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A91791 Divine consolations, or, The teachings of God in three parts ... with an answer to the objections made against it, and Doctor Crips [sic] booke justified against Steven Geree / by Samuel Richardson. Richardson, Samuel, fl. 1643-1658. 1649 (1649) Wing R1406; ESTC R42708 221,129 494

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of meditations objects Wee meditate to know God and contemplate to love him To contemplate on the things above is pleasant to those who have tasted of the sweetnesse of it The contemplation of Gods free love and the soules interest in it doth much revive raise and enlarge the soule Divine contemplation makes us high in thoughts and rich in expectation Conversation A disordered conversation doth hinder spirituallnesse in holy duties and causeth trouble and sadnesse Commands The command of God is the most powerfullest thing in the world to a Saint There is not any of the commands of God needlesse If men did know the Majesty and Authority and infinitenesse of God no man neither would nor could doe what he forbids or neglect his command Many when convinced of a duty consult with flesh and bloud whether they had best to obey God or no. Deadnesse Deadnesse of heart argueth disaffection Deadnesse of heart is the grave of many good gifts Deadnesse of heart is an enemy to action One cause of our deadnesse and dulnesse in the things of God is unbeliefe and consulting with flesh and bloud Spirituall deadnesse is a great griefe to a childe of God When we are dead and dull the meditation of the love of God will revive us Delayes in good things Delayes be dangerous by delayes many a good motion dyeth and comes to nothing Delayes arise from sloath Delayes coole us and cause the affections to fall downe The more we delay the more we may When we are to doe good Satan cryeth hereafter and that is never to morrow to morrow cosens many a man By delaying we presume upon that we have not and neglect that we have Declining It is easie to decline in good things A declining heart will catc● at that which may plead for declining Even Gods own people are subject to decline from him Difficulties Difficulties are discouragements and handsome excuses are welcome to a sloathfull heart Love will carry on through all difficulties and all manner of torments Distractions Multitude of businesse causeth distraction especially when there wants a wise ordering and dispatch of them Distraction of minde in duties is either from a minding other things or resting upon our own strength or in not seriously setting our minds on the things propounded by us for on that the heart is throughly set upon it 's so attentive to it that on that instant it can be present at no other thing especially to hinder the thing in hand Of doubts and discouragem●nts It 's the nature of sin to raise doubts in the soule There is no good got but discouragements Ignorance is the cause of doubts and discouragements So much discouragements we admit of so much sight and comfort we loose in our life and happinesse Discontents A small matter occasioneth discontent All our discontents arise from disappointment frustration of expectation is the ground of vexation There is no man that is without discontents It 's folly and madnesse to be discontent at trifles There is the most difference between them that are one and most alike Disposition It 's the disposition of a wretch to be cruell A milde and loving disposition is amiable and desireable Duties A dead man lives upon duties It 's no wonder the Papists doe as they doe because they expect heaven for it The more a Saint doth for God the more he enjoyes God A Saints desire is to doe all for God A meanes not to sin is not to omit duties A man may do duties from convincement of understanding and not from a principle of life and love Such duties as flow not from faith and love are slavish Many will own and confesse their dutie in generall and wholy deny it in particular especially when it concernes them When a childe of God hath performed duties best immediately he is tempted by the Devill and his own heart To be streightned in a duty may doe us more good then if we had been much enlarged in it Of selfe-deniall So farre as we are spirituall or live by faith so much we deny our selves Selfe is content to be a little denied in one kinde to be pleased much in another Unlesse a man can deny himselfe in his will honour credit state relations wife life he cannot follow the profession of Christ There are but few that deny themselves but many deny Christ and his truth Such as cannot deny themselves cannot endure the troubles and indignities of an angry world They live the sweetest lives that most deny themselves If we could deny our selves every thing that befalls us would be easie and sweet unto us for all things are so farre under us as we are above our selves Of dreames God speaketh in a dreame in a deep sleep in slumber and man perceiveth it not By dreames we may know what sin we are in danger to fall into which we are not aware of An evill dreame doth shew some evill that prevailes in the heart Delight Such as delight not in God delight in fin● The more we delight in worldly things th● more they sting and vex us when they part Fleshly delights are earnestly desired an● acted with great willingnesse Despaire Despaire can doe no good Ignorance is a cause of despaire Despaire is not commanded nor commended but condemned Distempers To be disquieted or cast downe arguerh a distemper of heart Distempers hinder us in our trust and delight in God Distempers hinder us in our spirituall and temporall callings Death We choose life with sorrowes rather then death without them I have heard that a porter being spent with his burden was forced to throw it downe oh death saith he come death welcome death death comes in a visible apparition what wouldst thou have with mee saith death oh nothing nothing but helpe me up with my burden By life we have a being but a better being is by death The day of death is the first day of life He whose hopes are in heaven is not much afraid of death Death is to him no misery whose hopes are in eternitie When death seemes to dispossesse a Saint of all it possesseth him of all The Saints have cause to welcome death Wise men desire death yet are content to live As loath as we are to dye God by death delivers his from all sorrowes at once and makes them happy for ever Death fully freeth the Saints from all crosses burdens and infirmities why should I feare that I would not escape what hurt is it to enter into glory I cannot have my happinesse unlesse I goe unto it Many good men at their death have feares and paines Death hath something to say to every man and would be heard but men are not at leisure If it were not for the miseries that attend this life many would lesse welcome death Concerning our ends The end is the ground and rule of our actions A man fully seeks to attaine his end nothing contents a man till he finde that which he apprehends he needs
As a mans end is in his eye proportionably he useth the meanes to attaine it When the chiefe end is apprehended and minded nothing can divide between the soule and it The more God is intended the more he is desired When God is chiefly desired no bounds nor limits is set to the desires and endeavours to attaine it Every thing rests in it's proper place the attaining the end quiets the heart Unlesse we know and minde our end we cannot have the comfort of our obedience The chiefe end beareth the greatest power in us Such as a mans principle is such is his end The end declares to us the goodnesse of our action The end rules the meanes and is above them We may know what is our chiefe end by the place and power of it A man is constant to that which is his end and acts freely to attaine it Wee are strongly inclined and moved to our end willingly diligently patiently constantly to attaine it As we attaine our end so are we contented so farre as we intend God we desire him The end is first in the intention and last in execution A beleever is true to his end however he may faile in the meanes The place of the end is in the intention and affection Not the endeavour but the ground of it discovers the end whether it be God or selfe Error Ignorance is the foundation of error It is the property of all men to erre and be deceived When errors prove profitable many will imbrace them It 's common for error to be called truth and truth to be called error One way to suppresse errors is silence for by this meanes they will dye alone whimsicall persons that affect novelty will lay them downe as fast as they took them up if you will let them alone Excuses It is easie to frame an excuse for any evill To cover an evill with an excuse is to cover à lesser evill with a greater When we have sinned Satan and our corruptions will helpe to cover it with excuses Such things as we cannot justifie we oft excuse Extremities No extremitie holds long It 's common to run from one extremitie to another It 's hard to be angry without sinning to grieve for sinne without despairing to feare without doubting to be merry without lightnesse to be sad without heavy and unprofitable dumpishnesse Most men love extreames men eate too little or too much and worke too little or too much Of education Good education doth oft cause an outward Reformation Evill education is a great provocation to evill Election The doctrine of election and appointment unto wrath and how much the first cause causeth all actions the certainty of the event the certainty of the state of every person and the like doctrines cause a corrupt heart to be more loose and carelesse therefore to teach these to the world is to cast holy things to dogs witnesse experience Examples The worst examples are most observed The examples of men are forcible when they are universall An evill example of a good man is very dangerous The examples of the best men ought not to be a Rule for us to walke by Excesses Most men are drowned in adversitie or drunke with prosperity The drinking healths is an excessive wast To drinke others healths is the way to loose our own Effects Effects are in order to second causes not to God who most certainly necessarily and wisely hath willed them nothing falls out accidentall to him whose knowledge and purpose reacheth every thing The eye Davids roving eye caused him to fall greatly and procured him much sinne shame vexation and griefe who would have thought an idle glance could occasion so much mischiefe Fancy will take fire before we be aware It 's in vaine to expect better fruit if we suffer our hearts to run after our eyes Experiences By observation we get experience Experience makes men wise because it gives understanding Experience teacheth what doth helpe or hinder a gracious temper in us Experience strengthens faith Without experience we know not where our strength and weaknesse lieth Things imaginary historicall traditionall will vanish in time of need Envie Envie torments the minde and dryeth the bones No good man can escape the envie of others Expressions Such as leave the Scripture expressions will soone loose the faith of Christ and receive error in stead of truth Extraordinary To doe to all as we would be done unto is extraordinary For men not to seek themselves is extraordinary For a man to deny himselfe is extraordinary To practice the truth against great oppositions is extraordinary To imbrace disgrace poverty prison and paines rather then to deny any truth is extraordinary To be more humble by knowledge and to goe against custome is extraordinary To be more humble when exalted is extraordinary For the rich to take reproose willingly and profitably from their inferiors is extraordinary For to refuse to joyn house to house when he can is extraordinary To part with riches as freely as they were received is extraordinary For man to seek not his own but others welfare is extraordinary To tell great persons of their faults in love wisely is extraordinary A minde that cannot be provoked is extraordinary To be willing to leave the world and to be zealous for God in prosperity is extraordinary Eternity Untill we have some serious thoughts of eternity we minde not our soules Serious thoughts of eternity will weane us from the world The favour of men The favour of some is much desired The favour of men is a vanity The favour of men is uncertain oft soone got and sooner lost The more some desire the favour of men the more God denieth them to exercise their faith or to weane them from the world or because we performe not our duties to them Folly It 's folly to meddle with other mens businesse and neglect our own Many never see their folly untill it be too late A fooles minde is all for thing● below and present but the wise prize most the things above they look beyond this life A foole multiplieth words Feares We feare what we should wish and wi●h that we should feare Feares make the understanding weake and the judgement dull Of all passions anger and feare doth most disquiet the heart The feare of an evill doth more afflict then the evill it selfe To be alwayes in feare is to be alwayes in misery it 's painfull to dwell upon the expectation of evill Feare betrayes care and hinders reason of affording it's help Feares hinder faith Feares multiply evills but faith diminisheth them Feares make dangers greater and helpes lesse then they are Feares present too many wayes of helpe So much as we feare men so much we slight and forget God Faith Faith is the staying of the minde upon God Faith quiets comforts and strengthens the soule Faith excludes not all doubting but fights against it Faith is under God the supporter of the Saints under many crosses and pressures Faith perswades the soule of Gods love that
that is not constant is false love Fooles love lightly and leave as lightly Forced matches are empty of love In love there is no lacke in good will there is no want A man will beare much when he knows it comes from love Union breeds love and love simpathy and compassion but where selfe-love prevailes union and love are absent Arguments of love are sutable to the nature of man We are made like the things we love Kindnesse puts an obligation upon the spirit of love Where love is duties are frequent and done with ease and delight Where love is wanting all things are taken in the worst part Such love the way of God who hate all that is contrary to it and practise it when it is most despised The more we love Christ the more we remember him and his love As our love is to God so is our love to his Word It 's naturall to love ease liberty and carnall pleasure The power of sin stands in the love of it self-Selfe-love blinds us and deceives us exceedingly it's a dangerous enemy When our love to God runs high our love to the world runs low so on the contrary We may apprehend the love of God but we cannot comprehend it The love of God makes a soule mourne for sin more then any thing else Such as would be affected with Christs love must dwell upon the consideration of the excellency of it Such things as we love we keep with care possesse with joy and loose with griefe As our longing is to enjoy God so is our love to him such as greatly love the Lord greatly long to enjoy him for as our love is to any thing accordingly is our endeavour to enjoy it According to the measure of the manifestation of the love of God to the soule so accordingly it is filled with peace and joy and beares Christs yoke obeys him and is content to suffer for him and doth all freely Such as see Gods love to be the same to them in all conditions are not troubled when God altereth their condition Losses There is no losse in loosing for God what we loose for God will be made up unto us in God One benefit that follows the losse of outward things is that we shall never be troubled with them any more Many get by their losses Labour All things are full of labour man cannot utter it Lust Lust is violent and is past sense and shame Bad discourse inflames lust Laught●r Laughter is a vanitie the wise laugh least Liberty When men thinke to use their libertie they loose it We are more prone to desire outward liberty then to know how to use it Such as plot and plead for liberty for the flesh are very carnall It is not fit to give young people halfe the liberty they would take Young people doe not know not will beleeve how slippery their state is till they come to feele it by their falls Many study more how to keep outward liberty then how to part with it the last is the best It is the greatest liberty to enjoy God and a free heart to serve him and to have the lets removed Too many of the Saints abuse their Christian liberty To be free from sin is liberty indeed Motions Forced motions cannot be perpetuall Minde This world cannot satisfie nor containe the minde of man Worldly things are not good enough to stay our minds upon Such as minde things above favour them and have interest in them By minding things above we are freed from many idle fancies When our minds are not fixed they rove any where and are no where to purpose Our minds are where our hearts are and that is where we love Our minds doe too much partake of the temper of our bodies God hath enabled some to make glad the sorrowfull minde Mirth In vaine mirth there is no true joy The mirth of the wicked is vanity and madnesse Naturall mirth ends in sorrow and sadnesse In naturall mirth when we are most merry we are nearest to danger When men are most chearfull and merry they are most free and bountifull Meditation Meditating on the sweetnesse of outward contents glues our hearts to them The more our thoughts are above the more is our joy and the more we avoyde the snares below It is no burden to fix our minds thoughts on things above where our life joy and treasure is There is much sweetnesse and profit in the consideration and view of the severall passages of Gods providence to us ours inward and outward of the time past if it were well minded it might strengthen our faith and draw out our hearts to God and inlarge our thankfulnesse who so is wise to observe these things shall understand the loving kindnesse of the Lord. By meditation we retaine truths and are enriched by them it makes them sweet to us it 's the way to knowledge the mother of wisdome it refines the judgement it cuts off errors in judgement and practice it makes the mercies of God fresh and sweet to us it increaseth love it 's the life of hearing reading conference c. it reveales truths to us and acquaints us with our selves it makes all to become our own it settles truth upon our spirits it removes lets and breeds affections and quickens them it makes hard things easie it fills the soule with experience and inableth us to apply it to our own benefit and others it fires the soule with love and sends it up to heaven By the neglect of meditation we loose a great treasure Unlesse by meditation the judgement be refined and setled and so work it upon our affections and lay it up in our minds Gods meanes and our hearing and reading comes to nothing M●sery Extreme miseries last not long It 's no small misery to have the body and soule and conscience all distempered God knows the miseries of his and will send help in the fittest season The better the man is the lesse he needs to be bid to share with others in their miseries Mercies We injoy more mercies then we are aware off The mercies we injoy are more and greater then our crosses Many possesse many mercies and yet want the comfort of them We come to know the worth of mercies by their want Of marriage There is no outward comfort under the Sunne so great and sweet as a married estate affords what is equall to marriage for the being and well being of life it s the prop of mutuall content the aide of nature the perfection of health wealth beautie honour no condition is sweet where marriage supplyes it not it 's the pillar of the world the preserver of chastity the glory of peace and the life of the dead no union so strong as this no joy in any outward union so contentfull as this There are comforts in marriage that a single life is not acquainted with and so there are many crosses The crosses in marriage goeth to the very heart
solitarinesse Satans temptations have come more frequent and stronger when alone and many sin more freely when alone Satan is most bold when we are alone and his temptations take a deeper impression Suggestions If evill suggestions be admitted they will grow and increase exceedingly into consent and consent into delight and delight into practice and practice into habit from habit into custome from custome into senslesnesse Of small things A small matter will trouble our spirits yea and interrupt us in our communion with God Of su●etiship Those who have least cause require sureties as Usurers Many have run themselves upon great straights and others have undone themselves by suretiship He is wise and safe that a●horres suretiship Concerning fleep The more the body is exercised with labour the more sleep it requires Foure houres sleep in a day and a night is enough for some and five for others six is enough for any one Some say they cannot sleep if they did labour and work more they should sleep more Much sleep maketh poore dulleth the wit and looseth time Season The season of an action addes to the goodnesse of it Every thing is beautifull in it's season Sadnesse Sadnesse of spirit breeds unsetlednesse uncomfortablenesse unthankfulnesse to God If we be sad we injoy not the comfort of any thing An unchearfull spirit is not fit for any duty What we goe about unchearfully we are soone weary in or off Sadnesse of spirit helpes us to yeeld to discouragements An unchearfull spirit doth nourish hard thoughts of God One cause of the sadnesse of a childe of God is because he doth not minde and apply such promises as are sutable to his condition and behold and live on the things above Satan Sin and Satan are never pleased It 's a great designe of Satan to cozen the Saints of their peace and comfort and to draw the Saints from God his truth and people and that we neglect the meanes or wholy relie on them Satan in his subtilty and malice watcheth to discourage and terrifie the people of God It 's a deceit of Satan to put a man upon the practice of a contrary duty to hinder the soule and cause a disorder In good things Satan separates the meanes from the end and in evill he laboureth to separate the end from the meanes An unadvised resisting of Satan causeth disappointment Senses The senses of our body doe every day decay by little and little though we take no notice of it Our senses doe often prove traytors to our soules and bodies Soule If our soules be downe it 's best and easiest presently to raise them up by meditation of Gods free love the longer we stay the more we may Selfe-seeking All men are full of selfe Selfe-seeking is dishonourable and dangerous Selfe alwayes aimes at her own ends and ends there Selfe cannot oppose selfe in a particular opposition Spiritualnesse The more spirituall a man is the more he abhorres and loaths himselfe A spirituall man is not alwayes alike his faith love zeale joy peace is sometimes great and sometimes small he is sometimes strong and sometimes weake Saints A Saint lives in the love of God The weakest Saint will passe with some graines of allowance and the best or strongest will not passe without Sinners Some will confesse in the generall they are faulty but in the particular utterly deny it Suffering Hope of glory incourageth in suffering We cannot suffer chearfully as we ought unlesse we know and minde our interest in God and minde sutable promises and the faithfulnesse of God in performing them the necessitie of suffering the end of it and the reward A good conscience a good cause and a good call will cause a sweet suffering As our love is to Christ and his truth so is our willingnesse to suffer for him It is best quietly to suffer that which we cannot prevent It is better to suffer then to sin He that intends to suffer for Christ must not hearken to fleshly reasonings To suffer for small matters in Religion is most honourable Single life There be helps conducing to a single life naturall morall and spirituall Surmises Secret surmises doe oft hurt our selves and others Seeke The more we seeke any thing the more we love it and the injoyment of it is more sweet unto us Speech Many make long discourses of that which a little is too much Many love to heare themselves speake and thinke to please others because they please themselves He is wise who hath skill when to speake and when to be silent Straights God doth provide for his people in their straights God puts his in straights that they might live by faith Slothfulnesse Our beloved said Come away but our sloath self-selfe-love ease carelesnesse inconstancy unsetlednesse hinders us exceedingly in going to our beloved Time Our time is short as a span a shadow a dreame it 's our duty and wisdome to preserve and redeeme it for good actions Losse of time is a great losse wee loose much time in idlenesse and idle visits in trifling and sleeping in which time much good might have been done Time is not valued to it 's worth A great part of our time slideth away in doing evill and impertinent and nothing He is wise that improveth time Time well spent is laid up for the future Time past cannot be called againe Time ill spent turnes to great losse and ends in deep sorrow Much time is spent about the body We loose much time which we take no notice off Time wasteth all things Time hasteneth to an end and runneth to eternity Time shall be no more We spare not so much time for God as we might We doe and will spare time for what we list and love That time is well and sweetly spent in which the soule obeys God and beholds God and glory and hath communion with him Of truth Whatsoever is against or without the word of God is not truth That which the most follow is not truth That which carrieth the greatest shew of humility is not truth The authority of men is not alwayes for the truth Mans reason cannot dive so deep as the truth The more naturall w●se any is the lesse capable he is of divine truth Neither the learned nor unlearned can know the mystery of the truth till God teach it them Many will have truth to be error Christ is truth and his Word is truth A man may loose Christ in the truth and close with truth and not with Christ He that receives truth as from men truth is but a tradition to him If truth may have liberty to goe abroad it will quickly suppresse errors The greatest enemy truth hath is concealement The more manifest truth is the more glorious it appeares The glory of the understanding is truth Every truth of Christ tends to holinesse God esteemes truth above the lives of his Saints Teaching Those God teacheth he first unteacheth in making them wise he sheweth them that they are
