Selected quad for the lemma: love_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
love_n heart_n love_v world_n 13,220 5 5.1546 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
A50400 The beauty and order of the creation together with natural and allegorical meditations on the six dayes works of the creation : with the addition of two compendious discourses : I. of the creation of man after the image of God, II. of the creation of angels, with a description of their several properties / by ... Mr. John Maynard ... ; published by William Gearing ... Maynard, John, 1600-1665.; Gearing, William. 1668 (1668) Wing M1448; ESTC R14885 107,977 226

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

it was perfect in its kind and therefore he had so much knowledge of his excellency as was sufficient to make him admire him love him magnify him above all things and so much as was sufficient cleerly to direct him in any duty which by the first Covenant and Law of his Creation he owed unto him so that as God knew himself so Man had a cleer knowledge of God and therein did bear his Image Then had he also a perfect knowledge of the Creatures sc. of Himself and Others Himself he knew both soul and body and well understood the nature and vertue of each faculty in the one and the temper and use of each member or parts in the other And this appeareth by the knowledge which he had of the Woman at the first sight This is bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh she shall be called Woman because she was taken out of Man He had a perfect knowledge of all the other Creatures here below he knew the Trees of the Gardens the Herbs Grass and all sorts of Plants and the natural vertues and properties that were in them he knew the Beasts of the Field the Fowls of the Ayr and Fishes of the Sea and so Adam gave fit and proper names to all Birds and Beasts so I doubt not but he knew the nature and several kinds of all Minerals mettals precious Stones c. together with the course and motions of the Heavens Sun Moon and S●ars Thus did the understanding which is the eye of Mans soul represent the infinite knowledg of God and bear its Image And those things which we call now hidden qualities in the Creatures were not hidden from him and are now covered from us not in regard of their own natures but in respect of our blindness contrary to that light which was natural to us in the Creation But all this while Man had no knowledge of evil he knew not what ignorance or error meant he knew not what a stubborn will an hard heart a polluted conscience was he had no knowledge of the nature of diseases nor of their remedies no nor of the cure of sin nor of the washing away of its guilt and pollution Therefore the promise of this new kind of knowledge made by Sathan caused the Womans Ear to itch and her Heart to long as imagining her self capable of some higher perfection which God had not given her for this knowledge concerned not that estate of Man or did it make for his happiness SECT 2. II. HIs will was perfectly bent to obey and cleave unto his Creator whom he knew to be infinitely more excellent than all the Creatures and from whom he saw he had received all the good and happiness which he enjoyed he was fully resolved never to forsake him knowing there was none in Heaven or Earth to be regarded in comparison of him in every affection of his heart and soul he did carry a lively Image of his Maker He loved God most intirely whom he saw to be the greatest good beyond comparison and he loved whatsoever was agreeable unto God and herein he did resemble God who loveth himself with a most perfect love and loveth whatsoever is agreeable to himself he perfectly hated whatsoever was contrary to God all manner of sin and transgression as the Lord also hateth it If he had any actual desire it was most holy but I see not what he could actually desire in that estate unless it were the continuance of that happiness which he had and that neer communion with his God for he was full already and had as much joy holiness and happiness as he was capable of so that his desire of good was not to have it increased but only to have it continued to him but he had not the least desire of any evil his Ioy was wholly in God who was his happiness and in whom he found most sweet and full contentment He had no matter of grief within or without him nothing that should lessen his joy or imbitter his comfort sin which is the fountain of sorrow was not then found in the World As for sorrow he had none actually stirring in him though an ability he had which afterward he had much cause to employ His trust and confidence was in God and he believed that which he revealed to him So long as he stood firm he believed that threatning In the Day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the Death And when Sathan by his lying suggestion brought him from his stedfast belief of this Truth then his Feet were more than almost gone his steps had more than well-nigh slipped But while he remained in his state of Creation he believed without doubting yet had he not actually faith in Christ as a Redeemer which is that grace whereby the Elect in this new Covenant of the Gospel are saved for being free from sin he needed not a Redeemer to satisfy for his guilt by his Death yet I doubt not but that he had an ability to believe whatsoever God should reveal unto him and so to have believed this truth if it had been revealed A● for fear he was free from all slavish fears of vengeance or misery perfect love casting out all such kind of fear Yet I am perswaded that he could not want an holy humble reverence and submissive respect unto his Maker Courage he had in perfection not fearing all the World whiles he knew that God was with him As for Desperation it was far from the height of his happiness who was not subject to the least distrust An holy anger a divine flame of zeal for his beloved Creators glory I cannot think was wanting in him inasmuch as the very Angels are called Seraphims or Fiery Spirits Thus brightly did the Image of God shine in the Face of Mans Soul at his first Creation and though he were infinitely unequal to him he had not any spot of sin or impurity in him to make him u●like or contrary to him that made him God made Man upright saith the wise Man Eccles. 7.29 and so he made him like himself SECT 3. 3. BUt besides these excellencies he did also otherwise resemble his Creator and that is the second thing the inferiour part of Gods Image in Man and that in two sorts of things 1. In things belonging to the Body it self 2. In things without his Body 1. Of the things belonging to the Body you have heard before when I spake of the Creation of the Body sc. the beauty and excellent temper of the Body for though the Lord hath no Body being an infinite and most glorious Beeing yet these things as they were excellencies and things that made somewhat for the happiness of Man they were in some sort resemblances of the divine glory and excellency of God To these I may add also Immortality for the Body also was by the goodness of its Maker free from Death had not Sin made a forfeiture of his life
