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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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but seeing he who is thy head is in Heaven thou that art a member of him must be there also And as Christ while hee continued upon earth after his resurrection lived a kind of supernatural and heavenly life so if thou be risen with him thou livest not the life of nature but hast begun the life of grace and an heavenly conversation Quest But how shall I know whether I live by this heavenly life or no Heavenly life disce●n●d by two notes Ans There be two special notes to discern this truth by the former is the dissimilitude and opposition which it hath with the life of sinful natural men upon earth the latter is the similitude and agreement it hath with the life of Saints and glorified men in heaven Concerning the former ● In the matters of this life the Natural man will follow and pursue things which tend to a sensual and natural life he will beat his brains for gold and silver meat and cloth goods and lands for himself and his as for Heaven he will have nothing to doe there till he be dead and for the way thither hee cateth not to know it till he be dying at the soonest But the Spiritual man hee coveteth after Spiritual things the power of Christs Spirit where it is present will lift up his heart be it never so heavie to seek the Kingdom and the righteousnesse or it and hee seeketh after the wisdome of God as for gold and treasures he accounteth of the graces of faith love hope humility and the fear of the Lord above all pearls and precious things he provideth for himself and his the food that perisheth not and thinketh h●mself warmly and comely arrayed when he hath put on the Lord Jesus Christ as knowing that only the garment of his righteousnesse can fence him from all the injury of wind and weather The Natural man doth not more seriously listen after great purchases of Lands and Fields as he doth cast with himself to purchase the pearl hid in the field for which he will sell himself as we say into his shirt nay and further how own self liberty life and if he had any thing dearer than that The Spiritual man as for the things of this life if he have them not hee wanteth not his portion If he have them his care is that they have not him or become his portion If riches increase he setteth not his heart upon them If they decrease his heart faileth not with them In abundance he carrieth himself warily and weanedly In want cheerfully and contentedly The things hee hath he useth as not using them the things hee hath not hee knoweth he hath no good use of them or else he should have them And thus as the Natural man bestirreth himself and all his motion tendeth to the bettering of his outward estate at home so contrarily doth an heavenly-minded man accounting himself from home while he is here in the body bend his chief care to settle his estate at home in heaven and all his trading and converse in this strange Country tendeth to the enriching of him in his own Country Further if we look to the Natural mans course in the matter of his religion we shall see as great difference between them For it is clear 2 In the matters of religion that whereas matters of religion are a burthen to the one they are the joy of the other The one as heavie to pray to hear to read and meditate on the Word and of his own estate as a Bear to the stake if Law of shame or some such by-respect moved him not if were all one to him to bee on his Horse-back as in the Church the other would account his life tedious were it not for these meetings of God and his people in the assemblies and those sweet refreshments they bring back from thence The one if he pray sometimes in publick hee maketh little conscience of private prayer in his family and so of other private duties to which God and a good conscience would bind him as straight as to the former The other walketh wisely and religiously in the midst of his house and preserveth the worship of God at home and maketh his house a little Church and house of God The one maketh little or no conscience of such sins as either in comparison of other or in his own corrupt conceit are smaller sins such as are inferior oathes idlenesse gaming sins of omission idle words of hurtful unclean or wandring thoughts words he thinketh to be but wind if he mean no hurt and if he mean hurt but doe none thoughts are free As for the sins of the time he will not be so undiscreet as to swim against the stream hee is here violently carried without resistance into a gulf of known evils and all is well he doth but as others doe and it were worse for him if hee did not The other maketh conscience of all sin lesser sins and secret sins hee can hate all even those which he cannot avoyd hee hateth the evil that himself doth and willingly will not displease God though all men bee therefore offended with him To conclude this point the one seeketh to appprove himself unto man the other to approve his heart to God because he knoweth he made it and knoweth what is in it And this shall serve for a tast of the opposite disposition between Natural and Spiritual life Agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in Heaven in two things II. The second note to discern this heavenly life by is the similitude or agreement which it hath with the life of the Saints in heaven For the life of the Saints in Heaven must be a counterpane of the beleevers upon earth to which they must be daily framed in sundry regards 1 In respect of the things they are called from 2 In respect of the things they are called unto 1 The Saints in Heaven are called from three things 1 The world it self 2 The corruptions that are in the world through lust 3 The company of the wicked of the world Even so must beleevers in the world in their degree and measure carry themselves as those that are chosen out of the world and such as are bought from the earth Rev. 14.3 medling no more wich earthly things than needs must enjoying them so as they joy no more in them than in things which are not their own but borrowed only for a time using them so as they abuse them not because they are to be countable for them abiding in them earthly businesse and callings What the Saints are called from in three things so as they be never earthly minded in one word so desiring pursuing having holding and parting from the profits of this life as those to whom God hath shewed better things than any below yea and esteeming of their present life it self so indifferently as that they can account the day of their
G 1 Grow up daily in the practice of every commandement and in the faith of every promise of God seeing God would have the planted in his house thrive Ps 92.13.14 well liking and more fruitful in their age he that is not best at last may fear whether ever he were good 1 Cor. 10.32 Rom. 14.13 2 Give no offence justly unto any man whether within or without for woe to them by whom offences come 3 Grieve for nothing in the world so much as for your own sins Rom. 7.18 19 24 and in them for nothing so much as for offending so loving a God and that not only in committing of evil but also in omitting of good H 1 Cor. 11.31 1 Humble your self for your sins that the Lord may raise you up for he that judgeth himself aright shall never be judged of the Lord 2 Honour all men in their places 1 Pet. 2.17 but no man so much for his greatness as for his goodness Act. 10.35 and thus shall you imitate the Lord himself who accepteth not persons but in every Nation accepteth him that feareth him 3 Have special care to avoid the sins which you have found your self most inclined unto and which have in times past most prevailed for sin is loath to be said nay and Satan seeketh re-entry I 1 Justifye Gods wisdome in all his proceedings concerning your self and others his Power in sustaining his Providence in maintaining his Justice in punishing his Love in correcting his Bounty in promising his Faithfulness in performing his Grace in giving his Mercy in taking away and in every thing say from the heart Job 1.21 Blessed be the Name of the Lord. 2 In every company receive some good and do some also to your power leave no ill savour behind you neither do hurt by speech silence countenance or example in your praises be discreet in saluting courteous in admonishing brotherly and wise in moving and entertaining speech or conference 3 It is fearful to sin Psal 51.3 Ephes 4.26 but much more to lye in it and therefore registerall your sins daily bewail them at fit times pray for pardon of them and strength against them contemn none as counting it little because Gods law hath condemned it and Christ hath dyed for it or else must you eternally K 1 Know God in Christ Job 17.3 which is life everlasting kiss the Son of God lest he be angry Psa 2.12 and know your self to be a beleever and that Christ is in you and you in him 2 Keep as your vows with God Psa 15.4 so your lawful promises with men for faith and truth must kiss each other in Christian conversation 3 Keep out wandring and worldly thoughts as much as possible may bee prov 4.23 narrowly watching your heart for such as you suffer that to bee such will be your words deeds and whole conversation L 1 Love all things for Gods sake and God onely for his own and look you make him your friend whosoever be your enemy for it this you shall do if as an obedient child you live in the eye of your heavenly father 2 Look upon the lives and behaviours of the wicked to avoid them of the godly to imitate them upon the Life and Death of them both as also your own not far off to make you loathe this world long after the life to come Luk 21.34 Rom 13 13. Deut. 28.58 Mat. 7.12 3 Let your meat apparel recreation be lawful needful and moderate M 1 Make not mention of God or any word or work of his but with fear and reverence nor of any man but with love and carefulness using his name as you would have him to use yours 2 Mark other mens profiting in religion to provoke your self their slips to make your self more wary their risings to be thankful to God for them 3 Meditate often upon the four last things 1 Death 2 Judgement 3 Heaven 4 Hell N 1 Never make shew of more holiness outwardly than inwardly you have in your heart which God seeth in which hee desireth truth Rom. 12 nor please your self with your unprofitableness unfitness or unwillingness to good 2 No man is owner but steward of that he hath you must therefore impart of the blessings you have to those that stand in need wisely heartily and in due season 1 Cor. 11.28 Rom. 12.12 3 Note your own special corruptions whether they grow stronger or weaker and how your self can resist them and if any assault you more strongly pray and make the matter known to God The best way for a woman solicited to folly to bee rid of the Tempter is to tell her Husband O Prov. 27.2 10.19 1 Often speak to the praise of God never of your self For other things because many words want not iniquity speak as few as you can or rather none than unprofitable ●am 1.19 2 Open not your mouth to speak of other mens infirmities Psal 15 especially behind them nor before them without grief and sorrow 3 Of every idle word account must be given Mat. 12 36 and much more of every wicked word and therefore let your speech be gracious poudred with salt Col. 4. ● and tending to edification P 1 Praise the Lord for every new benefit bestowed 1 Thes ● 18 and then by it promote his glory the Churches good and your own salvation esteeming of graces given as spurres to godliness and pledges of eternal life 2 Prevent anger before it kindle Eccl. 7. ● Prov. 14 17 it is wisdome to quench the least sparkle of fire before it begin to flame Consider 1 the original of anger being pride or self-self-love 2 The cursed fruits by giving place to the Devil 3 Gods patience 4 Gods image in your brother 5 Your own weakness in the same kind 6 The wrong is not remedied by revenge but inlarged nor the wrong-door amended but imitated 3 Prepare your self for death 1 Cor. 1 56 and pull out his ●●ing by 1 Bewailing sins past 2 Turning to God in time to come 3 Purposing a new life None can dye ill that hath had a care to live well Perswade your self if you live well you shall dye well but if you dye well doubt not but you shall do better Q 1 Quiet your heart Psal 39 ● and be still under the correcting hand of God because 1 He doth it 2 For your best 3 Hee will moderate it 4 Supply strength 5 Seasonably deliver out of it 2 Question not whether others should do you good or you them first Mat. 5. ● Rom. 1.20 it is praise-worthy to bee first in well-doing and if you do good to your enemies your reward is with God 3 Quench not the Spirit 1 Thes 19 not suffer any good motion arising in your heart to pass away but feed it by reading meditation prayer and practice R 1 Read daily something of
Church For if they do their duty in one place or other they shall hear on both sides both of Satan and his instruments Now because the Devil useth two special weapons against those in higher place to make them unprofitable or hurtful one open the other secret it behoveth Magistrates and Ministers to watch against them both and fully resolve against both Magistrates and Ministers must watch against two things especially 1 Satan will stir up his instruments openly against them Let either or both rebuke the world of sin and force men to walk in the narrow path of life wicked men grow mad against them and rage with all open rebukes and hellish and horrible slanders and so far as they dare blaspheme the Ordinance it self in their hands Hence Jeremy was a contentious man with the whole earth both Moses and Aaron take too much upon them What must men now because they must bee counted peaceable suffer every man to do what hee list as though there were no God nor King in Israel till iniquity so abound as it know no bounds bankes nor bottome No but wee must look both to the Commandement and to the Promise Jer. 1.18 19 If sinners bee obdurate as iron and of brasen and impudent fore-heads wee must bee as brasen walls to make their wickednesse recoyl and bound upon them and with the Palm-tree rise against the burden that lyeth upon us 2 If this will not weary them but they hold on with courage then hee works more secretly more dangerously If hee see them inclined to gain hee will offer them Commodities and profits If ambitious he will choak them with preferments If given to ease or pleasure hee can easily perswade them to a course of favouring themselves And experience shews how commonly Satan prevailes with men some of these waies and who would think him now an enemy or in the field and yet he hath won a fort which open force could not attain And as being in great danger they must adde to this watch Three means for their comfort and safety the means of their comfort and safety as I Let them look to their entrance and drift undertaking these functions not headily or hastily but as Christ did with fasting and prayer How few do it who have much more need than Christ had and are in greater danger than hee was When ambition or covetousness or idleness or any thing but earnest desire of Gods glory leads men into these places besides that they never do good no marvail if they fall fearfully as being not fenced they cannot say God set them there or will help them against temptations 2 Let them look that they have good warrant for that which they do and for every action of their calling that they may see themselves to bee in Gods work for so long they have promise of protection hee will keep and help thee in thy waies 3 Let them pray to God for power and successe notwithstanding their tryals which they shall do if they see the need of Gods strength as the Apostle did Eph. 6.19 Pray for mee and besought the Saints for Christs sake and the love of the Spirit to strive with him in prayer to God Vse 3 Seeing high estates are so dangerous Mean estate the safest and best for Reason why should not men content themselves with a mean condition but insatiably gape after promotion 1 High callings are like high trees upon the tops of hills which are subject to every winde 2 If height could bring content or a sweet life it were more worthily desired but wee see it consumes a man with envy and fear desiring still some thing beyond his present estate 3 There is as great sorrow in the fall as labour in rising and to come down in the height is greater grief And all this comes upon a man besides Satans malice Vse 4 Lastly this serves to comfort Christians Four grou●● of comfort weak Christans in ●●●ption who are acquainted with temptations in the beginning of their conversion and are ready to give up all as seeing nothing but discomfort For 1 It was the lot of Christ the head 2 It is a cursed peace to bee at peace with the Devil and a blessed war to fight for God and Christ Jesus 3 A Theef breaks not into an empty house and a dog barks at strangers it is a good sign that thou art gotten out of Satans power because hee pursues thee hee needs not pursue those whom hee possesseth they bee good men whom Satan is an enemy to 4 The Lord first strengthened Christ with his voice from heaven and then brought him into the field and so hee will deal with thee his member The second circumstance is the person opposed Jesus This will seem strange if wee consider in our Lord Jesus 1 The perfection of his nature hee was free from all Original Corruption by his most holy conception by the over-shadowing of the Holy Ghost as also from actual sin 1 Pet. 2.22 hee did no sin neither was any guile found in his mouth And though hee had our substance and our infirmities yet with one exception without sin Heb. 4.15 a The perfection of grace for hee was now full of the Holy Ghost indued with infinite knowledge wisdom holiness and grace and it might seem that there was no place or room for Temptation 3 The perfection of his power being the Creator and preserver of all things the Lord of Hosts by whose very word or beck all creatures as they bee sustained so might bee brought to nothing who being at the weakest was able by one word to cast down to the earth all that came to apprehend him and compel the very Devils to begge favour of him 4 The perfection of his Fathers Love having immediately before testified that hee was his beloved Son in whom hee was well pleased who as in his private estate he encreased in favour with God Luke 2.52 So now much more hath hee gained his fathers love as wee have heard Doct 〈◊〉 excelle●●● 〈◊〉 exemp●●● man f●●● S●tans temptations And yet Jesus must not escape the Tempter It is not any excellency or high respect that can exempt any man from Satans temptations If a man had all the perfections which Christ had of nature grace power and the love of God yet in this life hee must bee exposed unto them If wee look at all the worthies of the World of greatest grace in greatest favour with God as Job Lot Aaron Moses David Peter none of them could escape his onset Satan desires to winnow the Disciples as wheat even at the side of Christ Luke 22.31 Nay our first Parents Adam and Eve created in absolute perfection concerning present righteousness and holiness met with a Serpent even in innocency in Paradise If neither holiness of person or place can priviledge a man from temptation but Prophets Apostles yea the first Adam and the second Adam also must be tempted who
and set him on Ans It must necessarily be one of these two wayes either Satan must lead him or else must carry him The former that Satan took him as a Companion or a Leader seems not so probable 1 Because Christ of his own will would not goe for as wee have heard the Spirit led him into the Wilderness to bee tempted and hee would not of himself goe elsewhere because the Spirit of God called him thither and no whither else 2 Christ would not doe it at Satans instigation whom he knew to be the Tempter for neither must we doe any thing at Satans request be it never so lawful for whatever wee doe wee must have a word of God to doe it in faith 3 If Christ had yeelded to be lead as a Companion he might have seemed to have sought temptation and been a Co-worker with Satan against himself but it was enough to yeeld himself a Patient in it 4 The distance of the holy City from the Wilderness which was as those say that make it the least twelve miles from Jerusalem admitteth not that Christ being hungry and ready to faint should follow Satan so many miles The latter therfore seems to be the right manner of Christs conveiance namely that he was carried by Satan through the air who by Gods and Christs permission took him up and transported his blessed body to Jerusalem and set him on the battlements of the Temple For 1 The words he set him on the Temple signifies he set him down who had formerly taken him up and if he had power to set him there why should he not also have power to carry him thither And if he had not carried him thither but Christ had followed him the Evangelist would have said When they came to the pinacle of the Temple and not set him on the pinacle 2 This was the hour of the power of darkness wherein Satan was allowed to take all advantages to further his temptations and he might think this violent transportation a means either of shaking Christs faith with terror and fear what might become of him being now delivered into the hands of Satan or else to make him swell with pride and insolency that he was able to flie in the air or to be conveyed in the air from place to place without hurt which an ordinary man could not and this would well fit the scope of the temptation ensuing Quest But how could Satan carry the body of Christ being a spirit Or if he could why should hee Answ Hee is a Spirit 1 Of wonderful knowledge and experience to dive into secrets of Nature to work strange and hidden things 2 Of exceeding great power to shake the Earth move the mountains and confound the Creatures if God should not restrain him 3 Of Admirable agility and quickness proceeding from his spiritual nature whereby hee can speedily convey himself and other creatures into places far remote and distant one from another 4 Hee knows to apply himself to the creatures and to move them not onely according to their ordinary course but with much more speed and quickness 5 Hee is able to appear in the form of a creature or any person not by deluding senses but by assuming to himself a true body and move it by entring into it and to utter a voice in a known Language as hee did in the Serpent and so hee can in other creatures which have instruments of speech And thus it is not difficult to him to transport a body Witches and Wisards have been often by their own confession transported into remote places by wicked spirits which they call familiars Besides good Angels being in their nature Spirits as Satan is are able to transport men hither and thither as Christ was in the air Act. 8.39 The Spirit of the Lord caught away Philip and carried him from Gaza to Azotus which was about thirty six miles Some understand it of an Angel of the Lord as Mr. Beza noteth But if God by himself miraculously did that the additions to Daniel to which as much credit is to bee given as to any History which is not Scripture affirm that the Angel of the Lord carried Habbakkuk out of Judea into Babylon by the hair of the head Now why must Christ be thus carried by Satan Answ 1 It was not against the will of Christ but willingly hee puts himself into the hands of the Devil to pluck us out of his hands 2 It was not impotency or weaknesse of Christ but power and resolution who would not recoil nor shun any place where Satan would appoint for his assault or would carry him being as well the God of the Mountains as of the Vallies Here therefore wee must not admire the power of Satan but the patience of Christ that suffered himself to bee carried of the Devil being it tended to the greater confusion of Satan and the glory of his own victory 3 Our blessed Lord would be tempted in all things like unto us that as a careful Head hee might sympathize with his members God for the tryal of his children sometimes suffers Satan to have power even over their bodies and therefore Christ to sanctify this affliction to his members would suffer even his own blessed body for a while in the hands of Satan 4 What marvel if Christ suffred himself to bee carried by the Devil to temptation that suffered himself to bee carried by his instruments to execution How was hee haled and carried by the Devils limbs from place to place from Annas to Caiaphas from him to Pilate from him to Herod from him to Pilate again and from him to the place of execution Satan in himself might as well carry his body into Jerusalem to be tempted as his limbs carry it out of Jerusalem to bee crucified and as well might he suffer Satan to lead him into the mountain and tempt him as his instruments to lead his body unto Mount Calvary to kill him Vse 1. Consider the wonderful love of God to mankind who would give his onely Son and the Son of his love to such abasement to deliver him not onely into the hands of Satans instruments to mock to spit upon him to buffet yea to condem and kill but to deliver his blessed body into his own hands to carry and recarry at his Pleasure Adde hereunto the wonderful love of the Lord Jesus who was a willing patient in the hands of the Devil himself Hee knew it was the will of his Father and therefore submitted himself unto it Hee knew it was a part of that whole Righteousnesse which hee was to fulfil and therefore hee resisteth not Hee knew it to bee as great an indignity as never could bee the like yet for our sakes hee is well content with it Now as Christ was content because hee loved us thus to bee tossed of Satan here and of his instruments afterwards so let us shew or return our love to him If wee be tossed by Satan