therefore this never came from the nature of man besides it is a strong argument that the Scriptures came not originally from man but from God because they are no whit agreeable to our natures hence it is worth observing that we naturally choose and delight to reade any Booke rather then the Scriptures as we see by experience that those that read much reade little in the Scriptures 4. Because the Scriptures require that which is beyond the power of man to doe as that he should deny himselfe which to doe requires a divine power as the Scriptures and experience teach selfe is for it selfe how then can selfe deny it selfe nature doth not require nor desire any such thing therefore it 's required by some other which must needs be God also it affirmes that which is impossible to the reason nature and wisdome of man as that a Virgin should conceive a Son this is beyond the reach of nature and therefore it is from God 5. The Scriptures are not from men because the more any are ruled by it and obey it the more they are hated and persecuted by men which shewes it was never the will of man and therefore it came not from nature but from God 6. The Scriptures came from God because they tend to God this is a rule in nature every thing tends to it's center a stone to the earth the waters to the Sea from whence they came So the Scriptures tend to God they run to God they shew God in his goodnesse wisdome power love in the Scriptures there is a divine wisdome they speak for God they call men to God and to be for God which is the center of the Scriptures 7. The Scriptures are not from men because the way of bringing them forth into the world is quite contrary to the wisdome and expectation of man who in great matters imply persons that are wise great and honorable but they came forth in a quite contrary way in that meane and contemptible silly tradesmen fisher-men and Tent-makers c. were the publishers and pen-men of the Scriptures although at the same time there were men naturally wise learned at Athens 8. The Scriptures are from God because God hath wonderfully strangely preserved them in making the Jewes who were enemies to Christ and his words preservers of the Scriptures also in preserving them when the greatest men have sought their destruction by searching for them and burning them c. The like preservation cannot be declared of any other writings that have had so great opposition 9. The miracles which were wrought at the first publishing of the Scriptures prove them to be from God and that there were such miracles wee have the testimony of those who were enemies to Christ and the Scriptures those Jewes who did not own Christ nor his doctrine who lived in Christs time saying There was a man one Jesus if I may call him a man who did great miracles c. as Josephus others in their writings testifie Now what reason can be given that the enemies to Christ and his doctrine should confesse such things of Christ if they were not true 10. Lastly We know the Scriptures to be from God because we see in our dayes some of those things the Scriptures have foretold come to passe which things came not to passe in the course of nature nor in the eye of reason as Mat. 24. 5. 24. Luk. 12. 52 53. 1 Tim. 4. 1. c. 2 Tim. 3. To beleeve the Scriptures are of divine inspiration is a work of faith and unlesse the holy Spirit perswade the soule of the truth of them there will be doubting the Lord perswade his of the truth of them and of their interest in them Seeing the Scriptures came from God by divine inspiration they must needs be truth therefore we ought to beleeve what it saith and rest upon it whether there be reason to satisfie reason or no our reason is blinde and corrupt 2. Seeing they are the inspirations of God it should cause us to prize and love the Word of the Lord David did so Psal 119. 97. he loved it vehemently exceedingly unspeakeably the Saints love the Word and they are not ashamed to declare their love to it they love it for the excellency that is in it they see love wisdome truth purity c. The Word is very pure therefore thy servants love it Psal 119. 105 151. It 's a light to our feete the rule of our life it tends to perfection it cures all distempers it 's the ground of our confidence it keeps us from perishing in affliction 92. It quickeneth us 93. It rejoyceth the heart 111. It 's lovely and such as love the Lord love his word Job 23. 12. Love to the Word is a holy and strong inclination of soule or affection of heart arising from the apprehension of the Author of it and the excellency and sutablenesse of it which causeth the soule to desire prise it above all things Psal 119. 17. 25. If yee love the word then yee will highly esteeme it above gold above fi●e gold above thousands of gold and silver Psal 119. 72. Secondly then you desire it love works by desire great love is attended with great desire and longing to injoy it Thirdly then you will take paines to injoy it and obey it love and labour goe together Psal 27. 4. Fourthly then you thinke often upon it for so wee doe what wee love Psal 1. Fiftly then it shall rule you I have refrained from every evill way that I might keepe thy word Psal 119. 101. To obey it is a fruit of love so contrary Psal 81. 11. Sixthly then it 's a griefe to you that others contemne reject the word I was grieved because men kept not thy word Psal 119. 158. Rivers of waters run downe mine eyes because men keepe not thy law 135. see 139. v. Seventhly then you hate every thing that is contrary to the word love works by detestation of that which is contrary to that they love I hate every false way Psal 119. 104. Eightly then you rejoyce in the Word as one that findeth great spoyle Psal 119. 162. Ninthly then you will rest on what the Word saith I trust in thy Word 42. Tenthly then you will part with your sweet sin for the Word Psal 119. with 2 Cor. 5. 14. We have cause to be ashamed for our want of love to the Word our seldome meditation on it might convince us of our want herein To love the word 1. Pray that thou maist see the beauty and excellency of the Word 2. Reade and meditate on it 3. Practise it and you shall better know it Joh. 7. 17. 4. Abate in carnall affections for they are enemies to holy love 5. Consider the Word deserves thy love 6. Consider it 's thine and those good things contained in it the more we beleeve the interest in the word the more we love it Great peace have they that
to deny him his own 2. Love is the best thing we have therefore we should give it to God who is the chiefest and best good therfore he hath right to the highest pitch of our love and it 's pittie so sweet an affection as love is should be spent upon any thing but himselfe 3. Love will be fixed upon somewhat and it 's unreasonable to deny it to God and give it to the creature this were to forsake a living fountaine for a broken Cisterne Jer. 2. 4. God is the same he was when yee first loved him then yee looked upon him to deserve the highest measure of love and could not be loved enough God is not changed Heb. 13. 8. Therefore the change is in thy selfe 5. So much as you have left your first love so much you have left God God counts himselfe charged with ini●uitie when he is forsaken see Jer. 2. 6. In so doing yee greatly dishonour God as if there were not a fulnesse of perfection in him if there be in him what yee expected why doe you love him lesse thy practise declares thou repentest thee in loving him so much as if he is not worthy of it tell me canst thou mend thy selfe in bestowing thy love elsewhere 7. Lastly God hath done much for thee he hath saved thee from wrath hell and destruction and provided for thee a place of happinesse with himselfe yea given thee himselfe could he give thee more is all this as nothing to thee canst thou doe too much for him that hath done so much for thee why then doest thou not give him thy fi●st love and love him dearely and vehemently that hath so loved thee Use Leaving our first love is so great an evill that it should greatly humble us The meanes God prescribes for their recovery are three first to remember from whence thou art fallen secondly repent thirdly to doe their first workes Fallen persons may recover for God useth meanes to recover such this his love should worke upon us one great cause we doe not our dutie is because we doe not minde it our declinings might easily be discerned by us if we did but minde it The consideration and remembrance of what we once were and what we now are is a speciall meanes to convince one that is fallen Consider and see if you cannot remember the time 1. When your soules thirsted more for God and ●anted and brayed more vehemently after him then now short breathing is a signe of spirituall decaying therefore know you are fallen from your first love Psal 42. 1 2. 2. See if you cannot remember that time was when you tooke more sweet joy and delight in drawing neare to him and in communion with him then now then yee are fallen and your affections are divided 3. If you can remember the time was when you had more faith and confidence in God then now you have then you are fallen for a decay in faith and a decay in love ever goe together the lesse faith the lesse love so much unbeliefe so much want of love 4. If there was a time in which you were more willing to doe and suffer for God and to dye to goe home to him then you have left your first love 5. Are you as frequent in duties and as much in them now as ever are not spirituall duties something more wearisome and burdensome to thee then once they were then thou art fallen from thy first love Some may say once I prayed with more faith and fervency but now they are as my selfe more cold 6. Have you as much zeale for God and his truth now as ever the communion of Saints once more desired loved and delighted in then now if it be so then you are fallen from your first love 7. If ever you did love the things of the world lesse then you doe now then you are fallen for love to the world causeth a decay in our love to God love not the world so much as we love the world so much we come short in our love to God 8. Can you not say time was when I was more affected with the love of God and did more minde him and his love then you are fallen for so much as we forget Gods love to us so much we forget to love him the apprehending his love begets love in us to him We love him because he first loved us When Gods love in saving us did appeare to us to be great and wonderfull it set out hearts afire with love to him to live and dye with him and for him and because we minde his love lesse therefore we love him lesse If we should compare our selves with these Ephesians whom God finds fault withall because they left their first love what thoughts can we have of our selves when we consider how far short we come of them God saith of them vers 2 3. That they could not beare with them that are evill they could not marke that their love was so to him and zeale for him was so strong that it over-powred them they could not beare with sinners But alas wee can beare with fin and sinners They laboured in the worke of the Lord which implies carefulnesse and diligence in Gods worke but alas we are sloathfull and dead-hearted they were patient they indured all oppositions within and without they met withall for keeping the Commandements of God and the faith of Jesus they suffered much patiently as appeares Rev. 1. 9. We are impatient even at words Thou hast borne which implies afflictions sufferings pressures we can hardly beare with any thing And hast not fainted here was their courage for God and his truth they bore great trials without fainting we faint under small trials yea at the hearing of them For my Names sake their ends were holy they sought not themselves backs nor bellies but did all for the name and sake of God this holy frame of spirit is a sweet thing oh how farre short doe we come of them Obs Many good actions may proceed from them that are fallen from their first love many good actions cannot excuse for one fault Use Exhortation You who are convinced you are fallen from your first love oh lay it to heart your declinings from God a decay in our outward estate is laid to heart but our inward decayings should trouble us much more And repent the Lord bids thee repent what repentance is see Jer. 31. 18 19. The least declining in our love to God is cause enough of repentance it 's to be laid to heart Repentance is a duty sutable for a Saint that hath assurance of the love of God And doe thy first workes Doe saith God the life of a Saint is a life of action to live to God and for God is no idle life God requires many things to be done Doe thy first workes Repentance without reformation is not sufficient Such as leave their first love leave their first workes as we decay in our love
perswasions are to purpose because they are effectuall If men could give peace God should loose his glory and man should be admired and adored as God Vse 1. If the Lord of peace must give peace this should teach us in the want of peace to goe to God for it 2. It should teach such as injoy any peace how small soever it appeares in their eyes to be thankfull to God for it for it s from his mercy and loving kindnesse that we injoy it Obs 3. The Lord himselfe give you peace by all meanes God conveys peace to his people in and by meanes Meanes cannot give peace but God gives peace by them If meanes could give peace we would look and rest too much upon meanes and be satisfied with them without God and resting upon meanes and not upon the God of meanes Vse This should teach us to use the means to look above them to God to blesse them and in the use of meanes to live upon God and not upon the meanes Obs 4. By all meanes all the meanes that tend to increase the peace of the Saints they ought to know and minde and use and beleeve God will give them peace by them Vse Use all if by any meanes thy wants may be supplied Phil. 3. 11. Honour not one so as to exclude or flight another it s the fault of some to neglect some use such as themselves like be yee so wise as to imbrace and use all for all are for his glory and thy good the neglect of one may hinder the fruit of another there is no meanes how weake so ever it appeares but God can blesse it to thee There be many speciall means to quiet and settle a troubled foule in the assurance of the love of God which are of speciall use to increase thy peace to name some Meanes 1. Commune with thy heart and make diligent search to finde out what it is that troubleth thee see Psal 77. 6. Aske a reason of thy soule why it is disquieted why it is cast downe why art thou cast downe O my soule why art thou disquieted Psal 42. 5 6. 11. 2. Examine from whence all thy discouragements come and you shall finde they come not from God for his voice is peace and comfort to his I know the thoughts that I thinke towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evill Jer. 29. 11. Comfort yee my people saith the Lord speake yee comfortably to Jerusalem cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquitie is pardoned Isa 42. 1 2. You see they come not from God nor doe they come from Christ it was promised of Christ that he should speake peace Thy King cometh he shall speak peace unto the heathen Zach. 9. 9 10. This is his work and he doth it therefore he doth not trouble nor discourage any He binds up the broken hearted he proclaims peace and liberty he comforts all that mourne he gives beauty for ashes the oyle of joy for mourning and garments of praise for the spirit of heavinesse c. Isa 61. 1 2 3. Luk. 4. 18. He is gracious and pitifull He will not quench the smoaking flax nor breake the bruised reed Isa 42. 3. His voice is full of love and tendernes his words are sweet words as Let not your hearts be troubled Joh. 13. 1. Feare not it is your fathers pleasure to give you a Kingdome Luk. 12. 32. Cast your care upon me I will care for you Phil. 4. 6. Christs voice is Open to me my sister my love my dove my undefiled Song 5. 2. What sweet words are here all tending to peace and comfort not the least word of discouragement or trouble his name is King of Salem that is King of peace Heb. 7. 2. It s evident then our fears discouragements come not from Christ Nor come they from the holy Spirit of God for he is the great and most sweet Comforter he causeth no discouragement but removes them all by revealing and applying to the soule the love of God and carrieth the soule by faith from all discouragements to God who is love and peace where the soule is to rest Psal 116. 7. and be filled with sweet peace This is the worke the Spirit doth hence it is he is called the comforter Joh. 15. 16. He never caused the least feare or discouragement in the soule of any The consideration that our feares doubts and discouragements come not from God nor from Christ nor from the holy Spirit is sweet for then what need we care to regard them or be troubled for them but slight them But may a soule say from whence then doe they come 1. They come from the Devill who is a malicious enemy to the peace and comfort of the Saints he is an enemy to their beleeving therefore he tempts and takes the word out of mens hearts least they should beleeve Luk. 8. 12. And his instruments tempt see Psal 42. 10. 1 Thes 3. 5. 2. They come from our own hearts Take ●eed brethren least there be in any of you an evill heart in departing from the living God Heb. 3. 12. 3. They come from the l●i●g va●ities we have chosen They that hearken unto lyin● vanities forsake their own mercy 〈…〉 8. 4. The causes why the children of God have ●o many discouragements doubts and feares doe arise 1. From ignorance of the fulnesse and ●reenesse of the promise Isa 55. 2. 2. Mindlesnesse and heedlesnesse of the promise Heb. 2. 1. 3. Ignorance and forgetfulnesse of God Heb. 12. 4. Vnskilfulnesse of the word of Righteousnesse Heb. 5. 13. 5. And from corruption in the heart opposing grace unbeliefe takes the Law and ●pplies it to it selfe which occasioneth feares and feares doubts and discouragements 6. Not watching against sin the not keeping a cleare conscience omission of duties ●nd loose walking with God all these will ●aise tumults in the soule 7. Building our comfort upon that which ●s mutable and uncertaine Mica 2. 10. and seeking comfort in our personall sanctification and not in Christ in our justification by him 8. False reasonings as to conceive they have no grace because they see or feele none and because they are so bad thus we delude our selves in choosing trouble and preferring it before comfort Job 15. 11. 9. From the bodies distemper with melancholly and want of imployment or too muc● businesse and the troubling themselves wit● the event of things and peevishnesse Jona 3. 9. Jer. 31. 15. and pride in not quietly sub●mitting to that condition inward or outward God hath put us in and want of patience i● not waiting upon God for deliverance in th● use of meanes 10. Want of confideration of the groun● of the trouble to see whether it ought to b● a ground of trouble or no. 11. Too much eying of sinne and the co●●science siding with the Law against it selfe 12. Gods not appearing to the soule Ma● 27. 46. the Spirits not
doe not make us the better before God nor the more beloved of God but they declare us to be what we are made by God The Papists doe as they say many good works to be saved but we abhorre it because it is condemned of God Not of workes least we should boast If it were of works it were not of grace Therefore all those that expect hope for mercy because they leave their sinnes and doe many good workes as they thinke alas they are greatly deluded they are not taken off of selfe-works and selfe-concurrence with Christ you are ignorant of the righteousnesse of Christ therefore yee goe about to establish your own righteousnesse and so long as yee doe so yee cannot submit to the righteousnesse of God see Rom. 10. 3. But if thou didst know what a righteousnesse Christ is thou wouldst have preferred it before thy own yea it would be esteemed by thee but dresse and dung to his Phil. 3. 8 9. Publicans and Harlots are neerer salvation then thee as righteous as thou art who work for life as the blind Pharisees did and perished see Mat 21. 31 32. Luk. 7. 29 30. We are not commanded to doe any thing to procure the pardon of our sinnes but in reference to service and duty I doe count my selfe never the nearer heaven for my best works then if I had never done any thing but swore and blasphemed God it s to him that worketh not Rom. 4. 2 3 4 5. We are saved not according to our workes but according to his own purpose and grace 2 Tim. 1. 9 Doth not God speake plaine enough to the question in saying it is not according to our works And when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son Rom. 5. 10. I will doe away thy offences for my Names sake Isa 43. 25. When thou wert polluted in thy own bloud I said unto thee live then was the time of love Ezek. 16. 6. 8. From hence it is that all that see this mystery of Gods free grace that salvation is not according to our works they cry grace grace Christ Christ Christ is all in all nothing but Christ now all their prayers teares duties devotions all of theirs is nothing to them in respect of their acceptation justification or salvation they are dead to working they will not stirre to doe the least worke in the world to attaine any of these c. Heb. 4. 10. All ours is vanished in the infinite ocean of Gods free love it s so that God might have all the glory Eph. 1. 6. Jer. 9. 24. and that man might not boast Rom. 3. 9. but obey God freely Luk. 1. 74. I have no worke of God wrought in me The Spirit shall convince the world of sin and of righteousnesse Joh. 16. 7 8 9 10. God hath begun his worke in thee if he hath convinced thee of sin and of righteousnesse to be convinced of sin is for the soule to see it selfe utterly lost and undone by reason of sin they confesse th●y are vile and abhorre themselves Job 42. 6. They loath themselves for their deeds Ezek. 20. 43. 2. The soule is convinced so as to have no hope in any thing it can doe to help it selfe this is to be undone in nature so as he cannot doe any thing from whence he may expect salvation or have any hope of it for a man cannot expect life and salvation from Christ alone untill the soule be taken off all other things in respect of life This vision of God causeth the soule to see themselves and say There remaineth no strength in me my comelinesse is turned in me into corruption Dan 10. 8. That is now the case is altered from what it was now my best workes my righteousnesse is defiled and is sin now sinfull-selfe and righteous-selfe are alike if there be any difference the last is the worst now the creature hath nothing to procure Christ nor no strength to beleeve in him the Spirit of God reveales to the soule that there is nothing but darknesse and death in our best duties it is from grace to be taken off of nature and he that is taken off of nature hath grace is borne of God When the soule is taken off its own bottome it must have another to rest on or else it sinkes therefore when God takes away the soules false foundation which is her false hopes he gives the soule a better in himselfe this is the teaching and drawing of the Father Joh. 6. That in Christ there is a ransome in which is life and that all that Christ hath done is for him and that nothing will stand the soule in any stead but him when the soule hath learned this there is a secret power goeth with this teaching and carrieth the soule to Christ to beleeve in him for the teaching of the Father and faith goeth together Every one that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh unto me Joh. 6. So that to convince the soule of righteousnesse is to convince it of Christ to reveale that in him onely is helpe and in his righteousnesse is deliverance I have laid helpe upon one that is mighty Psal 89. 19. So that the Lord doth fix and settle the soule upon Christs righteousnesse onely at least he puts the soule under the hope of it Ezek. 16. 5 6. When the soule seeth nothing but death God saith live and when the soule is a going downe into the pit God saith Stay hearken I have received a Ransome for thee see Job 34. 23 24. Now the soule wonders at the love of God in pardoning his sinne he is taken up as Luk. 1. 41. 43 Though for the measure it is not in all the Lords alike The Spirit discovers to the soule that it hath chosen something else besides Christ upon which the soule resteth and satisfieth her selfe withall and expects mercy and comfort from her best workes and other lying vanities telling the soule that there is nothing but death in them God by this teaching turneth the soule from darkness viz. selfe Satan and all other lying vanities to light to Christ where life is telling the soule there is life in Christ and that it need not seeke life in nothing else but to waite upon Christ for it and that the soule shall not loose its waiting but shall certainly have it at last Isa 57. 13. These things are wrought in some measure Some are strong others are weake and are called carnall and not spirituall yet they are babes in Christ therefore they were in a happy state 1 Cor. 3. 1. 3. In the same measure this work is wrought in the soule in the same measure faith is wrought and as it appeares to the soule so faith appeares to the soule I know not whether I may beleeve for some shall not be saved The Scripture doth declare that he that beleeves shall be saved Joh. 3. 16. You are to rest satisfied in the Word of
