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A31037 The Christian temper, or, A discourse concerning the nature and properties of the graces of sanctification written for help in self-examination and holy living / by John Barret ... Barret, John, 1631-1713. 1678 (1678) Wing B907; ESTC R20482 253,096 440

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hope for the Grace that is to be brought unto them at the Revelation of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.13 They are to look for the Mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto Eternal Life Jud. v. 21. They that are highly conceited of themselves and their own works build on a sandy foundation lean on a roten prop. And yet there is preparing Grace such as God hath made the condition of the Promise a futable qualification and disposition of the subject in some measure fitting for the Mercy promised the Good to be received And for any to look for the Good promised without looking after that which God hath made the Condition in the Promise this is but to build Castles in the Air this may not be called Hope but Presumption I pray observe it to hope in the Mercy of God through the Merits of Christ quite over-looking the way and method wherein not looking after the condition upon which the Mercy hoped for is promised this is not sound Hope in God it is a rash and false Hope It has no bottom in the Word 4. True Hope as it is an Hope in God so it is an hoping for him A Believers Hope looks chiefly at God as the best Object he can hope for as he is the chiefest Good As he acteth for God and suffers for God so he longeth waiteth hopeth for God And methinks that expression Act. 24.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 having Hope towards God looks this way So when God is said to be his Peoples Hope In Psal Qui habitat Ser. 9. As Bernard takes it Convenientiùs siquidem Spes nostra dicitur quod speramus quàm in quo speramus He is our Hope whom we hope for As Christ is called our Hope The enjoyment of God in Christ is the top of a Believer's hopes As the Psalmist said Psal 73.25 Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none upon the Earth that I desire besides thee The Hope of others useth not to rise so high Their desires indeed are not this way Gold is the Worldling's Hope rather than God The praise of Men is the Hypocrites Hope rather than the Favour and Fruition of God The Heaven that carnal unsanctified Hearts dream of and hope for is not the true Happiness in a full Conformity to God and full Fruition of him but an imaginary Happiness in a meer freedom from such Miseries as they are sensible of here and a Life of perpetual ease and pleasure abstracted from the other 5. Sound Hope in God is accompanied with an holy fear of him Psal 33.18 Behold the Eye of the Lord is upon them that fear him upon them that hope in his Mercy Psal 147.11 The Lord takes pleasure in them None hope aright in his Mercy but such as truly fear him Psal 118.4 Let them that fear the Lord say that his Mercy endureth for ever Luke 1.50 His Mercy is on them that fear him from Generation to Generation Psal 85.9 Surely his Salvation is nigh them that fear him But such as are void of God's Fear are without any true solid ground of Hope in their present State Some as Dr. Preston noteth have neither Faith Hope nor Fear as Atheists others have some Fear but no Hope as Devils and desperate Men others have some Hope but no Fear as presumptuous Men. But they that have Hope and Fear mingled with it may rather hope that their Hope is sound 6. Sound Hope is accompanied with sound Obedience Psal 119.6 Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect unto all thy Commandments And ver 80. Let my heart be sound in thy Statutes that I be not ashamed And ver 166. Lord I have hoped for thy Salvation and done thy Commandments Heb. 10.35 36. Cast not away your Confidence that after ye have done the Will of God ye might receive the Promise But it is a vain Confidence to expect the good of the Promise without observing the Command There is no peace to the Wicked That is a false Hope which is maintained with a plain neglect of Duty and a bold adventuring upon Sin Prov. 10.28 The hope of the Righteous shall be Gladness But the expectation of the Wicked shall perish 7. True Hope is not maintained but by Diligence and Watchfulness It is contrary to Negligence and Security 1 Pet. 1.13 Wherefore gird up the loins of your Mind be sober and hope to the end or hope perfectly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Integre Hope soundly A dull stupifying Hope such Hope as inclines to a drowsie frame is not a sound Hope neither will it hold long Such as are lulled asleep with their Hopes shall be awaked again with Terrors True Hope is a Lively Hope 1 Pet. 1.3 A dead Man in true account is not a Man So a dead Hope is not true Hope The Devil never envies Men such Hope as