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B15559 A practicall catechisme: or, A view of those principall truths according to godlinesse, which are contayned in the catechisme diuided into three parts: and seruing for the vse, (as of all, so) especially of those that first heard them. By D.R. B. of Divin, minister of the Gospell. D. R. (Daniel Rogers), 1573-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 21166; ESTC S116040 309,840 430

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can attaine to a broken hungry self deined heart that Christ and his grace might enter and dwell there oh how harsh is it Therefore remember that in Heb. 2.2 3 4. If those that transgressed Moses Law Deu. 29.19 and being conuinced thereby yet sayd within themselues I shall haue peace and so walked stubbornly adding drunkennesse to thirst Nay if they that sinned onely in a ceremony yet by two or three witnesses were condemned what shall they looke for that despise the grace of the Gospell and that offer which God hath honored by so many miracles and such abundance of Sermons and the powerfull Ministery of so many preachers Beware of refuzing such saluation as being a more spirituall wickednesse then any morall offence Thirdly its reproofe to all cauillers that descant vpon Branch 3 this free plaine and simple-hearted offer of God Being vrged to receaue it they answer So they would if they knew themselues elected But say they we are afrayd God meanes it vs not If wee be chozen we are sure to be called to beleeue it if not none of their Preachers can giue it vs. It must be God say they and not man that must worke our hearts and draw vs. But oh vaine iangler tell me hath not God reuealed his Will in his offer Dost thou know his secrets Is not his offer ingenuous Say not in thine heart Rom. 10.25 Who shall goe vp to Heauen or descend c Lo the Word is in thy mouth it is neere thee If Ieremy in the dungeon had told Ebedmelec he knew not whether he meant to help him out or no and so haue refuzed to come out had hee not iustly beene left there still So when the Lord lets downe the ladder of his offer into thy dungeon casts thee his cords and rags to put vnder thy armeholes that hee may draw thee out dost thou cauill and say Lord I know not whether thou meanst mee well or no perhaps thou wilt pull me out a little way and then let mee fall backe againe perhaps I am not elected Is not this a wofull dishonor to the simplicity of the offer Was he euer tyed at all to offer it and dost thou distrust his ingenuous meaning in it Thy blood bee vpon thy owne head in that thou chuzest rather to smite the Lord to thy owne destruction then to set thy foot in his ladder and put on his cords that thou mightst come out The way for thee is first to step vpward that thou mayst come to the top then to leap to the top at first to breake thy necke backeward The fourth vse is Aduertisement to Gods Ministers to magnifie their Ministery in deed and practice by beseeching the people to be reconciled to God Conceale no part of this truth of God but aboue all ply thy Ministery of reconciliation This will sweeten and familiarize all other doctrine the first Part of the Catechisme about sinne and the third about Godly life will follow this second Part of Reconciliation Col. 3. in the end It s the office God hath put vpon thee O Archippus fulfill it Woe be to thee who mayst preach and canst and dost not Or dost and yet dost not this Thou art one of wisedomes handmayds one of the Kings seruants sent out to bring in guests to this feast of his Sonne learne thy errand well mistake it not get it by heart let not the fault of reiecting this call bee laid vpon thee and thou hast saued thy owne soule Paul was so acquainted with this worke that he saith It was committed vnto him Nay 1 Tim. 1. hee addeth It was his Gospell As mayds vse to say I must goe dresse vp my Chambers and make my beds not because theirs but because it is their office so Paul cals the Gospell his and ours 2 Cor. 4.4 If our Gospell bee hid because it was his office Let vs then all ioyne in preaching it and offring it not with a veile vpon our face as Moses but 2 Cor. 3.13 16. with open face shew the people this Mirror that they may be transformed by it from glory to glory Q. What other vses are there hereof Vse 5 A. Especially this that this Article bee a sweet preparatiue vnto vs to frame vs to beleeue Entertaine wee not any base cursed thoughts of GOD in the simplicity of his offer Nourish all possible perswasion in thy soule of his vnfeigned meaning toward thee in this kind thou canst honour him no better then to agree with him in his meaning well to thee There is no greater difficulty of Faith then this Seed of bondage in vs to iudge of God by our selues Wee muse as wee vse If wee haue an enemy wee cannot forget his wrongs wee meet him not without indignation and therefore so wee thinke of GOD also to vs and the rather because hee hath so much vantage ouer vs. But oh poore wretch Is this the way to get out of his displeasure to nourish iealouzy against his loue Is it not rather oyle to the flame pull downe thy traitours heart hate not him whom thou hast hurt put on an holy and childlike opinion of him who when he needed not yet purpozed sent receaued this satisfaction for thee and therefore cannot lye in offring it to thee Say thus LORD thy sweet offer naked bosome cordes of loue Passions of sick loue sometime to allure sometime to contest command vrge● threaten and beseech turning thee into all formes of perswasion to winne my soule all these conuince mee of thy well meaning toward mee If my owne enmity to my enemy and the slander of Satan that thou enuiest my good doe assault mee neuer so much and my owne trayterous heart conspire with them yet this thy gracious offer in thy Gospell shall beare downe all Read Esay 55.9 For my wayes are not as your wayes nor my thoughts as your thoughts but as farre aboue them as Heauen aboue the Earth Adde this All the vnderstanding of man cannot comprehend the loue of this offer no more then the eye of a needle can the great Camell and shall I goe about to lessen it Surely if this should be a great stay to my heart that the Minister of God hath offred mee this grace and dares seale it vpon earth to my poore soule shall not the offer of God himselfe 1 Sam. 15.16 the strength of Israel that cannot lye much more sway with mee Oh Lord captiuate all my hatred of spirit and base treachery against thee It s reported of a certaine Merchant of London in the Story of England that he made much of a poore Cobler that dwelt by him a cankred Papist and did as good as maintaine him yet this Traytor went about to betray him to death This Merchant hauing escaped his hands yet out of his loue vsed all meanes to bee friends with him againe and vsed him as before all this would not doe his heart was so villainous he would shunne the way of him
cast Besides the Lord lothes to worke vpon a soule in the heat of her lust first he will frame her to his discipline ere he bestow any grace vpon her And rarely doth the Lord honor any bold reuolting sinner during his course till first he haue stopt him some time from it So then terror first turnes edge and gets within and ouergoes a sinner in his way as Zara ouertakes Phares in his hasty issue out of the wombe The vse briefly that so I may be short in the maine vse when I come to it is first not to imagine all restraints from euill to be grace try them first God intends them for good but they are as farre from mortification as a trembling or Lyon-couchant is from a dead one The vilest harlot that Rosamund in her vault was actually kept from her vncleannesse as well as chast matrones but her heart was as before her principle was vncleane still Not the loue of good but lothing of euill restraines legally For the time Iudas was so far from his pieces that hee chuzes to hang himselfe rather then to fall to his trade And therefore restraint onely is not to be rested in howbeit God where he meanes to proceed sauingly doth restraine wholesomely if we could iudge but seeing this is a secret trust not our selues or others heerein till the Lord hath by this step trained vs further Reioice for the least degree as I confesse in such a loose debaucht age restraint of some yong drunkards would seeme high Religion its better to haue the halfe loafe then no bread but follow the Lord in the sauor of his law to a setting a true principle of purenesse and grace and loue to renue change thee Rom. 12.9 and to forsake sin with a true abhorring as hell Q. What is the second effect of this legall consternation A. Vnsetting and shaking the prison walles of rotten peace in a sinfull soule I say false secure peace which it takes to her selfe and pleases her selfe in i● when God debarres her of all sound peace Esay 57 vlt. This is a fertile sield to walke in but I will be short A sinners life is his rotten peace both without a law by reasō of his hurrying on frō sin to sin without leasure to call himselfe backe and selfeloue pleasing himselfe in the sight of his eies and the ioy of his heart with or vnder a law by sundry practizes colours 1. By nouzling himselfe vnder flattering meanes such as are quiet and safe sow pillowes threatning no disturbance 2. Withdrawing from stirring ones and resisting them and expelling them as Ahab did Eli●a and Micaiah his two enemies that neuer spake good to him 3. If conuiction assault yet holding it off with obstinate error or profanenesse and colouring with halfe yeelding and shew of consent the heart being rotten The Law of God fights against all these hauing once the soule vpon the hip vantage of terror doth cleare the deluded bribed iudgement stabbes the heart for her long rottennesse and rest in it rends off and sweepes down with the hand and besome of the law all the paper walles and copweb deuices she had spun and vtters it selfe both to her selfe others in deep detestation against the. All that league of a rotten heart with sin self hell danger Esa 28.18 the Lord batters against the hard stones of terror that it may be dasht in pieces And so for the time it holds except the soule shake it off therfore at the worst is infinitely better then all old peace A iust warre is to bee preferred to vniust peace alway and the hardest day of terror to a mans conscience for all his old rex is better then the sweetest he euer had in euill and the pleasures of it Oh his companions his excuses colours and deceits are reuealed to be hellish the curtaine now is opened and he sees them all meer Paint of an harlot to keep him in a spirituall fornication Hee is now so farre from peace that he sees hell gaping vpon him to deuoure him for his sweet pleasures Let the vse be treble First Iudge thy selfe if thou be not yet come thus far that thy false peace is broken off by the law thou art in wofull case the man thou wert wont Oh how few other doe we meet within our Ministery Mē will do much to be well thought of by other men but take no p●ins for the Ministry of Gods law to hunt out their soothing hollow loue of themselues alas why do ye spend time to nouzle your selues in self-loue which ten times might be better spent in bringing ye out of conceit with your selues and abhorring your rotten league that so the Lord might begin to thinke well of ye But men cannot abide to be thought ill of what doe ye thinke amisse of them Euen as the life of banquerouts is to set a good face on it and borrow what they can get and brace it out with their wealth and go braue in apparell till ruine come so heer men occupy with a stock that is none of theirs and yet scorn to haue their states suspected but are as good as the best of all others Oh false peace will bring ye to ruine at last That ye would catch at ye shall neuer get but that ye do so shun ye shall for euer meet with vtter shame with God and men and destruction to your selues Secondly Labor for this worke of the law to pull ye down and bewray your false peace try your selues by this that now yee cry out of all dawbers with vntempered morter false prophets and preachers of peace together with that Arch-false prophet of self-loue and cling to the faithfull and count their wounds Balme as for your owne vainties they haue caused ye to forsake mercy Lastly Let not this be enough that yee are brought thus far till Christ haue wholly expelled that strong man who rules and lockes vp the house in peace and till he bring in a true bottome of peace into yee by sprinkling ye with his blood that speakes better things then that of Abel When this Sherif comes he will fetch out all dwellers in the house and breake open all happy are they to whom the law brings this writ of eiection especially if the other Sherif of the Gospel bring in a new and a sound peace Q. What is the third effect of the Law A. The Spirit of bondage of which see Rom. 8.15 Heb. 2.15 Heb. 12.12 Ye are not come to mount Sinai to those terrors smoke which made Moses himself to say I quake for feare● hell speakes of the first condition vnder the law they were past a Taskmaster and Schoolemaster and were come to mount Sion and to the liberty of the first borne c. But heer he intimates how they came by it Now this differs as much from meer feare as a passage differs from an act The Lord ayming by this to
malignant properties of non members is yrkesome to this body of Communion Yea the LORD hath appointed it to bee so in the very externall Communion of his Church in the ordinance of it that spottes of Assemblyes Goates and Swine bee auoyded much more then in spirituall Communion 2. Cor. 6.14 15. No Communion betweene Christ and Belial light and darknes If thou see a man in whom the Spirit of wisdome dwels not one of another corporation of a dead rotten false carnall sensuall spirit Lo hee is not for thee See 2 Tim. 3.5 There must bee no Marriage betweene Israel and Ashdod no inwardnes b●tween them and those that abhorre Sacraments Gospell Pro. 25.23 Ministery and ordinances As the North wind is to the raine and the face of the Prince to a flattering Ziba so is the Spirit of this Communion to all her opposites I say no to their persons but their properties abiding such Secondly this Preseruing Spirit is also Aggregatiue of like parts to her selfe for the filling vp and strengthening of Communion Shee is still ayming at the bodyes increase and therefore as the waters of the sea winne vpon the bankes so doth this spirit of Communion seeke out and enlarge her borders Shee is like to Dan whose border was too narrow shee gaines still as a conquering army hath towne after towne falling to it so this Spirit both in the Ministery of it and in the other members endeauour after thee winning of more and more to become her Brethren her citizens her friendes no body hath such a faculty at this for the strengthening of her selfe for number for assistance both in gifts and graces as this hath Our Lord Iesus the head of this Communion spent his life in gathering members to this body Peter gathered 3000 at once and each member of it doth or ought to become all in al to gaine some The Angels reioyce in it the blessed Saints do long for the perfect collection of all the members into one and there is no truely borne sonne of God but seeks to get as many as he can out of the world into this fellowship mourning to see what an huge body the malignant Church is to the militant Thi●dly this Spirit is a Preuenting and wary Spirit to de●●ate whatsoeuer attempts might bee made against her Communion either by opposite persons or properties for persons First she doth with very quicke sight espie and iealously avoyd such affronts as threaten her ruine and by the Spirit of Prayer drawes God into a league and combination against them The eylidde is not so tender ouer the eye last any hurt should befall it as this Spirit is of them that plot against the welfare of her Communion See Esay 63.18 19. 64.11 12. where the Prophet in the name of the Church presses the Lord against them long before And so I say Secondly of all contrary properties which doe resist Communion as Harshnesse Suspicion Iealouzy Pryde Wrath Selfeloue Vncharitablenesse c. Q. What is the second to wit the furniture of Communion A. It is that Spirit which furnishes the Church with all such gifts as serue to maintaine Communion Q. What are they A. Many The first and mother grace of all is Loue 1 Cor. 13.2 3 4. Rom. 13.10 and all the graces besides this draw their originall from her shee being giuen for the nonce to nourish the rest to sustaine communion It s nothing else saue a beame of that loue of God to the soule which doth reflect it selfe backe to the Lord himselfe and being vnable to reach him lighteth vpon his Saints that excell in vertue Psal 16.2 It s that which Saint Iohn so magnifies telling vs Iohn 5.1 He that loueth him that begat loues him that is begotten It s that band of perfection Col. 3.14 that holds in all the duties of Communion as the corner stone doth the sides of the wall And it arises from the sight of that Image of Gods grace which shines in his people which rauisheth each other to behold and knitteth each to other in the sence thereof as betokening the excellency of that fountaine whence it comes 1 Sam. 18.1 Ionathans heart was not more knit to Dauid then the Saints each to other It is the soule and life of Communion it is giuen for the vse of the Saints who could neuer endure all things hope all things suffer doe and turne their hand to the works of this fellowship except this instinct of loue caused them to goe to worke But loue makes all sweet Q. What is the second A. Sociablenesse a compound of three cordes not easily broken viz. Amiablenesse Humblenesse and Selfe-deniall Col. 3.15 Amiablenesse is that holy suauity of Spirit which opposes tartnesse austerity sowrenesse and sullennesse whereby men are like ragged vnhewne stones vnmeet to couch in this holy building Contrariwise amiablenesse is a gentle and alluring facility of spirit which both puts forth it selfe to all courteous and gentle behauiour and also draws affection and delight from others Tit. 3.3 Many are so hatefull and hating so dogged churilsh and harsh in their temper that they are indisposed for society more fit to be Monks or Ancorits then Christians through their Timon-like disposition But amiablenesse is that grace that both acts and prouokes all louing offices of Communion Phil. 2.3 Humblenesse is a grace which opposes pride a vice excommunicate from true fellowship of Saints causing men to thinke themselues their parts their persons too good for Communion Rom. 12.16 Humility thinks so meanly of it selfe that it reioyces it may bee compted worthy to bee a doore keeper in this house of Communion and is glad it may bee admitted vnto it It s discerned by these two markes Peaceablenesse and Equalnes both principall pillers in this frame Phil. 2.3 The former resisting Contentiousnesse singularity of opinion Schisme and faction preiudice surmisings censoriousnesse vncharitablenesse and the like Rom. 13.13 11.3 The latter abhorreth all disdaine partiality and want of indifferency in this Communion We say of friendship Either it meets with like or makes like Those vnequalnesses of wealth age parts education and birth learning wit experience superiority greatnesse do vanish in this Communion for it makes all alike not in ciuill respect but in point of membership If it find equality it sanctifies it as betweene Husband and Wife Children Friends Men of like quality Calling State Gifts Magistrates Ministers Tradesmen cutting the sinewes of enuy and planting a most euen likenesse of mind of Spirit and harmony betwixt them But if not yet as the roundnes of the earth reduces al vneuen parts to one figure so this all incongruities dislikes partialities if not to an exact yet to a competent equalnesse and proportion The third grace of Sociablenesse is Selfedeniall Which Paul cals A mynding and seeking of the things of others as well as our owne See these texts Phil. 2.5 1 Cor. 10.33 Phil. 2.4 Let saith
