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A02744 A cordiall for the afflicted Touching the necessitie and utilitie of afflictions. Proving unto us the happinesse of those that thankfully receive them: and the misery of all that want them, or profit not by them. By A. Harsnet, B.D. and Minister of Gods word at Cranham in Essex. Harsnett, Adam, 1579 or 80-1639. 1638 (1638) STC 12874; ESTC S114895 154,371 676

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rod or the stick hee cries out hee layes on tongue hee doth with all eagernesse and earnestnesse intreat for pardon or no moe stripes even so when wee feel the smart of Gods rod whipping of us there is an edge set upon our prayers wee pray not in that drowsie and sleepy manner wee did before This appears by that which David speakes Psal 88.9 Mine eye mourneth by reason of affliction Lord I have called upon thee I have stretched out my hands unto thee In their affliction they will seek me diligently saith the Lord. Hos 5.15 You may observe many a dog sleeping in the chimney corner which will not arise when he is spoken unto but if you spill but a drop or two of any scalding liquor upon him he is up and is gone he cries and laies on tongue Thus the Lord by affliction awakens his children so as they call upon him in a more lively manner then formerly they have done If you peruse the Psalmes of David you shall find that very many if not most of them were penned in the time of triall and affliction And the sharper his afflictions were the more fervent and earnest were his petitions unto the Lord Out of the depths have I cryed Psal 130.1 The lower hee was brought by affliction the higher was he in prayer crying out unto the Lord. Thus was it with his forefathers in the dayes of the Judges the greater their danger was the more instant and earnest were they in prayer unto the Lord. To give you one instance The children of Israel were sore troubled and vexed by the Ammonites whereupon they cryed unto the Lord for help but the Lord gave them a cold answere saying unto them Ye have forsaken me and served other Gods wherefore I will deliver you no more Goe and cry unto the gods which ye have chosen let them save you in the time of your tribulation Judges 10.13 14. Whereupon they confessed their sinnes made hast to put away their strange gods from among them then they will lay on tongue unto the Lord beseeching him that he would do unto them whatsoever he pleased Onely wee pray thee deliver us this day Judg. 10.15 Thus I have made it evident that afflictions are very needfull to drive us unto the Lord in prayer yea to make us amend our pace to double both our diligence and our fervency in prayer Therefore If any be afflicted let him pray Wee highly dishonor God and wrong our selves if wee seek not unto the Lord in our troubles Call upon me in the day of trouble so will I deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Psal 50.15 Wee must make our afflictions our arguments to move God to deliver us as David did Psal 25.16 Turn thy face unto mee and haue mercy upon me for I am desolate and poore Reas 11 Eleventhly the Lord doth thus afflict his deare children to make them conformable unto Christ who though he were without sinne yet was he not without affliction If then affliction be a meanes of purging out sinne and refining of us as formerly we have heard then it is needfull wee be afflicted that wee may be made more like unto Christ both in sufferings and in righteousnesse The life of the crosse is the life of light Christ was the light of the world and his life was in a sort a continuall crosse Was it thus in the green tree and shall it not be so in the dry was the head thus continually exercised and should the body go free especially when all the sufferings of Christ were for our sake either suffering for us or to teach us patience by his example or to sanctifie our afflictions unto us God will have all his elect to be made like to the image of his Sonne Rom. 8.29 Not onely in holinesse and obedience but also in sufferings Wee must know the fellowship of his afflictions and be made conformable unto his death Phil. 3.10 Not any that shall reigne with Christ can be exempted or priviledged from suffering with him If any man will follow me let him denie himselfe and take up his crosse daily and follow me Luke 9.23 Yea the dearer and nearer unto him wee be in love the more conformable must wee expect to be made unto him in-affliction For the bearing of the crosse is a part of our tenure or holding of Christ himselfe as may be gathered out of that place last quoted Luk. 9. Christ himselfe held by this tenure Luke 24.26 Ought not Christ to have suffered these things and to enter into his glory And as any of Gods children have obtained a more evident right and cleare title unto this inheritance or as any hereafter shall obtain therein a greater portion of glory then other by so much the more strictly are they tied and bound to observe the custom of the Mannor For God hath predestinated us as I said even now to bee made like to the image of his Sonne first in his sufferings then in his glory for we an heires annexed with Christ if so be that we suffer with him that we may be also glorified with him Rom. 8.17 The end of the Lord his hewing and squaring of us by affliction is to make us lively stones of that spirituall house 1. Pet. 2.5 so that we may be joyned with Christ the chiefe corner stone 1. Pet. 2.6 unto whom wee be made conformable by affliction And againe 2. Tim. 2.12 If we suffer wee shall also reign with him Hence it is that James saith chap. 1.12 Blessed is the man that endureth temptation for when he is tryed he shall receive the crown of life which the Lord bath promised to them that love him Therefore such as go without correction whereof all the Lords people are partakers cannot be conformable unto Christ for hee was consecrated through afflictions Hebr. 2.10 Hee was a man full of sorrows and had experience of infirmities Esa 53.3 He was in all things tempted as we are that so hee might both have a feeling of our infirmities and also succour us in them for in that hee suffered and was tempted hee is able to succour them that are tempted Hebr. 2.18 Reas 12 Lastly not to keep you any longer in laying down of moe reasons the Lord doth afflict his children in this life that they may not perish in another life When wee are judged wee are chastened of the Lord because wee should not be condemned with the world 1. Corin. 