to our sensiblenesse of fin but to Christ 6. Our greatest measure of sensiblenesse of sin is not free from sin it deserves nothing but death 7. If thou didst see thy selfe lost and fatherless so as not any thing could satisfie thee but Christ this is a great and sweet worke of the Gospel this none have but such as shall be saved by thy renouncing thy own sufficiency it doth appeare there is a better sufficiency come in place 2. Dis● I feare my faith is not the faith of Gods Elect because I have so many doubtings 1. I grant feares and doubtings are the fruits of unbeliefe and as feares and doubts increase the stronger unbeliefe is yet by the Scriptures it appeares Gods people that have beleeved yet had many doubts and feares as appeares Joh. 13. 1. Mark 9. 24. Unbeliefe was so strong in Thomas that he said he would not beleeve Joh. 20. 24 25. It may be the case is so with thee therefore take heed least yee say you have no faith least yee deny the worke of God and call little faith no faith and light darknesse and one of the fruits of the Spirit sinne for to doe so is very evill Woe unto them that call evill good and good evill that put darknesse for light and light for darknesse that put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter Isa 5. 20. Those that put faith for unbeliefe doe so 2. Use meanes to remove such things as strengthen unbeliefe and hinder the sight of thy faith ignorance is one cause of doubting also an over-sensiblenesse of infirmities slighting Gods meanes neglect of duty or formall performance or nourishing sin p●onenesse to sin hearkening to Satan to sense carnall reasonings nourishing feares and unbeliefe c. Know that means are means not causes of the increase of the fruits of the Spirit look to God 3. Indeavour to strengthen thy faith know the happinesse of a beleever in Christ seed thy faith with sutable promises live upon Christ above pray in faith Aske his Spirit and thou shalt have it see Luk. 11. 23. Which will revive and fill thy soule with joy and peace in beleeving in the same measure God reveales his love to a soule in the same measure doubts and feares are cast out Perfect love casts out feare 3. Dis I feare my faith is presumption Presumption may be understood in a twofold consideration first for a confidence without the Word or secondly against the Word for the first 1. He that presumes he hath no ground for his confidence he can neither give you any Scripture or good reason for his confidence the ground of his confidence is his own conceit and not from the Word and promise of God but he that beleeves in Christ his confidence is in the Word We through the Scriptures have hope Rom. 15. 4. No hope without a word In his word doe I hope Psal 130. 5. But I hope in thy Word Psal 119. 81. He that beleeves in Christ receives no promise of life but in and through Christ in the riches of his grace but 2. He that presumes if he receive a promise he receives it upon his own qualifications without respect to Christ he gathers conclusions of life from what he is and what he can doe his own righteousnesse was never drosse and dung to him as Phil. 3. 8. So they depend upon their faith and not upon Christ the cause of their confidence is because they are so good and not so bad like the proud Pharisee he never received the sentence of death in himselfe 2 Cor. 1. 9. And as they were ever confident so it was ever easie for them to beleeve He that beleeves his hope and trust is onely in God they hope in his mercy The eyes of the Lord are upon them that hope in his mercy Psal 33. 18. 21. 22. It is Gods worke to perswade the heart to rest upon the free mercy of God in Christ Psal 13. 5. I trust in the mercy of God for ever and ever Psal 52. 8. With the Lord there is mercy Psal 130. 7. God is rich in mercy Eph. 2. 4. Presumption cannot doe so Joh. 12. 37. 1 Pet. 19. 20. John 6. 28 29. Also his confidence is contrary to the word of God the word of God protests against them and their confidence as appeares Jer. 9. 9. 15. So their presumption hardens them and imboldens them to venture upon sinfull practices as lying stealing drunkennesse swearing uncleannesse c. He that truly beleeves abhorres that which is evill and cleaves to that which is good Rom. 12. 9. Every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himselfe as he is pure 1 Joh. 3. 3. see Titus 2. 11 12. They count all things but losse for Christ for him they will suffer the losse of all things Phil. 3. 8. Those who have tasted of Gods free love admire it are thankfull for it and doe loath with the greatest indignation what soever shall intrench upon the free love of God although it were but in the least degree 4 Dis If I had grace I should grow in grace but I doe not my life is not holy nor am I like unto the Lords 1. Art thou a childe a young man or a father there is a great difference betwixt a childe and a man in nature so great is the difference between a babe in Christ 1 Cor. 3. 1. and a man in Christ see 1 Joh. 2. 12 13. Also consider are you a babe in the wombe or borne he is a babe that is unskilfull in the word of Righteousnesse see Heb. 5. 13. As a childe is begotten and alive it s in the wombe before it be borne so a soule may be alive begotten from above before it be borne Christ must be formed in us before we can be new-borne babes Gal. 4. 18. 1 Pet. 2. 2. When thou art delivered out of bondage darknesse and feares concerning thy soule thou art borne and brought forth for as the wombe is a place of bondage so is a doubting condition and therefore such cannot do that which others doe Also in case thou art new borne there cannot be that expected from thee as from a man in Christ you know there is a difference to be put between a childe and a man 2. Learne to distinguish between the fruits of the Spirits and the exercise of them it s not the having of the fruits of the Spirit but the exercise of them that attaines to a holy conversation 3. Know that the time of doubting is a barren time men cannot fight and work at one and the same time when a soule is delivered from its enemies Satans terrors then the soule begins to serve Being delivered we serve Luk. 1. 47. Yee see deliverance is before working therefore the time of doubting of bondage is not the season of growing in holy services 4. Know it s one thing to be the Lords and another thing for God to convey his power into the soule by which it
s made conformable to the will of Christ and lives by faith in the Son of God Gal. 2. 20. The first is where the latter is not 5. Beleevers are of severall growths and states first babes children secondly young men thirdly Fathers Can babes worke yet if babes dye in that state they shall not misse of glory 1 Joh 2. 12. It s one thing to be ●●stified and another to be sanctified as it s one thing to live and another to be borne and to worke is distinct from both There is a great deale of difference between the Lords own people some are spirituall but others are termed carnail 1 Cor. 3. 1 Thou maist be begotten and not borne 6. If thou beest ignorant or in temptation then thy heart is clouded and thy heart distempered with feare as Job 23. 8 9. and to thou art not fit to judge or thy growth is● new borne babe able to judge of its growth Also consider it may be thou doest not use the meanes or not rightly in Gods way Psal 1. 3. with Song 4. 12. 5. Dis I have many thoughts in me that I am not the Lords which discourageth me and weak●●●● my confidence 1. These thoughts are from Satan they are contrary to the word of the Lord which saith Cast not away your confidence Heb. 10. 35. 2. If you would consider from whence such thoughts arise it would appeare to be groundlesse and not according to the word they arise commonly because a man is so indisposed to doe good in that he is no more spirituall these indeed declare there is much corruption and sin but they doe not prove one not to be a sonne and daughter of God one sonne is more wilfull and stubborne then another yet he is a sonne for all that though a bad one 3. Satan tempts Christs babes to cast away their confidence in God it s no wonder he will tell them they have no faith c. Satan may be answered that he knowes not also if I should thinke so I may be deceived for as fire raked up in ashes appeares not nor gives it any light or heate so corruption may hide and obscure faith 1 Cor. 3. 1. The soule may say to Satan if I have no faith why doe yee not let me alone as yee do others and as yee did me when I tooke my fill of sinne then yee told me I had faith when I had none I have found yee a lier and therefore I will not beleeve you and am the more confident I have faith because yee say I have none for you are a lier and the father of it Joh. 8. 44. But suppose I have no faith there is no reason why I should despaire because all that are the Lords were sometimes as I am at that time yee were without Christ c. Eph. 2. 12 13. Which in times past were not a people but are now the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy 1 Pet. 2. 10. Men are ordained to eternall life before they beleeve I know not but I may be one of them despaire will do me no good it s better in the use of meanes to waite upon God and trust him with my soule if mercy appeare I shall praise him and it may come there is nothing too hard for God Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me cleane Mat. 8. 2. Jer. 32. 17. 6. Dis I cannot pray nor doe any thing that is good therefore God hath not done my soule good 1. Unbeliefe deads thy heart and hinders thy living upon Christs strength 2. It s so with thee that thou maist see a need of Christs strength and goe to him by faith for it 3. If God hath given thee a desire to obey him say not that it is nothing God saith its something 2 Cor. 8. to 11. He that gives this accepts it 12 and he will grant thy desire in his time He will fulfill the desire of them that feare him he also will heare their cry and will save them Psal 119. 19. He will not quench the smoaking flax When wee see no fire wee know there is fire by the smoake Many a time a will to obey may be all that a beleever can finde in himselfe To will is present with me but how to performe that which is good I finde not for the good I would I doe not but the evill I would not that doe 1 Rom. 7. 18 19 20 21. The strongest Saint is but weake the highest perfection we are capable in this life is a fight of our imperfections and a desire and endeavour to obey and to live upon Christ by faith see Phil 2. 12 13. Paul was one of the most eminent Saints yet see what he saith of himselfe Rom 7. 14. to 25. Rom. 8. 37 38 39. He had not power to doe what he should yet he lived by faith in the Sonne of God Gal. 2. 20. 4. We should doe all we can to obey God yet we must know our all we can doe will not justifie us before God see Eph. 2. 8 9. 7 Dis I finde no relish in go●d things and I often ●mit them 1. God may have begun his worke in thee although it be thus with thee this temper in thee may arise from divers causes first from unbeliefe secondly doubting of acceptance of thy person and duty it s no wonder such have little list to obey thirdly eying infirmities and not Christ with them fourthly not exercising the fruits of the Spirit especially faith fiftly little love to Christ fixt●y loving temporall things deads the heart and makes it 〈◊〉 seventhly weaknesse of grace eightly from Gods not affording present strength ninthly sloath and ease that-slayeth the soule tenthly undiscreet doing duties out of their season eleventhly ignorance of the nature of duties and what God requires in some cases twefthly ignorance of the sweetnesse in spirituall duties thirteenthly the soules sicknesse which hinders the soules relish of spirituall things the soule hath its sicknesse and distempers as well as the body fourteenthly weaknesse of body is a great enemy to action My flesh and my heart failes but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever Psal 73. 26. he never failes 2. Unwillingnesse to good duties argueth much corruption from whence the omission of them doth often flow 8. Dis I have nothing for I am not able to subdue my passions 1. Thy not subduing them may arise from weaknesse wee arke weake and imperfect at the best we fall often see Gal. 6. 1. 2. Some partake more of naturall choller then others and as that is so we are more or lesse hasty and passionate and as that increaseth passion increaseth one that is wicked may be naturally patient and a childe of God may be sinfully passionate El●● was a man subject to the like pass●ons we are Jam. 5. 17. 3. You must not measure Gods love to thee nor the truth of his work in thee
to say to us Gal. 3. 10. Deut. 27. 4. Gal. 5. 23. 4. 26. 31. Therefore we are freed from the punishment of sin The Law is holy just and good Rom. 3. 31. the righteousnesse of the Law remaines and every one ought to frame his life according to the same wee receive not the Law as given by Moses but as given by Christ he gives the same Law for his to obey though not upon the same termes though we have nothing to doe to be saved yet we have something to doe for his glory Joh. 15. 8. Wee are commanded to be carefull to maintaine good workes Titus 3. 8. For any to say we are not to observe the ten Commandements called the Morall Law ten words is abominable for if I am not tied to observe it I sin not if I doe contrary to it it s no marvell if such be abominable in their hearts and lives I grant we are freed from the curse and punishment of it but not from the things contained in it the Law concernes our conversation though not our salvation Be yee holy in all manner of conversation this is the Saints prize yee that love the Lord hate evill and abhorre to company with such as slight the commands of God see the Saints daily duty part the second Christ hath a yoke and we ought to put it on Mat. 11. 29. Mat. 14. 23. 31. It s easie and a sweet mercy to observe it The power of divine love will sweetly and violently draw the soule to obey Christ see Titus 2. 11. 3. 8. Christ saith If any man love me he will keepe my words Joh. 14. 23. 15. 16. Eph. 2. 10. Such as love Christ they desire and endeavour with all their soules to obey him For such as love sin and take liberty to sin such as turne the grace the love of God into wantonnesse and say they are saved c. they are liers they mocke themselves and others they have need to consider 1 Joh. 1. 6. Gal. 5. 13. to 23. 6. 5. 7 8. Rom. 2. 17. c. they are the basest among men it s a certain truth as a man beleeves so he obeys as his faith is so are his workes good or bad Observe and take heed of those that speake for liberty for the flesh say to such thou art one of them for thy speech bewrayeth thee When Christ comes into the soule all things are become new old things are done away 2 Cor. 5. 17. Fire shall as soone cease to burne as such shall cease to obey God 27 Argu. That which is for our profit that is a mercy to us and no punishment for sin but Gods chastisements and corrections sent to us are for our profit Heb. 12. 10. They are to correct our injustice but not to satisfie Justice they are to amend us not to pay God they are to exercise the fruits of the Spirit in us not payments without them we neither know God nor others nor our selves they imbitter sin unto us we need them to turne us from sin to God seeing wee are the better for them how are they punishments to us 28 Argu. That which comes from the love of God that is sweet that is not a punishment for sin which is from anger But whom the Lord loveth he chastiseth Heb. 12. 6 7. 8. Gods chastisements are love-tokens all Gods dispensations bitter or sweet are a portion of love to his crosses and afflictions I receive as love and my escape from them if God so ordereth it I receive as love hunger cold and nakednesse paine griefe and wearinesse though in themselves they are punishments yet they are not so to us if they be curses and wrath to the Elect how are we delivered from the curse Gal. 3. 13 14. and wrath 1 Thes 1. 10. Therefore to affi●me that wee are punished for sin is to deny we are delivered from the curse which is contrary to Gal. 3 13 14. 29 Argu. If they be blessed that God correcteth thou they are no punishments of sin but blessed is the man that thou chastisest Psal 94. 12. Our God turned the curse into a blessing Nehe. 13. 2. Therefore they are no punishments of sin 30 Argu. If God by corrections teacheth us then it s no punishment for its a mercy to be taught but God by corrections teacheth us Heb. 12. 9. Therefore they are no punishments to us 31 Argu If all things worke together for our good Rom. 8. Then all falls paines diseases crosses afflictions c. doe us no hurt but worke for our good all things worke for our good Rom. 8. 28. Death it selfe is a mercy to us we die not to satisfie Justice but to passe through it into eternall glory provided for us for me to dye is gaine Christ hath borne the whole punishment of my sinnes There shall no evill come unto thee Psal 91. 10. So that whether I live or die I am freed from the punishment of sin the sting of death is sin now that is gone we are saved from death though we die death is an entrance into life 1 Cor. 15. 55. 32 Argu. Those whose iniquities are pardoned they shall never be punished for them but our iniquity is pardoned Isa 42. 1 2. Therefore we are freed from the punishment of sin for that which is pardoned is not punishable how is it pardoned if we are punished for it or liable to be punished for it to forgive a man his sin and not the punishment is as if one should say I forgive thee the debt but not the payment of the debt our sinnes were debts 33 Argu. Those whose sinnes God hath forgiven he will not punish if he will how are they forgiven but God hath forgiven the sinnes of his people thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people thou hast covered all their sin Psal 85. 2. To forgive sinne and to cover it is one thing if all be covered there are none to cover my happinesse is not in having a few sins or many but in that they are all ●orgiven and not imputed to me Psal 32. 1 2. We are imperfect in our selves and action yet all our imperfectnesse is perfectly forgiven we are perfected for ever that is perfectly freed from the punishment of sin for eve● by the offering of himselfe Heb. 10. 10. 12. 14. The righteousnesse of Christ availeth for ever for all our sinnes if the bloud of Christ clenseth us from all sinne Joh. 1. 29. then from sin past present and to come for that is all lesse is not all as Christ by his death satisfied for all our sins so by one act of our faith we are to apprehend and beleeve the pardon of them Rom. 5. 11. to 24. This must needs be so for if we shall ever commit any sin that is not satisfied for by his sufferings Christ must come and suffer againe or e●●e we must perish in the unpardonable sin for without his bloud there is no
you keep the Law Joh. 7. 19. If yee say yee can keepe the Law without fin the Scripture doth call you a lier 1 Joh. 1. 8. There are none just upon earth Such as are such great doers for salvation are fit to be ranked with those in Mat. 7. 22. Can you make your selfe righteous can you keep the Law It forbids lust yea vaine thoughts Rom 7. 7. Gal. 3. 10. Unlesse yee can keepe the Law yee cannot be saved by workes 9. So much as wee eye any of our workes to be any thing in salvation it selfe so much we not onely neglect and slight Christ but are enemies to the Crosse of Christ Phil. 3. 18. Whatsoever they say or doe they are no better 10. To doe any thing to be saved is but wicked obedience all is uncleane Their minds and consciences are defiled Titus 1. 15 16. The more they doe the more hypocrites they are What men doe to escape hell and get heaven is wicked serving of God for that they doe is not in faith therefore it is sinne Rom. 14. and doe not please God Heb. 11. 6. If the plowing of he wicked is sinne what is his praying untill Christs love constraines the heart to love and serve him there is no love to God in what they doe all is but selfe-love their own ends are all they aime at but when the love of God is shed abroad into their hearts they will serve God freely Luk. 1. 74. 11. We doe nothing to be saved because we saw that when we had done all we could wee were unprofitable servants Luk 17. 10. Which could not be if we could have saved our selves or effect the least part of our salvation by any thing we could doe wee see we sin in all our workes they are no better then Pauls and he calls his dung Phil. 3. 8. Dung is fit for the dunghill Such are not worth the mentioning much lesse magnifying O Lord I will make mention of thy Righteousnesse even of thine onely Psal 71. 16. 24. We have no confidence in the flesh none in our selves but in Christ 1 Cor. 1. 3. We live to Christs righteousnesse we are dead to our own Gal. 2. 19 20. Our workes are our glory God spoiles us of our glory that we might glory in Christ I be nothing 2 Cor. 12. 11. All we can doe cannot satisfie for one vaine thought our workes are a most miserable rotten and sandy foundation if our salvation should depend upon them it did depend upon a broken reed no man is righteous in himselfe wee are not just in our selves but in another 2 Cor. 5. 21. Saving benefits are in Christ and not in us our blessednesse is in Christ and him crucified 12. Doers for salvation as confident as they are such were shut out of heaven those in Mat. 7. 22. were confident heaven should be opened to them their plea to enter into heaven was because they had done many great and wondrous workes t is worth the observing they thought it an unanswerable argument yet they were shut out heaven was not provided for them Publicans and Harlots were saved but not they Mat. 21. 31. Christ saith He knew them not What Doth not Christ know great workers for salvation no he neither knows them nor they him Such as look for salvation to be on condition of workes seeke to attaine it by workes they prize their own righteousnesse in stead of Christs see Rom. 10. 3. Such as know Christs righteousnesse prize it its glorious in their eyes our workes are as nothing to us they vanish before us like the morning dew as Hos 6 4. They prize set up and esteeme nothing but Christ Your conclusion it s your delusion consider againe and see if you can see whose is the errour who is deceived and strangely deluded I desire you may see looke on it well and submit Geree Who so blind as he that cannot see with halfe an eye that beleeving is the condition of the party justified p. 82. Wee must beleeve before we can be justified p. 81. The Doctor doth most ungodlily inferre that a man is justified actually before he hath faith p. 83. He saith We are justified before we beleeve this is the thing in question p. 87. He makes a wicked and sinfull seperation between Christ and faith in the point of Justification which methinkes should make all true Christians abhorre their Doctrine as hellish and apostaticall p. 95. The Doctor holds that Christ justifieth us before any qualification is wrought in us he saith Faith comes after Justification as well as workes and so excludes Faith in Justification p. 18. 34. The Apostle saith Wee are justified by faith Rom. 3. 23. The Doctor saith before wee beleeve You cry out against us our answer is to all your sharp arrowes most bitter words The Lord rebuke thee You will have us to see what spirit you are of I hope the Lord will let you see and say that you condemned the truth and those that taught it and that the errour and hellish doctrine and blasphemy is your owne You see the Word faith in Scripture Rom. 3. 23. But it s evident yee see not the meaning of it What the Scripture saith is true and so is what the Doctor saith it s but your mis-take to thinke otherwise wee deny not but affirme we are justified by faith but we deny we are justified by beleeving for the word Faith is not alwayes to be understood for beleeving the Scripture doth not say wee are justified for nor through nor by beleeving neither doth it follow that wee are justified by beleeving because the Scripture saith We are justified by faith because the word Faith is diversly understood as 1. Sometimes by faith is meant the doctrine of Christ Jude 3. Obedience to the faith Acts 6. 7. In the faith 2 Cor. 13. 5. Hearing of faith preacheth the faith Gal. 1. 23. 2. So for the power by which we beleeve Gal. 5. 22. Phil. 1. 29. 3. Faith is to beleeve have faith in God Mark 11. 22. 4. Sometimes by faith is meant the profession of faith Rom. 1. 8. 5. By faith we are to understand knowledge Rom. 14. 22. 6. Sometimes Christ is called faith in Gal. 3. 16. with 19. 23. The seed in the 19. verse is called faith in 23 verse and Christ in the 16 verse So that to be justified through faith and by faith that is through Christ through his bloud Eph. 1. 7. Through the Redemption that is in Jesus Rom. 3. 24. So the word through him is used 1 Joh. 4. 9. Through him and by him is all one Eph. 1. 5. 7. That the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ Gal. 3. 14. Compare Rom. 3. 14. 28. with Rom. 5. 9. Isa 45. 24 25. Mat. 9. 22. Eph. 2. 8. Acts 15. 9. Gal. 3. 26. Eph. 1. 5. Those expressions of Scripture that ascribe most to Christ are the clearest the other are to be
himselfe to be theirs and own them for his visibly My people Isa 5. 13. called so Rom. 9. 25. And so shall they own him in this sense they were not his people nor God to their God before Geree We must make our Election sure 2 Pet. ● 5 6 7. 10 11. Ans This place is to be understood of the knowledge of our interest in it that is we are to use all the meanes to attaine to the knowledge of it as for Election it selfe is sure enough it was before the world therefore nothing we can doe can cause it to be nor cause us to have an interest in it Eph. 1. 4. Our help comes too late to doe that which was done before we were borne we grant that untill men beleeve we cannot tell who is elected or shall be saved till it appeares to us Acts 13. 48. Geree All justified persons please God but without faith none can please God Heb. 11. 6. I herefore without faith no man is justified Ans God was ever pleased with the persons of the Elect Jacob was loved before he had done good or evill Rom. 9. 11. 13. This love is from everlasting Jer. 31. 3. God loves the Elect as he loves Christ and Christ was loved before the foundation of the world Joh. 17 23 24. Therefore the persons of the Elect pleased God before the world therefore before they beleeved nor doth God love any the more or the better because they beleeve as appeares Rom. 5. 8 9 10. 2 Tim. 1. 9 10. Rom. 11. 28. 1 Joh 4. 16. Therefore Heb. 11. 6. is to be understood of actions not done in faith are not according to the Word therefore are not acceptable therefore your Sylogisme is not true nor safe if ye learne the truth ye must learne a new Logicke your Doctrine inferres that a beleever doth not sinne or if he doe he pleaseth God if ye grant its possible for one that is justified to displease God then ye contradict your selfe then its possible for a man to displease God and yet be justified Geree Faith and repentance on mans part are conditions of the Covenant of grace is evident Joh. 3. 16. p. 73. Ans I would see Scripture for this I heare it from men but not from Christ the Scripture doth not say that beleeving and repentance are conditions of the covenant of grace nor that there is any conditions on mans part of the Covenant of grace When you write againe alledge the Scripture that saith so or say nothing if there be conditions in the covenant of grace then the covenant is frustrate if the condition be broken if it were so we could not be certaine of salvation Joh. 3. 16. Mark 16. 15 16. and the like places are not conditions of the covenant of grace but directions how the Gospel is to be preached and applyed if any aske who shall be saved the Scripture answers He that beleeves The Scripture saith He that beleeves and is baptized shall be saved Mark 16. 16. Ye see Baptisme is required as well as faith the thiefe on the Crosse was not baptized yet saved if he was saved and yet wanted the one by the same reason another may be saved in the want of the other if he belong to the election of grace seeing beleeving repentance baptisme are workes in nature one Whereas it is said He that beleeveth not shall be damn'd and is condemned already Such Scriptures hold forth what men are in appearance and not what they are in respect of the eternall decree and appointment of God for those who beleeve were once unbeleevers Rom. 11. 32. And if it were his will that they should be damn'd God hath or must change his will or they cannot be saved For the Lord of hosts hath sworne saying as I have thought so shall it come to passe as I have purposed it shall stand Isa 14. 24. 46. 10. Acts 2. 23. Heb. 6. 17. To be condemned already is to be understood they are condemned in the Scriptures and in their own consciences yet if elected they shall be saved The Word of God is his will viz. his signifying will it reveales some part of his pleasure it is not his decree or pleasure it is not so properly his will as the will of his good pleasure is By the event the not slaying Isaack it appeared that it was not the will and decree of God that Abraham should kill his Sonne nor Niniveh be destroyed The word of God is his signifying will and it concernes us to looke upon it to binde us to the observation of it untill he signifie the contrary thus it was in Abrahams case concerning the killing of his Sonne Also the providence of God declares his will as well as his word though it be not in the same way instance the sparing of Niniveh c. Geree Righteousnesse is imputed to us by faith p. 102. Ans The Scripture saith God imputeth Righteousnesse you say faith imputes it faith and beliefe you make one p 85. Doe you make God and beliefe one or doe you deny that God imputeth Righteousnesse 1. Nor doth God impute our beleeving for Righteousnesse if it be said Abraham beleeved and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse So Phineas executing Judgement was imputed to him for Righteousnesse unto all generations Psal 106. 30 31. That is it was an action commendable 2. It what it was imputed his beleeving or that which he beleeved it was Christ his Righteousnesse that was imputed not his beleeving the word beleeving implyeth so much that Righteousnesse is elsewhere and not in beleeving nor in our selves for by it we apprehend something out of our selves in another in Christ 3. If God imputed his beleeving to him for righteousnesse then it was his righteousnesse or God imputeth it for that which it was not for Christ is our righteousnesse This is his Name that they shall call him the Lord our Righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. We are to aske in his Name viz. his Name is his Righteousnesse He is made unto us Righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1. 30. In his Name that is in the confidence of his Righteousnesse wee are accepted and shall have what we need in this confidence goe to God without wavering 1. Righteousnesse is in Christ In the Lord have I righteousnesse Isa 45. 24. Rom. 2. 24. 2. Beliefe is in us Christs righteousnesse is without us it covereth us Rev. 19. 8. 7. 9. 13 14. Isa 61. 10. 3. Daniel beleeved yet righteousnesse was not then brought in Dan. 9. 24. Isa 61. 1. 4. The Saints did not count beliefe to be their righteousnesse Psal 71. 16. Mica 7. 9. I shall behold his righteousnesse Righteousnesse and glory consists not in faith but rather subsists in us by it I meane the comfort of this Righteousnesse 5. To say that any thing is our righteousnesse besides Christ is to deny him the preheminence in all things Col. 1. 18. 6. Therefore the Saints cry O Lord thou art