but it is nothing less than true obedience for 1 He came of his own motion but went away by Christs who spake a powerful word which he could not nor durst resist 2 He goes when hee can stay no longer his commission for this time was now expired his liberty was restrained the temptations were ended God permits him now no further and now he leaves the Son of God and so left he Job in the same reason when he had vexed him as much as he could obtain leave to doe 3 Satan could not change his wicked nature in leaving Christ hee leaves not his malice against him only hee leaveth the exercise of it for the present 4 He returns again afterward and sets upon our Saviour with new assaults which is a plain argument he went now against his will Doct. To doe that which God commandeth and to leave undone that which he forbiddeth is not always a sign of true grace The Devil is commanded to give over tempting of Christ and he giveth over is commanded to be gone and he goeth yet this is no argument of true grace and that which is incident unto the Devil cannot be a sign of grace in any man but as there is a forced and feigned obedience in Satan himself so in all his instruments which proceeds not from any true grace let them flatter themselves in it never so much Cain offers Sacrifice as well as Abel and brings a shew of obedience but his heart being filled with murderous thoughts was voyd of all grace Balaam was commanded not to curse the people of God and hee professed that if Balac would give his house full of silver he would not doe it as if hee had made great conscience of Gods Commandement but it was much against his will for having received an answer from God not to curse them he would not be answered but went again and again to know the mind of God not content to test in that answer with which he was not pleased And after that he giveth balac wicked counsel to send his people to Sittim to offer to their Idols where Israel was likely to fall in love with women and so commit fornication with them by which he brought the curse of God amongst them whereby numbers of them were destroyed Here was a seeming obedience without any grace in the heart Exod. 8.19 Jannes and Jambres and the rest of the Enchanters of Aegypt stood out in resisting Moses and Aaron so long as they could and then gave over but not of any conscience but because in the plague of the Lice they saw the finger of God against which they could not prevail The like was the obedience of the Jews when they desisted from persecuting the Apostles Acts 5.35 because Gamaliel a Doctor of the Law perceived that they did fight against God Adde hereunto the example of Judas who after his sin of betraying his Lord made a fair shew of repentance confessed his sin restored the mony bewayled and justified his Master but all this without all grace in his heart for he went away and hanged himself 1 A man only by repressing and restraining grace Reasons may both doe many things which God hath commanded and leave undone what God hath forbidden as Haman refrained himself from Mordecai Hest 5.10 though his heart was full of wrath chap. 3.5 Many other things might hinder him from the present execution of his rage against Mordecai as that Mordecai was as in a Sanctuary the Kings gate that he was the Kings servant that it was better to reserve him to a shameful death and effect it by a kind of form of Law than to embrue his own hands in the bloud of the Kings servant and so endanger himself But the chief cause is Gods restraint of wicked mens fury that they cannot execute what they can determine against his Church though hee use sundry means to restrain them Nay further a wicked man may be restrained from some evils which the child of God may fall into he affects an outward form and credit and glory of an outward profession sometimes and to attain this end in which he notably deceives himself he cannot enjoy the pleasures of sin with greediness not because he conscionably hateth these sins but hee is bridled with the credit of his profession 2 Obedience proceeding from true grace is so qualified Conditions of sound obedience ●our as neither Satan nor any wicked man is capable of it For 1 it is an effect of the love of God and of goodness Deut. 30.20 Choose life by loving the Lord and obeying his voice and cleaving unto him Josh 22.5 Take heed to the Commandement and Law which Moses the servant of the Lord commanded you that is that yee love the Lord your God and walk in all his waies and keep his Commandements and cleave unto him Love excludes all coaction and constraint Now wicked men resembling their Father the Devil cannot love God nor goodnesse but notwithstanding all their pretences are haters of God and enemies of righteousnesse they care not for his favour above life they love not his presence nor to bee with him nor his Image in his Child nor his will in his word nor his house nor his holinesse to resemble him nor his glory but are more troubled at the loss of a grain of their honour than all his 2 This obedience is a daughter of faith for without faith it is impossible to please God whereas wicked men have nothing above corrupt nature much less such a supernatural indowment as faith is which so uniteth unto Christ as it makes him more precious than all the World 3 It proceedeth from a man wholly renewed and changed such good fruit must come from a good tree which is the work of sound grace onely 1 The understanding is inlightened to discern between good and evil according to Gods Word 2 The will is sanctified and made willing 3 The heart is purified by faith and made a good treasury to send out good speeches and actions 4 The conscience is purged and being perswaded of the love of God in Christ it seeks to preserve it self good and pure and in all his waies out of Conscience indeavours in the good that God requires and avoids the evil which hee forbids 5 The affections are renewed and are sweetly perswaded by Gods Spirit to hate all evil and cleave to that which is good to grieve they can do no more glory to God but are at their best very unprofitable But wicked men are never a whit changed but are all impure even their mindes and consciences and out of the abundance of the heart the tongue speaketh the hand worketh neither can a bitter fountain send out sweet waters 4 Sound Grace within sendeth forth an obedience which is cheerful 1 In the undertaking love makes labours light and nothing is hard to a good will 2 In the manner of doing it is not forced but lead ruled by the word
them to God his Father so as being now redeemed and bought with a price they are no longer their own but the Lords that bought them 1 Cor. 6.20 3 Because when he hath thus dearly purchased his Church he contracteth himself in spiritual Marriage with her and so becometh her Lord Hos 2.18 I will marry thee for ever unto my self yea I will marry thee unto me in righteousnesse in judgement in mercy and in compassion Ephes 5.23 As the husband is the wives head so is Christ of the Church So as if a man bee a Lord of that which is given him of that which he hath redeemed and ransomed of her whom he had married into his bosome in all these regards by as good right is Jesus Christ the Lord of his Church and every member of it Object But how can Christ be a Lord and a servant too Isa 42.1 Behold my servant I will lea●e upon him and hee took upon him the form of a servant Phil. 2.7 Ans Christ considered as Mediator is after a special manner both his Fathers servant and yet the Lord of his Church In all the work of mans Redemption he served and obeyed his Father being sent of his Father for this end he was subject to the death he prayed unto him gave him thanks learned obedience by the things he suffered not as God equal to his Father but as our Mediator and Surety and yet by all these things he became our Lord and the King of his Church And herein the Apostles travel as in their main scope to prove that Jesus Christ whom the Jews put to death hath shewed himself the Lord of glory and the true Messias Acts 2.34 Let all the house of Israel know assuredly that God hath made that Jesus which they crucified Lord and Christ. Object But how can Christ be the Lord of all seeing many yea the most will not obey him Ans Doth a King cease to be the Lord of all his Country because some which were his subjects are gone out in rebellion against him besides howsoever it standeth with his glory and grace to suffer with patience the vessels of wrath yet at length he shews his power against them in bringing forth his whole displeasure upon them Vse Hence in that Christ is in general Lord of all we learn that all Creatures are his and therefore we must never use any of them without leave from him or without return of praise and thanks unto him none of them are sanctified to our use without the Word and Prayer And if wee have leave from him we ought in sobriety to use them 1 Cor. 10.26 Eat whatsoever is sold in the shambles making no question for conscience sake Hence followeth it also that he having an absolute power over all hee may doe with his own what he will who shall hinder a Potter to frame one vessel to honour another to dishonour which I speak because many cannot endure to hear of a decree of reprobation who must frame their judgement to his will who cannot but be just and good and leave off to reason with God Hence also he may make one rich another poor at his pleasure The rich and poor meet this Lord maketh them both Secondly in that Christ is in special Lord of his Church sundry things are to be noted as first That none can have Christ to be a Jesus that is a Saviour who have him not for their Soveraign and Lord whosoever thou art that challengest him for thy Saviour see thou acknowledge him thy Lord. Quest How may a man have Christ to be his Lord A man hath Christ his Lord by four things Ans By the practice of four duties 1 By preserving in the heart a fear and reverence towards his person Malac. 1.6 If I be a Lord where is my fear Lordship requires subjection Psal 45.11 He is thy Lord and reverence thou or bow unto him Now this fear must proceed from love for if any man love not the Lord Jesus let him be accursed and wheresoever this love is it must needs bee attended with a fear to displease him 2 By professing him to bee thy Lord as servants by their livery or cognisance speak and proclaim to all men to whom they belong so if Christ bee thy Lord thou must not bee ashamed of him but bee ever speaking of him commending his goodness thou must glory of such a service accounting it thy greatest honour that thou art become his servant thou must defend his name where ever thou hearest it called into question thou must suffer with him and take part with him in affliction 1 Pet 4.13 an unfaithful servant is hee that can bee dumb in his Masters dishonour but especially if his Master be assaulted and in danger then to forsake him when hee hath most need of him 3 By acknowledging thy self to bee countable unto him for all thy waies and for all thy receites Make account to be countable of all to this Lord of all The servant not being at his own hand must go about no business but his Masters whatsoever matter of trust hee receiveth from his Master it is not his own hee is faithfully to discharge himself of it by a true and just account Thus therefore must thou reason the case with thine own heart what am I now in my Masters work had I commandement from him did his word or warrant set mee about the business which is now in my hands Again what gifts have I received of body minde wealth authority credit I am to be countable for all all the Talents I have are his If I gain nothing I am unprofitable If I gain I must be profitable unto him By absolute obedience unto his will revealed To this Lord only must be given absolute obedience Thus himself being to give his Law beginneth thus I am the Lord thy God thou shalt do thus and thus other Lords and Kings must bee obeyed in him yea disobeyed for him if they command contrary unto him onely hee must ever by Kings themselves bee obeyed absolutely in all the parts of his will revealed Which may bee considered in three heads 1 It is his will that wee beleeve in him Joh. 6.40 The will of Christ reduced to three ●eads This is the will of him that sent mee that every one that seeth the Son and beleeveth in him not onely beleeving his word to bee true but leaning upon him only for thy salvation If a Master should promise a servant that if hee will but beleeve him and seek to please him hee will provide for him for ever it would adde cheerfulness to such a servant and hee would think none of his Masters commandements burdensome but yet wee having larger and surer promises are slow of heart and hand to beleeve or yield obedience 2 It is his will that wee shew forth this faith of our hearts in the fruits of sanctification 1 Thess 4.3 This is the will of God even
comes amiss to an idle person Besides discredit bad report and poverty come as an armed man upon such a one Prov. 6.11 3 To others 3 To others whether wee bee Masters or servants as knowing that in our Calling wee are to practise most Christian duties as love to our brethren patience truth fidelity uprightness as being ever under Gods eye 3 Be not busie in other mens Callings 3 Another point of Wisdome in our Callings is not to meddle with other mens business but follow our own close 1 Thes 4.11 Study to be quiet and to do your own business And every where the Apostle reproves busie bodies who going beyond their own bounds thrust their sickle into every mans harvest and being out of their own places and business intermeddle with that which no way concerns them And these are disturbers of peace and civil tranquillity kindling and blowing up contentions for lack of other work The same rule is for women also that they bee not gadders but house-keepers Tit. 2.5 4 In earthly business carry an Heavenly minde Phil. 3.20 4 In all earthly business study to carry an heavenly minde A Christian while hee converseth in earth must have his conversation in Heaven And know that in all the ways of this present life hee ought never to step out of the way to eternal life Neither shall a man bee a loser by this course seeing wee have an express promise that if wee seek Gods Kingdome first and principally these outward things should so far as they are needful for us without such carking care bee cast upon us 5 Intend most the most necessary duties of them 5 As all duties of the Calling must bee profitable in themselves and for the publike good so the most profitable must bee most intended and specially performed A Minister must read the Word but must apply himself more to Preaching as being more necessary A Magistrate must execute Justice upon transgressors of mens Laws but especially against open transgressors of Gods Law Masters of families must provide for the bodies and health of their family but especially for the good and salvation of their souls CHAP. XII Rules of Wisdome concerning a mans estate and first for adversity THe rules of Wisdome concerning a Christian mans estate are these One general Rule for all estates is to think the present estate best for thee First General Secondly Special The general rule for all estates is this Bee prepared for any estate contented in every estate and assure thy self the present estate whatsoever it is is best for thee though not ever in thy sense yet in Gods gracious and wise ordering of it This lesson the Apostle Paul had well learned Phil. 4.11 12. I can want and abound I can bee full and hungry I have learned in all estates to bee contented The special rules are either for prosperity or for adversity Rules for affliction Concerning adversity and afflictions these are the rules of Christian wisdome 1 Consider thou art not placed here in the world by God 1 God may as well be injoyed in Adversity as Prosperity to injoy the pleasures of the World but to injoy God which thou mayest do as well in affliction as in prosperity and to cleave to him in his service looking for nothing but afflictions as a Pilgrim going to thy Country the way whereunto lyeth through afflictions This ground not laid men count troubles a strange thing 1 Pet. 4.11 and start at the mention of them as the Apostles Joh. 11.8 when they heard Christ speaking of going into Jury where the Jews had lately sought to stone him And note it to bee a corruption of the heart to bee more grieved for thine own troubles than the troubles of the Church for private than publick evils 2 Lay up strength and comforts aforehand As first Humility 2 Lay up strength and comfort aforehand to over-master and tame the pride and rebellion of our hearts and to bring in contentedness to sweeten our troubles and our labour will be well spent for if wee can relish the hardest part of our life our whole life else will assuredly bee more sweet and joyful 2 Grow up in the knowledge of God which will make thee rise up in much comfort and will bring in comfort against that confused heaviness distrust and dangerous affections and passions which else in trouble might beat us down and off him 3 Get assurance of faith which will sweetly warm the heart in the sense of Gods love in Jesus Christ The fruit of which will bee first To inable us to trust our selves with God in any estate and bee assured the Lord is with us in fire and water in the midst of the Valley of the shadow of Death Secondly to depend on him for strength Psal 23.4 for howsoever Satan would make us beleeve our affliction is greater than it is or wee are for it yet wee shall assure our hearts that the Lord hath measured it out for our strength and not above Thridly 1 Cor. 10.13 to wait upon him for a good issue and seasonable deliverance who hath promised to turn it to the best This shall keep us from fainting distrust and despair Rom. 8.28 3 In all evils of punishment take occasion to set upon the evil of sin 3 In evils of punishment to set upon evil of sin and revenge upon that complain of it to God and men murmure and grudge at nothing else If affliction bee sharper than ordinary it is sure some sin or lust addes a sting unto it But this rule mortifies sin and unruly passions and will weaken the heart and make a man say with the Church Mic. 7.9 I will bear the wrath of the Lord because I have sinned 4 Make them no heavier than God maketh them by impatience 4 Make them no heavier th●n God hath made them frowardness and looseness of heart God sometimes layes on a little finger and the froward heart lays on the whole hand and loyns to make the burden heavier with faithless heaviness and distrust which is but an addition of new and worse troubles than the former How inconsiderately do many men load themselves with troubles too too light in themselves and on the shoulders of wise men who can make a vertue of necessity and step over a number of rubs which others stoop to remove and infinitely toil themselves How do many in smaller troubles as discourtesie of neighbours unruliness of children unfaithfulness of servants smaller losses and crosses in Family-matters give place to unquietness impatience and passion till their folly have by seeking to case their burden increased it from a dram to a talent And now how unmeet are they for the service of God How unprofitable in any Christian society How sowr and heavy in countenance disguised in speech Levius sit pationus Quicquid corrigere est nosas Horat. and impotent in their behaviour All which
first assault which is a great advantage For if Satan can get us to rest upon his suggestion hee presently hopes for consent and then hasteneth the execution forward for the party is wonn and the means of executing shall not be farre to seek Hence are we commanded to give no place to the Devil but to break the head of the Serpent hit Goliah in the fore-head tread on sin in the shell and dash Satans brood against the stones while they are infants For 1 Satan is more easily driven back at the first as ill weeds grow a pace in a ranck soil so by a little continuance Satans first assaults to be repelled for three reasons his temptation getteth power strength and greatness 2 Mans power is daily lessened and hee is more unable to resist as in the body the stronger the disease the weaker the body 3 Many habit grow to a nature and seldome are habitual sinners reclaimed When saw wee a Drunkard converted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist or a Blasphemer or a mock-God or a raylor at Religion No the delight in sinne hath delivered them into Satans hands to bee ruled at his will It is in the recovery of the souls health as in the bodies it is more easily obtained if the disease be met with at the first assault The second point considerable is Why Christ would bee tempted II. Why Christ would bee tempted four reasons For wee must think that hee voluntary submitted himself unto temptations and was not violently subjected to them seeing hee who was able to cast out Devils by his very word and legions of them could if hee had pleased by his own power have commanded the Devils not once to attempt the tempting of him And therefore one distinguished between Christs submission of which this was a branch and subjection which usually infertes necessity Wee may well assure our selves that it being in his power hee would never so voluntarily have yielded himself to such an unpleasant combat with so soul an enemy had there not been very weighty and urgent causes And these we shall see most specially respecting us rather than himself hee was incarnate not for himself but for us hee suffered in our nature not for himself but for us that by his stripes wee might bee healed hee subdued and vanquished the Devil not for himself who was never under his power but for us and so was tempted not for himself but for us and that for these reasons 1 That hee might through temptation win that which the first Adam through temptation lost and that as our fall was begun by temptation so also might our deliverance that as the Serpent by tempting the woman bereaved us of our happinesse so the same Serpent by tempting this seed of the woman might against his will help us to our happiness again 2 That by his temptation he should not onely overcome ours as by his death hee destroyed ours but by his resistance to leave us a pattern how to resist the Devil Hee is the chief Doctor who not onely teacheth by Precept but by unfailing example how wee may rise from under temptation Hee might have driven back the Devil with a word but then had wee wanted the benefit of his example which hath both shewed us our coat-armour and the right manner of using it as hee did As a faithful Captain hee trains his Souldiers and as Gideon said to his Souldiers What yea see mee do that do you 3 That hee might bee more able to succour them that bee tempted Heb. 2.18 Christ by being tempted enabled to succour us in temptation sundry way● for in that hee suffered and was tempted hee is able to succour them that are tempted And Christ by being tempted was enabled thereunto sundry waies 1 By experience hee learned wherein the strength of Satan did lye that as Dalilah when shee knew wherein Sampsons great strength lay did soon disarm him so Christ spoiled Satan of his locks 2 He took knowledge and felt our misery by reason of Satans temptations whereas he that hath not felt misery doth little know or beleeve the misery that another feeleth but hee that hath felt the like hath a fellow-feeling of it Heb. 4.15 Wee have not an High-Priest which cannot bee touched with infirmities but hee was in all things tempted in like sort yet without sin 3 As hee would by temptation feel our misery so hee was more enabled to shew pity and compassion on them that are tempted Heb. 5.2 He is able sufficiently to have compassion them that are ignorant and out of the way because hee was compassed with infirmity So as if Christ had not had experience of the force craft instance of the Tempter and of the misery danger weakness of the tempted so far as without sin hee could hee had not been so able to succour them that are tempted as now hee is 4 That by his temptation hee might minister sundry grounds of comfort unto us A ground of comfort out of Christs temptation as 1 That our temptations and tryals are not signes of Gods wrath no more than they were to Christ of whom hee had immediately before witnessed that hee was the Son of his love but exercises which the Lord in wisdome useth for the good of his Children If it had been evil to bee tempted certainly Christ had not been tempted 2 That wee should not quail at the sight of our enemy as all Israel ran away at the sight of Goliah but although hee bee never so huge and strong a Gyant yet hee may bee and is overcome and that by Christ true man in the flesh Yea this victory over Satan in our nature and by our head is the ground of ours to whom hee will also give power to do the same 3 That wee have him a Companion yea an invincible captain in our Combate who can never bee overcome but at the weakest and alone like a mighty Sampson slew down heaps upon heaps and bore away his enemies gates and his presence shall make us invincible that look as Daniels fellows could not bee touched with the fire because there was a fourth like the Son of God with them so much less shall Gods children by Satans most fiery temptations so long as the Son of God is with them 4 That wee might see in him what glory follows victory and what crowns are prepared for the Conquerours and so comfort our selves in all difficulties to hold out unto victory Vse 1. Seeing Christ was tempted let not us bee dismayed at temptations Motives to manful resistance of temptation but rather encouraged manfully to resist them For 1 By vertue of Christs temptations ours are sanctified unto us There was nothing which Christ did but hee sanctified the same to us publike institutions of Gods worship speaking and hearing the word prayer the Sacraments and all other private Ordinances meat drink sleep yea even infirmities that are without sin pain sorrow temptations
teacheth us to defend all our parts but especially our head and heart and such like vital parts the very Serpent will save his head so long as he can by natural instinct whatsoever become of other parts Our chief fortress is our faith we have no grace but is worth preserving and saving yet of them all Faith is as it were the Head and leader it sends the vital spirits of heavenly life to the whole man Let grace therefore teach us to save this grace which is the heart of a Christian above all the rest and to beware of the least prick or crack in it which is dangerous A man may receive great gashes and wounds in his arms and thighes or exteriour parts and recover it well enough not so in the heart or brain Though thy comfort joy feeling yea and fruits may fail take heed thy faith thy root fail not This is that which the Apostle Peter exhorteth 1 Pet. 5.9 whom resist stedfast in the faith wherein if a man sit not very fast Satan will soon unhorse him And of all others let afflicted and humbled souls lay hold and make use of this exhortation for Satan doth with so much the more violence assault them as he findeth it easier to prevail with them for well he knows that howsoever they heartily detest all other sins and much adoe he hath to bring them to his lure in other yet their spirits being oppressed and wounded by the sense of sin and Gods displeasure for it he findes them inclinable enough upon every trivial temptation to despair and so makes a wide breach by their improvidence watching narrowly all other things but not that which they ought most of all and which Satan most of all impugneth Quest How may I strengthen and stablish my faith Three general directions for the fortifying of faith Answ By observing these few directions 1 Consider the excellency of this grace for those onely that know it are in love with it and will use means to preserve and increase it And this excellency appears in these branches Excellency of faith in four things 1 It is the first stone to bee laid in Christianity called a subsistence or foundation Heb. 11.1 from whence also Christians are styled 1 Cor. 1. and the houshold of faith Gal. 10.6 of which Christ himself hath undertaken to bee the Author and finisher and hath appointed all his Ordinances to breed and perfect it in the hearts of all that shall attain the end of it which is salvation namely the word of faith Rom. 10.8 the Sacraments the seals of faith chap. 4.11 and the Prayer of faith Jam. 5.15 2 It is the beginning of our blessedness John 20.29 Blessed is he that hath not seen and yet beleeveth It espouseth us to God and Christ and ascertaineth us of the marriage day It honoureth God as Abraham by beleeving gave glory to God and makes us witnesse that God is true which is not more honour to God than our selves John 3.33 3 All our strength is from faith Heb. 11.33 by faith the Saints subdued Kingdomes and were strong in battel faith is the victory whereby wee overcome the world by faith wee stand A grain of it can work wonders and what then can strong faith It draws vertue from Christ who himself was foiled by it in the Syrophenissa● All things are possible to it Mar. 9.23 Give Peter faith hee shall not sink but shall walk on the Sea Matthew 14.29 4 All our present comfort is from it peace with God and peace in our consciences Rom. 5.1 2. comfort in afflictions it beareth great weights uncrusht it self being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sound and sure foundation According to the measure of faith is the measure of all other graces and comforts As a man beleeveth so hee obeyeth loveth prayeth and is heard Yea not onely the measure of grace here but of Glory hereafter is proportioned to the measure of faith And is it not worth preserving and increasing Means of fortifying faith four II. Use means to increase and strengthen it and they be these 1 Acquaint thy self with the word of God often read repeated preached meditated and conferred on this is the word of faith and every thing is fed and preserved by that whereof it is begotten and the often hearing reading meditating and conferring of it doth fix and digest it and makes it at hand to comfort the weary hands and weak knees And wee must not onely frequent the audible but also the visible word that is reverently and conscionably use the blessed Sacraments which are signes and seals of Gods favour and our Faith Those that say they beleeve and yet neglect the Word and Sacraments deceive themselves for there is nothing to save where is no means of saving A man cares not greatly for an empty chest Neither can faith stay where she sees not her self respected Oh take heed of Satans subtilty who to hold men in infidelity with-holds them from vision and to starve mens souls intercepts their food And in comming to the word consider the excellent promises that are made to faith and take special notice of places which may batter the devils temptations to unbeleef 2 Observe the tokens of Gods love and favour towards thee and because no man knows love or hatred by things before him labour to find it in spiritual things how much thy heart loveth him which is a reflexion of his love what joy of the Spirit what assistance in former tryals what strength patience issue and use of them thou hast Experience of God is a strong prop when the soul can gather from former time a conclusion of Gods presence and aid for time to come So did David Psal 23. ult and 1 Sam. 17.34 37. and Psal 143.4 5. and 77.7 to 13. Hath the Lord forgotten to be merciful and shut up his loving kindnesse in utter displeasure I said this is my death yet I remembred the years of the right hand of the most High I remembred the works of old And how justly do some faint in trouble for want of observing the waies of God with them in former tryals and deliverances 3 Labour to get and keep the assurance of thy adoption for then the gates of Hell shall not prevail to hurt thee The former by the witness of the Spirit which will alway uphold us in afflictions if our care bee not to grieve and quench him So long as the spirit of consolation possesseth the heart what sound comfort can bee wanting but if hee depart in displeasure neither can our faith or comfort bee long upheld The latter by keeping good conscience for faith and good conscience stand and fall together an accusing conscience weakens faith and destroies boldness that wee dare not come neer unto God whereas contrarily our election is made sure by good works 2 Pet. 1.5 and by the fruits of the Spirit It stands us in hand if wee would stand against Satan in the