makes them remiss and careless 8. A true Hope of Happiness is a great help to a progress in Grace and Holiness Though Hope is compared to an Anchor that stays the Ship yet here Non remorae sed calcaris instar est It is no remora but a spur in a way of Duty As the Apostle exhorteth 2 Cor. 7.1 Having therefore these Promises dearly Beloved let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of Flesh and Spirit perfecting Holiness in the fear of God And the Apostle John lays down this Note most plainly 1 John 3.3 Every man that hath this Hope in him purifieth himself even as he is pure A lively Hope of Heaven will quicken us in Heavens way That we shall follow after Holiness that we may be made meet for the Inheritance of the Saints in light True Hope promotes Holiness 9. Sound Hope produces Patience As we read of Patience of Hope 1 Thess 1.3 Remembring without ceasing your Patience of Hope Though we read of Patience working Experience Perer. in Pol. Synops and Experience Hope Rom. 5.4 yet as one no teth Spes patientem praecedit sed spem hîc vocat Spei robur c. Hope precedes Patience but here he speaks of Hope improved and grown up Patience and Experience add to the strength and firmness of Hope But without Hope Patience could not subsist There is Patience in expecting future good and happiness Rom. 8.25 And this is as I may say the elicit act of Christian Hope Again there is Patience in bearing present evils and miseries and this is as it were the imperate Act of Hope That is not a good Hope which makes us no fitter to bear evils here As Hope may be called the Daughter of Faith so Patience the Daughter of Hope Hope is compared to an Helmet 1 Thess 5.8 And for an Helmet the Hope of Salvation This would help on to bear furious blows Again it is compared to an Anchor Heb. 6.19 which Hope we have as an Anchor of the Soul both sure and steadfast This Anchor would stay one in tempestuous Waves and boistrous Storms 10. Sound
they should tell them such things as they have no mind to hear or know of themselves are not likely to have any other than a false Peace and false Joy 5. Spiritual Joy useth to come in in a way of Prayer Therefore in the want of it David betook himself to earnest Prayer Psal 51.8 12. Make me to hear Joy and Gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce Restore unto me the Joy of thy Salvation Yea he pleads this as an Argument with God Psal 86.4 Rejoyce the Soul of thy Servant for unto thee O Lord do I lift up my Soul So he pleads it for others Psal 105.3 Let the Heart of them rejoyce that seek the Lord. If it be not rather a call to such to rejoyce and glory in him This advice and counsel Christ gave his dear Disciples Joh. 16.24 Ask and you shall receive that your Joy may be full Christians that are most Prayerful are in the most hopeful way to be full of Joy too But such as neglect and despise Prayer their Joy may well be questioned There is just cause to fear such come not honestly by it who count not such Mercies worth asking who have it without begging for 6. Another ordinary means of Spiritual Joy is attendance on God's Ordinances Usually it is in this way that it is given in or increased And therefore Ordinances have been a great Joy and comfort to the Faithful As the Psalmist was glad when he thought of going into the House of the Lord Psal 122.1 So he rejoiceth at the Word as one that findeth great spoil Psal 119.126 So the Word to Jeremiah was the Joy and rejoicing of his Heart Jer. 15.16 No wonder that Ordinances are a matter of Joy to the Faithful which are an ordinary means of the furtherance of their Joy Isa 56.6 7. There God promiseth that those who joyn themselves to the Lord to serve him and keep the Sabboth from polluting it shall be made joyful in the House of Prayer Isa 12.3 With Joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of Salvation Which may be applied to God's Ordinances as well as to Promises They are breasts of Consolation too As here we may apply that Isa 66.11 That ye may suck and be satisfied with the breasts of her Consolations c. This way indeed we might find comfort in Ordinances if we come a thirst to them come with an appetite and put forth the strength of our affections in them if we draw hard at these Wells and suck at these Breasts But they that cry down Ordinances as empty Forms and dry Breasts they that count themselves above Ordinances what ever raptures of Joy they may seem to have we have cause to think they are only sporting themselves with their own deceivings Some have cast off Prayer and giving of Thanks some despise Prophesyings slight and turn their backs on the Ministry of the Word and yet pretend to rejoyce evermore But certainly the Apostle Paul was not of their way see 1 Thes 5.16 17 18 20. And the Joy of the Primitive Christians came in another way Act. 2.42 46. Some again are full of confidence because they frequent God's Worship and Ordinances