11.32 Prosperity immunity and freedom from afflictions ease liberty and fulnes is the broad way which leadeth to death and condemnation Hence it is that our blessed Saviour hath pronounced woe to those that are rich woe to those that live in fulnesse woe to those that live merriy c. Luke 6.24 25. Now because Gods children doe naturaly linger after these earthly delights and comforts the Lord in great mercy doth hedge up our wayes with thornes Hos 2.6 Hee will have us to
shall suffer and bee afflicted Revel 2.10 Yee shall suffer tribulation ten dayes This time thou canst not shorten but lengthen it thou mayst through thy impatience As an earthly father correcting his childe for some fault doth resolve with himself to give him but a lash or two to keep him but a while under the rod if hee take his correction patiently but if he kicke or murmurre hee resolves to hold him down the longer and give him the more stripes Even so our heavenly Father deales with his children the more patiently wee take our affliction the sooner wee are like to come out of it The patient abiding of the righteous shall be gladnesse Prov. 10.28 Trust in the Lord and thou shalt bee safe Hee that beleeveth maketh not haste Esay 28.16 But is content to tarry the Lords leisure Many are ready to compound and indent with God thus long they will wait thus long they will pray and if by that time no helpe nor deliverance come they will give over in their impatient mood as the messenger of the King of Israel said Behold this evill commeth of the Lord should I attend the Lord any longer 2. Kings 6.33 O beware of such thoughts but let thy heart bee in the feare of the Lord continually for surely there is an end and thy hope shall not be cut off Prov. 23 17 18. Wee cannot denie but The hope that is deferred is the fainting of the heart but when the desire commeth it is a tree of life Prov. 13.12 The longer the Lord delaies our deliverance the sweeter will it bee when it comes Wait therefore with patience seeing the Lord by his writing seal and oath hath promised to deliver us out of all our troubles And what hee hath promised hee will most certainly perform for though God may bee angry with us for our sinnes yet he cannot be unfaithfull though he may like Joseph conceale his affection for a time yet impossible it is that he should shut up his compassions and renounce the protection of such as depend upon him or denie deliverance to such as do seek aright unto him Therefore Who is there amongst you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his servant that walketh in darknesse and hath no light let him trust in the Name of the Lord and stay upon his God Esa 50.10 By darknesse is heere understood affliction out of which the Lord will assuredly bring all such as seek unto him and rest upon him Beware of making more haste then good speed to procure freedom from our deliverance out of troubles by unlawfull and sinfull courses Wee rob the Lord of a great deal of honor and our selves of a great deal of comfort which wee should reap by waiting upon the Lord. Too many are ready to thinke that if they have some little time besought the Lord that hee forsooth is bound presently to answer them As those hypocrites Esay 58.3 expostulated the matter with the Lord saying Wherefore have wee fasted and thou seest it not wee have punished our selves and thou regardest it not Some are ready to cry with David How long how long Lord wilt thou forget me for ever how long wilt thou hide thy face from mee Psal 13.1 Againe Have mercy upon mee O Lord for I am weake O Lord heal me for my bones are vexed My soul is also sore troubled but Lord how long wilt thou delay Psal 6.2 3. Beware of measuring the Lord by thine own line and plummet let not thy carnall reason or fleshly wisdom seem to direct or limit Gods Providence thou maiest not joyn thine own fantasies to Gods will but what thou seekest at his hands thou must commend it to his good pleasure without saying to thy selfe Let it be thus or so God doth many times delay his children and not by and by afford them that helpe and comfort which he intendeth them yea sometimes he suffers them to be ready to sink before he saves them As he dealt with his Disciples who were tossed up and down of the waves the ship reeling too and fro and ready to be overwhelmed before hee would awake and bid the tempest be still yet when he saw time hee rebuked the winde and seas and delivered his Disciples from their danger and feare Know and beleeve that the measure and issue of any tentation belongeth unto God Therefore howsoever the case standeth with thee expostulate not with God entertain no hard conceits of him The Lord in wisdom may delay our deliverance out of affliction because haply hee sees that it hath not as yet throughly wrought upon us nor done us that good he intendeth us Do Goldsmiths use to take their mettall out of the fornace before it be fined from the drosse There be some kind of plaisters applied to the bellies of children which will sticke fast so long as the wormes bee alive but if