renewed in knowledge wait at the gates of Wisdom shut not thy heart and eyes from the beams of this blessed light 3 Grow up in holiness and righteousness as God himself is not only free from all evil but infinite in goodness most just most holy and as hee letteth his light shine before men so must thou let thy light shine before men that they may see thy good works Matth. 5.16 2 Cor. 7.1 cleanse your selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit that yee may grow up to full holiness This holiness must not only fence the heart from uncleaneness but the eye the ear the mouth the hands and feet and all the members when they bee ordered according to the Word prescribing rules for them all Rule 2. VVhen thou feelest grudgings of diffidence arise and Satan will urge thee how thou canst think thy self respected of God being beset with such a world of trouble and almost drowned in a sea of vexations without bottom or bank Now call to mind and set before thee Christs blessed example in whom as in a glass thou mayest see the sharpest of thy sorrows in any kind not only sanctified and sweetned but mingled with admirable love of his Father VVhat evil befalls thy body and soul or thy estate inward or outward which he hath not born and broken and yet never the less loved of his Father Thou wantest comforts of body House Land Meat Money hee had not a foot of land not a house to hide his head in not any money till he borrowed of a fish not a cup of cold water till he had requested it of the Samaritan who would give him none Thou wantest friends respect in the world yea where thou well deservest yea where thou mightest justly expect it Remember it was his case his friends became his foes his scholar a Traytor the world hated him causeless he came to his own and his own received him not he was without honour in his own Countrey hee had evil repayed him for good he wept over Jerusalems misery but Jerusalem laught at his Thou wantest peace of conscience canst not see a clear look from God nor feel any ease from the sting of thy sins thy sorrowful mind dries up thy bones all outward troubles are nothing to this But remember that never was any so laden with the burden of sin as Christ when his bitter torment expressed such words as these My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee 3 Rule From these crosses by which Satan would drive thee from God Sundry waies of God drawing neer his Saints in their troubles labour to see how near and graciously God draweth towards thee and thus beat him with his own weapon 1 The Lord helpeth forward our salvation by them being sour sawces to bring us out of love with our sweet sins and of this evil world plowing of ground kills the weeds and harrowing breaks the clods they be the Lords sharp salves to draw out our secret corruptions and the Lords sope to wash foul linnen white they bee the Lords ushers to teach us his statutes to teach by a little smart both what thou hast deserved in the life to come and what Christ hath suffered for thee in bearing the whole punishment of all thy sins to teath thankfulnesse for contrary blessings by poverty sickness trouble men learn to bee thankful for wealth health peace to teach pity and compassion towards the misery of others to teach circumspection in our waies and more care of obedience to all Gods Commandements 2 The Lord by crosses tryeth and exerciseth the faith patience and sincerity of his servants whether they will hold out as Job for as a man by wrestling knows his own strength better than before so is it here 3 The Lord is never nearer his children than in trouble in fire and water in six troubles and in seven to support them with strength and patience to give a blessed issue and use● and turn it to his own glory in their mighty deliverance and to their best all things are turned to their best to recompence their light afflictions with an eternal weight of glory As Christ said of Lazarus This sicknesse is not to death but that God may bee glorified John 11.4 so wee may say This poverty loss disgrace c. is not to the utter undoing of a man but that God may have glory in his deliverance and glorification So much of the third drift of Satan in this first temptation now of the fourth In that the Devils last drift in it is to have Christ in his want and hunger to use an unlawful means of supply note that Doct. 4. It is an ordinary instigation and temptation of the Devil To use unlawful means to help our selves is diabolical or a Devillish spirit to use unlawful means in our want to help our selves Because Christ had no ordinary means of getting bread hee must provide for himself by extraordinary Gen. 25.29 32. Esau comes out of the field weary and hungry and almost dead for meat how must hee supply his want Sell thy birth-right said Satan and so hee did Peter was in great danger in the High-Priests Hall how must hee help himself out of their hands Deny thy Master said Satan forswear him and curse thy self and thus hee gat out Saul was in great straights God was gone from him hee was not answered by Urim nor Oracle how shall hee do for counsel hee must go to the witch of Endor and so the Devil sends him from himself to himself who can tell him more than all his Vrim his Dreams his Prophets Sarah wanted a Child shee had a promise of one but shee laught at that Gen. 16.2 yet must she have one another way shee gives her maid to her Husband and shee brings an Ismael a mocker and persecutor of the promised seed Reasons 1 Satan sees how easily hee can weaken our confidence in God seeing wee are ready to trust more in the means than in God hee knows our infidelity which makes us hasty and soon weary of waiting 2 Hee knows how derogatory this is to the promise truth power and providence of God who can sustain his children as well above means without means yea against means as with them His hand is not shortened that he cannot help 3 Hee easily draws on this temptation under of a colour of necessity which wee say hath no law but falsly Hence is the common speech of the world to defend any injustice Why I must live I must not put forth my wife and children to beg I must so exercise my calling as to maintain my wife and family I must utter my wares though I lye and swear and exact and deceive and so under a colour of good and pretence of necessity no wickedness comes amiss in the course of ones trade Use 1. This teacheth us to bewail the pittiful estate of numbers of men taken in this snare of the Devil as 1 Numbers of
the best Others see no likelihood of doing any great good and so either draw back from their calling Jer. 20.9 or else heavily and uncheerfully go on But wee must renew our strength and courage and know that our labour shall not bee lost Isa 49.4.5 4 In holinesse which 1 sanctifies our callings by the word and prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 2 Subordinateth all earthly and special things to the general and heavenly things of the Christian Calling yea it makes us express our spiritual calling in the use of the Civil it will make a man sometime for religion sake hear the word in the six daies unless some other necessary occasion come between ever preferring the more necessary businesse 3 It keepeth in the heart 1 a love to God aiming at the preferring of his glory above all it suffers not a man to esteem his calling a preferment of himself or a reward of his service past but a means of advancing Gods glory in further service 2 A love of men who partake in the benefit of our labours with whom we must exercise charity justice meekness c. The second rule concerneth our wealth and maintenance namely not to content our selves that wee can live by such or such means unless wee can say Gods Word doth warrant mee that this is my meat my drink my apparrel my money my house my land c. Quest When can a man say this Answ 1 When a man having nothing of his own nor right to any thing becomes a beleever ingrafted into Christ and so owner of that bee hath A man may have warrant and title from man that his house and land is his and hee is a robber that shall defeat him of it But all men and Angels cannot give mee a possession and true title before the living God but only his Son who is Lord and heir of all First know thy self a member of Christ and then his right is thine 2 When the manner of getting them is lawful and that is First When it is just when a man hath used no indirect means but they are either lawfully descended or else by faithful and painful walking in an honest calling God hath added them as a blessing of a mans labour Secondly When it is moderate and retired when a man so provideth for earth as hee especially storeth up for heaven first seeking Gods Kingdome and the one thing necessary without covetousnesse and the love of this life nay accounting all things dung in comparison of Christ Thirdly When the manner of using them is warrantable that a man shews himself a good steward in the holy dispensing of them using them as furtherances of piety as pledges of love towards men and as testimonies of sobriety in himself and every way making them servants to his christian calling Prov. 3.9 Honour the Lord with thy riches 4 When his affection is indifferent both in the having and holding of them that a man may say These be mine I am not theirs I have them they have not me I am their Master to command them they command not me And why should we not draw our affections from them seeing 1 The wicked are as rich yea richer in these things than the best at the best they make not their Masters better 2 They bee no inheritance they bee but moveables changing their Master as the giver will and while we have them they are but lent us 3 We are but Stewards we sit not in our own but have a large account to make yea we are very Pilgrims and Travellers and shall goe lightlier and less loaden 4 Wee must not measure or tye God unto them nor esteem of his love by them Thus a man may use the mercies of God with comfort for his necessity and for his delight in the days of his pilgrimage thus may he dispose them to his heirs as the right owners with hope of Gods blessing to stand with them nothing of which can be expected in goods ill gotten or spent to which nothing but Gods curse is intayled The third rule concerneth our health and sustenance namely that it is far better to want means than to procure them by any other means than that which proceedeth out of the mouth of God Yet numbers will maintain their lives health and estate not by Gods word but directly against it for example they that seek to Witches and Sorcerers for health or goods lost or stollen or upon any other occasion whatsoever Whereas the word proceeding out of the mouth of God Levit. 18.10 is this Let there bee none sound among you that useth Witchcraft or is a regarder of times or a Sorcerer Charmer Sooth-sayers or that counselleth with spirits Obj. But Gods Word and Ordinance is with them to doe us good and much good they doe which none else can doe Ans God hath a two-fold word 1 Of Blessing 2 Of Judgement the former proceedeth out of the mouth of God who is goodness it self the latter sometimes hee permitteth to proceed out of the mouth of the Devil giving him power to work lying wonders that the seekers of him might beleeve in him to their final destruction Thus the Devil who can doe nothing against Gods word doth what he doth by Gods word spoken in Judgement and Justice Whence I conclude 1 It were better for a man to want cure than have the Devil his Physician better for a man to want health of his body than procure it with the death of his soul Better had it been for the Israelites to have wanted Quails than procuring them by murmuring to be choaked with them Better for a man to want the world than winne it with the loss of his soul Better had it been for Ahab to have wanted Naboths Vineyard than to lose the whole Kingdom for it Better for Judas to have wanted the thirty pence than to hang himself for them for Ananias and Saphira to have wanted the third part of their possession than to dye for it Rule 2. Better it were to want the means of health and maintenance than not to use them according to the word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God as food apparel physick health and life it self Had it not been better that Asa had wanted Physick than be struck with death because he trusted in Physitians Better had it been for Gehazi to have gone in raggs than to apparel himself by lying and deceit which apparelled himself and all his posterity with Leprosie Whether was the state of Lazarus that dyed for want of means or of Dives better that sared deliciously every day Less have men to answer for who have no meat to strengthen nature than those that have abundance which they pervert to strengthen themselves in sin sacrificing their strength to the service of the Devil and to their lusts Wee our selves know numbers in all corners who were better continually to be bed-ridd and sick or maimed than to abuse their health and lives in such
his soul As for that A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump the Apostle speaks it to the Governours not to suffer such wicked persons and provoketh only private persons the peeces of that lump to be the more watchful over themselves but not to refuse Gods Ordinances for them And as neither that Church of Corinth ceased to be a Church for suffering that wicked man for the Apostle honours them with that style while he checketh that sin so neither doe particular members cease so to be for that such are suffered much less Look to thy own soul the Apostle wisheth every man to examine himself rather than others Object 5. But how can I hear the Word with profit from a wicked man Ans 1. A wicked man may preach salvation to another and damnation to himself as Judas and the builders of Noahs Ark. A statue may point another the way but it self stand still 2 An instrument hath all his efficiency from the first mover who is God himself a Knife with motion will cut if the hand will use it 3 The Word is like the Light now as the light of the Sun is not defiled though it pass through the dirtiest places so the Word is not polluted through awicked preacher 4 Look to thy own disposition that thy soyl be good as the seed is good take the benefit of the Sun and rain and it is no matter whether the hands be clean or foul that cast and disperse the seed 5 Let Preachers consider what a barr it is to all their labour to bee scandalous covetous disdainful envious noted for Gamesters companions c. how their example doth more harm than their teaching can doe good with how little power or prevailing he can point his finger to other mens sores which every one can point at in himself what an odious thing it is to make Gods people to loath Gods Ordinances because of him and what a woeful case is it that Paul intimates of such teachers who preaching to others themselves by disobedience become cast-aways 1 Cor. 9.27 Rules to avoyd entangling and seduction by Separatists perswasions 1 Labour for wisdom to discern between main truths in doctrin and inferiour in discipline as knowing that Jerusalem was the holy City before Nehemiah builded the wall of it between the person and the place not condemning the place for the person between the thing and the use and condemn not the use for the abuse between Offices and Executions substance and circumstances the being of a thing and the wel-being of it 2 Labour to reform thine own heart first for that is in thy power to amend and then thy own family and if it be in thy power goe further to the house of God but if thou beest a private man and this bee not in thy power thou must turn thee to prayers and tears and yet so strive in seeking the wel-being of things as by unthankfulness thou lose not the comfort of the things themselves 3 Be low in thine own eyes suspect thy own judgement condemn not much less contemn those that are not every way as thy self Pride and contention of spirit are inseparable and it is folly to look that men who have a different measure of grace should not differ in judgement and though they walk in the same way yet not after the same manner 4 Testifie thy self a sound Christian by the badge of Christ which is love by this shall all men know that yee are my Disciples if yee love one another Study to be quiet saith the Apostle and follow things that concern peace Love will make the best even of bad things and give a charitable construction of things doubtful and pitty and pray for such as erre howsoever and much more if they erre of ignorance Use 2. This doctrin teacheth us that the way to sanctifie a mans person or family is to set up the Worship of God in his heart or house 1 Thy heart must be the Temple of God yea as the Ark within the Sanctuary In the Temple God was daily worshipped there were daily Sacrifices offered the Scriptures read and expounded and prayers preferred unto God from his people Thou must get proportion in all these if thy heart be Gods Temple thou must privately yea secretly apart daily worship God with personal worship daily offer the sacrifices of praise and thanks for personal blessings and deliverances daily prefer thy personal prayers daily apart read and apply the Scriptures to thine own use for thus must it be in Gods temple And further thy heart must be as the Ark wherein were kept the Tables of the Law written with Gods own finger endeavour in obedience to all Gods Commandements intreat God to write his Law in thy heart that thou mayest never depart from it Thy heart as the Ark must keep the pot of Manna a type of Christ the food of life close Christ within thy heart and hold him as thy life never to part with him for that figured the Sacraments in which Christ is propounded the food of the soul Thy heart as the Ark must contain Aarons rod that had budded signifying the discipline and government of Christ unto which thou must subject thy self let this rod flourish in thee and stoop with reverence and fear to this scepter 2 Thy house and family must be sanctified also by setting up and preserving Gods worship there We read of some of the Saints who had Churches in their Houses Every Christian professing holiness must have the like care and endeavour in such Family-exercises as God hath prescribed as 1 In diligent teaching and instructing the family-partly in reading and partly in delivering precepts out of the word It is Gods Commandement Deut. 6.7 to whet the law continually on our children and train them up even from child-hood in the Scriptures The benefit whereof shall bee 1 To fit them for the publike Ministry 2 To cause the word to dwell plentiously in them 3 it is a notable means for their growth in godliness and to contain them in good order 2 In calling them to account for things delivered by catechising pittifully neglected in families who yet would be thought to bee Gods people This is the driving of the nail to the head to stick the surer It works care in those who easily reject good means It hinders vain thoughts words and exercises It banisheth much folly and ignorance that is bound up in the hearts of children and servants 3 In applying the works of God past or present on our selves or others to move them to confidence and trust in God by the works of his mercy and to fear to offend by the works of his justice and by this means the seeds not only of true Religion but of good conscience shall bee sown in them betimes this was holy Abrahams practise for which God would not hide his secret works from him Gen. 18.19 4 In daily private prayer with the family at least every morning and
quench or repel the fiery and furious darts of Satan and his Instruments if he want the sheild of faith That man that puts on this armour of God shall overcome all difficulties and stand where many have fallen for he hath with him the victory that overcomes the world 2 In all places lay hold on all opportunities to doe good as Satan doth to doe evil He that hath goodness in him shall come in no place but he may finde some fitness to communicate it If in places of good resort men may and ought to make gain of that occasion Can good men meet and not bee better one for another whereas the wicked cannot meet but be worse Here a man may 1 Observe Gods graces in others to bee a pattern to himself 2 Draw out understanding of them by godly and fruitful questions or conference Prov. 20.5 3 Stirre up others to diligence in going forward and to greater love Heb. 3.13 and inoffensive walking Others may be ignorant and here is occasion for thee to pitty them and open thy lips with wisdom to feed them Prov. 10.20 Others may be dull and slow in Gods ways and these must bee provoked and encouraged Others by infirmity may bee going astray and thou perhaps mayest be a means to turn him and winne a soul Others may need an exhortation an admonition a loving and brotherly reproof or may need comfort A wise man may now watch occasion not only to prevent Satans baits who would keep Christians from doing the good they can but also to acquit himself in all places to the good of others and his own comfort 3 In places of bad resort or scorners if our calling lead us into them let us take with us the exhortation of the Apostle 2 Pet. 3.17 Take heed ye be not plucked away with the error of the wicked and fall from your own stedfastness And besides 1 Let us grieve that we are fallen into such company 2 Let us think of some good or special work of Gods mercy or judgement fresh in memory 3 If there bee apparent evil either give apparent token of dislike or in a wise and peaceable manner so speak as Gods honour be not by our silence trodden down 4 If there bee no opportunity or place for good depart with all speed Prov. 14. vers 7. and beware of falling into the like company again Took him up and set him on the pinacle The third circumstance in this preparation is the manner how Christ was conveyed to Jerusalem Then the Devil took him up into the holy City and set him on a pinacle of the Temple Some of great Learning and Piety hold that Christs presence in the holy City and on the Pinacle was only in Vision and not corporal Their reasons are these 1. Some of the Prophets thus are said in vision to goe from place to place as Jeremy must goe to the river Perath and back again chap. 13.4 and Ezek. 11.24 The Spirit of God took me up and brought me in a vision by the Spirit of God into Chaldea and 8.3 And took me by an hairy lock of my head and the Spirit lift me up between the earth and the heaven and brought me by a Divine vision to Jerusalem 2 Because the Evangelists say that the temptations were in the Wilderness and therefore could not be actually in the holy City or on a pinacle but in vision 3 Because Luke saith that the temptations being ended Christ returned into Galilee namely from the wilderness But it seems Christs being in Jerusalem and on the Pinacle of the Temple was not in vision but in deed and in truth and the reasons well considered are too weak to prove the contrary because 1 It overthrows the end of the temptation which was to cast himself down head-long for the Angels would keep him without hurt How could hee hurt himself by an imaginary fall or what needed he the Angels help Neither could hee cast himself down if he were still in the plain of the wilderness 2 It seems not to stand with the holiness of Christ seeing every vision which is a work of Satan intending by it to delude man is either a deceiving of the outward senses whereby he makes a man think he sees hears or feels something which indeed and truth he doth not as the Witch of Endor made Saul beleeve hee did hear and see Samuel when he did not 1 Sam. 28. And after the same manner if it were a vision supposing that Christ was awake he must not see the ground of the Wilderness where they say he was but upon that ground the City Jerusalem the Temple and Pinacle and himself standing on the top of it when indeed it was not there Or else a vision presented by Satan must bee an illusion of the mind whereby he makes a man think that of himself which is not true which can farre less agree with the holiness of Christ whose imagination could not be so farre abused as that he should think he was carried when he was not carried or to think himself to be there where he was not for this were contrary to that unmeasurable wisdom which was with him And if Satan had had such power over the superiour part of the mind of Christ he might likewise have perswaded him he had not fallen when hee did fall or he did not worship him if he had done so As for the Objection taken from the example of the Prophets I answer Great is the difference between the visions of God and visions from Satan They knew their visions to be Divine and not to delude or deceive them they knew the Spirit of God took them up in Divine visions but here it is said The Devil took up Christ and the text mentioneth that theirs were visions so it doth not here For that which is objected out of the Evangelists that the temptations were in the Wilderness and if it were not in vision only the first should be there I answer 1 The Evangelists say that Christ went into the Wilderness to be tempted but none of them say that all these three were in the wilderness 2 If they should have said that the temptations were in the wilderness it had been true for as we have heard Christ was tempted with other temptations than these in that place within the forty days Whereas it is further said that Christ returned after the temptations into Galilee and therefore the last temptation was in vision upon the Plain and not on the Mountain I answer 1 No one Evangelist saith he returned from the Wilderness 2 That the Evangelist hath reference to the last temptation which perhaps was finished in the Mountain either in that Wilderness or near it after Christ was led back from Jerusalem and there the temptations ended And now seeing that his presence in the holy City and upon the Pinacle was real and local not in vision and mental the next question is How the Devil took him up