Sun at the same time and in the same place hardeneth one thing and softeneth another so the word is a means to soften some hearts and an occasion though not a cause of greater hardeness to others as the Sun killed some things by its scorching heat and quickneth other things so the word is to some the savour of life unto life and to others the savour of death unto death Many other meditations may you gather by comparing this excellent creature of God with that more excellent word of God SECT 2. NOw let us compare the Sun with Christ himself he is called the Sun of Righteousness of whom it was said that he should arise with hea●ing in his wings Malach. 4 2. 1. The coming of the Sun gladdeth the world oh how joyfull was that news when the Sun of righteousness was reported to be risen upon the earth when the Angels said to the Shepherds behold I bring you glad tidings of great joy which shall be to all people Luk. 2.10 Oh how happy is the soul of a Christian when after a night of natural blindness after a stormy night of errours in the conscience this blessed Sun riseth upon the soul shineth upon the heart dr●veth away clouds darkeness guilty fears di●●rustfull th●ughts 2. As the Sun is sometimes hidden so sometimes Christ doth withdraw the sence of his gracious presence from his beloved The spouse in the song of songs sought long ere she could find him when once he stepped aside As the S●n returning maketh the earth which was benummed in winter to spring and bring forth fruit again so when Christ is effectually present and united to the soul he causeth a spring of grace and fruits of the spirit to arise in that soul. Let the Meditation hereof move thee to lament thy barrenness and cry with that blessed Martyr at the stake Son of God shine upon me shine upon my soul heal it quicken it make it fruitfull to thy glory It is an argument that they are far from Christ who bring forth no fruits pleasing unto God but yet remain in a carnal estate 3. Consider also that those fruits are most sweet and pleasant commonly which grow toward the Sun-rising and have the morning Sun to ripen and bring them to perfection so the zeal and obedience of the Christians who lived presently after our Saviours resurrection in the primitive Church and in the times of the Apostles was most excellent and so the graces and obedience of such as remember their Creatour in the days of their youth and consecrate the first f●uits of their time unto God are exceeding pleasing and acceptable unto him 4. When the Sun setteth at night and leaveth us in the dark we doubt not but that he will return again so when Christ seemeth to withdraw himself from a faithful soul on which he hath cast the sweetest beams of comfort and refreshment let such a one know for his comfort that he will rise again this night will not always last though it be a long Winters night a tedious time of desertion yet a dawning yea a perfect day will follow it when the face of Christ shall shine again upon it Again as the Sun never so setteth as not to shine at all but when it setteth to one part of the world it ariseth to another so Christ never withdraweth his light from the whole world but although he removeth from one nation yet he shineth upon another he hath a Church in all ages 5. Again as among those fruits which grow in the earth such as grow most toward the Sun are sweetest such as are most in the shade are sowrest so among those Christians which are united unto Christ those who have more free and constant communion with him partaking most of his spirit keeping more close to him than others they bring forth most sweet and savoury fruits of obedience their services have a more pleasing and heavenly relish of the spirit in them than theirs who though they partake of some life and warmth from Christ yet have it in aless degree and are less careful to remove such things out of the Sun as hide the face of Christ from them Therefore this should move us to draw neer unto him to dwell wi●h him to walk i● the light of his countenance then should we esteem his love to be better than life so should we delight more in him and both we and our services would be more pleasing to him Ephesus was charged with the decay of first-first-love surely this decay of heat had never been but that she had withdrawn her self from the Sun she did not keep so close to Christ as before perha●s the world did get between Christ and her heart and kept off the heat and thereupon she cooled And as you shall see some ag●d person whose blood is cold to stand in the Sun for warmth so let us close with Christ Iesus come home to h●m that we may receive heat from him and let us be more watchful that we step not aside from him in time to come 6. As the Sun is able more effectually to thaw and melt the frozen ice than many thousand men with axes and bettles so the presence of Christ and his love manifested to the soul and shed into it is more effectual in melting an hard frozen heart into sound godly sorrow than a thousand threats or terrours of the law Therefore let not an afflicted soul put back the hand of God tendering unto it the offers of grace in Christ-I●sus because it is not yet sufficiently humbled but so long as its conscience beareth witness that it seeketh not mercy for a cloak of sin but for a motive to obedience let it with confidence apply the promises knowing that the apprehension of the love of Christ shining upon the soul is of all other the most ready and the most excellent means kindly and sweetly to melt and soft●n the heart and to conform it to the will of God this will make it yeeld and fit it to receive any stamp of grace that now it will be like wax before the fire that will be moulded as it shall please the hand of God Therefore do not stand back from Christ because thou art sensible of too much hardeness in thy heart but rather come to him that this hardeness may be removed and thy heart may melt at his love 7. Let the glory and excellency of the Sun make thee to admire the infinite glory and excellency of its Maker if the Sun cannot long be look●d on with a steady-eye oh then how doth God dwell in that light which cannot be approached unto who can stand before him 〈◊〉 Angels may well hide their faces at his presence where then shall man appear in the rags of his pollutions Oh learn to contemn all the glory of the earth in comparison of his infinite excellency who made the Sun it self of nothing which is more worth than the whole earth and all its