the bed of them be broken and they killed the plaister will fall off and so of many sores If affliction still cleave unto thee it is because sinne is not yet killed in thee This plaister lieth on us no longer then till the sore be whole and the disease be cured in us It may be the Lord sees wee are not fit for deliverance wee would too quickly forget the rod and return to our own byas if hee should by and by ease us as soon as wee cry unto him It may be the Lord sees wee would not be thankfull enough for deliverance if it should bee granted upon the first request Things lightly attained unto are oft times slightly regarded Whereas those things which we get through the pikes wee prize at a high rate Therefore thou forgettest thy selfe and the Word of truth in saying God hath forgotten to be mercifull and gracious because he doth not by and by answere thee Can a woman forget her childe and not have compassion on the son of her wombe Peradventure there may bee some such unnaturall monsters that cast off all naturall affection and lay violent hands upon their children but though they forget yet will I not forget thee saith the Lord and for assurance hereof Behold I have graven thee upon the palmes of my hands Esay 49.15 16. When wee are afraid wee shall forget a thing we tye a thred about our finger for our better remembring thereof but when wee tie threds upon both hands wee then make sure wee will not forget it thus doth the Lord set down his children in the palmes of both hands that they may not be forgotten Therefore still wait and deliverance will come when thou dost least think of it Object I have no hope I cannot thinke I shall be delivered Answ Gods thoughts are not your thoughts Esay 55.8 You know your own thoughts you know not Gods Jerem. 29.11 I know the thoughts that I thinke towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evill to give you an expected end Object But I see no way no
of his deare Sonne Is any man so mindfull and carefull of keeping covenant and promise as the Lord Is any so able to make good his word as God Tricks of Law and the wilie subtilties of mans braine are oft occasions of frustrating promises made betwixt man and man but there is no wisedom neither understanding nor councell against the Lord Prov. 21.30 God is not as man that hee should lye neither as the sonne of man that he should repent hath hee said and shall he not do it hath hee spoken and shall hee not accomplish it Numb 23.19 God is so faithfull of his Word that nothing is able to make him goe back or to falsify his promise Gods Word shal stand when Heaven and Earth shall fall To mistrust Gods promise is to question whether there be a God or no. For either to deny or doubt of his truth and fidelity is to deny or doubt him to bee God Every honest man scandeth upon his credit for his credits sake he dares not eate his word hee keepeth promise though it bee to his own losse and hindrance How much more will the Lord who is jealous of his glory bee carefull to make good whatsoever hee hath said What greater indignity can bee offered to an honest and godly man then to question the truth of his word What greater dishonor can be unto the Lord then to call into question his truth which wee do when wee either say or thinke hee loves us not in afflicting of us Howsoever crosses and afflictions do oft times present themselves to the apprehension of carnal men with much terorr horror yet even in the very bitternesse and extremity of them thou by the helpe of faith maist draw a great deal of joy and comfort from them if thou wouldst fix thy minde upon such places and promises as these are Isa 43.2 and 63.8 Rom. 8.28 2. Cor. 4.17 Heb. 12.6 A patient submission to Gods will and a perswasion of his love in correcting of us is an infallible evidence that thou art a sonne and not a bastard Is there not more sweetnesse in those afflictions which are evidences of Gods love tokens that thou art in the right way to Heaven then in outward ease worldy pleasures and carnall liberty which clearly demonstrate to thy conscience that thou art in the broad way to Hell hence it was that the Apostls rejoyced when they were beaten That they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for the name of Christ Act. 5.41 Nay all the scorne and contempt all the contumelious reproaches which the world shall spit out at thee do crown thy head and therefore should fill thy heart with aboundance of glory blessednesse and joy If ye be reproched for the name of Christ happy are ye for the spirit of glory of God resteth upon you 1. Pet. 4.14 Schoffes spitefull and taunting speeches odious nick-names and lying imputations cast upon thee by those whose tongues cut like sharpe raisors are but so many honorable badges of thy profession and Christian resolution of standing for Christ his truth and shall pull down a blessing upon thee Blessed are ye when men revile you and persecute you and say all evill against you for my sake rejoyce and be glad for great is your reward in Heaven Mat. 5.11 12. I define to beate this mile home to the head therfore I tarry the longer upon this use for if we could but bee thorowlie perswaded of this truth that God loveth us in that he correcteth us all differences betwixt the Lord and us about affliction would bee at an end and our sorrow would be turned into joy and rejoycing in tribulation Rom. 5.3 our unquietnesse would bee turned into patience our lumpishnesse into cheerfulnesse and our murmurring into thankfullnesse Therefore I would have you know that the Devill our adversary hath not a more forcible engine or any more cunning stratageme to batter our peace and patience and so to draw away our hearts from resting upon God in the time of our afflictiō then to make us to question Gods love