like those that cryed The Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord. But there is little comfort to be taken in an outward attendance on Ordinances without a Spiritual improvement of them Yea some that may fall away have a taste of the good Word of God Heb. 6.5 6. The stony-ground Hearers received the Word with Joy Mat. 13.20 Herod heard John Baptist gladly Mar. 6.20 The unbelieving Jews some of them for a season rejoiced in the Light of John's Ministry Joh. 5.35 Some are taken with a Sermon sometimes for the comfortable matter of it or for the Abilities of the Preacher his eloquent utterance or affectionate delivery c. who yet are very far from that Spiritual delight upright ones find in it These are not so taken with the Sound as with the Power of it They are best pleased with the Word when it meets with their Corruptions and does greatest execution on them when they have not only their affections moved in the present hearing of the Word but their Hearts established by it when they can find their Souls more quickened and Grace actuated and increased by it 7. Spiritual Joy hath God for its cheif ultimate term and Object As it is called the Joy of the Lord Neh. 8.10 The Joy of the Lord non activè sed passivè Joy in him How oft are we called to rejoice in the Lord As the Psalmist called God his exceeding Joy Psal 43.4 Vnto God my exceeding Joy or the gladness of my Joy or my Joy and exultation Psal 9.2 I will be glad and rejoice in thee Act. 2.28 Thou shalt make me full of Joy with thy Countenance So a gracious Soul can greatly rejoice if he has a sense of God's presence notwithstanding the absence of creature-comforts Hab. 3.18 Although the Fig-tree blosom not c. Isa 61.10 I will greatly rejoice in the Lord my Soul shall be joyful in my God Now hence it appears that such as have not come to place their cheif delight and happiness in God are strangers to Spiritual Joy 8. Spiritual Joy is also a rejoycing in Christ Jesus As he is the cheif and principal means to bring us to God Rom. 5. We Joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ by whom we have now received the atonement The faithful are described to be such as worship God in the Spirit and rejoice in Christ Jesus and have no confidence in the Flesh Phil. 3.3 As he rejoiced who had found the hid treasure Mat. 13.44 So do Believers rejoice having found Christ that rich Treasure and Pearl of greatest price 1 Pet. 1.8 In whom believing ye rejoice with Joy unspeakable and full of Glory Or if sometimes they walk heavily 't is because they discern not their interest in him or find not his presence with them as their Souls desire We can have no ground of rejoycing in God but through Jesus Christ out of whom he is a consuming Fire to Sinners Therefore they that make no account of Christ that see not their need of him their misery without him that rejoice in sparks of their own kindling not regarding the Son of Righteousness have no sound Joy 9. That is Spiritual Joy when we are most taken with Spiritual Mercies That is Joy in the ●oly Ghost when we rejoice more in any experience of the gracious workings of God's Spirit in us than in all outward earthly enjoyments Or when we rejoice in outward Mercies upon a Spiritual account When we see them Blessings indeed and sanctified to us When they steal not away our Heart from but draw them nearer to God When they are a means of increasing our Love to God of strengthening and encouraging our trust and dependance on him of engaging us to serve him with greater chearfulness
others God's Fear and to promote it in others As Abraham that feared God would teach his Children and his Houshold after him to keep the way of the Lord. As the Psalmist Psal 34.11 Come ye Children hearken unto me I will teach you the Fear of the Lord. As he took up his fellow Luk. 23.40 Dost not thou fear God So if we have the Fear of God we shall desire to establish and confirm others in his Fear Mal. 3.16 Then they that feared the Lord spake often one to another They thought on God's Name still and would be speaking for God and his ways even then when the mouth of Blasphemy was most open against him They would be confirming one another in the belief of God's Providence Justice Goodness Truth and Faithfulness how much soever wicked Atheists disputed and denied them Thus they that are acquainted with the true Fear of God are real Friends to it would promote it in others what they can 10. If we have the Fear of God we are for making progress in Holiness The true Fear of God as it opposeth all Sin it will be quickning unto and in every Duty and will befriend every Grace And that is right indeed when we are perfecting Holiness in the Fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 though here it be not fully perfected So much of the Effects of God's Fear 5. True Fear may be known by the Concomitants of it by its Companions Though I shall but touch on a few