Selected quad for the lemma: love_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
love_n hate_v love_v sin_n 9,451 5 5.6895 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A29488 A bundle of soul-convincing, directing, and comforting truths clearly deduced from diverse select texts of Holy Scripture, and practically improven, both for conviction and consolation : being a brief summary of several sermons preached at large / by ... M. Roger Breirly ... Brereley, Roger, 1586-1637. 1677 (1677) Wing B4659; ESTC R1288 256,743 378

There are 16 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

then he was strong Great Knowledge devote Holinesse and high Thoughts chooke Faith only humilitie preserveth it The one lives by opinion as light as wind but the other by Faith and mercie he feels nothing but weaknesse and guilt 3. Well-worth weak and repenting hearts that weep with Peter We deny him often but repent seldom What ever knowledge or other thing they have yet if this be kept lively Faith shall not fail though it be seemingly lost and he turned his back and he sees no way to peace Yet wait a while and light will spring out of darknesse and well-worth Crosse that preserves Repentance in man when he sees his own beastly guilt how he hath forsaken God and run from him and sees how all fails then he returns So it is hard to preserve Faith lively in prosperitie It is a great point of simplicitie to enjoy all gifts and yet look at none We see then whereby man is preserved in all straits viz a praying and believing heart all else vanish 4. But praying dayes are gone We have wept but now rejoyce We were weak but now strong in our selves Strengthen thy Brethren Pitie not me nor weep for me but weep for thy self and pitie thy Br●thren So that As the life of Faith is in Christ only see the practice of Faith is in love to the Brethren David Psal 16. My goodness is nothing unto thee but to the Saints that are in the Earth Thus all rules of practice after Faith that are stablished by Paul are such like as help the weak admonish the un-ruly c. and Christ left this his last Law Love one another and Faith works by love This was Christs practice all his dayes in doing good this is a free disposition of a Redeemed Spirit the flesh seeks its own but love doth not 1. Thus is the Fathers Love spread abroad and the Truth of the Gospel and the Church increased and herein is the Communion of Saints 1. But we all walk in the thearick knowledge of Faith and Christ and nourish our thoughts therein but we foresake the practice of Faith for self-self-Love and Pride hath drowned all hearty Religion Do we help the poor and relieve them nay we spoil them do we bear with the Weak nay we judge them do we cover the sins of others nay we spread them Do we love our Enemies nay We hate them 2. I wish we had lesse Knowledge so we had more Faith and Love Is it not a shame to see how Drunkards are linkt together and every Sect as one man yet we that professe to believe in Christ lead everie man to his own gain So we thrive we care not who losse who grieves and bears the burden of others I will go with thee though all forsake thee Pride of heart and over-weaning conceit of our own power because of some singular gift above others is the readie way to fall before all so it s in the Jews Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar Lucifer So that There is a presumptuous and proud carlesse confidence from the arm of flesh which goes under the name of Faith and lifts man up in securitie a while but will fail in the end Thus David Psal 30. And his numbering the people SERMON XV. Dan. 3.16.19 Then Shedrach Meshach and Abedneg● answered and said to the King O Nebuchadnezzar we are not careful to answer thee in this matter IN the former Chapter Daniel had interpreted the Kings Dream concerning the Image of Gold Silver Brasse Iron and Clay and the destruction of several Monarchies by the Stone hewed out of the Mountain without hands that is to say The power of Christ whose Kingdom should overcome all the rest and be everlasting never to be destroyed by which the King was convinced to acknowledge the great Power and Wisdom of the God of Daniel and sell into admiration but understood not the Mysterie of Christ therein nor the downfal of his Kingdom therefore presently returns to his old Idolatrie So that The Word of God from God and the great work of his power doth for the present put man to silence and convinceth him yet where the heart remains hardened and that the mysterie of Christ is hid from man he soon returns to his old vanitie and Idolatrie of his own heart Thus they are often convinced by the great Works of God Psal 16. Yet forgot how they were brought out of Egypt and walked not in the Covenant but returned t● their Lusts And the Pharisees in Christs time often put to silence but soon grew wise again to maintain there own Kingdom Yea how manie of his followers who saw his grea● Workes and confessed never man spake like him or did the like spake with such power and assurance and yet forsooke him see the stony ground and those of Judea 1. For ease and peace and prosperitie being offered and a man lothe to live without them they choak the VVord 2. The Knowledge of the Gospel without the power of Christ and his death hardens above all none such enemies to the simplicitie thereof 3. For if the Truth and Power of God be revealed yet if God keep not the Promise of Repentance by the Crosse so bring man under the power of that Word he soon starts up and becomes Wise and Righteous in himself not in Christ in the flesh not in Faith 4. Though for the present it dash man and convince him that he confesseth and sweareth that it is the truth yet when it both crosseth his present ease and libertie brings no life but death for the present he grows wearie unlesse the great power and love of God pursue his Soul by his Word and Crosse Hence comes so much back-sliding in the church that men admire the great Power of God yet not living in Repentance under the Crosse Every thing starts up and so they turn to the old way or a new device of their own but do not believe the down-fal of their Kingdom for the present For most men when they have talked and shewed abroad their Wisdom Righteousnesse and increased their Glorie they are the old men again The World is welcome and sweet Sin as light themselves at ease secure as they had never known such a thing 1. And yet they know their ease and securitie ariseth not out of simple confidence of Faith but hardnesse of heart and clothed under a vail of Religion 2. So it is a fearful thing to grow hardened after truth revealed that man joyn hands with the World that sin become lesse sinful in conceit This is a meer securitie and not Faith for if a man flie off and that the Word cease to judge man arraigned at Gods judgement seat For Christ hath two judgements in mans heart viz Judgement and Mercie so it is said Man must give an account of what he hath done Yea of every ●dle Word which is true in mans heart for they are judged and man tormented untill he apply to
themselves and kept all Truth off In the end he leaves them with a sharp nip But wisdom is justified of her Children viz. the Children of the Truth will justifie the Truth though against themselves and though all the world besides should reject it so that The Children of the Truth do in their hearts justifie and bear witnesse and clear the Word of Truth though it be to the condemning of themselves 1. Cor. 14. They fall down and say of a truth Christ is in this man so though the Law Rom. 7. condemned and killed Paul yet he justified it to be good holy just and spiritual but I am carnal So David Psal 51. That thou mayest be justified and clear c. So Abraham justified the promise which prevailed in him more than all reason to the contrary 1. For it leaves that impression in the heart which all the lyes and shapes of Satan cannot wipe out though they may cover and hide Yet this is more powerful in him than all 2. For this discovers the Intents of the heart and strikes the heart down whatever upheld it against which man is not able to stand but as the guilty fellon justifies the sentence of the Judge so he justifies the righteous sentence of the Truth 1. But we see that thousands which professe Christ yet justifieth not his Word Nay we judge the Word and are not judged by it We rule and comprehend the Word and are not comprehended and ruled by it We mince the Law and limite the promise and all to save our own skins because we would not be condemned by the Word 2. Yea such is this wise generation wherein we live that a man will now judge and limit God himself setting a Law to his Decree but he is justified to everie believing heart though reason not able to comprehend it Nay everie man labour to justifie himself rather than God and his Truth and everie thing on which man dependeth as 1. The worldling labours to justifie the world and the wayes thereof in his thoughts 2. Another justifies his own qualities of holinesse and righteousnesse 3. Another his knowledge and fleshly notions for they are the Children of these 4. Another labours to justifie the Truth by Arguments of Reason against others but not by faith against himself as a Malefactor justifieth the Law from his own guilt and not because he comprehendeth it 3. No surer sign of a true man than to justifie the truth for he sets to his seal That GOD is true when man even swears in his own heart to the truth of all the Word as that the Law is just he is guilty the promise is free for he is a sinner when the heart lyes bleeding under the power of the Word though he feel nothing but death in himself 4. But we see how we even deny the Word we professe we confesse that God will have mercy and preserve us and yet flie to the World and something else and that repentance and denying of our selves is the way to Heaven yet hope for it repent not at all The Pharisee desired him to eat with him He ever was to spy some advantage for further justifying of himself so that That under the profession of Love and Religion there lurks in most men base and filthy ends respects whereat they specially aim which poysons all proves their Love and Religion meerly nothing All the Pharisees guilty of this as Saul and Simon Mag us c. 1. For this is to frame Religion to serve our selves and not to serve God 2. This argues an unpurged heart which turns all meat to ill humours 3. Thus Religion is made a way to cover but not to crucifie the World and our fleshly Lusts Self-will 1. And this is plain in experience What is it that man doth in Religion but some base end is more powerful in him to produce it than the simple power of Christs love in him We run after the example of others for credit and approbation rather than out of simple love for our lost minds Others talk of Religion so must we that we may be known Others shew love so must we that we may be approved and nothing is said or done whereat we have not an end of our own We judge the Pharisees and justifie our selves and yet do the same thing 2. Hence we see what a vain and vile thing mans heart is that he meddles with nothing but he mar●s it that though the thing be good and the word good yet in us it is ill 3 No simple and hearty Religion indeed but when man dwells in the simplicity of his own heart in the simple truth else like a huckster he makes Religion but as a Trade to gain by either from God or man Behold a woman which was a sinner both in the eye of the World and in her sell judged by both and condemned in her self So that None flies to Christ in deed and truth nor finds mercy with him but he that knows and feels himself dayly to be a sinner and through sin is a lost helplesse creature So the Prodigal and Publicane and Paul Rom. 7. O wretched man that I am c. and David Psal 51. 1. Joh. 1 If we say that we have no sin we deceive our selves 1. For then death and weaknesse wrath judgement lives in man presseth him down and forceth him to cry and to pray 2. For else man lyes covered from himself under some figleafe and so flies the judgement that he may preserve his fleshly life alive c. 3. This preserves humility and keeps down pride and prepares for mercy for to these only doth the Kingdom of God come Now this is not a seeing of this that action amiss but that he see and feel the Original fountain and guilt That though all actions were restrained yet he feels the Power and Inclination and sway of his mind against G●d his Truth that though he be prevented by Gods Power and shall not taste of Judgement through grace yet he sees in himself such a power of corruption misguided passions that he cryes out for mercy daily so is faith daily preserved 1. But all men strive to appear both before God and themselves to be rich none would be found sinners Therefore when we have missed it in one action we mend it in the next that we may appear to be righteous As 1. The pure moral honesty among men though they have no great matters of Religion to boast of yet even that they offer to God as a Sacrifice for their sin 2. But the more devote men they think they have a heart full of good qualities and dispositions and so cloath themselves therewith for their repentance humility faith and love c. They look at as good qualities to cover sin withall but the only quality that Christ loves is when man comes a sinner to him 3. May others indeed have seen themselves