and so to mistrust his truth Who did ever trust in the Lord and was deceived Our Fathers saith David trusted in thee they trusted thou didst deliver them they called upon thee and were delivered they trusted in thee and were not confounded Psal 22.4 5. Whereupon David praies My God I trust in thee let mee not bee confounded so all that hope in thee shall not bee ashamed Psalme 25.2 3. And was the Lord the God of David only Is he not also their God that do put their trust in his goodnesse and mercy Is Gods love and kindnesse his mercy and goodnesse lesse unto his people now then it was to those of old Or is the Lord more feeble and lesse able to helpe and do good to us then to our fathers before us No no hee is the Ancient of dayes Dan. 7.22 the same God now that ever hee was as able and as willing now to do good to those that beleeve in him as he hath beene of old Therefore in all thine afflictions learne to judge of and to measure Gods love by his word not by thy present feeling and comfort Let thine eye bee upon that love which will one day change thy estate and give thee a plentifull croppe of good out of this sorrowfull seed time of affliction Should any husbandman measure his estate and wealth by his seed time there were poore comfort to bee found for doth hee not weary his body through painfull toile and labor doth hee not empty his store and cast away his corne out of his hand but when hee doth consider that without a seed time there is no possibility of an harvest and withall that Hee that soweth liberally shall reape liberally 2. Cor. 9.6 He is then contented both with his paines and expences Even so if our eyes bee so fixed upon our present afflictions that wee see not the future good which through the love of God unto us they will bring us wee shal very hardly bee upheld in the time of our affliction but if wee look off the affliction and fasten our eye upon the love of God and that good he will doe us for that evil which we patiently and thankfully sustain how joyfully how contentedly how sweetly may we sit down and blesse God for afflicting of us Object But may some weak beleever object and say I make no question but that God in love doth chasten some of his children but how can I beleeve that my afflictions are tokens of his love when as I find and feele no good that hath come unto me through them nay I feare I am the worse for them for I am now more impatient more uncheerefull and more distrustfull of the love and providence of God then ever I was before Answ To favor thy weaknesse a little let mee tell thee that it may be this is but one of Satans wiles enterprises
personally holy and pure free from all fault without any blot or blemish of iniquitie but hee is holy and unblamable in regard of Gods gracious acceptation of him through Christ as if he had never sinned For you must know that where sinne is pardoned it is purged If thou canst truely mourne for thy sinne thou art forthwith disburdened of the guilt and freed from the eternal punishment of all thy former wickednesse Repentance if it be true doth cast sinne out of the heart and where this is done God laies down all quarels against such a person Therefore nourish no sin abandon it banish it from thee break off thy course of sinne betimes even whiles it is called to day and then Gods countenance will appear friendly comfortable unto thee and thy conscience will be quiet and speak peace unto thee Object This were some comfort if I could beleeve what you say or be able to apply it unto my selfe which I can not doe Answ This indeed is another sore affliction which lies heavie upon the hearts of many of Gods dear children They are for the most part annoyed and pestered with doubttings and unbeliefe The glad tidings of the Gospel some say are too good to be true or if true too good for them to share in And why for them because they say they are such sinners And came not Christ into the World to call sinners yea the greatest sinners such as Manasses and Paul was who acknowledged himselfe to be the chiefe of sinners 1. Tim. 1.15 The greater thy sinnes have been the more thine unworthinesse is the more will the grace of God shine in receiving of thee into grace and mercie Object If it were with me as it is with good people I could beleeve this if there were that grace in mee I perceive to be in others I make no question but God would be good unto me Answ Oh beware of spirituall Symonie Too many thinke that the mercie of God must be purchased by somthing of theirs if they were thus or thus quallified they durst beleeve if they had thus much sanctification they durst hope But these erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the goodnesse of God whose grace is freely bestowed upon all that partake of it Ho every one that thirsteth come yee to the waters and yee that have no silver come buy wine and milk without silver and without money Isa 55.1 In which words all condition of merit on our part is utterly excluded Christ in the Gospel is offered freely unto sinners and there is no more required at our hands but to receive and welcome him being offered freely unto us The water of life is tendered freely to all that desire it I will give to him that is athirst of the well of the water of life freely Revel 21.6 The Spirit and the Bride say Come and let him that is athirst come Revel 22.17 Object But I cannot thirst as I should Answ But hast thou a will Dost thou desire to thirst wouldest thou faine thirst hast thou a will These words are also added to draw on fearfull and doubting sinners and let whosoever will take of the water of life freely Revel 22.17 O sweet words O comfortable words Thou sayest thou wouldst faine have mercy faine have Christ what hinders thee from receiving him from beleeving Heere is a