vassall to the earth and not a servant to the Lord. Learn thou to know him that made thee and never think thine understanding so well employed about any other things as when it is busied in studying the word of God frequent those exercises wherein the word of God is taught and thine understanding is to be pre●ected The eye loveth the light and is delighted with the sun-shine let thine understanding the eye of thy Soul love the light that shineth from heaven in the ministery of the word and do not turn from it or neglect it Let thy delight be in the law of the Lord and meditate therein day and night magnifie God who hath given thee this faculty of thy soul whereby thou mightest come to be acquainted with him thy Maker and think there is none so worthy of thy knowledge as he that made thee this knowledg shall be everlasting the knowledg of earthly things worldly policy skill in dealings laws of men c. shall perish but the knowledg of God is everlasting and immortal as the soul it self is yea it shall be perfected when other knowledg shall perish 3. Thy W●ll wherein the strength of thy soul lyeth must be wholly for God it must be firmly bent to obey God and strongly resolved against all disobedience flashes motions and good moods and fits now and then arising in the heart toward God either in affliction or when we see some spectacles 〈◊〉 mortality or hear the word pressed upon us are but slight and weak of themselves and soon Vanish if there be nothing else but these But the strength of the Soul lies in the Will when it is sanctified and firmely resolved to obey its Maker in all things When Barnabas saw the good affections of the new Converts at Antioch be exhorted them all that with purpose of heart they would cleave unto the Lord Act. 11.23 So David I have sworn and I will perform it that I will keep thy righteous judgments Psal. 119.106 there was a resolute spirit and such should be the bent of every sanctified will The affections may be stirred and yet may be no more but as a few loose sticks which Satan will soon break again and bring to nothing but the will when it is throughly bent and confirmed indeed it is as a common bond to tye up all the affections and to strengthen all let us therefore pray to the Lord that he would give us both the Will and the Deed. 4. The will being thus for God then labour to stir up the affections which are as it were the wings of the soul. 1. Love is strong as death jealousie is hot as fire thou shouldest love God with passionate and strong affections Oh how I love thy law it is my meditation all the day saith David Psal. 119.97 Tell him that I am sick of love saith the Church of Christ. Cant. 5.8 That is an happy soul that is sick of this heavenly love It is not enough to wish well to God and his glory and coldly to desire that things might be amended but the heart must be carried after him in strong and stirring passions of Love that as the heart of a fond lover is passionately carried and overcome with the love of the person beloved so should a Christian Soul not content it self with an ordinary cold temper of love but should labour to have it self possessed with fervent affections yea to be overcome The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts saith the Apostle now that I hope will work an affectionate love to God when his love is poured abundantly into the heart this will make a man love out of a pure heart fervently 2. This will draw desire after it which is another affection oh how the Soul will pant long hunger and thrist for God if once it fall in love with him and be truly joyned unto him having tasted of his excellency and found how Good the Lord is I have lifted up mine eyes to the hills saith the Psalmist Travellers at the foot of the hill look up to the top and now oh that I were there with a wish so a Christian in the valley of humiliation and in the sence of his own wants locketh up to God and his holy Mount and now oh that I were with the Lord oh that I were neer to him and could more fully enjoy him oh that I had more of his Spirit more of his fulness more of his graces my soul thirsteth for the Lord even for the living God And when once thou comest to this how canst thou chuse but from thy heart loath all sin tendered or suggested to thee by Satan the world or the flesh if once thou thus lovest God thou wilt not make league with any enemy of His. 3. Then thou wilt rejoice in the Lord with joy unspeakable and full of glory then the worlds joys will seem poor heartless unsavoury flashes and now a world for my part in that blessed feast of fat things of wine upon the lees of wine upon the lees well refined No delicates so sweet as the Paschal Lamb Christ Jesus no feast so excellent as that which the soul maketh on him by Faith Now I can relish Christs sweetness in the Word in the Sacraments in private Meditations 4. And now also must thy sorrow be sanctified and nothing be so grievous to thee as that which is displeasing to thy God thy heart should ake when his spirit is grieved all should be godly sorrow that bringeth repentance give not way to that sorrow for which thou must sorrow again but to those tears after which thou shalt reap in joy 5. As for Hope where shouldest thou cast Anchor but upon the Rock there is the only sure hold that will abide a storm fasten there lean not upon the arm of flesh cast not Anchor in the Sand. 6. And whom shouldest thou fear but him that hath all power in his hand all Creatures that can help or hurt at his command e●ther to let them loose or to tye them up fear him for his Goodness and Mercy as well as for his Justice that it is too good to be abused and to be made a patronage to thy sins 7. Labour to be couragiously confident in the Lords goodness toward thee and bear up thy soul upon the multitude of his mercies and his truth that never faileth above the gulf of desperation 8. And for thine Anger let it not be a strange fire of inordinate and distempered passion but an holy fire of zeal for the glory of God oh let it burn inwardly to consume the dross and corruptions of thy own soul and to burn up the stubble vanity of thy corrupt affections and then let it flame out in the eyes of the world that those that hate it may yet see its light and then whatsoever the world speaks or thinks of thee thou maist with a glad heart say in the presence o● God Praise the Lord O my soul
