miseries let the latter do what they will Psalm 4. 6. There be many that say who will shew us any good i. e. any outward good how to compasse any earthly worldly gain or advantage O that we might have peace and plenty or how shall we once get out of these troubles and afflictions but few say with David lift thou up the light of thy countenance upon us and then all shall be well if thou do but this Many when they are in pain and sick and weak they cry out indeed but for what for ease and health and recovery not that they may be turned from their sins and recover God's favour as Pharaoh he calls to have other plagues taken away but never begs to have the plague of his own heart taken away which was the greatest of all and far worse than all the other but this is the voice onely of nature and argues a graceless heart and that which the Lord as I said complains of Hos 6. 14. Vse 2. Of Exhortation Then when miseries and calamities do abide us let this be our Prayer let us with the Church and people of God here more especially and most earnestly beg and implore spiritual mercies that God would turn us again and cause his face to shine lift up upon us the light of his countenance vouchsafe us his grace and favour bless us in turning us from our iniquities let us be importunate for these ask them again and again and whatever outward evils or distresses may abide us these as you have heard will not only comfort and support us under them but more than countervail them When he giveth quietness who then can make trouble c if God be for us who can be against us Rom. 8. 31. You know what Philip said to our Saviour John 14. 8. Lord shew us the father and it sufficeth us So let but the Father shew us himself shine on us with his face vouchsafe us his favour and it sufficeth As the Lord said unto Paul and says to all his people 2 Corinth 12. 9. my grace is sufficient for thee though then Paul was in
it well with us without this try we what other ways or courses we will or can without this they will signifie nothing Our felicity or our misery our safety or our peril our weal or our woe our having it well with us or our having it ill with us in a word life or death the blessing or the curse our being saved or our being utterly destroyed it depends upon this on our being turned or not turned again unto the Lord and on his favour or frowns on his love and grace and good will or anger and displeasure upon his causing his face to shine or hiding of the same and not on other things though we are ready to think otherwise and strangely therein to mistake If think we times would but turn things were but so and so O we should be a happy people but let times and things turn which way they will let them turn as we think never so much for the better yet if we be not turned again our selves and God does not cause his face to shine if he yet shall say his soul has no pleasure in us O woe unto us we are yet a miserable and an undone people but let the Lord but do this which the Church here so earnestly craves turn us again to himself and cause his face to shine and then let our condition be what it will seem outwardly never so calamitous we cannot but be happy But otherwise let it seem never so prosperous we cannot but be miserable For to be saved from our calamities and not to be turned from our iniquities to be saved from our afflictions and not from our transgressions from our sufferings and not from our sins what is it but to be saved so as afterward to be destroyed and that with a sorer destruction as it is said of the people that the Lord saved out of Jude 5. the Land of Egypt that he afterward destroyed them that believed not And hence when the Psalmist speaks of the Lords redeeming Israel in mercy he expresseth it thus And he shall Psal 130. 8. redeem Israel from all his iniquities And therefore let us be intent and earnestly bent upon this and importunate for this Let us humbly and earnestly supplicate this Turn thou Lam. 5. 21. us unto thee O Lord and we shall be turned renew our days as of old that is vouchsafe to us thy favour And turn thou me and I shall be Jer. 31. 19. turned and let our hearts eccho back to God as Davids did When thou saidst seek ye my face Psal 27. 8. my heart said unto thee Thy face Lord will I seek And thus in this sense let not the Lord say Seek ye me in vain but let us answer his invitation O seek we the Lord and his strength seek we his face evermore and intreat we his favour with our whole hearts Let the Lord hear us and find us as frequent and as fervent as often and as earnest as vehement and as importunate as the Church and people of God here who thrice here as I have said in one Psalme make this their humble and earnest suit v. 3. Turn us again O God and cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved and v. 7. Turn us again O God of hosts and cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved and again v. 19. Turn us again O Lord God of Hosts cause thy face to shine and we shall be saved And the more to put us upon this earnestly and importunately to seek these let us consider these several particulars As 1. That this is that the Lord invites us unto and that often to seek him and his face and that he would take away our iniquities and turn us from our sins and when and where God invites and commands shall not we obey And surely if we look about us it is high time Hos 10. 