word heere is thy warrant to take Christ Nay thou art peremptorily commanded to beleeve 1. John 3.23 This is then his Commandment that wee beleeve in the namt of his Sonne Jesus Christ Thou hast as good warrant to beleeve the promises and to receive Christ as to love thy neighbor or to absteine from theft murder c. Darest thou kill commit adultrey or steale No. And why so Because these are breaches of Gods Commandment And dost thou not also break Gods Commandment when thou doubtest of his goodnesse when thou beleevest not God commands thee to receive Christ for thy salvation therefore if thou hang back through doubting if thou question Gods truth thou committest a greater sinne then if thou didst break the whol morral law therfore stand not on rhine own termes with God The Lord knew how base unworthy the best of us were when he tendred his Christ unto us The Gospell was to be preached unto every creature and Christ tendred unto every sinner for of what kind soever our sinnes have been the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sinne 1 Jo. 1.7 If thou wilt accept of Christ he will aceept of thee thou hast his word and promise Come unto me all ye that are weary and laden and I will ease you Mat. 11.28 Christ requires no more of thee but to come unto him no more but thy hearts consent to receive him before any other If thou canst but come and desire and take Christ to be thine it is enough for thy happinesse and salvation If thou hast but so much humiliation as may cause thee to abhorre thy selfe and to disclaime thine own worth as dung and dogs meate if thou hast but so much sorrow and heart breaking as may divorce thee from thy sinnes and make thee willing to accept of Christ thou art a happy person How darest thou then stand a loofe upon termes of thine own unworthinesse Is it any other then ingratefull rudenesse to prescribe the Lord upon what termes we shall have his wine and milke when as he bids us come and take it for nothing If any master should call one of his servants unto him and he should draw back and go away saying I am not fine enough to come before thee would this frivolous excuse be sufficient to beare him out in his unmanner like disobedience So when the Lord cals thee to partake of his mercy if thou hangest back because thou art not good enough as thou supposest what dost thou else but slight yea scorne the free grace and undeserved kindnesse of the Lord. Therefore be perswaded to make choice of Christ to be thine which if thou dost I dare assure thee thou art a justified person although thou dost not by and by feele the sweet influence of his grace nor the presence of his spirit perswading thy heart that heaven and salvation are questionlesse thine Object But some will say I have falne off from Christ I have broken that vow and covenant made betwixt us I have not walked so closely with the Lord as is required of me and as I have promised I have abused his love and favor and turned his Grace into wantonnesse nay which is worse my heart hath not melted nor dissolved into teares upon the view of my faylings which makes me feare that the Lord in displeasure hath cast me off and is departed from me Answ If he be so it will be but for a moment to humble thee to see how thou wilt take his absence but whereas thou saist thou hast broken covenant and therfore thinkest that the Lord hath cast thee off know that
and safety Who can say that Abrahams heart at the first smote him not for this evill Yet it is evident that hee fell into the same sinne againe Hee that peruseth the book of the Judges shall find Israel fallen into idolatry and upon correction humbled and penitent and yet afterwards againe and again fallen into the same wickednesse they had formerly repented of Was not Jonas thinke you thorrowly humbled for his sinne of stubbornnesse and disobedience when hee felt the smart of it in the Whales belly yet for all this when he saw the Lord so mercifull as to spare Ninivie upon her humiliation and repentance how angry was he with God justifying his former sinne which in effect and before God was all one to have committed the same sinne againe yet the Lord forgave these and received them againe to mercie Doth not the Lord enjoyne us to forgive our brother offending us daily even unto Seventy times seven times if hee repent Matth. 18.22 And will the Lord enjoyn us that act of mercie and compassion wherein himselfe will not be exemplar unto us Is there any drop of pittie or kindnesse in us which comes not out of that bottomlesse sea of love and mercie in the Lord if wee must forgive our brother so many times in the day no doubt but the Lord in whom is the fulnesse of goodnesse and compassion will receive humbled sinners as often as they returne unto him There is no sinne but blasphemie against the holy Ghost which upon repentance shall not be pardoned If residnation and relapsing into the same sinne may bee repented of questionlesse it may it shall be pardoned at Gods hand And whereas some may think that true grace will preserve any from falling into the same sinne againe whereof hee hath formerly repented it is a fond error for if the Lord leave any unto themselves they will be as ready nay more ready to fall into the old sin then into a new the disposition and naturall temper being more inclinable to that evill then any other and Satan knowing which way the poore sinner hath been most foiled will that way most strongly againe assault him It is therefore a binding of the Lords hands a confining and limiting of his boundlesse mercie and compassion yea an undervalewing of the all-sufficiencie of Christ his merit and passion to say that relapsing into former sinnes is a thing unpardonable or that a person so offending was never in the state of grace or can be a