spirituall when they are naturall If our affections love anger griefe joy doe fit us to pray they are spirituall else not When the object is spirituall and the motive spirituall then the affection is spirituall In our greatest earnestnesse wee have most cause to examine our hearts and affections Our affections come farre short of that we thinke we have in our judgements If some mens affections were answerable to their apprehension of God it would indanger their lives The quicknesse of our affections depends much upon the spirits of our bodies All the disquietnesse and distempers in us and by us is occasioned by the want of well bounding and ordering our affections Our affections declare what we love the fooles mind was all for his ease and his belly Our affections are strong and unruly and hard to be subdued The will is much to be observed in it's tempers inclinations motions which are the affections of the soule It 's not easie to master our wils and affections because they rage and doat so vehemently after vanities We set our affections on things below When our affections are set strongly 〈◊〉 things below it 's good for us they be taken from us that wee may take more delight in God and the unspeakeable and everlasting delight prepared with himselfe Concerning actions The lesse we doe the more we suffer Actions profit most but contemplation pleaseth best As the soule is more noble then the body so the actions of the soule are more noble then the actions of the body That which is the cause ground and end of an action in it wee live whether it be God or selfe Even the best actions of the best men are subject to the mis-interpretation of others The more spirituall any duty is the more averse our hearts are to it Actions begun with selfe-confidence doe oft finde successe accordingly Actions which concerne our selves wee oft exceed in but those that chiefly concerne God we are hardly drawn to but easily from If Satan cannot corrupt the action he will endeavour to corrupt the judgement and affection Without some measure of love and joy we are not fit for any good action Selfe-love rules all a naturall mans actions Wee often act more from affection then ●udgement but such actions never produce ●olid comfort but often reall sorrow Actions without a word to warrant them cannot be done in faith and with comfort A roving minde devours time and action The more wise we are the more we weigh all our actions in the ballance of the Word Of afflictions Crosses and afflictions are Gods call to examine our hearts and lives Afflictions are as necessary for our spirits as food is for our bodies Afflictions cause many to see their sinnes to own and confesse them and to be humble Sinne makes affliction bitter God sends afflictions to his for to try and exercise their faith and patience to open their eyes more to prevent and remove sin and to quicken us Afflictions breed patience give understanding humble and mortifie selfe they teach a Saint experience reforme him and send him the oftner to God Such as are most afflicted have oft-times most experience of God and themselves Not any affliction could trouble a childe o● God if he did but know wherefore God di● send it It 's beyond our knowledge what good Go● will doe us by afflictions God is as sweet and may be as much injoyed in poverty and affliction as in prosperity God is alwayes present with his in affliction though alwayes we doe not see him because we often look so much on the aff●ictio● if oppressed with it yet many of the Lord see God best in affliction It is not best to fasten our minds upon the affliction but to minde the end of every affliction which of a certain will be sweet and comfortable to all that are the Lords A childe of God may alwayes sucke some sweetnesse out of the bitterest affliction There is a blessing in every affliction to a childe of God whether they see it or no sooner or later they shall finde it Without affliction neither others know us nor we our selves Of assurance of the love of God Assurance of salvation is an effect of the testimony of the holy Spirit speaking peace to the soule A beleevers first assurance or comfort doth arise from the apprehension of Gods free love to him in Christ As our assurance is of the love of God so answerable is our peace and comfort and accordingly are we spirituall and our conversation is alike sutable Some things tend much to weaken and other things tend much to strengthen the assurance of the love of God Obedience is necessary to our comfort and assurance though not to pardon A childe of God may decay exceedingly in the sence and assurance of the love of God One that hath had the witnesse of the Spirit to evidence the goodnesse of his estate may notwithstanding in time of temptation and desertion question his estate and be full of feares and trouble The assurance of a Christians good estate may be maintained in him when the frame of his spirit and life is much degenerated from what it was The more we injoy the assurance of pardon of sinne the more contented we are in any estate and straight He that hath assurance of the love of God can trust himselfe with God in any estate and straight and can part with any thing for God A heart sensible of sinne and touched with remorse for it may stand with the assurance of pardon Authority The authority the husband hath over the wife is great but to exercise all of it ordinarily none but fooles will doe nor is it comely for the head to stand out of it's place Of the attributes of God The attributes of God are infinite The attributes of God are rocks of strength and fountaines of comfort to his and those that eye them live comfortably upon them It 's best in all our straights to looke to the attributes of God and live upon them by meditation faith and prayer Of Apostacy Going back tends to apostacy Infidelity is a cause of apostacy love of lusts love of the world ungroundednesse in the truth an unsound heart or not considering what attends the profession of Religion causeth many to draw backe Such as love not the truth will leave it To draw back from the profession of the truth is condemned by God and man Offences and darknesse and weaknesse cause many to stumble and turne aside Age. Old age is a state of griefe and sorrow and burden to themselves and others Age will kill no sinne Distrust and covetousnesse doe oft increase as age increaseth Every state and age hath some peculiar sinne to attend it It 's rare to see one full of yeares full of zeale for God Old and cold yet so it should not be Of anger Anger is a short madnesse it darkens our sight dulls troubles and corrupts us An angry man is weake he cannot
it is as much to h●● in their afflicted estate as in a prosperous Faith saith to the soule in the want of food and rayment be content God will provide He that lives by faith is content sincere and fruitfull The Saints enjoy Christ by faith and not by feeling When faith is greatest there is the least feeling to satisfie sense and reason The life of faith is a hidden life but unbeliefe is too open To those God gives faith he gives trialls to exercise it Humane wisdome hinders saith A way to strengthen faith is to live by it The more we live by faith the more we may and so on the contrary The more faith the lesse feare Even good men live more by sense then by faith As our faith is great or small so accordingly we are incouraged to obey God Faith beleeves impossible things to sense and reason By faith we look through death and see our felicitie He that lives by faith lives a sweet and comfortable life on Christ alone Faith in God and the use of meanes doe well agree The lesse a man apprehends the grounds of his saith to be solid the lesser shall his comfort be and the more he applieth the promise to himselfe and apprehends the unchangeablenesse of God in his oath and promise the more strong shall his consolation be Of falls Even good men stumble and fall If we have occasion and temptation and Gods permission then we fall If God withhold his strength lust soone drawes us aside and downe we fall Such as reproach others for their falls either have or are like to fall as much or worse themselves Freedome Christs freedome the Saints most prise none so blessed none so much to be desired Christ in his time freeth his from all feares and terrors death hell and judgement and from the commanding power of sin and free to noble imployments Friendship When friendship is between good and bad they quickly part or become alike for like will to like A friend must shew himselfe friendly He that will accept of all that his friend offers may weary him in time To affect familiarity with the wicked is to lead our selves into Satans temptations Flattery Flattery gaineth friends plaine dealing makes men foes Many can beare flattery but not reproo●e A fault It 's best sometimes not to seeme to take notice of some faults Sometimes it is a fault to finde fault and sometimes it 's a fault not to finde fault knowledge and wisdome must determine it It 's easier to see a fault in another then in our selves and to reforme one in another t●en in our selves Good We oft doe the least good to them we owe most A man may doe good in the strength of a lust There be many good things will decay if let alone but evill if let alone will in●rease Parents thinke they doe their children great good when they make them rich and great in the world which is to make them great sinners for then they have little else to doe but to wast the creatures and live in excesse and idlenesse lust pride and oppression God No voice signe or forme can sufficiently expresse God either to sense or reason no finite understanding can comprehend that which is infinite our understandings are finite therefore cannot conceive the forme or patterne of an infinite being God is the cause of all good there can be no good at all in any thing which God from all eternitie hath not decreed to effect or bring to passe What God is no man can perfectly define we rather know what God is not then what he is God doth sometimes worke by contraries Gods wayes are sometimes secret and unsearchable God is neere his when he seems furthest off When God seemes to leave a man then helpe is neerest God is the center of the Saints lives In God is satisfaction and no changes They that live upon God alone live most comfortable they are satisfied and feare no changes We oft enjoy most of God when we enjoy least of the creature The more wise powerfull glorious and eternall God is the more happy are we in being in his love Eyes faile flesh failes heart failes all failes but God he never failes It 's a great comfort to a Saint that God is present in every place Such as know God will trust him with their soules and bodies Nothing can free a soule from sin and misery but God alone The selfe sweetnesse we finde in God the lesse we love him and the lesse paines we take to obey him The sight of God to a Saint is glorious and the knowledge and meditation of him will raise and inlarge the soule So much as we desire God so much we enjoy him and so much as we enjoy God so much we seriously minde him All perfections are in God therefore we may well be content with him Gifts Gifts blind the eyes of the wise Great gifts and great corruptions too oft goe together The greater gifts spirituall or temporall the prouder the flesh is and the readier Satan is to assault Such as act from their gifts without looking to Christ are like to fall as Peter did Glory What a man trusts in he glories in and what a man glories in he trusts in and is confident off When we thinke we most seek the glory of God we too often most seek our own Vaine-glorious and simple men love to shew their authority in needlesse commands Griefe It 's a great griefe to a childe of God to speake of any good thing he finds a want of in himselfe We cannot heartily be grieved for the sin of another if we make no conscience of it in our selves If we grieve much for any earthly thing it is a signe we seek not that comfort from God we might and should If we did not immoderately love outward things we would not keep such a doe to get them nor so grieve at the losse of them as we doe It 's poornesse of spirit to joy or grieve at any thing worse then our selves yet this poornesse is in all men Honour Honours change manners The honour of men is a vanity a very shadow Honour ease and riches are great things in the eyes of the world The more me● de●ire honour the lesse they deserve and the lesse they often have Such as stand most upon termes of honour have the least true worth in them The more a mans worth is lessened in his own eyes the more he is honoured in others A mans honour is his honesty c. He is free gentile and noble that is a Christian Happinesse Happinesse is not found in honour riches nor health There is no happinesse but onely in God alone He is happy that God loves although he know it not but he that knows it knows he is happie A childe of God cannot be content to be happie alone That cannot make a man happie that is
mutable and subject to change Heaven The Saints enjoy heaven out of heaven Heaven and glory are ready for the Saints if they were ready for them No man can set his affections on things above untill he see a vanity and emptinesse in all things below Such as count heaven their home reckon the world a strange Countrey Humility The more we see our selves the more we loath our selves and stinke in our own nostrils worse then carrion Nothing huumbleth us more then the knowledge of our selves According as our humility is so is our knowledge of our selves One may be humbled but not humble Such as are content to be sharply reproved of their faults have humility Our ignorance coldnesse dulnesse deadnesse c. might humble us Heart The heart thoughts words deeds are of one and the same nature What the heart likes best the minde studieth most A man knows not what is in his own heart ●ill tryalls and temptations come Great joy in worldly things and little joy ●n things spirituall shew plainly what kinde of hearts we have for God We daily finde our hearts are worse then we took them to be The heart of man is ready to be glued to every poore contentment Many mens braines deceive their hearts Unlesse the Lord fix the heart on himselfe it will b●●xed and fastened on things below and wander after vanities to fill it selfe withall O the vanity of the minde Watch. If we cease to watch our hearts they quickly become vaine A carelesse watching our own hearts will cost deare Hatred Hatred is irreconsilable That sinne that a childe of God most loved before conversion he hates most when converted Healing God sometimes healeth corruption by not healing it Hope The Saints hope is in heaven in God The naturall mans hope is to get riches honour costly apparrell good cheare ease and pleasure Habits In acquired habits the act goeth before the habit and prepares for it but in infused habits it 's contrary for as we have first the faculty of seeing before we see so we have first the infused habit before we exercise the operation of it Of infirmities No childe of God is free from infirmities errors falls and defects If we did live more by faith our infirmities would be lesse An infirmity is some weaknesse which hindreth us that we cannot doe the good we would but doe the evill we would not An infirmity is an impediment that one would faine remove but cannot A sin of infirmity is alwayes attended with griefe and sorrow if it be an infirmitie those in whom it is do desire to be informed of the evill of it and are willing to be reproved for it and would know how to leave it they plead not for it but complaine to God against it they are ashamed of it and are grieved and abased for it and use all the meanes they can against it Interest Interest blinds mens eyes Inclination Our inclinations declare what we love Idlenesse An idle person is fit for nothing but sinne and temptatation An idle life is much loved and entertained of most men Ignorance Ignorance is the cause of all evill Devotion with ignorance breeds superstition idolatry and persecution Hope with ignorance causeth presumption Feare with ignorance causeth desperation Ignorance causeth men to lay a plaister on a sound place Judgement True judgement stands not upon number nor multitude Impossible things It 's impossible to be conformable to Christ and the world to obey God and the world Joy Every heart seekes joy such as it is There is no sound joy in outward things they reach not the heart but the fancy Worldly joy and sorrow last but a night Outward joyes make a great noise but never truly heale and comfort the heart While we live here we have joy and griefe mixed not this life nor our bodies will admit of perfect joy Spirituall joy opposeth carnall and carnall spirituall the more we relish heavenly the lesse we relish earthly and the more we relish earthly the lesse we relish heavenly In temporall things our joy is greater then the cause in spirituall the cause is greater then the joy Spirituall joy eats out carnall mirth and carnall mirth hinders spirituall mirth None can joy in God but such as injoy him The strength of our joy depends upon the infallibility of our hope No● joy is in the Saints when they are in heaven they shall be in joy Knowledge Knowledge is better then gold and wisdome is better then understanding Knowledge is not given to keep but to impart Knowledge is good but the means of getting it is not alwayes good Knowledge onely in the braine will not subdue finne nor Satan He knows not himselfe that knows not that he is in himselfe as base as the Devill We know but in part It 's easier to informe the understanding then to subdue the will and affections Knowledge is to be reckoned by practice Such as know good things cannot but love and affect them That knowledge that is from God subjects the soule to God By neglect a childe of God may exceedingly decay in his knowledge in the truth In the use of the Scriptures knowledge is gotten Light Light causeth them that see it to follow it Many goe beyond their light The light of truth is knowne but to a few Life The most men seek life where it is not We live in that we minde and love Where our life is our hearts are Such as our life is such is the nourishment of it naturall or spirituall Every life is sed with that which is sutable to it the body cannot be satisfied with that which is spirituall nor the soule with that which is naturall It 's a poore life to live naturally and be d●●d spiritually This life is a dying being we are borne crying and we live laughing and dye sighing The life of man is like a shadow something next to nothing This life keeps us in slavery at the best it 's but a variety of vanities Mans life is vaine and subject to many discommodities and miseries without number Mans life is folly and his death rottennesse Many have comforts few crosses frequent pleasures short and paines lasting God mixeth the life of man with prosperity adversity to shew they are both empty This life is beset with death tends to death and ends in death Love Love begets and kindles love Love disputes least and doth most Nothing is more active and stronger then love Love will venture upon great difficulties Love is strong and powerfull to carry on through all Love and labour goe together What will not one doe for that he loves Love may be perswaded but it cannot be compelled Love not begun upon good termes will end in hatred Love is the greatest Commander in the world Love will have i'ts way at the last Love built on beauty and wealth will not hold because the foundation is sandy Love is active when it is not knowne and cannot be requited Love
Consider God hath forbidden it Rom. 6. Consider sin in the nature of it in the root and fruit of it It 's the price of bloud there is no true sweetnesse in sin no contentment no satisfaction in it why you should desire it it fills the soule with wounds sorrow bitternesse shame let experience speake Rom. 6. 21. Pro. 23. 8. Avoyde the occasions of sin evill company Psal 119. 63. Pro. 13. 20. 6. 9. Places and provocations of sin idlenesse excesse in eating and drinking order your steps by the Word and get others to watch over you receive reproofe willingly and profitably know the more you yeeld to Satan the more you may he useth to double his temptations when resisted but give no place to the Devill if yee yeeld it will be harder to resist the next time consider thy relation art thou a childe of God an heire of heaven it 's unsutable for thee to serve Satan to doe his druggery Eph. 4. 20. Yee have not so learned Christ Eph. 4. 17. I say and testifie in the Lord that yee henceforth walke not as the Gentiles walke in the vanity of their minds Christ gave himselfe for ●is that they might be holy Titus 2. 14. Rom. 6. 10. 1 Joh. 3. 2. 2 Cor. 6. 18. If tempted answer I am chosen to be holy I may not sinne Rom. 8. 29. Consider the eye of God is ever upon you Heb. 4. 14. Pro. 15. 3. 16. 6. Can you consider that and sin in so holy a presence Remember Christs love nourish the motions of the Spirit Walke in the Spirit and yee shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Gal. 5. 16. Nourish zeale and hatred against sin every sin Keepe your heart as your life Pro. 4. 23. Reforme the inside and Satan shall not prevaile Job 14. 4. Consider the time yee are to live is but short and the pleasures of sin are but for a season and a short one Heb. 11. 25. Hearken to the voyce of Conscience least it be silent and yee hardened When the pleasure of sin is presented to thee present to thy selfe the sting it will leave behinde it also present to thy selfe a greater and better pleasure and sweetnesse to be injoyed with God minde home and the pleasures there that are for evermore Set your affections on things above where your Crowne and glory is 1 Cor. 9. 24. Watch and pray for strength against ●in at the first approach of sinne change the object and fall to prayer be not discouraged if foiled still resist beleeve against experience God will helpe thee against it Eph. 6. 16. 4. 12 13. Apply sutable promises against sin consider Eph. 5. 5 6 7. Rom. 6. 11. Psal 119. 6. doe as Mat. 17. 21. Reprove sin in others in case none else doe Consider by silence when sin is committed we have ●ellowship with it and breake Gods command defile our soules loose comfort incourage and harden others in sin 1. It 's Gods command that who sin Rebuke before all 1 Tim. 5. 20. Pro. 28. 23. 29. 25. 24. 25. Thou shalt reprove 〈◊〉 Levit. 19. 17. 2. The Saints have done so with great zeale Acts 13. 16. 10. Ezra 9. 2 3 4. Psal 119. 139. Num. 15. 11 12 13. Can we heare false things spoken and Gods truth his way and people condemned and be silent where is our zeale 3. God commends it for a vertue in his people that they could not beare with them that are evill Rev. 2. 2. To see and heare sin committed with silence is to beare it if Ely sinned in doing it coldly 1 Sam. 2. 3. 13. what shall we say to them that doe it not at all that neither love to God his truth his people the good of others soules their own peace will move them to doe it doth a friend love as he ought and heares his friend abused and is silent offer not this to God 4. Reproofe of sin is a meanes to prevent the contagiousnesse of sin 1 Cor. 5. 6. 1 Tim. 5. 20. Spare none if we must take care for the Oxe or Asse of an enemy as appeares Exod. 23. 4 5. then much more for the good of the soule of an enemy 5. It was Jobes comfort that nothing could cause him to keepe silent Job 31. 34 If he might have been silent and not sinned his silence was but a poore comfort 6. God esteems presence and silence a doing of the action 1 Cor. 11. 4 5. with ●4 24 that is by consent for they did not all speak God charged Ahab with murder when Jezabel did it and he onely by consent 1 King 18. 19. with 7 8 9 10. Silence is confirmation as appeares Numb 30. 14. He confirmed them because he held his peace when he heard them So it was not enough that they sh●d not innocent bloud but that they did not see it Deut. 21. 7. God deales with those that were present and silent at the committing of sin as if they had done it see Lev. 5. 1. 20. 4 5. 7. to●ave ●ave fellowship with it Eph. 5. 11. Hag. 2. 13. Rev. 2. 20. J●sh 22. 18 19 20. Hence the Saints are called to come out of Babylon that they might not be part●kers of their sinnes Rev. 18. 2. 4. 2 Cor. 6. I was almost in all evill in the midst of t●e Congregation Pro. 5. 14. Lastly God saith He shall dwell on high that stoppeth his eares from hearing of bloud and shutteth his eyes from seeing of evill Isa 33. 15 16. Which shews they can by no meanes indure it Of speech 1. When thou speakest of thy selfe speak modestly without vanity and boasting 2. Heare much but speake little 3. Speake not hastily consider before you speake see that in all your words there be truth fitnesse in respect of time place persons profitablenesse choicenesse sobernesse and moderation in them 4. If you teach matters of Religion see that yee prudently understand and faithfully dispense the word of the Lord be short and fruitfull and preach against fleshly lusts doe not affirm or maintain things that are doubtfull if the Scripture speake it not be yee silent 5. If you speak to such as are troubled in minde consider what knowledge they have whether they be strong or weake whether more or lesse wounded and for what whether they be troubled because they are troubled or for feare of punishment or for the evill of their sin observe the persons age state and condition of life whether they be naturally fearfull and melancholy whether they be lost or no and what hinders their beleeving be not too hasty nor stay not too long observe a fit season to comfort Of Suretiship Be not thou one of them that strike hands and of them that are sureties for debts Pro. 22. 26. Give not thy selfe to Suretiship Saints O deare and precious soules feare not death love one another be obedient to God make much of his word rest satisfied in the Scripture That which