of these very briefly 1. When Fear and Faith go together that 's right As we read of Noah's Faith and Fear Heb. 11.7 Psal 15.11 Ye that fear the Lord trust in the Lord. Psal 33.18 Behold the eyes of the Lord are on them that fear him upon them that hope in his Mercy And the Lord takes pleasure in such Psal 147.11 That is not a right Fear which is the Van-guard of Horrour and Despair A fear of Diffidence is no blessed thing Though it's true some degrees of this may be with true Faith and Fear That of the Psalmist Psal 101.1 I will sing of Mercy and Judgment The Chaldee Paraphrase hath thus If thou dealest mercifully with me if thou dost Judgment with me for all I will sing Praise And so some take it thus I will not presume of thy Mercy so as not to fear thy Judgment nor so fear thy Judgment as to despair of thy Mercy Which I offer but as an Allusion not as the Sense 2. When Fear and Godly Sorrow go together that 's right The true Fear of God is seated in a poor and contrite spirit Isa 66.2 Godly Fear and Godly Sorrow are undivided Companions 2 Cor. 7.11 Behold this self-same thing that ye sorrowed after a godly sort what carefulness it wrought in you yea what fear Which Text seems to make Fear the Daughter of Repentance or Godly Sorrow And like Naomi and Ruth they never part There is a phrase Isa 63.17 Why hast thou hardned our hearts from thy Fear Which implieth so much that an Heart which is hardned is no-way disposed to his Fear So Prov. 28.14 Happy is the Man that feareth alway but he that hardneth his heart shall fall into mischief Where we see he that hardneth his heart is opposed to the Man that feareth with a blessed Fear 3. When Fear and Love go together that 's right When these go hand in hand it is certainly a filial fear But no doubt that is a sinful fear which drives souls from God which is contrary to the Love of God O dread such Fear 4. How comfortable is it when Fear and Joy in the Lord go together Though I must confess all that fear God cannot find this Joy There are that fear the Lord and that yet walk in darkness Isa 50.10 But as the most High is to be feared we should rejoice in his Highness too As those good Women who came to seek Jesus departed from the Sepulchre with fear and great joy Mat. 28.8 It is an happy thing indeed when our fear of the Lord is joyned with spiritual delight in him and his service Psal 2.11 Serve the Lord with fear and rejoice with trembling So let us labour to be like those Act. 9.31 that walked in the Fear of the Lord and in the Comfort of the Holy Ghost Of Humility 1 PET. 5.5 And be clothed with Humility for God resisteth the Proud and giveth Grace to the Humble HUmility is a Christian's Livery This Clothing every Christian must put on and wear must never put off Without this our great Lord and Master will not know us will not own us for his He beholds the proud a far off Humility is as the ground-work both of Grace and Happiness Mat. 5.3 Blessed are the poor in spirit that is the humble in spirit It is the first of the Beatitudes laid as the foundation of the rest As it is from poverty and humility in spirit that we are put upon spiritual mourning It is this that causeth a spiritual hungring It is this that meekeneth and softeneth the heart towards others that makes peaceable and makes patient under Sufferings This is a preservative of holiness and purity Pride is supposed to be the special sin that cast the Angels out of Heaven That text 1 Tim. 3.6 seems to hint so much that * Fugite superbiam fratres mei quaeso mul tum fugite Initium omnis peccati Superbia quae tam velociter ipsum quoque Syderibus cunctis clarius micantem aeternâ caligine obtnebravit Luciferum I quae non modo Angelum sed Angelcrum primum in Diabolum commutavit Bern. de Adv. Dom. Serm. 1. Pride was the condemnation of the Devil the cause of his condemnation And Pride was evident in Man's first defection from God Man fell by his Pride affecting to be as God And certainly Humility is necessary to his recovery As God created the World of nothing when he createth us again he brings us to a sense of our own emptiness and nothingness Humility is both a Grace and a Vessel a receptacle of Grace God gives more Grace to the Humble It is a good expression one has Humility emptieth the heart for God to fill it Humility is a Nursekeeper of other Graces Radix omnium malorum superbia custos omnium virtutum hamilitas est When I am weak then am I strong says the Apostle And a Christian's strength lieth very much in an humble sense of his own weakness Humility is a great preservative from Temptation Such as lie low are safest most out of the way of Satan's Gun-shot But Souls that are lifted up stand as a fair mark for him Humility is the way to Glory Chilo asking Aesop what God was doing he answered That he does humble the Lofty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Laert. in Chilo l. 1. p. 47. abase them and exalt the humble He brings down high things and sets up low things Luk. 14.11 He that humbleth himself shal be exalted But