true member of the Lord Christ The covenant of grace excludes none but impenitent and unbeleeving persons Truth it is that the burnt child dreads the fire and it is not an ordinary thing for the childe of God in the state of grace to fall back againe to his old byas but that it is not possible for him it God leave him so to fall or that true grace will not admit of any such falls is more then can be warranted or proved by the Word of God I speak not this God knowes to countenance or bolster any in their sinne but partly to magnifie the boundlesse and unlimited patience and mercy of our good God and partly to underlay and comfort that poore afflicted soul wounded conscience who through his owne pride selfe confidence or securitie and Satans pollicie hath been againe intangled in that snare out of which by former repentance hee hath been delivered This is the childrens bread it belongs not unto dogs Impudent and impenitent sinners can claim no interest in this comfort it is baulme to heale onely wounded consciences whom I would not have to be so strongly deluded by satan as to be beat off from repentance and the throne of grace or to think that they never had any true grace or that their former repentance was ever sound because old sores are againe broke out in them they have relapsed into old sinnes The worke of grace doth not wholly take away all sinne nor free us from it but only weakens it and workes the heart to a hatred and detestation of it And know that if thy sinne when thou wert Gods enemie could not prevent his love much lesse shall it now thou art reconciled Object But by my relapsing I have made the Lord such a gracelesse requitall of his former love and kindnesse as I know not how to look him in the face againe yea I begin to feare I shall never againe recover that which I have so wretchedly lost Answ I pitie thee Doth thy heart faint hath thy faith lost its former feeling or working in thee dost thou now behold Gods angry countenance bent against thee hath the Lord as thou concievest set thee up as a spectacle for men and Angels to wonder at throw thy self prosttate at Gods feet let not thy soul leave cleaving to the dust never leave knocking at the dore of his goodnesse and compassion intreat him to look upon thee a poore confounded wretch beseech him to behold thee in the face of Christ tell him here lyes a miserable caitiffe a forlorn creature a wounded and forsaken sinner one that resolves to lye and dye at his feet one that will set down at the threshold of his tender mercyes and never depart without some almes some crums of mercy to revive and refresh thy languishing soul withall and my life for thine in due time the Lord will satiate thy heart with comfortable tydings from Heaven of his reconciliation and of the pardon and forgivenesse of all thy sinnes Object There were some hope if I had not gon on so long in my sinne as I have done there was a time I am perswaded when I was capable of mercy but that time I feare is gon and past Gods mercy is out of date with me and therefore I am undone for ever Answ No no the Lord waites that he may have mercy upon thee and therefore will he be exalted that he may have compassion upon you Isa 30.18 The Lord hath proclamed himself to be abundant in goodnesse reserving mercy for thousands Exod. 34.6 7. Hee hath mercy in store for thee as well as for others if thou canst truly repent thee of thy former wickednesse The Lord forgiveth iniquity transgression and sinne Ez. 34.7 It would highly derogate from the Lords power from his all-sufficiencie and boundlesse goodnesse and mercy it he should not forgive capitall and foul sinnes as well as petty and small sinnes Consider what the Lord hath promised Ezek. 18.21 22. None of all his transgressions shall be mentioned And againe verse 23. Hath the Lord any desire thou shouldest perish or shalt thou not live if thou returne from thine owne wayes It is not any sinne but the love of sinne and the going on in sinne that seperates betwixt God and a poore sinner Now then cheer up thy drooping spirits stand it out no longer against the Lord and his goodnesse lay downe not only thy weapons of disobedience but also all carnall reasonings captivate thy will
A CORDIALL FOR THE AFFLICTED Touching The Necessitie and Utilitie of Afflictions Proving unto us The happinesse of those that thankfully receive them AND The misery of all that want them or profit not by them By A. HARSNET B. D. and Minister of Gods Word at Cranham in Essex The Second Edition enlarged with direction touching Spirituall Afflictions LONDON Printed by Ric. Hodgkinsonne for Ph. Stephnes and Chr. Meridith at the Golden Lion in Pauls Churchyard 1638. TO THE HONOrable Lady the Lady JOHAN BARRINGTON The Wife of that Noble and renowned Sr. FRANCIS BARRINGTON late of Barrington Hall and to the Right Worshipfull The Lady MARY EDEN the Wife of Sr. THOMAS EDEN late of Ballingdon Hall Much honored Ladies IT is too true a saying that Greatnes and Goodnesse seldom go together for not many mighty not many noble are called Yet blessed be God for his mercies to you-wards wee finde both of these in both of you For your Greatnesse next under God yee are beholding unto your Parents out of whose loynes you came For your Goodnesse yee are in in some measure beholding unto Affliction by which The Lord hath done you good so as I make no question but that ye may both of you say with David It is good for mee that I have beene afflicted Hereupon worthy Ladies I have adventured to put forth this small Treatise touching the Necessitie and utility of Affliction under your Ladiships names and Patronage joyning you both together because God hath already conjoyned you so neere in affinity by the marriage of your Pious and Religious children beseeching your