where he onlie lives not She hath much forgiven her and therefore she loves much Here is the cause and effect of Christ forgiving her sins and she loving Christ so that An heart truly troubled and lost in himself and finding remission of sins in and by Christ loves and cleaves to him above all things in the world or himself and all men in and for him Paul esteemed nothing but Christ Phil. 3.7 Mat. 10.37 He that loves Father or mother c. 1. Cor. 16.22 He that loves not Christ let him be Anathema The disciples being stricken with this Doctrine forsook all 1. For there is no life left in any thing to man either in the world or himself but only in him as the Prodigal What is all gold riches to an hungry Stomack in comparison of bread So What is all the World to a lost heart in respect of Christ 2. For nothing is or can be such a burden and death to the heart as sin and guilt and so nothing like freedom life as forgivenesse O how sweet is the voice of a pardon to a condemned man Now we all say that we love Christ But know it is the mighty power of God in the truth of his Word that separates man from himself and all things to Christ alone for while when any thing else gives hope delight joy ease or peace to man Christ is not regarded but in opinion only 1. For there is a loving of Christ after the flesh as the Disciples who could not abide to hear of his departure so we have fleshly cold affections to the notions of Christ but not to be ruled and guided and live by him only but will be quartermasters 2. And there is a love to the ease and peace and comfort by him which we would still have and fit at his right hand or for works sake but to love him and esteem him for poverty want forsaken and persecution c. we like not Like a heartlesse wife that loves and obeyes her husband so long as he pampers hers and keeps her fair and fine But when he falls into poverty forsakes him and takes another as the rich Lawyer and Dives did So that Christ may well say Who hath believed our report or to whom is the power of Christs death effectual Seing all are so knit to the World and our selves that he and his word is not regarded 1. The World we love as Father Mother Ease Fulnesse c. and these darken the heart and gives such a peace to the flesh that we see not the miserie of our Spirits 2. We love our own fancies and thoughts knowledge and qualities and think these will help us and plead for us 3. We love our selves and any thing that may preserve our fleshly Kingdom but the Kingdom of Christ we cast off 1 One rather than want his will another rather than want the World another rather than want ease and life sets Christ aside So that we may say How dwells the love of God in these 2. But see Christ is esteemed and loved of none but miserable and sinful men in themselves who though he k●ll them yet they will love him these tread all under foot all righteousnesse for they see none all wisdom the World Ease and Peace and Christ only is life unto them And besides him all things works their bondage yea are wearisome as all men are to a loving wife but her husband 3. Away then with all Religion where love is wanting all talking and working where man doth it to cover his filthinesse with them Christ is a judge and they cannot love him 4. And none loves Christ that loves himself for only such as condemn and judge themselves esteem of him 5. And this appears in love to your neighbour even of mankind our very enemies which appears in parting freely with the World helping the needful forgiving injuries covering infirmities of others suffering willingly else how dwells the love of Christ in us 6. So that it is not love that is the form of Faith but faith begets love love expresseth faith to the World Thy sins are forgiven So that Free forgivenesse of sins in Christ to a troubled heart is life in death and the door and life of all hearty Religion Having forgiven us all our trespasses This was life in the Prodigal and to the Publicane And this Paul acknowledgeth Psal 32. This is our blessednesse 1. For till then the Partition-wall stands and man sits in death in himself or life in the world only 2. This opens the door of the Covenant unto man 3. This is the daily life of man who though he daily sin yet God in Christ freely forgives and this brusts his heart and makes it melt into love 1. But most enter not in at this door but leap over this take for granted what they never felt nor enjoyed 2. Others offer sacrifice to purge sin and cover with righteousness wisdom opinion 3. But O What a life is this to a dead man as a Prisoner condemned yet obtains pardon through the mercy of a Prince And this forgivenesse is the free mercy of God forgiving mans sin for his own Names sake not because they are lesser or fewer nor because we repent now turn nor because we are more righteous or for good qualities Who is this that forgiveth sins Here they begin to judge him again because he forgiveth sin they looked that he should have judged excommunicated her or set her to keep the Law and wrought her own peace No saith he I came to save and not to judge sinners and lost man But this was a Principle that they favoured not so that Unbelieving Strait-hearted Hard-hearted Self-religious Men though in Wisdom Righteousnesse they excell others yet have they least favour or feeling of repentance and forgivenesse wherein the life of all Religion consists They tithe the Mint Annise and Cummin they look to the plucking of the ears of Corn on the Sabbath-day but mercy they are not acquainted with Mic. They offer thousands of rams c. But to walk humbly with their God they know not The first they urge with all vehemency but the latter they never mention 1. For what is in mans power by diligence by his own ends he obtains but what is Gods free gift as this he hath not faith to embrace 2. Do well and have well is the Principle all stick to but resting in Christ when all things are lost is a mystery known to none but he that hath it 1. The worldling hath no life but in the World and knows not what forgivenesse and burden of sin is So 2. The Pharisees know all and do all but forgiveness and faith he savours not therefore judgeth this to be carnal liberty 3. All Sectaries busie themsel●es about circumstances but this never medled with 4. So we talk and think of Religion and run into many disputs and circumstances and over-leap the foundation viz.
left but naked Christ a poor despised man Let the Worlding know that there wil come a scattering night where thou and thy guilty portion must part horror possesse thy mind which all thy Wealth will not quiet Yea thy Father and Mother Childern c. will be found too light in that day Yea thy joy in thy Works and Knowledge Then will he say Bring out thy Righteousnesse and all thy qualities of holinesse thy joy and comfort thy Manna laid up nothing then will serve but praying to escape that hour yet shall not but believing that his grace is sufficient But we drink down sorrow like beasts or we hide as under the World or we make an aggreement and put it off We call for Mountains and high devotions to cover us but all this would not free Job nor preserve Jeremiah but down they must So the time will come that God will either by his Word and affliction try us as by fire and then shall we curse the day of our Birth or else try us at Judgement and say What have I done unto thee Wherein have I failed thee what hast thou wanted I warned thee of this night and told thee of this time but thou would not believe thy Blood be upon thine own head But I have prayed for thee How shall man do in this day of Wrath yet here is a friend at back Christ praying as to the men in the Ship and he gone into a mountain to pray So here he knew the sorrows of his people as a Man of sorrows and so prayed for them So that here we see the brotherly care of Christ So that That in great Dangers and Weaknesse of man Christ doth and is readiest to help What care had he of his Disciples and how earnestly prayed he for them Isa 63. In all their afflictions he was afflicted he leaves the ninetie and nine in the Wildernesse and seeks the lost sheep Heb. 6. VVe have a faithful High Priest touched with our Infirmities Like a loving brother if his brother be overlaid he pitieth his weaknesse and helps him if he be beat he stands by and cryes if he want he gives him half Or as the husband helps his Wife runs rides to do her good For though he was the Word of the Father yet he became a High Priest and fellow-feele of our infirmities he was given as a Testimony and witnesse to the People and the first begotten of many 1. What then are those high mystical Speculations and Comprehensions of Christ making him so high like speculative Angels This is but an airy Christ but our Christ is low and among us suffering watching praying with us and for us He comes not for these high thoughts but for pure and contrite spirits 2. What a hearting is this in trouble to endure when Christ like a husband is present in well and in woe We think our case miserable we bear the burden of sin lo he was forsaken and sick he swate water and blood he bears our weaknesse but who feel it he pities our tears but who sheds them he hears our cryes but who makes them So that all high thoughted Religion is not of Christ but of the Devil He came to bring down high mountains and Imaginations We see then that praying believers have a Friend at back praying when we are suffering Friends may sail and Riches may vanish and life taken away but he endures yesterday to day and the same for ever If then we are weak miserable Christ is never wanting That thy Faith fail not And then let him do his worst while thou sticks to me and goes with me through death and hell So that The only way of safety in all straits is a praying and believing heart and while these continue nothing can prevail Psalm 107. They cried in their distresse and he heard them we are kept by the power of God through Faith unto Salvation 1 Pet. 6 8. When stedfast resist in the Faith Psalm 9. They that know thy Name trust in th●e 1. For them their cause is wholly committed to God and to his Mercy 2. These are the weapons that overcomes by suffering 3. These overcome the World and crucifie the flesh which only worke our bayne 1. But our mouths are stopped and hearts straitned We live by conceits only we are full and pray not Want makes man pray and weaknesse him believe And so Satan never overcomes none but wise strong men these Christ rejects 2. But the time may come when we shall cry and not be heard whatever stops straitens and hinders prayer is a snare But O Praying dayes are gone But Lord increase Faith in all our hearts When thou art converted strengthen thy ●rethren This is the monition that Christ left and thou must go through much fear and have experience of sorrows yet faith shall overcome though Infidelity seem to overcome yet shall faith discover it and then by renewing Repentance Faith shall restore thee So that note That the faith and comfort of a man being over-clouded and covered is renewed by daily Repentance as in David and Peter and the Incestuous man 1. For as Christs Kingdom comes only to repenting hearts at the first and as Sin in the World by accident brought Christ into the World So sense of sin in mans heart brings Christ thither 2. Here is way made in mans heart for mercy and joy in Christ the heart driven to seek him in earnest 3. Though man build hay and stuble on this foundation yet God will destroy them by Fire the Crosse and bring back Israel with joy that went out weeping 1. But herein it is that our Faith is turned to a dead and fleshly security because repenting dayes are gone we did repent and felt the bitternesse of sin but it is all removed and joy and freedom is come thou become secure so that thus turns the eye from our selves and Christ too and so repentance is hid from our hearts Is sin lesse odious to God than before or doth he more tollerate it in thee than others Art thou not more guilty having felt his love to turn from him Is not thy Pride and Self-Will and Love thy security and high thoughts as odious to him and as great rebellion in thee as was the wanton sins in the days of thy Ignorance Hast not thou as much need of his grace and power to preserve thee as ever thou had to receive them Shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under grace Nay as hard shall thou be sifted but I will bring thee back by deep Repentance and thy Faith shall revive though for the present it fail 2. So that Faith is not preserved but by deep daily humilitie and repentance As Saint Paul though he was partaker of great gifts and more experience of Gods love and power than thousands yet hereby was it preserved He stil rejoyced in infirmities when he was weak