12. to seek the Lord and to stir up our selves to take hold of him now that he seems as it were to be going from us How readily and cheerfully did David answer God's invitation when thou saidst seek ye my face that is my favour my grace for favour appears and shines in the face my gracious benign presence my heart said unto thee thy face Lord will I seek he eyes God's command looks to that and presently yeilds and complies thy face Lord will I seek as if he had said whatever others seek let them seek what they will the face and favour of others but as for me this is that I am resolved to seek and this shall be in stead of all to me thou and thy favour and herein I freely and willingly comply with thy command and so should we as those to whom God had said Return ye backsliding Jer. 3. 22. children and I will heal your back-slidings Behold we come unto thee or behold here are we so the Dutch for thou art the Lord our God 2. Let us consider what great goodness kindness and gracious condescention it is in the great God that he should invite us to seek these and in inviting us to seek them should shew himself so willing and ready to discover himself and to communicate them to diffuse his grace and goodness unto us yea such goodness the chief good Seek ye me and seek my face as if the Lord should say I am for ever blessed my self and I would have you so too I am my own happiness and I would be yours too which none else nor any thing else can ever be I am happy and I desire to impart happiness to you also to shine upon you Seek ye my face that I may impart that to you for your felicity that is my own What kindness is this that God should be thus willing to bestow good yea the chief good to vouchsafe his favour yea more willing to vouchsafe it then we are for to ask it so willing as that he becomes a Suitor to us for to seek it he seeks us to seek him Heaven becomes a suitor to Earth the Creatour to the Creature he knows our happiness is out of our selves and wholly and onely in him and his favour the spring and fountain of all good and therefore puts us upon this 3. Let us consider that the Lord does this it is not for any need that he has of us but because of that need which we have of him not as if his happiness could in the least be impaired without us but because we cannot be happy without him How should all-sufficiency it self be under any want or indigency he who is himself all and every thing and has every thing bee in want of any thing Whatsoever says he is under the whole heaven is mine yea whatsoever Job 41. 11. is in heaven for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is thine thine is the kingdom c. neither 1 Chron. 29. 11. needs he any thing seeing he giveth to all
Ephraim Surely after that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote on my thigh c. Jer. 31. 19. So Lam. 5. 21. Turn thou us unto thee O Lord and we shall be turned c. Use 1. See what folly then it is to procrastinate and put off repentance as if it was in our own power to repent and turn when we pleased whereas it is in God's power alone and therefore as the holy Ghost saith to day if you Heb. ● 7 8. will hear his voice harden not your hearts c. Vse 2. Let this make us the more careful how we turn aside from God because though we of our selves can turn away from him he onely can turn us again to him Use 3. As ever then we would that our selves or ours should be turn'd again let us apply our selves to him as these do here turn us again O Lord God of Hosts I have gone astray says Ps 119. 176. David like a lost sheep seek thy servant c. We can lose our selves but we must have recourse to God to reduce us and fetch us home O Lord I know the way of man is not in himself it is not Jer. 10. 23. in man that walketh to direct his steps and therefore let us cry with Ephraim Turn thou me O Jer. 3. 18. Lord and I shall be turned c. Vse 4. Then when we are turned again see here to whom to ascribe it and to whom to give the praise and glory of it even to the Lord God of hosts It is his work he has done it and none else but he could do it and therefore let him have the glory of it alone Doctr. 5. When the Lord turns a people again to himself he causes his face to shine He manifests his favour and shews himself gracious and propitious for these two are here joyned together Turn us again O Lord God of Hosts cause thy face to shine And this latter may be considered either as the efficient or as that which as an effect follows upon the former or as both So that when the Lord turns a people or a person to himself 1. he does cause his face to shine and 2. when he has turn'd a people again to himself he will cause his face to shine that is he will more and more cause it to shine more and more manifest his favour and to both these I shall speak something briefly 1. He then does cause his face to shine when he turns them again to himself he then remembers them with the favour that he bears Cùm convertit faciem suam Deus ad nos nos respici● tum ad eum convertimur to his people and lifts up upon them the light of his countenance saving conversion being a blessed effect and happy fruit thereof and it being his special favour and grace that puts him upon it I will heal saith the Lord their back-slidings Hosea 14. 