as soone as he liveth for hee must be perfected in the wombe and brought forth and so is a childe of the world hee lived before the life of the wombe but now he lives another life in the light feedeth sleepeth cryeth suckes the breasts So is it here Faith giueth the generation and life to the soule at the first quickning but the birth is not obtained fully till it be brought forth as a new Creature by Renovation then it is declared to haue the true life of God when his image of holinesse declares it Q. Well the Similitude may serue let vs now come to the three heades and first what is the Author of this creation A. The holy Ghost As almost all the Scripture prooueth Two places may serue 1. Cor. 6.11 But ye are washed purged sanctified hy the spirit of our God So Titus 3.5.6 He saued vs by washing of Regeneration and the renuing of the holy Ghost Co● 2.12 And the reason is plaine For euen as it was in the vnion of Christ our head with our flesh the holy Ghost most miraculously did concurre with the matter of conception and did vnite it to God so that one person was made of two natures and by this meanes the Deity infused into the humanity the most excellent purenesse of God and the quallities of light and holinesse so this beeing for vs lo the same spirit takes the same matter of the Lord Iesus his nature and properties and vnites the one and infuses the other into the soules of his people by the worke of the Gospell Not that wee made Christ as some dreame but vnited wholly to his person and thence partake the influences of his graces wisedome and righteousnesse c both in the habite of renouation and in all the holy properties of humblenesse patience loue feare zeale c. As 2. Peter 1.3 most sweetly saith His diuine power ministring all things fit for life and godlinesse and making vs partakers of the diuine nature and gifts of the Spirit And looke how it was in the old Law that the next kinsman to the deceased was both to redeem his lost inheritance if embezeled and then to raise vp seed to him Ruth 4.5 as vnto the first borne euen so in the Gospel the Spirit of God doth not onely recouer vnto vs our lost title and inheritance of Gods fauour by forgiuenesse of our sinnes but also raise vp an holy seed vnto God by begetting in vs his Image againe so that not onely hee becomes our righteousnesse of iustificarion but sanctification also Moreover it 's cleere by this that the Spirit of God concurres with the offer of Christ vnto the soule according as it lyes and neuer seperates the things which God puts together Now as I noted in Part 2. Artic. 4. the Lord offers his Christ wholly and at once not onely adoption and reconcilation to bring vs into fauour but also sanctification to make vt the workemanship of God Yea and in truth the Spirit lookes at this chiefly For although in this life faith to iustifie a sinner is the maine gift because it giues vs the right of grace and heauen and holdes it for vs yet that which faith armes at is the renuing of the Image of God in vs. Onely bec●use we lost it by sin therefore faith in the first place brings and knits vs to God in pardon but the perfection of it is that our lost image in Adam might be restored Now therefore the Spirit doth come and vnite them both together in the soule at once because Christ is not nor cannot be deuided either wee haue him not all or else we enioy him wholly and at once as he is offered in the word Q. I would faine know what workes the Spirit doth for the soule in this new creation of nature and infusion of qualitiess A. He doth two things First perswadeth Secondly sealeth For the first he draweth the soule to be willing to take all Christ at he is offered and to reiect no part of him and succoureth the poore soule in her application of the offer and couenant of grace Hee presenteth to the soules view the meaning of God to keepe backe nothing of his Christ but hee will haue him wholly eaten as a passeouer no bone broken no part left Though perhaps the soule see not the extent of Christ at one view yet the Spirit attends the offer of God in the Word and ceazeth the soule with that gift which God giueth As if a man being to giue his seruant a bone doth not onely reach him a ring which the seruant thinkes enough but a ring with a rich pearle of price set in it The pearle is aboue the hope of the receiuer yet because it 's not aboue the Giuers loue both are taken at once So heere the Spirit shewes the soule what God beteemes wholy tels it there is nothing too much shee shall haue vse of all for one vse or other and therefore let none be refused And this i● doth by the tennor of Gods charter and couenant in the Word See that noted place Who is made of the Father all the 4 Wisedome Sanctification c. Marke the Lord offers not onely righteousnesse to accept but sanctification for image Take all therefore Secondly the Spirit sealeth these to the soule See Mat. 3.11 The Lord Iesus shall baptize with the holy Ghost and fire What is that the very diuine gifts of Christ which as fire do purge and clense our drosse Col. 2.12 and bring forth our mettall as pure and cleane So in Rom. 6.4.5 he tels vs we put on Christ in baptisme and that not onely to couer our nakednesse but to warme vs with holinesse We are not only partakers of the satisfaction of Christ to forgiue vs but of his death to mortifie vs and of his life to quicken vs in both to giue vs his image And by baptisme we are sayd to be ingrafted into the similitude of his death and resurrection This baptisme of the Spirit seales vp the substance of the couenant to al purposes as a seale to a writing confirmes the writing in all points Now marke the tenor of the couenant not onely to pardon our sinnes and to remember our sinnes no more but to wash vs with pure water to write his Law in our hearts and inward partes to cause vs to walke in his wayes and to put his feare into our soules that we neuer depart from him any more And from this spirit of Renuing proceedes the infusion of all diuine graces issuing from his holy nature as loue compassion meeknesse feare confidence doing and suffering for Christ and betokening our conformity Q. I rest in your answer touching the first of these three now proceed to the second what is the inward instrument on the soules part to apprehend this Creation A. Faith sauing and effectuall As appeares in those texts Act. 26.8 To giue them an inheritance among them that are sanctified
sort strongly to conceale the old Like whereto is this to thinke our lusts are mortified because by some violent cause feare penalty or inward terrors they are restained Secondly it 's vse of instruction to all new creatures to wonder Vse 2 that the Lord will accept them to be so and take them after al their refuse stuffe and seruice to old lusts to be new men who would thinke it that the Lord should chuse such defiled Temples of Idols lusts and lewdnesse to dwell in who would thinke he would admit of those nastie sties of vncleane thoughts those cages of pride vncleanesse and self-selfe-loue those powers members of body soule that haue been so defiled to bee weapens of righteousnesse Oh what encouragement is it to old creatures to become new The Lord will melt and alter the property of your old Idols and he will prepare himselfe euen of such mettall vessels of price for euery good work He will admit the captiue woman when shee is pared washt and shauen to be a wife for an Israelite hee wil admit Mary Magdalen Luk. 6. her eyes teares hayre lips and oyntments euen so neere as his owne sacred body and become one with her that was an harlot and abused all these to abomination Oh! how iustly might hee haue for euer left vs to our selues and sworne that no sacrifice should blot out our sinne nor would hee euer take the seruice of a persecutor to bee a preacher Oh those very powers of wit and those affections of loue and ioy which we haue so abused wee should wonder that God will purge the fretting leprosie out of them so far as to be honored by them which yet we cannot deny but he hath except we should lye against the grace of the new creature Thirdly it should admonish all to take heed how they meddle Vse 3 with any true beleeuers in Christ to hurt discourage reproach or persue them Let vs know they are new creatures and the workmanship of God him that defaceth Gods image will God destroy Beware touch not the annoynted of God doe not his image any wrong If a King will leaue him to the punishment of a Traytor who shall race out and deface his image vpon a peece of siluer what shall hee doe to them that deface the liuely image of his holinesse stamped vpon his new Creature doe not descant here and say ye doe not deface them as such but in other respects well but in as much as hee hath honoured them yee shall pay for it that yee haue not counted them precious and delighted in them that honour ye doe not to them as well as that disgrace ye offer them is not done to him is offered to him and if you dare venter to hurt them with a distinction he wil punish you without distinction If the Lord will haue others beware how they deface Vse 4 Gods creatures how much more should his new Creatures beware of defiling themselues Oh! if God haue made ye so beware ye cast not dung in his face and pollute not his image The vilest wretch that liues when hee playes his parts yet if he were the sonne of an holy father he will draw the curtaine ouer his fathers picture as ashamed of himselfe And shall not we tremble to disguize our selues with any dreg of earthlinesse enuie pride and vanity loue of our selues knowing whose Creatures we are Take but the creatures of some proud ambitious ones will they doe any thing distastfull to their makers are they not in all points like them How then dare we to tempt him after whose image wee are created Oh! what a check should it be that any leauen in so much as a mouse-hole to allude to that Iewish curiosity should bee found in vs Remember that charge of Paul Purge out the old leauen therefore 1. Cor. 6. and let vs serue the Lord in the sincerity of a new Creature old things are passed away all things become new new Adam new couenant new Paradise new Ministry new Creation new Lord new Law and all new Shall they who are thus renewed suffer that vnrenued part to get head and to darken and defile the new that euen in them old base dregs should bee obserued to deface the Image of God But more of this in the latter Article Q. Proceed to the vse of the second branch A. If faith be the instrument of this Creation wee heere doe confute the conceite of them that imagine faith to bee a branch of Sanctification Sanctification is so farre from beeing the genus or totum of faith that it differs from it the wide skie Faith is a grace that addes no inherency to the soule but onely serues to receiue a forraigne imputed righteousnesse of another sanctification receiues an infuzed righteousnesse in to the soule faith receiues a righteousnesse of perfection to stand in the sight of God sanctification a righteousnesse in part and imperfect Can then an inherent holinesse bee the cause of an imputed or can an imperfect holinesse bee the cause or genus of a perfect But I must not dwell and I see this error is lately at large confuted Onely this faith and a new Creature being parts of Regeneration and of the Totum of a conuerted one so long as they bee diuiding members they are rather things of a contrarie nature then effects and causes of each other See what I said of their difference in the beginning of this Article Secondly wee learne heere what course Gods people must Vse 5 take to repaire the ruines of their holinesse when it is decayed in them by their falles Satans preuention or the like Run to their faith fetch fire from the hearth of the Lord Iesus his spirit wee are preserued by that of which we consist if the Lord Iesus bee our principle of Regeneration by faith hee by faith must be our sustentation goe to the Promise in thy fals take hold of the strength of Christ in them and compasse not thy selfe with thy owne sparkles thinking to recover thy selfe by thy owne heate but abhorring thy selfe go to a promise and there behold apply Christ thy righteousnesse to pardon thy fals to accept thee in weaknesse to repaire thy strength and then h●e will be thy righteousnesse also of holinesse to enlarge thy grace and by the addition of sweetnesse and love to uphold ●hee in thy course more and more Thou hast not received Christ thy new Creature to create somewhat in thy selfe but to fetch from his fountaine grace for grace daily Iesus Christ yesterday to day and the same for ever Q. What use doe ye make of the third branch Vse 6 A Very speciall And it should first teach us a discerning use betweene all hypocrites and truely renued ones The one may set up the Image of Christ in some of the powers of his soule as in his understanding wit memory in his tongue eares sences and outward members but the renued Creature sets him up
and circumstances according to Christian rules of which see Phil. 4.6 Finally brethren whatsoeuer is pure good of good report c. Also it s a grace teaching him that hath it to keep a decorum in religions and outward conuersation as knowing what his person cōdition wil beare or refuse Lastly how to carry himselfe in the vse of things indifferent without excesse or defect how to vse Christian policy with simplicity purenes of conscience Q. What is Simplicity A. It is a grace of a renued soule looking at truths in the naked nature apprehending and iudging of them without all mixture or corruption of fleshly conceit and wisdome and accordingly desirous to be informed of them as they are and to loue embrace and ensue them accordingly neither looking at the right hand or left I feare that as Satan tempted Eue so he tempt and lead you from the simplicity of the Gospell Q. What is Sincerity or Vprightnesse A. It is a grace of the Soule looking at the actions of Conuersation in respect of their right and true ends and therefore as it oppozeth al hypocrisie which is to do good with a squint look and mixture of our owne ends of credit gaine ease or content so it doth good with a pure ayme at Gods glory the honest discharge of duty and the good of others so as a man may haue good conscience in all things See 1. Cor. 1.12 and Act. 26.1 Iob 1. he abhorred to be an hireling This is called perfection viz. of parts not degrees Q. What is faithfulnesse A It properly respects the due manner of conuersation that it be holy and approouing what is accepted howbeit properly it hath a respect to opposition For as we say of a good and faithfull seruant wee dare trust him with vntold gold meaning although we see them not so this grace is such an honesty as puts God in security not to reuolt from him or warp notwithstanding baytes to allure or terrors to discourage or dangers to deferre either by threats error of the wicked collapsed times or provocations from our own false hearts Reu. 2.13 and Reu. 3.8 Thou hast kept my word and not denyed Mat. 25. Well done good and faithfull seruant It 's also taken for sincerity Act. 16.15 Q. What is integrity and what grace of the soule is it A. An equall and whole vprightnesse of it towards all the Commandements of God without partiality or taking exception Psal 119.6 When I haue respect vnto thy commandements It is contrary to that halting of spirit with God and patchery of a false heart whereby it affords God a maymed sacrifice in some duties forward that come on the right side but such as finde not fauor in our eyes reiecting them Q. What are the Graces of quantity or measure A. They may be referred to two Prosperity and Constancy Q. What is Prosperity A. A grace of the soule compounded of many in a word the welfare of a soule in respect of degrees and measures of grace And it hath three parts first Rootednesse secondly Fruitfulnesse thirdly Growth Rootednesse of the soule is a grace contrary to staggering and slightnesse whereby it is both grounded wel in knowledge for direction of life and setled in grace for full purpose and resolution of obedience See that of 1 Cor. 15. ult unmoveable So elsewhere the word of stablishing and setlednesse in the grace of the Gospell is used Also 11.23 That with full purpose of heart they would cleave to the Lord. Secondly Fruitfulnesse is a grace issuing from rootednesse whereby the soule is abundant in the worke of God and full of the fruits of weldoing The contrary is barrennesse and emptinesse when the soule scants the Lord in his due as if he were an hard Master The effect of it is to auoid unprofitablenesse in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus 2 Pet. 1.8 Read for this grace 1 Cor. 15. ult The third is the fruit of both to wit Groth and encrease For as wee see it to be in trees when they are once well fastned in the earth rooted we looke they should beare fruit and then that in so bearing they waxe and grow in height and bredth and fruite so is it here Groth is a grace of the soule by which it encreases by due steps degrees to that fulnesse of the measure of Christ according to the proportion of the part Ephe. 4.15 Pet. ult Luk. 8.8 And it commonly is the effect of the meanes of grace blessed to the beleeving soule as 1 Pet. 2.2 Now then of these three stands Prosperity which is the spirituall gladnesse and laughter of the thriving soule 3 Iohn 2. Thy soule prospereth that is apparently is fat and well liking in goodnesse as those three children Dan. 1. and as we say the corne and hops laugh upon the ground and poles that beare them And it is a grace of the soule rooted fruitfull and growing whereby it beareth marke in the sight of all Act. 15.23 that it goes well with i● to Godward and is cheerefull full of health vigor and contentment saying thus What I am I would be and wish no better Q. What is Continuance A. A grace of measure in the soule whereby it gives not in nor is faint or weary in weldoing and its contrary to staggering sloth and ease It hath two branches the first is firmenesse and resolution in the truth Col. 4 12. The other respects the course or wheele of conversation and it is either a going on and on from duty to duty with strength and purpose Psal 119.57 and long-breathednesse Psal 84 7. and Heb. 12.1 Run the race with patience set before thee taking alwayes in good part thicke and thin and not fainting in affliction and troubles Or else it is small Perseverance the fruit of the former for by a continuing in well-doing Rom. 2.7 and accounting each day a peece of our journey home at length we attaine the end of our hope and the issue of our faith and combat This grace hath the honour of all the rest not because the rest are inferiour to it but because it hath the lot above all the rest to stand next to the doore of salvation and to let in the soule thither See Mat. 24.13 14. Revel 2.10 And thus much of the Graces qualifying good conversation generally Q. What are the particulars that immediately helpe conversation A. All the sanctifying graces of the spirit of God according to the peculiar use they have in conversation as some are more proper for one use some for another and all for some or other Thus faith is a grace for the just to live by to God in the world hope is a grace to beare up in streights patience in an affliction thankfulnesse in blessings moderation in lawfull liberties innocency and righteousnesse in the common life of men love generally helpes all in a word each grace doth more or lesse serue for the enabling of the soule
life of creation as in these few things may appeare in the well framed constitution of body appeare First Vnion of parts Secondly Order Thirdly Sweetnesse and beauty Fourthly Strength and actiuity Aptnes at the end it serues for But in a dead carcasse together with the absence of the life and soule of reason what appeares saue contrary effects Impotency to all former Operations Genes 6.5 disorder stinch and putrifaction confusion and yerksomenesse The generall then is Destruction of the frame of Nature Rom. 3.23 corruption of the Image of God Touching the parts both faculties and powers of the soule and body it were endlesse to mention all In the minde there is a death of all pure light and knowledge Ephes 5.8 a nakednesse of Gods image in poynt of that ruling and ouerruling power by which shee conueyed direction to all the inferiour faculties will first and then affections and operations now she is both darknesse in her selfe and losse of her birthright to rule other parts vnto darkenesse adde death of iudgement easily receiued in matter of discerning of the natures and truths of things and so also impotency and languor of apprehe●sion dulnesse and inability to conceiue good things Esay 44. ●0 Rom. 7.14 21. and besides this priuatiue indispositio● also a positiue pronen●s and propensity to all eui●l of the mind● I conceits false hereticall erroneous opinions vaine prophane idolatrous vnsauoury imaginations discourses thoughts and iudgements Rom. 8.5 keeping in memory noysome and ●u●tfull obiects So secondly De●th of the will especially Rom. 7.14 in the matter of her subiection to the lore and leauing of the vnderstand●ng then also in her faculty of w●l●ing and nillin● or suspending corruptnesse in the freedome thereo● by meere bondage both vnto sin and by sin a deprauednesse of the chusing facul y and so of ●he rest yea a disposednesse to will onely and continu●lly euill to nill good to suspend onely from good and not euill Iames 4.1 Ecles 7.27 to cl●use euill before good So truely doth the Lord complaine That the whole frame of the soule is onely euill continually To these adde the death of afflictions in poynt of their due direction to the obiects and whole inclination of them to a prepostrous and disordered liking of ●uill dislike of good Ephe. 4.29 Iere. 2.25 a disposition thereof to extremities on either hand either to loue hope sorrow feare pity shame zeale and the rest more then ought to bee or vnder that should be and thereby to ouerthrow the course and order of the whole of the whole conuersation Esa 57. vlt. Ioyne to these the death of the conscience both in respect of her staruing death that she wants matter of excusing peace and conten hauing lost all welfare and the death of her pureness● ●o represent obiects to the soule aright eyther with comfort o● accusatio● not to speake of her pronenesse to be defiled di●abled feared senseless● and slauish according to the corruption of ●he mind both which goe together Tit. 1.15 Rom. 6.8 As to●ching the spirits and the sences and the members there is a de●t● in them of that hability soundnesse vigor and ser●iceablenesse to the soule in good things and a pronenesse and tickling to be vainely and frothily imployed except worse bee offred euen prophanely and vnholily And to conclude there is a death of the person in respect of that right and soueraignety ouer the creatur●s wi●h a sl u●sh pronenesse rather to Idolize them both in the worship of some and the loue or vse of others a declension from Go● and a reuolt to the base creature as Eue did to the forbidden fruit Q Now what is the misery of Actuall sinne A. The deprauednesse and death of all the operations flowing from the soule within or the body without for whereas these resembled the purenesse of the principle at the first lo now they bewray the contrary all confusion disorder ignorance and vnrighteousnesse being broken into them As appeares in this that in the first table the soule departing from God sets vp to her selfe other gods profit pleasure ease worldly lusts worships him after her owne deuices liues as seemeth best to herselfe in her conuersation abhorres his Sabbaths and the like In the second that forsaking the law of righteousnes and sobriety the soule defiles her selfe with disobedience and rebellion to man to vnnatu all cru●ll and vnmercifull carriage to vncleannesse Mat. 15.19 Gala. 5 19 2 Tim. 3.2 3 4 5. Psal 14.2 1 Kin. 8.46 Rom. 3 9 to reuenge to wrath to vniust oppressing defrauding wayes to lyes tricks and slanderous aspertions to a continuall lusting after vnrighteousnes And all these not onely in open acts which are not so vsuall but in the actuall thoughts desires proiects counsels of the heart yeelding consenting thereto and delighting to thinke of talke of to loue and commend sinfull practizes as swearing drunkennesse bebate wrong intemperancy and the like For these are but one of a thousand of those actu●ll sinnes which as sparkles flye vp from the former fornace Not all these in euery m●n but some in one and some in another See 1 Cor. 6.7 Such were yee some of yee c. Q And wherein stands the second generall part of misery to wit of punishment A. In the manifold penalties both of soule and body and those properly expresse that threat of God When thou eatest thou shalt dye the death In the soule first for of all other these are fearefullest because they are sinfull penalties of sinne first an auersenesse from God or from returning to God any more but going from him further and further infinitely Ephe. 4.14 15. Rom. 8.7 Rom. 7.23 2 Cor. 2.14 Cannot c. As a stone cannot melt an insensiblenesse of soule in this double misery a dedolency of heart vtterly and impenitently hardned in it an vncapeablenesse of admitting of any meanes to draw the soule out of misery to any better estate a spirit of resisting and opposition of any such an infinite peaceablenesse and content of heart in the present condition thinking this bondage and hell another liberty and heauen and if berest of it raging as the Beare robbed of her whelpes and so a pronenesse to bee riueted more and more deepely into this woe with lesse and lesse feeling or beleeuing it Now these we must know are of a deeper dye then the former as being cursed of God vpon and against a sinfull Rebell giuing him ouer to himselfe and sealing him to wrath and perdition which though the Lord doth not alwaies enlarge but rather suspend till the due season thereof yet they are all inherent in our corrupt nature Touching the body where shall I beginne or end What languors and diseases are there incident to the body what pouerty basenesse beggery and want to the estate Gene. 2.17 Esay 53.4 what reproch to the name and credit aspersions slaunders dishonour What misery in family in