willing and desirous of Christ and his Grace that he would have them above all things that may stand in competition above all the pleasures or advantages of Sin and the World Yea he would have Christ though he was to beg with him to suffer with him He is willing to deny himself for Christ And so 4. He consents resolvedly and firmly Before Faith a Man is at shall I shall I He may sometimes have a sudden motion towards Christ but the Flesh and the World soon draw him quite another way But Faith quite turns the Scale Temporary Believers have some mind towards Jesus Christ they are a little in love with him by fits but their Minds soon change especially when they are threatned with persecution they are wont to take offence at the Cross and draw back they go not thorow with him But the true Believer is married unto Christ hath taken him for better for worse for richer for poorer to Love Honour and Obey him even until Death As the Apostle Phil. 3.8 For whom I have suffered the loss of all things Have suffered but did he not hereupon repent his bargain O no! he had as high an esteem of Christ as much affection for Christ as ever After all his Losses after his Sufferings for Christ he was still of the same Mind I have suffered the loss of all things for him says he and as it follows I do count them but dung that I may win Christ But you may ask here Who can tell whether he shall hold out or no Have not some gone a great way and yet fallen off again Answ 1. However this note is of use so far as to discover the unsoundness of their Faith who fall away As they that draw back are opposed to them that believe Such did never truly believe were never truly resolved for Christ Had they taken Christ without any sinful reserve they would have stuck to him A Believer falleth sometimes yet does not fall away He falleth forward not backward Still his Heart is towards Christ and his settled habitual prevailing resolution for Christ and so he riseth from his falls And therefore 2. If indeed we cleave to Christ with full purpose of Heart we may thence conclude that we shall keep to him Then we shall be kept by the Power of God through Faith unto Salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 And shall not be tempted above that we are able 1 Cor. 10.13 Having God's Promise here we should rest upon and not distrust his Power or Faithfulness Indeed to run ordinarily and wilfully upon Temptations is a thing contrary to Grace contrary to such an habitual resolution for Christ A Sound and Holy resolution to stick to Christ armeth the Soul and sets it on its watch against Temptations that would draw it from Christ and which is more sets the Soul under a Promise of a gracious Divine Protection Now let us see whether we thus consent unto Christ and to the terms on which Salvation is offered in and with him Do we consent entirely not partially seriously and deliberately heartily and willingly firmly and resolvedly So I come to a third Act of Faith which is 3. Affiance Faith is a firm Assent it is a practical Assent such as draws the will to consent and it is a fiducial Assent Of this I am next to speak The word Fiducia or Trust is oft used by Divines for confidence and full perswasion which is separable from true Faith But it may also be taken for resting or relying on God and Jesus Christ and being so taken it is an Act of Faith ordinarily put forth and however always included in Faith as to the habit of it A Believer resolves to venture and cast himself upon Christ how much soever he be in doubt of the event and issue As it was with Job Chap. 13.15 Though he slay me yet will I trust in him This Affiance relyance and recumbency upon Christ seemeth to be pointed at in the phrases of believing in and believing on him Which some would have translated trust in or trust on him As v. g. Joh. 14.1 Ye do trust or Do ye trust in God or on God trust also in me or on me As the word trust or hope is used Mat. 12.21 In his Name shall the Gentiles * That the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used for to Trust or Confide even in Exotick Authors Melancthon hath gathered many Instances to prove it In Loc. Com. de vocab Fidei Apud Chemnit loc Theol. par 2. p. 256. Vide etiam Chemnit Ib. p. 262. trust And Eph. 1.12 who first trusted in Christ Believing and Trusting are used as equivolent Psal 78.22 Because they believed not in God and trusted not in his Salvation Psal 2.12 Blessed are all they that put their trust in him qui se recipiunt ad eum that betake themselves to him The word properly signifies protectionis causâ aliquò confugere as Mollier to flee some whither for Protection As Chickens in danger run to the Hen. Christo mirè congruit verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hic enim congregat Filios suos instar gallinae Mat. 23.37 Hic est umbraculum nostrum Isa 25.4 Riv. in Pol. Synop. There is another word used Psal 22.8 He roled or let him roll himself his concerns his burthen on the Lord. Which is rendred He trusted in God Mat. 27.43 And Cant. 8.5 The Faith of the Spouse is expressed by her leaning or recumbing upon her Beloved Vid. I. de Dieu vel M. Pol. Synop. Faith is a relying and staying on the Lord. 2 Chron. 