4. and whence will he do it what puts him Poenitentia est effectus gratiae fluentis à dilectione Dei in filio Dei fundatâ Pareus in locum upon it his love I will love them freely for his anger is turned away from him We are bid to seek God's face to seek his favour and such have found it and the Lord hath dealt very graciously with them but it is not thus as to the things of the world they in their very quintessence and though in their greatest confluence do not simply of themselves speak God's love and favour no but for all them though in never so great abundance men may be under God's frowns and have none of his favour but hatred and abhorrence for God's heart here does not always go along with his hand God's giving hand and his gracious favourable accepting hand are two distinct things and so is his permissive and his promissive approving Providence Men Ex largitate non ex promisso may have Quails and wrath the daintiest viands and vengeance coin and the curse heap Num. 11. 33. Psalm 33. 7. up wealth and worldly treasures have more than heart could wish and yet be under God's sorest Zach. 1. 15. displeasure I am very sore displeased with the Irâ magnâ irascor heathen that are at ease God's bringing these things abundantly into mens hands is no argument nor intimation of the love of his heart The tabernacles of Robbers prosper and they that Job 12. 6. provoke God are secure into whose hand God bringeth abundantly Ps 73. 12. Behold these are the ungodly who prosper in the world they increase in riches c. and yet such whom God hates and abhors Psalm 12. 5. But the wicked and him that loveth violence his soul hateth and Psalm 5. 5. Thou hatest all workers of iniquity and God is angry with the wicked every day Ps 7. 11. So that these things are no sign of God's favour neither in any or all of them does his face shine or is the light of his countenance lift up but now saving conversion and God's turning of a man again to himself this ever speaks God's favour and the shine of his face and the lifting up upon him the light of his countenance and though such a one may have but little of these things in his hand this is a sure intimation to him of the love of God's heart and this makes the little though it be never so little that such a one hath better than Boni nunquam in statu malo nam illis vel ipsa mala vertuntur in bonum mali contra nunquam in statu bono quia iis vel ipsa bona vertuntur in malum Gry●●ous the riches of many wicked Ps 37. 16. for better says Solomon is a dinner of herbs where love is than a stalled Oxe and hatred therewith Prov. 15. 17. And this makes it that it can never be ill with a godly man how little soever he have of these things because he has still God's love and that it can never be well with a wikced man how much soever he has of these things because he has ever God's hatred therewith and the evil things of the one being turn'd into good and the good things of the other being turn'd into evil Ps 25. 10. Rom. 8. 28. Ps 69. 22. Pro. 1. 32. 2. The Lord will cause his face to shine yea more and more to shine on a people or person that he turns again to himself For 1. it is his promise so to do to be gracious and to manifest his favour to such Job 33. 23. If there be a messenger with him an interpreter one of a thousand to shew unto man his uprightness the Hebrew his rectitude that is what is right and straight viz. to repent and turn to God Dutch read it to declare unto man his right duty as indeed conversion and true turning to God it is our duty and it is a right
just and equal duty and it brings us into a right state into a right frame sets us at rights and till then our state is wretched crooked and wrong nothing is at rights for how should things be right with us whiles our hearts and ways are not right with God but when that which is so right is shewn to man and shewn powerfully and effectually so as to embrace and do what is made known and shewn Then it follows v. 26. He shall pray unto God and he will be favourable unto him and he shall see his face with joy c. The Lord is very gracious and of a very kind nature and disposition he has always in himself a rich storehouse of kindness and mercy and then he gives it forth Come and let us return unto the Lord Hosea 6. 1. and then v. 2. we shall live in his fight or in or before his face live and enjoy his love and favour the life of our lives He looketh upon men and if any say I have sinned and perverted that which was Job 23. 27 28. right and it profited me not that is if any truely repent what then his life shall see the light he shall live in the light of God's countenance Thus the Lord waits to be gracious he waits for our repentings and turnings to him that he may be gracious and while we retard our repentings and turnings to him we retard his grace and favour from our selves There is indeed a previous preventing grace and favour of God a first shining of God's face and breaking forth of Gratiam qui invenit apud Deum ab eâ primum inventus est quia eam nemo quaerit quem ea prius non quaesierit admiserit Rivet Conditio ad gratiam recipiendam requisita nonponitur in nobis nisi per gratiā praevenientem Pareus the light of his countenance as in the conversion of a sinner which I hinted before when God puts a stop to a poor sinner and gives him to repent and turn to him then is a time of love and then God causes his face to shine when he says to the sinner even in his bloud live but then after this previous preventing favour and grace there is more grace second Acts as it were and renewed manifestations we upon our repenting and turning to God being put into such an estate as in which he owns us and delights in us and is gracious to us How gracious was the Lord to Peter upon his repenting and turning again he was gracious to him before Luke 22. 