A BUNDLE OF Soul-Convincing Directing and Comforting Truths clearly deduced from diverse select Texts of holy Scripture and practically improven both for Conviction and Consolation BEING A brief Summary of several Sermons preached at large by that faithful and pious Servant of Jesus Christ M. RODGER BREIRLY Minister of the Gospel at Grindleton in Craven Matth. 11 25 26. I thank thee O Father Lord of Heaven and Earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto Babes Even so Father for so it seemed good in thy sight LONDON Printed by J. R. for Samuel Sprint in litle Brittain 1677. An Epistle to the READER CHristian Reader concerning Roger Breirley the Author of these following Notes of the heads of some several Sermons by him more fully Illustrated in his publick Ministry I desire to say something to thee of his Life and Message that he witnessed As also to give thee an account of the Ground and Rise of this Word Grindletonism by which many men of the World as adverse parties styled his Followers Concerning his Life and Conversation therein it was as became the Gospel of Jesus Christ and comely in the eyes of the Sons and Daughters of Sion and beautiful in the Streets of that Citie so that none could lay any shame thereon As for his Message that was given him for to declare to the World it was mighty and piercing to the laying open in the very Heart and Conscience of man the most secret and hidden things of dishonesty though never so closely infolded in the deepest mistery of iniquitie so as many yea and many that stood fenced in the Field with the Weapons of their own self-righteousness in the flesh and the Covenant of works fell wounded to the very ground and were found to be of Sinners the chiefest And to this I bear record such was the Penetrating Power of God in his Ministration that if thousands were before him under it in very few hours discourse every mans several Condition whether under Light or Darknesse should have been spoken to layed open bare and naked that every one might truely have confessed in their several conditions that the Word was spoken to them in particular For what was done acted in every mans heart and spirit was there openly related revealed that all might read their seven-fold abominations So that in a word for much more here might be related none either in their Gentilish Nature nor in their self on taken Jewish Righteousnesse nor in any formal way either to Law or Gospel could stand t●●ir ground if they dealt truely with themselves but they ●●ll convicted under his Message for it was not in word only but in the Power of God to take away from Man the whole stay staff of his own Brea● that every House might be lest without inhabitant man lying desolate might sit in silence upon the ground whereunder many gave out this witnesse that God was in him of a truth And not only so but mighty powerful was his Ministration in the evident demonstration of the Holy Ghost to bear witnesse in to the desolate weary forlorn hopless broken heart of man sentenced unto death of that unchangeable love in the faithful Promise of the healing Covenant of God established in with Jesus Christ against which Sin Death Satan the father of lyes should not prevail to blast curse but it should arise the blessing of his own free love to sit above them all in true dominion by the witness of the Holy Ghost sent down in faithfulnesse from above to comfort the desolate needy poor beggerly heart of man writing the Law of Life in his heart tha● he shall not dye but live where whose eye is so opened by the living Faith begotten of the Incorruptible Word he ma● Run and Read in the same place where be Read the blood Lynes of Death the Lynes of Gods unchangeable Love Blessing which is only perfect to cast out of the Conscience Heart of man all fear torment whatsoever Saying Rise up walk for thy sins are forgiven thee And th● his Ministration being as I may say in the Authori●● Power of the living God not as the Ministratio● that stands only in the Art Wisdom Eloquence of Ma● it drew hearers from divers places about several miles 〈◊〉 stant to wait on his Ministry Some in go●d will hungeing thirsting travelling in birth under the stro● of the powerful Word untill the living Seed we brought forth by the Spirit of Life in open view in the hearts to give unto them that Bread that should endu● unto eternal Life the taste whereof made their Spirits dance for joy caused them to tell it out unto others wh● they had seen heard handled that they also mig●● come and taste of the same love of God The Eccho Fa●●● whereof went diversly abroad Some saw heard the w●ders of God and believed others astonished went a●● wondering that they never heard any preach like hi● And many others came to hear see what should cause such strange reports seeking to catch something that they might report also Whereupon mistake went abroad and great contentions stirred up and jealouses fixed in mens minds that some great Heresee as a monster would appear when indeed the living Truth only appeared to the Children thereof although those against him could not see it but dayly sought to compare it with some new or old Errours Heresies And when they sought accusations from this Authors Doctrine could find none being in the hearing of it silenced that they had nothing to say against it yet to shewtheir minds what good will they bare to him in his Message to those who did embrace it because they could not well stile them by the name of Breitlists finding no fault in his Doctrine they then styled his Hearers by the name of Grindletonians by a name of a Town in Cravan called Grindleton where this Author did at that time exercise his Ministry thinking by his name to render them odious and brand them for some kind of Sectaries but they could not tell what Sect to parallel them to Hence rose the name Grindletonism And yet they rested not with this nicknaming but raised aspersions against this Author informing the High-Commission against him who sent their commands to bring him up to York where he was kept in prison for a while during which time fifty Articles were exhibited by his Adversaries against him before them which when he came to his tryal not one of them directly proved against him Whereupon after a Sermon preached by him at the Cathedral he was dismissed and liberty by L. Bishop Tobias Matthews granted to exercise his Ministry as formerly who after much travel and pains in witnessing the glad tidings of Salvation ended his Natural Life at Burnlaie in Lancashire after whose Death these few Head-notes of
nor profit but only the maintenance of the Truth of the Gospel viz. Faith in Christ only and Love to all men So that this being their example Note that Faith in Christ and simple Love to Man is the very Summe of the Gospel and the Life of all Religion in the heart of Man Gal. 5. Faith works by love 1. Tim. 1. The end of the Commandment is love out of a pure heart a good Conscience and faith unfeigned all else ver 7. is dross and dung This is the summe of all Pauls Epistles This Paul to Tim calls the spirit of faith love and a sound mind Thus Paul thanks God for to the Col. the Faith and love to all Saints c. 1. For these destroy Self Righteousness and Self Confidence and Self Love which are the poyson of all Religion viz. Self Witt and Self Will these Adam got and therein opposed God 2. For by Faith he is made a Lord over all things that will suffer nothing to start up in the Church and in his Heart but Christ and by Love he is servant to all and plyable and servant to every one By the one he is freed with God and by the other amongst men 3. By Faith he that had thought to live in and by himself through the Law comes to dye in himself and to live in and by another 4. Nay all Religion without these is nothing but meer opinion and conceit whereby the heart is puffed up and so not fit for mercy and also tyed to himself and his own good Minde the Religion of Christ was it any thing but a denying of himself and cleaving to the Father and giving himself to the Church in love yea to his very Enemies Which Faith and Love is nothing else but a partaker so of himself and his own weaknesse Sin and Death thereby that he can believe and trust nothing in himself or the world but only the Word of God and in that weakness waits on Christ and meere Mercy and cut of that dislike of himself and love to that he sees in Christ loves all judgeth none but himself 1. How far are we then from Christs Religion when all our Religion is 1. Either in Fire of questions and disputations about this and that Opinion maintaining of our singular conceits wherein we seem to excel others in knowledge whereby true love is drowned quite 2. Or in some singular conceit of quality and disposition which we conceive in our selves and thereby grow proud and despise Christ and trample mercy under our feet 3. Or in high roveing conceits of the eternal Deity Majesty and Power and Secret Will and Purpose of God without Christ whereby the heart is hardened 4. Or in the Notion of the Gospel and Christ and faith without the power thereof gloriously vaunting of deep Mysteries But in all these the thing is wanting viz. an humble low believing and loving heart like unto Christ 1. Thus in all these man leaves his own heart and followes his heady opinion he forsakes Christ and pleaseth himself with his own qualities turnes from the word and followes vain speculations denyes the Faith and lives by the flesh 2. Know then that whatever would draw thee from Christ and his Truth is not the Doctrine of God whatever sets up man and makes him any thing but a Sinner is not the doctrine of Christ but of the Devil and Antichrist for it destroyes faith Pray we then that the Doctrine of the Gospel even of Faith and Love may be continued pure in the Church For Maus Wit and Reason will gather a thousand Errors out of Gods Truth viz. when it will not be content to become a fool but will needs comprehend a spiritual Truth and determine thereof according to its own Principles and Judgement Then it brings a world of absurdities for all errors have risen out of the Wit of fleshly minded men for the Spirit leads unto all Truth And I fear there will arise men of perverse minds to pervert the truth of the Gospel some to their carnal liberty some to the establishing of a righteousnesse and power in man without Christ bear we the Infirmities of men But take heed of false Doctrine in the Church for this is the worst of all And I pray God that many alive do not see that the Truth of the Gospel be turned into the Mysterie of Iniquitie and a greater Mysterie of spiritual wickednesse than yet we have seen Sed magna Veritas praevalet● Great is the Truth and prevaileth 4. But the kindly effect of the Gospel is to establish these two in the heart of man viz. to bring all things down in man by the Crosse of Christ and so lay him low under thee feet of all For the Gospel is a low thing Faith is a low thing though mighty in Christ and Love is a low thing Therefore all high flowen Chimical Divinity is the Doctrine of Satan and not of Christ And therefore if man be brought under the power hereof then will Christ be precious to him and his Word will be the Life and Treasure of his Soul because man hath nothing to stay him in his deep humility but only he And then will man love a man because he is a man and not because he is of my opinion or good to me or of my way or linage but loves as Christ did yea h s very Enemies As you have us for an example viz. Us in whom you see the Truth of the Gospel to rule and to walk according to the same who seek Christs Kingdom not ours So that He walks safely who truly feeling his own weaknesse and believes man for the Truths sake and not the Tr●u●h for mans sake Follow me as I follow Christ But many were drawn away by the Error of the wicked For man having a good conceit of another is apt to believe what he saith for he believes that God is with him and so falls into odd opinion● 1. Better we should never preach than that the Gospel should be believed for our sakes Can we that are nothing bu● error add to the Truth of God nay if God be not with us and guide us we shall tell a thousand lies for Truth 2. But woe be to that man who becomes by his example a perverter of the Brethren either for matter of Faith or Life or Liberty It had been better he had ●ever been born Take heed then how we depend on ●an there is one man for all even the man Christ Who is the way the truth and the life follow him in the way o● faith and love of whom I have told you often because of the danger thereof mans weaknesse So that Man is apt and weak of himself to be drawn into an ●vil way of error and hardly to believe the truth and ●tick thereto 1. For he is blind of understanding apt to believe any thing that may further his fleshly Kingdom ●oath to believe any thing that