hold and keepe the soule whō he will saue from all reuolt to former lust liberties The spirit of bondage is the frame of a fearfull heart held vnder slauery and chaynes of the Law from all escaping As we say such a man hath the spirit of mirth or Couetousnes in which he is rooted So in one place a woman is sayd to haue a spirit of infirmity viz. Sealth when her disease had so preuayled ●uer that she was crazed by habit So the spirit of bondage Gal 4.7 is to be as one sold to i● ●hat cannot get out It might bee wondred at that the Lord should vse such a course to do the soule good but considering our cursed base heart which is like the slaue no longer to bee in worke then the whip is vpon the backe it is no marueile Take a similitude Wee know it is one thing to bee rankt in the forlorne band which goes against the Cannon mouth another to bee beleaguered in a City by a long siege The one looke at present danger which when it s ouer they are past it but in the City men are held vnder continuall feare they see the Image of Death before their face ten wayes by famine pestilence Sword heere one wall beaten downe there another heere one slayne there another some dye of famine and threaten the rest to follow so heere to be vnder bondage is to lye vnder chaines as Peter vnder many keepers by which meanes frequent terrors assault dayly more or less● and the soule is held to it as poore Israel vnder bricke and clay Neuer was this Taskemaster of more vse then in these dayes wherein men shunne legall feares as Todes or Serpents or if any come nigh them they shake it off with violence It s yrkesom to the flesh to bee vnder the whip long some way of breaking out of this house of Correction they deuise thinking themselues neuer well till they be at their old liberty out of the hands of so hard a Master But as it is with the breaker of the house of Correction or prison his end is commonly to be hanged so is it with such as despize this remedy of a licentious heart Now for vse of it beware that wee rest not in this feruill state Whatsoeuer the LORD meanes to do by it in time when hee offers the Gospell to the soule sure it is this is no state to rest in For why It differs from true feare as much as from true liberty True feare is the Lodestone to attract the soule to GOD and to acquaint it with GOD thus rather of it selfe dryues it away from God especially if it bee in any excesse Secondly This feare hath a respect to sinne onely as an occasion to punishment as a cause As wee see in the Slaue who lookes not at his Sloth but the whip But the true filiall feare looks at sinne as the proper cause of feare but at punishment as the occasion Thirdly True feare softens this rather hardens and imbitters the heart As wee see both in the examples of Iosiah who melted and Ahab who hardend his heart by his feare and returned to his pranks The feare of a condemned man is an hardner of him but he that heares of a pardon relents at it presently Fourthly It hath excesse in it both for the constant assault of it without intermission in all places dutyes and occasions and also for the dangerous inconuenience it brings after it oft times Hinders all fitnes of spirit both to duty and in duty to calling worship liberty solitarines defiles all and is a speciall sparke to light vpon the sad and melancholique temper of the body which the Deuill seldome fayles in to make it flash vp and blow vp the whole frame of nature yea euen in the godly themselues its a mayne enemy to fayth hope or other graces or duties Fifthly And the truth is looke how the feare of her that played the harlot differs from the loyall wifes so doth this from the feare of the regenerate the one feares danger and hurt from her husband the other reuerences him from loue Saul feared Dauid because he lookt for danger from him no otherwise Let the vse then I say be to take heed lest we rest in it Vse 2 And secondly let none heere stumble at my description of it for although it bee no better in it selfe yet the LORD can moderate qualify and correct it so that it sh●lbe a speciall medicine to prepare the heart for that which lightnes and giddines would disable it from attayning Pray therefore for a moderation of it and a directing it to the end which God int●nds it for and the lesse good is in it of it selfe the more adore his wisdome who vses it to good both in ●he restreint of euill and the preparing of the heart to more stayednes sobriety Q What is the end of GOD in this worke of the Law A. To make way for a sinners reconciliation which otherwise were not possible to worke As soone catch an Hare with a Tabre as a wi●d wi●full sinner by the Charme of the Gospell That woman of Samaria scoffed at Christ telling him the well was deepe and there was no bucket But when he had well tozed her she changed her humour See Ioh. 33.33 If then after long terrors there bee an interpreter one of a 1000 to decla●● to man his R●conciliation he will be good to him and be entreated saying Deliuer him I haue accepted a ransome But how appeares this ● Doubtlesse hitherto appeares no such things in all this tedious Law-course no as the Law is for her vs● so is the Gospell for hers neyther intimating other but oppozite saue in the intent of the ordeyner But if we looke thereat we shall in sundry respects confesse this a most wise and fit way to bring on the remedy First By this meanes GOD ioynes all wholesome Doctrine together For it is not his purpoze to leaue the soule in this case to seeke out of her selfe after ease seeing it s not in her power But hee himselfe will haue his Minister to ioyne all Doctrines together in the order of Catechizme both of remedy and misery in their due order Not because all that heare them can for the present apply them but that heereafter they might and the whiles want nothing which might set them on worke Secondly by this consternation he doth tyre and weary the spirits as in a Labyrinth working thē to an vtter hopelesnes in th●mselues to be better that in such a case the least inkling of mercy might be as newes out of a farre country Thirdly That by the hearesay of it their hearts might be ●●ysed vp to make serious inquisition after it and not to Perish in their misery When the prodigall was brought to huskes at the trough then and neuer till then the notion of a father pierced him rea●ly When those lepers saw their liues past hope they resolued thus If wee
is a sufficient release to him of the offence and punishment The imputing of Adams sinne to vs is as reall as if we had beene in the garden with him Christs taking our guilt vpon him was as reall and as really felt as if himselfe had been the offender And shal not his imputed righteousnesse be as reall as if our selues could in our owne persons haue satisfied or as if we had needed none Yes verily Q. What issueth then from this imputation of God A. The act of God iustifying vs really and freely from all our sinne and guilt and all the curse due thereto Rom. 8.33 quitting vs by proclamation as I may say from heauen by the voyce of his Spirit through faith so that hauing disabled all enemies from giuing in euidence lo he absolueth vs as hauing nothing come in against vs. As once he scattred those accusers of the woman Ioh. 9 so that none came in to accuse her but turned their backs with confusion and so discharged the woman so doth hee heere hauing disabled all euidēce against vs he doth impute blamelesnesse vnto vs and declare to vs our righteousnesse yea proclaiming vs righteous And as the Creditor abhorres to receaue the debt of his debters surety and yet to compt him a debtor still so the Lord hauing accepted Christs price for vs abhorres so to disable his Sons payment as to require the debt at our hands the second time but rather disables his owne Wrath and Iustice from thinking of any further demand of vs. And touching the freedome of it Whereas it might be obiected How can that be his free act which hath such a pryce payd to purchase it I answer no man dare call it free on the behalfe of the Father and Christ for so it s the dearest purchase that the World euer heard of but in respect of both the Father and Christ to vs ward the Father hath freely giuen himselfe content in his Sonne and Christ hath freely yeelded it to the Father so that whatsoeuer it cost Christ it costs vs nothing we may come nay must without our cost with empty hands and buy it for nothing so that in truth the m●re it cost to purchase and the lesse it cost vs to c●m● by the freer is that iustification which absolues vs and the truer is that of Paul Rom. 3.24 Beeing iustified freely by his grace Q. What is the vse hereof A. The Vses are many Let mee begin with you of my owne Congregation to whom although as dead yet I speake this being as you know the last Sermon I preacht among you let I say my admonition vnto you be this It hath not bin with you as with euery Congregation wherein preaching hath beene To you I may truly say That now toward these 56. yeeres the Lord Iesus hath beene crucifyed among you I doubt not but the Lord hath thousands in many Congregations of this land who though they haue wanted that full and cleare light which you haue enioyed yet as faithfull seruants of God walke with him and serue him instantly day and night in simplicity of heart and innocency of life Giue me leaue to say vnto you in this fiue or sixe yeeres past besides Sermons God hath reuiued the Doctrine of Christ Sacraments of selfdeniall faith the satisfaction the imputation of righteousnesse among you and God grant you long to enioy the doctrine and practice of these grounds but what answer shall ye make to God if as he hath walked in and out at large with you in all his truths opening vnto you all these welsprings of saluation and concealing nothing from you which humane weakenesse hath been able to vtter you still shall fayle and come short of such people as I may truly say haue had but the Baptisme of Iohn among them Thus I speake in respect of that cleare light of all Christ both in his satisfaction and Gods imputation in season and out of season vrged vnto you Remember To whom much is giuen of them much will bee required What would many Eunuches Corneliuies and Proselites ignorant of those things that haue beene pind to their sleues giue that the things you haue heard might sound in their eares Why is all this cost but that you might also walke in and out with God in all your wayes not onely in a morall abstinent harmelesse and honest manner which is a great fauour but with a broken and selfedenied heart liuing by fayth dayly in this Imputation of a Satisfaction holding your part in it yesterday to day and for euer Heb. 13.8 Do yee not accompt it one thing to liue by guesse and deuout aymes and another to know your Righteousnes to cleaue to it by a promise to clense your selues by it from all loosenes and priuy lusts to season all your liberties to alieniate and supply your crosses to enable you to all Duties to fructify all meanes to sanctify all estates and to make your death happy and welcome Beware beware lest there bee found among poore people that neuer heard of the Doctrines which thus long haue sounded in your eares many whose Simplicity innocency and zeale equalls if not exceedes yours Oh! let not any of you be found naked at the comming of Christ of this Robe of his or lying at these welsprings without power to taste them be not vnsettled in a Christian course stand fast in your liberty go on with God in all meanes duties and graces yea euen in the hardest times streights and distempers suffer no loue of the earth profit ease lust to eclipse the lustre of the Lord Iesus which hath shined among you But as many of Gods Saints before my parting and since haue dyed with ioy and Triumph by this imputation of Christ so stryue yee and runne yee as yee may ouertake them and none may take away this your crown from you Secondly let this be consolation to all faynt and weake children Vse 1 of God in the fight of thier little grace and meane gifts and in the feares of perseuering to the end For the First tell mee weake soule if I should come and say Thou wert as holy as Iob as vpright as Dauid beleeuing as Abraham zealous as Phinees would it not make thy heart leape within thee Surely although I dare not say these of thee yet I dare say this If all these had not had the Robe of Christs imputed righteousnes cast ouer the holiest of all their Graces their vnhallowednesse had defiled them and the greatest of their holines had not profited thē And lo this Robe thou hast as fully largely and deeply as the best of all these euer had The imputation of God is equall to all his iustified ones one hath no more then another If thou couldst come in and say That Abraham or Peter had more Righteousnes of Imputation to couer them then thou it were somewhat But lo thy Righteousnes of imputation is as large as the largest of theirs If they haue
gathered some more patience some more knowledge some more loue thanks and zeale that others can repeate Sermons or pray better then thou follow thou after them enuy them not hee that had for them hath for thee I say not equall grace what shall it need if it bee sufficient but I assure thee that none hath gathered more Manna then an Homer full .2 Cor. 8.15 so much thou hast and more they haue not then their Homer of the imputed righteousnes Let this ioy thee in thy defects teach thee to honor that God with more more holines who hath honored thee with the equall Righteousnes of his best Seruants And secondly touching thy feare of holding out I say to thee Proue to thy selfe thy faith in this act of Imputation and that thou hast receaued that from God and then I assure thee that eternall Spirit by which the Lord Iesus offred vp himselfe for his elect the weakest as well as the strongest shall also susteine thee It is the stocke which thou art by Imputation implanted into which holdes thee not thou it looke thou to thy receauing fayth and that shall so enable thee by the vertue of the gift receaued that whatsoeuer thy feares now bee that shall vphold thee eternally and when thou art weakest the power of it shall be most magnified in thee Vse 3 Thirdly this point is vse of Instruction vnto vs teaching vs the excellency of the gift of fayth The first respect And first in respect of the Nature of it Other graces of inherence dwell in the soule and are actiue within and vpon the soule more or lesse as patience sobriety c But the Nature of fayth although it be a Gift put into the soule yet standeth rather in a Passiue receptiuenes then an actiuenes it s rather like to a Begger then a Worker the Begger forsaking his bare wals seeks out for his liuing and takes it into himselfe from without the Worker earnes it from the principle of his owne skill There is no grace appointed to that purpose to which faith is viz. out of her home-emptinesse to looke out and to receaue into her selfe from God the vertue of the Lord Iesus by this imputing of righteousnesse scowring her selfe with water of life from his welspring and with wealth from his treasures Secondly in respect of the constancy of it other Graces while they last doe vs great stead as patience vnder a crosse thanks for blessings but faith alwayes recea●●s this imputation of Christ from the Father aswell to couer and beautify vs all our life as at our first conuersion and carries her influence into each grace both to strengthen keep the life of it and also to couer the wants of it yea the defects of our whole course No grace can supply faith properly but faith supplyeth all them For she letteth into them the vertue of the Lord Iesus imputed by the Father to accept couer and purge them all not to speake of the worke of sanctification of which elsewhere Thirdly in respect of the prerogatiue of it that it s admitted ●o be all in all with God for the soule I may say it is that vpon earth in this militant course which Holinesse shall be in Heauen For its faith onely which maintaines Vnion and thereby communion with God She is as the Lords priuy seale thorow whose hands all grants passe and take effect no one promise can be Yea and Amen without her She receaues from God a right to all mercies ordinances and priuiledges concurres with God in this great wo●ke of imputing Christs righteousnesse yea and the Lord dares trust her with her prerogatiue It s sayd Salomon set his mother Bathsheba by him sit●ing on his Throne for shee was safe and would not pull away but ascribe glory to him and compt hers to rest in his So is faith admitted in a sort to doe all vnder God to iustify to impute to reconcile and the rest because shee is made for the nonce she is loyall and made for the honor of God al that can be thinking her selfe safe when she can set the Crowne vpon his head but abhorring all trechery She is a Grace that excels all which Adam euer had because shee hides all her life hopes and welfare with Christ in God he that steales away her treasure must rob the Lord first who keeps it Whereas Adam in the midst of all his perfection yet could keepe no one parcell of it but lost all at once She can both apply the promise offred in Christ and the imputation of righteousnesse from God the Father both at once and hath in a sort a kind of omnipotence with God and so also makes that which comes from her as prayer hearing Sacraments and the like of the same precious effectuall nature with herselfe Vse 4 Fourthly let it prouoke all that partake this imputation to be thankfull to God for his most wise and gracious prouidence that hath cast their portion so in this life that if there be any defect it should be in things of lesse necessity but for those that are most essentiall he is most large and full in his prouision for them I may say the Lord deales for the soules of his people as for the mindes hee hath so written the Scriptures that if any obscurities remaine they are about things of circumstance which are not so absolutely needfull to be knowne but if they be of weight and essence they are left plaine and euident So heere if he faile vs in any grace it is in some fruits of faith as the grace of thankfulnesse loue and ioy which are to be imperfect in this life and so in knowledge of particular cases or the like none of which though we had them could iustify vs but as for the grace of reconciliation and imputation of perfect righteousnesse which onely can accept vs and pardon vs and couer all our wants this he hath prouided to the full for vs euen in this life to enioy I say in the midst of all imperfection yet the perfection of that which cannot bee wanted hee hath giuen vs. Yea and this hee will haue his people to know although it is the bane of hypocrites Yet it is the cordiall of each poore beleeuer Dogges onely will snap at it to maintaine themselues in a licentious course but the beleeuer will blesse God fot it and bee so farre from laying it in his owne way as a block of Presumption that rather hee will say If the LORD hath so regarded mee as to accompt mee his perfect righteousnesse in the midst of my vnauoydable corruptions of Nature and life Shall I turne his grace into wantonnesse or shall not I keep all wilfull wickednesse from his eyes who hath turned his eye from all my transgressions Fifthly let it bee a ground of Selfe-deniall to Vse 5 vs As wee would obtaine this Righteousnesse of another so let vs bee naked of our selves I remember what