61. And the Lord turned and looked upon Peter c. and how gracious after Mark 16. 7. tell his disciples and Peter c. And so to Ephraim upon repenting and turning how abundantly did God manifest his grace and favour how lovingly and meltingly and tenderly does he speak of him Jer. 31. 18 19 20. Is Ephraim my dear son c. My bowels are troubled for him I will surely have mercy on him And so the Prodigal upon his returning how does the father meet him and falls on his neck and kisses him 2. Then that is removed which interposes between us and God's favour and hinders the Luke 15. 17 18 19 20 c. shinings of his face I mean our sins for they and onely they do this Is 59. 2. But your iniquities have separated between you and your God and your sins have hid his face from you therefore when we are turned again from our sins to God his face must needs shine What should hinder when the clouds are dispell'd and scattered the Sun appears and its light breaks forth Vse 1. Blessed and thrice happy are they then whom the Lord hath turned again to himself for unto them he hath and will more and more be gracious and manifest his favour and cause his face to shine Blessed is the man whom thou choosest and causelt to approach to thee c. Ps 65. 4. For he shares in that and partakes of that which is man's happiness and renders him blessed as appears in that form which the Lord prescribes of blessing the children of Israel Numb 6. 22 23 c. and this makes his present state and condition so comfortable one day of a repenting sinner and so of a sinner that is reconciled to God and to whom he vouchsases his favour being more comfortable than a thousand years of another man that is in continual fear of death and judgment Vse 2. As ever then we would make it out indeed to our own souls that we have any clear evidence or comfortable demonstration of God's favour of his love and the light of his countenance let us never rest 'till we find our selves to be indeed such that the Lord hath turn'd again to himself and then he hath and will cause his face to shine David prays Ps 86. 17. Shew me a token for good and here 's a token for good indeed for the chief good the greatest good God's favour which is life yea better than life Saving conversion is ever a sure sign of divine affection and of a work of grace upon the heart of a souls having found favour in God's eyes our being turned unto God clearly evidences his Si conversi fuerimus per poenitentiam ille omnium placatissimus benignissimus convertentes ad se recipiet Musc having in favour turn'd to us and that he will more and more so turn to us And therefore how earnest and sollicitous should we be for that which gives us so clear an evidence and sure demonstration of so great a good even of the favour of God but never let any bear themselves up with what is consistent with God's hatred and with wrath and eternal death as the honours and profits and pleasures of the world are which men may wallow in the fulness of and yet be under divine frowns and which for the most part are cast upon the worst and vilest of men and upon those whom God's soul abhors which made the very heathens contemn them In hoc coenum in has sordes Seneca being cast upon such dunghils But saving conversion is ever an effect of and followed with divine smiles and on such the Lord God of hosts hath and will more and more cause his face to shine CHAP. V. The main chief and principal point of Doctrine observable from the words DOctr 6. The onely way for a people to be saved it is for God to turn them again and cause his face to shine That is as hath been open'd and explain'd for God to convert them from their sins to himself and his ways and to vouchsafe them his favour to be gracious and propitious to them in his son this is the onely way of a peoples weal it consists in their sound conversion to God and in their finding grace and favour with God in their being turn'd again unto him and in his turning unto them as the Lord expresses it Thus saith
7. 21. 6. of joy I hou hast put gladness in my heart more than in the time when their corn and wine increased for thou hast made him most blessed for ever thou hast made him exceeding glad with thy countenance it makes exceeding happy and exceeding glad It is the greatest cheerer the choicest cordial for thy love is better and we Cant. 1. 2 4. will be glad and rejoyce in thee we will remember thy love more than wine 8. It is glory it is our honour and exaltaion For thou art the glory of their strength and Psalm 89. 17. 148. 14. in thy favour our horn shall be exalted he also exalteth the horn of his people he and his favour whose name alone is excellent and whose v. 13. glory is above the earth and heaven And who should or what should exalt his people if not God and his favour It is a crowning mercy who crowneth thee with loving kindness and Psalm 103. 4. tender mercies the favour of God the loving kindness of God and those special peculiar tender mercies which flow from his very bowels as it were from his tender intimate and affectionate love these crown these are our honour and ornament With favour wilt thou compass 5. 