Ladyships to accept of these my poore labors being such as tend to the furtherance and increase of your comfort in present or future trials For allbeit yee bee good proficients in the School of Affliction Yet peradventure yee may have forgotten some good lessons which Affliction hath formerly taught you or else have not attained as yet to that good wherein it may hereafter instruct you To help you in either or both of these be pleased I heartily beseech your Ladiships seriously to peruse what is here tendered unto you and then I doubt not but by Gods blessing yee shall be able to make that good use of Affliction that yee shall not only blesse God the Father of mercies and God of all comfort who as hee hath afflicted so hath hee comforted you in all your tribulations but yee shall also be able to comfort others which are in Affliction by the cōfort wherewith yee your selves have been comforted of God Which fruit that yee may reape I shall sow my Prayers before throne of Grace and for ever rest your Ladyships to be commanded in the Lord AD. HARSNET Cranham TO THE CHRIstian Reader Increase of Faith Hope and Patience SVch is our blindnesse and ignorance that wee are too ready to judg amisse of our selves as may appeare by two extreames into which the most runne The one is self-conceitednesse or flattering our selves in and about our spirituall estate perswading our selves that wee are in the estate of Grace and that wee have the love and favor of God when as it is neither so nor so For the redressing of which mischiefe I have heretofore undertaken the discoverie of true and sound grace from false counterfeit that so we may no longer be deluded by an overweening of our selves and too high an opinion of our goodnesse as if we were that which wee are not or were not that which wee are The other extream is a diffidence and distrust of Gods love and our own happines through the sense and smart of some troubles and afflictions wherewith it pleaseth the Lord in mercy and wisdom to exercise and trie us Whence it commeth to passe that too many of Gods deere ones are ready to cēsure themselves as out-casts or at the best as a people but meanly beloved or regarded of God in that they are so sorely afflicted For the healing of which error that there may be no mistaking that we neither charge the Lord with any want of love to us ward or hard dealing with us in afflicting of us nor surcharge our selves with unnecssary needles feares and cares nor yet causelesly increase our griefe by adding of more sorrow to our affliction I have now undertaken this Treatise Wherein my desire and ayme is to minister some comfort to such as are in affliction that so they may not cast off their hope of hapines in Heaven because they are exercised with judgments upon earth but rather beleeve that the Lord it now refining and pollishing them that so they may bee the fitter for that glory which is prepared for thē I know it is a hard thing to obey in suffering yet because it is that which maketh for our good we should with the more willingnes and cheerfulnes undergo whatsoever afflictiōs it shal please the Lord to exercise us with If our afflictions brought God out of love with us or us more in love with that which God hates and is hurtfull unto us or if our afflictions were sent unto us as curses wee had great cause to mourn in them but seeing they make so much for our good being sanctified unto us and the word of truth telleth us that wee are blessed in thē have wee not great cause to bee thankfull to God for them the Lord sees how ready we are to plunge our selves into perils if we be but a while exempted from afflictions therefore that wee may not be too bold with sin the Lord wil have us to fall into affliction least being let alone wee fall into condemnation For where God is most silent in threatning and most patient in sparing there is he most inflamed with anger and purpose of revenge And seeing we are willing to receive being sick or diseased any medicine from the hand of him that can truely say probatum est good experience hath been made of the worth working of it let my counsel good reader be acceptable unto thee give me leave to tell thee how much good thou maist gain by afflictiō if through thine unbelief and impatience thou doest not put it from thee I assure thee by good experience that howsoever afflictiō be untoothsome and unpleasing to the flesh it is most soveraign and profitable unto the soul as in the Treatise following I have made plaine unto thee Now if the stile and phrase dislike any because it is so plain and homelike let him know that I prepared this provision for poore and hungry souls unto whom course mean things are welcome and bitter things are sweet not for queasie and full stomacks which despise an hony-combe He that is falne into a pit wil refuse no hand that may help him out of it He that hath a wound in his body will be glad of any plaister that may heal or ease him Accept then of these my poore labors which I desire may be as a hand to help thee out of affliction