is written of that Worthy Learned and Holy Scot Master Rollock in his life That beeing on his death-bed and much encouraged by them that visited him by his worthy labours I abhorre saith hee my Rectorship of Vniversity Readership of Diuinity and Pastorship of Edenburgh all which with great profit to all hee vnderwent that I may bee found in Christ clothed with his righteousnesse all myne owne is dung in comparison of this The fourth Article Question PRoceed to the fourth Article shew what it is and the Coherence thereof with the former A. It layes forth the meane or way by which ordinarily the Lord exhibits vnto and settles vpon the poore sinner this deliuerance As touching the coherence as in the two former Articles the fountaine in God and the foundation of it in Christ is described so in this fourth is shewed how the soule may know them both to bee heere It s said Heb. 4.13 That God with whom wee haue to doe is a Searcher c. Note it The soule in her distresse hath to doe with God to his Tribunall she stands hearing her Iudge Now it is not the hearing of his giuing of Christ nor of a satisfaction which can quiet her but this that shee may know its giuen and performed for her Heere therefore in this fourth Article I say The offended Father hath accepted this satisfaction is well pleased with it his heart is made placable by it and now his heart is opened and his bosome of loue bared towards a poore wretch and this hee vtters by a proclamation and by an offer of grace to them if they will beleeue him to meane as he speakes See 2 Cor. 5.20 21. Him that knew no sinne he made sinne c. And what of this Therefore he saith Be reconciled to God Now when the soule heares of this ground and building she feeles her selfe to haue somewhat to say for her selfe in this her dealing with God I thanke thee O Lord for granting it and for the pryce payd but now seeing thou hast done it that in thy being satisfied I might haue my part in it as offred and pind to my sleeue when I see a thing more precious then the world laid in my lap by thy hand I tremble to thinke I should refuse my owne saluation Q. Because this point is large therefore lay downe some particulars to vnfold it And first what is this meane by which GOD reueales this deliuerance A. The Gospell in the Ministery of reconciliation is the instrument of this Reuelation and that both fully and onely The point is plaine all the Word witnesseth it Paul tels vs that when the loue of GOD appeared then hee saued vs This appearance is the light of the Gospell and the arising of the day starre thereby in the heart Reade by name 2 Cor. 4.6 GOD that commanded light to shine out of darkenesse hath shined into our hearts See the place Briefly hence it is that it s called the power of GOD to Saluation Rom. 1.16 See Matthew 13.44 2 Cor. 3. vlt. The field in which this pearle is hidden the Mirror in which wee behold the LORD with open face the Net inclozing the fishes the Light the Leauen c. Now yet this Gospell is not the meane in respect of the bare letters and syllables of it but in the Ministery of Reconciliation See 2 Cor. 3.8 9. where Paul cals it the Ministration of Righteousnesse and adornes it with termes of honour aboue the Lawes Ministery Especially See that 2 Cor. 5.17 18. Where Paul speaking of this great gift of Christ twise ioynes this with it And hee hath made vs Ministers of Reconciliation as if this were a materiall point Wee the Ministers of God beseech you bee reconciled receaue not the grace of God in vaine As who say It were a great helpe to our Faith to consider GOD hath sealed Ministers to engage their truth for God that if God do not meane as hee speakes we are lyers And lastly this is the onely ordinary way of reu●●ling ordinary I say because what God can doe wee speake not and no other So that if God reuealed not himselfe thus to his Church wee should remayne as blind as Moles in the earth As wee had neuer knowne sinne but by the Law so neyther Grace but by the Gospell See Iohn 1.17 Nay much more For although both stand in Reuelation yet there is more of the Law left in our ruinous nature then of the Gospell no one sparkle of the latter is in vs by nature it stands meerly in Reuealing Hence Paul so oft presseth it as a Mystery hidden from the foundations of the World ● Tim. 19.10 till now the Gospell vnueyled the Curtaine And although the Lord reuealed this in a darke sort and within narrow bounds and in sundry sorts in times past according to their capacity yet now onely by this meane of his Sonne in the Gospell Heb. 1.1 Q. But is there not some peculiar thing in the Gospell by which he reueales it A. Yes And that is his gracious offer made to the soule therein which is nothing else but the expression of the Couenant of Grace that hee is willing a poore soule may come to him without doubting and feare because hee holds out this Golden Scepter vnto it and bids it Be reconciled Hither refer all those textes wherein this offer is made both in the couenant and in the seale of Baptisme Esay 55.1 He euery one that thirsteth come And Let him that thirsteth drinke freely Reu. 22.17 and Iohn 7.37 In the great day of the feast Iesus cryed If any man thirst let him come So that as a Prince hauing set vp his Proclamation in all places intimates his mind so the Lord by this Tender of Christ is acquitted from all aspersion of vnbeteamingnesse Especially if wee consider those cordes of his loue by which he drawes the soule to see his meaning sometimes by his inuitings to this feast of his Sonne sometimes by his contestations as Esay 55.2 Sometimes by his entreaties and earnest exhortings sometimes by his allurements Gen. 9.26 H●s 2.14 to perswade and toll on the heart that hangs off by the promises of all the good things which he offreth Sometimes by his mournings and passionate lamentations Math. 23. vlt. Ioh. 3.19 Mar. 16.16 Sometimes by his seuere threats to all that ref●ze his offers all these shew how willing and cordiall hee is to part with his grace Not to adde the freedome the fulnes the simplicity the vnchangeablenes the fidelity the strength and ability to make good ●hat which he offers all which are the ingredients of his offer and promise and lastly sometimes by the vniuersality of it that he dispenceth it without all respect of persons age sexes states and conditions who exempt not themselues But the especiall properties of the offer to be noted for our purpose are three first Libertie secondly simplicity and thirdly fidelity First Liberty that he doth
and not looke at him It fell so out at length that he met him in such a narrow lane as he could not balke him but must needs talke with him The good Merchant takes him to him and told him he was glad he had met him he wondred what he meant so to decline from him What said he do you thinke me your enemy If I were could I not crush yee with a word speaking Alas I am not offended with you if you be not with me for all your treachery but forgiue and forget it The words of this man so pierced the Coblers heart that it brake instantly and hee falling downe vpon his knees and with bitter reares confessed his villainy and repenting of it told him This loue should for euer bind him vnto him and so he continued This base Papist is the heart of euery child of old Adam this royall Merchant is the Lord this narrow lane is the streight of conscience beset with sinne and curse this kind behauiour is this offer of Grace Let vs not bee worse to it then a cankred Papist but breake our hearts and melt into teares and with Saul to Dauid say Where shall a man find such loue 1 Sam. 24.19 as to spare his enemy when hee had him in his hand and to bee content to cut off the lap of a Garment when hee might haue cut my throate Breake thy heart in the bosome of this loue Q Is there any more vses of it A. Touching the maine vse of faith I shall finish the Vse 6 last Article with it God willing Yet this one more let mee adde That wee learne hence to vnderstand the Couenant of God and the promise of grace as it is in it selfe not a bare naked thing but filled with all the strength mercy Iustice and faythfulnes of the Promiser And so doing pray the Lord to write it in thy soule The offer of God thou seest is f●unded vpon a satisfaction as in the second Article I sayd and what then Surely it hath the full strength of it therein It hath made the Father well pleased Conceaue then that in this offer the Lord is voyd of anger as he sayth Esay 27.3 Anger is not in me I● I were angry What should dry stubble doe But I am reconciled I cannot now be angry with a poore soule I haue taken order to answer my Iustice by my Sonne and in so doing I meant no more to bee angry If I were it was for a time to humble an hard heart but then with euerlasting mercy I will compasse thee I haue toucht this already before Onely marke this that all that is in a promise or an offer is little enough to settle a poore soule being in her feares Therefore be able to say A promise is no empty thing it proceedes from a GOD satisfied therefore If I perish by beleeuing bee it so I will perish Q What is the most proper adiunct of the Church of Christ A. Communion of Saints or members of this mysticall body of Christ which is nothing else but the due enter course holy fellowship reciprocally betweene member and member for the good of the whole Read Ephes 4. vers 12 13. Psal 133.1 2 3. Q How many things are we to consider in this Communion of members in the Church A. Two things first due qualifying of the persons that are to communicate Secondly due exercise of Communion among them that are so qualified Both intimated in that text Psal 133.1 They must be brethren And these Brethren must dwell euen together Q. Wherein stands this Qualification A. Generally in this that they bee Brethren No sooner is a man a beleeuer and a new Creature borne to GOD but hee is also a brother or she a sister of those that are bredde both Relations goe together So then first thou must bee a member of this body a citizen of this Ierusalem a sonne and daughter of the Almighty and a sister of the Church a free denizon of this corporation or else thou art not so much as generally qualified Touching the grounds of this I will not heere preuent my selfe for I shall handle the point of fayth and the New creature in their places onely heere I say in these this qualification consists No bastard no Gibeonite no stranger no blemisht one may enter the Temple of this Communion Secondly and more specially that they haue the true spirit of Brethren of members by which the former is manifested to be true For all that are truly borne children and legitimate haue the true spirit of such and also of brethren this Spirit of Communion therefore is the tryall of sound ones from Countetfeits Q. Shew then some markes of this Spirit of Communion A. As the Philosophers say There is a soule of the world which holds together the parts so much more there is a Spirit of Communion which vnites the members of it As the parts of the body of man would loosen and fall asunder if there were not instruments of sinewes of muscles of ligaments aptly ioyning them so heere This Spirit of Communion then is the same with the Spirit of vnion though in a seuerall consideration hee that is one with God that begat 1. Ioh. 5.1 is one with them that are begotten and the one issueth from the other But to the point this Spirit of Communion may bee discouered in these two particulars First In the spirit of preseruing her selfe in her estate and integrity Secondly In the spirit of Furniture for the seuerall operations whereby Communion may be supported Q. What is the former of these viz. Preseruing of Communion A. It s a qualification whereby it is with the members of this mysticall body as it is with all other bodies eyther Naturall or politique it hath an instinct giuen vnto it to preserue her selfe in her estate from dissolution and ruine No body hath so close neere a Sympathy to it selfe as this nothing need teach any liuing member in the body to preserue it selfe and the body in which it subsists instinct doth it alone So heere for the opening whereof consider these few things First This spirit of Selfe-preseruation in the Church is the spirit of Separation of different or contrary parts which threaten ruine to her Metals melted will goe together and vnite their substance but seuer the drosse which is of another nature from incorporating with them Psal 15. The Citizen of the heauenly Ierusalem is brought in by his loathing quality he loathes Swearers lyers forswearers vsurers and so of the rest the scope is a true member of Communion discernes a non-member a Neuter and loaths to intermixe or vnite with them As Peter told Simon Magus Act. 8.21 Thou hast neyther part nor fellowship in this body They may thrust in themselues into fellowship vndiscerned but so farre as they are knowne the Spirit of Communion segregates them from her selfe No Colliers trade is so noysome to a Fullers as the
thorow the cloud of meane estate learning parts it lookes narrowly and spyes oftentimes great grace in a meane man for attire for carriage and f●●hion The Spirit of Grace carries the eye of the humble to the treasure where it lyes lye it neuer so close and low Againe humble ones are both fitter to commun●cate and to receaue The former because they thinke they can fall no lower nor lose any great credit for they haue no great thing to lose Hence it is that when selfeloue will chuze to haue no prayer at all then to forfeit her repute humblenesse will trust God with her selfe and pray The latter because being empty they are hungry and the hungry are gla● of any thing Eagles catch no Flyes but meane ones stoope to meane things They are truly seruants of the Seruants of God Not that an humble man denies the grace of God but because he conceaues that eyther hee is indeed the meanest of others in grace or else that his better graces dwell not so well as other mens because darkned with more corruptions then other mens smaller The humble Christian is in loue with the Graces of others and out of loue with himselfe Hee enuies not slights not others hee sees the vncomely parts often more graced then the comely and beholds a pearle as of patience wise speech cheerfulnesse mercy loue euen in the dunghill of the meanest outside Shee knowes her owne vilenes and wonders if any thing can come from such a one but others she knowes not and therfore what she sees vncomely she hides but beleeues that excellency in them which she sees not Q. What else is required A. Thirdly coueting of each others graces 1 Cor. 12.31 Couet the things that are most excellent Especially those wherein others excell vs most Appetite after the graces of cōmunion is the instinct of Gods Spirit for the growth of graces Many dwell much vpon any gift they haue to improove it but they see not where the hedge is lowest to amend it Coueting then is to esteeme the good for that which is precious in them and to seeke it earnestly Pro. 19.22 That which is desireable in a man is his goodnesse As Abraham said to the King of Sodom Gen. 14.21 Giue me the soules take thou the prey so the hungry heart couets communion for graces other things shee seekes in other places riches and pleasure and the like but Grace shee seekes where the Spirit of Grace lyes Men that hunt the Bezor seeke not her flesh but that which is precious in her the stone which is so cordiall Base respects are nothing to the Saints in comparison of this Iewell And this they seeke couetously as Paul Phil. 3. If by any meanes I might attaine c. And indeed it s the onely meane to procure it for who knowing the price of grace will helpe them to it who are indifferent whether they haue it or not The Lord Iesus when hee saw the poore woman would not giue him ouer till shee had her desire powred out all his treasure vpon her Matthew 15.28 And so importunity is a maine helpe to communion in graces Q. What is the last meane to attaine grace A. A gift to extract it out of such as haue it in them Salomon saith Pro. 20.6 There is wisedome in the heart of the Wise and a man of vnderstanding will get it out There must be a deep bucket to diue into a deep well to fetch out the water of it The skilfull Chymist or Apothecary knowes what Oyle what Salt what Q●intessence lyes in the Minerals Spices or Herbs and applyes his Art to extract and purchase them That Shunamite rested not in the staff which Gohazi had she would haue the skill of the Prophet So doth each Christian applyes himselfe to extract the gift of another as Elisha 2 King 4.30.34 Layed eies to eies and face to face of the child whom he restored Some excell in this more then others Delila lay at Samson till hee had told her his whole heart So shouldst thou that seekest the grace of others First by putting thy case in their pe●sons whom thou tradest with As If thou wouldst learne what patience in sicknes and payne is or how thou mightst dye well aske others How would you doe in this case make mine your owne Secondly obserue wisely what falles from the godly in their communion and conuerse ouersee not their words behauiours affections zeale scopes Watch thē narrowly as Benhadads men did Ahabs Yea obserue the speciall seasons wherein such grace may be gayned and redeeme them eyther in publique or priuate ordinarily or extraordinarily Speciall opportunities affoord speciall enlargements Thirdly let faith be the chiefe Extractor Beleeue the graces of the body to be giuen for thy vse not onely in the ordinances but euen in priuate conuerse All things are yours 1. Cor. ● 21 saith Paul meaning all Graces in all the members it s a great help of profiting whenas wee beleeue all the Graces of others are ours allotted vs by priuiledge from Christ whose we are Fourthly Rest not onely in the outward obiect but pierce into the inward There is more in a Saint then a bare Sentence or carriage will expresse Looke into the bottome as the Cherub into the Mercy-seate The Spirit of faith 1. Pet. 1.12 humblenes hope in a Christian is a differing thing from prayer or Speech in the family the wisdome meeknes of a woman appears rather in the frame and spirit of her course and constant walking then in her words or outside Pro. 18.4 The treasure of the wise is in their hearts Begge of the Lord skill in this mystery till thou canst say I thanke God I discerne in s●ch a sicke man the spirit of patience susteyning him in another that prayeth the Spirit of humblenesse feeling in a third of Sobirety loue Compassion an heart aboue the Earth c. Fifthly Bee wise to chuse thy obiect Each man excels not in each grace or gift And when wee meete not with that wee looke for wee thinke meanly of mē as Naaman did being crossed by Elisha 2. King 5.12 But the Graces of God are to be marked as they be most eminent as in Moses his mickenes in Phinees zeal● in Abraham fayth Rom. 12.4 The eye lookes not at the foot to reach a thing but at the hand nor at the hand to go but at the foote Acknowledge this peculiarnesse and profit by it Fiftly Although thou extract not at the first what thou desirest yet wayt still to see more But if thou get that thou seekest blesse God and be satisfied and thankfull as Paul I haue enough I am full I haue receiued the fruit of your loue a sweet sauour Phil. 4. And looke what wee freely receaue that freely beteame to others that the Graces of the Spirit may neuer lye dead in the banque of Cōmunion but still runne fresh and be of vse for the good of the body Yea vse