he must give life or else we die 2. All things live by him onlie much more mans Soul which hath no life in any thing else as the body hath 3. This is the whole Law and the Gospel 4. And God and the Faithful are joyned and made one in Spirit like Father and Child Husband Wife so that offer what thou wilt they cry none but my Father and my Husband 1. But the dark World which is blind hath incroached upon Gods Inheritance and shut him out of the hearts of men that they cry Any God but this God So the Jewes any but Christ Barrabas or any Murtherer As 1. See how the World and the Strength thereof is trusted and relyed on that they say with Israel These are thy Gods which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt 2. See how it is loved and how it is sought and delighted in 3. See how the want and the losse thereof is feared and sorrowed for 4. Yea how willingly man serves and becomes a slave to it and yet this great and terrible God this good kind and merciful God and his sure word promise not regarded 2. So that Faith is a simple and single hearted thing casts off all power wisdom and good of all things but this only and like a chaste Wise cleaves onlie to her husband and cryes out with David against all Satans temptations 1. When he offers plentie and fulnesse nay none but God and his Christ 2. When he offers Righteousnesse and Wisdom to look at nay none but Christ 3. When he threatens drives man to seek to the arm of flesh nay none but God his power yea when he draws to sin through lust yet with Joseph No I cannot sin against God So that Faith is only the preservative As in the Martyrs wh● for this God forsook Father Husband Life and all to be joyned to this God so good For while God was a God to Israel all Nations fled before them and feared them no want nor miserie surprised them but they were filled to the full with all good and satietie and while man sits under his shadow simplie he is safe he needs no power of man to support him nor riches to fill him For he hath a joy peace and riches and goodnesse that the World knows not off because it knows not him 3. Let everie man try who is the Lord and God of his Soul One saith O! riches is the onlie thing another Nay drunken and merrie companie is the onlie joye another Nay youthful sports and pleasures the onlie Heaven another Nay the great Babel that I have built for my honour another Nay but I have none in Heaven nor in Earth but thee alone Which brought thee out of the land of Egypt I helped when thou wast not able to help thy self I freed thee when thou wast a slave and I delivered thee when thou wast in danger I supplied thy want when thou was readie to faint wilt thou have any other Gods but me For they thought not of it Moses a weak man to deliver them What straits were they brought too still he fred them So that God ever witnesseth his power and truth and love to man in his greatest weaknesse and miserie and then doth man ever find God to him the nearest What straits was David in all those bitter complaints and Israel when they wandered in the wildernesse and had no City to dwell in Yea out of the deep have I cryed and thou helped me So when we were in Egypt wearie of that bondage he braught us out Yea the Prodig●l what straits was he in and was received to mercy This is the Type of our great Redemption manifested in the Gospel 1. For then doth man most purely believe Gods love most apparent 2. These straits wants God brings man into that he may shew man his power and man may believe him 3. Then doth he Seal up the truth of his Word and Promise which man in fulnesse calls a lie 1. No marvel then though we have but little appearance of Gods love when we are readie to brost with fulnesse and satiety of conceit sin bites but we feel it not we can shift it off and Christ came onlie to sinful man want presseth us not need makes us not run We live in Egypt but we would live there and fill our bellies and so seek no deliverance For we feel no bondage but know that this Pharaoh a devil will root as out at last as to Israel when they fled to him for help 2. So that straits and bondage in our selves and the World makes God great to appear for Where sin abounds there grace also O! what straits were the poor Martyrs put too when all was taken away Their joy turned into sorrow peace freedom into war bondage and jeopardie of death everie hour and yet How did he deliver them how did the light break out of that darknesse The wicked who being in honour Psal 49. Yet dying passe from house to grave with woe welladay These passed from the prison to the fire with joy and with singing I have seen I have seen saith God the affliction of my people in Egypt I remember my Word to Abraham Come therefore I will send thee to deliver them But he cannot say so to us I see the desolate mourning Soul of my people lying groaning under the bondage of sin Nay they are full rich increased with goods c. Therefore I will not cast my Word upon them in vain For they are not fit subjects for my mercy A merciful man indeed hath ever an open heart and hand to the needie So hath God But the rich he sends emptie away The deliverance is more urged in the Old Testament than any work that God wrought both by Moses Samuel and the Prophets And wha● wonderful Sacraments for remembrance thereof did God institut as the Passeover and Pascal Lamb because it was a figure of our eternal redemption To teach That the life ioy comfort of man is continued still the same way of faith promise power of God whereby mans was first fred that this promise might still live in mans ho●● I am the Lord thy God which brought the out of the land of Egypt 1. For man is as weak in himself and Satan as strong as then For as God gave life to man and be only continues it so he gives grace and continues it thereby we live His Word endures for ever Paul was received to mercy th●●ugh grace and the same Christ still lived in him So he often exhorts to continue in grace and to be grounded and established in grace to live by faith 1. Not as wise unbelieving men who having tasted of the good word of the Lord and knowledge of the Mystery of the Gospel with Israel turn back into Egypt or become wise and righteous in themselves and so cast off the Covenant And
be representative as Bellarmine Herson c. 3. But the Jesuits of late fearing this would prejudice the Popes Supremacy too much concludes it is the Church Vertual the Pope only or alone And so while they boast of the Church their Mother they mean nothing else but the Pope their Father What foundation can there be here for man to rest on But we have a sure word of the Prophets and a sure foundation Jesus Christ than which none other ca● be laid 1. The ground then of all uncertainty in all thing● is because we build without this foundation One man layes a foundation in the World another in Wisdom another in righteousnesse and uncertain in all 2. Take heed of stumbling at this stone 1. Either at his sufferings as Peter the Disciples at his death 2. Or at his poverty and low estate as the Wordling Matthew 19. and 21. 3. Or at his mercy and love as the Pharisees that judged him 4. Or at his Holiness crossing our lusts 3. See the certainty of believers 1. They have a sure foundation a tryed stone that abides the storm a precious stone full of treasure a corner-stone that joyns altogether in love He that believes makes not haste or shal not be confounded For he seeks no vain shifts but sits in death darknesse by faith waiting and sticking to this foundation till the light shine out of darknesse So that The only rest to man in all straits is the sticking to Christ by faith and waiting on the promise which shall be fulfilled in time Abraham waited four hundred and thirty years Israel seventy in Babylon Isa 30. Your strength is to sit still 1. For God hath set a time appointed for every work like a nurse which hides her self from the child till it thinks it hath lost her yet still hears its cryes and comes in time 2. God knowes it is best for a man to keep him under as yet till his will be subued and lust abated 1. But the blind World will needs run before their guide and will now have it and so forsake God and his Promise 2. Weaklings who would have rest assoon as they feel any disquietnesse 3. Others that will see things before they fall and stumble for the present 4. Wait thou weary heart make no haste Fly not off to any other shifts nor fix on none other foundation This will be able to keep thee from drowning he that hath kept thee hitherto is able to keep thee still and he that cometh will come and will not tarry SERMON XI Isai 39.5 Then said Isaiah to Hezekiah Hear the Word of the Lord of Hosts Behold the dayes come that all that is in thine house and all that thy Fathers have laid up in store until this day shall be carried into Babylon c. VVHen Hezekiah had overcome the great Hoste of the King of Assyria he fell sick received a message from the Lord that he must die Whereupon he fell into great heavinesse and prayed unto the Lord and wept sore So that The sentence of Death is fearful unto man if the great and mighty hand of the love of God do not mightily uphold him so to Christ 1. For this is the last enemy to be destroyed this takes away all sta●s helps in the flesh at once We all play with it as with a dead snake and make a covenant therewith but when it comes on us with open mouth it shakes the heart of the best if God do not mightily preserve him 2. But if the wrath of God the guiltinesse of our hearts the end of our dayes come all at once O whither then shall man flee O that man but saw and believed his own mortality How would it pull down the pride of man and make the World little in his eyes and that man would but see himself on his Death-bed How fearful is that destroying Angel and Messenger of Death or the Plague when it comes to any place to them that are round about it After this the Lord hard his cry and saw his tears and gave him assurance of his life for fifteen years with a sign of the Suns standing still for more assurance which goodnesse of God he acknowledgeth in his Writing from chapter 38. 9 to the end Wherein he shews both the misery he was in Gods deliverance as ver 15. c. What shall I say he hath spoken unto me himself hath done it I shall walk humbly in sense of my own weaknesse as knowing my life is in his hand Then he acknowledgeth Gods truth and Power O Lord by these viz. thy Word and Power men live my spirit hath life in these and that all this was of meer mercy for in peace I had great heavinesse but in love to my soul thou hast delivered me from the pit cast all my sins behind thy back Yet after all these experiences his recovery see how he falls to the World to be lifted up in his fleshly portion in shewing all his store to the servants of the King of Babylon such a vile creature is man So that That after so many experiences of his love power wrath yet by a little ease and peace in the flesh shakes hands again with the World and becomes lifted up thereby to the forgetting of his God So with Israel evermore when they had ease So with David in the matter of Uriah 1. For the world blinds the eyes of man hides the glory of the Gospel by the glory of the world that he is lifted up feels nothing of mercy power in another 1. We see this in experience How soon doth man forget his misery and bitternesse of his soul the goodnesse ●nd power of God the weaknesse of himself dotteth in a fools Paradise yea and quite runs away from that Word he once believed and sound life in fixeth upon that store he hath gotten when as alace all his store yea and life too was in the hand of God even newly delivered How soon is that faithful confidence forgotten those Purposes resolutions of miserable men quite at an end We cryed O that God would de●iver us and he s●ould be our God for ever and pre●ently we chuse another 1. So that no keeping of Faith Comfort in God but ●y preserving of humility sense of death in our sel●es for as we die to the World so we live to God but if ●e live to the World we die to God 3. See the danger of prosperity viz. of raising up of a mans heart without God in carnal confidence and turning the heart from God to his great gifts This World eats the Word out of Mans heart that now he lives as though there were no God and his Word a matter of no moment And now he comes with another message from the Lord to the King that because he had rejoyced in his store God would take it away and his children