or by his instruments for Christs sake as the Saints have been from Prison to Prison wee must bee contented our Love to our Lord must help us to swallow it and not shrink from him Consider wee may bee in the hands of the Devils instruments but hee was in the Devils own hands for us this would make us shrink Vse 2. Observe hence That the work of our redemption though free to us yet cost Christ dear Hee must bee not onely in the hands of Judas to betray him of the Jews to scoffe him of Pilate to condemn him and of the Souldiers to crucify him but personally in the hands of the Devil to tempt him And had not Christ been thus and worse than thus in the hands of the Devil wee had never been gotten out of his hands Here take wee notice of the execration of our sins and the wofulnesse of our estate our sins put him into Satans hands he must put himself in our place or stead before we can berescued Vse 3. Observe The wonderful power of our Lord Jesus that being in the bands of the Devil can come out safely nay his mighty power shines herein that by his own comming into Satans hands hee brings us out an unlikely and contrary means but such as by a divine power prevails for himself and all his members Could any other but hee worke Satans greatest disadvantage by offering him the greatest advantage Here is omnipotency to work by contraries to kill death by dying to shut the grave by entring into it to remove hellish pains by suffering them and to pull his members out of Satans hands by putting himself in The Philistims desired but to get Sampson into their hands and prevailed but here is an invincible Sampson his enemy cannot hold him Use 4. Hence wee see that Satan may have power over the bodies of men God permitting him to carry them as hee listeth and grievously to afflict them as wee see in Job That Satan can transport the bodies of Witches all Histories record That hee can bewitch the bodies of unbeleevers none deny But our example teacheth that even the godly themselves may bee bewitched as Jobs body was and the woman of Canaan her daughter a daughter of Abraham Matth. 15.22 For if the Devil hath power here over the Body of Christ himself hee may also over his members Many presume upon the strength of their faith and graces that Satan can have no power over them and they defye him But hast thou more strength of Faith and Grace than Christ had over whose body Satan had power for a time to carry and recarry Object Witches have assaied to bewitch such and such but have confessed their faith to be so strong as they could not prevail Answ They alledge a false cause to feed the former delusion for the true cause of their not prevailing is Gods restraint not the strength of faith Vse 5. Here is a ground of comfort if the Lord permit the bodies of his elect to Satans disposal it is no argument suppose a man be bewitched or possessed that a man is not then the child of God For 1 Christ was as dear unto God now being in the Devils hands as before 2 Christ was safe enough now in the hands of the Devil and so are all they that are in Christ He was no lesse in his fathers hands now than before 3 He was not left in the hands of the Devil but permitted for a time of trial and temptation So it is no argument of final delivery up to Satan when the child of God is for a time delivered into his hands to exercise him 4 It is rather an argument of Gods child and conformity with Christ to be maligned of Satan and vexed by the Devil Satan may winnow and sist Gods children but their faith through Christs prayer shall not fail and the gates of Hell shall not prevail Vers 6. If thou bee the Son of God cast thy self down For it is written c. NOw after those three former circumstances which contained the preparation to this second temptation wee come to the temptation it self which consists of 1 The assault 2 The repulse The assault containeth 1 The ground of it If thou bee the Son of God 2 The matter and scope of it cast thy self down 3 The argument inforcing it For it is written c. 1 The ground If thou be the Son of God is the same with the former which sheweth 1 Satans importunity and violence 2 His subtilty by often making question of it he will see if hee can yet bring Christ to make it a question 3 His malice against Christ laying still his greatest forces against his saith which was the greatest moat in his eye dealing herein like an experienced Souldier who seeing a Town or Fort in any hope to be won will not away at first repulse but will assay it again and again with new assaults Whence we may learn that Doct. Satan will not sticke to urge the same thing often if thereby hee may advantage himself or disadvantage us With how many new messages and devises did he urge Balaam to curse the people of God Still hee changeth places but all is one temptation to curse the people of God By how many means did Satan by himself by Jobs friends and his Wife seek to with-draw him from his confidence in God bringing a number of several arguments and all to prove him an Hypocrite For that was the foot and burden of all their discourses 1 It may be the circumstances of time or place may yeeld him some advantage as here hee thought the Pinacle fitter than the Wilderness Reasons as Balaak thought the top of Pisgah more commodious perhaps for Balaam to curse Israel in than the high places of Baal Numb 23.14 compared with 22.41 2 Sometimes our disposition is more secure and remiss especially having out-stood and overcome a temptation and then Satan comes again and by the same temptation not finding us the same men suddenly surprizeth us Wherein he deals with us as David with the Amalekites who having took a great spoyl from him and his wives they fell to eat and drink and dance and lay scattered because of the prey In this security David comes upon them and recovered all and they lost more than they had gotten So deals Satan with us when wee grow secure after wee have prevailed he wins more than before wee had gotten 3 Sometime the thing which Satan would win from us is so necessary so excellent as if hee get not that hee can gain nothing at our hands This makes him renew the same assault as here the faith of Christ had been a sweet morsel and if hee gets not this hee gets nothing So our faith is so precious as hee still aims at it because hee knows if hee overthrows this wee are as branches without a root withering and dead souldiers without a shield Vse 1 Look for the same temptation again
searched whether the things spoken were so We take no coin without due tryal Quest How shall I try the spirit that brings a sentence of Scripture Answ 1 By diligent study and reading of Scripture diligently searching out the truth for the determination of every truth must bee by scripture Dubiu●● and though scripture seem to bee opposed to scripture wee must not with Papists draw determination of matters from scripture so saith the Apostle in Eph. 4.14 Let us not bee carried about as children with every wind of doctrin how should wee do other but follow the truth in love Examine the places circumstances antecedents and consequents confer with other scriptures to all which it must agree 2 Follow and frequent the Ministery as not content with the knowledge of the scriptures without the true understanding of them Non in legendo sed in intelligerdo Hieron for they consist not in the bare letters but in the pithy sense said the Father And this true understanding wil help us to lay it to the Analogy of faith wherunto it must bee agreeable and will make our senses exercised in the word 3 Adde hereunto prayer which procureth the spirit to lead us into all necessary truth David never ceased to Pray to bee taught as we may see through the whole 119. Psalm 4 Consider the end and scope of the scripture alledged If it lead thee into an action condemned by the law of nature or against other direct scriptures or principles of religion it is of the Devil the father of Lies for Gods Spirit never alledgeth scripture but to lead us into the knowledge and practice of some truth This is Moses his rule Deut. 13.1 If a false Prophet rise up see what hee aimeth at if it bee to draw thee from the Lord his worship or word take heed of him so if Satan by any instrument of his shall bring the word and pretend great zeal if the end bee to draw thee to superstition Idolatry or Popery beware of him his scope discovers him If a doctrin or scripture be alledged to nourish any fleshly delight or to hold men in sin though the words bee Gods the allegation is the Devils as At what time soever a sinner repenteth c. and the Theef was saved at the last hour and therefore if thou canst say two or three good words at thy death all shall bee well here is the Devil saying It is written for all scripture truely cited by Gods Spirit aims at mortification and the furtherance of Repentance If a Scripture bee alledged and urged to threaten and discourage such as fear God and shew forwardness in good waies or to animate the sinner promising him peace and life it is Satans allegation for if Gods Spirit alledge scripture that word is good and comfortable to him that walks uprightly and the threats of the law are fit provision for impenitent persons Vse 2. This teacheth us not to content our selves to know the Scripture and bee able to speak of it or to alledge it for the Devil knows the word and can alledge it readily yea hee is expert in it Many men deceive themselves in their estate and think themselves sure of salvation if they can get a lirtle knowledge of the scripture above others as though Satan could not alledge it or as though the wicked could not preach it as Judas did or ungodly men profess it who take the word into their mouth and hate to bee reformed Psal 50.16 17. Use 3. But let us take heed wee come not behind the Devil himself while wee thus highly conceit our selves for 1 Are there not a number of ignorant men almost as ignorant as if the scriptures had never been written and shall not the Devil condemn these who hath gained so much knowledge in the word which containeth not one word of comfort for him but judgement that makes him tremble Yet these whom they would make wise to salvation and to whom they offer the joyes and comfort of life eternal are utterly ignorant of them 2 Many read the Scripture but as Satan not to inform or reform themselves nor to make themselves better but both themselves and others far worse as not only Hereticks and learned Papists who bend all their knowledge to suppress and hide the truth but all such as by the scripture se●k to maintain their own errors and sins which they will not part with And these are no better than the Devil 3 Others will read Scripture and hear and know it but without all special application and grace in the heart wherein they should differ from the Devil and wicked men who know the word but affect it not do it not nay cannot abide the special application of it to do them good and this doth nothing but increase sin and judgement sin Jam. 4.17 to him that knoweth to do well and doth it not it is sin a great sin without excuse or cloak Joh. 15.22 judgement for such shall bee beaten with many stripes 4 Others brag of their knowledge they read the Bible at least Davids Psalmes and they know as much as any Preacher can tell them But stay the Devil reads the Psalter as well as thou and can quote Davids Psalms more readily than thou hee can read the Bible hee knows as much yea more than any Preacher can tell him what sayest thou more of thy self than the Devil can do of himself and more truely And what hast thou gained by all this challenge but thine own conviction of great sin without excuse but not without witnesse Is not thine own mouth thy judge who professeth so much knowledge and so little grace love practice To sin wilfully and presumptuously against the light is an extraordinary conformity with Satan Rules of reading and hearing the word religiously 1 Consider the excellency of the Word above all pretious things and how dangerous it is to take Gods name in vain which is then when the word is frustrate of his right end 2 They are called holy Scriptures not only in regard of that holy truth contained in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but because they are instruments by which the Elect are sanctified and made holy John 17.17 and therefore are never to bee used without holy affection nor without indeavour to grow up in holiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3 They are the Word of faith therefore wee must mingle the Word with faith and lay up the precepts and promises thereof to beleeve it 4 The Scriptures being the rule of life wee must submit our whole man to the obedience and practice of it with all sincerity and constancy Hereby we shall go beyond the knowledge of the Word in Devils and ungodly men NOw for the place it self wee must consider it two waies 1 As abused by Satan in his allegation 2 As wee find it holily set down by the Spirit of God In Satans abuse of this Scripture wee may see many particulars 1 Hee wrongs
over them but his Vicar neither love they the truth in the Canonical Scripture further than it will stand with their Popish Canon Law Or if a man come to read out of custom and coldly without fervency and love experience will tell him though thus he read much his profit shall bee but small 3 With repentance and faith and a good heart 2 Cor. 3.14 when the heart of Israel shall be converted to the Lord the veil shall be taken away this veil is natural ignorance and infidelity VVhere the former is no marvel if the word read and known be not understood as a blind man cannot see the Sun shining in his strength VVhere faith is absent and is not mingled with the word it must needs become unprofitable Impossible it is that the wisdom of God can dwell in a wicked heart no man puts precious liquor into a fusty cask This is the cause that men of great learning want sound understanding because they want sound conscience Hos 14.10 The ways of God are right but the wicked fall in them 4 With a purpose not only to know but to practise Joh. 7.17 If any man will doe my will he shall know whether my doctrine be from heaven The scope of the Scripture is not only to beleeve in the Son of God but to walk in the obedience of faith Now if men read over all the Bible an hundred times either for knowledge only or for vain-glory or to advance themselves into preferments or to oppose the truth as Hereticks and Papists doe no marvel if they never attain the true sense of them 5 With prayer for the Spirit to lead us into all truth because the Scriptures were inspired by Gods Spirit at first and the same Spirit is only able to acquaint us with his own meaning If any man want wisdom he must ask it of God Jam. 1.5 so did David Psal 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonderful things of thy law Is it any marvel that they who flie the judgement of Gods Spirit and stand to the Church Pope Councils and only swallow that sense which they give and never look after Gods Spirit should miss of the true meaning of the Holy Ghost and fall into and tumble in a number of errors and heresies To these might bee added meditation diligence keeping of order and time special application and the like These things let them be brought to the reading of Gods Word and no man shall lose his labour hee shall bee taught of God who hath promised to reveal his secret to them that fear him So much of the qualification of the person II. Now follow some rules which a person thus qualified must learn and keep by him to try when a Scripture is wrested or no. Rule 1 The first is that in our text conference of Scripture there the Spirit of God by plain places expoundeth those which are more difficult Thus Nehem. 8.8 Ezra opened the Scripture by comparing it with it self and so made the people to understand as Junius noteth out of the original So the Bereans having heard the doctrine of the Apostles searched the Scriptures that is compared their doctrine with the doctrine of the Old Testament Thus the Apostles themselves teaching Christs resurrection Acts 2.16 prove it out of the Old Testament viz. Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not suffer thine holy one to see corruption And to prove that those words cannot be meant of David himself he appeals to another testimony in 1 King 2. where it is said that David slept with his fathers and lay buried in his Sepulchre and so saw corruption This is a special way whereby the Scripture giveth wisdom to the simple Psal 19.7 And for this purpose the Lord hath in great wisdom tempered the Scripture with some hard places to exercise mens senses and try their diligence in comparing of Scripture whereof there were no need if there were no hard places How comes it that many pervert the Scripture to their own destruction but because they conferre not one part with another which would lead them into the right sense How come the Arrians when they hear Christ say The Father is greater than I and other such sayings to hold to the death that Christ is not true God co-essential and co-equal with his Father but that they doe not compare this with other places as Job 1.1 That word was God Philip. 2.6 He thought it no robbery to be equal with God Rom. 9. which is God blessed for ever And consequently that the former place speaks of his Human nature the latter of his Divine nature How could the Papists suffer shipwrack of faith and Heretically erre in the foundation of Religion teaching justification by the works of the Law out of Jam. 2.21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works but that they conferre not other places to help them into the right sense as Rom. 4.2 and 3.20 We are justified by faith without the works of the law and Tit. 3.5 Not by the works of righteousness which we had done but according to his grace he saved us Which places being compared shew that one speaks of justification before God as Paul the other of justification before men as James the former of justifying the person the latter of justifying the faith of the person When they read such places as these Awake thou that sleepest and Turn you turn you O house of Israel hence they conclude man hath free-will in his own conversion Whereas would they compare these with other places as Gen. 6.5 The whole imagination of mans heart is only evil continually and it is God that works both the will and the deed c. the reconciling of such places would force them to see that till God work us wee are meer patients and after that acts agimus being moved we move for his grace must not bee idle in us The lewd and disordered Libertine when he reads that wee are justified by faith without works casts off all care of his conversation What can his works doe what need they But he could not thus pervert the Scripture to his destruction if he compared it with such Scriptures as say that faith without works is dead and that faith works by love The reconciling whereof would teach them that although works be excluded from justification yet not from faith they must bee in the person justified though not in the justification of his person This conference of Scripture is either in places parallel and like or in such as seem to be opposed and unlike The conferring of like places bringeth great light to the reader As for example 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing If we would understand what is meant by this nothing compare we it with Gal. 5.6 In Christ Jesus neither uncircumcision availeth any thing nor circumcision where nothing is to avail nothing and is not referred to Circumcision or uncircumcision it self but to the person it is
by Zachary chap. 11.13 and not by Jeremy Many learned men trouble themselves more than needs in reconciling this place 1 Some say that Saint Matthew joynes together both one place in Jeremy chap. 18.1 2 3. of the potter and this of Zachary 11.13 But there is little or no agreement between them 2 Some say that it is not in Jeremies writings that are Canonical but in some Apocryphal writings of Jeremy which the Jewes had and which Chrysostome confesseth he saw wherein these words were But it is not likely that the holy Evangelist would leave a Canonical text and cite an Apocryphal or give such credit to that or seek to build our faith upon it And by our rule that Book should be Canonical 3 Some say that Matthew forgat and for Zaehary put down Jeremy but with more forgetfulness that holy men writ as they were moved by Gods Spirit This error Erasmus takes hold of from Augustine who in his third Book concerning the consent of the Evangelists Chap. 7. defendeth and excuseth this error 4 Some think it the error of heedless Writers who might easily so erre but all the oldest Copies and the most ancient Fathers have the name of Jeremy 5 Some say that Zachariah being instructed and trained up with Jeremy did deliver it by tradition from Jeremy and so Jeremy spoke it by Zachariah which might be true because it is said in the text As was spoken by Jeremy not written But 6 The most compendious and likely way of reconciling is this that Zachary and Jeremy was the same man having two names which was very usual among the Jews as Gedeon was called Jerubaal and Jerub●sheth Salomon was called Jedidiah Jethro was called Hobab and Revel Jehoiacim Ieconias and Coniah Hester was called Edissa Simon Peter Cephas and Bar-Jona Matthew was called Lev● Jerusalem Jebus and Salem c. 4 These are such rules as not only the Learned who besides these have the benefit of Arts and Tongues the knowledge of Phrases the benefit of Disputation and the like but even the simplest may make good use of 1 To understand the Scripture aright and so discover the subtilty of Satan and seducers 2 To convince error and let others see their errours and so gently lead them back into their way again 3 They be great means to justifie the truth and glorifie God 4 Practisers of them have comfort in themselves that they are lovers of the truth and desire to find it even with much labour and industry 5 The want of this diligence and study of Scripture is the very cause that so many stagger and doubt of our religion and are so indifferent that they cannot tell whether to leane to Papists or Protestants and so hold doubtful to their death Yea and many goe away and fall off from us and depart to Antichrist which is a just judgement of God upon them because they were so farre from receiving the truth in the love of it as they would never take pains to search into the Scripture which witnesse of the truth VVE are now come to speak of the allegation it self and the force of the reason taken out of Deut. 6.16 where the Israelites are forbidden to tempt the Lord as in Massah How they tempted him in Massah is set down in Exod. 17.7 being in want of water and distress they contended with Moses and said Is the Lord amongst us 1 They doubted of his power and so would try whether he could give them water in this their want for the word nasah properly signifies to make trial as David is said to have tried and proved before to goe in armour 1 Sam. 17.39 where the same word is used 2 They doubted of the truth of his promise not beleeving him to be amongst them as he had promised unless he would shew them in all haste some sign of his presence in present supply of their necessity and therefore they say I● God amongst us Now mark how aptly and wisely our Lord and Saviour applieth this place I. In his choyse he is now on the pinacle and in a dangerous place and well knows that this prohibition was a fitter place to study and meditate on than those large promises in that most comfortable Psalm For howsoever all Scripture is profitable and Divine yet some Scriptures fit some persons and some occasions better than other It is a true and comfortable promise Isa 1.18 Come let us reason together though your sins were as red as scarlet c. But for a man not truely humbled the threats of the Law are fitter to meditate on neither doth the Lord so invite the Jewes till they be humbled It is true God hears not sinners but such a place is not so fit to bee meditated on and applied by such as are seriously beaten down already in the sight and sense of sin He that provideth not for his family is worse than an Infidel a true and holy speech but if a covetous man apply it it hurteth him hee hath other places to study on as Beware of covetousness and covetousness which is Idolatry is one of the sins which shuts out of heaven The holy heart of Christ could equally meditate and apply all Scripture but by this his choise hee would teach us to make choise according to occasions II. In direct meeting the Devils drift which was to move Christ to vain confidence and make trial whether he was the Son of God or God his Father by throwing himself down Comparing this place with the former he shewes him that it gives him no leave to cast down himself for this were not to trust God but to tempt God as the Jewes did in Massah but I doubt not of my Fathers power and therefore I need not try it I distrust not the truth of his promise and presence with me what need I make trial of it I have a Commandement which I must not separate from the promise as thou doest Thou pretendest a promise but no promise extends to the breach of any Commandement but hath his ground and dependance upon some Commandement or other Thou wouldest have me cast my self down and promisest help but no promise can secure him that attempteth that wherein he tempteth God as this action would In the words are 1 The person that must not tempt Thou 2 The person that must not be tempted The Lord thy God 3 The action of tempting not tempt I. The person Thou Some think that the pronoun Thou is to bee referred to Satan and the Lord thy God to Christ himself as though Christ had said Thou shalt not tempt me But 1 It was never written that Satan should not tempt Christ if it had it had been false 2 It is a negative Commandement of God directed to his people which bindes all persons at all times in all places and not to bee restrained to this occasion 3 Satan was irrecoverably fallen from the Covenant of grace and so although Christ was his Lord
understand not the goodly Workmanship of God in the frame of the Heavens and Earth which wee must love and admire but all the Riches Honours Pleasures Profits and Allurements of it without God or before God as when men are willing Servants and Slaves to Worldly Desires and Corruptions 1 Tim. 6.10 The desire of money is the root of all evil a fruitful mother of much mischief There is no sin so impious so unnatural and barbarous that a man in love with the Profits of the World will stick at And more plainly vers 9. They that will bee rich fall into manifold Temptations and Snares and into many foolish and noysome lusts which drown men in perdition and destruction which in sense is all one with this That such a one makes himself a willing spoil and prey to the Devil Hence they are called deceitful Riches because they easily lead us out of the right way Matth. 13.22 and Job 18.8 The wicked walks upon snares and the grin shall take his heel Reasons 1 The love of the World banisheth the love of God out of the Soul Hee that is a lover of the World is an hater of God Jam. 4.4 Know yee not that the amity of the World is enmity to God Whosoever therefore will bee a friend of the World maketh himself an enemy to God now what sin will an enemy of God stick at And the Apostle John plainly divorceth these two which can never agree in one 1 Joh. 2.15 If any man love the World the love of the Father is not in him And if the love of God ●way not the heart Satan will easily incline it to any sin 2 Where there is the love of the World that heart hath already renounced God in Heaven and given it self to bee possessed ruled and commanded by the God of the World For look what a man chiefly loves hee not so much possesseth it as is possesseth by it Whence the Apostle is not afraid to call Covetousness Idolatry Eph. 5.5 and Coloss 3.5 not onely because the chief love but the chief trust hope and confidence goeth with them They say to the wedge of gold thou art my hope And further as the Heathen Idolaters worshipped and served gods of Gold and Silver so these serve and obey their golden and silver god wherein they take up their chief desires and contentment Now having denyed the God of Heaven and thrust himself out of his protection a man becomes to be in the power of the Devil and ruled at his will 3 The love of the World spoiles us of our armour and strength by which wee should bee fenced from Satans subtleties For 1 Whereas our chief fence is in Gods Word it First intercepteth the Word and estrangeth the heart from it as Ezek. 33.31 They sit before thee and hear thy words but their hearts go after their covetousnesse Secondly it choaketh the Word that it becomes as seed cast among Thorns which choak it presently Thirdly it scorns the Word as may appear Luke 16.14 These things heard the Pharisees which were Covetous and mocked Now is not such an one easily snared by the Devil who is thus dis-affected to Gods Word Is not hee easily bound that wants yea scorns his weapons 2 The love of the World whether the Pleasures Profits or Glory of it as a Theef steals and robs our graces which are another chief part of our strength Good Hezekiah a little tickled with vain-glory made himself and his Land a prey and spoil to the Enemy Wise Solomon loved too much the unlawful pleasures of the World and how did it rob him of his Wisdome The Disciples while yet Christ was with them were stirred with love and debate for superiority and greatness which did much hinder them and took up their thoughts when they might have attended to better things How many for love of the World and Preferment fall from their first love abate their zeal become cold and indifferent as the times are 4 The love of the World where it is rooted delivers a man so far into the hands of Satan as hee easily falls from all shew of goodness and dangerously revolts from all the goodness that seemed to bee in him The young man that came to Christ with many good shews and desires hearing of selling all and giving to the poor goeth away heavily and wee hear no more of him Demas once a Companion of Paul but easily forsook the truth when hee embraced the present World Judas an Example almost without example a Disciple at Christs elbow indued with excellent gifts Apostolical of Doctrin of Miracles c. having his heart glewed to the World for a trifle fell from his place from all the affection hee had sembled to his Master from the society of his fellow Disciples and stood with them that betrayed him 5 Experience shews how when Satan hath thrust the love of the World into a mans heart hee hath power enough 1 To binde that mans hands from the works of Piety and Mercy Hee is a bad Tenant the more land he holds the less homage hee doth unto God And as for works of Mercy hee will not part with his crums like the rich man in the Gospel And as hee lives altogether unprofitable to others so to himself hee hath no care of his salvation Thou fool This night shall they take away thy soul 2 As hee hath no power to do any good for God or man so he will suffer nothing A man loving the World flies affliction for Christ Matth. 13.21 when the Sun riseth hee withers when persecution comes hee is offended and falls away to the hinderance of many They that minde earthly things are enemies to the cross of Christ Phil. 3.19 Vse 1. Oh therefore Love not the World nor the things in the World 1 Joh. 2.15 A necessary exhortation to us to whom it is as natural to love the World as for water to run down a Hill And who can hardly affect it without being infected with it Hereunto lay hold on these motives 1 Consider how hard it is to love God and the World too even as hard as to look with the same eye saith Augustine up to Heaven and down to the Earth at the same time The more love a Woman bestows upon a stranger the less shee loves her Husband whence S. James is bold to call worldlings Adulterers and Adulteresses chap. 4.4 whom the Lord will not indure to dally and sport Eph. 2.3 and go a whoring after the World Yee cannot serve God and Mammon 2 Consider that a course lead in lusts is fitter for the Gentiles than those that profess the teaching of Grace Tit. 2.11 For the grace which hath appeared teacheth us to deny worldly lusts Our relation to Christ of whom wee are called Christians must draw our affections out of the World for 1 He hath chosen us out of the World so that now hee professeth of us They are not of the World Job 15.19 2