not onely extending to themselues but euen reaching beyond the Sphere of Spirituall Communion to those that be without and that both strangers and home-dwellers yet with caution For wee see that many will giue to strangers whom they neuer saw double to that which they will allow to knowne poore And this is the disease of wretched people not onely in point of mercy to poore but euen respect and reuerence to others A stranger vnknowne shall find double respect aboue them we know For why as they sayd of our Sauiour We know him whence he is So that it is a great argument with base people for honour that they know not him whom they esteeme A signe of an Idolike not religious regard But secondly and especially to the poore that liue with vs. No doubt that good Samaritane who tooke out two pence for the releef of a Iew would haue giuen six for one of his owne poore Luk. 10.35 And although there be not grace in all yea in few such yet heerein the common band of Creation mooues pitty towards the miserable especially in case of streight and extremity The dew of Zion refreshes Hermon Psal 133.3 and the mercy of Spirituall Communion extends beyond the good euen to heape hot coales of fire vpon the bad Q. But what seruice of Communion concernes the bodies of the poore members of Christ A. The seruice of mercy and compassion Sometime in the infancy of the Church it hath beene aboue ability Act. 4.34 35 36 37. When the goods of some were sold and the Church had all things in common And afterward wee see the Church had very speciall care of her poore appointing Officers for the purpose that is Deacons Act. 6. yea Paul made it one of his peculiar Seruices that the poore might be releeued both at home and abroad especially Ierusalem See 1 Cor. 16.2 Rom. 15.25 Not to cite those infinite Scriptures which presse this duty and that not by law and compulsion but voluntarily and that not in a slight measure but according to each giuers ability and receauers necessity 2 Cor. 8.12 13.14 It was one of Dauids prayers That there might be no complayning in our streets Psal 144.14 The streets of the Church should not swarme with beggers but prouision should be made for a supply and such an enormity must bee duly preuented in the Church Not onely when the states of Christians are sunke but euen before when they are in sinking in which season one shilling will go further then ten after Thus Dorcas not in one kind Act. 9.39 but in many was helpfull to the Bodies of the Saints clothing their nakednesse feeding their hunger c. So Matthew 35. Our Sauiour reaches it to visiting them in prison releeuing them in their suffrings especially for Christ Infinite it were to name the particulars Q. And is there no other seruice of Communion to the Bodies of these members saue onely in case of pouerty A. Yes verily euen to the bodies and outward man of all sorts in this Communion for the attaining of the chiefe ends of Spirituall fellowship the more easily Of this nature are frequent conuersings of the Saints together the more liberall vse of the Creatures and the like Those Nutmegs and Rases of Ginger and bowed groats and gilt pence which the imprisoned Martyrs sent out of prison heere and there shall rise vp in Iudgement against the vnkynde degenerate age we liue in in this behalfe Q. What seruices concerne the Soules of the faithfull A. Briefly besides all that I haue said before the Spirituall Seruices of Holy example sauory instruction admonition reproofe correction of errors exhortation and quickening to holinesse comfort in heauinesse sicknesse and distresse and in each Spirituall respect wherein member may be vsefull to member Iob 4.2 3 4. Iob 20.2 3. Of which seeing I spake before in the point of ordinances I repeat nothing Onely know that Seruiceablenesse in this kind is not onely to be exercised in the ordinances but apart euen in a priuate Communion Obiections I know there are many which a selfe louing heart may alledge against these First That this worke is meeter for the Minister then the people Secondly That knowledge is now rise among men what need therefore such ado Thirdly Men care not for our reproofes admonitions they will not heare vs. Fourthly Wee haue no leasure for such seruice from our owne businesse Fiftly We must not be buzy-bodies Sixtly We are not gifted for it 1 Pet. 2.9 1 Cor. 8.1 I answer to the first All the Lords people are a Royall Priesthood To the second knowledge puffeth vp loue edifies To the third let vs not kill our brother because he● is wilfull if we doe our dutie we haue saued our owne soule it is the little practice of Reproofe and Admonition which make them so vnwelcome To the fourth we haue leasure enough to buy and sell our neighbour but not to serue him in loue To the fifth he that forbids buzy bodinesse commands vs not to be slothfull in Gods buzinesse Rom. 12.11 To the sixth I say He that is willing and louing hath commonly skill enough and yet it is no plea to excuse one fault by a worse For God requires that all his be qualified with wisedome and skill to speake and to know their places obserue the best opportunities for his ends as well as for our owne matters And thus I haue shadowed out this doctrine of Communion And ere I come to the vse of the whole Article this I would say Oh how is it to be lamented now a dayes that as he said Rome could scarce be found in Rome so scarce a shadow of Communion is to be seene among Professors As for Communion in graces it is gone and not mist no more appearing among common Christians then an acre or two of land in a Map of a Countrey As for the tyes of ordinances how few are there whom the Sacred band thereof tyes to the seruices of Communion and as for duties let vs but marke what the loue of people in their Congregations is towards the heads of Communion I meane such Ministers as haue spent themselues for their soules and by that Scantling iudge what other Communion there is among themselues The fifth Article Question VVHat is the fifth Article A. It is this That the Lord offring Christ to the soule doth not offer him nakedly and barely but furnisht with all the benefits of his satisfaction So that in this point we are to consider what the parcels of those good things are which the Lord reaches to his Church in the gift of his Sonne If a Prince come vnder a subiects roofe hee comes not empty and bare but with all his bounty and leaues the markes of his presence behind him So heere The Father offring Christ would not haue vs thinke him to be a dry and bare gift but a rich Cabinet of all choise Iewels of good things that so it might be
told them of a sonne for how could this and that stand together Nay wait vpon God and presse vpon him by prayer to performe his promise vpon this condition Elisha being to forgo his Master asked him that his spirit might be doubled vpon him Elia told him it was hard to grant howbeit if he saw him at their parting he should Now what did Elisha did he start from him Could any thing deuide him No he would be sure to keep the condition of the grant and so did For seeing Elia to ascend he cryed My father my father the Horsemen of Israel and the Chariots thereof and so in taking vp the cloake of his Master hee receaued his Spirit doubled Oh that this wisedome were in vs Rather the sinne of our hearers is after they haue spent a great part of their life in getting the condition they are so farre from heartening themselues to beleeue that God will perfect the worke of faith with power that they are ready to float betweene these two the Condition and the Performance If they be vrged to beleeue they fly to the condition saying yea if I had the condition but I am farre from mourning c. If they be vrged to the condition then they answer yea if I could beleeue as if these were works of our owne not the Lords rather the one contrary to the other then agreeable I end therefore with this caueat Let not the Deuill deceaue thee about thy condition and then hold what thou hast and let nothing so beguile thee as to deny Gods grace and so doing plead with the Lord humbly that he would not frustrate thy hope of which hee hath giuen thee such a pledge and in his best seasō he wil assuredly answer thee Q. Now come to the latter branch What is it to cast the soule vpon a promise or to beleeue A. It is the last worke of the Calling Spirit of GOD wherby an humbled sinner doth cast himselfe vpon this Word of God Be reconciled come and drinke come and I will ease you or the like offer will charge or promise of God for pardon and life This point is of all others the chiefe and therefore I choze to refer it to this place as the vse of all that hath beene spoken ioyntly considered for wee know a fiuefold cord is not easily broken and yet no one twist thereof might well bee spared Fiue diuers grounds haue beene handled in this second part First God the Father our enemy hath cut off his plea and found out our deliuerance Secondly The Lord Iesus accordingly hath satisfied the iustice of God that mercy might haue free course by the procuring of a righteousnes Thirdly God the Father accepts this for a poore sinner as if hee in person had satisfied and therefore offers it to the soule most vnfeignedly without hooke or crooke Fourthly He offers him not nakedly but with all his rich furniture to draw the soule to fasten vpon him Fifthly He offers him to each poore member of his Church there to dwell for euer both in grace and Glory Now conclude I demand what one linke of all this chaine were not strong enough to draw the heart to settle it selfe vpon it And yet I must say this That the Word promise of God is the immediate thing which faith relyes vpon although strengthened with all the rest A little therefore of the nature of this promise Q. How many things are required to this consideration A. Two in generall The one to gage the promise and offer of God as a mariner would sound the depth of the Sea lest his ship should be on ground to see whether it be able to beare the weight of the soule or no and answer all her distempers and feares fully The second if it appeare that it is able to susteine it then to rely and cast it selfe vpon it confidently for her owne pardon and saluation Q. How shall the soule rightly gage the depth and strength of the offer and promise which it cannot reach A. Although the mariner cannot himselfe by his owne fadom touch the bottome of the Sea yet by his line and plummet hee can sound it as well as if hee could reach it with his hand and so fasten his Anchor vpon it so heere the plummet and cable of the Word wherein this strength and depth lyes will helpe vs to find it out so farre as may serue our turne The hand of fayth touches the depth of mercy conteined in the offer by the direction of the Spirit in the Word which tells vs what is contained therein Q How many things are conteyned in it A. Many things of which by the way I gaue a touch in Article three but heere I will open further Looke thither and see what I sayd of the freedome and Simplicity of the offer Now adde more touching the nature of the Word of promise which is Gods expression of the offer at the full Three things then the soule must looke at to bottome it selfe vpon the promise of Reconciliation and deliuerance First The wisedome of the Lord. Secondly The strength Thirdly The faythfulnes all which as sure grounds the Lord hath hidden in the promise of mercy to a poore sinner that is vnder the condition Q. What is the first the wisedome of GOD in the promise A. I may say of it as the Holy Ghost sayd of Salomon when hee called for a Sword to cut the Child All Israel sawe that God hath put the spirit of wisedome into him to doe iustice So God hath shewed all wisedome in the promise to settle the soule And that in two respects first of himselfe secondly of vs In respect of himselfe because in reuealing his heart of loue to the soule onely heerby and no other way he teacheth vs that he who is God onely wise 1 Tim. 1.17 could in the depth of his counsell find out no other way so wise and sufficient as this to ground the soule in sure peace towards him Christ and the promise in him was that which seemed the wisest of all wayes in the thought of God especially to vs vnder the Gospell See Heb. 1.1 After sundry wayes the Lord spake to our Fathers in darke times as dreames Vrim visions but now by his Sonne and Word the engrauen forme c. Note how this course is called the best and wisest and holdingest of all as hauing more in it then all the rest Oh! we would thinke in our shallownes that one from the dead Angels or reuelations were better But wisedome it selfe hath pitcht vpon this way all things considred as the wisest of 〈◊〉 Secondly in respect of vs For it is suche way as call●● vs to fayth a promise hauing relation to beleeuing it without wch it cannot profit vs. Now if it bee without vs how w●●e a way is it to quash and dampe our base spirit of Selfe-conceit and selfe endeauor and to abase our pride that he who boasteth might boast in the
by faith in me Note the phrase Iustification is much ascribed to faith As Act. 13.38 Rom. 5.1 Rom. 3.25 but heere sanctification also So Act. 15. Hauing purified their hearts by faith 1. Pet. 1.22 And Saint Peter Hauing purified your harts by faith to the obedience of the Gospell Yea the Apostle Paul Ephes 1.13 seems to make faith to bee the instrument of the spirit sealing the soule After ye had beleeued ye were sealed by the spirit of promise faith attending the Spirit in beleeuing the promise it selfe doth further attend also the seale of it and applies both to the soule The reason is because although the seale is aboue a word yet it 's by a word and with it and not else Q But here it a great scruple how faith should be the apprehender of both these at once viz forgiuenesse of sinne and renuing of the soule For who sees not how wide a difference there is betweene receauing a thing without vs as imputation of righteousnesse and a thing really inherent in our natures as the image of God and renouation A. I grant the point needeth due consideration yet as the Lord shall guide me I will endeauour to answer it And seeing the truth hereof is as cleere in the Scrip●ure as any one therefore the manner thereof wil the better be found out To this end note that faith being the instrument of the spirit in both the acts of regeneration I meane reconciling and renuing doth of necessity attend the worke of the spirit in both If then it be true which I sayd that the spirit reades a lecture of the Couenant to the Soule according to the whole purpose thereof then needes must faith do likewise euen follow the direction of the spirit in applying them equally to her selfe for faith is as the eye of the handmaid to the Mistres that is do that which the spirit suggesteth and takes all which the Lord offers her euen the Lord Iesus at once and wholly If the spirit say take Christ both for pardon and sanctification lo it takes him for both together of the former there is no doubt Let vs see for the latter Eph. 1.18 the Apostle prayes that the eyes of the mindes being enlightned by faith they might ver 19 20. see the exceeding powerfull and mighty worke of the Lord Iesus in them that beleeue that is wha● hee can doe by the power of his death and resurrection So in Eph. 3. end he praies that they might haue Christ dwel in their harts by faith that so they might comprehend his length and depth that is take him as hee is to the soule and haue the knowledge of him that passeth all knowledge beeing filled with his fulnesse So that faith takes the Lord Iesus in his fulnesse that shee might bee compleate in him both for mercy and sanctification So if we looke Ioh. 17. vlt. As thou O Father art in mee and I in thee so thy loue may be in them and I in them Marke Christ is not onely offred to the elect to be for them in pardon but to be in them to dwell to rule to comand to exercise power ouercorruption and for gouernment to bee as a soule in the body to act guide and beare sway in them as the branches in the vine out of which they wither so that the promise offers Christ both for vnion of reconciliation and also Communion and influence of grace In both which she takes him for he is not diuided a pearle is little worth being broken Now then looke how the hand of the Prophet was vpon the Kings in shoo●ing so is the hand of the Spirit vpon the soule in beleeuing and as the hand of the writer vpon the learner to frame it his way so is the spirit vpon faiths hand And as the wax takes all the who●e print of the seale so doth faith of the promise by the hand of the spirit So that although its certaine that nothing is more vnlike than the things themselues which faith applies in the manner of apllication the one taking a grace onely imputed and resting onely in the act of God casting forgiuenesse vpon the soule without any addition of inherent goodnesse to it the other taking Christ as infused and dwelling in the powers of the soule yet this puts no difference vpon the apprehension of faith seeing with one hand and one act both the Lord offers them the Spirit ioynes them the soule beleeues them The spirit is that which doth order these two benefits and settles them vpon the soule and in the soule but faith with one hand and act doth receiue them according to the seuerall vse and seruice as the spirit pleases to apply them It pleases the law to conveigh a Copy-hold by Court roll and a free hold by other conveyance of writing seale deliuery and possession but the same hand takes the copy and receaues the liuery and season So heere Q. What doth faith in the application of this Gift of Reneuation or the new creature A. Two things It workes the heart to be renued by an argumentation See 2. Cor. 5.14 For the loue of Christ constraineth vs because wee thus iudge c. Marke faith iudges the matter aright and passes a sound verduict vpon it If Christ haue so loued vs how should our soules earne toward him in all conformity to his blessed nature faith is in this as in all other respects a deepe Logician shee argues for God strongly shee brings euidence vnanswerable for him that as a she carries about her the marke of a diuine cause beeing the most Divine worke of God that ever hee did since the Creation above all the gifts of Adam and ayming at a better end so she carryes also strong reason to move the soule to bee like to her workeman and to resemble his holy nature The word constreine vs signifies such an hemming in as of the beast in a Pound or Pinfold that is put into it and c●nnot get out by any euasion so doth faith controll the heart that it cannot wind out must needs yeeld to bee as hee who hath imputed his righteousnesse to forgiue her that is righteous and holy The very savour and instinct of faith tends to holinesse she serves to abandon nature to set vp holines in the soule As she settles an imputed holinesse to iustifie from Christ so she cannot rest till she her selfe partake it within Such things as are alway lying among sweets cannot chuse but resemble and sauour thereof Faith comes from the divine breath of God and is his gift therefore cannot degenerate but as riuers flow from the sea and runne thither so doth faith come from God and returnes to him shee sins not till shee haue so pleaded for God that she haue drawne the heart to sauor him in his holinesse And secondly by infusion She is the Tunnel of the spirit to convey the renuing of the holy Ghost into the soule As the hand of the workman
to a well a bearing of it selfe towards God man or selfe Of these I speake no more onely I would adde one thing That graces of the spirit serve not onely to take up the residence within and no more but mightily to strengthen the soule to all spirituall or externall conversation see that Col. 1.11 Strengthned by the might of his power unto all long-suffring with joyfulnesse and well pleasing c. Hence it is that Eph. 6. Paul reckons up speciall graces of the spirit as the compleat harneis of a Christian I will open this by a similitude I told yee that Conversation is like a wheele Note then As in a Wheele there be three parts the nave the spokes and the round so here the nave is compared to the spirit of regeneration or the new creature of which in Article 1. the spokes are these graces I have named issuing from the nave and fastned to the round for as these staves doe unite the strength of the nave to the round and carry the strength thereof to each part of the wheele which else would breake and split in sunder so these graces of the spirit of Christ are the staffe of our life and the very support of our conversation and wheele of our course As for example Take away knowledg from the use of our liberties faith from the Sacraments or Word love from visiting the sicke mercy from almes where shall these parts of conversation become And thus much of this first part of the substance of conversation in graces Q. What is the second part of the substance hereof A. It is the consideration of the Subject who is to lead this conversation that is the regenerate person Now looke what the severall instruments are by which a Christian doth and must ordinarily converse those are the subject in which it stands and therefore had neede to be accordingly qualified Q. What are they and how many A. Three Thoughts Affections and Actions Q. What are the Thoughts and what rules are there for the frame of their conversation A. Thoughts are the first movers in the soule and from them issueth either good or bad life see Pro. 4.23 so our Saviour That which defiles a man comes from within as evill thoughts Mat. 15.19 They are the master-wheele If a man be envious and malicious Psal 36.4 his thoughts devise mischiefe upon his bed if the course be covetous the thoughts first set them on fire they pierce them through with cares 1 Tim. 6.10 So in the rest Therefore it being granted that we speake of the new Creature who hath purified already his soule to obedience let these rules serve to frame his commonwealth of thoughts aright First let our continuall care be to keepe the through-fare of the soule free from them as by pardon of them Acts 8.22 so by purging of them daily from that vanity prophanenesse disorder endlesnesse and other sins thereof which makes the conversation vaine 1 Pet. 1.18 Eph. 4.24 put off the old man of deceitfull lusts Secondly Iere 4.14 Mica 6.5 labour to season thy imagination and the doores of thy sences eyes and eares with holy meditations of God his Church his Will and Promises Psal 1.2 In the Law of God he meditates day and night Psal 19. ult Let the words of my mouth and the thoughts of my heart be alway acceptable Thirdly watch over these thoughts as men doe for theeves and aske whence they come and whither they will ere they passe yea keepe the whole prison the streighter for the sake of thy thoughts because if the ringleaders breake loose all the rest follow them Pro. 4.23 And the doore of the thoughts had neede be kept as well as the tongue Psal 141.3 yea and keepe in holy thoughts that they goe not out as fast as they come in Eze. 46.9 So fourthly attend seriously upon holy objects to fixe the imagination upon good things Esay 26.3 which is the way to beat off the swarme of these flyes Above all looke to the maine worke of Renuing and let all thy springs be in the Lord Psal 87.7 even the root of thy whole conversation which is the spring of thy thoughts and this will cause the branches and streames to be holy and cause thee to dwell upon meditation and to be heauenly minded Q. How is the wheele of Affections to be guided A. The Affections are the wheeles of the soule indeed an● upon them the soule is either hurried to evill or led to good Little doe most men thinke how they are carried by these their passions by each object Sometime by love by joy by hope on the right hand otherwhiles by feare by sorrow by anger pitty or the like rare is that man who venters not upon the sea of conversation with the broken barke of Affections It may be said of them as of that ancient Where they doe well none better where ill none worse Heathens were faint to abandon them quite the Stoicks I meane for the pudder they found by them and to deny all affection and so put out their eyes and cut off their hands and feete for feare of offending them But the Scriptures afford more grace than so therefore first weigh well how hardly the best escape the violence of them Note how Dauid disguizeth himselfe suddenly in swearing Nabals death vpon his defeate 1. Sam. 25.13 Ioh. 18.10 how soone Malchus his eare is smitten off by Peter in his passion how soone fire from heauen is sent for by the disconten●ed disciples Luk 9.54 So also Dauids rashnesse to Nathan 2 Sam. 12.5 which he must needes blush for So by the beholding of Bathsheba how soone was a fire kindled but long in quenching How suddenly Iosh 7. did the babilonish garment fire the heart of Achan The newes of Absoloms death pierce and disguise Dauid 2 King 5.20 Not to speake of Gehazi his sudden following Naaman Felix his hope of a bribe from Paul the disciples excesse of sorrow vpon a word speaking by Christ that foolish pity of Ahab vpon the men of Benhadads errand the extreame feare of the women vpon the Angels words All these Cloudes of witnesses shew the vnbridlednes of the passions and therefore should prepare vs with earnestnesse to preuent them Secondly yet note how affections are as soone vp in armes if the heart be well seasoned and stablished with grace How soone was Peter mooued with holy feare vpon the draught of fishes Luk. 5.8 How easily was the poore blind man rayzed vp in the depth of loue to the Lord Iesus how soone was sorrow wrought in the hearts of three thousand murtherers at once by Peters preaching how presently was compassion mooued in Peter and Iohn toward the cripple Act. 3.4 how quickly was zeale stirred vp in Phineas against Zimri and Cosbi Numb 25.11 and so may bee said of the rest Thirdly therefore let vs nourish the fire of the holy Ghost kindled in vs in our first regeneration and apply it