heavy Luk. 12. He said Soul thou hast goods laid up for many years Take thine case eat drink and be merry therefore death was that night so fearful 1. Thus we see in experience and say I was finelie set I had paid my debt gotten a good portion built an house provided for wise and children in a good way of thriving and verie like to have risen and now all is gone For look how far the heart is lifted up in experience so far it is cast down in the want of any thing 2. Lust leads out the mind beyond present state and sets a seeking great things not content with present so both wanders in desires and uncertain hopes when they have gotten them with much toil they are left in 〈◊〉 moment and he laid in the dust 3. This deprives man of present good ●nd what he hath because of the want and expectation of what he would have But subjection is necessarie in all estates thus we are carried still in expectation of great matters that we forget the present one of great riches and certain inheritance for himself and his and it may be he or they dies a beggar Another of great joy and comfort and good will keeps low his heart in sorrow All expects a mending of their condition which till it come they pine and languish The way of rest is to walk faithfullie for the present and reserve the issue unto God SERMON XVII Isa 64.6.7 But we are all as an unclean thing all our righteousnesse is as filthy raggs and we all do fade as chaffe or a leaf and our Iniquities like the wind have taken us away IN this Chapter is laid down the earnest desire of the Prophet for taking away their rebellion healing their pride and security that so the judgement might be removed wherein by a Metaphor that nothing can reform Israel but God descending by his power and bringing down their high mountain For he acknowledgeth that God is faithful and wonderful in his mercy to them that wait for him and seek him in his way for whom he hath done such great things as were never heard of and then confesseth where the fault lyes In the former verse he shewes hovv ready God is to meet him that rejoyceth and worketh righteousnesse in his vvay and that yet novv he is vvroth because they have ●nned but that in his way there is continuance of his mercy and goodnesse and that man vvalking constantly therein shall be saved Then in the sixth verse a map and a plain description of mans estate without God that is laid down 1. Generally in their natural disposition as filthy raggs 2. In their holinesse or devotion all-our righteousness are as filthy raggs 3. In their failing and fading in all goodness like a leaf 4. In their miserie their Iniquities like wind takes them away 5. In their hardnesse none calleth upon thy Name or stirreth himself to take hold of thee 6. Gods absence from them because of their Iniquities 7. And last they commit themselves to God in submission as clay to the Potter and so after cryes for mercy and reconciliation and of restoring their captivity In those is continuance and we shall be sav●d In thy way there is safety and continuance of comfort if we had hearts to continue faithful therein But we are So that Mercy Love and Truth are a continual act in God and never fails to man but when man turns to himself and his ovvn vvayes But if man could continue constant in faith he should be preserved in all dangers His mercy endureth for ever and his truth from generation to generation c. Mic. 6. Israel testifie against me wherein have I been wanting or failed thee How did he continue his love to Israel though they sinned yet he continued a Father though we sin yet he abides saithful Christ continues ever a faithful High Priest neve●●easeth to make Intercession 1. For with him there is no shadow of turning he changeth not as man God is not yea and nay as a man in war with his enemies who hath a Captain wise and puissant to overcome if they bear their station and fight in confidence But if he out of his pride and infidelity run out into a way of his own and trust his own devices shall fall It was because he stayed not vvith the Captain so it is vvith us because vve stay not with him but run after some lust or device and think to prosper which skill fails For vvhen Israel stuck to the Covenant and endured hunger and thirst and drunk bitter waters and waited on him in his way they prospered But when they began to lust turned from him they fell through Infidelity 2. For no length of time nor work of man can alter him or his word but man running from him deprives himself 3. For it was Adams running from God and the Prodigal from his Father and the Apostates for denying and forsaking the faith that was their undoing 1. Hence we see why our joy and peace continueth not viz. because we continue not faithful in sticking to him But 1. Either blesse our selves with hearing of Redemption and yet live by the world and the flesh 2. Or tasting of the joy and freedom in the way of faith thinks all is perfected and lives not by faith but the World creeps in 3. Or receiving joy and assurance from God thinks to store it up in our selves which was Adams sin For he that thinks to store up faith and love c. in himself and thereby to please God or to receive from God is deceived For there is faithfulness in God and continuance in God but not in man So that here is our error we think to store up these by wit and diligence and by faith for there is no continuance or keeping of holinesse in man but in Christ for He is our Holinesse and Redemption Charge not God then as those in Isaiah 58. as though he failed for there is no failing in him but condemn thy self And yet God chargeth not man as though he had been a wanting to him Isaiah 1. as though man can do any thing to Him but because we are not fit to receive O that my people would have heard Because he hath not an ear to hear and a heart to receive what God would bestow on him Being fore-stalled with a conceit of his own gifts the sin of the Angels 3. Hence we see how hard it is for man to continue in any good way with God is continuance man failes oft for man is lothe to ly in the dust still and to suffer affliction and mourn but he will have some merry dayes and if God give it not he flies to the world and seeks it there And yet we know that man never finds life but in death and Paul never rejoiced so much as in infirmities which argues we are abundance of flesh but little spirit for one hour that we
Spirit of our mind renews Which to Samaria was so joyful newes New wine first Love the Christians sweet beginnings Fine gold rich pearls the godly Merchant winnings Christs yoke made easie by the spirits oyls The Joy of Harvest or dividing spoils Not that I then did or do look to find Some strange Religion of another kind Then that wherein I ever have been trained Since first I from my mothers breast was wayned For so to do as I consider well Were t● make sure work soon to get to Hell But even the same say I that hath been taught Since God his Gospel into England brought Gods very Truth which that it doth not fit All ears and seasons man is faulty yet But to be short then was the time alass I can but only say That then it was I was I say more sensible of sin And of the danger it had brought me in But shall I now begin God's love to storie To me his wretch and is it for his glorie Especially If I shall there withall Shew how his favours on a dung-hill fall For though Sun-beams do draw from flowrie brinks Sweet smell yet carrion send forth filthy stinks Lord I confesse much sowen small increase found Of fruitful crop within my barren ground O let my soul ne're draw this curse upon her Thou can'st not bless her but with taint of honor 'T is only thou w●o can'st an answer yield Whether I Dung-hill be or fruitful field But if at all thou ought in me hast sowen Bring to perfection that which is thine own And leave me not as sin gives cause to doubt Among these Virgins who shall stand without Nor what I have from me in Judgement take But me a harvest for thy mercies sake I will say on then what my Conscience tells me And clear the truth since thus the case compels me The Good I did I say seem'd then more slender The ill more vile my Conscience much more tender Then now it is as having felt the smart Of God's great judgements with a troubled heart Gods Sp'rit what say I who now scarcely know If e're I ●elt it truely yea or no God's Sp'rit I say for so as then I thought Had to my Soul such happy tydings brought Of Gods great mercy in delivering me Who had so long try'd the forbidden Tree And thereby plundge me in such deadly danger As to Gods Cov'nant almost made me stranger That then me thought I felt his love more free Then I before could it conceive to be His love more free I say my self more vile Then er'e before unless I me beguile Then say I what Not liberty to sin Because of freedom God hath set us in So that one may whoredom and these commit And not withstanding not offend in it Nor that the Spirit so renewes the will As quite excludes all motions unto ill O Blasphemie dute any brag of ground Wherein there may such cark o● grace be found Nor of Gods presence knew I ere such sense As drives from his all sin and doubting thence So that one would not thereof be beriven No not to change it for the joyes of Heaven Nor that the Spirit doth without the Word Unto our Souls sufficient light afford Nor that one may adventure on a sin Because God will be glorified therein But this I saw that there 's a rest of faith Which sets Believers free from hell and death That out of us our health and life is wrought That out of us the same is to be sought That Gods elect even from their second birth Unto their death are strangers on the earth That precious liberty they thereby win How sweet a thing it is to master sin How this new Law doth set Believers free How Christ his yoke is perfect libertie How this can be that men can part from ill When dangerlesse they may do what they will That God sometimes his presence so reveals That for the time both sin and sorrow vails How such shall think that while be 't short or long They nev'r shall move their hi●l is made so strong That more one doth from this degenera●e The more he falls to pride or worse estate How God doth draw by his sweet cords of love Souls here below to live with him above Who whil●s they see Gods will is so o strange Their present bless for greater would not change Not but that they full freedom would require But thus to Gods will linkt is their desire Wha● power with God this law of love doth give How in his Members Christ is said to live How grace doth with a Metamorphose strange Deep threatnings into exhortations change That th' World Flesh Sin yea Satan and the rest Are for Gods Children sorc't to worke the best So God for his good out of ill doth draw What 's life to God what 's death unto the Law How first the Law doth Man in bondage bring How Christ his death hath tane away the sting But now of late as I must needs confesse To Gods great glory and my shame no lesse I have been through the Tempters subtiltie Tost with temptations of inconstancie Not in respect of our Religions ground I ever doubted to be safe and sound But in regard of some particulars About the which have been so many jars As whether there be any living wight Who like to Gideon walking in his might Doth sin down right like Midian's host destroy Whose heart God fills with such continual joy In his great love such strength against their sin That faith in them hath long unshaken been In which his love their souls are so set free As they therein can walk at liberty Such as that sin can neither break their peace Nor upright walking confidence increase This hight of Grace do so exceed my skill I needs must say that title it who will For mine own part I utterly disclaim it I mean the having not the will to gain it No not the will to gain it so I say Wherein I trust I go not far astray For sure I am if faith were fir●ly ●here It Lyon like the li●bs of sin would ●ear More faith more love the surer is the knot Yea such a one as sin dissolveth not But rather shrinks to nearly to ap●roach The Mint of faith its copper c yn to broach Or if it do it s but as though a rush Gainst shining shields his pricks should proudly push But wo is me how should I frame my tongue That some men here should not conceive me wrong I do not I broach newes of such a state Where blocks of sin ly not in graces gate But that his heart 's more safe that 's better guarded That fortress surer which is strongly warded Faith is a fortress Love lyes strong within To keep the hold lest Foes should enter in When Gods bright cloud his Temple doth fulfil Lesse room I trow remains therein for ill The Bridegrooms presence whiles the same doth last Workes joy and chear