the nourishment of the body and so for the preservation of life and this also yeildeth abundant matter of delight and refreshment Iob saith Doth not the ear try words and the mouth or palate tast his meat Iob 12.11 That is doth it not by tasting try it for God hath given this ability to the Creatures to try what is agreeable to their bodies and what is displeasing In the last place the Touch or Feeling is may rise again an incorruptible immortal spiritual glorious body like the body of Christ at his comming through his mighty working whereby he is able to subdue all things to himself SECT 4. IV. EVen this earthly frame of the body proveth it an hard thing to put off earthly affections and therefore care and striving should be used in it The body being made of dust it will return to dust again not onely in the final dissolution but also in the present inclination it now leaneth to the earth and resteth on the earth Man is deeply in love with his own Element and strongly tyed to it in his affections It is said of one that being one of Three who demanded of the Orracle which should be chief and hearing that he should be the man that first should kiss his Mother he fell down and kissed the earth as accounting it the common mother of all men are so in love with the Earth that they embrace it and as it were kiss it in their affections as a Mother out of whose womb they had their beginning although the Oracles of Gods word condemn this folly and teach them that thus doing they shall be least in the Kingdom of God and that this doting love of the world is enmity with God Therefore we should pray earnestly to God that he would change this earthly temper of our souls into heavenly affections How needful is it for us to practise that of our Saviour even to forsake our selves our selves being earth we must renounce our earthly selves and deny our selves for though we could restrain our selves somwhat from outward earthly courses yet so long as we keep our earthly affections our hearts will cleave to the earth Special cause we have to study that book of the Wise man throughout which teacheth us the vanity and vexation of spirit that is in earthly things and to see and admire the treasures and riches of Gods Kingdome that apprehending better things we may make better account of these SECT 5. V. IN as much as God made our bodies we must yeild up our bodies to his service for God made all things for himself saith the Scripture He made not the body for the Devil nor for the world nor for lust nor for drunkenness but for Himself let us well consider this and learn to give God his due The Idolater will bow with his body to Idols and say that he keepeth his heart to God but he must know that God made the body as well as the soul and if he made all things for himself then the body as well as any other thing The prophane person that abuseth his Tongue to swearing wanton wicked discourses to railing scoffing c. the Adulterer which sinneth against the whole body as the Apostle sheweth the Drunkard who abuseth his body to excess of swilling and drinking the wanton that abuseth his eye to careless wandring and openeth his ear to vanity he that pleaseth his palate and loveth his pleasures more than God he that thinketh his body given him for no other purpose but either to drudge about earthly things or to ●ast of earthly delights even such a one is apt to say he hath a good heart toward God But be not deceived God made this Body for Himself and therefore we must not abuse any part of the Body to his dishonour nor make any member of it an Instrument of unrighteousness but to give up the members of our bodies as Instruments of righteousness unto holiness let us not think a little pains of the body too much to bestow in the service of God in hearing the word in prayer in humiliation c. but let us glorifie God as in our souls especially so in our bodies also for they are Gods as well as our souls SECT 6. VI. IN that God made the body care must be used to preserve and not to destroy thine own body or thy brothers we must not pull down this tabernacle which God himself hath pitched but must leave it to his disposing using all lawful means to keep it up and to preserve it strong untill he please to dissolve it shun intemperancy and excess in things that please the appetite in meats and drinks c. Use those means which God hath given thee to repair this house which God Himself hath builded for thy soul to dwell in let the life and body of another be precious in thy sight and do thy endeavour to preserve it And let us know that in some case not to save life is to destroy viz. when there is special means calling and opportunity to do it in times of necessity some means must be used to prevent the famishing of many therefore at such times we should freely give without grudging to the relief of others Remember that it is for the preservation of those bodies which God hath made And let this keep thee from laying violent hands on thine own body it is a loud crying sin to destroy anothers body because God hath made it but most horrible to destroy thine own sith God hath made it and hath given thee a special charge to keep it Moreover sith God hath made the body let us rely upon Him for the maintenance of the body He hath made it and he will keep it he hath given a mouth and he will give meat he hath given a back and he will cloath it Thus may a Christian that hath recovered his forfeiture in Christ reason from the love and promise of God And therefore in hard times our wants should be special motives to drive us home to God through Christ that being in him we might assure our selves of all needful supply for the body from his hand that made it there is not the poorest among us but if they would effectually turn to God and depend upon him they should find they have no cause to despair in regard of bodily helps they should find him supplying or supporting and one way or other providing for them SECT 7. VII HAth God made thy body upright and looking up toward heaven this should teach thee to mind the things that are above to be heavenly-minded It is a great shame that the body should look upward and the soul and affections bend downward to the things of the earth There is many times an upright body and Curva interras anima a Crook-backed soul leaning toward the earth so that whereas the soul should raise the body and make it the better because of its Union with an immortal Spirit it rather