force a good iury to bring in a false answer that he may sin by preuiledge Lastly and especially through the neighbour-hood that good hath with euill oft-times who would not commend the pity of him that refused to smite the Prophet 1 King 20.36 or the fact of the good midwiues that saued the women of Israell Exod. 1.19 and who would not at first discommend the Leuites for slaying their brethren Exod. 32. But wee must doe no good that euill may come of it and where God discharges the conscience from a Law there is no transgression as in the borrowing and robbing the iewels of the Egiptians appeares Therefore let vs cleaue to our grounds abhorre all doubtfull generall erroneous ones take paines to discerne betweene the colors of good and euill and beware we be not lead by the errour of wicked as 1 Pet. 3. end and Ephes 4.14 Q. What is the right mannor of actions A. So necessary is this rule that it reaches to all our actions yea the most indifferent in her nature and such as wee are not tyed to but are arbitrary yet when they are done are to be done in a right manner or else we sinne And this manner of doing requires two things First that they be done in the estate of well pleasing Secondly well pleasingly for the former it is an assurance that the person pleases God Heb. 11.4 for the latter it is a cleauing to the quality of performance that it be pure To the pure al things are pure in their lawfullnesse yet euen pure things must be done purely also as I noted before in the Beauty of Conuersation each action hauing in it a peculiar quality to commend it as there I noted in diuers instances And therefore next to knowledge the eye of the soule must call for this true mannor that withall closenesse entirenesse humblenesse faith wisedome loue cheerefulnesse resolution it may performe that which is good But I repeate nothing Q. VVhat is the due measure of Actions A. That the Lord be served with the best of us within by the best bent of our soules without by the best extent of our abilities and that wee keepe no false measure within vs. Our course is to deale with God as buyers and sellers doe each with other buy by one measure and sell by another So we when we trade with God are content hee should sell to vs by the largest bushell heaped thrust and running ouer but we repay to him by a cut scanty one But as we doe or would fare at Gods hand so should we measure out vnto him and in all that we doe to him or for him call forth the best of our spirit and bent of heart all our courage and might and also enlarge our actions to the greatest extent we can in number and in degree that our goodnesse may be as diffusiue and exemplary as without hypocrisie and within within our compasse may be But I haue spoken of these two before of the one in the Subiect of Regeneration of the other in the grace of Measure Looke backe to them Q. What is the true end of all good actions A. It is one of the maine of all the rest For as the end and scope of a thing giues it the being so a childe of God is more properly obedient in his end then in any hee may faile through ignorance or weake carriage or measure but in this is his glory That the desire of his soule is towards the Lord and that he may approoue himselfe to haue had an vpright ayme at the Lords ends the glory of his name good of his brethren and peace of his own heart whatsoeuer else he failes in in preaching in prayer in mercy and compassion in Sabboths in example yet that in this he is voyd of guile See Pauls boasting 1 Cor. 1.12 we haue had our Conuersation in sincerity c. This was Abimeleck's praise for the moral of it that he had done it with a pure intent It is that God lookes at Psal 51.6 It was Dauids reioycing that he walked in the perfect way Psal 101.2 and Asa his prayse that in all his distempers he still held vpright in heart Oh this a d●fficult worke As hucksters deale with their milke honey and wares they mixe them with waxe water and trash for the vantage so doth our heart seldome any action but some dreg and dead flye of our owne aymes and ends is ready to defile it Beware therefore and let a true end steere all the actions of our life But of this before in the grace of vprightnesse Q. Proceed to the third branch of the substance of conuersation concerning the obiect thereof what is it A. It is two fold either our Spirituall Conuersation with God himselfe or our Conuersation with man in our common life Q. What is our conuersation with God A. Godly conuersation as Peter calles it is that communion which a renued soule hath with God or in a word it is the soules enioying of God so farre as here may be and it is either inward or outward Q. What is inward conuersation how manifold A. It is twofold either the life of faith or the exercise of the Graces of the spirit within the soule Q. What is the life of faith A. The soules enioying of God Christ our Sanctification by all his promises concerning life and godlinesse And a faith at the first drawing neere to God did cleaue to him in Christ by a promise for reconciliation as in Article 6. of the second part so it proceedes and improoues Christ her sanctification for all needes and vses of this present life For as Paul saith if being enemies wee were reconciled to him by his death much more by his resurrection wee shall partake his life And againe If he haue not denyed vs his owne Son how much more shall hee not with him denie vs any thing Now saith vnderstanding whole Christ in sanctification to be made hers 1 Cor. 1.30 doth draw as a man would draw lines from a Center to the circumference on each side so particuler promises of vpholding the weake soule in each condition that so she might say in all Now liue I yet not I but Christ in me And the life I liue I liue by faith in the Son of God and againe The iust man liues by faith not as some inuert it The iust by faith shall liue Q. What promises doth faith liue by in Christ A. To speake of all were endlesse for a draughts sake I referre them to foure heads First estates Secondly meanes Thirdly duties Fourthly graces which may serue for the rest The sum is Iesus Christ is the life of the soule throughout and as before and without Christ the soule liued a naturall and common life of selfe world pleasures vanities so shee now liues the life of Christ in all those foure And shee is thus said to put on Christ that as a man in his apparell doth all the workes of this
degrees First In our outward ordinances themselues as preaching receiuing Sacraments c. Secondly the instruments or liuely Organes seruing to minister therein as Pastors Teachers Ministers of the Gospell Thirdly gifts and administrations vouchsafed vnto them for the better dispensing and officiating those seruices Fourthly the Spirit of God to assist and enable them to all these performances So that the Lord is no hard Master to his people and Church but tendereth it most fatherly and is not wanting thereto in any furniture which any one member thereof needeth for the building of her vp in grace The Lord is not as Pharaoh who tyrannously exacted the same tale of his Bricke when the Israelites wanted Straw as when they had But rather deales with vs as with his people in their passage from Egypt to Canaan as he would bring them by the way of the Wildernesse farre about and difficult so he stucke close to them in their trauell He brought them by his Angell of the Couenant both into that desert through the Red Sea as it were their baptisme of imitation thence he led them as sheepe Esa 63.11 by Moses and Aaron his guides he went with his two Pillers as it were Law and Gospell before them day and night he prepared each place of their pitching a new vpon their former remoue in 42. of their periods which resembles the going out and in by his Spirit with his Church he gave them his Manna from Heauen and rocke gushing forth miraculously with waters as his two Sacraments now to vs for so Paul expounds them he did in a word spread them a Table in the Wildernesse of Quales a great depth about the host noting the choise dainties of his Table and by sundry miraculous courses annexed to his other directions as deliuerances crosses patience sutable to his wayes of gouernment to vs he did convey them at length into the land of promise So doth he now in spirituall manner so that it is not for nothing that Paul doth so punctually apply them and our Saviour toucheth upon them See 1 Cor. 10.1 2 3. Ioh. 6.31 And great cause for he is the Alpha and Omega the beginner and perfecter of our Sanctification Heb. 12.2 Phil. 2.13 1 Cor. 6.1 Q. Is God tyed to these absolutely A. It is not for us to meddle with his secrets Deut. 29.29 revealed things are for us what hee can doe by an extraordinary power where these helpes are denied we leave to himselfe but in ordinary course we say that the Lord doth tye himselfe to his owne way of working that so wee know where to have him and he doth in like sort tye us in the matter of our calling and building up to these meanes that we might not vanish in other wayes or devises of our owne And wee shall note it that in some texts the holy Ghost doth purposely joyne these with the spirit it selfe when he speakes of the necessity of salvation As in Iohn 3. Except a man be borne againe of water and the spirit he cannot enter And Marke 16. He that beleeveth and is baptized shall be saved not excluding all unbaptized ones nor including water equally with the spirit but to awe our spirits to an holy seeking God in and by them and deterring of us from contempt when they may be had Q. Doth he exclude all other wayes to walke by A. Not all other wayes of profiting but all other wayes of revealing himselfe Q. What other wayes doth he exclude A. All wayes of mans devising whereof Popery is full at this day by Masses Images Crucifixes other base and carnall devotions of our owne fancy and spirit as Anabaptists and sectaries doe invent both Ministers doctrines dreames and Revelations of their owne Q. What other wayes of profiting doth he admit A. Any secret administrations by his workes of providence may be blessed to the elect as Gods patience benefits crosses examples preventions and intimations to our conscience but how with and under the word not else except they attend and follow the ordinances there is no wisedome in them Esay 8. because hee hath made no promise unto them They are but as Witches whisperings under the earth and have no lively voyce without the Word they are sanctified by a Word or no way and so they may be coadjutors to the Word and helpe forward the worke we see little good done till God afflict yet crosses are not causes but effects Q. But of what nature are they now are they as those ancient reuealings of God to his Church in the manner thereof Or if not then why A. They doe wholly differ from them I meane from those immediate reuealings of God to the old Fathers and Church as by the Priests Vrim or Ephod Prophets dreames visions fire from heauen Cloud filling Temple sacrifices or the like miraculous courses Heb. 1.1.2 Now the Lord onely speakes by his Sonne and that by no such immediate way but mediate onely Hee auoideth any courses which tend to any visible audible or sensible presenc● sight or voice of God himselfe nay abhorres so much as resemblances of shapes which now are common in Popery a● by the shape of an old man a Rood or a Doue and now h●e onely treates with his Church at a distance and absence euen as if a Prince should make loue to a Lady not by any presence or going to her face to face but by spokesmen or Embassadours and so win her loue or by loue letters tokens and his picture sent to her Q. But is not this course to our Detriment A. No for as the way is more obscure to the eye so is it more open to the soule by the ministry of the spirit of God For as those former dealings of God although they were fit to conuince the sences of ignorant and blind ones yet were but weake in the concurrence of the spirit as appeares by that infinite sottishnesse and infidelity of such as had them so now the Lord doth supply the darkenesse of these by the powerfull presence of his grace as the phrase imports Heb. 1.2 But now by his sonne that is there is more of the Lords reuealing in these then was in all theirs at the best Q. What store hath he giuen vs of these A. He is neither abounding in superfluous ones for a pompe and Popish state nor yet yet wanting in necessary ones as appeares by this hee hath not giuen vs any more waies then Couenant and seale and no more of th● former then which might call vs to Christ as the Law and Gospell and hold vs in him nor more seales than two one CHRIST to bee seed and food none but ordinary for common and extraordinary for speciall vse and in a word as he is spary in clogging so yet plentifull in prouiding variety for vs because he knowes wee need as well in priuate as in publike and being soone weary of either wee had neede of variety to keepe vs occupied with delight
Maintaine and hold this right and Title of thine Thinke not that this Spirit of Grace and Supplication is spent though thou see not God so clearely in it for all ends as thou desirest yet giue it not ouer thy sinne hath bound thee in cheynes but Prayer is not bound rather it bindeth the Lord by promise to thee The eare of God is not heauy that hee should not heare Hee is not as a man that he should be distracted by multitude of praying Suppliants at once a thousand to him are as one and one as a thousand Beware of Atheisme in this kinde Secondly Goe in the Lord Iesus by a promise hauing thy wants in a readinesse and thy faith on wing let not thy course in praying issue from a formall platforme though I iudge not any man for reading a prayer but a liuely feeling and humble pinching of soule for thy Necessities Thirdly shake off all extremities of a corrupt heart by faith which must hold thine eye fixed upon thy Mediator by his Spirit vpholding thy faintnesse and groning within thee against all thy presumptions commonnesse dulnesse deadnesse coldnesse and beseech the Lord to stirre thee vp to pray as he shall suggest vnto thee by the present occasion well digested either for the Church others or thy selfe Tye thy selfe to no punctualnesse but as the holy men in Scriptures have done so let confession sometimes goe before or follow prayer and either of both thankesgiuing Come not to the Lord with either an heart moyling and lowring with discontent without faith or bold and ventrous without humiliation but let both haue their due weight If thou wouldest be heauenly in prayer first abase thy selfe as a worme dust and ashes yea as Master Bradford hell and the sinke-hole before the Lord who is heauen and holinesse if the Lord haue any speciall draught for thy net he will put thee out of conceit with thy owne Art and thy selfe as Peter was when hee had toiled all night and catcht nothing Emptinesse is the onely raiser of our minds in prayer Oh! how hard is it to get and then secondly by faith be quickned to wait for 〈◊〉 ●nswer these two will fill thee with heauenly affections and rid thee of thine owne inuentions manner and ends Fourthly Adde these meet qualities of Prayer viz. fervent importunity as one whom God cannot bee rid of till thou speed and frequency as hauing sped well already If in prayer thou finde little stirring know it is not because Prayer is not Gods Ordinance but he would try whether forme and the worke done bee not aboue spirit and faith in thee if they be not persist and goe against the edge of thy owne deadnesse resting in that measure gladly which the Lord sees best for in this case thou wilt pray oftnest as 2 Cor. 12.10 Fifthly and aboue all come not to pray with any tainted knowne sin I say not onely grosse but euen secret and close through a lazy heart loth to cast them off or a loose heart louing them better than the things thou prayest for lest the Lord iustly leaue thee to be wearisome to him and thy selfe Cast out thy wrath and earth and disdaine and censures and vncharitablenesse yea let thy praying awe thee against them ere thou pray that it may arme thee when thou hast done Til prayer become thy familiar friend bring thee into acquaintance with God for a supply of wants pardon of daily sinnes helpe for all duties of conuersation And so looking vp to thine Aduocate for a couering of thy weakenesse this duty shall be a speciall helpe to godlinesse vnto thee Touching the Lords Prayer I send my Reader to the speciall Treatises thereof Q. Adde somewhat of meditation and leaue the rest A. Touching this Ordinance I may call it the high-way to all good conuersation yea I may say it 's as the smoke of the sacrifice in which the Angell Iudg. 13.20 went up to heauen in I set it not aboue prayer but magnifie it to set an edge vpon people who will not know it And surely if that be an helpe to God which both takes away lets and both in the act and effects of it is so admirable iudge what an helpe meditation is Tell mee then first what are the cheefe lets to grace in them who otherwise want not knowledge Surely either giddinesse of mind or vnsavourinesse of spirit The former like a sieve out of the water loseth all it gets suffers nothing either truths heard or workes seene to abide long in the heart But Meditation settles them in the Spirit that they leake not out Heb. 2.1 Thus the life of a thousand Sermons of mercies and occasions is preserued In stead of the latter it seasons the heart with the sap the life the savour of good things They are not heaps upon heaps leauing vs a thirst but we drink of them digest them and make our soules merry with them Euen as an enuious man so long chewes the cud of his malice in his bed till hee haue het his heart and deuised reuenge so is meditation a reall grace on the contrary and whetteth vpon the promises and works of God till it be fired with the love of them Againe it makes the meaning view scope and order both of particular doctrines and the whole frame of Religion to become our owne And lastly wee come hereby to the ease of practice the fruit hereof Experience so that if once we haue found crosses to doe vs good wee feare not when new ones approach if wee haue felt the gaine of a Sabbath we get a delight therein in a word whatsoeuer is easie it becomes sweete and therefore if this be worth somewhat to find the yoke of God easie and his burthen light as to say the truth it is the vpshot of goodnesse well may wee then say Meditation is a diuine helpe to a good course Oh! how it s to bee lamented that men know it not they get no matter to chew vpon they seperate not themselues to it thinking they may meditate while they ●e at worke they doe not curbe their wild and wandring hearts from other obiects and so this piece of Gods Worship is irkesome vnto them Thus much for a tast of some of the priuate Q. But are the extraordinary helpes so too A. There need be the lesse question of that because as their nature is more solemne so is their vse if they be attended accordingly And first that of Fasting Of which I say this that if wee esteeme that receit aboue all which doth cure a disease that no other medicine could then surely fasting deserues account Our Sauiour tels vs This kinde of Diuels goeth not out Mar. 9.29 saue by fasting and prayer that is all the ordinances of God are effectuall but this aboue all for this end Wherefore briefely whither we bring the Churches or our owne cases either sinnes or sorrowes before the Lord to be done away Let vs first arme