men need not then to fast Though slender shot doth cause the Fool to fall Canons scarce make sign on the Castle-wall The Assailants strength the Objects weakness do Ever contrare to make a deadly blow This is the cause why tender flesh by dint Of sturdy steel receives so deep a print And here especially it must be so Where th'ones strength doth from th' other weakness grow Like mushroms which from harreness of soyl Doth suck his sap and filthy liquor boyl And if you think whiles Faith stands firmly sound Yet sin that while can strike as deep a wound As where ●ts weak you speak things quite contrary And so affirm impossibility Indeed I grant most men coin such a Faith As may of sin abide the better breath And not be sick but such a Faith say I Will with his Master live and with him dye So then such Faith my soul desireth not As is a Poyson but an Antidot Not such as flesh might freely sin as much As it desires and conscience feel no truth But a perfume which casts such smells behind it As foul as made us cannot once abide it Such as prevents that sin can bring no smart For that it first so purifies the heart And though this life afford it not in prime The less it is the more the fault is mine And who imagins sin and this agreeing Feigns a new fiction never yet in beeing Yet is it true that our Salvations ground Rests not herein what good in us is found But in another higher seat doth sit Whick makes our works but underlings to it Hereof it comes that our Divines well say Which words Lewd men may wrest another way That if from works or more or less thou measure Thy certainty thou heapest copper treasure Since God in Christ before all times and place By His Decree determined our case Not from the good that we should after do But of free choice ordaining us thereto Then make not that a cause which is th' effect Of Gods dear love in them He doth elect But whoso draws from Faith by true descent The Pedegree of Works as consequent May thereby judge if no such fruits appear That sound assurance is in no wayes there For good and ill trees by their fruits are known And fruitful seed will spring where it is sown So when I say I wish in God his love Such confidence as sin might not remove My meaning is I wish a ●aith so stable As t' enter therein sin might not be able Or if it did yet hope should not be lost But hid in him whom it so dearly cost As i● that case when Sin and Law is over This were I trow the next way to recover Nor would this cause Gods goodness to despise But in new life still more and more to rise Unless Corruption do abuse the same Which if it do yet grace is not to blame And 't is most true that Unbelief is Mother Of every sin adulteries thefts and other By which is writ the sins of graceless men With Diamond point and with an Iron-pen For Conscience Paper is Ink unbelief Th' affections Pen men whereof Will is chief So then lewd life and true ●aith are no kin For Christ is not the Minister of sin Nor yet doth freedom preaching in such minds As that sweet Doctrine fitted for it findes By its own kind abroad such bastards set More than doth Nature monstrous shapes beget But if this new cloath wider make the rent It only falls out so by accident As when it meeteth with an hardned heart Which wholesome food to poyson will convert As oft it doth too I confesse yet so As that the Law of other sort makes moe I mean of Hypocrites who while they hear The hideous thundrings of the same through fear Worke with a vengeance till their backs do break Wishing mean while their wrath on God to wreak Who still think they most like a cruel Master Layes on more load and bids them worke the faster Yea gathering ever where he hath not strawn And heaping profit where he hath not sown These when they see the Law no mean nor measure Doth hold in loading then they take more leasure And having not the Son to set them free Are tyr'd at length break out at liberty And so a freedom of their own they have But such a liberty as God nev'r gave Whereout off too springs th'Atheist filthy swine The carnal Protestant or Libertine Or else such Hypocrites as still make sure They take no peace but what they may indure Gaining like peace by that their formal walking As doth the Fowler get by Fowlers stalking Much like the Crab their eye sight one way bending The whiles their footsteps are another ●e●ding Whereby it falls out that these counterfeits Are of all other seldom set in Straits Whiles formal walking keeps them flesh bone From being br ken on the Corner-stone A cause why Harlots place in heaven find Before that w●●ke proud Pharisaick kind As for the Law this ground of Faith it gaineth That graceless men it civilly restraineth At le●st until some exigent betide Such as it said and ●ake them turn aside Then wha● wayes best for thee who art a gleaner To make thy God herein the greatest gainer Since that most like as in our Statute Law Ou● of the yoke lewd men their necks can draw By this or that exception or pretence Or otherwise by wresting of the sense And that in our Experience every day Those words prove true that Christ himself did say We pipe to you yet you no measure keep We mourn to you and yet you do not weep 'T is not alace in offering oyl though fountains Nor though all thine were sheep upon the Mountains Nor that thou dost thy Neighbour sorrows grieve Nor yet the poor with all thy goods relieve 'T is not in this nor that corruption killing No nor in Rivers of salt tears distilling 'T is not thy foot from outward evils turning Nor yet thy body given to the burning It neither is in this or that mans teaching Nor is it in the Law or Gospels preaching No no 't is not in him that wills or runs But in Gods mercy which creats us sones Yea Lord it is thy Spirits mind that blows Which none can tell from whence or whither goes But saith one for so I hear one say I thought at length these fellows would display What minds they bear reposing in such wise Themselves in God the means they do despise O God forbid alace let not one brother Such eager censures lay upon another The means I reverence as the thing whereby God saves his Children ordinarily Nay th' only way wherein all Gods elect H●s saving Grace a●d blessing can expect Nay who neglects much more who it contemns Gods Ordinance for his souls health condemns Yea 't is in b●ief Gods worthy Instrument Us'd in his hand his Children to prevent Yet he offends not who more p rases puts
Gods VVord affordeth us the way For winning souls who first for sturdy Rocks A hammer hath for sin and Satans locks A powerful key with many wondrous wardes From which no time nor place so secret guardes For every sickness Medicines sweet affording To every person and degree according Not only so but teacheth to apply And giveth reasons when and where and why As bidding us not grieve whom God would glad Nor strengthen them whom he would have be sad As Reasons serve rebuke exhort reprove And all these with long-suffering and with love Yea warn the wicked of his wicked way On mourning Souls some balme of Gilead lay With many other such like rules yet this May be a thing too which belonging is And that is Christian Wisdom to discern The proper state of those who are to learn Whether wild fallow that needs plowing up Or gapeing dry that showrs of grace would sup Like skilful cooks in season to prepare And each Stomack wholesome fitting fare I w●uld not be mistaken here as though M● me●ning were s● deep in others bow To draw as ●hat I here presume to lay A Pl ●form to direct our Preachers way No no let none once such intention dream If ●ny do I speak it not to them My meaning only is to manifest Wh● I d● h●ld in this as in the rest I h●ld it fit that each one fitted be As to his need and want do best agree Which being difficult of to discern Those needing most who least desire to learn Teachers must crave Gods spirit so to finde it For in their own case hearers oft are blinded Thinking they knew enough we wish more still Then can be kept subjected to their Will Or comforts to their hardned hearts applying Else loading Conscience that 's already lying The first I needs must say is oftner seen For in the latter few to blame have been Most hearers being such whose wounds do fester Needing sharp cor'sives more than healing plaister And holy things must not be cast to Dogs Nor precious gold before such angry Hoggs For though these Halcion dayes which God hath sent Men may the Churches orderly frequent And so be formal th'unassailed Senses Blinded and guld with Satans sly pretences The strong man arm'd in peace posession keeping Tryals not rousing yet the dog that 's sleeping Yet sure full many who the means thus use Do not forthwith God for their portion chuse But rather in the Closet of their Hearts With Sin and Satan secretly take parts Yea all that live in unregenerate state Do God his truth and Children deadly hate Whom i● they could but at a dead lift see On God himself they would revenged be Who being so to that they love so dear They cannot choose but needs his Force must fear Knowing if he live they are sure to smart For that from which they are so loath to part Whose forc'd good works though ●e regardeth not Those dear earn'd goods that one a stone are got Yet are they turn'd through his ov'r ruling hand For him and his in righ● good stead to stand To make his power known and shall to th'free Hewers of wood and water bearers bee But to return most hearers bring now Such as the truth in words at least allow Yet wanting vigour in the inward part Gods graces into wantonness convert Yea Gods dear Children which regenerate be So far as carnal are not herein free For Wanton flesh soon taking heart at grasse The soul bewitcheth with her whorish face And saith since Christs robes on man nev'r fear it Thou' rt safe enough though slovenly thou weare it It 's meet the hammer of the Word should wound The Laws loud Trumpet much and often sound To such hard hearts for it 's at all no wrong Since Law and Works of right to them belong At least so far forth as they carnal be Or not ingraft in Christ the living Tree And so works taught them in another kind Than those that are of a more freer mind At least until it bring their brazen face And iron sinnew into other case For there 's difference and a main one too 'Twixt works that carnal and regenerate do So do the Governments that they are under Differ as far as heav'n and earth is sunder Th' one under grace things good and well do act Th' other bond slaves rest with the ontward fact Yet is the first far nobler Government Harmonious and full of sweet content As which doth here with noblest minds accord How much more fitting for the noblest Lord. Especially since where man cannot look He ope'ns and reads it in the heart-seal'd Book It 's this no doubt which shall forever be The Saints Companion through Eternity This golden Rule which to be wished were Instead of all Laws might be Ruler here And no discouragement to Princes tho Whose Rule were n●arest to G●ds ●rder so Then should long sufferance sweetly make supply To friend or foe to any Injurie If Injurie at all amongst so many Graces of Love there could be offer'd any Which reaches foes for a regenerate state To friends and foes its goodness will impart It 's general unto Christians in their way And unto foes to win them if they may Which may be so yet wickedness and sin Through indulgence men though not fostered in For evermore he loves his friend most dear Who least can with his faults and strayings bear This is that love which from good conscience springs And a pure heart like to the heavenly Kings Who is loves fount pure infinite divine Who sends his sun on good and bad to shine Then would be pouring out abundantly To other men as God had pour'd to thee Yea far beyond ability a will As large as is the light that all doth fill Then would be no envying one another Nor lifting up our self above our brother Nor yet disdain with th' elder son to see The younger in his Fathers grace to be No though the while his brothers feast did laste Sowre herbs instead of dainties he should taste No contumelious nor opprobrious words Which wound the heart more deep than piercing swords No seeking for our private wants supply Letting our Countreyes and out neighbours lye No Practices no bitterness no hate Gainst private persons or the publick state No ill surmise allow'd in friend or foes Without a t●yed and a grounded cause No prejudice against a deadly teacher Nor fear of words wrong wrested from the Preacher No busie hunting after higher places Nor no disdaining men of meaner graces No soul rejoycing in committing sin ●ut Gods sweet savour and go●d conscience in No wrong invasions n●r no hateful jarring No disobedience nor no cause of warring Nor any thing which might a hinderance be ●o sweet concordance and firm amity ●ave that perhaps our conscience would not reach To guide us what 's most fit to do in each But if the judgement were inlightned too Accordingly then were no more a-do But sweet