of his love so every promise of Satan is a token of his malice An example of the Devils faithfulness we have in our own Chronicles In the reign of Edward the first when the Welch-men rebelled their Captain resorted to a Conjurer for counsel whether he should goe on in the intended warre against the King or no yes said the Devil goe on in thy purpose for thou shalt ride through Cheap-side with a Crown on thy head and so he did indeed but it was cut off and he was carried in triumph as a prey to the King This may justly reprove and shame many professed Christians that will scarce give Gods promises of grace and life the hearing though they are founded in Christ in whom they are all yea and amen flowing from his love and tending to our eternal happiness with himself Many will not bee brought to hear them many hardly when they have nothing else to do and many hear them as things not concerning themselves for then would they take more delight in them But if Satan promise any earthly Kingdome or profit hee hath our ears our hearts at command all our speech runs upon the World our desires and hopes are for earth and earthly things and being thus earthly-minded how expose wee our selves to Satans assaults and offer our selves to bee won by his most treacherous promises Vse 2. This teacheth us what to think of that Doctrin and Religion that teacheth men to be Promise-breakers what may we think of it but to bee a treacherous unfaithful Diabolical Religion But such is the Romish Religion as wee may easily see in two or three instances 1 In that Article of the Council of Constance That Faith is not to bee kept with Hereticks that is Protestants and so brake promise with John Hus who had not the Emperours onely but the Popes safe-conduct Against the Examples of good Joshua who kept Promise though rashly made with the Gibeonites and with the Harlot of Jericho and of David who kept Truth and Promise with Shimei a seditious and cursing wretched Traytor 2 The Church of Rome teacheth by the Doctrin of Equivocation to break the Promise of a lawful Oath before a lawful Magistrate and teacheth the lawfulness thereof But the Scripture condemneth a double heart and the deceitful Tongue and proclaimeth woe against them that trust in lying words In lib de fide cum haretic is servanda Jer. 7.8 and that make falshood their refuge Yea Molanus a great and learned Papist concludes syncerè faedera juramenta sunt intelligenda all leagues and especially Oathes are sincerely to bee understood and condemns plainly such mockeries and dalliance with Promises and compacts by one or two instances as of him that made truce with his enemy for thirty daies and wasted his Enemies Countrey and Camps only in the night and of Aurelianus the Emperour who comming afore a Town Tijana and finding the Gates shut to animate his Souldiers with great anger said I will not leave a Dog in the Town they hoping for the spoil beestirred themselves to Ransack the Town but being won hee would not give them leave to spoil it but bad them leave never a Dog in it and let the goods alone This was but a dalliance condemned by the Papist himself and yet had more colour of truth than Popish Equivocation can have 3 The Romish Church teacheth men to break Promises and Oaths with lawful and Christian Princes exempting subjects from obedience and putting Swords Dags Daggers Powder and all deadly plots into their heads and hands against the Lords anointed A treacherous and Devillish Doctrin Vse 3. Wee see also what house treacherous and deceitful persons descend of such as care not how much they promise and how little they perform men most unlike unto God and resembling their Father the Devil who is most lavish and prodigal in his promises when hee knows hee hath neither power nor purpose to perform men of great tongues which swell as mountains but of little hands not performing mole-hills Of these Solomon speaks Prov. 25.14 Hee that glorieth of a false gift that is speaketh of great things that hee will do for his Neighbour but failes in the accomplishment is like a cloud and wind without rain A Cloud seems to offer and promise Rain but the winde takes it away and frustrates a mans expectations And the same is true of all windy Promises Which wee must carefully avoid and use these rules against slipperiness in promise 1 If a man would bee like God who cannot lye in his promises hee must strive against it But Satan is a Lyar from the beginning and the Father of Lyes and Lyars 2 Faithfulnesse in contracts is the sinew of humane society which Satan would have crackt that hee may bring all to confusion 3 The Heathens that were given up by God to a reprobate sense are branded with this mark they are truce-breakers Rom. 1.31 4 It is a mark of a man in the state of grace who hath obtained remission of sins that in his spirit is no guile Psal 32.2 5 A note of a man that shall dwell in Gods holy and heavenly mount is this hee speaks the truth from his heart Psal 15.2 and Revel 14.5 They onely shall stand on Mount Sion and sing before the Throne who have no guilt in their months Especially wee must bee careful of two promises whereof God and the Congregation have been witnesses as 1 That of Baptism which wee must have a special care to look unto for if wee fail in keeping touch with God no marvail if wee fail with men 2 That of Marriage which the Prophet calls the Covenant of God Mal. 2.14 THE second thing in this profer is the reason annexed Luk. 4.6 For it is delivered unto mee and to whomsoever I will I give it The Devil like a desperate man that is sure in this bout to kill or bee killed laies about him with all the skill and strength hee hath yea hee is put to his shifts so as no base or mischievous devise comes amiss by which hee may either in fair combat or cowardly attempts oppress his adversary and that which hee cannot do by strength and power hee will attempt by falshood and lies which hee heaps up here together most like himselfe the Father of lies that stood not in the truth And here he challengeth the power and glory of the World to bee his 1 In Possession 2 In disposition First Hee affirmeth it to bee his but not directly but indirectly by Gift It is delivered unto mee But this is a most notorious lye for the earth is the Lords and all that therein is the world and all that dwell therein Psal 24.1 and Deut. 10.14 Behold the Heaven of Heavens is the Lords thy God and the earth with all that therein is And where read wee that ever hee committed these into the hand of the Devil Object 1. Joh. 14.30 Hee is called the Prince of
is when a man useth any superstitious or diabolical means for the effecting of his desire which hee knows neither in themselves not from Gods institution have any such power to effect things but from the power of the Devil a● the use of Charms or spells figures character An●●ie● S●●atching of a Witch or the like which having no power in themselves not by Gods Ordinance can do no good but by a secret saith in the Devil who by Gods permission puts power in them to heal men for their delusion Secret consent unto the Devil is yet more common than the former though the former bee the common cure of common people namely when Satan secretly suggesteth and offereth to make a Covenant and bargain with a man without any expresse form of contract but by inward temptation putteth the motion into the heart as of Judas that if he will use such an unlawfull means or upon such a condition hee will effect his purpose which hee earnestly desireth to attain now the party blinding his own judgement by the eagerness of his affection gives his consent to Satan and accepts the condition which mutual and silent consent of party with party is a real bargain and covenant Satan solicites the heart and the heart consents to Satan here is a secret compact by which numbers of men are in league with the Devil that would bee loath to bee thought so to bee Yea numbers there are that receive the greatest part of their earthly portion at the hands of the Devil by vertue of this compact secretly beleeving or consenting unto him Vse 1. This serves to let us see the difference between Gods gifts and the Devils in four things 1 Gods gifts come all from Grace and Love hee freely bestows his blessings for his love is everlasting before our own being and our inheritance is eternal above our merit and in the Heavens above our reach But Satans gifts proceed out of his endless hatred and are wages of unrighteousness 2 Gods gifts are derived to us by good and warrantable means diligence labour prayers Satans for the most part by wicked means Gods conditions are profitable and safe Satans hurtful and dangerous by the breach of some Commandement by impiety or injustice 3 Gods gifts are first bestowed upon us and then obedience is required as a testification of Thankfulness not as merit Satans are after our work as a merit and wages of sin first fall down and worship mee and then I will give thee all these things 4 Gods gifts are in mercy for our salvation and comfort and incouragement in his service Satans to draw us from his service and to drag us to destruction Use 2. Let this Doctrin make us afraid to receive any thing from the hand of the Devil and accept of nothing but God offers For 1 God is more able and willing to do us good than the Devil is unless wee think with those wicked ones that it is in vain to serve the Lord. 2 An enemy is never so dangerous as when hee flattereth and fawneth hee never kisseth but killeth with Joab or betrayeth with Judas his gifts are dear bought his conditions are intollerable hee will have a better thing for it even our pretious souls 3 A little from Gods hands is far better than if wee could receive all the World and the glory of it at the Devils for this comes with blessing with Promise with Contentment with good conscience so doth not the other Therefore bee the just mans portion small or great it is ever pretious it hath no sorrow added to it as Solomon speaketh Quest How may I know I receive any thing from the Devil Answ When any thing is gotten by the breach of any Commandement of God as by Swearing Lying Deceit Oppression and the like this is a gift of the Devil and the wages of unrighteousnesse Use 3. Note here how like the Usurer is to the Devil the Devil saith hee will give so the Usurer saith hee will lend which should bee free as gift but then comes a condition of ten in the hundred which is more than the lending is worth Satan is an enemy to all charity and so is hee The like may bee said of Covetous men who will do no good but where they look for return of the like or more as like the Devil as may bee and altogether unlike to God who doth good where hee can receive none sowes where hee reaps not Use 4. See the misery of men who accept of Satans profers 1 Such as are in open league with him as Wizzards who bind themselves to renounce God and their Baptism and Redemption by Christ and to beleeve in the Devil to expect aid from him and give him Body and Soul for that help which is the substance of the solemn Leagues made by such limbs of Satan hee is of the sure side with them they can gain nothing by him unless hee gain themselves first And such by Gods Law ought not to live 2 Worldly-minded men with whom hee deals as with Esau hee gives them a messe of pottage but on condition to sell their birth-right a silly match is made presently an exchange of Earth for Heaven 3 Men impatient in Losses or sicknesse who run to the Witch as not knowing what to do with themselves But Satan never easeth the body of temporal pains but to cast the Soul into eternal 4 Ambitious and discontented persons that take preferments of Satan upon base conditions Absolom shall have a Kingdome on condition hee will rebell against his own Father Zimri a Captain under Baasha 1 King 16.10 shall have the Kingdome of Israel if hee will rebell and slay his Master Discontented Papists shall divide the Land among themselves if they will blow up the Parliament-House Now if wee would avoid the dangerous compacts with Satan let us observe these rules 1 Beware of prophanenesse which is a sin where men carelesly lose Heaven and the joies thereof for these lower and earthly things as Esau to satisfy his lusts despised the blessing Heb. 12.16 Let there bee none such amongst us 2 Beleeve the truth of Gods profers and promises to relye on them and thou shalt bee senced from Satans lies 2 Thess 2.10 3 Consider how easily men pour out themselves for Balaams wages Covetousness carries away their whole heart and yet in the end they are deceived as hee was instead of his reward he was slain in his return homeward Numb 31.8 4 Consider how little joy there is in that which is received at the Devils hand neither Ahab nor his posterity injoyed Naboths Vineyard Judas brought back his thirty peeces and hanged himself According to that of Solomon The wicked resteth not that which hee taketh in hunting 5 Moderate thy affections not to desire the Kingdomes of this World and the glory of them but a far more glorious Kingdome in the World to come and all these transitory matters onely to help thee forward to that The
of subjection to the thing adored and a note of inferiority in deed or in will by this gesture this person makes himself inferiour to a Creature and giveth worship and preheminence to that which in his knowledge hath neither life nor sense which is sensless and against common reason 5 A plain difference between Civil worship and Divine is that all Divine worship is absolute and immediate which is plain in this instance God in all his Commandements must be absolutely and simply obeyed with full obedience never calling any of them into question never expostulating or reasoning the matter with God seem they to us never so unreasonable As Abraham against the Law Moral and even against the Law of Nature without all reasoning riseth up early to kill his own son when God bids him who will be simply obeyed for himself But all obedience to men is respective to God in God and for God and as farre as God hath appointed them to be obeyed and no further God must be obeyed against the Magistrate the Magistrate not against God but so farre as his Commandements are agreeable to Gods Man as man is not to be obeyed but because God hath set him over us in the Church Common-wealth or Family Whence we see that Civil worship hath his rise and ground in the worship of God and what is the cause that so little reverence is given to superiours whether Magistrates or Ministers Masters or Parents in these dissolute and unmannerly days but because Gods worship decays and is not laid in the hearts of inferiours the force of whose Commandement would force reverence to superiours What other cause is there that inferiour impudent persons of both sexes take such liberty without all respect of conscience truth or manners to chatter against Gods Ministers and the Kings towards both whom God hath commanded more than ordinary respect yea with all bitterness to scoft rail curse threaten with horrible damnable and incessant Oathes more like Furies than men even to their faces but that Gods fear is utterly shaken out of their hearts and where Gods fear is absent how can we expect any fear of men The Heathen Priests were honoured because Heathen gods were feared which shall condemn Christians among whom neither Gods Priests and Ministers nor the Ministers of the King Gods Vicegerent and consequently not God himself is feared and honoured Doct. All religious worship whether outward or inward is due to God only For inward worship it is most express Joh. 4.24 God being a Spirit hee must bee worshipped in spirit and truth And it might be proved in all the parts of inward worship as 1 Love Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy soul 2 Fear Isa 8.13 Let him be thy fear and dread Fear him that is able to cast both body and soul into hell 3 Trust and confidence Prov. 3.5 Trust in God with all thy heart 4 Faithful prayer Psal 50.15 Call upon me in the time of trouble and How can they call on him in whom they have not beleeved But of this there is little question As for outward worship if religious all of it is his due only Psal 95.6 Come let us kneel before him and bow down to God our Maker Whence it is manifest that all the gestures and signs of religious worship as bowing of the body of knees lifting up of eyes or hands and uncovering the head with religious intention is not to bee yeelded to any but the true God 1 A reason hereof is in the text because he only is the Lord our God Reasons our Lord of absolute command and we his servants whos 's our souls are and our bodies also to be at his beck in religious use and none else and our God by the Law of Creation and daily preservation as also by the Covenant of Grace and Redemption he hath not only created but preserveth yee redeemeth our souls and bodies also and no Creature hath any right unto us as David saith Christ refuseth here to bow to the Devil not only because he is a Devil but because he is a Creature 2 In our text wee see that Satan will yeeld God is to be served but not only he would have a little service too Nebuchadnezzar would bee contented God should be served but he would bee served too if they would but fall down and bow to his Image he desires no more Let Christ be as devout towards his Father as he can inwardly Satan desites no more but a little outward reverence But the three fellows of Daniel tell the King they will worship their God only and Christ tells Satan the chief Idolater of all that hee must serve God only even with external and bodily service 3 If outward religious worship were due to any Creature then to the Angels the most glorious of all but they have refused it and devolved it only to God as his Prerogative Judg. 13.16 Manoah being about to worship the Angel that appeared to him the Angel hindred him saying If thou wilt offer any sacrifice offer it to God And Paul condemneth an outward humility in worshipping of Angels Col. 2.18 Revel 19.10 the Angel refused Johns worship and chap. 22.8 when he fell down at his feet to worship him being amased and perhaps not knowing whether hee might not bee the Lamb himself of whose marriage he was speaking and the reason in both places why he refused even that outward reverence was 1 Taken from the Angels condition hee was but a fellow-servant 2 Because it was proper to God Worship God who is there opposed to all Angels good and bad 4 Idolatry may bee committed onely in the gesture neither can wee set our bodies which ought to bee presented as living and reasonable sacrifice● to God before Idol-Worship without the crime of Idolatry no external dissembled honour can be given to an image with safe conscience for which cause Origen was excommunicated by the Church for offering a little incease to an Idol though hee were forced thereunto by a suddain fear 5 Some things must bee had alone and admit not of a second No man can serve two Masters One woman cannot have two husbands at once her Husband is jealous of any partner or corrival Now God alone is our Master and Husband and therefore hee alone must have religious honour This serves to confute the Popish doctrin and practice of their image and Saint-worship and of giving many other waies Gods peculiar worship clean away to the Creatures not onely bowing to images of wood and stone and metal but invocating them vowing unto them offring gifts unto them lighting candles before them offring incense dedicating daies fasts feasts unto Saints departed c. Wherein they commit most horrible idolatry against this express Commandement which commandeth the service of the true God onely As wee shall see further in these grounds Grounds against image Worship 1 No image may bee made of God Thou
and stratagems should we make Obj. That was heath ●nish service but the Masse is more Christian and hath good things in it Ans 1. That was the Masse from which the Protestant Princes departed 2 The Masse is as gross Idolatry as ever any was among the Gentiles being made up of Judaism Gentilism and shreds of Christianity 3 Let them tell us a difference between the bodily adultery of Heathens and Christians and wee will observe the same in the spiritual whoredome which is Idolatry Obj. 1. But what say you of Naaman the Syrian who requested leave to goe into the house of Rimmon with the King his Master and the Prophet bade him goe in peace 2 King 5.18 Ans 1. Some think he spake only of Civil and Politick presence that his Master the King might lean upon him before his Idol hee in the mean time protesting that he would never worship other god but the true God to which the Prophet condescendeth Which is the answer of Mr. Perkins upon the second Commandement and Mr. Zanchius on Ephes 5. But howsoever the gesture it self is indifferent to stand when the King stands and bow when the King boweth c. yet this gesture being cloathed with such circumstances seemeth to me not approved by the Prophet to doe this 1 In the Church 2 Before an Idol 3 In the time of publick service 4 By one professing the true God this seems not so warrantable And indeed both those famous Divines departed from this answer and gave a sounder in their latter works as appears both in Mr. Perkins his Cases of Conscience and Mr. Zanchius his Book De redemptione 2 Some think he speaks in the time past as if he should say Herein that I have bowed c. the Lord be merciful to me to which the Prophet said Goe in peace But there is no need thus to wrest either the tongue or the text 3 The best answer is that Naaman professeth it a sin to go in to bow with his Master in the house of Rimmon and therefore prayeth twice for mercy for it professing he will never now worship any but the true God neither doth he only pray against sin past nor for leave for sin to come but in sense of his own weakness and infirmity desireth mercy that he may not bee drawn from his purpose and withall stirreth up the Prophet to pray for him for grace and strength and for pardon if at any time hee should against his purpose bee drawn into his former sin and in this sense the Prophet bids him goe in peace as if he should say I will pray that God would keep thee in thy godly resolution and for strength and mercy if thou shouldest bee drawn aside and so farewell Now out of this example how can they defend that not to be a sin which himself confesseth a sin and desireth grace and mercy for and strength against Besides Naaman might seem to plead his calling for his warrantize if it were not but what calling can they plead but only newfangledness and rash running out of their way and calling Obj. 2. But Daniel worshipped the Image which Nebuchadnezzar set up else he should have been punished as his three fellows were Ans A silly argument of desperate men blaspheming the holy Prophet who before had been cast into the den of Lions for sticking unto God But if they fall to conjectures we may easily refell them in their own kind thus 1 Perhaps the Image was not near Daniel 2 If it were hee might not bee observed 3 If he were it may be the Chaldes durst not accuse him for his great grace and place with the King 4 Or if they did it may be the King would not hear them nor draw him to death for the great love he bare him or the great service he did in his Kingdom Oh therefore let not us that are Jews that is the Israel of God meddle with these Romish Samaritans Joh. 4.9 let vs not enter into their Cities nor turn into the way of the Gentiles let them bee unto us as Publicans and Heathens Oh that our young Gentlemen would not goe into this way to perform even the basell services of the Masse but hear the voyce of Christ Matthew 10.5 Vse 3. In all our service of God this precept requireth that we give him religious reverence and express it in reverent and seemly gestures especially in prayer and praise to bow our bodies and compose the parts thereof to seemly behaviours True it is that religion stands not in gestures neither doth the Scripture expresly tye us to this or that in particular but only in general to such as beseem holiness and humility See it in the example of the Saints 1 King 8.54 when Salomon had made an end of all his prayer he arose from kneeling on his knees and stretching his hands towards heaven Good Jacob being not able to bend and turn his body for age yet in worshipping God hee would lean on the end of his staffe being in his bed and bow as well as hee could Heb. 12.21 Hee might have thought the age of his body and weakness might exempt him from outward adoration yet hee makes a supply of his weakness by the help of a staff 1 Chron. 29.20 the whole Congregation of Israel in blessing the Lord bow down their heads and worshiped the Lord. And our Lord Jesus himself before his Passion fell on his face and prayed Matth. 26.39 All to teach us how reverently to demean our selves in our Lords service yea if we can convenien●ly with Ezra chap. 9. vers 5. to fall on our knees and spread our hands to the Lord. 1 To testifie our humility and that our souls are cast down with our bodies 2 This is a profession of the high Majesty of God before whom wee are the greater the person is among men the more reverence is to bee used in speaking to him or in being spoken unto by him but God is the greatest of all The Lord our Maker Therefore let us kneel before him Psalm 95.6 7. 3 Our reverent and humble gestures greatly help us against our own weaknesses the lifting up of our eyes and hands help us to get our hearts lifted up to God 4 It manifesteth our care to glorify God in our souls and bodies as wee are commanded 1 Cor. 6.20 and that wee acknowledge them both to bee his and both to depend upon him 5 That wee set not light by his Ordinances in which hee giveth us leave to approach unto his throne of Grace before whom the very Angels are said to cover their faces 6 Hereby wee give good example to others and provoke them also to reverence All which much condemneth the prophaneness of many whom when Satan cannot hinder from Church hee prevails against them there and in hearing the Word receiving the Sacraments and Prayer they manifest their contempt of those Holy Ordinances casting and rolling their eies here and there gazing