12. him as with a shield the Hebrew is crown him And so the Dutch and others read it thou shalt crown him with thy favourableness or well Ut scuto voluntate coronabis eum pleasing complacency as with a target as with a buckler with favourable acceptation thou wilt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coronabis crown him Not only does glory life and immortality crown hereafter but the love and favour of God crowns here yea all the Gold and Gems and Rubies and richest and preciousest stones in the world set and compos'd together can never make such a Crown for the head as the favour of God puts upon the soul With favour wilt thou crown him In the 2 Sam. 12. 30. we read there of a Crown the weight whereof was a talent of gold with the precious stones which according to the weight of the Sanctuary weighed above an hundred pound but according to the ordinary talent above fifty four pound but the Crown of Gods favour exceeds it and excels it Thus the favour of God is not only Shield and Buckler but Crown also yea 't is any thing every thing that is truly excellent comfortable and commodious and that his people stand in need for it to be unto them But thou O Lord art a shield for me my glory Psalm 3. 3. Isa 28. 5. and the lifter up of my head In that day shall the Lord of hosts be for a crown of glory and for a diadem of beauty unto the residue of his people c. As he said to Paul his grace is sufficient 2 Cor. 12. 9. Favor Dei auxilium spiritus sancti á favore isto proveniens for us or enough for us and is all in all to us his accepting grace and his helping and sustaining grace his favour and what flows therefrom 4. It covers and silences all that God has against his people So that though his people may have many failings which oppose their weal and might be matter of plea against them yet God shining on them with his face he passes them by and silences all in his love for love even in us covers multitudes of sins how much more 1 Pet. 4. 8. Prov. 10. 12. Zeph. 3. 17. God's love The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty he will save he will rejoice over thee with joy he will rest in his love that is as some render it he will take satisfaction and contentment in loving thee in the affection he bears to thee But the Hebrew is as is noted in the Silebit propter dilectionem suam obmutescet in amore suo Margent he will be silent in his love or because of his love that is he will bear with thy infirmities and pass them by without manifesting any displeasure for them his love shall answer all objections against thee so that thy frailties shall not be charged upon thee but born with The Hebrew signifies also to be dumb or deaf and some render it he shall be dumb in his love or deaf that is to speak after the manner of men his ear shall not hear nor his mouth utter any accusations against thee so as to reject thee though he may humble thee he will quiet himself in his love when his anger is ready to be stirr'd he will pass over many things and as it were wink at them because he loves thee as the tender-hearted loving husband does as to his dear wife the loving father or mother as to her dear child So Hosea 14. 4. I will heal their back-sliding and whence I will love them freely for my anger is turn'd away from him and Micah 7. 19. He will turn again i. e. in mercy and loving kindness he will manifest his love he will have compassion upon us he will subdue our iniquities and thou wilt cast all their sins into the depth of the Sea drown them in the ocean of his love Psalm 85. 1 Thou hast been favourable unto thy Land and then v. 2. Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people thou hast covered all their sin CHAP. IX The Application of the point and first in general by way of Information or inference IS it the onely way for a people to be saved for Use 1. of Information or inference God to turn them again and cause his face to shine as hath been abundantly made good then there are several truths that this point doth inform us of and instruct us in and several things from hence are deducible and may be inferr'd As 1. That then there is a way for a people to be saved and that let their present state and condition be what it will be it never so sad though as sad as this peoples was here whose prayer God had seemed to be angry with a great while v. 4 5 6 12 13 yea and had fed them with bred of tears and given them tears to drink in great measure made them a strife unto their neighbours and their enemies laught among themselves yea though God had planted them as his vine yet now he had broken down her hedges so that all they who passed by the way did pluck her The bore out of the wood did wast it and the wild beast out of the field devoured it yea all God's former mercies were now turned into judgments and yet were a peoples condition as sad as theirs here yea sadder yet there is a way for them to be saved yea let God but turn them again and cause his face to shine and they shall be saved Thus whatever are a peoples sicknesses or sores there is a salve whatever their maladies there is a remedy whatever is their case there is a way of