acquire As some of our late well approv'd Divines Have testified in their new extant lines Why should it so incredibly be thought That men should into such a case be brought As both we finde the Scripture doth avow And good mens past experience too allow And who art thou darst scoff at or deny That for sincerity thou ne're didst try Nay canst thou do it tell me by the way That its impossible I do not say Since grace there is and grace its face doth show Why judgest thou the heart thou dost not know I grant thou may est upon the parties where Some answerable fruits do not appear Pronounce that they but rotten branches be And no sound members of the living tree But therewithall beware that thou good seed Do not pluck up together with the weed Give me a man that can himself set free From imputations of Hypocrisie For still more labour he bestoweth in it More cunningly men thinks he strives to spin it Since this is so what means hast thou to spy it More probably then th' other to deny it So then where thou good signs sees how much lesse Canst thou these Parties charge with doublenesse Not that but Maskers by contempt awateing Those apeish Juglers and their counterfeiting Who having not the heat of Grace within A superficial self wrought web begin Self wrought I say for where true grace is seen The Parties Patients more than Actors been Still understand me not in any case The means hereby I lessen or debase Since commonly God in and by the means Bestows on his this rich and happy gains But to return mistakings I confesse In Christians one another sort no lesse That Hypocrites I willingly let passe Who counterfeiting what he never was As one who doth the praise of goodnesse favour The thing it self yet nev'r the rather savour Who by his seeking how to be accounted ' Mongst such as to some pitch of grace are mounted And outwardly the businesse undertaking Quite ●ars the matter in the very making These I let pass being such defigured mates As makes themselves unbid associats Of them I nothing say but of dear brothers Of mis-conceits 'twixt Christians one and others But out Alace will no man undertake 'Twixt Paul and Barnabas accord to make Must I the man so far unfit be he Somewhat to say or nothing said must be Or is the one part so obstinately bent It may be counted labour vainly spent Or have the other eyes and do not see Nor can with meekness they restored be Or if not so do brethren quite give over To labour so their brethren to restore Or do their Conscience testifie that ever They thereto have imploy'd their best endeavour Or is the one part willing and the other Backward unto the dutie of a Brother Or would in meeting still more jarrs arise And cause the one part th' other to despise Raising an heap of doubts and quarrels more Than ever came in question yet before Or is' t in vain to strive that inward light That some decernes to paint to others sight Would some disdain to hear or to be told Of mysteries that meaner men behold Or think they should be thereby much despis'd At least accounted not so well advis'd Or hath the one part cause of jealousie That th' other deals not in sinceritie Is any side with prejudice so led Words may not rightly be interpreted Is any side say I must taking parts Remain where should be Harmonie of hearts Or is their main truths left undescried Or are men carnal or is Christ devided But O! what means and parties might be found To search out these things to the very ground For as for me I am a silly man Unable and unsit these things to scan To whom it may be said look thine own eye Before thou fault in others dost espye But 't is no spying faults where what 's amiss Through misconceits one labours to redresse And lo how Sion droups love lyes along Even like to dye who then can hold his tongue Then somewhat will I say and somewhat must Though sin say no and I lye in the dust And if that any these my words despise Say he hath met with one more bold then wise And if he listeth let him add this too Who can more boldly then blind byard do And if he think a Mediator still Should be a man discreet of place and skill Of good desert who needs not be asham'd To finde a fault where faults are to be blam'd To either part indifferent or at least One who on all sides hath some interest And he that judgeth me to be none such Well fare his heart I will not blame him much For I am greatly conscious to my self Of indiscretion ignorance and pelf Yea sin and weakness insomuch that I At all disdain not to be said so by Yet thus much say I for apologie I take not on me this or that to be Nor seek I the preheminence and state To be some dooms-man things to arbitrate But leave to each man as he thinketh best To censure it and me even as he list Praying that Gods not mans regard may be In chiefest honour and respect with me Not that I light esteem mans love or hate But would to Gods keep mans subordinate And for my taking parts my answers this I see not where a real difference is For this I count as none where men accord In substance though some difference be in word But had there been and I had therein rankt me I know not who would for my Work have thankt me Nor seek I for 't for that nor for this stuff Which though perhaps it now endure a snuff Some honest heart may yet when I am dead Vouchsafe to Read and think not evil said And howsoe're the manner I may misse I 'm sure I know what min intention is In fine let this serve for a period here If ill I say let all men witnesse bear For difference then I say I do not see In these Garboils a main one yet to be If men by rule of Charitie be led That things may rightly be interpreted For as I grant some worthie to be checkt Because dark speech they do too much affect So by mis-understanding answer me May not some hearers too blame worthy be Far b● it from me here in any wise For dark and doubtful speech t' apologize Much lesse for that accursed worthie hating Dam'd Romish practice of Equivocating The which though by Nature all men lyers be Who willingly maintains accursed he Nor do I judge of Charity as blind But say it s no sharp censurer by kind Whiles Christ and his Apostles plainly spake Did their true sense each hearer undertake Nay who 'l deny God doth to some unfold That others cannot see though they be told No though thou spell them in the plainest ways Withall the best words thou canst once devise For what sees flesh or man regenerate too So far as
fruitful soyl Some having try'd these things cry out that this No other but a meer delusion is I mean who try the danger to rely Without like inward power or liberty And in loose hearts it doth in very deed Dangerous errours and confusion breed By accident while men will take in hand To know above what they do understand And these are in this manner said to know Whose brain without the heart in these things go This is that new cloath on th' old garment spent Which is a cause that all the whole is rent And that new wine into old bottels fill'd Which makes both wine and vessels to be spill'd Which if Christs words as they needs must be true God 's not a workman which makes pieces new But all at once new hearts new hands new will New love new hate new joy new fear new skill If any frame and have not all of these Proportionable such their labour leese As who of liberty such teachers been As little lack of beeing slaves to sin Sometimes confess they beeing on the score Of upright Christians so esteem'd before Thinking themselves so too hold this for lewd Till after they repentance had renew'd But O so sweet then was that little crumb More sweet then honey or the honey-comb For want of this renewing oft a heart That cooles in grace to works would backward start Nature and reason for the soul refining To make her worthy thereunto inclining That so works might stifle and stop the breath And thrust themselves into the room of faith The part regenerate that it might obtain Its ancient fellowship with God again Not so as though the part regenerate smelt The Hirelings task but much much carnal felt The whole to be and so must needs come under The burning mountain and the voyce of Thunder Or else become these two extreams between Of neither partie but a libertine It s not brain knowledge that doth make men free But where Gods Sp'rit is there is liberty In quantity as faith proportionable And other graces too are answerable Then who so is in this untoward state With those who fear God worse than death to ●ate As they can neither make themselves believe The Laws their Lord nor yet by faith can live Their way is this since they will needs be free Map of their Faith to let obedience be And judge if small or none be this proceeder According thereunto is that its breeder It s wantonnesse which makes this Word so ha●ed I mean the Word Liberty and so be rated To witt when such as Liberty professe Thus turn God's Graces into wantonness There is an holy Liberty I grant Which may the Devils and all gain-sayers dant And therein also difference of degrees As in the brightness of the Stars thou sees Which with our late Divines I think more clear In our posterity shall yet appear When once the Stone that 's cut withoutten hand Shall like a mountain cover Sea and Land When God by his sore plague shall on a day Leviathan that crooked serpent stay When he shall so his vineyard purge and fine That men shall sing of red and purest wine When under David his anointed King He his out of Captivity shall bring When they who once did pierce his dearest son Shall weep and mourn for that which they have done When a New Temple God shall fashion so As streams of life shall from the threshold slow Where shall resort devoid of Doggs the clean For it s no carnal Liberty I mean But of this pitch this Iron-age comes short God hath no doubt his time reserved sor't When as his Church even here on earth shall close With this sweet doctrine faster I suppose Yea even now I dare not say but some May to good measure of perfection come As good presages for hereafter be Of New Jerusalem's prosperitie As Wickliffe and John Huss in ages past Were of that time when Luther came at last I fancy no particulars herein Be who they may who have or first begin If thou seest some to aim at here and fall Thou thinks to stand look to thy self withall But that it may appear this Sate's not fained Look Master Rogers how it is attained Which if that some in weaker means have got Gods mighty power and working limit not If such through want of constant strictnesse lose it Take thou good heed who better knows to use it The well beloved sometimes skippeth in When almost past all confidence we been And whether his abode be short or long Whiles it remains it makes a chearf●l song Untill which time let still Gods Child expect God in the means and watch but for the effect It 's inward work which out the other bears It 's the first mover that first moves the sphears Let that within still guide the rains or curbe And sort thy motion to its proper orbe And if at any time flesh get the raine Rest not untill it be redeem'd again For otherwise insensibly will grow A senseless slumber and thou shalt not know Or such occurrences as whereof the least May bring more danger than can be exprest As sloath prophanenesse and such like the seeds Of many hateful and accursed weeds The whiles men do the stock of grace imbessil Striving to carry sail above their vessel The head unwealdy for the body grown Makes topsie turvye all quite overthrown This is ov'rwise and overjust to be Whereby so many desolate we see To censure strange opinions which I know not I may not take upon me No I do not But this is blam'd in Familists I hear Which others also may have cause to fear All I can say is I would have men be Wise as is said after sobriety For he that faiths proportion will exceed Looseth his labour and withall his meed Yet to beware too then in no wise plead For backwardness and standing in a stead By these and like words men no angels are Who love to climb a fall let them beware To dream of constant fellowship with God For weeks and moneths is but conceits and odd These and such phrases while men often use Many do them to sloathfulness abuse I know they have their use and proper place But such is seldom and a rarer case While men to press to good works are too slack Striving to keep a streight unstrained back For we must wisely words and speeches sort After as times place persons fitteth for t Had one to Pauls worke proud Galathians taught St. James his doctrine he had over raught Or this to James his Auditors apply'd That faith alone sets free had gone aside Though both be true each must applyed be Still to mens several necessitie Witness the State in general of the World Which into such security is hurld Security nor Ignorance I trow For most have knowledge more then will to do Though I must say to know and not practise Is no sound knowledge counted by the wise And though it may be thought