body have a power to draw blood from the Liver which is far below them as well as the lower parts And in this the wonderful wisdom of God is clearly manifested 2. There is a Retentive faculty or a power of keeping that nourishment a convenient time till it may be so wrought upon and perfected as to turn into one substance with the body and to refresh its parts But l●st nature should suck poison insteed of nourishment or digest that into its substance which is hurtfull 3. The Lord hath added for its farther security and benefit an Expulsive faculty or a power of casting out such matter as is superfluous and burdensome and not fit for nourishment whence come many fluxes from the Head and sweats over the whole body besides those gross excrements whereof nature is daily ●ased In these also the admirable wisdome of God is manifested and when we enjoy the use of any faculty of the soul we should glorifie him that made them Moreover there is also a generative faculty or power of propagation which God gave to Trees Plants Beasts Birds Fishes Men blessing them and bidding them to encrease and multiply SECT 3. 2. Of the sensitive part THere are both the senses and the affections the senses outward and inward of the outward senses somewhat was briefly spoken when we spake of those parts of the body that are Instruments of those senses The inward senses are conceived to be three The Common Sense The Fancy The Memory 1. The Common Sense which is said to receive the objects of all the outward senses and to be seated in the former part of the Brain 2. The Fancy or Imagination which worketh upon those things that are received into the former and is thought to be placed in the middle part of the Brain 3. The Memory which keepeth those things that are received in by the other and layeth them up as in a treasury and the seat of this is in the hindermost part of the brain And in this most admirable is the wisdom and power of God that certain images of things long sithens seen or heard should be laid up in a corner of the Brain and there preserved many years and called to mind though they be the resemblances of many thousand several things Some Memories are far worse than other yet even the meanest ordinary Memory is wonderful if we did rightly consider that in so narrow a compass the shapes and likenesses of so many several things should be preserved yea even this is notable that the Images of so many mens faces as one man can remember should be there ingraven in so small a table as is the Memory SECT 4. Of the Affections AS for the Affections they are seated in the heart and these are many as 1. Love which is an affection of the soul uniting it self to some thing apprehended as good for so whatsoever is beloved either is good or seemeth to have some good in it to him that loveth it contrary to which is a second affection sc. Hatred and that is an affection of the heart shuning and separating it self from that which is so hated as supposed hurtful for though good things are often hated yet there is an apprehension of evil in them and if we speak of the affections as created of God then nothing was beloved but that which was truly good nor hated but that which was truly evil But of the integrity of the affections we may speak when we come to speak of the Image of God in Man Desire is an affection of the heart reaching after some good thing which is absent Contrary to which is Detestation or abhorring of that which may hereafter happen being conceived to be evil These two may be expressed by hunger and thirst on the one side and on the other a loathing of meat in the Stomach when the heart riseth with dislike at some thing which as yet is absent but is tendered to it or may hereafter be presented to it When our Saviour told Peter that he would fall into that fearful sin of denying his Lord and Master his heart rose against it and he detested it this was not only a simple and meer hatred of it as a thing evil which is directly contrary to love but also a detestation of it as an evil that might happen or was foretold should happen to him though now he were free from it which is an affection contrary to desire In the next place is Ioy which is an affection of the heart pleasing and resting it self in some good thing Enjoyed In this affection there must be some good true or seeming in possession which doth so affect the heart as to rest it self with some contentment in it opposite to this is Sorrow which is an affection of the heart distasting some evil already felt Now I cannot see how this affection should be exercised in the state of innocense because man had no cause of sorrow unless it may be supposed that he knew of the Angels fall and rebellion against the Lord which is not likely Howsoever the faculty no doubt was then given unto man by the Lord who foresaw a world of woe and sorrow which man would fall into who knew that of all affections this of sorrow could not want work nor be idle for want of matter to work upon There is also Hope which is an affection of the heart looking for some good or the avoiding some evil that is to come for that which a man hath already why doth he yet hope for Contrary to which is Fear which is an affection of the heart trembling at some evil to come or at the loss or missing of some good Then there is Courage which is as it were a degree beyond hope and is a more assured expectation of some good or of the overcoming of some evil contrary whereunto is Desperation a sinking of the heart under the expectation of some evil to come Anger seemeth to be an affection mixed of Sorrow and Hatred which by Tragedians is somtime called Dolor These I call faculties of the soul because of their near union with the spirit of a Man and because the soul hath some government over them CHAP. V. SECT 1. BUt the most proper and peculiar qualities and faculties of the soul are the Understanding and the Will and such as are seated in these or compounded of these The Understanding is the prime faculty of the soul that guideth the whole man and giveth light to all hi● actions 1. In it there is an act of discerning whereby it seeth into the nature and qualities of things knowing both those things more perfectly than the Senses which the Senses discern and other things also which they cannot reach And this is that faculty whereby man is become acq●ainted with God his Maker whom no unreasonable Creature can discern God is a spirit and cannot be discerned by any