beyond the reach of reason to understand that any thing can be that never had a beginning God is so else he could not be God Behold God is great and we know him not neither can the number of his yeares be searched out Job 36. 26. Touching the Almighty wee cannot finde him out Job 37. 23. So also concerning the Baptisme of Infants bring it to the Scriptures and try it by them see if yee can finde either a command or an example there for it wee finde none if wee admit of one invention in Religion by the same reason we must admit of many yea any invention of men God complaineth of the doing of that which he commanded them not Jer. 15. 9. 7. 31. 32. 32. 35. Levit. 10. 5. Deut. 17. 1. 18. 20. Mark 7. 8 9. Did God ever commend or accept of the doing of that which he never commanded neither can any thing be well done that God hath no● commanded to be done If we suffer our selves to be beaten back from this principle where shall we stay or rest our feete wee plead for the perfection of the Scripture see 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. Secondly God hath appointed who are to be baptized and the manner how see Acts 8. 12 13. 36 37 38. 2. 38. 41. Mat. 3. 6. 17. 16. Jo● 3. 23. Mark 14. 5. Acts 10 44. 47 48. Mat. 28. 19. To sprinkle Infants is not to answer this Rule Thirdly the matter of the Church ought to be Saints Infants appeare not to be so see 1 Pet. 2. 5. 9. Eph. 2. 19. to 23. 1 Cor. 12. Eph. 5. Acts 20. 28. Fourthly the being children of beleevers makes them not to be the children of God nor to be accounted so Rom. 9. 8 9. Gal. 3. 26. 29. Jo● 3. 5. 6. 36. But there are severall Treatises of this subject to which I referre thee In a word try all things by the Scripture and hold fast that which is good The severall Branches of the Saints duty and service to Christ every day Walke circumspectly be yee holy as I am holy ' Eph. 5. 15. see Mat. 11. 38 39. 1. EVery day to be thankfull for rest sleep and preservation from sin and to commune with your heart upon your bed and be still Psal 4. 4. Seriously to minde him and meditate on him When I awake I am still with thee Psal 139. 18. and to thinke on such places as these Psal 19. 15. Psal 73. 28. Heb. 13. 8. Psal 104. 34. Acts 11. 13. Psal 42. 1 2. Psal 119. 81 82. Jer. 14. 8. Psal 13. 1. Exod. 33. 13 14 15. 18. and to crave his strength to walke with him all the day Hold thou me up and I shall be safe Psal 17. 5. not else 2. Every day to live by faith in all estates and conditions and in glorification The just shall live by faith Hab. 2. 4. Concerning the life of faith see as followeth 3. Every day and all the day to watch my heart to keepe it still and spirituall content and thankfull and to observe the secret motions thereof least unawares I be catched and insnared in sin and that I doe not receive any thing without warrant from the Word Pro. 23. 17. Jer. 17. 9. Heb. 13. 12. Luk. 6. 45. 4. Every day to watch our thoughts that they be holy or lawfull and seasonable and to think on such places as these Psal 139. 17. Such thoughts raise the heart and make it spirituall joyfull thankfull and serious in all duties and holy services 5. Every day to hearken to the voice of conscience prize the peace of it endeavour to informe it and not to doe any thing that shall offend it 1 Tim. 3. 9. in keeping thy commands there is great reward Psal 19. 6. Every day and all the day to watch our affections that they be set upon right objects and that they move not contrary to judgement and that according as the object discernes that they be not set immoderately upon ear●hly things though excellent desireable and amiable and so injoy them as expecting every houre to loose them Set your affections on things above Col. 3. 1. 5 Desire delight hope joy are the acts of love they chiefly belong to God then our affections are set right when with God we are sicke of love Song 2. 5. 7. Every day to watch our time to redeeme it because it 's precious and take notice how we spend it and improve it to injoy God and obey him and to serve each other in love Eph. 5. 16. Acts 20. 31. 8. Every day to watch the windows of the soule our eyes and eares to keepe them from such things as they would sucke evill from to shut eyes and eares if need be as Isa 33. 15 16. Psal 119. 37. Job 31. 1. else much evill will enter in through these floud-gates of sin but a foole will take no warning Pro. 17. 4. 25. 23. 9. Every day to watch to observe the creatures and the severall passages of Gods providence so as to get good by them and that we may minde heavenly things Mat. 16. 10. Every day to watch in lawfull things with care how wee use and injoy them viz. meate drinke sleepe apparell marriage visitations recreations our natures are prone to excesse herein Luk. 12. 29. and to receive the creatures with thankesgiving 1 Tim. 4. 3 4. Christ did eate bread and gave thankes John 6. 23. 11. To watch that wee use not indifferent things securely and carelesly but have regard to others weaknesse Rom. 14. 21 22. Requires that we doe not that which is in it selfe lawfull in case another is offended at it if we may omit it without sin if I doe that which is lawfull I give no offence and it 's his weaknesse to be offended yet if I doe it to his griefe my action cannot be defended neither by the word of God nor with a good conscience 12. Every day to watch against every sin and plead not for any sin not lessen it under no pretence of corruption temptation the sweetnesse and smallnesse of it nor inwardly favour it but resolve and watch against all sin with the occasions and appearances of it and be jealous against it and fearfull of falling by it and ever to shew some dislike of it Levit. 19. 17. Pro. 5. 8 We should be afraid to sin because it 's forbidden by God 2. It 's dishonourable to him his truth and servants 3. It incourageth others to sin 4. It will fill our soules with sorrow to sin against so loving a Father and to dishonour him c. Having sinned if but in the least measure we should be so far from covering it with any pretence or excuse that we should abhorre it and our selves for it with the greatest detestation see Ezra 9. 2 3. Rev. 2. 2. Let every one that nameth the name of the Lord depart from iniqui●i● 2 Tim 2. 19. 13. Every day to watch that our speech be not
vaine idle and frothy but savoury Psal 17. 3. Eph. 5. 4. Psal 71. 24. and that I wrest not others words or actions nor disgrace nor insult over any but in stead thereof remember my own weaknesses the thought of which should cause us to finde lesse fault with others except necessitie inforce it the consideration of our own weaknesses should lay us low and greatly humble us our pride unbeliefe hypocrisie atheisme thoughts of blasphemy selfe-love selfe seeking selfe-confidence unprofitablenesse hardnesse of heart ignorance blindnesse of minde unruly passion security lukewarmnesse coldnesse abuse of lawfull things unthankfulnesse for mercies want of laying to heart the fins of others want of courage for the truth deadnesse dulnesse heavinesse wearinesse indevotion distractions indisposednesse of heart to doe our duties forgetfulnesse inconstancy walking uncomfortably with our soules cast downe c. ●s it so can we remember these and not abhorre our selves When we consider our hearts lives we may say with griefe and sorrow Lord what is man I am nothing but a very va●●●● 2 Cor. 12. 〈◊〉 with Eccle. 1. 2. 14. Every day to observe the passages of my spirit in my actions and duties with what knowledge faith zeale love wisdome humility c. I doe them how I am sensible of my wants in prayer and thankfull for mercies how I waite for an answer of prayer and observe how he answereth me 15. Every day to desire and endeavour to doe my dutie according to my station and relation Eph. 6. To give good example religious instruction loving admonition and seasonable reproofe endeavouring to doe good to friends and enemies see Acts 10. 24. John 1. 40 41. 1 Tim. 4. 12. 16. Every day to watch to doe and receive good to looke to my wayes Psal 39. 1. Mat. 26. 41. 17. Watch against coldnesse and formality and that I be not taken with the praise of men mirth pomp profit pleasure ease outward contentments that I exceed not nor sinke not under any of them and to see God in others favours and frownes 18. Every day to take notice and sympathize with the sorrows and sufferings of those that are the Lords and be a companion with them as Heb. 10. 23. To be willing to indure any sorrows and suffering with the people of God as Heb. 11. and for their good to part with estate friends libertie life see Psal 137. 6. Lam. 1 2 3 4 5 Chapters 19. Every day to meditate on God and his goodnesse to me and others and what he hath prepared for me in heaven and how I may be preserved from sin selfe c. and order my conversation aright consider Gen. 26. 63. Mat. 6. 6. and doe so Psal 1. 2 32. 4 5 6. Heb. 10. 38. Jos 1. 8. By meditation we winde up our minds from things below Col. 3. 4 5. and so injoy God and our selves and live in heaven while on earth Oh refresh thy selfe with the variety of the invisible comforts in heaven thy interest in them the comfort joy and rest thou shalt have ere long for ever meditate on the shortnesse of the time wee have here to live the miseries that attend this life how we may preven● sin deny our selves beare the crosse live by faith be content in want grow in grace escape temptation keep a good conscience what duties we owe to God and man wherein we come short what mercies we injoy how we profit by afflictions how thankful we are to God for his sweet and large love c. Set your affections on things above Col. 3. 1. By faith and meditation keepe thy heart there view thy everlasting glory fill thy selfe with joy injoying the joyes of heaven which are unutterable unconceivable and infinite boundlesse bottomlesse endlesse Oh the greatnesse and sweetnesse of those joyes pleasures and 〈◊〉 which shall never have an end 20. To deny my selfe selfe-wit wisdome carnall reason applause passion ease liberty and all things for God consider Luk. 14. 20. 33. Mat. 16. 24. Mark 8. 34. Luk. 9. 23. 21. In all actions be humble sincere servent in spirit serving the Lord serious chearfull thankfull Mat. 11. 29. Deut. 18. 13. Eph. 6. 14. Joh. 1. 47. Rom. 12. 11. James 5. 17. 22. Daily to use the means to nourish and increase holy desires and resolutions for God Psal 42. 1 2. O the strong and restlesse desires after God and the unweariednesse there of that soule who hath tasted of the sweetness of his love 23. All the day long to joy and rejoyce in God in our interest in him and union with him our priviledges and happinesse by him his Word Saints the fruits of the Spirit temtations c. as our chiefest joy and great advantage 24. That I scorne not nor slight nor check any with their infirmities and deformities of body or dulnesse or weaknesse of wit or memory meannesse of outward state or birth smallnesse of gifts or parts but consider 1 Cor. 4. 7. Job 10. 10. Psal 39. 13 14. 16. Isa 28. 26. in spirituall things Ezek. 16. Isa 43. 25. Rom. 5. 11. Eph. 2. 20. the love of God makes the difference if God should convert him he may soone become better then we 25. Every day to minde the vanitie and emptinesse of the things below the hurt we receive by them and how we exceed in our affections to them that they are not our own they may soone be taken from us or we from them and how wee are often distracted and unsetled by them that wee may with more ease and content want them and be weaned from them in the injoyment of them and to use the liberties of this life so as to be bettered by them Eccle. 1. 2. 2. ● 1 Cor. 5. 25. Pro. 23. 4. Luke 12. 15. There is no certainty of the things below but above is certain●y constancy and eternity of all excellencies perfections and pleasures 26. To watch our selves in our retirednesse and solitary seasons to prevent needlesse feares and thoughts of the pleasure of sin past present or to come such thoughts cause sin upon supposition and pollute their soules and bodies with sin Gen. 38. 9 10. 27. Watch to speake for truth and contend for it Jude 3. and glory in suffering for Christ and his truth 1 Pet. 4. 14. 28. To consider what times we live in what they afford how I may be usefull and fin●sh smy course with joy 29. To take h●ed and beware of covetousn●sse it deceives and spoiles all we minde earth as if it were better then heaven against covetousnesse consider H●b 2. 6. Mat. 25. 14. Luk. 6. 2. 25. to end Phil. 4. 6. 1 Tim. 4. 8 9 10. James 5. 1 2 3. Pro. 25. 5. 1 Pet. 5. 9. Luk. 2. 7. 30. Every day to expect troubles and crosses and to beare them patiently troubles will come our life is a life of trouble and suffering more then other men Psal 73. 5. Fr●t not Psal 39. 9. Wee should be so fixed on
God that nothing below should move us Phil. 4. 11. 13. Our spirits should rule the things below and not be ruled by them we should rejoyce in tryalls temptations conflicts disertions and outward troubles death it selfe is to make us capable of a fuller injoyment and communion with God James 1. 2. c. If wee should rejoyce how much more should we be content and patient 1 Thes 4. 18. One said Lord I will beare any thing because my sins are forgiven a conscience set at liberty can with ease undergoe a great burden Bees gather honey from bitter flowers as well as sweet so should wee from bitter conditions Crosses are Christs servants they come and goe at his command they are sent to doe us good all is sent in love and best for me God will supply all our wants with his all-sufficiency we should not looke so much ●t freedome from trouble as to profit by it to injoy God by it and strength to beare it looking upon all that befalls-us as appointed and ordered by God in his wisdome and love for our good c. 1 Thes 3. 3. 31. To shew mercy and pitie to others in their misery and supply their necessities according as we are able freely and willingly and be more industrious and sparing in expences to supply others necessities especially the Saints above our ability let thy heart house and hand be open joyfully and compassionately supply their necessities consider Luk. 3. 10 11. 12. 33. Mat. 5. 42. 7. 12. Gal. 5. 10. Ease as many mens burdens as we can be helpfull have mercy compassion love goodnesse and such like vertues 32. Watch that wee grieve not the holy Spirit Eph. 4. 3. We quench and grieve the Spirit when we neglect the motions of it and slight the comforts of it seeke comfort from the flesh feed upon lusts and spend our thoughts and time upon the outward man and use spirituall things for carnall ends and father the work of the flesh upon the Spirit slight that which is good and allow of evill or plot for sin or cavill against the truth or omit duties or slight them or doe them in our own strength or slight the fruits of the Spirit or slight any Saint c. 33. Every day to take notice of Gods goodnesse and mercy to us and others and acknowledge it in all things give thankes 1 Thes 5. 14. 34. Every day will I blesse and praise thy Name Psal 145. 2. 35. Every day to grow in grace and knowledge 2 Pet. 3. 18. 36. Every day to beleeve the present state and condition best for me Rom. 8. 28. if any thing oppresse thee use the meanes to remove it then be content 37. Every day to cast my care upon God Phil. 4. 6. 38. Every day to be willing to be dissolv●d and to looke for death All the dayes of my appointed time w●ll I waite till my change come Job 14. 14. 39. Every day to observe my profiting in Religion 2 〈◊〉 3. 18. Heb. 6. 1 2. 40. Every day to view my actions and take notice of my failings omissions and commissions to be more watchfull against them and to live by faith in all infirmities above infirmities as if I had never sinned living in the sweet injoyment of the love of God and so lie downe in the consideration of it Saints subject to fall from their first love Thou hast left thy first love c. Rev. 2. 4 5. CHrist commends this Church in vers 2 3. and informes and reproves them in these words and vers 5. containes the meanes to recover them from their evill In the first verse he saith He knowes their workes He would have them to know that he did know and observe all their actions what their actions were and with what affections they did them how they exercised the fruits of the Spirit and how they decayed in their love to him which should teach us to observe all our actions and to walke circumspectly as becometh so holy a presence The Saints first love is the best God will be served with the best with the fullest measure and highest pitch of love The Saints Church of Christ need to be informed of their decayes of their love to him To leave their first love is to abate in the degree and measure of love which they have to God Gods own people are subject to decline or leave their first love this the Scripture and experience testifie The causes of our pronenesse to decline in our love to God are many 1. Our natures are prone to it we have an apostatizing spirit and we know it not or consider it not Heb. 10. 2. Security in us causeth us to thinke wee are well and need not feare no danger and so we fall before we are aware 3. Is from the insensiblenesse of this sin it secretly steales upon us wee fall so easily and by small degrees that we perceive it not till we are downe nor hardly then we need be told we are fallen 4. Because wee doe not meditate on the love of God and rest satisfied in it causeth us to seeke satisfaction elsewhere and resting satisfied in that we are happy and what affections actions we formerly have had for God thinke wee have done enough this is a base frame of spirit that causeth us to turne the grace of God into wantonnesse such need forget what is behinde and presse forward as knowing they can never doe enough for him who hath done so much for them 5. Because of the sloathfulnesse of spirit causeth us to have no minde to stirre to goe to God or to doe any thing for him ●loathfulnesse casteth into a deepe sleepe and then we neglect or abate in the use of means in which we have had communion with God when we leave our first workes then wee decline and fall asleepe God absents himselfe While the bridgegroome ●arried men slumbered and slept Mat. 25. 5. 6. Want of watching our hearts and lives did we watch wee might observe our coldnesse and on what our love is set and so our consciences might smite us for our divided love 7. W●nt of faithfull friends to observe and informe us of our declinings from God and their not using meanes to helpe 〈◊〉 8. Comparing our selves with those who are fallen and because wee are like them we thinke our selves well enough and so rest satisfied and thus we teach and cause others to be as cold as our selves 9. Because iniquity abounds the love of many waxeth cold This should teach those that stand to take heed least they fall to watch narrowly against all occasions which tend to draw us from our first love for God will have his to know that it is a great evill for to decay in their love to him The greatnesse of this sin appeares in these particulars 1. Because our love is Gods and he calls for it My sonne give me thy heart He calls for his own and it 's unreasonable
heaven by faith we know our selves to be happy when to a carnall eye wee seeme most miserable by faith wee can part with the sweetest outward comforts and welcome death because we know we leave the worst place and things and goe to better they that live by faith live upon God and are feasted in Christs banquetting house where there are all desireable dainties and enough Eate O friends and drinke abundantly because it is the pleasure of our Lord that we doe so it 's thy portion duty and priviledge to digest and refresh and make thy soule merry with his dainties to injoy himselfe in them that so thy joy may be full The life of faith is the communion the soule hath with God in Christ in his promises spirituall and temporall Faith in effectuall calling It 's the soules cleaving to God in Christ for life upon such places as these Mat. 11. 28. 2 Cor. 5. 20 21. Mat. 5. 1 Joh. 3. 23. The life of faith in justification The Lord having spoken peace to the soule that Christ hath paid all and his sin shall be remembred no more Isa 53. Jer. 31. 34. Now the soule knows it's happy and injoys the comfort of it is filled with joy and peace in beleeving his life is a life of comfort beholding and injoying Christs righteousnesse as his own lives upon it what ever befalls him he is comforted in his interest in the righteousnesse of Christ as sufficient to satisfie him at all times living upon such places as these Rom. 8. 38 39. Job 13. 15. Isa 54. 7 8. Rev. 1. 5. Eph. 1. 6 7. Rom. 5. 9 10. Gal. 3. 13. Heb. 10. 10 11 12 13 14 c. 2 Tim. 2. 13. Concerning justification see the third part The life of fa●th in sanctification 1. It 's the soules cleaving to Christ our sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 30. 2ly it 's the soules cleaving to God in his promise to clense and renew my heart and life and be a quickning Spirit in me upon Psal 103. 8. Hos 14. 5. Isa 57. 18 19. Micah 7. 19. Joh. 17. 17. 19. Oh how little doe we obey him injoy him and honour him The life of faith in infirmities It 's the soules beleeving that God will be to us according to his promise for ever a God of love notwithstanding all our omissions and commissions excesses and defects Psal 103. 3. Joh. 13. 1. Mal. 3. 6. Heb. 13 8. Psal 89. 30. Nehe. 9. 16. c. Isa 43. 25. Psal 130. 7 8 9 10 13 14. 17. Isa 42. 2. Psal 86. 5. He that lives by faith in infirmities he will heare Christ 1 Sam. 3. 10. He is not offended at what Christ requires Mat. 11. 6. Joh. 1. 5. 3. The Scripture is his rule he will trust God and relie upon his Word he eyeth the promise saying as Psal 46. 6. Isa 45. 24. He will contend for the truth Jude 3. and doe others good Acts 20. 31. His sinne doth not sinke him into despaire the soule despaireth not for any sinne or trouble the weakest beleever may say in the midst of all imperfections I have as much of the love of God acceptation and perfect righteousnesse in Christ as the best Saint ever had Jer. 23. 6. my state is as happy as any of theirs Job 35. 7. and I shall have as much glory in heaven as the best Such as live by faith in infirmities live upon Christ in his promise for strength against all infirmities upon such places as these In deadnesse of heart Isa 35. 36. Ps 37. 30. In forgetfulnesse Joh. 14. 16. In feare of want Psal 34. 9. 37. 3. Mat. 6. 25. to the end Rom. 8. 32. Luk. 12. 15. In cares Phil. 4. 6. 1 Pet. 5. 7. Heb. 13. 5. In ignorance Heb. 5. 2. James 1. 5. If fallen by passion not to sinke under it James 5. 17. Acts 14. 15. In all infirmities Psal 103. 8. For a supply of all wants Phil. 4. 6. 19. To live by faith for the fruits of the Spirit c. To beleeve 1 Joh. 3. 23. Zeph. 3. 12. To increase in saith Rom. 1. 17. To continue in the faith Luk. 22. 32. 1 Pet. 1. 5. In the exercise of faith Isa 26. 3. Psal 18. 30. 32. 10. To know God Jer. 31. 33 34. Pro. 1. 23. To love God Mat. 27. 17. Joh. 17. 26. In loving God Deut. 30. 6. To seek God seek ye the Lord Acts 17. 27. In seeking God Psal 119. 2. 9. 10. 69. 32. 22. 26. To feare God Jer. 32. 39 40. Hos 3. 5. In fearing God Psal 147. 11. 25. 12. 34. 9. To hope in God Psal 147. 11. 146. 5. 31. 24. To waite on God 1 Cor. 2. 9. Isa 49. 23. 30. 18. To delight in God Psal 41. 16. 89. 16. 33. 21. To praise God Isa 38. 19. Ps 72. 15. 63 3. To injoy peace Isa 27. 5. To love the Saints 1 Joh. 3. 14. 23. 4. 7. 1 Pet. 2. 22. Joh. 13. 35. To love enemies Mat. 5. 43 44. Luk. 6. 35. To judge our selves 2 Cor. 11. 31. Eze. 36. 31. To mourn for sinning against God Zach. 12. 6. Joh. 16. 20. Mat. 5. 4. In poverty of spirit Mat. 5. 3. Isa 66. 2. In de●ires after Christ Isa 51. 1. Job 7. 33. 37. Rev. 21. 6. Mat. 21. 6. Isa 42. 3. 2 Cor. 8. 10 11 12. Gen. 16. 17. Heb. 11. 27. Luk. 21. 3. Psal 37. 4. Pro. 10. 24. To be meeke Psal 25. 9 76. 9. 149. 4. To be sincere Psal 51. 6. Mat. 5. 8. To confesse sin 1 Joh. 5. 9. Job 23. 27 28. To forgive others Luk 17. 4. Mark 11. 25 26. 6. 37. Mat. 6. 14. Eph. 4. 23. To be a peace-maker Mat. 5. 9. To devise good Pro. 14. 22. Isa 32. 8. To selfe-deniall Mat. 16. 15. To watch Mat. 13. 17. 1 Thes 5. 6. Rev. 16. 15. Luk. 22. 37. Mat. 22. 47. To be patient Jam. 1. 5. 8. Luk. 21. 9. Heb. 6. 15 To be content in our condition Heb. 13. 5. To resist sin Rom. 6. 14. Not to feare the world Joh. 6. 33. 1 Joh. 4. 4. To mortifie the flesh Rom. 8. 13. To give to the poore He that hath two coa●s impart to him that hath none and he that hath meat● let him doe so likewise Luk. 3. 10 11. The life of faith in the use of meanes It 's the soules cleaving to God in Christ for a blessing upon the meanes he hath appointed Pro. 9. 29. Isa 48. 19. Isa 48. 17. To pray 1 Thes 5. 17. Z●ch 12. 10 Mat. 7. 7 8 9 11. Luk. 11. 13. Mat. 21. 22. Mark 11. 24. Mat. 16. 23. Isa 65. 24. To reade 1 Tim. 4. 13. Rev. 1. 3. P●o. 1. 23. To meditate Jos 1. 8. 1 Tim. 4. 15. Psal 1. 1 2. Psal 104. 34. 49 3. For conference Prov. 15. 17. 18. 21. Mal. 3. 16. Psal 37. 30. 71. 24. Isa 59 21. To heare Christs Ministers Pro. 8. 34.