idlely or laying themselves to sleep and take a nap some part of the Sermon or sitting unmannerly in prayer-time without all reverence that should they come so and behave themselves towards their Prince they should bee taught a lesson for their rudenesse Is this to confesse a mans own basenesse and the humble conceit hee hath of himself Is this the fruit of acknowledging Gods infinite Majesty Surely that soul which feelingly sees it self to deal with God will make the body either kneel as a Petitioner or stand as a servant ready to hear and know and do the will of his Lord. And him onely shalt thou serve Doct. God must not onely bee worshipped but also served The distinction is easily observed For a man may in heart and gesture honour another to whom hee owes but little service And this word in the Hebrew is taken from Servants who besides inward reverence and outward worship owe to their Masters their strength labour and service yea frank and cheerful Obedience And suppose any man have a Servant who will bee very Complemental and give his Master cap and knee and very good words yet when his Master commands him any thing hee will not do it here is honour but no service and denying service hee plainly shews that his honour is but dissembled and hypocritical So as this service to God as to earthly Masters stands 1 in fear and reverent inward affection 2 in dutiful and ready obedience in all holy and civil actions For 1 These two God in the Scriptures hath every where joyned together Reasons and therefore no man may separate them Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were in them such an heart to fear mee and to keep my Commandements Josh 24.14 15. Now therefore fear the Lord and serve him in uprightnesse else chuse you for I and my house will serve the Lord. Eccl. 12. ult Let us hear the end of all Fear God and keep his Commandements which is all one with fear God and serve him 2 This service is a fruit of fear and a true testimony of it for fear of God is expressed in service and if a man would make true trial of his fear hee may do it by his service It is a note and branch also of our love unto God all which the holy Prophet Moses declareth Deut. 10.12 when hee expresseth that walking in all Gods waies is a consequent of fear and the service of the Lord a fruit of love And now Israel what doth the Lord thy God require of thee but to fear the Lord thy God and to walk in his waies and to love him and to serve the Lord thy God 3 Hee justly calleth for our service in regard of the relation that is between him and us as hee is the Lord our God and Master and hath authority over us to whom wee owe simple obedience and wee are his servants to whom wee owe of right our whole strength and service Now hee becomes our Lord and wee his servants not onely by right of Creation and prese●vation but by expresse Covenant that as the Jews servants were said to bee their Masters money so wee are not our own but bought with a price 1 Corinth 6.20 Our wages are set and our Promise passed our earnest-penny received and no other Lord can lay claim unto us 4 There is no Creature exempted from the service of God all Creatures in their kind serve him and much more ought man to whom hee hath appointed all creatures to serve him and hath exempted him from the service of them all to serve himself alone All the Saints ever gloried that they were the Servants of God The honourable mention of Moses is that hee was faithful in all the house of God as a servant And David saith often Lord I am thy ●ervant keep thy servant c. Paul Peter Jude the servants of God The Angels professe themselves our fellow-Servants and are called Ministring spirits sent forth for the heirs of Salvation Adam in innocency was not exempted from this service but must serve God in dressing the Garden as a servant his Lord and Master Nay Christ himself the second A●am was not onely stiled the beloved Son but the righte●us servant of God Isa 53.11 5 Our Talents our gifts our strength our work our wages all are his received from him and for him and therefore must be returned again unto him in his service Quest What is this service which God requires at our hands Answ The service of God is either Legal or Evangelical The former stands in a perfect conformity with the whole Law of God when the creature can present unto God a personal and total righteousness Of this kind is the service of the blessed Angels Of the same kinde was Adams in innocency Of the same was Christs service when hee was made obedient to the death that by the obedience of one many might bee made righteous This is that by which wee shall serve God in heaven when wee shall once again recover perfect sanctification and the whole Image of God which we have now lost This now wee cannot attain unto yet wee must ever carry it in our eye as our scope and aim Evangelical service is when the heart being regenerate by Gods Spirit and purified by Faith hath Christs obedience imputed unto it which is accepted as its own perfect obedience and now indeavours to obey God sincerely in all things In a word that is Evangelical service which is perfect in Christ begun and inchoat in us in him compleat in us sincere and upright which is Christian perfection And to know this service the better wee will set down the conditions of it I. It must bee willing and free a free-will offering for hereby it is distinguished from the service of Devils and wicked men who are all subject unto the power of God and do him service in executing his will whether they will or no but one thing it is to bee subjected another to subject ones self the one is f●●●an inward principle even the Spirit of Go● which reneweth the will and makes it of unwillingly willing and pliable the other is onely by some outward force The service of the godly resembles the Angels in Heaven who are said to have wings by which their will and readiness is figured in doing the bests of God David had not such wings to flye swiftly yet hee would run in the way of Gods Commondements so fast as the burden of flesh would suffer him This condition our Lord and Saviour commends unto us in his own example when hee professeth it is his meat and drink to do the will of his father 2 It must bee hearty and sincere Rom. 1.9 whom I serve in my spirit not in body and ostentation but in soul and sincerity not in hypocrisy and coldnesse but in soundnesse and fervency not co-acted or compelled but chearfully and without dispute The Apostle requires love out of a pure heart 1 Tim. 1.5
and a good Conscience and faith unfeigned And when the Lord bids David seek his face Davids heart answereth I will seek thy face Psal 27.8 Those that serve bodily Masters must not serve with eye-service but as the servants of Christ Eph. 5.6 how doing the will of God from the heart and ver 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in simplicity of heart What man can abide a servant that deals deceitfully with him if he know that hee outwardly pretends service but his heart is not with him but he dissembles Love Truth Faith and Reverence No more can God Men cannot see into the hearts of their servants but the Lord doth and cannot bee deceived The fountain of all our Obedience must bee a pure and sincere heart or else if the well-head be corrupt share all the waters that issue thence 3 It must bee ruled and squared by God himself Hinc obed●re ad audire for God must bee served as hee will bee served and not as wee think good for God knows what is best and what pleaseth him best All Obedience is to go by rule not our own or others but Gods As the eyes of the hand-maid is upon the hand of her Mistrisse so in our service must our eyes bee upon Gods direction Ps 123.2 which is implyed in that phrase Luke 1.75 That wee should serve him in righteousnesse and holinesse before him all the daies of our life An earthly servant must not take up his own work nor do other mens business but depend upon his own Masters mouth and direction Now God ruleth his whole service in respect of the 1 matter 2 manner 3 end I. For the matter Whatsoever I command that do onely saith the Lord. Thou shalt not do that which is good in thine own eyes but what I command thee And so wee are taught to pray Thy will be done II. For the manner It must bee 1 Absolute 2 Total I. Absolute without all condition on our part whereas all service to men must bee conditional The reason hereof is because God being holiness it self can command nothing but what is most just and holy but men may II. Total both objective and subjective 1 It must bee total in respect of the object all Gods Commandements all which call for our obedience Partial and delicate service when wee list or at leisure as the retainers of great men on feast-daies is not that which liketh him but a constant diligence in all his Commandements and a conscionable indeavour in all General service was holy Davids aim Psal 119.6 Then shall I not bee confounded when I have respect to all thy Commandements Not that wee can perfectly serve him unlesse wee were perfectly sanctified but that we must make conscience of all Gods Commandements even the least 2 It must bee total in respect of our selves we must be wholly imployed in his service in all our parts and powers the whole heart and all the strength is here challenged Wherein there is a notable difference between the service wee owe to God and that to men Wee are to bee serviceable to men only in part not wholly for the soul and Conscience are not subject to men which God especially taketh up and looks for Gods priviledge it is to bee the father of spirits for although wee take our bodies from our Parents yet our souls are immediately from God Men therefore have no power and authority over our souls but God hath power both over soul and body and is the Lord of our conscience and spirit and therefore of due must we subject our selves wholly in his service III. God ruleth his service in respect of the end which is twofold intentionis termini 1 The proper aym and end of our service must be 1 Gods glory directly If all our service of men must be for God as we saw it must much more must Gods immediate service 2 The good of our brethren and of Gods Church which we must not scandalize but build up for God will be served in our service of men 2 Wee must serve our God without end he requires such an heart in his people as to fear him always Deut. 5.29 and 6.13 Thou shalt serve the Lord and cleave unto him Wee allow not our servants to cast up our work and make holy-day at their pleasure much less most Gods servants think it lawful at any time to give any service to Satan Sin Lust the World or any Creature against the Will of the Lord. Vse This should provoke us to tender unto God this service with heart and good will thus squared by God for the matter manner and ends of it The Apostle Ephes 6.5 6 7 8. perswadeth servants to obey their Masters according to the flesh by three arguments all which are much more strong to perswade our service to our Master in heaven First saith he it is the will of God Gods institution and the ordinance of Christ It is enough for a servant to know that such a thing is the ordinate will of his own Master The second reason of the Apostle is taken from the honour of their service that in serving men they served the Lord Christ which was an honourable thing Now we serve a great Lord and as good as great If a servant were bound to a wicked and froward Master he must obey him in all lawful things How much more are we to yeeld service to so good a Lord who can command nothing but that which is most just holy and honourable Hee sets us not about any base or ignoble service to work in brick or clay as Pharaoh commanded the Israelites but our work is the practice of piety and righteousness of prayer and praise And besides it is most beneficial to our selves for what gaineth he by our service our goodness reacheth not to him to adde a grain to his perfection Psal 50.9 10. I will take no Bullock out of thy house for all the beasts of the forest are mine and the sheep on a thousand mountains If I were hungry I would not tell thee But it is our honour and profit as when a noble man takes a poor Sneak near him to serve him such a mean man is more honoured and pleasured than the noble man to whom he retains The third reason of the Apostle is drawn from the expectation of reward or wages which if their Masters should fail God would not fail to repend unto them knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doth that same he shall receive of the Lord. Now if the Lord so liberally reward faithful service done to mean and even wicked men how rich and royal a reward gives hee to the faithful service of himself It gifts then may move us to serve God the Lord truly saith All these doe I give thee and more also my Christ my Spirit my self and life eternal No man gives such wages no servant ever had such a pay-master To these might be added sundry other motives
resisted but flye 4 The battel which wee fight is the Lords wherein hee will not bee overcome the strength is the Lords who is mighty in battel What was the strength of David to Goliah but when hee comes against him in the name of the Lord a small and weak resistance overthrows him Our armour is the Lords Put on the armour of God And it is armour of proof It were a disgrace to his workmanship if it should ever bee found slight or insufficient Our cause is the Lords a contention for the faith Fight the good fight of faith which shall prevail against all the gates of Hell Our Captain was never overcome nor can bee nor any one of his fellows for they are all members of that body whereof hee is the head and can a Head able to save the Body suffer it self to bee dis-membred of any one member Our Aiders and Assistance that come in to help us while wee resist are the Angels who have a charge to keep us in our waies and give us strength and victory they bee too strong for Satan and all his powers and they bee more that be with us than they against us Object But are not many of Gods Children not onely sore thrust at but even overcome in temptation Nay and doth not experience shew that the more the child of God resisteth the more Satan assaulteth him And doth not another experience teach us that the lesse hee is resisted the sooner hee flies and is less troublesome Answ God in great wisdome suffers Satan to molest his dear Children and infest them with long and strong temptations and many times to foil them and to renew his temptations and the battel day by day 1 For their humbling and exercise the Lord destroyed not all the Canaanites before Israel but left some people to hold them battel lest they should grow secure Judg. 3.1 and to teach them battel And Paul must bee buffeted by Satan lest hee should bee exalted by the multitude of Revelations 2 To make them more watchful of their Graces and keep close their Faith Hope Love Patience c. as when Robbers and Pilferers are abroad men shut up and lock their goods within so here 3 To magnify his own glory who manifesteth such power in such weakness and seasonably sets in for their safety and victory when in their sense they are utterly lost But 1 Satan never overcomes him that resisteth hee may foil him and beat his weapon to his head Ne●●l i● non vin●● n si qui vince●e no●u●t Erasmus yea hee may send him halting away with Jacob so long as he lives yet at length hee shall overcome if hee hold on his resistance 2 Satan indeed often assaulteth where hee is much resisted for hee will still renew the battel Sometimes in strong Christians whom the Lord presseth forth as the Leaders in his battel for strength is for the war Job resisted but was still assaulted because his measure of strength was such as was to bee a pattern to all ordinary men Our Lord had resisted Satan once and again but till now hee flies not because hee was to bee the General of the field on whom all must look as an example and for direction But the issue is that Satan shall flye at length and the longer and stronger his temptations are the more God glorifieth himself both in the victory of his servants and confusion of the Devil as wee see in both the former examples Sometimes hee fiercely assaileth weaker Christians who are easilier pulled from their holds for want of knowledge judgement or resolution these hee thinks will bee tyred out with importunity and hee hopes to force them to yeeld at length And surely many weaker ones invite Satans temptations unawares which toil them worse than death because they are so flexible Satan sometimes hears them speak in his own Language Thou art an Hypocrite a great sinner above all men sometimes hee sees them use his weapons against themselves and so give way to the Adversary in stead of resisting whereas stout and manful resistance would speedily procure their peace sometimes for want of judgement they are not able to distinguish of Satans sins from their own but carry themselves as they would take upon themselves the Devils reckoning Alass All this invites him and makes him welcome But here let the weakest Beleever know that if hee resist lawfully hee shall carry away the victory let his resistance bee never so weak and this shall make for Gods greater glory and Satans greater confusion that hee is not able to stand out the field against the weakest of them whom hee may seem to scorn It was a great confusion that Satan was not able to stand against Christ himself but that hee shall not be able to stand against a sinner a worm which turns again in the name of Christ is greater confusion than the former 3 Whereas Satan seems quiet where hee is least resisted it is no marvel his Kingdome is not divided against himself What need a Captain bend his Forces against a Town which hath delivered up it self into his hand What need hee set bul-warks and Canon-shot against those Walls and gates which are willingly set open When the strong man keeps the hold all things are at peace But a miserable peace it is to run from under the colours of the Prince of peace to go so peaceably and gently to the dungeon of eternal darkness Vse 1. This may comfort the child of God that hee shall out-stand all his temptations it is not onely possible for him to overcome the Devil and put him to flight but also certain For The just man falleth seven times a day but riseth again Prov. 24.16 And why 1 Because Gods election is eternal and unchangeable and his foundation sure 2 Because of Christs prayer that our faith might not fail 3 Because the godly man hath built his house on a rock against which the windes may blow and the floods beat but it shall stand and hee is set into that head who overcame the Tempter that hee might overcome him also 4 Because of the promise that God will not forsake his Child overlong but supply strength for the combate and give a gracious issue And temptation prevails only when God addes not a second grace but standeth afar off Object But was not David overcome with temptation Answ Yes justly when hee remitted of his watch and resistance but this was neither totally nor finally The reason is because God puts a man into the hands of the Devil two waies 1 Absolutely 2 With limitation Absolutely 2 Tim. 1.16 as when his justice gives up a wicked man to bee wholly ruled at his will and carried head-long to destruction With limitation when a man is put into his hand to prevail over him to a certain measure as Job and our Saviour to be in these temptations carried and molested to a certain measure of time and vexation Thus
rather than over-ruled by power it laies by all dialogue dispute murmuring and desire of dispensation 3 In the measure of doing it will indeavour in all the Commandements and all duties no man so wicked but hee can do many things as Herod but hee cannot yield to all 4 In continuance and conclusion of that hee doth it holdeth on in doing things purely for a good end for Gods glory and not by fits and starts but perseveres to the end and the crown of the work In all which a wicked man comes short for whatsoever is forced or feigned must bee heavily entered on and more heavily ended besides whatsoever is from such an one is joyned with reigning sin which hales and tugs him backward and toils him out before hee bee half way in any good work 3 How often doth the Lord reject the sacrifice of the wicked their oblations their fasts their prayers their temporary yea miraculous Faith their almes and charity yea their confessing and Preaching of Christ as in the last judgement all which had they been fruits of sound grace they had been acceptable But God looks not so much to the matter of the work as the person working the manner of working and the end of the action Vse 1. Well as Satan goes away when hee can stay no longer and so his obedience is forced so doth sin from most men when they can keep it no longer and so that which seemeth obedience in them it is no better than the Devils obedience in this place Vse 1. Many refrain many sins for fear of Hell and the curse of God they dare not hold their sin any longer whereas they are as much in love with it as before as Moses his Parents kept him so long as they durst before they exposed him to the waters so dearly love men the children of their own corruption What thank is it for a Robber or Felon to leave robbing and stealing for fear of hanging If there were no Law nor Magistrate hee would to his own calling again because hee is no changeling So what thank is it for a man to avoid sin because of damnation here is no fear of God but fear of evil no love of God but self-love And yet this is the restraint of most men whom Conscience no whit bridleth Why do men abstain from open wronging of men by Robbing Stealing Murthering they will say for Conscience But then the same Conscience would keep them from all secret deceit lying and cousenage and then the same conscience would keep them from all other sins also as swearing drinking dicing carding gaming pride wantonness and the rest A good conscience in one thing is a good conscience in all 2 The like is the obedience of many sinners that are still in league with their sins Many filthy unclean whoremongers and harlots have left their sin but it is because it hath lest them they have broken their strength and either age or diseases in their bodies hinder them oh now they will pretend Conscience But they can as filthily speak and as merrily remember their mad pranks as ever they acted them they want onely a body no minde will or affection to commit over the same things again Many Prodigals have left their sin because their wealth hath left them and poverty feeds upon them Many quarrellers and swaggerers have left off such furious courses why perhaps they have gotten some maim or mischief or perhaps they fear whether they can do so again safely or no and this is all the conscience that hath calmed and quieted them but what obedience is this Is that an obedience to God for a Dicer or Gamester to forbear play or rather as it is his theeving when he wants mony to stake 3 In Gods service what makes men come to Church to hear and Pray Every man saith Conscience Yea but good Conscience works powerfully upon the Will what then means the unwillingnesse of men and heavinesse who are so far from apprehending their week-occasions as if they ask their own hearts they must tell them that on the Sabbaths of God were it not for fear of law and shame of men both which are often forgotten they would not come at all Here is obedience much like the Devils because they are of the Devils teaching The like of many servants and Childrens obedience whose comming to Church to hear their duty is meerly forced by the compulsion of Masters and Parents and hath as little comfort in it as the Devils obedience 4 The like is to bee said of late Repentance at the time of death when the sinner hath held his sin so long as hee can then hee would bee rid of it Indeed his sin leaves him but not the curse of it but hee is so far from leaving it as were hee to live over his daies again hee would put as much life into his sin as ever before Late repentance is seldome true ever suspicious Why do many rich men never do good while they live but live as unprofitable and hurtful as swine till they come to the knife but then when death is binding them they will give somewhat to good uses to the Poor for a Sermon c. Why what moves them Conscience they say But it is an accusing Conscience crying out against their oppression usury wrong cruelty and deceit and now this wicked Conscience would stop its own mouth by offering to God some trifle of that hee hath robbed For were it a good conscience why doth hee not leave some part of his wealth for God before it wholly leave him Were it a free-will-offering why comes it so late why doth hee not good while hee hath time Gal. 6.10 Surely God likes a living Christian for any man will bee a Christian dying Neither is it thank-worthy to give that which a man cannot keep And commonly such gifts do more good to others than the giver himself Which is not spoken to hinder men from doing good at their deaths but to provoke them to do good before that time And yet better late than never Let us examine all our obedience by this ground and bee sure that it differ from the obedience of Devils and wicked men And that by these rules 1 God loves truth in the inward parts and refuseth all that obedience which follows not sanctification of the Spirit duties without must flow from graces within Examine now thy inward change wee are his new creatures created to good works joyn that in thy actions which the Devil divorced the inner man with the outward the subjection of the soul with the obedience of the body 2 Examine thy love in thy obedience that because the love of God constrains thee thou doest what hee commands and whether thou preferrest the Commandement of God which is ever-joyned with his glory above all the World and thy obedience above thy profit credit case pleasure mens favour or dis-favour whether thou canst obey God against all these This was