that is true which is said though often false But on the other side one is ignorant he hath a blind soul Another hath a graceless profane and unsanctified soul laden with many sins in great danger to perish for ever but when shall ye hear such a one complain of his neighbours for hard-heartedness toward his soul in not pittying his spiritual misery in not instructing him in his ignorance When shall ye hear one of these complain oh I have a neighbour that hath knowledg he knoweth that I am ignorant of God but alas he is hard-hearted he doth not pitty my soul he will sooner see me damned in my ignorance than once open his mouth to instruct me in any matter of salvation Or when shall we hear one that goeth on in sin cry out of another in this respect I have a neighbour seeth my soul in a fearful case he perceiveth me to go on in the stubbornness of my heart and he knoweth that the wrath of God will one day smoak against me for it and yet his heart is hard he hath no pitty upon me he did never once open his lips to bring me into the right way to reprove me for my sin Nay if any in zeal to Gods glory and love to the souls of such shall labour to do them good what is their answer meddle with your own business I shall answer for my self you shall not answer for my sin I pray mark what sensles speeches these be it is as if a man should see another fallen into a dangerous pit where he could not live without help and should go to help him out or to direct one that is going in some dangerous place in in the dark where he is like to break his neck or to succour one that is in need and like to starve and should have such an answer from him as this Why do ye trouble me look to your self if I perish I perish you shall not perish with me Why do ye feed my body if I starve it is nothing to you you shall not be famished by it No verily this help is for the body and therefore it is welcome at all times but the other that is for the soul that is distasted as unseasonable and troublesome SECT 4. IV. THis sheweth us also the greatest harm which a man can do to another is that which is done to the soul men may receive wrong many ways but the greatest injury and mischief that one man can do another is that which falleth upon the soul the best part Is not a blow in the eye worse than one upon the arm he that woundeth thy soul doth he not worse than if he smote thy body and yet what deadly malice doth one bear to another for a box of the ear or some such wrong done to the body whereas they account them their best friends that work the greatest mischief to their souls He that will drink to them when they have drunk too much already he that will flatter and humour them in their sins He that will entice them unto sin he is the only friend and good fellow whereas indeed such a one is a most dangerous enemy He that threatneth to be revenged of thee that saith he wil have thy blood that raileth at thee slandereth thee doth not hurt thee so much as such a one who seeketh to draw thee into that or by joyning with thee to encourage thee in that which tendeth to the destruction of thy soul such a one endangereth thine everlasting life and taketh a course to wound thee so that thou mayst die for ever Therefore when thou hearest that no Drunkard shall inherit the Kingdome of God and one pu●leth thee by the sleeve and another enticeth thee c. answer him thus I perceive you are none of my friends what are ye loth to have me go to heaven would ye have my soul perish would ye seek my destruction you seek to draw me into such a sin as will shut me out of heaven If thou wouldest answer them so now and then thou wouldest be well rid of such companions and not be so much pestered with these troublesome flies But most lamentable is the sin of such in this case whose care is onely for the bodies of their Children but care not how they betray their souls how they leave them in their sins which they see to grow upon them and use no means to cure them of these deadly evils Oh do not deal with thy child as with thy beast as if it had onely a body to be fed and clothed and not a soul to be saved SECT 5. V. SIth God did Create our Souls let us conceive that he made them for Himself therefore let every faculty be given up to his service 1. As for thine Imagination let it be dedicated to the service of God let thy thoughts and meditations be directed unto God and his Word and Kingdome The fancy of a man is a working stirring thing always medling with something or other now let it be turned toward God and his Word and when thou findest it busie with other things call it home and think with thy self I must go about my Fathers business this faculty of my soul must mind him that made it So for thy memory it is God's treasury he made it and therefore you must lay up the riches and treasures of his Kingdome in it and not the trash of the world you must store it with holy instructions and meditations Promises Precepts c. out of his word and not stuff it with idle Tales wa●ton Songs or meer earthly Vanities and nothings else This Cabinet of the Soul was not made for such base uses When thou comest to hear the word thou must not think it enough to take it in with thine Ear that is not the onely part which God made but labour to lay it up in thy memory that thou maist be rich in all saving knowledge of the word A man may have a great deal of money come through his hands yet be never the richer if he spend it idlely as fast as it cometh and lay up none A man may have many a Sermon entring in at his outward ears and yet never prove rich in knowledge if he suffer all to be lost again and treasure up none in his memory 2 Thy Understanding that most excellent faculty of the Soul how carefully should it be improved that the Lord may be honoured by it let him have the best that made the whole It is strange to think that men should be excused by ignorance what is that but to rob God of the principal endowment of thy Soul even thine understanding It is a miserable folly when men labour for skill in earthly things and would be wise every way except in heavenly things and in the mean time least of all regard to Know the Lord as if the top of the Soul the Head of the inward man were made to be a