wherein ●e hath made us acceptable in the beloved Eph 1. 5 6. To whom be all the praise honour now and for ever Amen The end of the first Part. DIVINE CONSOLATIONS OR The Consolations of God The Second Part. Declaring how a soule may know and live in the sweet injoyment of the love of God c. Are the Consolations of God small to thee Job 15. 11. How sweet are thy words unto my tast Psal 119. 103. His lips drop downe sweet smelling myrrhe Song 5. 5. By Samuel Richardson I heard sweet Jesus Christ unto me say Rise my love my faire one come away ●ONDON Printed by M. Simmons in Aldersgate-streete 1649. To Mr. Daniel Tayler Silkman Mr. Nathanael Andrews Merchant Mr. John Fountaine Merchant Mr. Samuel Penoire Merchant Mr. Edward Wright Goldsmith in Norwich Fulnesse of joy happinesse and glory Much honoured and worthy Sirs GOD hath in his wisdome and love mixed crosses with comforts and comforts with crosses He hath said In the world yee shall have trouble but in me yee shall have peace peace in trouble is a sweet mercy behold a fountaine of joy and rest sufficient to satisfie the soule at all times which ever floweth full of sweetnesse and life to refresh our soules withall at all times Loving friends the love you have manifested to me it s so great so free and full and undeserved and unexpected the more I view it the more I see God in it and the more sweet it is to me I have cause to be affected with it with great thankfulnesse to you and to God for you in that he hath ordered you to be so sweet a mercy to me I trust he will take the kindnesse you have shewed to me as done to himselfe Mat. 25. 40. I know not how to require your love I cannot doe more nor lesse then to present you with the best I have as a testimony of my sincere and hearty thankfulnesse to you for the favour and kindnesse I have received by you not doubting but these spirituall and divine Consolations will be savoury and acceptable to you The Lord blesse you and keepe you from all evill so he prays that remaines Your much obliged Samuel Richardson The second Part. DIVINE CONSOLATIONS Of the first Chapter of the Song of SOLOMON 1. A Song of Songs the most excellent Song because it is of the most excellent things viz. the excellencies of Christ his love Which is Solomons which is Christs The soule saith of Christ 2. Let him kisse me Kisses are expressions of love and signes of peace and reconciliation 1 Thes 5. 26. 2 Sam. 14. 23. He is my love and my love is to him I prize and desire him and the manifestations of his love he is full of sweetnesse he is perfumed with Myrrhe and Frankinsence with all powders of the Merchants Song 3. 6. Let him kisse me There are no kisses so excellent nor so full of sweetness none so comfortable as his therefore none so desireable and acceptable as his therefore let him kisse me O that he would kisse me With the kisses of his mouth His mouth is sweet Song 4. 16. The roofe of his mouth is like the ●est wine very sweet Song 7. 7. His words are sweet Prov. 16. 24. I long to injoy the discoveries of his sweet and everlasting love Jer. 31. 3. The kisses of his mouth are sweet whose heart is full of love his lips drop down sweet smelling myrrhe Song 5. 13. Honey and milke are under thy tongue Song 4. 11. The expressions of his love doth quiet my troubled heart and heale my wounded soule Comfort me with apples for I am sicke of love the smell of thy nose like apples Song 7. 8. Apples are of divers and severall tasts yet all comfortable to the body So are the fruits of his death of divers and severall tasts all which are comfortable to raise and refresh the soule I raised thee up under the apple tree Song 8. 5. Let me heare thy voyce make hast my beloved Be thou like to a Roe or to a young Hart upon the mountaines of spices Song 8. 13 14. For thy loves Many loves Redemption Justification Salvation c. are the fruits of his love and as so many loves he hath drowned all our sinnes in the Ocean of his loves Are better then wine More good then wine more profitable more comfortable more strengthening more satisfying more sweet and pleasing more joyfull and lasting then wine Wine maketh the heart glad Eccle. 10. 19. Psal 104. 15. It causeth to forget sorrow and affliction So Christs loves chaseth away the soules feares and sorrowes as the comforts of the soule exceed and are better then the comforts of the body so much better are his loves then wine In the sence of sinne our soules are comforted and satisfied with his loves in Christ and his loves are all my consolation happinesse and glory This wine is sp●ced wine Song 8. 2. it goeth downe sweetly and causeth the lips of him that is asleep to speake Song 7. 9. Drinke of this juice of apples for in this there is sweet consolation Acts 2. 18. His fruit is sweet unto my taste Song 2. 3. 5. 1. 3. For the savour Thy smell is as sweet Odours smell is a very sweet and comfortable savour pleasant words are as an honey-combe sweet to the soule and health to the bones Pro. 16. 24. Of thy good ointments Good made of precious things of sweet spices odours and perfumes Exod. 30. 23 24 25. The fruits of Christs death are the good ointments healeth all his ointments are very good very sweet and precious to the soule ointments and perfumes rejoyce the heart Pro. 27. 9. Thy name an ointment The Lord our Righteousnesse is this name This is his Name that they shall call him the Lord our Righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. This Name is this ointment The smell of which is better then all spices Song 4. 10. Christs righteousnesse is the best and most precious thing in the world this makes us righteous in the sight of God in this ointment there is contained all precious things pardon peace reconciliation redemption justification happinesse and glory and what not Psal 34. 6 7. This is very good very sweet this ointment healeth all our wounds 1 Pet. 2. 24. They that know thy Na● will trust in thee Psal 9. 10. Therefore we leane on thee we venture all on thee leaning upo● her beloved Song 8. 5. Powred forth In the powring forth it is discovered and evidently seene in its sweetnesse as a sweet ointment being opened and powred forth the sent thereof fills the place with sweetnesse so Christs Nam● our Righteousnesse filleth the soule with love so that his breath where this love is smels strong of love he cannot but sent it forth Therefore the Virgins love thee Virgins chast ones who are content alone with Christ they follow Christ Rev. 14. 4. love thee the Name the Righteousnesse of
is T●y necke with Chaines Christs commands are these chaines Our necks are not too good for Christs chaines chaines are for use and for ornament for use for service and to keep in order and restraine Chaines Many chaines chaines are for service and for strength to hold and last long a horse may snap a bridle asunder but a chaine will hold him if not many chaines will The Law of God is this bridle or chaine to restraine order and guide us in the right way in which wee are to walke the many commands of God are the chaines which are as a bit to be put in our mouthes and upon our cheekes and about our neckes if the commands of God were not strong and durable we have such stiffe necks we need chaines to hold us else we would breake them snap them asunder as Sampson did his cords by nature we are like the Horse and wilde Asse and swift Dromedary Jer. 2. 23. We are not easily catched and when we are we need be chained Also chaines are for ornament so are Gods commands My sonne beare thy fathers instructions they shall be as a comely ornament unto thy head and as chaines for thy necke Pro. 1. 8 9. Chaines of gold Song 1. 10. The more of these chaines we have in our mouths and about our neckes the better and the more faire and beautifull our neckes are no Jewels of gold or pearle can adorne any so as these chaines adorne they are ornaments to us it s a shame to us not to have these chaines about our neckes we live in evill times the commands of God men reject and perhaps count it Religion to doe so but yee that love the Lord abhorre such a thought Gods own people are to be ruled by him by his commands allow our selves to be set free from the commands of God is unreasonable and abominable 11. We will make for thee we saith God as Gen. 1. 26. Rowes of gold with specks of silver Divers ornaments severall fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22 23. They are from God created by him Phil. 1. 29. Eph. 3. 16. Phil. 2. 13. to beautifie our conversation c. that it may be for his glory else it is not comely The soule saith 12. While the King Jesus Christ Sitteth at his Round Table With his Church at the Lords Table Mal. 1. 12. 1 Cor. 10. 21. With his Church at his spirituall banquet the Lords Supper a Round Table hath no upper end My spikenard is very costly spice Joh. 12. 3. A sweet smelling spikenard full of vertue see Song 4. 13 14. The breaking of Christs body in the Supper is this sweet precious Spikenard that fils the place with sweetnesse so the fruits of Christs death is held forth in the 〈◊〉 of ointment of Spikenard with which Christ was anointed Joh. 12. 3. Giveth forth the smell thereof The sent thereof fills soules with sweetnesse Joh. 12. 1 2 3. It sents forth Redemption Salvation happinesse and glory and what not Oh! the sweetnesse of these none can expresse nor conceive what joy delight or consolation is like this of Christ dying for my sinnes c. It causeth the soule to extoll Christ and say 13. A bundle of Myrrhe is my beloved unto me This holds forth the greatnesse of the contentment satisfaction and joy the soule takes in Christ in the fruits of his death the soule desires ever to take comfort in these benefits and bundle them up together least they be scattered and to seeke tie them up together in a bundle its the sweetest poesie ever to smell on to comfort refresh thy selfe withall A bundle of Myrrhe is sweet but nothing so sweet as Christ and his benefits is to me I finde by experience he is so to me there is nothing to be compared to him there is nothing so sweet and pleasing as is sweet Jesus unto me What is a mountaine of myrrhe and a hill of frankinsence Song 4. 6. Dropping sweet smelling myrrhe Song 5. 13. The bundle of my workes is not so sweet to me Love is as strong as death the coales thereof hath a most vehement flame Song 8. 6. The heate of these coales were so exceeding hot and the flame so vehement it scorched and burnt up all my righteousnesse ere I was aware that bundle is gone now I need it not for my beloved is a better bundle unto me I leane not on any thing but on my beloved Song 8. 5. I have nothing else to leane upon nor is any thing else worth the smelling on he is my delight and all my pleasure in the sence of sinne and wants I comfort my selfe in the Righteousnesse of Christ He shall lie all night The night is the saddest time by reason of darknesse the night is a sad time by reason ●f feares Song 3. 8. Many walke in darknesse Isa 50. 11. When my soule is most sad and darke he shall lie all night the soule is to own and imbrace Jesus Christ and rest satisfied in him Between my brests When I am at the worst Christ I desire and nothing but Christ I leave all to imbrace my beloved he shall lie as near my heart as may be he is onely sweet to me I will have him alone and nothing else to lie between my breasts that I may smell on him and be satisfied with his sweeetnesse when I am at the worst he is enough for me he alone will I imbrace and fill my soule with his loves and sweet solace The breasts is the place of consolation and satisfaction Isa 61. 10 11. A bundle of myrrhe is sweet for sent but not so sweet as he my soule solace thy selfe with him and take thou no content but in him I am my beloveds and his desire 〈◊〉 towards me Song 6. 10. 14. A cluster of Cipres is my welbeloved unto me Cipres is sweet it hath reference to Christ in the fruits of his death Redemption Salvation Justification c. are all clusters together in one and not to be parted Christ hath joyned them in one part them not In the vineyard of E●gedy A fruitfull soile Jos 15. 6. 2. Ezek. 47. 10. So Christs death is wonderfully fruitfull who can reckon up his benefits all which are the fruits of his death Christ saith to the soule 15. Behold thou art faire my love behold thou art all faire It s twice repeated because Christ would have his to know and minde their beautie Isa 62. 5. Song 7. 6. Thine eyes are as doves eyes Good eyes and cleare as the eyes of doves by the Rivers of waters washed with milke Song 5. 12. It holds forth the soules quick-sightednesse in the mystery of Christ Eph. 3. 4. Secondly Doves eyes are chaste Doves eyes within thy looks Song 4. 1. It holds forth the soules chastnesse to Christ they are covered except it be to Christ their eyes are fixed on him they looke not to their workes for life but freely part with all their
art my salvation Psal 35. 3. I beseech thee shew me thy glory Exod. 35. 18. Cause thy face to shine upon me Psal 80. 3. Establish O God that which thou hast wrought in us Psal 68. 22. 29. Frequent and wisely improve those whom God hath setled who are able to direct and informe thee in the knowledge of the grace that is revealed in which is fulnesse of joy 1 Joh. 1. 4. Many heare and confer with such as doe not understand the truth and finde successe accordingly 30. In the want of comfort goe not for comfort to sin to duties to conscience but to Christ to his word and promise Trust to the word of the Lord it s in vaine to thinke that ever their discouragements will be removed untill they cleave unto and rest upon the word of the Lord. When David rested upon the word of the Lord then he was setled Psal 73. 17. but not till then Psal 119. 92. God hath appointed his word to settle us wee finde by experience nothing will remove the soules doubts and discouragements but the word of God the word discovers to the soule the love of God it conveys to the soule that which is sutable to settle it carnall reason cannot settle the soule but the word can when God discovers his power and authoritie in it then all doubts c. gives place So we finde that according as we cleave to the word of the Lord our doubts and discouragements vanish and as we cleave to lying vanities our feares and discouragements increase Jonah 2. 8. When God pleases to settle a soule in his love he causeth it to trust in his word Remember the word unto thy servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope Psal 1 19. 49. You had better make the word of God your familiar and companion then to make carnall reason so see Isa 18. 16. Many in the want of comfort seek it where it is not which is to seek the living among the dead and so meet with dead comforts 31. Hearken to the voice of conscience prize and preserve the peace of it and doe nothing against it 32. Be thankfull for what thou hast received and improve that and waite for more We waite for thy loving kindnesse O God Psal 48. 9. 33. When thy conscience is satisfied by the Word hold to that stay there and maintaine it that so we may not alwayes have this work to doe 34. Hold fast what thou hast and let nothing goe that tends to thy peace doe not heare any thing against thy soule be so wise as to give no way to doubting he is a foole that doth so see Luk. 24. 25 O fooles and slow of heart to beleeve all that the Prophets have spoken 35. Remember your resting place Jer. 50. 6. If you forget your resting place it s no wonder if yee be troubled we have no more present actuall comfort then we have remembrance they were troubled the cause of it was they forgot the exhortation that speaketh unto you as children Heb 12 5. Christ is our resting place Returne unto thy Rest O my Soule Psal 116. 7. 36. Avoid sadnesse of spirit it breeds uncomfortablenesse and unsetlednesse and sadnesse causeth us to yeeld to discouragements seeing we are commanded to rejoyce alwaye● and evermore 1 Thes 5. 16. Wee should thinke our selves bound in conscience to doe so 37. When our spirits are downe and sad we should winde up our affections and stirre up our selves to take hold on God Isa 64. 7. If thou hast sinned thou hast done foolishly it being done it cannot be undone What shall the soule doe but remember that sweet place Heb. 10. 17. Their sinnes and iniquities I will remember no more see vers 19. to 26. Rom. 8. 1. 33. Fetch thy comfort from it 38. Know and consider there is not any sin a beleever can commit that should cause him to cast away his confidence or so much as question the love of God to him not for any thing he hath done or can befall him he may not admit of such a disquietnesse as shall discourage him or hinder him in obeying another command of God 1 Thes 5. 16. 39. Lastly Know that these means are to be used they tend much to assure and settle the soule in the sensible injoyment of love and that meanes alone are not sufficient to quiet and settle a troubled soule it s the worke of the Spirit to answer all doubts and remove all discouragements God creates the fruit of the lips peace peace to him that is afar off and to him that is neare saith the Lord and I will heale him Isa 59. 19. It s God that stablisheth us 1 Cor. 1. 21. In the use of meanes we are to look to him and waite upon him who will in his time free all his from all their discouragements doubts and feares and satisfie them with his love These things I write unto you that your faith and hope may be in God 1 Pet. 1. 21. 2 Cor. 5. 20 21. Now then wee are Ambassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us wee pray you in Christs stead be yee reconciled to God For he hath made him to ●e sin for us which knew no sin that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him THese words breath forth nothing but love tydings of peace and great joy in that Christ alone doth free the soule from sinne and causeth the soule for to injoy the Righteousnesse of God in him Behold what sure sweet cleare full durable divine consolation is here sufficient to cheare revive raise and ravish the sinking soule by reason of sin in the want of a Righteousnesse of God in him These words containe many divine truths for our instruction and consolation In that he saith We are Ambassadours for Christ Obs That God hath sent to us his servants to declare his infinite love and the unsearchable riches of Christ and the freenesse thereof as Isa 61. 1. Zach. 9. 9 10 11. 2 Tim. 1. 9 10. Ambassadours It s the duty of an Ambassadour to deliver his Message without alteration addition or detraction Obs Ambassadours for Christ Christ Ambassadours are for him not against him As though God did beseech you by us Obs Those into whom God hath put this word of Reconciliation when it is declared unto us by them or in his Word we ought to beleeve and receive it as if God did immediately speake unto us for they speake in his stead Obs Then all the doubts and feares the soule or Satan can frame of Gods unwillingnesse to save a lost sinner as Luk. 19. 10. are all groundlesse and false for God seeks to us to be reconciled man seeks it not I was found of them that sought me not Isa 65. 1 2 3. The Prodigall is said to goe but God who is the Father is said to run Luk. 15. 18. 20. As running doth expresse more willingnesse then going so God is more willing to save
before God All our Righteousnesses are as filthy rags Isa 64. 4. 6. Obs After what manner Christ became a sinner after the same manner wee are made just but Christ became a sinner not by any infusion of our corrupt qualities but by imputation onely therefore wee are just before God not by any infusion of any habituall grace into our corrupt natures but by imputation of his Righteousnesse without workes Rom. 4. 6. If this were well minded it might remove divers errors and answer many temptations which are occa●ioned in many by apprehending the contrary Obs So that justification is a Reciprocall translation of our sinnes unto Christ and his Righteousnesse to us both which are done by God for us Obs God reveals to the soule Christs Righteousnesse and the soules interest in it John 16. 14. To comfort the soule and cause us to love God he doth not comfort us with our own Righteousnesse but with Christs Righteousnesse that so we might fetch all our peace and comfort from Christs Righteousnesse and so rest satisfied in Christ alone Use Exhort Seeing Christs Righteousnesse is a perfect Righteousnesse yea the Righteousnesse of God this should teach us to prize highly Christs Righteousnesse and count his enough for us and rest satisfied in it and to slight and abhorre all our Righteousnesse in comparison of his esteeme Christ to be as he is our Righteousnesse This is his Name whereby he shall be called the Lord our Righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. 2. This should teach all that beleeve to admire the greatnesse and sweetnesse of Gods love and free grace in making Christs Righteousnesse our own it s a mercy to heare of it how much more to have interest in it and to injoy it and be possessed of it Isa 61. 3. Is Christs Righteousnesse thine then claime interest in it take it and apply it against all sin and discouragements because it is thy own portion and treasure provided for thee therefore take it Col. 2. 3. and ever live upon it and the eternal love of God in Christ to thee this object is sweet full durable and sufficient to satisfie thee at all times 4. Dedicate thy selfe and all thou hast freely to him who gave himselfe fully and freely for thee he suffered yea dyed for thee to make his Righteousnesse thine c. Oh how should such love ingage our hearts to walke with God to be holy as he is holy to doe all and suffer for him for the wayes of the Lord are right and the just shall walke in them Hos 14. 9. 5. Declare to others Gods goodnesse to thy soule use meanes that others may injoy the same mercy with thee be mercifull as he is mercifull give and forgive freely to the soules and bodies of others for so thou hast received 6. Be content with thy estate inward and outward though many crosses and miseries attend thee seeing Christs Righteousnesse and God himselfe is thine thou hast enough and therefore maist well be content let not many nor great troubles inward or outward dismay thee see 1 Cor. 10. 13. Though they seeme long they cannot last long The God of peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly Rom. 16. 20. Christ saith Loe I come quickly Rev. 22. 20. 7. As Christ is all thy happinesse so let him be all thy comfort and the support of all thy wants expect from him all you need and can desire yea that God can give that is for thy good for thou shalt have all thou needest Psal 34. 10. Seeing he hath freely given us his Sonne how shall he not with him give us all things else Rom. 8. 32. 8. Watch and pray least yee fall into temptation and so abuse this favour and turne this grace into wantonnesse 9. Stand fast in Christs Righteousnesse and in that liberty in which he hath made you free Gal. 5. 1. 10. Rejoyce evermore let thy joy be in God who is thy portion They shall joy in their portion Isa 61. 7. It is no small joy to us that Christs Righteousnesse is ours it comforteth 〈◊〉 at the very heart Lastly Be exceeding thankfull to God for his exceeding great grace and mercy to thee in that he hath given thee beauty for ashes verlasting joy shall be to th●e Isa 61. 3. 7. Because Christ and his Righteousnesse is thine all other comfor●s will soone vanish and come to nothing but this shall last for ever Righteousnesse in him Obs That righteousnesse which justifieth us before God as it is not ours so it is not in us but as the righteousnesse is Christs so it is in him therefore Christ saith In me you shall have righteousnesse and strength Surely shall one say in the Lord have I righteousnesse and strength Isa 45. 24. In him Obs The state of a beleever in Christ as considered in him is a state of perfection We are compleate in him Col. 2. 9 10. 13. As Christ is so am I as I am so is Christ as he is so are we in this world 1 Joh. 1. 17. What is Christs is mine and what is mine is his Christs righteousnesse is mine therefore I am all righteous I doe not need no more nor no other righteousnesse as I am in Christ I am as righteous as Christ and as acceptable as Christ God seeth no sin in me because there is none as God saith so I beleeve Thou art all faire my love there is no spot in thee Song 4. 7. Isa 38. 17. It is also as true that in the most perfect Saint if he be considered as he is in himselfe there is much sin in him and God doth see it Yet God cannot condemne them to wrath for it because Christ hath suffered for it Seeing that righteousnesse which causeth a soule to be accepted pardoned saved and that on which our eternall happinesse depends is in Christ in him we learne Obs That our eternall happinesse doth not lie in our selves in nothing that is in us or done by us therefore when we seek for our happinesse or righteousnesse in our selves we loose our labour for Righteousnesse is in him Obs Seeing this Righteousnesse is in Christ then it must needs follow that the Saints cannot possibly make it away or loose it because it is not in us and so not in our keeping but is in him Adam had his righteousnesse in him and he lost it but seeing it is in Christ in him it cannot be lost Obs If the Saints Righteousnesse be in Christ then all the Saints are alike righteous the meanest and weakest as the best he hath as much righteousnesse in Christ as any and is as much accepted by it as the best as Christ hath righteousnesse enough for them all so it is alike for them all as they are in Christ they are alike perfect righteous and glorious they that doe most for Christ doe best but they have no more righteousnesse then the rest all the Elect are alike cloathed with the garment of salvation and covered with