1 possession 2 disposition four reas page 199 God some waies an actor in evil no waies an author page 10 God tempteth man two waies page 20 Godly men shall want no accusation in the world why page 19 The more God graceth a man the more Satan seeketh to disgrace him three reasons page 1 and page 6 Six graces Satan would fain rob us of page 182 H POpish hallowing of water wicked six reas page 8 Headship of the Pope falsly grounded page 149 Little or no Help in injustice three reas page 95 Christ full of the Holy Ghost how page 25 Holiness sweeteneth our callings three ways page 98 To hold out in tryals without hast-making four reas page 234 No sign of Gods hatred to be vexed with the Devil but of the Devils four reasons page 125 Christ able to feed others miraculously was hungry himself page 38 I SAtan can make gross Idolatry seem a small moat page 203 Jerusalem called holy City five reasons page 104 Jerusalem full of corruptions yet called holy why page 107 Importunity of Satan against Christ and his members to draw them to sin four reas page 180 Infirmities which Christ took upon him which in three propositions page 38 Why Christ took our infirmities five reasons page 39 Infirmities of Christ differ from ours in six things page 40 Induction to prove all things subjected to Christs word page 242 Infallible Judge of controveres the holy Scriptures four reas page 157 Incompetent Judges of controversies obtruded by the Church of Rome four page 158 Instance of Satan to draw us to evil must make us more instant in good page 182 Instances of Satans false conclusions in matter of faith three of practice nine page 66 Instances in four kinds of temptations how to use the word against Satan page 81 Instances of many men whose obedience is no better than that of Devils page 249 L. TO know a man led by the Spirit three rules page 12 Christ cometh led of the Spirit Satan cometh of himself page 49 Liberties of religion are better prized in their absence than in their presence page 117 The more light of grace the Lord bestoweth on his children the more doth the darknesse of the world fight against it page 102 Life of a Christian a continual entercourse of peace and trouble four reasons page 251 Love of the world easily maketh a man a prey and spoyl of Satan five reasons page 192 To pull our hearts from the love of the world five means page 195 Four other considerations to the same purpose page 194 Lying is the Devils mother-tongue page 65 A Looking-glasse for Lyars page 202 Lying a hateful sin for three reasons ibid. M. MAgistrates governours not of men only but of Christians page 215 Man tempteth God two ways page 20 Man tempteth man three ways ibid. Man tempteth himself two ways ibid. Manner of Christs temptation external four reasons page 48 Not to be present at Masse with pretence of keeping the heart to God five reasons page 225 Mean estate best three reasons page 5 Means of fortifying faith four page 56 Means to confirm to a mans self his own adoption three page 60 To use unlawful means to help our selves Diabolical three reasons page 61 Means to fence us against Satans wicked inferences three page 67 Means not sufficient to sustain the life of man in six instances and five reasons page 87 Means not to be set above their place page 89 Means not to be neglected where they are three reasons ibid. Better to want means than to enjoy such as proceed not out of the mouth of God page 99 Means to raise our selves being cast down four page 136 To sin against means fearful in things 1 Spiritual 2 Temporal page 143 Means to partake of the Angels ministery three page 155 Means of nourishing confidence in God four page 178 Meeknesse of Christ to Satan himself five reasons page 72 Ministers must bee very watchful over their people because of the tempter page 46 Wicked Ministers hinder some comfort but not all efficacy from the Sacrament page 108 To conceive of dumbe Ministers five grounds page 109 Modesty in speaking of our selves commended in Christs example page 74 Motives to avoyd slandering five page 18 Motives to out-stand temptations three page 27 Motives to stir up one another to good four page 47 Mountains about Jerusalem seven page 186 Mountain chosen for the third temptation three reasons page 184 No mountains to be wished but Gods holy mountain page 186 N. DIfference of Names or Numbers must not make us suspect error in the Scripture but our own ignorance page 171 O. OBjections for Usury answered page 96 Objections for Sabbath-breaking page 97 Chief Objections of the separation answered page 108 Objections to prove Christ on the pinacle only in vision answered page 122 Objects of Senses five warrantable page 189 In opposition of good men and good things consider five things page 102 Ordinances of God not to bee medled with without due respect and reverence as 1 Word 2 Oath 3 Lots page 113 Conditions of sound obedience four page 247 Cheerful obedience four things page 248 Outward things make neither happy nor unhappy four reasons page 59 P. PInacle of the Temple chosen for the second temptation by Satan four reasons page 118 No place in the world free from temptation page 13 Places of Gods worship to bee reverently esteemed and used page 113 No place longer holy than God and his worship are present page 114 Satan usually sitteth his temptation to the place or the place to his temptation three reasons page 118 Places of probable peril and danger to be avoyded especially of four sorts page 119 Men in highest places are in greatest danger of falling three reasons page 184 The higher the Pinacle a man stands on the more busie Satan is to cast him down page 134 Satan helpeth men up to the Pinacle only to cast them down again page 135 The Pope puts down the Devil in boasting page 203 Power of Christ unresistable by all the Devils in Hell four reasons page 241 Power of Christ is of his Office and Essence ibid. They differ in three things ibid. Popes have erred in matters of faith page 162 Fight marks of the mighty power of Christ in us page 244 Power of Christ frustrateth Satans greatest advantages page 124 Power of Satan over the bodies of men great God permitting him page 125 Prayer to be made for Governours especially why page 185 Presence of God in his Word and Worship maketh places holy three reasons page 106 Satan ordinarily tempteth to presumption four reasons page 129 Most dangerous presumption is in spiritual things as in six instances page 131 Presumption in things temporal to be avoyded in four instances page 132 Priviledge of Gods children because of the Angels page 154 A singular priviledge of the Church to have so perfect a direction as the Scripture page 87 Priviledge of the godly to
such as are wealth honour learning parentage beauty or such like here called the face of a man for which God accepteth not nor rejecteth any man Job 34.19 Hee accepteth not the persons of Princes saith Elihu nor regardeth the rich more than the poor they being all the work of his hands And applied to the Apostles purpose is as if he had said I now indeed clearly perceive that the Lord hath no respect of any dignity or priviledge in any people above another that hee should pour his grace upon one more than another upon the Jew above the Gentile Why God accepteth not of persons upon the circumcision above the uncircumcision upon the seed of Abraham according to the flesh above the rest of the Nations and Kindreds throughout the world Now I see that the righteous Judge of all the earth can be no accepter of persons For 1 This were to esteem men by adjuncts and qualities Reasons and not by their essence and substance of grace and piety thus should the rich man have been preferred before Lazarus and the proud Pharisee before the penitent Publican 2 This were to judge by inconstant things for all these outward respects pass away as the figure of the world it self doth whereas the judgement of God is most unchangeable and therefore grounded on things unchangeable 3 It were a most unequal valuation to compare and much more to prefer things which are in no proportion of goodness to the things which are undervalued for between temporal and eternal heavenly and earthly things can bee no proportion 4 He which hath forbidden us to judge by the false and crooked rule of sence sight reason and such things as are before us cannot himself do so both which points are plainly reproved 1 Sam. 16.7 The Lord biddeth Samuel being to chuse one of the Sons of Ishai to bee King look not on his countenance nor on the height of his stature and addeth this as a reason for God seeth not as man seeth man looketh on the outward appearance but the Lord beholdeth the heart Object But when the Lord passed by all the rest of the Nations and chose Abraham and his seed did he not accept persons Answ That Abraham and the Israelites were chosen the Ismalites and Heathen rejected was no accepting of persons the Lord himself declareth that there was no cause at all in the people which furthered his choice of them just cause there was in them why hee should have passed by them as well as the rest for as they were the fewest of all people Deut. 7.7 so they were the worst and most stiff-necked of all Deut. 9.6 Yea consider Abraham himself their Father and the Father of all the Faithful what cause was in him that God should set his love upon himself or his posterity or call him out of Ur of the Chaldaeans where hee lived in as Heathenish Idolatry as any of the rest in so much as God by his Prophet puts them in minde of the pit whence they were hewn and telleth them their Father was an Amorite and their Mother an H●ttite Ezek. 16.3 If it bee still asked what cause then was there why this people should above all other bee chosen to partake in the Covenant of life the Lord himself directly answereth that there was no cause without himself that moved him hereunto it was only his free love and meer good will The Lord loved you because hee loved you Deut. 7.8 Object But when God electeth one to salvation and rejecteth another hee seemeth no accept of persons for all lye alike in the same condition Ans The Objection answereth it self for in that all lie alike in the same mass and all are corrupted it is plain that election and reprobation depend not upon any thing outward for seeing matter enough to condemn all all being sold unto sin and no more matter of love in those whom he chuseth than those whom he refuseth we must needs conclude with the Apostle that Hee chuseth freely whom hee will and whom he will he justly reprobateth and refuseth Rom. 9.18 If it be here alledged that it seemeth hard that those that are all equal in Adam should be so unequally dealt with I answer may not the Lord do with his own what we will who art thou that darest dispute with God or prescribe Laws to thy Creator who is it that bindeth him or spoileth him of his Soveraignty over his creatures that he may not deal with one thus and with an other another way Object But when God judgeth men according to their works doth hee not accept of men by outward things and did not the Lord accept persons when hee respected Abel and his sacrifice but to Cain and his sacrifice had no respect Answ God judgeth men according to works but not as they are outward actions but as they are fruits of Faith purifying the heart and working by love thus only he looks on them with acceptance whereas bee they never so many and glorious without faith he rejecteth them so as still he judgeth by that which is within and not by things without further than they testifie of the former As for Abel his ●ace and person was no more respected than Ca●ns it was the faith of his heart the fear of God and working of righteousness that was accepted and which is witnessed Heb. 11.4 By faith Abel offered a greater sacrifice than Cain by the which he obtained witness that he was righteous So as notwithstanding all that can be said to the contrary it remaineth an undeniable conclusion That God is no accepter of persons Wh soeve● would b●●●e God mu●● 〈◊〉 accept of persons Vse 1. If God accept not nor reject men for outward respects no more must those who would be like unto him And hence sundry sorts of men are to be instructed in their duty As 1 Magistrates who are Gods Vicegerents and called gods yea called by God to execute his Judgements must beware of respecting persons in judgement Deut. 1.17 Moses appointing Judges over the people sendeth them away with this charge Yee shall have no respect of persons in judgement but shall hear the small as well as the great yee shall not fear the face of man for the iudgement is Gods This corruption yeelded unto makes a man say to the wicked thou art righteous and layeth him open not only to the curse of God but even to the curse of the people Prov. 24.24 Nay more hee maketh God so farre as lyeth in him a patron of iniquity a justifier of the wicked a taker of the ungodly by the hand a condemner and punisher of the innocent for he pronounceth sentence from God and fastneth that upon the Lord which the Lord abhorres 2 Ministers who are the mouth and Messengers of God must take heed of this base sin of accepting the face or persons of men so as for fear or flattery they hide or betray any part of the truth of God
which draw on such fearful falls and mischiefs and preserveth him that neither hope of promotion nor gain nor ease nor favour of man who is but a worm shall make him forget the Lord that spread the Heavens this fear which is Loves keeper holdeth the heart in the Love of God himself of his Worship of his Word of his Children and whatsoever carrieth his Image all which without it either lye or quickly grow as refuse wares out of request 4 To drive away security awake sloathfulness provoke to watchfulness stir up to prayer keep in a fitness to profit by the word to tremble at it when God threatneth to rejoice in the promises as those to whom they belong to help us to better our selves by our afflictions as the speech of the converted Theef to his fellow implieth that if hee had had the fear of God he would being in the same condemnation have otherwise carried himself towards Christ than hee did And in a word to fence the heart which is as the market-place of a City against temptation in which special use it is called a Well-spring of life to escape the snares of death By all this that hath been spoken every man that would seem religious ought to labour above all things for this worthy Grace which God specially bestoweth upon his Children with whom hee maketh his new Covenant Jerem. 32. I will put my fear in their hearts never to depart from mee saith the Lord. Which hath all promises belonging unto it for a mans Self for his Children for this life present for a better for supplies of every good for with-holding and removing of every evil so as whosoever feareth the Lord wanteth not a good and rich treasury such as all the Indian Mines cannot afford yea such as both possesseth himself and entaileth unto his posterity the rich blessing of the Almighty Blessed saith the Psalm is the man that feareth the Lord Psal 128.2 3. himself shall bee mighty on earth his Children shall bee blessed after him his Wife shall bee as a fruitful Vine Riches and Treasure shall bee in his house Psalm 112.3 hee shall want nothing that is good and let his troubles bee never so great the Lord will deliver him out of them all Here is a Jewel worth hiding and laying up in the safest closet of the soul even in the midst of the heart for there God layeth it and calleth for the Heart to make room for it Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were such an heart in them to fear mee Isa 8.13 Sanctify the Lord in your hearts and let him be your dread Another bond whereby man is knit unto God is the working of righteousnesse an immediate fruit of the fear of God Where must bee considered 1 What this righteousness is and then 2 What is the working of it For the former To work righteousnesse what it is This righteousness is a grace of God whereby the beleever is inclined unto honest actions according to the prescript of Gods Law When I say a grace of God I understand that righteousness whereof a man in the state of grace is by grace made partaker and exclude all that Original Righteousness which was set in the nature of man by his Creation whereby hee was wholly conformable to the Image and Righteousness of God further saying that the beleever is hereby inclined to honest actions three things are implyed 1 That this righteousnesse is not that imputed righteousnesse of Christ which is a most exact conformity of the humane nature of Christ with all his actions and sufferings performed of him in our stead with the whole Law of God whereby wee are wholly covered as with a Garment in the sight of God but rather a fruit of that namely that infused and inherent righteousness wrought in the heart of every beleever by the finger of the Spirit whereby the Image of God is daily renewed and repaired in him and so himself inclined to works of righteousness to which hee is now Created Eph. 4.24 2 That the subject of this righteousness is the Beleever for all the works of unbeleevers whose mind and conscience are defiled Tit. 1.15 inward or outward cannot be other than sin and unrighteousness 3 That the next efficient cause of it is lively faith being the instrument of the Holy Ghost by which hee begetteth this righteousness wheresoever it is now Faith produceth this righteousness in us not as it is a● excellent gift of God nor as an excellent quality in us but onely as it is a●●and or instrument apprehending and laying hold upon Christ who justifying us by his own righteousness imputed and by his Spirit regenerating and sanctifying our natures is the very proper cause of this infused and inherent righteousness The last words in the description according to the prescript of Gods Law shew that then a work is righteous Juste agere est agere ex praescripto juris when it is framed according to the right rule of the Law of God it being the only perfect rule of all righteousness Mens Laws are rules also but imperfect and no further yet so far bind as they are agreeable unto Gods II. The second point is the working of righteousness wherein 1 The Order 2 The Manner The Order is in the words first To fear God and then to work righteousnesse all the duties of love must bee founded in Faith and in the fear of God for whatsoever is not of Faith is sin and the fear of God is the very seed and life of all true obedience which the wise man implyeth when hee calleth it the head and beginning of wisdome Prov. 1.7 that look as all sense floweth from the head so all heavenly sense and motion from the fear of the Lord. Which sheweth that many men begin at the wrong end in the matter of their obedience some think they do God high service if they come to Church say some prayers hear a Sermon things not to bee dis-allowed but know not how far they are from pleasing God herein because they bring not hearts renewed with Faith and Repentance nor souls possessed with Hope Love and the true knowledge of God without which the Lord accounteth their sacrifices but maimed and professeth his hatred against them others place all their Holiness and Obedience in the works and duties of the second Table If they bee liberal to the poor just in their dealing sober and civil in their conversation though they live in gross ignorance of God and his Word utterly careless of the waies and worship of God yet conceive themselves in as good case as any other man which is all one as to account that man a living man who hath no head the fear of God being to true religion even as the head to the body of a man besides that they thrust the second Table into the place of the first inverting the order of God yea they pull and break asunder the two Tables which the Lord
hath so neerly conjoyned Now for the right manner of working righteousness it appeareth in these rules 1 It setteth all the rule before it and endeavoureth in all if it were possible The right manner of working righteousness in four things to fulfil all righteousness for seeing all the Commandements of God are Truth and Righteousness they are all without exception to bee observed And this although it bee necessarily implied in the Text yet is it else-where expressed Deut. 5.29 Oh that there were in them such an heart as to fear mee and keep all my Commandements 2 A second thing required is diligence which must needs attend fear How diligent a vertue fear is appeareth in Jacob who being to meet his Brother whom hee feared could not sleep all night and in Abraham who having a most difficult Commandement to slay his Son yet rose early and went three daies journey without reasoning the matter But what moved him hereto surely the Lord himself sheweth the true cause Gen. 22.12 Now I know that thou fearest God seeing thou hast not spared thine only Son 3 Delight in the works of righteousness which also attendeth the fear of the Lord Psal 112.1 Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord hee delighteth greatly in his Commandements both to think of them to speak of them and to do them Whereas the worldlings heart speech and affection is taken up with his Gain Commodity Rents and income For as the fear of God it self is not a servile and slavish fear for punishment no more is that obedience which proceedeth from it forced or wrung out but as it is such a fear as delighteth greatly in Gods Commandements so the obedience is such as is offered from a willing people like a free-will offering which they must only offer whose heart encourageth them and whose spirit maketh them willing 4 Continuance in working for this is another property of the true fear of God that it respecteth not only all the Commandements but always Deut. 5.19 and seeing Gods fear is to keep the heart continually and that man is blessed that feareth always Prov. 23.17 this inseparable fruit of it working of righteousnesse Prov. 28.24 must never wither or fail in the godly who are exhorted to passe the whole time of their dwelling here in fear 1 Pet. 1.17 to walk with God as Henoch did and to have their conversation in Heaven Philip. 3.20 that is their whole practice and course and not a part of it only Motives to the practise of righteousness Hence therefore is afforded another ground of exhortation namely that howsoever this is not such a righteousness as wherein we can stand before Gods Judgement Seat not being every way answerable to the Laws perfection yet we want not good reason to take up the practice of it in the manner prescribed Seeing 1 It is commanded by God Psal 4.6 Offer to God the sacrifice of righteousnesse 2 It pleaseth him and makes us also pleasing unto him for the former Psal 11.7 The righteous Lord loveth righteousness the latter is the latter words of the verse in hand 3 It maketh us like him 1 Joh. 3.7 Little children he that doth righteousness is righteous as he is righteous 4 It is a mark of our regeneration and a fruit of faith easier discerned than it self 1 Joh. 3.10 In this are the children of God known and the children of the Devil He that doth not righteousnesse is not of God 5 Much blessing is upon the head of the righteous saith Salomon The blessing of God comes down upon him and descends to his posterity God hath blessed him and he shall be blessed in his person in his estate in his name in his goods in this life and in the life to come The blessing of men also comes upon him the loyns of the poor blesse him the Church of God blesseth him yea turn him what way hee will the blessing of goodnesse meeteth him every way God giveth him according to the work of his hands often even here in this life and if that should fail hee being marked for a member of the Church Militant he shall be in due time removed into the holy mountain of Heaven where he shall dwell who worketh righteousnesse Psal 15.2 Thus much of the description of a religious person now of his priviledge Secondly the priviledge of a religious man is that a beleever of any Nation under Heaven of any calling sex or condition of life is accepted of God Where it may be asked Whether God whose grace is most free be bound by any thing which any man can doe to accept of him I answer a man is to be considered two ways 1 As in the state of his corrupt nature before his calling and conversion and thus he hath nothing worthy love and nothing which provoketh not further hatred here are no works which are not wicked and stained such a filthy puddle cannot send out one drop of sweet water How the person and work of a beleever can be accepted of God not any cleane thing can be brought out of such filthinesse all this while can be no acceptance of the person or of the work no sight of any present object in such a party nor any fore-sight of any future faith or work whereby the Lord can be moved to accept him for then the freedome of his grace should be hindered 2 As he is converted and now reconciled unto God called by the Word regenerated by the Spirit and having his heart purified by faith Now the Lord looking upon him sees him not as he was before all naked and lying in his bloud and filthiness but beholding him in the face of his Christ hee espieth his own image upon him yea and his own workmanship upon him and thus cometh the person to be first accepted And then in the second place the work of such a person cannot but be also pleasing unto God not for any worthiness or perfection in it self for even the best work of the best man from imperfect faith and imperfect knowledge is so farre from meriting as that it needeth pardon but 1 Because it cometh from an accepted person 2 Is a fruit of faith 3 A testimony of obedience unto Gods Commandement 4 The imperfection and stain of it is covered and wiped away with Christs most absolute obedience And thus both the person fearing God and his working of righteousnesse is accepted of God Vse 1. To comfort the godly poor Comfort the godly in that God is the God of the ●bject who find but strange entertainment in the world where they are strangers who hence learn That as the world loveth her own so God loveth and accepteth his own in what Country or condition soever they be the which comfort if they had not to sustain their hearts withall they could not but think themselves the most miserable of all men so many sins they see which God may see in them so many temptations with
Why stand yee gazing on us as if wee by our own power or godlinesse had made this man go The God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob hath glorified his Son Jesus and his name hath made this man sound vers 16. Yea in the working they shew themselves instruments As Moses commandeth the Sea but he is bidden take his staffe Elizeus divideth Jordan but hee must use his cloak 2 King 12.13 Joshuah divideth Jordan but by means of the Ark Josh 3.13 but when Christ commeth to still the Sea hee doth it by his very word and command which is so powerful as the very senceless creatures obey it So also the Apostles in working miracles alwaies change their stile from Christs Act. 3.6 In the name of Jesus Christ I say to thee rise and walk Act. 9.34 Peter to Aeneas Jesus Christ maketh thee whole arise But Christ comming to a sick person saith Mar. 5.41 Maid I say to thee arise yea to a dead man as to Lazarus I say to thee arise So the Apostles in casting our Devils commanded them in the name of Jesus Christ to come out Act. 16.12 But Christ saith Come out of the man thou unclean spirit charging them in his own name 2 The Prophets and Apostles had not that habitual power to work miricles when they would nor could not at any time but even then when they were commanded by the Spirit But Christ could when hee pleased not being at the command of any other but having ever that power with him which could command whole nature so as Christ onely went about doing good by his own power and word and no Proph●● or Apostle could so do it and this power was habitual in him which in them was present onely in some extraordinary motion Quest But was not the holy Doctrin of Christ sufficient and powerful enough of it self without miracles Ans His Doctrin was such as ought to have been received for it self if there had been no addition of miracles which onely serve to help our weakness whose incredulity is such as except wee see signes and wonders wee will not beleeve Joh. 4.48 whereas wee must strive to say with the Samaritans that wee beleeve not now for the Miracle but because our selves have heard him ver 42. Object But how can those Miracles infallibly confirm his Dostrin or person seeing it is granted to wicked men also to work Miracles as Pharaohs inchanters Simon Magus the Man of Sin yea one may remove Mountains who wanteth love and many shall say in the day of judgement Lord wee have cast out Devils in thy name and done many great things to whom hee shall answer Depart from mee I never knew you Difference of the miracles of the Apostles and wonde●s wrought by the help of Satan Ans There is main difference besides the former between the true Miracles of Christ himself and his Apostles and all those wonders and strange things which God justly permitteth to bee effected by Satan and his instruments First in their substance or being for in a true Miracle the thing is the same that it appeareth to bee and hath true and real and not onely seeming effects Moses produced a true Serpent and very blood whose effects were the eating up of the Enchanters rods and the killing of the fish but the other are lies and not the things which they seem to bee called by the Apostle lying Wonders ● Thess 2. meer Sorceries Juglings Sleights deluding the sences in stead of Samuel himself offering but a shape or appearance of him to Saul Thus Pharaohs Inchanters by jugling made no Serpent nor blood but the appearance of both for the Text saith expresly it was done by Sorcery Exod. 7.22 8.7 Such lying wonders are the Popish Miracles the sweating of their Images the bleeding of some of their hosts the motions of their Images their speech their weeping most of them effected by sleight and knavery and many other by sorcery and jugling Object But was not that a true and real effect of the Devil when hee stirred up winds and blow down Jobs house and slew his children Ans Yes but no true Miracle because it was done mediately by the natural causes for hee knoweth well the matter of windes and the manner of generating them and by Gods permission can gather much matter together and joyn himself with it to make it far more violent raging and fitting to his purpose than ordinary but all this while exceedeth hee not the compass of nature which all true Miracles do The like must bee said of the fire which he brought down from Heaven upon the Cattel and servants of Job hee created it not for creation is the sole and proper action of God but added combustible matter together Vel ludificatio sensus vel occultatum naturalium causarum conjunctio and brought fire to it by his power and agility And thus also he infected the air corrupted Jobs humors and smote him with sore boyles from top to toe In one word all the work of Satan and his instruments in such strange events is nothing else but either the deceiving of the senses or conjunction of natural causes to deceive by And by the way let the Romane Church consider what kind of Miracle their transubstantiation is seeing in every true miracle every thing is as it appeareth to be and there is no appearance but of bread Secondly In the end and use true Miracles alwaies confirm true doctrin alwaies tend to the glory of God and salvation of men but all these false Miracles as they bee lies so they tend to lies to confirm false Doctrin to impair Gods Glory to hinder the Salvation of men yea to further and hasten their Damnation The Miracles of Moses tended to the dis-missing of Gods People according to Gods Commandement that himself might bee served his people eased and Pharaoh himself if it might bee freed from destruction but the lying wonders of Jannes and Jambres for they were the Sorcerers that resisted Moses tended to hold them in Egypt still against the express Commandement of God to harden the heart of Pharaoh and resisted the power and glory of God and the good of his people yea of Pharaoh himself and his land By which rule if wee shall examine Popish Miracles wee shall ever finde them brought to confirm some untruth which hath no ground in the word to stand upon as to prove Image-worship prayers to the Virgin Mary Saints Angels and dead men Pilgrimages Monastical life with sundry other orders Christs real and bodily presence in the consecrated Host the verity of their most Idolatrous Masse To which or the like purposes let them bring in their whole legend we are to adjudge their Miracle-mongers no better than Pharaohs Inchanters nor the Miracles themselves no other than the lying Wonders of Antichrist which cause men to beleeve lyes who have not received the love of the truth Thirdly they differ in the manner of confirming