16.7 Isa 50.10 Let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God Et innitatur c. Tanquam fulcro Calv. Muscul in M. Pol. Synop. nè labatur omnem curam in illum velut pondus importabile conjiciendo Faith is a looking to the Lord Isa 45.22 Psal 123.2 Like the Israelites looking up to the Brazen Serpent Joh. 3.14 15. Faith is a committing our Souls with all that is dear unto us unto Christ to keep 2 Tim. 1.12 A depositing our greatest Concerns with him The believing Soul casts it self upon Christ ventures its All with him And no doubt but they that give us this description or they that put this into the definition of Faith scil that it is A resting upon Christ alone for Salvation no doubt I say but they were aware of that great errour and mistake formerly so common making Faith a full perswasion of the Heart c. As if Assurance was of the very nature and essence of Faith And so was that French Divine before cited that describes it Jo. Mestrezar to be A penitent Sinner's fleeing for succour to the Mercy of God in Christ Indeed it was very needful to correct that errour which both gave the Papists such advantage against us and gave such a wound to weak Believers who would conclude they had not Faith because they had not a full
Life REpentance is not a more common than necessary Subject It is part of the Foundation of Christianity Heb. 6.1 And without true Repentance Mens hopes of Salvation are built on the Sand. I do not say that any Man is saved for his Repentance yet speaking of the Adult we must say that none are or can be saved without it Except ye repent ye shall perish Luk. 13.3 5. Repent and be Converted that your Sins may be blotted out Act. 3.19 without Repentance no Pardon no Remission and consequently no Salvation But what is this Repentance unto Life And how may it be known In the late Confession of Faith chap. 15. a good and full account is given of it viz. By it a Sinner out of the sight and sense not only of the danger but also of the filthiness and odiousness of his Sins as contrary to the Holy Nature and Righteous Law of God and upon the apprehension of his Mercy in Christ to such as are penitent so grieves for and hates his Sins as to turn from them all unto God purposing and endeavouring to walk with him in all the wayes of his Commandments The Subject of Repentance is a Sinner Mat. 9.13 I am not come to call the Righteous but Sinners to Repentance In Paradise while Man retained his Innocency which indeed was but a while he had no need of Repentance In Heaven the Saints are made Perfect in Holiness and so have no more occasion for Repentance The Subject of Repentance is a Sinner Yea a Sinner of some hopes In Hell a place full of Sin as ever it can hold there is no hope of obtaining Pardon or finding Mercy and so no place for Repentance Hell that is full of Despair has no place for Repentance Only upon Earth as there is no Man that liveth and sinneth not and as God hath graciously promised pardon to all that truely Repent here is both an engagement upon Sinners and encouragement for Sinners to Repent Some go further and make the Subject of Repentance a believing Sinner Supposing that Faith in order of Nature goes before Repentance As I conceive the principle or habit of Faith and of Repentance and other Graces are infused together But by the special help and operation of God's Spirit the Soul is first inabled to put forth a gracious act in consenting to the terms of Gods Covenant actually closing with and accepting of Christ as he is there offered upon which the Spirit of Grace is given to dwell in the Heart gracious habits are implanted in the Soul as a new nature inclining it to such acts Which I could wish added to what I have written in a former Treatise scil of the Covenants p. 224 225. Now though the general assenting Act of Faith must necessarily be supposed to go before Repentance as it is in the Will Cathol Theol. lib. 1. par 2. p. 84. as Mr. B. noteth yet a Man cannot truly accept of Christ as a perfect Saviour without a sense and feeling of the burthen of his Sins and being humbled under it nor can he accept of Christ as Lord and King without a resolution and hearty purpose of turning from all Sin unto the Lord. That in the very first act of Faith as saving there is Repentance also included Repentance may be thus distinguished 1. It is either initial or continued Initial Repentance at a Man's first Confession Continued that which follows through the course of ones Life afterwards 2. There is an habitual and virtual