by thy mortification of sin consider Rom. 7. 4. God may for ends best knowne to himselfe suffer corruption to be too strong for thee it may be to abase thee more in thy own eyes to see thy weaknesse and to see a more need of Christs strength God may leave thy personall Sanctification the more imperfect that wee might the more minde and behold Jesus Christ and our Righteousnesse in him and live the more upon him and joy the more in our Justification by him Rom. 4. 6 7. 5. It s one thing to have thy sinnes forgiven or not imputed Psal 32. 1 2. and another thing to subdue sinne in thee 6. The reason fin so much prevailes is because yee live so much in discouragements live in the apprehension of the love of God and downe goes sin and discouragements but if yee live in discouragements sin prevailes as you may see Psal 77. 2. 7 8 9 10. 7. We ought not to fetch our comfort from our subduing of sin but from Christ who is made unto us both Righteousnesse and Sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 30. When wee are at the best wee may not live in our selves nor by sigh● bu● by faith and when wee are at the worst wee ought to live upon Christ by faith and comfort our selves in him and in him onely It s the folly of many when they want strength and comfort they seeke it in their duties ●nd subduings of sinne and comfort themselves there but Christ is not in all their thoughts Psal 10. 4. 9. Dis What I once felt is now decayed 1. The ground of our faith is God in his Word and not our sight and feeling that is sensuall Wee live not by sight but by faith 2 Cor. 5. 7. 2. Whilst thou maintainest feares and jealousies of Gods love to thee it s no wonder it is so with thee call to minde the dayes of old as Psal 77. With him there is no variablenesse nor shadow of turning Jam. 1. 17. Whom he loves he loves for ever Joh. 13. 1. 3. A childe of God may decay in parts sight feelings and exercise of faith as Phil. 4. 10. these are sometimes more sometimes lesse as God seeth best that so wee might rest and relie upon Christ alone I see and feele nothing in my selfe or all is as nothing to me to Jesus Christ who is all to me 4. We ought to beleeve that we neither see nor feele saith is the evidence of things not seene Heb. 11. 1. To live by faith is to walke after the Spirit and to live by sight and feeling is to live after the flesh Rom. 8. 1 2. 10. Dis I am discouraged because nothing is made good to me I doe not possesse is 1. If thou beest included and art under the promise of it thou shalt possesse it 2. It may be made good to thee without thy possession of it there is neither faith nor hope in what we possesse to have right in it and to possesse it are two things They dyed in faith they did not possesse what they beleeved Heb. 11. 17 18. Abraham beleeved he should have a Sonne here was his faith Rom. 4. 3. 17 18. yet then he did not possesse his Sonne to make injoyment essentiall to faith is a very great mis-take 11. Dis I have no assurance of salvation and therefore have no faith 1 Faith and assurance are two distinct things assurance cannot be without faith but faith may be without assurance for assurance is not the proper act of faith but an effect of it and a higher measure then that is and the greater our feelings of assurance are the lesser is our faith 2. Faith is an assenting or cleaving to the truth and faithfulnesse of God in his promise not from any thing the soule seeth or feeleth in it selfe but from something it apprehends in God in his Word Rom. 4. 20 21 22. Sometimes faith is attended with much strife and strugling for Satan saith to the soule it s in vaine to beleeve Christ saith Come I will ease thee now for the soule to rest upon the ability and fidelity of Christ in his promise is no small measure of faith Assurance is not from the nature of faith nor from the direct act of faith but from the reflect act of faith which is for a man to see and know that he beleeves which assurance is from the light and testimony of the Spirit of God in the conscience of one that is already a beleever causing the soule to know it beleeves the Spirit it selfe beareth witnesse to our spirits that wee are the children of God Rom. 8. 16. 3. There be some that have faith by reason of their ignorance and unskilfulnesse as Heb. 5. 14 15. 10. 15. Babes are unskilfull and have not experience of Gods dealing with his for order and manner so that when faith doth not act and when Christ doth not clearly appeare in the soule he doubts whether he be not deceived but when the Lord appeares againe the doubt is dissolved and the soule satisfied and he is armed with experience against such a time if he be able to judge and neglect not to marke well but where use and exercise is wanting there is not so cleare a discerning Heb. 5. 11 12. 12. Dis I feare the opposition in me is not between Christ and Satan or the Spirit against the flesh but from my corrupt will and my inlightned conscience I grant all the combates in men are not right many are deceived herein yet the difference may be discerned as 1. The naturall conscience though inlightned acts onely in a naturall way at the most it is but morall as not to ●lie steale sweare and such grosse acts 2. It stirres not unlesse it be forced and onely to that its forced unto 3. Conscience inlightned strikes onely at the branches of sin but not at the roote 4. It sets one faculty against another as the will and affections against the understanding 1. But the Spirit of Christ causeth an opposition in the same faculty as in the will c. 2. The Spirit of God makes a free full constant impartiall resistance against all sin 3. And discovers to the soule her secret corruptions in their colours the Spirit overpowereth the soule causing it to hate sin and leave it 4. The Spirit causeth the soule to be more glad the more sin is discovered 5. The Spirit of God teacheth the soule to oppose all sin even the appearance of evill equally proportionably and orderly 6. The Spirit causeth the soule not to turne the truth of God into incouragements to sin as some doe 13. Dis I am so troubled with hideous temptations as I beleeve no childe of God is 1. Christ was tempted Mat. 4. There is no temptation but a childe of God may be tempted with see 1 Cor. 10. 13. 2. If they be hatefull and burdensome to you and you cry to God for helpe against them they shall not be laid to
that is unprofitable to him that doth not keepe the Law Gal. 5. 3. Therefore Circumcision hath nothing to doe with the covenant of grace 2. The Scripture doth not declare that Circumcision was an old seale of the covenant of grace Col. 2. 11 12. Doth not prove it was 3. Because if Circumcision had been a seale of the covenant of grace those who had that should not need a new seale 4. If Circumcision had been a seale of the covenant of grace then the urging it could not have overthrowne the Gospel as the Apostle said it did see Gal. 2. 17 18. with Gal. 5. 10. and Chap. 3. 5. Because the promise of blessednesse by remission of sinnes Gen. 12. 3. is farre different from that covenant Gen. 17 7 8. which was sealed by Circumcision Lastly Circumcision being an intolerable yoke Acts 15. 10. it could not be a seale of the righteousnesse of Christ if it had then it had been a benefit and not a burden Luk. 5. 4 5 6. Observations MAster Christ is to be owned acknowledged and obeyed We have toiled all night Much paines And have taken nothing Mens labours without Gods blessing are fruitlesse Neverthelesse I let goe reason experience and likelihoods to obey thee At thy word Christs word prevailes a word from Christ is enough to put us upon action his word is to be eyed I will So soone as the soule heares Christ speake it submits Let downe the net Faith and the use of meanes agree Nets filled Obedience of faith never fruitlesse c. Matth. 10. 29 30 31. Are not two sparrowes sold for a farthing and one of them shall not fall to the ground without your Father the very haires of your head are all numbred COnsider the lilies of the field how they grow they toile not neither doe they spin Mat. 6. 28. God provideth for the young Ravens their food Job 38. 41. All things are ordered by the providence of God Whatsoever the Lord pleased that did he in heaven and in earth in the seas and all deepe places Psal 135. 6. Our God is in heaven he ●hath done whatsoever he pleaseth Psal 115. 3. Many seeke the Rulers favour but every mans judgement cometh of the Lord Pro 29. 26. He fashioneth their hearts Psal 33. Whose hearts God hath touched 1 Sam. 10. 9. 26. As the Rivers of waters he turneth it whither soever he will Pro. 21. 1. The lot is cast into the lap but the whole disposing thereof is of the Lord Pro. 16. 33. The preparations of the heart in man and the answer of the tongue is from the Lord Pro. 16. 1. A mans heart deviseth his way but the Lord directeth his steps vers 9. Yee ought to say if the Lord will we will goe unto such a Citie and doe this or that Jam. 4. 13. 15. They shall fight against thee but they shall not prevaile Jer. 1. 19. The consideration of these Scriptures are very necessary profitable and comfortable these Scriptures declare that what God willeth he effecteth all things are as he pleaseth to order them Job seeing of God in all his crosses was patient content and thankfull The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken blessed be the Name of the Lord He knew men could doe neither more nor lesse then God will it was God that did it A cause of that great care and over-thoughtfulnesse of heart in fearing men and want is because wee see not all things to be ordered by God wee are more like heathen Gentiles as Christ saith Matth. 6. Wee have need to minde that Chapter more to be more content and to live by faith and to be thankfull to God which we cannot be untill we see it s sent from God it s a gift of love whether it be bitter or sweet it shall doe me good Psal 34. 1 Cor. 13. 10. All our care and dislike c. cannot alter what God will doe it might cause men to be content Job saith He is in one minde and who can turne him and what his soule desireth even that he doth for he performeth the thing that is appointed for me and many such things are with him Job 23. 13 14. As if he should say I cannot helpe it God will have it so I may use the meanes but I must waite upon him both for the time and manner of my deliverance Man disquiets himselfe in vaine because he doth not see and minde the providence of God in the ordering of all things and so are not content with our conditions nor beare crosses patiently If thou art lost and fatherlesse Luk. 19. 10. Hos 14. 3. Christ is precious to thee and thou art precious to him Oh know Christ came to seeke and save you and that you shall injoy life and glory by him God is at peace with you he hath loving kindnesse for you that is better then life loe all is yours for God is yours and that for ever what can be more sutable pleasant profitable and delightfull better or more desireable Oh the fulnesse sweetnesse gloriousnesse of this peace it passeth knowledge if thou art nothing in thy own eyes thou hast a right in it and therefore mayst apply it and be ravished with it Consider what I have said what God hath given thee sent unto thee and put into thy hand even his rarest choisest dainties from his banquetting-house flaggons of his most excellent and richest wine full of spirit and life one taste is able to cheare and revive thy heart yea raise and ravish thy fainting soule with love into love Oh here is enough Christs dainties are durable his fountaine is bottomlesse and infinite it cannot be exhausted or drawne dry therefore eate O friends and drinke abundantly To be comforted and strengthened with it if God please to blesse it to thee it will be sweet and profitable instead of darknesse light shall shine clearly sweetly pleasantly if the Lord cause thy soule to be this light love to live in it be overpowered with it thou wilt acknowledge his goodnesse with thankfulesse and ioy as some have done he creates the fruit of the lips peace if he speak the word it s done Gen 3. 3. The Lord so speake to thee that thou maist profit by it and that thy joy may be full A Song of the love of God to such as are in Christ Make yee his praises glorious with a joyfull voice Psal 66. 1 2. 1. THe love of God hath been to me full great In leaving me in such a state to be And then to set me free from that estate He gave his onely Sonne to dye for me Which is a greater happinesse to me Then if I had not been in misery 2. I was as vile as any man could be And my vile state did openly appeare When God in love did please to looke on me And caused me a joyfull voice to heare For passing by me he to me said
live Which voice of his unto me life did give 3. When I heard this sweet voice of God to me Vpon my heart effectually it wrought That I was then so set at liberty That oft times I did ponder in my thought From sin Satan curse wrath and hell so free That I feare not what they can doe to me 4. Love caused God for me his Sonne to give Love caused Jesus Christ for me to dye Love caused God to say to my soule live Love in my soule doth now againe reply In Songs how lovingly Christ did come forth A mighty and ransome of great worth 5. What glorious sight of love is this I see That being had before the world could be Without all time bounds measure or degree Is this his love which he hath set on me One glorious sight of this so great love Will cause a soule for to be sicke of love 6. This love made known to me made me to muse That ever God should be to me so good To give his Sonne for me and me to choose Which was his enemy and in my bloud When I fled from him after me came he I sought not him but he sought after me 7. The love of God to me is passing great Which had a being ere the world began It boundlesse is and every way compleate And longer doth endure then this world can Like love to this hath never yet been heard And there is none can be to this compar'd 8. That many in their sinnes should be destroy'd Whose first condition was as good as mine And yet to me this mercy is injoyd Thus being freed I shall in glory shine This shews his love to me is great and free And could not be deserv'd at all by me 9. Oh! who could wish himselfe a thing so rare As to be hem'd in and compast about With boundlesse love oh who can it declare Or who by fathoming can finde it out My heart my hand tongue are all too weak Of matchlesse love to thinke or write or speak 10. It is through faith injoyed so excellent It comforteth and elevates on high The saddest heart and fills it with content Yea it revives a soule ready to dye The apprehending it brings joy and peace When it is clouded then our joys decrease 11. Each soule that doth this boundles joy possesse May well be swallowed in admiration And to the praise of God may it expresse And have it in their meditation Well may it cause us to serve feare and love This infinite Giver ever God above Glory be to God on high The end of the second Part. DIVINE CONSOLATIONS OR A fountaine of life and comfort The Third Part. Declaring that the Elect were justified from the punishment of sin by Christ when he was upon the Crosse and the objections against it are answered And that Christ alone is our life happinesse peace strength comfort joy and all perfection Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sinne Rom. 4. 8. Being justified by his bloud Rom. 5. 9. Who can lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect Rom. 8. 33. For they are without fault before the Throne of God Rev. 14. 5. By Samuel Richardson LONDON Printed by M. Simmons in Aldersgate-stre●te 1649. To all that love Jesus Christ in sincerity heires of the purchased possession to as many of them as this shall come understanding to know and love to embrace the truth Holy and beloved in the Lord BEhold I present to your view Christ crucified which is the sum and substance of the Gospel The Priesthood of Christ and the sufficiency of his Sacrifice to save is the main thing I contend for against the Papists who say Christs sacrifice is not sufficient without their sacrifice Charity saves saith one without good workes no salvation saith another a third saith that Christs sacrifice is not sufficient for our Salvation without beleeving that beleeving saves and that without beleeving we cannot be saved Yee see they all urge a necessity of something for salvation besides Christs Sacrifice without which something they say we cannot be saved so that they de●y the sufficiency of Christs sacrifice to save and so deny that Christ doth save for those that he saves he saves by his sacrifice Also if Christ and something else saves us Christ saves us not for he is no Saviour if he be but a part of a Saviour therefore in adding something to Christs sacrifice they deny the sufficiency of Christs sacrifice so that their opinions are dishonourable to Christ therefore as we tender the honour of Jesus Christ we are to hate and abhorre them being enemies to the Crosse of Christ and therefore abominable If we consider how generally these are received and scarce contradicted by any that beleeving and Christ and beleeving together saves us sure it should greatly stirre us up and provoke us to contend for the sufficiency of Christs sacrifice though our contending should cost us our lives There is no truth more honourable to Christ nor of greater conc●rament to his glory and our salvation then this is take away any thing of the sufficiency of Christs sacrifice and our salvation is destroyed what a dishonour were it to God to send Christ to save us and yet for him not to save and not to be sufficient to save there is no opinion in the world that my soule doth more abhorre nor against which I would more freely lay downe my life for then this This Treatise tends to exalt Christ alone selfe is not exalted nor nothing of man this doctrine puts a man upon a whole deniall of himselfe because man and his best works are not onely wholy shut out in this worke but trampled upon in respect of Justification and Salvation This doctrine strips us naked from all things else but Christ it is not I and my workes nor Christ and my workes together that saves me but Jesus Christ alone is he that saves us from our sinnes c. Many want this light desire and hope of doing good moved and incouraged me to take paines herein and send it into the world I have no prejudice against the persons of any nor would I have any thinke ill of them in many things we sinne all in one kinde or other it s in vaine to expect better so long as we are in this world neither d●e I know that I take any pleasure in writing against any no further then I thinke my selfe bound in conscience to witnesse to the truth and then especially when others omit it Mr Gerees Booke against D●ctor Crispe hath been published above foure yeares and no answer given to it by any neither have I heard that any other hath given any answer
are justified in the beloved so we are compleat in his compleatnesse not in our selves but in him is our perfection Col. 2. 10. 28 Argu. Our Justification is a part of our compleatnesse therefore where we are compleat there we are justified but we are compleat in him Col. 2 10. Therefore we are justified in him therefore we are not justified in our selves nor by beleeving 29 Argu. If we be justified by grace and beleeving is not grace then we are not justified by beleeving but we are justified by grace Rom. 4. 24. Titus 3 7. Beleeving is not grace the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22 23. are called graces by men but not by God the Scripture calls them not so faith love meeknesse temperance peace joy c. are not graces but effects of grace gifts of grace or from grace grace is but one there are not many graces though there be many gifts of love which are the effects of it which all are the gifts of grace Rom. 2. 6. 1 Cor. 12. 4. Grace is out of us in the good will and pleasure of God and Christs death was an effect of grace of Gods grace is love Titus 3. 7. We are exhorted to grow in grace viz. in the knowledge of the love of God c. He that beleeves hath the witnesse in him but faith is not this witnesse 1 Cor. 2. 10. 2 Cor. 4. 13. The seed that remaineth in us is not God but the Word of God Luk. 8. 11 12. Rom. 10. 17. Rom. 8. 30. It declareth the order of Gods dispencing these priviledges to us the setting of one thing before another doth not alwayes prove the being of it before it see 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rev. 5. 9. If men be called before justified men are not justified by beleeving for if they be called they beleeve or else how are they called if they be beleevers and yet are not justified it is because beleeving could not justifie them We are also to consider when Scriptures were written if before Christs death or after Some of those before his death saith as some object He shall redeeme Israel Psal 130. 8. He shall justifie Isa 53. 11. He shall save his people from their sinnes Mat. 1. 20 21. These speake in the Future tense he shall come for as yet Christ was not borne but after Christs death the Scripture speaketh in the Present tense because he had then actually done it see Heb. 10. 10. 12. 14. Rev. 1. 5. 5. 9. Before Christs death it was commonly expressed that he should do it now Christ hath done it wee may not say it is to doe Justification by beleeving is not to be understood of Justification it selfe but the manifestation of it in the conscience for the Scripture attributes that to a thing which is not a cause nor meanes nor effect of it but a meere shadow of it as appeares Levit. 16. 30. compared with Heb. 10. 11. Col. 2. 17. Till Christ dyed there was no satisfaction for any one sinne the Father trusted Christ for the sins of the Elect till Christs death and then Christ made payment for the sinnes of his Elect to the end of the world 30 Argu. If we are healed by Christs stripes then we were healed before we beleeved for his stripes were before his death when he dyed upon the Crosse but Christs stripes healed us By whose stripes we are healed 1 Pet. 2. 24. Therefore beleeving doth not heale us then ever since Christs death we have been sound and whole even before we knew it see Eph. 2. 16. 31 Argu. If men are given to Christ before they beleeve then beleeving doth not make men belong to Christ but the first is true Joh. 6. 37. Joh. 17. 6. Therefore the latter is true also 32 Argu. If salvation is in Christ then it is not in us much lesse in beleeving but salvation is in Christ 2 Tim. 2. 10. Mat. 1. 21. 33 Argu. If the cause why we shall live is because Christ lives Joh. 14. 19. then beleeving is not the cause why we shall live if we are alive to God through Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 5. 7. then not through beleeving see Rom. 6. 10 11. for beleeving is not Jesus Christ 34 Argu. If our salvation depends upon the promise of God then it depends not upon our beleeving but it depends upon the promise of God Heb. 13. 8. Heb. 6. 17 18. 35 Argu. If the Reason why we shall not perish is because none are able to plucke us out of his hand then the Reason of our not perishing is not because we beleeve but the Reason we are saved is because none are able to pluck us out of his hand John 20. 28 29 30. 36 Argu. If our salvation depends upon the faithfulnesse of God then it depends not on our beleeving but it depends upon the faithfulnesse of God 1 Thes 5. 23 24. Mica 7. 18. 20. 37 Argu. If the Reason why we are not consumed is Because the Lord changeth not Mal. 3. 6. Then it is not because we beleeve we change oft but he never Heb. 13. 5. The ground of my confidence is not in any thing in me or done by me but in God in his promise Psal 62. 7 8. I rejoyce in the Crosse of Christ Gal. 6. 14. and that my name is written in the booke of life Luk. 10. 20. O yee that love the Lord Rejoyce in the Lord Phil. 3. 1. Alway Phil 4. 4. Evermore 1 Thes 5. 16. I would know of you that hold we are justified by beleeving whether faith in the nature and power of it doth justifie or no if yea I would know how the power to beleeve apart from the exercise of it can be knowne to us and how it may be called faith when there is no beleeving and whether the light and power by which we beleeve be not the same by which we obey the rest of the commands of God and how it can be distinguished apart or without beleeving if it justifieth us without its act can you tell how and when you were justified for if it may be in the soule one houre and not act why not two seven yeares and whether this opinion doth not imply that a man may have faith and be justified by it and yet not know it nor beleeve if faith justifieth in respect of the righteousnesse and meritoriousnesse of it whether it will not follow that we are not justified by the righteousnesse of Christ but by that of faith which is in our selves and so need not looke at a righteousnesse in another in Christ if the act of faith justifie whether we are justified by one act or many if by one how we may know it or distinguish it that we may not so act faith againe needlesly for what need is there of more then one if one be enough if many acts of faith be required to justifie us it is necessary to know how many that so we may know when we are justified