amendment of life for the remission of sins Mark 1.4 never hope for remission unlesse thou hungrest after this grac● of Repentance for the Lord will not bee merciful to that man that blesseth himself in his sins Deut. 29.19 but if the wicked return from his sins he shall live and not dye Ezek. 18.21 2 The second Companion is Gladness and cheerfulness of heart yea an unspeakable joy that the Lord hath done so great things for his soul and made him so happy as to bring him from such extremitie of misery to partake in the Wisdome Righteousness Holiness and Redemption of Christ for can a man have a gift bestowed upon him of more price and use than all the Kingdomes of the world and never find his heart made glad in it or is it possible that he that findeth the pearl can go away without joy The Eunuch being converted went away rejoycing and if every beleever must rejoyce in another mans conversion much more must hee in his own 3 The Third is Love and Thankfulness to God which are enforced by this excellent grace Luke 7.47 The poor woman that stood weeping behind Christ loved much because much was forgiven her Psal 116.1 I love the Lord because hee hath heard my voice and wherein the Lord had thus gratiously dealt with him the whole Psalm teacheth especially v. 8. Because thou hast delivered my soul from death mine eyes from tears my feet from falling Now if David for a temporal deliverance from Saul in the Wildernesse did thus provoke his heart to the love of God how should the consideration of our spiritual deliverance from Sin Death and all hellish powers blow up these Heavenly sparkles in us And what can so liberal a love beget in a good heart but much thankfulness for apprehension of much mercy how David in the sence of mercy reaching to the pardon of his sins melteth into the praises of God see Psal 103.1 2 3. c. And the Apostle Paul considering what a weight of corruption did still oppress him whereof hee expected to bee fully eased concludeth his comfort with thanks unto God in Jesus Christ Rom. 7 2● And remembring what a bloody persecutor and an extream waster of the Church hee had been formerly 1 Tim. 1.12 yea what an Enemy unto God what a blasphemer of his Name hee breaketh with vehemence into the praises of God for his happy change But I thank him who hath counted mee faithful and put mee in his service vers 14. and the grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant towards me 4 The fourth is a sound and sincere heart hating and striving against all sin even secret and small as well as open and greater David in Psal 32.1 pronouncing him a blessed man whose iniquity is covered and whose sin is pardoned true but it might bee asked how shall I know such a blessed man or my self to have attained that blessedness The Prophet giveth us this note to know him by in the next words and in whose spirit is no guile namely to hide and foster any sin of which guile hee there directly speaketh 5 The fifth note or Companion is a tender affection to forgive our Brethren private wrongs and injuries even great as well as small hee that hath ten thousand talents forgiven him will not easily take his brother by the throat for two pence The Commandement is to forgive one another Eph. 4.32 even as God for Christs sake forgave us The Example is set down Luke 6.36 Bee merciful as your Heavenly Father is merciful but hee forgiveth all and freely is the first in forgiveness and perfectly hee forgiveth and forgetteth too The form of our petition of mercy is forgive us as wee forgive c. Thou wouldest have God to forgive thee all and forget all and to make thy wrongs against him as though they had never been go then and do so to thy brother otherwise the threatning will meet thee Jam. 2.13 Judgement mercilesse to him that showeth no mercy Use 1. All this Doctrin concerning this article sheweth that there is no other means in the world to be free from si● but by Gods 〈◊〉 remission of it Whence it is that remission of sin is called the covering of sin Psal 32.2 in that the faith of the heart layeth hold on Christ and his righteousnesse who is our Propitiatory covering us and our sins against the two Tables as the Propitiatory covered the Ark in which those Tables we●● without which cover every Sinner is next to the Devil and his Angels the m●st vile and loathsome creature in the eyes of God This use must the rather be thought ●f because neither the Papists not yet the common and carnal Protestant yeeld con●ent unto it Neither Papist nor comm●n Protestant yee●deth to this d●ctrin of free remission of sin The Papist he beleeveth that many si●s are venial and prop●rly no sins am●ng which he reckoneth Concupiscence which indeed is the mo her 〈◊〉 of all and these need no remission Hee h●l●eth also that men redeem●● by Ch●is● and having received the first grace of God a●●●●w 〈◊〉 to m●●it by their works rem ssion of their sin● Are further be thinketh that beca●●e no man knoweth whether hee have w●rks ●n●ugh ● ple●●● Go● n● man can know that his sins are remitted All wh ch wi●h m●ny 〈…〉 to th●● ar● most blasphemous Heresies agai●st th●● 〈…〉 A●ticle of free rem●ssion of sins through belief i● 〈…〉 S●n 〈…〉 w●●h so l●●g as 〈◊〉 us they hold t●em 〈…〉 in the r●m ssion of their sins by Chr st and consequently 〈◊〉 the gr●ce ●f life But the comm●n Protestant also 〈…〉 with simple def●nc●s against his sin ●he A●ams cover and arm● 〈…〉 ●aves which wi●●●●ar●e hold the sewing S●m● w●ll 〈◊〉 their 〈◊〉 in mens eyes and then all is safe others strive to f ●g● them and having ●●●●ked 〈…〉 their conscience they lye them d w●● se●mely and 〈…〉 of them any more Others ●●ve●●●osse a●d soul sins su●● 〈…〉 of God contempt of his W●rd ●●●●nesse of heart ●atr●d ●f 〈…〉 and all irreligion with an outward civil life and an h●nest conversation as it seemeth to bee not thinking that God seeth many a wi●ked hear● th●●ugh a civil life Lutum l●vi●●●●to ●gn●● extinguunt lign●rum struc O●hers will goe beyond the former in a●kn●wl●dgi●● th●ms●lv●● 〈◊〉 is a d will make some sh●w of ●a●ing up their peace but it is with so●● c●rem ny or bodily exercise they will fast and pra● a●d 〈◊〉 som 〈◊〉 o● some M●ny to good uses when they dye 〈◊〉 as for th● grace of faith which should bee as a soul to quicken these acti●ns they 〈◊〉 know what that meant But h wsoever m●st men are carried 〈…〉 wit such s●●on●●●●usions as these let no man that would not deceive him 〈◊〉 w●lf●lly 〈◊〉 in any such course to meet with sound peace n●thing but the blo●d 〈◊〉 Jesu● his Son that cleanseth from al sin In the garment of
Motives to look to our Tongue 1 BEcause a good man cannot bee an evil speaker Motives to govern the tongue if the speech bee naught the Religion is vain Jam. 1.29 Lying and accusing is the devils work 2 Watching of good spe●ch keeps out evil words which ingendreth to evil Take up Davids resolution Psalm 39.1 I thought I will take heed to my wayes that I sin not with my tongue I will keep my mouth bridled while the wicked is in my sight And this is necessary because the tongue is an unruly member as fire and by this means shall become our glory James 2.6 8. and our brothers shield 3 God hath a time to call to reckoning the words that are thought but wind Psalm 50.20 21 even every idle word Matth. 12.36 CHAP. XVI Rules of Wisdome concerning our actions that in all of them wee may shew forth Chrstian prudence and circumspection and first in general FIrst Every Christian is to examine the work hee is to do whether hee Rules for our actions in general 1 Examine what thou art doing bee about a good work whereof hee may expect comfort Gal. 6.3 Let every man prove his own work and so hee shall have comfort in himself And good reason for his work must bee tr●●d afterwards and therefore it is wil some to try it before hand This Trial stands in four thin●● 1 Whether go d in the matt●● Deut. 12.32 〈◊〉 1.12 And the lam●●●● of examining it is now and shall bee hereafter This tria● stan●● in four things 1 Wheth●r it bee good in it self and in the matter of it if i● be● l●wful if it bee commanded The rule for the goodness of any action is the word of God What I command thee that do onely Or else it will ●ee a●ked Who required those things at your hands And for the matter of our a●tions wee have a spe●ial rule Phil. 4.8 Whatso ver things are true honest just pure Whatsoever things pertain to love and are of good rep●●t if there bee any vertue or praise think on these things And Rom. 12.17 and 1 Cor. 8.21 Prov● as things that are honest no● onely before the Lord but a so bef●re men ● It g●●● in he manner 2 Examine wh ther it bee good in the doer und●rtaken by vertue or a special calling and answ●rab●e to that ●●●y which hims●lf ow●●● to God or man God upholdeth t●e societ●●● of men by order which is when every man k●●p his own standing and every one m●●● 〈◊〉 the s●v●ral ●●ars but every one in his own sphere n●● troubling the motion of ●●●ner S. publick m●n should 〈◊〉 the publick offi●● and privat● m●n 〈◊〉 in private but l●t the publick alone For Christ reproved Peters curiosity in asking What John should do Joh. 21.21 And the 〈◊〉 of Scena wa●ted calling for an action that was good in 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 were 〈◊〉 and w●●●ded of the Devil Act. 19 15 16. 3 If good in circumstances 3 Examine whether it bee good in the circumstances s●asona●●● and ●●nvenient or whether the season●●● not for some better action than that For wisd●me will intend of 〈…〉 the most necessary and 〈…〉 most profi●able 4 If good in the ends 4 Examine whether the 〈…〉 done bee good in the ●nds 〈◊〉 it which esp●cially are tw● 1 G●● glory 1 Cor. 10.3 Let 〈…〉 the glory of God 2 The good and ed●fi●ation of our brethr n 1 Cor. 14 2● Let all bee done to edifying yea ●●king their profit in some 〈…〉 own Then 2 ●inding the action good spoyl it no● by ill handling The right manner of doing a good acti●n in three things Secondly I● by examination w●● 〈…〉 ●●tions good in themselve 〈◊〉 us in circumstan●●● and ●●ds w●e must bee carefull 〈…〉 not good ●●●ons by ill handling but in 〈…〉 do good action● well a●d to 〈◊〉 matter adde a good manner of doing Now the right manner of doing a good a●tion well stand●●h three things To undertake th●m holily To do them sincerely And to finish them humbly The first i● when wee begin them with prayer For as in all matter● small and great wee are to take counsel at Gods mouth so wee are to beg lea●e and blessing at 〈◊〉 secretly to our selves without which n●thing is sanct●fied unto it T●● second is when wee do things sincerely as in Gods sight with a good 〈◊〉 and keeping good conscience that a man if hee b●● questioned in any 〈◊〉 may bee able to say with Abimele●h Gen. 2● 5 With an upright heart aid I this thing And whatsoever may befall him for well-doing hee may appeal to God with Hezekiah Isa 38.3 and say Lord remember that I have walked u●rightly before thee The third is when in effecting all our b●st action● 〈◊〉 labour to see our defects and wants and mourn that wee ●●●ther do that w●e should do not in the manner wee should Wh●r●of there will bee th●●● notable fruits 1 This will breed and nourish humi●i●● It will drive 〈…〉 Christ to get a covering 3 It will make us ascribe all the glory of our a tions to God of whom wee have not onely all the power but eve● the will and purpose Phil. 2.13 For it is God that worketh in you both the will and the deed according to his good pleasure CHAP. XVII Rules to carry works of Mercy wisely IF our actions concern others then they bee works either of Mercy Rules for works of mercy 1 Mercy must p●●c●ed from faith and love or of Justice For works of Mercy much wisdome is required and that is shewed in these particulars 1 See thy charity come from a good ground namely from a heart qualified with two graces 1 Faith For whatsoever is not of faith is sin Rom. 14.23 Thou must first give thy self to the Lord and then to his Saints 2 Cor. 8.5 Thy mercy must issue from the sense of Gods mercy in Christ to thine own soul apprehended by faith in Jesus Christ Joh. 15.1 Bring forth fruit in this vine 2 It must proceed from love Works of mercy must come from the fountain of a merciful heart Rom. 12.8 Hee that distributeth let him do it of simplicity that is out of meer compassion not out of any by a●d sinister respe●ts For if I feed the poor with all my goods and want love it profiteth mee nothing 1 Cor. 13. The reason is because the Lord looks more at the affecti●n than the action Whence many not giving out of a tender heart sympathizing and fellow-feeling their brethrens misery lose both th●ir gift and reward What comfort or help is in that work of mercy which i● wrung out by importunity or by strength of law or for shame lest a man should bee noted or by terror of conscience when a man would heal the gripes of a galling and accusing conscience by giving away at his death a little ill-gotten goods to the poor which were none of his to
body Rom. 12 6. 3 Here is an excellent work of love which is called the Bond of perfection which tyes persons and vertues together and perfects them by frequent actions By conv●●sation actually confute all wickedness 4. In what company soever a man comes his care must bee that his life and conversation bee a visible confutation of all ungodliness Daniels piety confuted Idolatry and Lot was a real reproof of Sodome A Christians light must alwayes shine even in the darkness of the world and against it Should the life of a Christian bee like the life of unbeleevers covetous contentious conceited unjust c. or should not the life of a wife Christian vary from the multitude and common people in judgement and practise Did not Christ and his followers so This Rule is opposite to that worldly wisdom to swim with the stream and to do as the most do to avoid the note of singularity But here as in all the course of godliness 1 Wee must become fools that wee may bee wise 2 Wee must not avoid mens evil speaking by running with them into the same excess of riot 3 Wee must not take the example of many and great ones but of Christ the greatest and wisest of all And Phil. 3.17 hee yee followers of mee and look on them that walk so These examples suit to our Rule Love ●very mans person no mans si● 5 Christiani●y enjoyns love unto all even the worst whose vices wee must hate their persons wee must love by which vertue all men have place in our prayers in our mercy and compassion as occasion requires This grace covers a multitude of sins in all it beareth with infirmity it forgives offences in all Col. 3.13 forbearing and forgiving one another And therefore the Apostle wi●heth us above all things to put on love And to consider that motive Col. 4.7 Every one is one of us even the worst in the natural and civil bond one of us if not in faith yet in flesh one of our Neighbours or Congregation or at least by the common bond of a Christian Joyn with good conscience good manners 6 Religion requires courtesie as well as piety good manners together with good conscience and therefore wee must bee courteous to all 1 Pet. 2.17 2.8 Honour all men And Rom. 12.10 In giving honour go one before another Which honour is a good opinion conceived inwardly and expressed outwardly by reverent words and deeds Christianity will make us have a low opinion of our selves and better of others than of our selves Object Some are so bad or so base as no honour or respect belongs unto them Answ None is so bad but hath some honour on him hee is Gods creature hee is a man a Christian and hee may bee a good man● a member of Christ and certain reverence belongs to all this Object But how can superiours in higher place honour their inferiours Answ Many wayes 1 In action by testifying their good opinion of them in words gestures or deeds not the least contempt And so Job ●ehaved himself Chap. 31.13 2 In affection especially when Superiours whom God hath by their place made receivers of honour could out of an humble affection bee well pleased either to want it or return it upon their inferiours if they might do it without offence or might it stand with good order which God hath set in the Church and Commonwealth CHAP. XXIX Rules of walking wisely towards good men 1 Rule brotherly affection Heb. 13.1 THE first of these Rules is in respect of our affection to love the godly with brotherly love It is true indeed all men must bee loved but here is required a more special love as between brethren of which Saint Peter saith 2 Pet. 1.7 Joyn with godliness brotherly kindness because they are of the same Father and Family of God The reason of this Rule is this The nearer any man comes to God or expresseth him the more right hee hath into our affections for Gods Image sake and here is a straighter bond than that of Nature The Apostle makes this a mark of Gods childe to love the brethren 1 Joh. 3.10 And David professeth Psal 16.1 That all his delight was in the Saints the excellent on earth And Rom. 12.10 Bee affectioned one to another with brotherly love And because this cannot bee Many things in Gods children might draw our eyes unto them except men see more in Gods people than ordinary therefore labour to see 1 Their high birth and true nobility Joh. 1.13 Not of blood nor of the will of flesh but of God 2 Their kindred and alliance they are Sons of God brethren of Christ who was not ashamed to call them brethren Heb. 2.11 3 Their high office and place whom Christ the faithful witness the first born from the dead and the Prince of the Kings of the earth hath loved and washed from their sins by his blood to make them Kings and Priests unto God Rev. 1.5 4 Their beauty and glory being covered with long white Robes of righteousness and holiness such as Kings anciently were distinguished by wherein they appear most lovely and graceful to God Angels and good men nothing is wanting to their perfection of beauty seeing they are compleat in Christ the head of all power Col. 2.10 5 Their present wealth and future expectation Their goods are God the chief good Christ given them of God for righteousness the Holy Ghost sent unto their hearts for sanctification and consolation eternal election effectual calling justification And their future expectation is the City ot God the heavenly Jerusalem which God hath prepared for them Heb. 11.16 Now were it a wise course for a man to disaffect the chief favourite of his King And are not Gods children Gods chief favourites Were it a safe thing to hate the people of God to disaffect them to lowre upon them seeing the Lord observes what looks are cast down upon his children as in Cain How was Balaam slain by the Lord for desiring evil to Israel though himself could do them none but by his wicked counsel These are the last times in which men are lovers of themselves and of men onely for their own advantage 2 Tim. 3.2 they love them for their wealth ease and pomp not for God and his graces 2 Wee must not onely affect their persons 2 Rule Faithful communion but also imbrace a fruitful fellowship and society with them in the Gospel This is the Apostles Rule 1 Pet. 2.17 Love brotherly fellowship And how glad was hee for the fellowship of the Philippians in the Gospel Phil. 1.5 Now the means of fruitful conversing with the godly are these First To consider one another Means of fruitful converse what need the best have to be provoked and whetted on especially in these evil and cold dayes yea such times as ●ip and blast piety and the fear of God Heb. 3.13 Exhort one another daily
being of no Religion cannot bee at leasure to give it hearing But wee have seen it to be no novelty to the Spirit of God every where charging it upon us nor to the godly guided by his Spirit who can neither bee idle nor unfruitful in the work of the Lord. Object 6. I like such as can bee so strict and I could wish so to bee but then I must part from the pleasure and joy of my life For this continual watch and circumspection is full of melancholy and uncomfortable it hinders neighbours from sports and merriments breaks off good company and makes the husband and wife often look heavily one upon another and besides I should lose some profits and customers and wrong my estate by neglecting it Answ 1. This is a clean contrary judgement to Gods Spirit Prov. 3.17 Her wayes are the wayes of pleasures Gods wisdome ordering the wayes of man brings true joy and pleasure For is there no joy in God in his word Psal 19. Joh. 16. which was wont to bee as sweet as the hony-comb nor in the Spirit of God which is called the Comforter Is it such a thing of heaviness to live with God Alas What is such an heart made of 2 What delights do wee call men from but such as are carnal foolish perishing and unlawful is stollen waters so sweet and savoury to corrupt flesh the forbidden fruit which a Christian should neither touch nor taste and happy hee were if hee never saw it 3 There is no sorrow in godly life but all the sorrow of Gods servants is that they cannot bee more godly Lay this for a ground that God is thy chief delight and no man may bee so moderately joyful as thou 4 For pleasant companionship thou losest no good company but exchangest for better thou hast now fellowship with God union with Jesus Christ the inseparable presence of Gods blessed Spirit the attendance of the Angels the communion of the Saints the benefit of their prayers comfort and example This is a pleasant thing for brethren in the faith to live together in unity And what true joy is therein the company of Gamesters Drinkers Swearers riotous or idle persons who are never merry unless they bee mad and never glad but when they have driven away the remembrance of God 5 As for the loss of any part of thy estate trust God on his word Prov. 3.16 In her right hand is length of dayes and in her left hand riches and glory Never did true piety weaken any mans estate but godliness hath been the true and constant gain this makes a small portion sweet and precious and intails a blessing upon it when it passeth into the hands of our posterity after us CHAP. XXXV Marks of a man walking Circumspectly AND seeing most men beguile themselves with the goodness of their present course and esteem a civil life and external honesty Marks of a circumspect walker not onely unblameable enough but justifiable and sufficiently commendable Bee it known to them that if they examine not the goodness of their course by this Doctrine they are far from Gods approbation whatsoever they may conceive of themselves In which examination I will help them with a few notes and signes of a Circumspect person by whose wayes as by a right line they may both see the crookedness and at length begin to straighten the obliquity of their own 1 A circumspect man watcheth all occasions for his own good and advantage and if they bee offered slips them no So a circumspect Christian looks round about him and thinks it not sufficient to take occasions of grace and well-doing being offered but will seek them How might every moment of our lives make us more stored with grace than other if wee would seek occasions of good to our selves What a rich stock of grace might wee have attained How rich in good works How should wee have furthered our reckoning 2 A circumspect man looks round about him and so ordereth his many businesses as one hinder not the other but all may go forward and so saveth one commodity as another bee not lost or lye in hazard So a circumspect Christian casteth his occasions as seeing every Christian duty is enjoyned him hee hath respect to all Gods Commandements Duties of piety shall not justle out civil duties nor civil duties eat out duties of piety but as ●ne hand helps another so one table shall further the other one calling forward another yea hee looks to the thriving of all his graces Hee will walk very humbly before God but so as hee maintain his joy in God His moderation shall not damp his zeal his zeal shall not out-run his knowledge His providence shall not lessen his faith nor his faith destroy his providence His love with mens persons brings him not into love with their sins and his hatred of their sins impeacheth not his love of their persons His righteousness to men hindreth not his mercy neither doth cruel mercy withstand or thrust down needful justice Thus hee is busie in maintaining all his graces all of them beeing of great use and all of them flowing from the same Spirit 3 A circumspect man will bee sure not to disadvantage himself by his words but will speak to his own profit So a circumspect Christians words make for his own best advantage Hee will speak for Gods glory for good men Gal. 4.6 and good causes Hee will bee sure to profit himself and others with gracious and Religious speeches and bee silent where fruitful speech will not bee heard Exercise to good speeches brings a dexterity and readiness of well-speaking to which every Christian is exhorted Col. 4.6 Let your speeches bee gracious alwayes and powdered with salt that yee may know how to answer every man 4 As a wary and circumspect man proves a good husband for the world so circumspect Christians are the best husbands for their souls Such a one hath wisdome and will to increase his estate of grace by every thing and thinks himself then truly rich when hee thrives in the best Commodities Hee conceives himself rich not when hee hath things about him to leave to his heirs but when hee hath his Wealth personally in himself and for himself such Wealth as hee carries to Heaven with him A circumspect Christian will not win the whole world with the losse of his own soul which is nothing but to make his heirs happy in his own eternal misery A circumspect Christian is not so careful to heap up gold as good works in abundance and by works of Mercy and Love hee makes himself Bags that waxe not old a Treasure in Heaven that can never faile where the Theef commeth not not the moth corrupteth Luke 12.33 A circumspect Christian is not so careful for the soyling tilling and sowing of his ground the mounding of his Pasture the weeding of his Field the pruning of his Trees the feeding of his Cattel as in fencing