me out of thy clawes and from reuolting Q. How tempts he in the Assisting grace A. Especially in the first workes of the Law which some referre to the former hee corrupts the minde and spirit both in the enlightning part and the terrifying The former hee abuseth to multiply the fearefull view of sinne The latter to make terrour intolerable Hee tempts to bee weary of this Discipline tels them some good people neuer had terror that it will spoile their natures and so it will that they were best to put it by for Mellancholly and these Preachers will kill them let them be merry and sport themselues with pleasures with ease and liberty and then their senses will be fresher themselves fitter for good Now they are but dulled and the Preacher will cast downe ten ere comfort one and therefore leaue off with small trouble rather than great and terror is not repentance neither it can doe no good but kill And when many are thus snared they destroy themselues by violence despairing of any helpe But if they grow to some hope by the Gospell and not to make their hell another heauen then hee tempts them about the condition of the Promise either for kinde or measure that they neuer saw that sweetnesse in Christ which should break their hearts they neuer mourned enough nor hungred nor tooke paines aright nor prized the Promise or if they did yet for necessity or else out of selfe-loue alas they haue despised the Gospel it selfe and can grace saue them that haue hardned themselues as well against it as the Law besides they see others called home long since themselues behinde they are so vile hardened vnworthy cannot pray meditate and therefore God may doe much but they are daily worse rather than better and so in the rest it is not condition can saue them but faith Q. And how in the worke of Beleening A. Here he labours to hold them vnder especially by their irkesome bondage Oh saith he Faith is onely of the Elect and thou art none it 's the free gift of God and he may deny it as well as grant it Many haue come to the birth and haue dyed so and to beleeue is a greater thing than to talke of Sometimes hee makes it lesse than it is to puffe vp the heart with presumption Or hee hides the vertuous savour and strength of the Promise the Simplicity the Faithfulnesse of the Promiser and the offer Hee tells them if they beleeve they must be changed which is hardest of all yea rather than faile hee will seeke to pull downe the whole frame of God ouer their head fill them with temptations about the truth of the Scriptures as if they were but fables and Ministers preacht their owne fancies Hee poysons them with melancholicke distempers and feares askes them how they know this word which they so cleaue to is the Word or not puts worse temptations into them namely whether there be any God or no. And most vsually keeps them betweene the doubt of the Condition and the doubt of the Promise to bee at uncertainties But oh poore soule how shalt thou know thy Election saue by beleeuing or what is that freedome of God saue his bounty to the miserable and who are worthy Revel 3.4 saue those who are made so Looke backe to that I haue written in Part 2. Article the last and God stay thee Q. Proceed to his temptations of them that are called A. These concerne them either in point of their faith and as touching the former he tempteth two waies either about the being or the life of faith or else secondly their obedience Q. How about the being A. Thus he takes aduantage of the weake setling at the first and by that vnrenewednesse of nature which opposes this spirituall grace he seekes to ouerthrow them in the holding of their confidence He knowes this is their onely prop and therefore sometime by shewing them how poore their fruits are or how small their humblings were or what self-selfe-loue is mixed with their faith or how deadly and dully they walke or that they cannot appropriate Christ in each part of his merit or by the like hee concludes their faith is but temporary and no faith of the elect And at such a bay he holds some for lacke of knowledge that they yeeld and are ready vpon the least Sermons touch or obseruing of other mens confidence for many are too confident or vpon the occasion of any meanes to be vsed or duty to bee done or crosse suffered or the vrging of any priuiledge of a beleeuer to start and say yea if I had faith But I haue none Poore Creature if thou euer hadst it thou yet hast it and therefore hold that thou hast got 2 Iob. 8. Q. How about the life of faith A. Exceedingly For in truth this prooues the other Hee therefore knowing what aduantages he hath in this by either that naturall ease sloth and aweknes to enlarge the truth of one promise to all and partly that willing want of Christians in this point who chuse rather to soder with God in duties then obey him in nourishing their faith daily hee doth very much prevaile and by the small life seekes to destroy the beeing of faith If thou hadst but faith as a grayne of mustard seed thou mightst remoue mountaines But alas what faith hast thou who canst not beare the such a slight crosse a pette fillip of the finger an ill word for thy prosession the losse of a little matter Cow or horse Nay many that want can beare more than thou If thou liuedst by faith either in states meanes graces or duties thou wouldest bee otherwise then thou art not so soone vnsetled not so little growing not so defectiue in the measure of grace in vprightnesse integrity c. But iet the reader reade of this in the second Article of the life of faith Take from Satan his chiefe weapon thy carelesse neglect and the Lord shall sticke to thee in point of weakenesse Q. How doth he assault in point of obedience A. Either he tempts them about it or against it Q. How tempts he them about it A. Thus he buffets them in their comfort therein For whereas it's Gods will that he that walkes vprightly should walke safely and sweetly lo Satan separates the end from the meanes An hipocrite seperates the meanes from the end looking for peace where there is no vprightnesse But heere the stratagem of the Deuill contrary and therefore either he hides that from his eye which should bee his maine comfort in all failings or else takes vantage by that which should bee his humiliation to bee his vtter discouragement And indeed he is rightly himselfe in this for as in the former point he belyes God to the soule as if he could not support it for euer by his promise in the life of faith as Heb. 13.8 so here hee belyes the soule to it selfe and holds it in bondage And although he
the way the seruants and Ordinances of Christ which being once giuen out proue irreuocable See Matth. cap. 28.12 The Priests gaue large mony to the Souldiers to giue it out that Christ was stollen away and this preuailed long after against the Resurrection So men speake of the godly Tush doe yee beleeue them I warrant yee they can breake their promises bee as hard and couetous as others This new learning neuer did good wee liued better ere it came there was better house-keeping love among neighbours your greatest Professors shutting their doores and liuing in some corner of London to spend all vpon new fashions or else to hoard vp for their Children And so they speake of the good Ministry they doe but driue men out of their wits they are factious and turbulent And in old times the world reported of the faithfull that they met in the night and after their deuotions put out their lights and fell to vncleannesse Q. What is Cosenage A. That Trade of which mainly that Text treats Eph. 4 18. whereby false Teachers schismatiks and Hereticks blanched their conceits wresting their wits to abuse the Scriptures to set false Colors vpon their opinions And so the subtill and cunning devices which drunkards and the like set vpon their sinne calling them good fellowship or the like So the che●ting chapman hath his glosing protestations colors and tricks that harlot Iezabel abused fasting to couer her murther the Strumpet in the Prouerbs saith shee hath payd her vowes when that woman came with her circumstances to Dauid he asked Is not the hand of Ioab here so may we say If the father of lyes and trickes were not in this world of cogging and cosenage how could it deceiue so as it doth Q. Proceed to the next branch of the liuing worlds defilements wherein doe they consist A. Partly in words partly in deedes The former are the open corrupt Counsels of sinners or their secret insinuations Of the former see Pro. 7.18 the harlot tempts her paramour Come let vs take our fill my husband is far off And the t●eefe Prou. 1.13 Cast thy lot in with vs we will haue one purse But more close ones are such whisperers as the Apostle calls priuie corrupters of mindes whose words fret like a cankar 2 Tim. 2.17 Thus some do whisper in secret against Magistracy and good Ministers and others against gouernment of parents entising their children seruants yea wiues from their loyalty So doe wicked preachers scatter their false tenents or principles of prophannesse to taint mens iudgments or manners Thus young nouices are beaten off from their zeale and hearing I would scorne saith one to be tyed to their girdles Q. What are the deeds of the liuing world Vse 1 A. All their wicked malitious cruell intents threats and pursuits of the godly to quash them and to vphold their own Kingdome As those Scribes and Pharisees had a Law to crucifie Christ though they made it for the nonce And Daniel 6. those enemies of his This trade were infinite to rip vp Popish machauillian plots and deuises to dismay to suppresse and destroy all puritie of Doctrine and power of religion Witnesse their inquisition prisons censures and torments both lying in waite for the precious soules and bodies of men and sacrificing them to their God Maazzim wherein they doe whatsoeuer the Deuill their father hath taught them with absurd unreasonable and implicable hearts to the Truth And thus I haue gone ouer this whole Doctrine of the Lets in the three parts thereof Q. What now is the use hereof A. Large and plentifull I will but touch the heads and Vse 1 first it should bee vse of Instruction to vs to be humbled Branch 2 to bee comforted and to long after a full redemption For the first It 's humiliation to the best of Gods children for their self-selfe-love and for this misery that lyes upon them For marke it what outcryes doe we make if any man wrong vs in our bodies goods or names liues or liberties and indeed it is true we have bitter enemies but oh poore soules who is such an enemy such a Traytor such a deuill to vs as our selues At home begins our sorrow and our woe in our bosomes are those euils of pride prophannesse hypocrisie and selfe-loue which bane vs and what they cannot doe of themselues they doe by others setting dore open and letting in Divell and world to rifle and rob vs of all without which no enemy could hurt vs. Learne wee truly and cordially to cry out upon our selues So also for all this misery which in this vale thereof lyes vpon vs. Paul Rom. 7. O miserable man Why this body of death and world of sinne creates a world of sorrow in us of annoiances feares doubts strength of lusts little groth errors of wicked deadly feud of Satan melancholly crosses bad times poverty bootlesse wrongs hardnesse of heart harshnesse to the yoke of Christ an vnbroken carnall pusillanimous froward impure heart Are not these sorrow our belly full to vs at the best If God alayed them not with inward supports who should endure them Oh! so it must bee yet let vs mourne vnder our bondage Such as are led into captiuity are no merry folke witnesse they who hung their harpes on the Willowes and were so full of anguish that they could not sing How shouldst thou Psal 137.2 poore soule in a strange land Secondly let yet this comfort them for the present that it is Branch 2 no otherwise with them in this their sorrow than that wise God their good Father hath allotted them so that if they feele their burden they may cheere themselues with this They are as God will haue them it 's their Pilgrimage their Baca their warfare the Lord will worke them triumph out of these battels and combats hee will purge them and conforme them to his deare sonne by them and euen the sin and penalties they here endure yet are conforming and moulding things to make their victories sweeter It is not well with them they may say but it shall be they see it a farre off if this were a life of perfection if any of the faithfull were exempt from the like 1 Ioh. 1.8 Pro 24.16 Esay 64.6 2 Cor. 12.9 then this were cause of all and only mourning But here the best of our perfection is the sight of our imperfection we are as well on it as our head while he was here in this strange land he could neither be rid of our sinnes nor of infirmities or enemies but afterward hee knew no more Very gladly therefore will I be glad euen of my desertions and tentations to me its a sure signe of consolation to them of confusion and that of God I only wait my time to be perfectly redeemed Branch 3 Thirdly wait for that with longing as Paul did Rom. 7. Who shall deliuer me Be not so well apaid in this smalnesse of thy grace measure because it must
be so that thou shouldst be willing to haue it so no let it make thee longue and stretch out thy necke a far off after thy Redemption and when thy knocking off drawes neere lift vp thine head Here is thy pilgrimage when shall I come to my fathers house how long Lord holy and true how long Lye under the Altar and cry till God answer thee Count them happyest that are gone before and put off their harnesse Oh when shall I follow well after and ouertake deere husband wife and friend that haue got the start of me Lord here is not the place I looke for here an handsell and earnest but Lord euen my very faith and hope which are my best graces in trauell are but releefes of misery for a season euen these should here cause me to cry out for the Christ of a better life saying with Paul If our hope were here in Christ only of all other I were worst Faith and Hope and Patience and Hearings and Sacraments shall cease if then therwith sin and sorrow cease not what is my best but misery but as long as I haue Christ for hereafter I care not hee will pay for all If here to be a little eased of my feares bee such a benefit what is it to be quite rid of them If here to be guided by faith what there to need none If here to hope for a good end what there to enioy the thing hoped If here to liue a barren poore sad life patience mixt with impatience knowledge with error faith with infidelity what there to haue the vse of them taken away Christ made mine wholly fully all loue without defect ioy without mixture peace without disturbance Christ in his kind blessednesse and perfection he was not giuen me to be some grace and more sin but all grace and no sinne then I shall not see him through this grate of my prison but with open face as hee is and as he sees me Oh Lord this coast of the present world so dimmeth and darkens that coast of heaven that I cannot behold it Turne thy loue-tokens oh Lord once at length into presence and fruition and shew me thy glory Q. What other vses are there A. Exhortation and that in generall first to resist all these Vse 2 wofull enemies of our peace It is a word soone spoken but of long and hard practice to stand I say vpon our guard therefore a little I would direct about it though I feele my selfe in a sea of matter yet I will send my Reader to large and godly Treatises of this vast argument and my selfe cull out two or three directions best agreeing to my drift Q. Begin then first with the first annoyance or let which is our owne corruption how is that to be resisted A. I will mention three wayes 1. The spiritual combat ere sin be brought into act 2. Watchfulnesse against outward occasions and temptations 3. Wisedome after we are fallen Q. What is the duty of the Combat A. It is the exercise of that holy Principle of the Spirit of the new Creature which perpetually fighteth against the flesh in the regenerate Let this bee perpetually maintained and the hand of Faith or of Christ rather bee continually iogged by vs for the liuely quickening grace thereof to resist our inward selfe-temptations Gal. 5.17 The Spirit lusteth against the Flesh and ye cannot be as ye would There is in the New Creature a renuing throughout in euery part yet not throughout in all As in a dead Palsey all one side dead yet the other wholly aliue How doth the liuing part fight against the dead If a man should haue a dead carkasse bound to his backe till he dyed were it not an heavy plague would it not be irkesome So this body of death to the liuing part of the new Creature Oh mourne and grone it out The Physitians say Every deepe sigh spends a drop of bloud Oh that thy grones might consume this bloud I likened it before to Peninna I Sam. 1. Let Hanna then bee to Peninna as shee to bee sure will be to her Shee will not see the least looke of Elkana toward her the least loue-token not one nights lodging not one cast of favour but shee will pine at it vpbraid her for it vexe at and grudge her the least drop Oh! Let Hanna doe so to her Let her all that shee can get into her husbands heart and the more shee is envyed the more let her cling to him that his loue may support her against her enemy let him be to her aboue all her feares Oh if this were how happy were we It 's said of Rebecca that she was weary of her life for Esaw's wives as I noted and wisht them out of doores Let vs be like her and say Oh Lord these base dogging thoughts of sinne which breed ill affections and threaten to breake forth daily into action how noysome are they When Rebecca felt a strugling she asked the cause of the Lord and he answered Wonder not there be two nations in thee a cursed and a blessed one one whom I have hated another loued it must be thus wait thy time pray for a good trauel the whilst thou must beare this strife within thee So doe thou doe not onely beare it but maintaine it also Say to the Lord I can neuer shunne euill but I am the more tempted to it never ensue goodnesse but I am driuen from it Lord why is it thus Oh quicken vp that loue that Image of thy righteousnesse that seed of God that inner man of the Spirit which may present thee so to my soule that thy sweetnesse and love may cause the Image of old lust to be despised decay daily more and more Create in my soule that holy nature of thine which may for euer abhor foile conquer this flesh and the opposition of it in me Thou oh Lord art as holy as sin is wicked Oh Lord shew it and the preuailing nature of it let it burne vpon the Altar of my soule against the Altar of corruption Oh that I could find but one day of many that I were mine owne and free to righteousnesse rid of my cumber and clog That I could feele those secret motions and instincts of sin in me rebelling against thee tickling mee snaring and leading me captiue being as sensible and wake to marke and discouer them and nip them in the necke as they are to annoy me Q. What is the second duty of watching A. Continually to obserue and preuent occasions offered when we cannot foile inward motions Cut off her prouision and sterue sin As men deale with fields of weeds which they cannot root up they hooke them and so kill them by oft cutting off their tops so doe thou with occasions obiects counsell prouocation to thy wrath reuenge couetousnesse maintaine a sound desire to abhorre them that they neuer enter thy trenches The welcomming of obiects is as casting of oyle
quite vs like men 1 Cor. 16.13 is a better grace It is not our vaine weapon of selfe-confidence learning experience wit or parts no not our great resolutions our deep vowes against oathes vncleannesse or the like will saue vs or that we scorne the Deuil as the slaue of God What shall it boot vs to scorne him as a slaue of God when he is our tyrant Therefore neither feare him slauishly nor scorne him prophanely but be armed wisely and constantly watch to it with prayer the Lord shal be with thy endeauour and teach thy hands to fight preuaile Eph. 6. from 14. verse to the 18. Q. But in a word how should the parts of the Armour be vsed A. If once truly put on they shall bee vsed the more easily The most blessed part of thy Armour is faith which puts on all the rest and doth as the shield not onely defend thee but all thy armour also It is that grace which carries a poore soule into the field with like courage to Dauid when he said 1 Sam. 17. Who is this dog that defieth the host of Israel This day shall God inclose thee in mine hand It argueth thus first by experience if euer Satan or world could haue foyled me it had been in my onset my fresh-water souldier but euen then the Lord kept me against a Beare and a Lyon and shall he keepe me to destroy me I haue been kept from him in my first call to God and shall I not now much more being armed I am the Lords he will couer my head in the day of battell Againe it disputes for God against her own weaknes by proofe of continuall assistance I see indeede stronger than I haue beene foyled but the Lord can bring a weake nouice through as well as a strong man the Battell is the Lords Race is not with the swift nor the Battell with the strong But he that fights as well with few and weake as strong and many giues victory as he pleaseth And as when wee see a weake wearish old man of 80 yeeres we wonder so weake an one should so hold out when thousands of stronger dye in their strength so here yet beleeue that so it may be and he that in all our brunts and streights hath kept vs and as the fierie dart hath beene cast at vs hath latcht it for vs and to shew what he can doe for a poore wretch hath brought me through so many pikes of Deuil or world already can he not doe so still Thus faith in temptation by deuill malice of instruments is more than a Conquerour not to shun temptations but not to be consumed euen in the burning And Faith claspes here to a merit of Christ her Captaine by a word or promise I haue prayed for thee that thy faith fail not the gates of hel shal not preuaile against it I haue ouercome the world be of good courage the like These faith cleaues to and puts all her strength vpon them The Lord Iesus hath disarmed this strong Gyant triumphed ouer him on the Crosse and led him and all his captiuitie captiue and they fight against mee but with the dregs of courage and policy since he ouercame them Secondly they keepe on the helmet of hope on their head as a woman would doe her hat in a wet iourney They looke at that final redemption and victory which is set before them when their harnesse are off and this holds vp their faith which else by one or other temptation would be foiled Heb. 12.2 as Christ who for the hope set before him endured the shame so these endure the heat of this battell knowing it shal one day ioy them to haue been so occupied and the end shall pay for all Thirdly the peace of conscience treads downe all as Sampson trod down his enemies horse and foot Iudg. 15.8 For why this peace of God rules their hearts minds they are tempted strongly but they will not lose their peace and buy repentance at so deree a rate Their precious peace they will not change for any deuils or worlds pleasure If they should lose it to win the world what shou'd it profit them Shall I Iudg. 9. forsake my fatnesse and sweetnesse to exalt my selfe God forbid The false mother cared not for cutting the child but the true mother trembled at it So the true child of God cries saue my peace whatsoeuer I forgoe Fourthly The brest-plate of righteousnesse next their heart as a Corslet of proofe preserues them Lord thou knowest righteousnes and obedience innocency toward thee and men hath alway bin deerer to mee then goods ill gotten then all spoiles all pleasures of sin for a season all baits of men or terrors and threats They have lighted vpon my brest-plate and beene dashed And through thy mercie by whatsoeuer darts Satan beguile me I hope these shall not while I can keep my integrity As good Iob Iob 27.5 said to his enemies My righteousnesse shall ye neuer take from me Fifthly Their Girdle of truth and sincerity not of tongue onely but of soule not looking with Balaam at base ends but truly at the honour of God whose loue I can proue because hee vpholds me in my integrity Sixthly the Sword of the Spirit the Armoury of God his Word that offensiue weapon by which the soule is able not onely to saue her selfe but to crush and foyle her aduersarie the Lord hauing put into his Word that authoritie which no Deuil can resist especially when it is wisely sparily and seasonably vsed not to dally with Satan but to brush him off as the Butchers flap beats off and crushes the flies As we see in those apt Scriptures which Mat. 4. our Saviour used and by vsing blessed to vs when we shal according to our temptations by faith retort Satan with them And thus I haue giuen a short tast of a thousand which might haue beene added beseeching the Lord to blesse them and the whole doctrine of this Article which here I conclude The sixth Article Q. VVHat is the sixth Article of this third part A. That as the lets and discouragements of the children of God in this their militant condition are many on the left hand by their enemies so on the right hand on Gods part there are many priuileges and fauours allowed them whereby their condition is made both comfortable and honourable And that both to draw on many to be of Gods houshold when they see what gaines and vayles belong to his seruice as also to encourage such as are already admitted members of it and besides to compell such as care not to ioyne themselues to them because of some hard conditions to the flesh when they see their Priuileges to acknowledge their state to bee aboue their owne and to pine and consume for the wilful debarring themselues of such happinesse As then wee see it to bee in the Companies of Royall Cities and their seuerall Trades and