The love of God and his truth and the hatred of every evill which tendeth to the dishonour of God or to the clouding or eclisping of his truth against which evils when the childe of GOD shall any way bestirre himself hee is said to be zealous for the Lord. So that to be zealous is to shew love to God and hatred of error and false wayes to be grieved at those things which may dishonour God or crosse his truth to oppose them with might and main and to the utmost of our power to resist them And amend or repent These words have relation to their Lukewarmnesse The Lord will have them to leave off their Lukewarmnesse to repent them of their sinfull temper being negligent and carelesse in good duties and promoting the glory of God Object But it may be demanded why the Lord doth here put zeal before repentance when as zeal is by Paul set down as a fruit and effect of repentance For writing unto the penitent Corinthians 2. Cor. 7.11 He saith Behold this thing that you have been godly sorry what care it hath wrought in you yea what zeal making zeal an effect of repentance Answ The meaning of the Lord in this place is to exhort the Laodiceans to the practice of that duty which they had altogether neglected being a lukewarme a remisse and carelesse people Therefore having before reproved them for their sinne of Lukewarmnesse he doth now exhort them to be zealous and not only so but to repent them of their former remisnesse The words of the verse may be thus metaphrased Those that are my dearest children my best beloved I do rebuke and convince of their sinnes yea as a loving father tendering their good I do in mercy correct and chastise them therefore see you be not so Lukewarme as heretofore you have been but shew more love to mee and my word and more hatred to error and evill wayes be grieved and sorry for your olde courses and amend your lives Come wee now to the raysing of some Instructions out of the words In that the Lord telleth the Laodiceans that he rebuketh and chasteneth as many as he loveth wee may in the first place from hence learn that None no not the best of Gods dear children are without their trials afflictions Man is born unto trouble as the sparkes flie upward Job 5.1 Affliction is the lot and portion of all Gods children It was a cup which Almighty God did temper and put into the hands of Christ his best beloved Sonne Shall I not drink of the cup which my father hath given me John 18.11 And in this cup Christ will have all his members to pledg him as appeareth Mat 20.23 Ye shall drink indeed of my cup and be baptized with the baptisme that I am baptized with Hence it is that Tryals and afflictions are by Paul called the marks of the Lord Jesus Gal. 6.17 I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus The crosse is Christ his badge and cognizance If any man will be my follower let him denie himself and take up his crosse daily and follow me Luke 9.23 The way wherein Christ went to glory was affliction and in this path all that shall be glorified with him must foot it after him for Acts. 14.22 Thorow many afflictions wee must enter into tho Kingdom of God The way to heaven and happinesse is not strewed with rushes or set with violets and roses but with briars and thorns it is not a milky but a thorny way not a faire broad smooth and easie but a narrow cragged crooked and crosse way through many difficulties and troubles As the children of Israel were evill intreated in Egypt groaned under heavy burdens sighed and cried for their bondage before they could be possessed of that land which flowed with milk and hony so must we know what troubles and sorrows mean before we come at our place of rest our spirituall and Heavenly Canaan True it is that some have but a few tryals in comparison of others yet the most have many and the best yea all have some for all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution 2. Tim. 3.12 Do you desire examples for the better setling and confirming you in the trueth of this point Sooner may I find where to begin then where or how to make an end therefore out of an heap and a cloud of witnesses I will take but an handfull some few drops Job was a holy man as the Lord himself hath witnessed of him Job 1.8 An upright and just man one that feared God and eschewed evill Yet how great were his tryals how sharp and bitter were his afflictions Stript of all his outward means brought unto a morsell of bread bereaved at one time of all his children and that by sudden death yea whiles they were eating and drinking not having it may be breathing time to call and cry for mercy Wee should take it to be a heavy judgement and think that the Lord were highly displeased with us if out of ten children some two or three of them should be made away by an untimely and sudden death but to be at one blow bereaved of all our children to lose ten at one clap where is the man that would lay his hand upon his mouth in so great a tentation and not murmurre against the Lord Besides the Lord came neerer to Job fighting against him with many personall terrors afflicting his body with aches and botches vexing his soul in the day time either with the words of a foolish woman his wife or with the biting and taunting speeches of some which came to visit him whereas in truth like miserable comforters Job 16.2 they came to vex and gall him And in the night time how was he tumbled and tossed up and down Job 7.4 for when he said My couch shall relieve me and my bed shall bring mee comfort then was hee feared with dreams and astonished with visions Job 7.13.14 So that he was a burthen to himself grew weary of his life cursing the day wherein he was born wishing that he had died in his birth that he might not have lived to see and feel the miseries and sorrows which he sustained David also was a man after Gods own heart 1. Sam. 13.14 Yet how sorely did the Lord almost all his life time exercise and afflict him Hee was daily punished and chastned every morning Psal 73.14 So as he roared day and night through extremity of grief his bones were consumed with sorrow and his moysture was like the drought in summer Betrayed by his false-hearted friends persecuted and pursued from place to place by Saul 1. Sam. 26.20 As one would hunt a partridge in the mountains And which went neerer him then any other troubles his sins excepted what heart-breaking sorrows did he sustain through the wickednesse of his children defiling each other murdering each other yea and most unnaturally seeking to depose him