thy friends at all That can relieve or ransom thee from thrall I tell thee true as sure as I do live Thou shalt not dye for for thee I will give My only son and he sh●ll pay the prize Of all thy debt I swear it to thee thrice For rather then that thou in this thy state Should dye and from my love st●nd separate I will perform that which before all time Was wi●h me then and in my love did shine My word is past to thee it shall appear Which shall thy nature once again up rear By assuming it to my self wherein I will a living life to thee begin For I to death in that same nature thine Will subject lye that then the God-head mine May there appear to be that mighty one The which shall trush like to a mighty stone Thine Enemies and captive lead them all And thee redeem out of thy sinful fall For I will that decayed natu●● thine Assume unto my word the God-head mine Wherein I must perform my Fathers will And andergoe his mighty wrath untill It satisfied be for every one And thus thy debt I will discharge alone And when thy sin and death and hell and grave Hath got on me whatever they could crave Then I 'le triumph and captive lead them all And free thy Nature from thy former fall And in the same I will triumphant ride Unto my Father there I will abide At his right hand there I will reign so long Till sin and death and all that darknesse strong Stand subdued among my people all And then the Kingdom to my Fathers shall Be resigned that so for evermore He may be all in all as heretofore THE SOVLS ANSWER NOw Lord what lets that this thy love to me Doth not yet shine unto my heart so free To make me know and fully understand My happiness which yet is in thy hand Wilt thou not now at this same present time Declare thy Kingdom to this sense of mine I fain would know how thou thy love to me Would so confirm that I may cleave to thee THE LORDS REPLY O Stay a while that way I 'le from thee go And thou after thy flesh and sense also Shall not me know for I will far ascend Above those thoughts yet I an ear will lend Unto thy cry yet is it fit for thee Thou still attend in thy humility The time and season that the Father hath Kept to himself for so the Scripture saith I tell thee true this way thou looks for me I will not come but that way will leave thee Which when I go it shall thy sense so try That down shall fall that which thou lifted by And this is fit it should be done to thee Or else the Comforter thou shalt not see Let not thy heart at this be so agast As though it should for ever with thee last I 'le come again according to that life Of holy Ghost so that no evil strife Shall shut thee out from my dear love wherein I will a living life to thee begin Then let not sorrow fill thy heart so fore As though that thou should meet with me no more Wait but a while in that Jerusalem And thou shall see again that blessed Stem Jerusalem thy heart that now lyes desolate Which of my presence makes so high a rate As by the flesh a Tabernacle there Might builded be to keep thee out of fear It matters not though from thy sense I go I will not leave thee now and alwayes so For when thou thinks that I am gone for ay Wait thou that while for then 's the time I say That I 'le appear my sp'rit it shall descend Into thy heart and thee it shall defend From all thy foes which do encamp thy soul And bring thee where thou shalt without controul● Received be into that lasting peace Which shall abide and in thee never cease For then I will give thee my sp'rit which shall Seal thee to me in that true love withall My tokens true which shall not thee beguile Shall be within thy heart and mind and I 'le So charactere my love therein that none Of all thy foes shall hurt thee for that stone That I have cut out of my mountain great Shall fill thy heart and unto dust shall beat Thine enemies all and in thy heart I 'le write Again my Law that first I did indite And therein shall my spirit freely move Which shall be witness of my dearest love And in thy heart there shall my temple be There will I dwell so I assure it thee And thou in me shall be thy resting place From all thy sins in this my day of grace And live in me by my own life alone And thou in me and I in thee be one This is my word from me to thee it s gone And shall prevail as that chief corner stone That shall be lay'd within thy heart so low That death and hell shall never overthrow THE SOULS ANSWER NOw Lord what have I more to thee to say This breaks my heart I can it not deny That golden chain that 's ty'd about my neck That word of thine that gave my foes the check Hath wounded me and win my heart that so From thee and from thy Word I cannot goe Here will I dwell my heritage doth stand On thee alone and builded by thy hand And I will feed by that same water-side That floweth from thee and I will abide Within thy house thy praises forth to tell Thy house my heart there will I with thee dwell For there I shall behold thy wonders all Thy lovely works freeing my soul from thral That pierceing word that made my heart to bow And all my Forces for to overthrow That pure truth that made me naked lye And bair'd my heart before thy seeing eye As in that day in Edens garden I Did eat and drink of the forbidden Tree That living Word wherein thy footsteps shine In love to me in purest streams divine Of thy true light that now my heart so free Of thee shall boast of that same libertie Where I shall stand in that same truest vine And root of life whereout in me may shine Thine own life streams for ever to declare Thy loving wonders in me great and rare And that I may Lord grant me still mine aid Thy Spirits life as unto me thou said Whereby thou mayest within my heart indite Thy living Word That Lord I pray thee write In Table of this meek'ned heart of mine That there thy Image once again may shine In living power and lively streams again From thence may run in such a heavenly strain As I may live and in such union dwell With love divine as may again I 'le tell Reduce my soul from all duallitie And set me fast in perfect unity From whence as from a perfect fountain fair May spring in me these lively graces rare Whereby I may in those same lively streams Preserved be and by those
Of grace and truth in that same little seed Which thou hast sown for me when I stood need When Sin Death when Hell Darknesse great When losse when crosse about my heart did beat When angrie thou as judge to me did shine And I stood judg'd within my conscience mine Such witnesse had that I could plead no more My sin did mount to such a mighty score When all my friends from me a loof did stand When lovers all ran far away yea and When I lay dead and hopes I then had none Of life but laying comfortless alone Then thou declar'd to me that time I say Thy saving health wherein O Lord for ay In peace I 'le rest as unto me thou said From all my fears for thou hast so displaid Thy freest love that makes my heart rejoyce And mount and sing with Simeon that voice Now let me Lord depart in peace anon For I have seen thy great salvation Thy words enough I thereon will depend In it there 's life and it will me defend And bring me forth into that light wherein I shall remain and with high Cherubin Shall shew forth what with thee I have seen In my return as it hath with me been I have none other Song but this to sing What thou hast done for me that I will bring Before thy Saints that they also with me May sing it forth in sweetest melodie As none else can but them whom thou alone Hath so redeem'd by that same corner-stone That lyeth lowest in the building so That simmoned they are for so to do Which freedom brings in such great mighty store That sing that song they will for evermore Then thou my Soul sit here in silent rest Under his wings in whom thou thus art blest And wander not nor let thy gadding mind Be turn'd about thy Spirit for to blind Into the flesh as though that heavenly thing Thou there would keep and to thy sense would bring Thy freedom now and think thereby to hold That in thy self which no man ever could And soar not up into thy thoughts so high But ly thee down in true humilitie And eat thy portion there with that content That faith doth bring and be thou patient A word 's enough he will supply thy want There 's all in him how can there then be scant Nor turn thou back unto thy pleasures vain Nor unto Mammons filthly sordid gain Such lovers all too base are for thy mind Who now stands free in such a heavenly kind Of noble birth nay what shall I say more An heir with Christ as was said heretofore Of that same Crown which links thee into one Where freedoms stands beside which there is none And that I may Lord take into thy hand My life for all 's at thine own great command If thou wilt speak thy word it will suffice Then speak it Lord let not my foes arise Me to prevent of this thy pearl great O then speak Lord and so they shall retreat And then full safely I shall walk along With thee though with my wicked foes among I sojourn still untill that precious time Of Jubill come that full deliverance mine That Jubill time O! when shall it appear To free me from my burdens that are here Me thinks I long my heart it would be gone Out of this clay unto that only One But I must stay and in this house abide Till gold from drosse be true and fully try'd And sin and death hath done their worst and then Shall life come in and that same last Amen Shall then make up both breach and ruins all That hath befall'n the Saints since Adams fall The which shall then full gloriously appear When God in man his Kingdom shall up reare When God is all and man brought home in one That 's the Kingdom or else I say there 's none For Kingdoms else before him they shall fall And come to end though they be ne're so tall Then hasten Lord this Kingdom that is thine That I in thee may in thy onenesse shine That thou in me and I in thee still may Remain in one eternally I say Where I may cast before thy face my crown Where thou abides in that same highest throne Of glory great where all things end in one And thither brought by the chief corner stone Where Saints and Angels in true unity One song shall sing in God eternally Amen Lord hasten this thy pointed day It 's in thy hand yet still for that I 'le pray That when thou hast brought all things into one We all thy Saints may live in thee alone And thou in us may be our heaven alway Which shall remain that mighty longest day That mighty longest day that Alpha one That last Omega who is God alone Amen Amen O Lord I do thee pray To bring my soul to this thy holy day For thou art First and thou will be the last Of all that is to come or hath been past That glory honour power and due praise May be of all return'd to thee alwayes The corner stone out from the Father came Was laid in blood for to declare his name His grace and love unto fall'n men alace And by an oath so interposed was To reconcile to God his creature man So as no Angel nor no creature can So that his glory did surmount the bound Of all darkness in this wide world round Yea it did shine through sin through death through hell And grave as doth the Scripture fairly tell And if his splendor shine through such darkness Then doth it shine within all men no less To be the life of them who do receive it And judgement unto them who do reject it Thus is he set the fall and rise again Of some and all as will appear full plain When he as judge such witness will produce That who rejects shall be without excuse Let all men then what talent God doth give Improve it so as he therein may live And give account what gain comes in thereby Unto his Lord lest not so doing dye Then see thy Talent be not laid within Thy carnal earth which no good gain can win But exchange that which of thee is carnal Into a state that is spiritual So shalt thou build upon the corner stone A good increase while carnal earth brings none In Jordans water Christ baptized were By John so plung'd over head and ear The Holy Ghost descending on him so That he our sorrows bare and rude our wo And was the man who did repentance bear For all mens sins that he might wash them clear And after that that he was so baptized His after life was all then sacrificed Up unto death and in death baptized And by the spirit he again was raised Into the heavenly beeing there to reign In power great untill he come again In watry tears and siry blood was he So plunged in our Saviour for to be Thus water fire and blood was mingled For him to