To both in common this doth belong that God will doe for vs in both aboue all that we can aske or thinke Eph. 3. and supply abundantly all our wants he will supply our bodily wants pouerty infirmities wits and sences as our sight and hearing or such decayes and our spirituall as want of knowledge faith patience much more of Sabbaths ordinances good helpes of conference c. And besides in neither estate will hee require any more of vs then according to our abilities Mat. 25.15 not according to what we want but that wee haue If wee bee poore and cannot doe what wee would if wee bee weake in grace and faith hee lookes at our talents and no further so we be faithfull in that little Mat. 25. Q. What are the priuiledges of our temporall estate A. Our temporall reaches to our estate of the world and it concernes either blessings or crosses touching blessings first that whatsoeuer is meete for body for meat drinke apparrell health life good dayes successe welfare good marriage credit and the like shall be giuen vs Psal 84.11 Psal 37.4 Wee need not feare it Luk. 12.22 Why take yee care what to put on Secondly that our labours shall be blessed and wee shall eate of the fruit of them Psal 128.2 Thirdly be it more or lesse it shall be enough and we content with it as our portion best of all Phil. 4. 1 Tim. 6.6 with contentment and sufficiency for so is the word Fourthly a little of the righteous is better and shall goe further then a great deale of the wicked Prou. 15.16 Fifthly all they haue they haue it from a running fountaine and with the good will of him that dwelt in the bush Deut. 33.16 Sixtly that we haue it without sinne an ill conscience in getting keeping forgoing Pro. 10.12 or ill dependance and without sorrow that is carking distrust or basenesse Prou. 7. that he will suffer the Lyons to want then vs or ours to beg our bread hee will neither faile or forsake vs Psal 37.35 Heh 13.5 Q. VVhat are our priuileges in Afflictions Psal 34.8 A. First that no more no other no sooner can befall then the Lord hath cut out for vs Ioh. 8.20 Houre was not come Ioh. 8.59 he passed through them all Secondly He fitteth our yokes for vs as we for our cattell great and small Beare the yoke take vp our crosse Lam. 3. Mat. 16. Thirdly the extremity of a crosse shall neuer pinch vs the streight shall not annoy vs Psal 32.6 floods of great waters c. Fourthly wee shall escape many that the wicked pull vpon themselues Psal 32 8. Fiftly These that must bee wee shall bee vpholden in them Mica 7.8 He shall shew me light in darkenesse and hee shall couer my head in battell Psal 140.7 Sixtly they shall bee sent in loue so that they shall not be the enuenomed arrowes of the Almightie in our flesh but the corrections of a father Heb. 12.9 and that of Salomon 1 Chronic. 22.10 The seuenth when they haue done their errand they shall returne and wee bee deliuered Mica 7.8.9 10. Lastly wee shall bee more then conquerors Rom. 8.37 and partake full redemption Eph. 4.30 Q. What are our spirituall priuiledges A. Some concerne God some our selues Touching God this All his administrations shall profit vs hee will discouer himselfe in them to vs in the way of his gouernment of the Age and times wee liue in in his blessings vpon his owne and iudgments vpon his enemies his patience and carriage towards our selues in our whole courses the sundry changes of this world the manners of men the ends of men the examples of men good bad mortality and the vanity of things our owne experience the administrations of God in all shall teach and profit us See for this Psa 25. All the wayes of God to his c. Q. Touching our owne spirituall estate what privileges doe wee enioy A. They belong to our spirituall estate either in point of our faith or of our obedience Touching our faith First That the iust shall not onely be forgiven by faith but also liue by faith as Habac. 3. Heb. 10.38 Secondly They shall grow from faith to faith Rom. 1.17 Thirdly their faith shall never totally or finally faile them Luke 22.32 the gates of hell shall never preuaile against it with manie moe Q. What priviledges concerne obedience A. Some negative some positive The negative such as these No lets enemies divell sinne or world shall pull us from God or plucke us from our stedfastnesse 2 Pet. ult The positive are made to the whole course of it or the particular parts To the whole such as these God that begun his worke shall finish it for us Philip. 1.6 Wee shall be upholden in our whole course graciously Psalme 41.11 12. By this I know thou louest mee that thou upholdest mee in my integritie And that hee will guide vs by grace till hee receive us to glorie That wee shal I perseuere to the end Reuel 2.10 And such other Q. And what are the particular parts of our course and what are their priuileges A. Either the course of worship or of conversation Touching the former either they may be referred to the meanes of obedience or the duties of it Concerning which I have spoken in the second Article in the point of life of faith and in a word this is all That the meanes are theirs all blessed to them for the helping of them home in peace And the Lord who hath enioyned them duties will give them strength to performe them and make them easie Mat. 11.30 Q. What are the priuileges of Conuersation A. Eyther they concerne common life or conditions of men therein Common life or marriage liberties company solitarinesse or the like manifold entercourses Conditions of men as their callings in which God hath set them their places of gouernement or subiection magistracy or ministry their relations in family or otherwise parents masters c. To all which Gods people haue peculiar promises that God will furnish all them with gifts whom he calls to any function That hee will cause a voyce behinde them to say This is the way walke in it And according to the changes and conditions of life which hereafter shall befall Esay 30. the Lord will picke out meet grace and bee the same God to them in all Q What are the priuiledges of the Saints in death A. That they are precious in death to the Lord Psal 116. that death nor any thing shall separate them from Gods loue Rom. 8 vlt. That a good life shall bring a good death That they shall dye in peace Psal 38.37 That the day of death is better then the day of life Eccles 7.1 That it is sanctified together with the graue to bee a step to glory and the putting on of incorruption 1 Cor. 15. Q. What is the last priuiledge A. The greatest of all that eternall fruition of God and all that
Aaron and Hur that the poore soule might bee propped vp on both sides against the enemies of a good conuersation Let no paynes seeme too great 1 Cor. 1.7 hauing such precious promises let vs purge our selues of al filthines As Paul spake of one so I say of all these 1 Thess 4.18 Comfort your selues and one another by these priuiledges If the most common blessing become peculiar to you through Christ what shall the best become How should that hope of glory after your toyle and trauaile ended encourage you when the glory of the Moone shal be as the glory of the Sun and the light of the Sun ten times greater and the Saints shall worship from Sabbath to Sabbath to all eternity Oh! count all your troubles tolerable in the hope heerof and deceaue all the world in their opinion of your misery Let this hope make ye as farre aboue the miseryes of this life as your treasure is aboue the earth But especially let not death be vnwelcome as that old man sayd Thus long haue I serued God and it yrketh me not to dye for I haue had a good Master Secondly let it hearten vs to our worke to see what good vayles we haue better then al the wages of an hireling Priuiledges are commonly held by Seruice and we see how the guilt of soule Treasons or riot and misdemeanor doth forfeict the liberties of Cities and companies Honors are best mayntaind by loyalty by labor and diligence It s hard to renue a Charter once lost by Rebellion Therfore hold our selues close to our holy conuersation and walking with God by such Priuiledges It s a great matter that we haue them vnder Gods seale but when we see that they do concerns vs alone how should this cheere us Let all the braue spirits of the world and all the fauorites of Princes at death hold vp their heads as a beleeuer may vnder one of all these promises and we will embrace his choice But the Spirit of this Treasure and these priuiledges the ioy peace and welfare of a Christian can hardly be counterfeited a stranger shall not get into his ioy Thus much also of this Article The seuenth and last Article of the third part Question VVHat is this last Article A. The vse of the whole part in generall Euen the very text of the Apostle may comprehend it Eph. 4.23 If yee haue learned the truth as it is in Iesus put off the old man and put on the new As we haue felt Iesus in the truth of his Reconciliation so let vs put on the same Lord Iesus in the truth of Renouation for the one intimates the other Shew thy selfe to vnderstand how the spirit by fayth breeds Repentance in the heart and life As the poore childe hauing the mothers cost about it dainty fare money in purse fine cloathes carries them to shew in euery corner of the house so let vs warmed and adorned with the Lord Iesus our righteousnesse 2. Cor. 2.14 vtter his loue and shew forth the sauor of it in all our course Let vs abhorre the thought of such a Iesus as will keepe within our bosomes and lye still no his loue will burne within vs and wee shall not bee able to smother it It will giue vs the spirit of Dauid 1 Kin. 1.30 who cryed As the Lord liueth who hath deliuered my soule from all aduersity Salomon shall raigne signifying that this loue of Gods redemption and deliuerance was kept as the perpetuall sacrifice burning vpon the Alter of his heart alway ready at his call to set him about euery good duty with resolution Hee speaks as a Gyant refreshed with wine ● Cor. 5.14 as if this loue of Christ compelled him and was as strong as the spirits of wine to encourage him to his seruice when hee would do any thing to purpose he cals for this Spirit of Gods loue that deliuered him Let this Spirit carry vs to preach to meditate to deny our selues to bee patient to beare our crosses to dye in peace If any duty more then common offer it selfe let this mayne motiue be drawne forth and bee as the necessity of an armed man Ephe. 3.16 That the Lord hath deliuered vs from all aduersity Then we put on the Lord Iesus when his loue is put into and vpon our soules to enlarge and widen them to goe thorow our conuersation with holy resolution His length and depth and breadth and height must enlarge vs to the length or continuance of a sweete course to the depth and hardnesse of the most difficult duties to the height and pitch of the most heauenly affections the bredth and measure of the most plentiful and fruitfull obedience that is to whatsoeuer is godlynesse Not our pangs not our good affections not all encouragements blessings or examples no not all meanes ordinances and performances without which this will do it As that good Latymer to some that asked him why one that preacht his Sermon did not preach it as he did answered Hee had his Fiddle and sticke but wanted his rozen so vndoubtedly will it be heere when wee goe to worke without this loue of the Lord Iesus warming vs as an inward principle of life and motion we may thinke we haue harped vpon the right string and admire our selues but the true stroake of the musique the rellish and sauor of the worke will bee to seeke and all returne vpon vs with fulsome distaste in respect eyther of Gods account or our own content Still that of poore Isaac will be wanting Lo heere my Father is the Altar and the wood ready Gen. 22.7 But where is the Sacrifice Let all I haue spoken end in this All true sight of sinne sence of mercy ends in the life of fayth in obedience Goe ouer the second Article of conuersation in thy thoughts get a view of it and conclude It must be no small loue must driue such a course no little stocke that will carry such a trade currently and the cause why the wheele of conuersation cracks and breaks in so many parts why it driues on so heauily and is so vnequall in her motion is this it wants her spokes to ioyne her to the Nave such a wheele wee know as wants her staues must needs split and the wheele of that conuersation that is full of loding and duties being yet vnsupported with these staues of loue from the Naue of the Lord Iesus his deliuerance and redemption must of necessity cracke in sunder The Lord Iesus we read commended two persons admirably Luke 7.9 Luke 7.47 the one that Centurion of whom hee sayd I haue not found such fayth in Israel The other was Mary out of whom he had cast seuen deuils and sayd She loued much because much was forgiuen her Let both be ioyned together if we get such fayth as is rare to finde let vs bewray it by such loue as is so too and both will carry vs forth to this
thy meanest gifts to do good Mat. 15.37 Iob 8.7 and thy loues shall encrease in the breaking and thy small beginnings shall prooue great By these and the like directions conceaue of this first point Q. Proceed to the second Communion in meanes What is that A. It is such an exercise of Communion as whereby the Church of Christ doth edify her selfe in by the ordinance of GOD Ephes 4.13 Q. How doe these ordinances of GOD edify the Church A. Two wayes first as they are Tyes and bandes of Communion secondly as they are actiue instruments helps to beget and nourish it Q. How are the ordinances of God Tyes and Bands A. In that they are appointed by GOD to bee the sinnewes and cordes of vnion not onely of the Church to God himselfe but of the members each to other Without the which the members would scatter and be dissolued Hence Psal 122. Ierusalem is called a compacted City knit together by the Assemblyes by the Sacrifices by the Thrones of Iudgement Read it So Paul Ephes 4.5 One God one Baptisme one fayth noting that the Churches mutual interest in the Doctrine and Sacraments doth knit her in one Communion Thus it s sayd that the Church continued and claue together after the Ascension in the vse of the ordinances Act. 2.46 and 4.32 the Sacrament especially of the Supper Experience teacheth that the fellowship of the word prayer and the like is the life strength blood and marrow of Communion Hence it is that they are called the Banners Ensignes Standards of Christ and the Ministers the Bearers thereof For as Souldiers flocke to the Standard and Ensigne so doe these Doues of Christ Fly to these windowes and the youth of his wombe to these Assemblies Psal 110.2 Hence Paul saith 1 Cor. 10.16 The Bread we breake and the Wine wee drinke are they not our Communion with the body of Christ meaning that as they knit vs to him so doe they knit vs each to other Saint Peter saith 2 Pet. 1.2 The Saints partake like precious Faith We are said Heb. 12.22 to bee come to Mount Zion and the Assemblies of iust men Why saue that heereby we might be strengthned in the same Communion We see that the Common tyes of nature education and place doe much tye men together To haue had one father to haue lyen in one wombe to haue dwelt in one towne to haue fed at one boord to haue beene brought vp in one family or Nursery are bands of fellowship how much more all these Spirituall tyes in one In particular how dare wee come to the Supper of Christ without loue Why because it is as it is called a Sacrament of Communion a tye and band of Gods people into a more close and firme league of amity then else they could enioy So also the decency order beauty of the ordinances of hearing of prayer of fasting especially in the purity thereof what singular helpes are they to Communion Yea the members of the Triumphant Church the Angels themselues are tyed to the Militant by the ordinances 1 Pet. 1.12 When the faithfull members of Christ behold with what holy Claspes and Taches not of siluer or brasse the Lord hath fastned the parts of his Tabernacle together when they behold each in other the Reuerence the Zeale the Feare the Ioy and all the gracious dispositions with which they meet God in Hearing Praying Receauing how must they needs hee vnited in neere affection and loue Not to speake of the holy Censures which God hath ordained to curbe the vnruly and to confirme the godly in their station to make the one to feare and the other to obey So that there is no Iesuite or profane person doth more abuse and defile these ordinances to treason and lewd ends then the Saints doe embrace them to strengthen themselues in this Communion As Nehemia once said Shall such a one as I flee Nehem. 6.11 So doe the faithfull Shall such as we who enioy such Ordinances and haue such a Charter of Priuiledges quarrell contend goe to Law iangle and liue at variance Shall wee that are to heare one truth of God and receaue one Sacrament lye cog wrong hurt each other or dare we come into the presence of God in these Ordinances if we walke inordinately in our course Q. How are these Ordinances begetters and nourishers of Communion A. There is none of them but concurres heerto in a speciall manner First as for the Word preached how many thousands did one Sermon of Peter gaine to this Communion And it no lesse preserueth and holdeth the faithfull therein For either it findes them staggering in this Communion and then it restores them or weake and then it strengthens them or sad and heauy and then it encourages and comforts them or ignorant and then it enlightens them or vnruly and then it admonishes them or standing and then it stablishes them So th●● it doth all offices of communion Secondly so the Censures duly administred Thirdly so the Sacrament of the Supper How actiue an instrument is it to reconcile them that are at ods and to vnite them more who are brethren It makes them dwell together more sweetly and louingly Fourthly Prayer is another what office is there which it hath not done in the Church what was the meane of conuerting Saul What deliuered Peter out of Herods prison Act. 12.6 Fifthly Fasting ioyned with it what good thing hath it not beene a key to open the Treasure of Heauen and to bring vpon the bodies and soules of the faithfull Plenty in famine Victory in warre Protection in dangers Ease in distresse Witnesse the examples of Ezra Ester and others Ezra 8.23 Ester 4.16 And to end The Conuersing of the people of God in Holy conference how doth it reuiue and cheere their soules when they are filled with heauinesse and sorrow and to seeke of instruction and strength in the wayes of God Heb. 10.25 Q. I see your meaning in both these viz. Graces and Ordinances conclude now and shew what is the third viz. Communion in Seruices A. It s such an exercise of Communion as wherein the members of the Church by mutuall duties and seruices performed do edify themselues in the body Q. Of how many sorts are these A. Some concerne the bodyes of men other their soules Q. VVhat duty concernes the bodies of men Are bodies also the obiects of Communion A. Yea doubtlesse if the dying bodyes yea dead carcasses of Paul supposed to be so Act. 14.19 and Stephen Act. 8.2 were assisted and enterred with solemne lamentation much more the liuing Besides we communicate not one with other as the Angels by Communion of Spirits but by the mediation of our bodyes Not to vrge that viz. The Bodies as well as the Soules of the faithfull are redeemed to the liberty of this Communion Q. Are onely the bodies of the faithfull the obiects of Communion A. No. There is an holy ouerflow of Communion of Saints