last thing is a consequent of Gods Image in both which was that their nakedness was without shame the cause whereof was because they were free from sin Thus much for the opening of these things I now proceed to application CHAP VIII Use 1. THis condemneth the folly of those that use to say that women have no souls which though it be a most sottish speech yet no Opinion is so sottish which hath not some to embrace it Howsoever though men think not so but speak it many times in an idle jesting humour yet is it worthy of reproof in publique both because it is to be reckoned among those idle words for which the speaker must give account at the day of Judgment and also because it is a notorious lie and falshood which no Christian tongue should utter in jest or earnest And that which the Apostle speaks in another case may be applied to this That evil words corrupt good manners But if it were worthy of a confutation it were easily shewed that the blessed Virgin began her song of praise thus My soul doth magnifie the Lord c. It is said that Lydia another woman had her heart or soul opened to attend to the word of God It is said that the Woman whose Daughter had a Devil had a great Faith which is always seated in the soul. It is said that the woman who washed our Saviours feet with tears had many sins forgiven her but without a soul she could not have sinned nor have received forgiveness of sins But some that will take upon them to carp at Sermons or Catechisms though themselves have need to be catechized will say it is an idle thing to speak of this let their wisedomes know then that in mine own experience I have found such as could not tell whether Christ were God or man or an Angel c. Therefore there is need that the plainest things should be taught and that they which know them should also know some arguments whereby to stop profane cavilling mouths but Moses tells us that both male and female were made after the image of God and therefore both the one and the other had an immortal Soul both were made Rulers over the Creatures 2. This sheweth God's tender care over man he would not suffer him to want that which was good for him thus tender is his love when sin maketh no breach This should therefore teach Thee O man to lament thy sins and the sins of the land when any evil befalleth thee or the land Hadst not thou wronged him by thy sins as Adam then had not he would have been as tender over Thee as over Him Had it not been for sin the Lord would have said It is not good for man to be punished with famine and scarcity I will provide him food convenient for him It is not good for man to be sick I will continue health unto him It is not good for him to be made a Slave or a Prisoner whom I have made Lord of the other creatures I will give him liberty It is not good to bring him under any affliction I will keep him free from sorrow It is not good that he should die I will give him immortality Thus would the Lord have dealt with man had not sin confounded that happy peace between God and man complain not then so much of thy affliction as it is a cross to thee as of thy sin which is a cross to God and which hath moved him to bring the cross of affliction upon Thee 3. In that woman was made to be an Help meet for man at her creation and at the first appointment of marriage this sheweth that So far as she is an hinderance to him or neglecteth to help him So far she erreth from the right end of marriage As she is an hinderance to him in Spiritual things and a means either to draw him from God or to cool his Zeal for Gods glory to lessen his care for his service or to make him more backward in good du●ies or to discourage him from a sincere constant course of obedience so far doth she grievously cross the very rules the true end and original institution of marriage Again so far as she helpeth him forward in these things as she provoke●h him to grow in grace and to be more and more fruitful in good works so far she sheweth her self to be a wife even a wife of Gods making an help meet for man for indeed she is no farther a wife then she is an helper Again So far as by her wilfulness negligence or wastful riot she impaireth his estate So far she faileth of those accomplishments that should go to the making up of a wife And so far as by moderate care diligence and discretion she furthereth him this way so far she approveth her self to be a true wife that is an help meet for him So it is in regard of his true comfort and contentment every way sc. of his credit c. Therefore wives should labour to be Wives that is helps in every respect for although infirmities sithence the fall wil not permit them to be perfectly helpful in the highest degree yet should they labour to do their best in every several kind wherein they ought to be helpful 4. The neerness of the marriage-bond which is shewed by the original of the woman taken out of Man and the law of marriage enacted by God whereby they are become one flesh should move them both to knit their hearts in most intire and mutual love accounting each other and affecting each other as a part of him or her self 5. This condemneth the pride of the whore of Babylon which accounteth the state of marriage polluted and thinketh her shavelings too good and holy to enter into that order which yet the Lord thought a fit and helpful estate for Adam in his first estate when the image of God shined b●ightly and perfectly in his Soul without all spot of lust or stain of corruption 6. In that nakedness it self was not shameful until naked Man and woman became sinfull this should make us not so much ashamed of any thing as of sin no meanness of condition no defects or deformities no reproaches of lving and idle Tongues should make us so ashamed as any sin against God for shame is as proper unto sin as the shadow to the Body and we may call shame the shadow of sin For as there is no shadow without some light yet the shadow cometh not from the light but from the Body So shame doth not follow sin without some light to discover it yet the shame cometh not from the light but from sin there must be either the light of the Word or of Conscience or nature c to discover sin before the shame of it which is its shadow will appear and therefore men that are wholly in darkness and blindness and come not to the light they go on without sense of the shame of