if we are to act faith continually to be justified because we sin continually it will follow we are not justified for ever and that we may despaire of ever inj●ying one quarter of an houres sweet injoyment of Justification because in lesse time we sinne and so are unjust and to be justified againe and if it be so no man can say three minutes together he is a justified man because in lesse time he sinneth and then he is by faith to be justified againe but this it is for a man to justifie himselfe as the blind Pharisees justified themselves Luk. 16. 14 15. Call you this Justification which will last no longer and is to so little purpose it s but a shadow there is no truth nor substance in it they are like the Priests under the Law and their worke to lesse purpose Heb. 10. 11. Geree For satisfaction that they may see we derogate not a jot from Christ see Wards Sermon p. 68. Ans It seemes Wards Sermon saith they doe not therefore they doe not this is proofe enough for those that will thinke it so Geree How can this be a derogating unto Christ or an abrogating unto faith to say by beleeving we live and are justified from sinne c. Joh. 3. 33. p. 92. Ans How can it be otherwise seeing yee dishonour Christ and put him to open shame it is a very great evill yee doe your evill is great and grievous For 1. Christ should be lifted up but yee pull him downe in that yee deny him his perfection and glory yee derogate from his sacrifice in that yee deny it to be sufficient to save us 2. Yee bring in workes beleeving and repentance c. as joynt causes of salvation and deliverance from wrath 3. In desiring something beyond his perfection yee make Christ an imperfect Priest and his sacrifice imperfect 4. Ye disgrace Christ in adding your righteousnesse to his ye deny the efficacy of his death and deny him to be able to save to the uttermost 5. In that ye would have something done for salvation ye deny it depends alone upon Christ for it depends not alone upon him if it also depends upon any other condition or additions 6. Ye deny salvation to be a free gift freely given us if we must doe for it and so earne it else as you say we shall not have it and so you make salvation uncertaine and doubtfull 7. Ye make Christ a meere shadow in comparison of your workes in saying the promise of God and the death of Christ is frustrate to us unlesse we performe such conditions 8. In saying we are justified by beleeving ye deny we are justified by Christ which is dangerous though it hath a shew of truth because Christ and beleeving are two things so that it s to divide our Justification between God and man Christ and us his workes and ours 9. Ye deny Justification and Salvation to be accomplished by Christs obedience in making it to depend upon our obedience and so ye impute it in part if but in part to our selves so overthrow the death of Christ 10. Ye make not Christ but faith and repentance c. the meanes of our salvation 11. Ye give that to beleeving c. which is proper to Christ in that ye attribute Justification which is the chiefe and maine thing Christ hath done for us to beleeving Isa 45. 24. 53. 11. 12. You make beleeving a cause of Justification in saying without it we cannot be justified 13. In saying beleeving is imputed for righteousnesse ye make it our righteousnesse or charge God to impute that for righteousnesse which is not righteousnesse 14. Your opinion ingendreth unto bondage it leaves the conscience in feare it robs it of peace joy and consolation it s an enemy to a chearfull and free serving of God 15. To say that we are justified by Christ and faith together is dishonourable to Christ for if we be justified by both then not by one and so Christ is made no Saviour in their judgements he is but a halfe Saviour I desire to know how it can be made out that we are justified by Christ if we be justified by beleeving if we are justified by his bloud Rom. 5. 9. Unlesse beleeving be his bloud we are not justified by beleeving the Scripture doth not say that any one is justified from sinne by beleeving but we have been taught so and it is no easie matter to unlearne and leave a corrupt principle 16. Christ hath not all the glory of our salvation if we joyne beleeving or workes to Christ as a copa●ner with him faith must have a part of it and we our selves for wee beleeve as you confesse p. 6. 17. In saying we are not loved nor accepted untill we beleeve ye deny we are accepted for Christ sake 18. Ye attribute righteousnesse in part to our selves in attributing it in part to beleeving many please themselves with a conceit that they doe not dishonour Christ in attributing salvation to beleeving because faith is from Christ 19. If we may ascribe Justification to beleeving then by the same Reason we may ascribe Justification to love patience temperance c. yea to all our performances our good workes prayers teares c. Because the power by which we doe these is Christs Without me ye can doe nothing Joh. 15. 5. 20 You make Christ no Saviour at all though you confesse Christ dyed for us yet you affirme beleeving and workes save us He is all yet you make him nothing at all unlesse man please ●o make him and what he hath done something by beleeving c. Christ will be all 〈◊〉 thing in that if ye make him not all ye 〈◊〉 upon him O ye sonnes and daughters of the most High lift up your voyce and cry no inherent holinesse no workes of the Law to Justification It s not of workes of righteousnesse we have done but according to his mercy he saved us Titus 3. 5. to 9. In the Lord have I righteousnesse he is our righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. My tongue shall talke of thy righteousnesse even of thine onely Psal 71. 16. 24. Geree Methinkes Ezek. 36. 26 27 28. should make him blush if he were alive they shall be my people and I will be their God p. 79. Ans You have cause to blush for writing your selfe a Preacher of the Gospel and are so ignorant a Preacher of the Law yea of Popery to be a Minister of the Law is to be a Minister of the Letter as appeares 2 Cor. 3. 6 7 8 9. Such a Minister you are 2. Such as belong to the Election of grace ever were and shall be the people of God yea all the world and all in it is Gods he saith My Gold it s his Ezek. And the beasts of ten thousand mountaines the world and all in it is his but when God saith I will be their God and they shall be my people the meaning is he will declare
causeth us to be accepted Eph. 1. 6. Actions without faith are not accepted neither for Christ nor for faith Our happinesse consists not in Gods accepting our actions but in our union with him and in that our sinnes are not imputed unto us Psal 32. 1. Our actions are accepted because our persons are accepted Gen. 4. Ans It s strange you will offer to say so oh the horrible and tragicall effects that naturally flow from this doctrine that he that beleeves cannot sinne or his sinfull actions are accepted if so then Davids adultery and murther was accepted yea all the sinnes of beleevers are accepted we abhorre to open such a gap for sinne to enter The word Reconcile declares that God is at enmity with us and we with him Re signifieth againe con signifieth together ciliation to call or move to how is there a removing where there was never a removing how together of those who were never asunder how againe unlesse the onenesse had been broken apieces Ans Though the word signifie so it will not follow that God was ever at enmity with the Elect. We are full of movings and removings because changeable but it s not so with God although the Elect sinne and depart from God yet the Scripture saith not that God was at enmity with them or that they fell from the love of God or that God hated the Elect consider 1 Joh. 5. 16. Isa 27. 4. Rom. 5. 9 10. Heb. 13. 8. In saying God was never an enemy to the Elect you make the fall of Adam in whom the Elect were included a fiction and the story of Christs sufferings a fable and Christs passion a vanity and overthrow the nature of God whose purity cannot indure sinne ye deny many Scriptures which testifie that God was at enmity with the Elect Eph. 2. Isa 63. 10 11. Lev. 26. 40 41 42. Ezek. 16. 62 63. Ans These are hard words and high charges indeed Jud. 13. 15. like the raging waves of the Seas that looke big and rise high and fall as suddenly so will your words fall into meere fables or slanders for no such thing will follow we say the ●all of Adam Christs death are no fictions nor fables but reall things by nature in Adam the Elect did sin and fell in Adam c. And had not Jesus Christ been made a curse for us we had perished therefore the death of Christ did more then reveale love men can reveale love each to other without dying much more could God in the love of God and Christs death lyeth our eternall happinesse Consider whose doctrine is against the purity of God yours or ours You say we deny many Scriptures tell us of one we deny not any we deny your false glosses and mis-interpretations I pray tell us in what place of Scripture we may reade that God was ever at enmity with the Elect or that he did not love them untill they did beleeve You say Till conversion comes God is an enemy with the Elect. Ans The Scripture you alledge to prove it says not as you doe the word wrath Eph. 2. is the curse that nor any other place doth not say that by the word wrath is meant Gods enmity against the Elect if it doe we will say so too In Isa 63. 10 11. is the word enmity viz. In some of his dispensations he was so for he fought against him So Levit. 26. God walked contrary to them yet it will not follow that God did so from any enmity and hatred to them for he did then love them and own them for his as appeares vers 45. I have given the dearly beloved of my soule into the hands of their enemies Jer. 12. 7. As for Ezekiel 16. 62 63. When I am pacified towards thee it appeares by the foure last verses that it s to be understood of the knowledge of his love for he saith Thou shalt know that I am the Lord thy God Joh. 14. 20. God may seeme angry yea seeme an enemy and hide himselfe and handle them roughly and yet love them not the worse for that as Jer. 31. 20. He change●h not Mal. 3. 6. He saith He is the same yesterday to day and for ever Heb. 13. 8. Anger is not in me Isa 27. 4. Therefore your brother was very much mistaken to conceive that there was anger in God till he was pacified If Gods enmity had not concurred with Eves enmity against him shee had not in all likelihood eaten the forbidden fruit Ans You are hard put to it and have no Scripture to prove that you affirme it appeares you have no more but a likelihood for it therefore we must take that or nothing The fall was not from any enmity in God against her but God by that meanes was pleased to bring about his glory see Eph. 1. 6. to 12. Rom. 3. 19. God is a God of wrath to us till faith in Christ comes Eph. 2. Rom. 5. 1 2 It s as evident as evident may be that by faith in Christ God is reconciled to us and we to him Ans It s as evident as may be in your booke though the Scripture say not so Faith is a cause of Justification Ans You ascribe as much to faith as to Christ a cause this your opinion is very dishonourable to Christ in setting faith above Christ in making it a cause whereas Christs death is but a meanes a cause is above a meanes the cause is the love of God I say actually God cannot be said to be reconciled to man while man is not reconciled to God Ans I see you say it and say more then you can prove we say and prove that we were reconciled to God by the death of his Sonne Rom. 9. 10. What Christ did was actuall unlesse you will make it a fable if Christ dyed before we beleeved we were reconciled before we did beleeve Faith brings us into Christ Eph. 2. 8 9. Joh. 6. 37. Joh. 3. Ans You say into Christ and that faith is a part of Christ and a part of the divine nature but the Scripture doth not say so the divine nature is God and incommunicable if it could be divided in parts it were not infinite we partake of it by union not by in●usion it s no wonder ye ascribe all to faith as you doe if ye thinke faith is God So you ask ●f God saves us without our being in Christ and whether God doth not love to see us in Christ rather then out of him is this to speake like a Doctor Tell me how could we be chosen in Christ before the world if God did not consider us in him Eph. 1. 4. Can you ●ell when God considered us out of Christ or or in what Scripture it is said that ever any of the Elect were out of Christ or that they by ●inne fell out of Christ or out of the love of God When in Ephes 2. 5. doth not import a difference of time Ans
deny this doctrine Can two walke together unlesse they be agreed Amos 3. 3. The Saints cannot walke together warrantably and so not comfortably without these two things 1. An onenesse of faith in the principles or doctrine of Christ knowne owned and declared 2. Love to the truth and to each other so as to desire to walke together For my part I would not joyne to that Church who denied any foundation-truth and this is one but being joyned if the Church doe not den● it I am not to deny communion with those that deny it untill sufficient meanes hath been used to informe them it appeares to me there is a necessitie to part in any of these causes following as 1. If the staffe of beauty is broke Zach. 11. 10. Faith and Order Col. 3. 5. 2. Or the staffe of bands is broke Zach. 11. 14. Love so broke so as each desires to part 3. Or the brotherhood so broke that the Church the Candlesticke is removed one part from another that we cannot performe our duty one to another Rev. 2. 5. with 1. 10. 4. Or many depart from the faith 5. Or the worst over power the best that offenders cannot be cast out 6. Or cannot agree about the doctrine and discipline in the Scriptures for the Church when our staying cannot reclaime the rest then can we not with honour to the truth nor with comfort and peace of conscience walke together Such as love the Lord who are of one minde and heart in the principles of truth are to cleave to the truth and each to other as Jer 50. 5. Onely let each soule consider well that his grounds be full and cleare let not any thing be done in strife nor passion but in love to the truth and them The Lord helpe and direct us all to know his will and to doe it Concerning the Ordinances of Christ many shall slight them and depart from the faith and the practise of them and pretend want of Apostles and of men to worke miracles that all that did baptize did worke miracles cannot be proved but the contrary appeares John did baptize yet he did no miracle nor Apollo Acts 19. Joh. 10. 41. He that is least in the kingdome of God is greater then he therefore a preaching Disciple may baptize as well as he The Scripture doth not declare that he that baptizeth must work miracles c. therefore it may not be restrained to such consider 1 Cor. 12. 7. to 14. The gifts of the Spirit are in nature one though diverse in operation therefore of equall authority and so to be esteemed by us 1 Cor. 12. 7 8 9. 24. He that is baptized by any of the gifts of the Spirit is baptized by the same Spirit we are baptized by one Spirit 1 Cor. 12. 3. He saith not by the gifts of miracles see vers 28 29 30. If God workes in all the operations of the Spirit the baptisme by one gift of it is to be acknowledged the baptisme of the same God the first is true 1 Cor. 12. 6. therefore the latter is true also To tie Baptisme to some of the gifts of the Spirit and not to the rest is to dishonour the Spirit as 1 Cor. 12. 23 24. This in effect was the Corinths sin 1 Cor. 12. 26. The ceasing of the gifts of tongues and miracles might be because they might not be idolized above the other If the Apostles did baptize because Apostles then might they baptize though they had not the gifts of miracles c. for it is one thing to be an Apostle and another to worke miracles 1 Cor. 12. 28 29 30. Gifts are given to men severally as he will 1 Cor. 12. 11. The Disciples were not Apostles when they baptized Joh. 3. 22 23 24. 4. 2. At that time Christ had no Apostles Mark 1. 14. After John was cast into prison vers 16. Simon and Andrew his brother were converted and that Simon Andrew were the first Apostles appeares Mat. 10. 2. Luk. 13 14 15. Whence it will follow that one that is not an Apostle nor a worker of miracles may baptize Obj. Apollo conferred the gifts of the Spirit by laying on of hands because its a principle in Religion and he baptized not till he had learned the principles of Religion Heb. 6. 2. Ans It doth not follow because it is one thing to understand the principles of Religion and another to conferre the gifts of the Spirit by laying on of hands as it s one thing to understand to beleeve the Resurrection of the dead c. and another thing to raise the dead Which holds forth most of Gods wisdome love to say the Ordinances of Christ are not necessary or cannot be had or to say they are usefull and God hath appointed a way and meanes for such as beleeve to come by them and injoy them Therefore as in Moses time the children of Israel had miracels yet obedience was required of the after ages who saw no miracles So in the Apostles dayes there were miracles yet obedience is required of those who now beleeve although we see not such miracles It s foretold that Antichrist shall come with signes and wonders as Mat. 24. 23 24. 2 Thes 2. 9 10. Christ is not to come in this way yet many except they see signes wonders they will not beleeve Joh. 4. 48. Preaching and Baptisme are to continue to the end of the world as appeares Mat. 28. 19 20. And breaking of bread untill he come 1 Cor. 11. 26. And gifts to teach until he come Luk 19. 13. 1 Cor. 14. 3. So all things delivered unto the Saints are to be held fast till he come Rev. 2. 25 16. The end of the third Part. FINIS a Eph. 2. 4. b Rom. 3. 9. c Rom. 3. 24. d Joh. 3. 16. e 1 Cor. 2. 9. f 1 Cor. 15. 45. g Ezek. 16. 3. h Ezek. 16. 6. i Ezek. 16. 6. k Ezek. 16. 6. l Ezek. 16. 6. m Gen. 1. 3. n Ezek. 16. 6. o Eph. 5. 14. p Rom. 8. 33. q 1 Cor. 2. 9. r Joh. 8. 36. ſ Rom. 8. 38. t Gal. 4. 4 5. u Joh. 10. 18. x Ezek. 16. 6. y Psal 116. 7. z Heb. 10. 7. * Mark 10. 45. a 2 Joh. 3. 1. b Eph. 1. 4. c Eph. 1. 4. d Eph. 2. 4. e Eph. 3. 19. f Song 5. 8. g 1 Joh. 3. 1. h Rev. 1. 5. i Eph. 1. 4. k Ezek. 16. 6. l Jer. 3. 7. m Isa 65. 1. n Eph. 2. 4 o Eph. 1. 4. p 1 Joh. 3. 2. q 1 Cor. 2. 9. r Rom. 5. 7. s Rom. 5. 7. t John 8. 21. u Eph. 2. 3. x Rom. 5. 1. y Joh. 17. 24. z Ho● 14. 4. * Isa 64. 6. a Psal 63. 3. b Rom. 8. 39. c Eph. 3. 19. d Hos 11. 4. e Eph. 3. 19. f Eph. 2. 4. g Rom. 3. 20. h 1 Pet. 1. 8. i Rom. 5. 1. k Rom. 8 35. 39. l Rom. 5. 1. m Rom. 7. 24. n 1 Pet. 1. 8. o Eph. 3. 8. p Rom. 7. 25. q Joh. 16. 22. r 2 Cor. 5. 14. ſ Rom. 8. 32. a 1 Pet. 1. 19 20. b Eph. 1. 4. c Phil. 4. 4. d Rom. 8. 38 39. e Phil. 3. 3. f Phil. 3. 9. g Psal 61. 1 2. h Psal 18. 49. i Ezek. 16. 14. k Col. 2. 10. l Rev. 19. 8. m Col. 2. 3. 10. n Mat. 3. 17. o 1 Cor. 3. 21. p Heb. 10. 19. q Mat. 21. 22. r Gal. 4. 7. 1 Joh. 1. 1 2. ſ Mat. 1. 21. Psal 2. ● t Rom. 5. 8. u Eph. 2. 13. x Joh. 1. 4 5. Col. 3. 4. y Phil. 4. 13. Acts 3. 22 23. z Heb. 9. 11. Eph. 1. 22. * Luk. 2. 11. 1 Cor. 15. 19. a 1 Cor. 1 30. b Col. 1. 20. c Rom. 15. 5. d Mat. 1. 21. e Isa 42. 6. f Eph. 2. 14. g Luk. 5. 31. h Eph. 1. 7. i Psal 23. 1. k Isa 9. 6. l 1 Pet. 1. 8. m Psal 16. 11. n Isa 9. 6. o Phil. 4. 6. 19. p Eph. 2. 20. q Luk. 2. 32. r 1 Tim. 1. 4. ſ Psal 71. 23 24. Psal 71. 15 16. t 1 Pet. 1. 1. 8. u Eccle. 1. 1 2. x Psal 4. 6. y Luk. 12. 19. z Luk. 12. 19. * Psal 49. 6. a Psal 49. 6. b Phil. 3. 8. c Rom. 10. 3. d Phil. 3. 7 8. e Rom. 7. 18. f Joh. 15. 5. g Mark 15. 34. h Heb. 2. 11. i Rom. 7. 23 24. k Rom. 7. 23. l Eph. 2 13 14. m Psal 71. 16. n Phil. 3. 7. Col. 3. 11. o Phil. 3. 8. p Rom. 8. 38. q Psal 71. 16. r Col. 3. 11. s Gal. 6. 14. t Phil. 3. 21. u Rom. 8. 33. x Joh. 8. 36. y Heb. 2. 11. z Joh. 17. 24. * Rom. 8. 35. a 1 Pet. 1. 8. b Phil. 3. 3. c Col. 2. 3. d 2 Tim. 4. 7 8. e Psal 18. 49 f 2 Cor. 5. 14. g Col. 3. 23. h 2 Tim. 2. 9. Rev. 2 10.
God But I have no love to Christ I am an enemy to Christ and not fit for Christ 1. The reason you doe not love Christ is because thou doest not know Gods love to thee Wee love him because he loved us first 1 Joh. 4. 19. As soone as we know Gods love to us that love constraines us to love him 2 Cor. 5. 14. 2. Art thou an enemy to God so were all that ever did beleeve see Eph 2. 12 13. While we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Sonne Rom. 5. 8. 10. Enemies cannot deserve Christ yet God gives Christ to such 3. It s a foolish conceit to thinke of fitting thy selfe for Christ it can never be 4. If thou desirest Christ goe to him and you shall speed He that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out Joh. 6. 37. You see you have his word for it also Christ is in you if you desire him for no man can hunger and thirst after righteousnesse that is Christ but such as are blessed Mat. 5. 6. They that are led out of themselves to Christ for light and life and strength are the children of God Rom. 8. 9 10 11 14. This desire is from the in-being of the light and life of Christ in you Indeed there are many great and sweet promises in the Word but they are all for beleevers but I am none I grant none may apply a promise of life but such as beleeve yet the promises are for all the Elect thou doest not know but thou art one of them when God shall give thee faith thou shalt know thou hast an interest in them Acts 13. 48. In the meane time stay thy selfe with this that the Lord Jesus gave himselfe for enemies and justifieth the ungodly Rom. 5. 4. see Rom. 5. 8. 10. Be not discouraged God may save you also the Lord saith I will have mercy upon her that hath not obtained mercy and I will say to them that are not my people thou art my people and they shall say thou art my God Hos 2. 23. Oh sweet place therefore by no meanes yeeld to thy feares doe not nourish jealousies against his love resolve thee in Christs strength to cleave to his Word as Psal 119. 49. And hold there saying My beloved is mine and I am his Song 2. 16. FOr he Jehovah is and changeth never Strong gracious he is and mercifull The same this day as yesterday and ever Kindness truth as from their fountain flow Though thou hast nothing wrought no kinde of way That might deserve his mercy on thy part Doe not thou faint therefore or doubt to speed He gracious is and loves without desert If thou hast waited long and also pray'd And yet no comfort from him thou canst finde Still hope in him and be not thou dismaide He in the end will shew himselfe full kinde Declaring love yet in his judgement just All that doe know his Name will in him trust He is a Father O come taste and see How sweet he is and how he loveth thee I would gladly beleeve but I dare not 1. There is no reason in the world for thee to doubt or be afraid seeing Christ cryeth saying If any man thirst let him come to me and drink Joh. 7. 37. The Spirit and the bride say Come and whosoever will let him come Rev. 22. 17. Doth God say come come come and are you afraid come he will not quench the smoaking flax Mat. 12. 20. Hope thee in his mercy and know The Lord takes pleasure in them that feare him and in them that hope in his mercy Psal 147. 11. 2. The feares in many are occasioned or much increased by such teachers who bid persons beleeve and then unbid them againe saying take heed what yee doe you may be deceived it s no easie matter to be saved you must first be humbled and so sensible of sin before yee may beleeve and they conceive they are not so humbled nor so qualified and therefore they dare not beleeve So sometimes they scare them exceedingly with the many things hypocrites may doe and how far they may goe and so set them short of hypocrites which must needs discourage them and terrifie them so they build up one day and pull it downe againe the next if not the same day The word of God requires no such teaching for men to learne before they doe beleeve for when the soule seeth it selfe lost the first thing they are to doe is to beleeve in Jesus Christ as appeares Acts 16. 31. The word requires nothing of them before they may beleeve therefore we may not for none may presume to teach what is not written Rev. 22. 18. 3. If thou desirest to beleeve thy will is in part regenerated and thou dost in some measure beleeve though weakly as he that said Lord I beleeve helpe my unbeliefe Mark 9. 24. Gods servants are described by a desire to feare his Name Nehe. 1. 11. Psal 145. 89. Psal 147. 11. Those desires which worke towards God came from God The spirit returnes to him that gave it if thy desires be spirituall thou art spirituall to will to repent and beleeve evidenceth that such do repent and beleeve to will to be regenerate is the effect and testimony of regeneration It is God that worketh in you to will Phil. 2. 13. Holy desires cannot be in the soule that hath no spirituall life Psal 145. 19. Desires after Christ are an act of spirituall life an act is from a faculty a faculty is from life and being a dead man desires not spirituall desires flow from the Spirit and are a part of the worke of God in us the will of man in it selfe is not able to effect a supernaturall action 2 Cor. 3. 5. insufficient to thinke Gen. 6. 5. He cannot perceive the things of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. He cannot repent Rom. 2. 4 5. He cannot come to Christ unlesse he be drawne Joh. 6. 44. God must give eyes to see and a heart to understand Deut. 29. 4. There can be no desires without saith 1 Pet. 2. 2 3. A man cannot desire that which he doth not love nor that he beleeves not to be Heb. 11. 6. Many doe give God their hearts and doe not know it and so are troubled because they doe not know what is meant by the heart nor where it is seated I speak not of the heart of flesh Rom. 8. 5 6 7. There is a carnall minde and a spirituall minde I speake of the heart mystically and spiritually which is principally seated in the will so that what it wills or desires there is the heart and to that which the will most wills or desires to that the bent of the heart is unto now if any one were to have its choice of any one thing in the world that one thing that the soule should choose would any question whether they loved it and whether their hearts were to it so in