the world especially if they be of consequence and must there onely be delays here were a mans house on fire would he delay to seek to quench it or was his estate much more his life in danger to be lost would he delay to seek to save it But is not the loss of the Soul ten thousand times sadder If ever you mean to turn from your sins to the Lord are there not the same reasons for it now as hereafter Is not sin evil bitter and destructive now as well as afterward and does it not now dishonour God thwart oppose provoke offend burden yea weary him and debase defile and wrong your own souls and threaten your ruine and hinder your own happiness comfort and peace separate between you and Is 59. 2. God the chief good and his favour which is better than life and is not God you should turn to as full lovely desireable soveraign excellent and all-sufficient a Good now as he will be afterward or what other reasons are there for turning from your sins to God that are not now and the reasons being the same now as hereafter why should you defer and go on still to adde further to your own shame trouble and grief O how much more peace and comfort Castigemus igitur mores moras nostras might sinners have did they sooner break off from their sins and turn to God and were they but betimes converted and brought home to him in their younger days how much more honour might they bring to him and how much more service might they do for him which they are not capable of till they come to be converted for till then they are in the flesh that is in Rom. 8. 8. the state of corrupt nature and so cannot please God nor serve nor honour him and yet what is our end or what were we made for but this or what is it worth the while to live for but in reference to this which makes our life to be life indeed without which it is no better than death that being the very end and business of our living and though we be we do not properly Fuit non vixit live 'till then For she that liveth in pleasure 1 Tim. 5. 6. is dead while she liveth And what an honour is it to please honour and serve the great God which is the honour of Angels and of those blessed Heroes above Thousand thousands Dan. 7. 10. Rev. 22. 3. ministred unto him and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him c. And his servants shall serve him c. But 'till you are turned again you neither do nor can serve God but serve sin Satan your lusts instead of the Lord of life and glory And who would not hasten out of such an estate O how good is it to bear the yoke in our youth and feel the bitterness of sin and abandon it betimes and not defer what is so infinitely for our own happiness and good and yet this is that people are exceeding prone unto still to put off and procrastinate their turning to God They deny not but it is to be done and they say they purpose and resolve to do it but not yet all in good time and so never set upon it and this is occasioned partly from their sloath and idleness partly from their excessive love of their lusts and sins and vanities as also from their hearts being so much glued to the world and the cares and incumbrances they have about the same and their still continuing in a prosperous estate in health and strength and not being in those troubles as Psal 73. 5. Jer. 22. 21. others are I spake to thee in thy prosperity but thou saidst I will not hear c. But what contempt do these delays cast upon God and his favour and so upon the soul and upon heaven and salvation as if these were not worthy the minding and regarding presently But the vain things of the world which cannot profit nor deliver were to be preferred before them and therefore the more to put you upon speed and expedition herein I shall leave with you these following considerations 1. Consider Repentance is not in your power nor at your command to repent when you please no it is God that gives it and the Spirit that works it which is a free agent and Qui poenitentiae indulgentiam promisit secure in peccatis pergenti poenitentiam non promittit works when and where he pleases and is not at thy beck and God who promises pardon to such as repent does not promise repentance to the secure thou mayest have time but want power have space but want grace to repent If God peradventure will give them repentance 2 Tim. 2. 25. c. and therefore put it not off 2. It is a great work even the work of thy whole man and thy whole life and thy whole strength and will you still put it off when as so much of thy time and life and strength is spent already does it need all and shall it yet have less 3. The longer it is deferr'd the greater it will be It may be as yet thou hast some meltings some relentings but sin the longer it is liv'd in the more it hardens and the hardlier it is left lest any of you be heardened through the deceitfulness Heb. 3. 13. of sin There is an inbred natural hardness Ezek. 36. 26. that is in all by nature we have all stony hearts but sinners by going on still in sin and refusing to turn adde acquired hardness and the heart becomes more stony and less capable of the impressions of God's Spirit and so the sinners condition less hopeful continuance in sin taking away the sense and feeling of it and becomes as a milstone about the sinners neck He Qui non est hodie cras minùs aptus erit that is not fit to repent and turn to God to day will be more unfit to morrow and the less time he will have to do it in and the less strength to do it with there will be one day more to repent of and one day less to repent in The further any go on in the ways of sin the further off still they go from God and so their turning again is the more difficult and therefore it is good to stop betimes else it will be the harder task and seldom is it seen that such as have been long in travel from God in the ways of sin do bethink themselves of returning Can the Jer. 13. 23. Principiis obsta c. Ethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil Wounds are presently to be healed else their cure will be harder and how much easier might this work be would sinners but set upon it betimes 4. The time is short It is as the Apostle expresses 1 Cor. 7.