and breath And that upright posture of his Body was a fit resemblance of the Majesty of God that made it 2. Now without the Body there were these two things 1. The sweet and happy habitation which Adam had in the Garden of Eden such as now no place with the greatest cost and art in the World can possibly afford hereby resembling God who hath the glorious Heavens for his dwelling place wherein he doth especially manifest his divine and glorious presence 2. His Dominion over the Earth Ayr and Waters with all the Creatures in them whereby as an Under-officer or Deputy he did represent the Person of God who is the Supream Lord of all CHAP. IX Use 1. LEarn here then to admire this wonderfull Work of God and to magnify Him for that admirable perfection which he gave to Man within him and without him in Soul Body habitation and dignity having made him a little lower than the Angels and Crowned him with glory and honour What an excellent Creature was Man when he came newly out of the Hands of God until Sathan ●●rred him with his foul hands A Body without any blemish a Soul without the least defect without all impurity an understanding and wit without all dimness or dulness a judgment without error a memo●y free from leaks o● failing an heart without the least distemper always carryed even not swayed or stirred out of place on the one side o● the other 2. Learn here not to think God the Author of any sinfull disposition in thee Remember how he made thee and condemn thy self justifying his purity and holiness by whom thou wast made upright 3. Learn to lament thine own misery who art so far from that perfection which God gave to Man at the first look upon thy defects every way within and without and see the fruits of Sin in thy self and give no rest to thy self till thou seest thy self new-made again until thou art become a new Creature and hast the Image of God restored unto thee So far as we come short of Adam's perfection so far we come short of that which we should be of that which we must continually seek for But you will say all in the World come short of Adam's perfection True and therefore all must strive to grow in grace more and more and none must condemn another that goeth beyond himself but yet there is a great difference in this case for some are not sensible of their failings at least not so as to be carefull to reform them but rather dislike those that give them the best examples and keep themselves most close to the Rule of the Word These have not the Image of God at all restored to them they have no part of that spiritual life which Adam had But others there be whom the Lord hath new-molded and once again by his Spirit hath breathed into them the breath of spiritual life who see themselves to come short of that perfection which Adam had and mourn and strive and pray and use all holy means and helps to this purpose who are willing to be shewed wherein they come short of this Image of God in Adam wherein they are unlike unto it willing to be reproved by the Word These have some degrees of his Image renewed in them and these strive after farther perfection But now compare thy self with this Image of God in Adam before his Fall and see what thou hast to do how much is amiss in thee and must be amended When a Man hath lost a great estate and by some means beginneth to recover again he will scarce think he hath enough until he hath gotten as much as he had before he would fain be as rich as ever he was Men are too greedy of these things but as the Apostle saith so say I Covet yee the best things Thou wast rich in Adam our first Parent had abundance of riches to leave us but he committed Treason and so all was forfeited into the hands of the Lord. Now we should never think our selves well until we have recovered the same degree of excellency which we lost Thou that thinkest thou knowest enough consider how far thou comest short of Adam who knew the Lord perfectly but thou art ignorant of many things in the Word of God and those things which thou dost know thou knowest it very imperfectly How far art thou from that full purpose of heart in obeying God and cleaving to him that was in Adam How far from that uprightness that perfection of holiness those Heavenly affections that strong love to God that ravishing constant joy in him which Adam had How unsetled are thy affections How dead is thy heart How little art thou affected toward Heavenly things How far in love with the Earth and Earthly things Therefore think with thy self in these and these things I am unlike to God I bear not his Image I am contrary to his purity and so resolve upon present reformation And beware thou art not of the number of those who instead of the Image of God do bear the very Visage of Sathan Oh let all the Children of God labour to be more and more conformed to the Image of their Heavenly Father and to become Holy as he is Holy that they may for ever be happy as he is happy CHAP. 1. Of the Creation of Angels and of their Properties Colos. 1.16 For by him were all things Created that are in Heaven and that are in Earth visible and invisible c. THus much of Visible or Corporeal Creatures now let us speak something of the Invisible or Spiritual where observe from the Text that God Created all Invisible substances These are called Spirits or Angels and all of them I conceive have the same natural Essence or Beeing though in regard of their present moral enclinations to good or evil there be a wonderfull difference between them 1. For their nature they are called Spirits so the good Angels are called He hath made his Angels Spirits Psal. 104. So the evil Angels are often called unclean Spirits in the Holy story of the Evangelists and in that story of Ahab 1 King ult there is mention made of a lying Spirit Now in that they have appeared in a Bodily shape this is no proof that their nature is not spiritual but this they might do sometimes by the Lords command sometime by his sufferance for special ends for if some excellent Artificers can amaze the minds of others with strange inventions and artificial performances how easie is it for these excellent Creatures even of any matter Ayr or Water c. to frame shapes for any purpose 2. For their Original here you see they were created as the Text maketh it manifest but not as many other Creatures so as to propagate others of their own kind but all those that now are we suppose were at first created and their number shall not be encreased to the end of the World for the Day when