Repentance a Disposition or Inclination to mourn for and turn from all our Sins as we come to have our Sins discovered to us And actual formal Repentance actually grieving at loathing resolving and striving against the Sins we have found out and are convinced of 3. There is an ordinary Repentance daily practised for daily ordinary failings and a special extraordinary Repentance exercised upon some foul Fall sad Declining or Backsliding as in David's and in Peter's case Renewed Repentance as some call it in regard of some sad Interruption before Yet these Distinctions do not imply various kinds of Repentance but only different degrees There are two main essential constitutive Parts of true Repentance viz. Humiliation and Reformation or Contrition and Conversion A mourning for Sin after a godly sort 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and a turning from Sin unto God Now first Of godly Sorrow for Sin The Hebrew Word nacham and the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Latine * Poenitet me quod poena tener me Poenitet est idem quod ●edet vel piget Poenitet all shew Repentance to have Grief and Sorrow in it A Man that grieves not for what he hath done amiss repents not Yea there is no right forsaking of Sin without an hearty Sorrow for it There is a Rending of the Heart for Sin before it is rent from Sin Quest But how shall a Man know whether his Sorrow for Sin be right 1. Right Sorrow for Sin is upon right Grounds As the Lord says Hos 7.14 They have not cried unto me when they howled upon their Beds And Zech. 7.5 Did ye at all fast unto me even unto me So there are many that cry out of their Sins are troubled about their Sins that yet do not sorrow after a godly sort but have respect only to themselves Many are troubled for Sin not as contrary to God but only as mischievous or injurious to themselves not as it dishonoureth God but as it brings shame and disgrace upon themselves not as it displeaseth God but as it subjecteth them to his Wrath and Curse not as God is offended by it but as they are like to suffer for it Many only respect the Shame or Punishment felt or feared Now that Humiliation which comes only from Pride cannot be sound Humiliation And that Sorrow which is meerly from self-respect cannot be godly Sorrow Hard-hearted Pharaoh would sometimes confess his Sin under the sence of an heavy Plague so wicked Ahab could humble himself under the fear of Judgment threatned while far enough from true Repentance And as there is a Principle of self-love planted in all Men the wickedst Man on Earth would not be miserable for ever is not willing to be damned And so when a Sinners Conscience is awakened that he sees himself obnoxious to God's everlasting Wrath and to the torments of Hell for ever no wonder if he be full of horror Nature only without the least dram of Grace would teach one under such terrors to cry out with Judas Oh! I have sinned Thus a Sinner under Convictions may have stronger passionate Workings of Grief than gracious Souls have ordinarily The Passion of Grief may be very much stirred when yet there is no godly Sorrow Though I grant it is lawful to be troubled for Sin as it is against our selves But if we are troubled for Sin only as against our selves not as against God such Trouble is privatively sinful Godly Sorrow is not
from them Without doubt the wicked and impenitent are bound to believe God's threatnings denounced against such in his holy Word and so to conclude themselves at present in a miserable state subject to God's wrath and curse and final condemnation that if they die in their present state they are sure to be damned And certainly they that are bound to believe and conclude thus of themselves ought thereupon to be moved with fear Can there be any greater fool-hardiness than this for any to see Hell before them to see themselves ready to drop into that Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone for ever and yet not fear and tremble only indeed such are not to despair to conclude there is no hope There is hope yet upon condition and supposition that if they repent and turn they shall live they shall not die 4. There is a penal Fear not only a fear of punishment but a fear inflicted as a punishment Terror and consternation of mind is threatned as a punishment Lev. 26.16 I also will do this unto you I will even appoint over you terrour And v. 36. and if Men sin sin wilfully after they had received the knowledg of the truth there remains nothing for them but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries Heb. 10.27 This penal fear in its full strength and perfection is upon the Devils and the Spirits of disobedient ones in Prison with them They cannot but tremble Jam. 2.19 Horrour hath taken full and fast hold of them which they can no more any ways shake off This is one part of the punishment and misery of the Damned that they can never think of God and of his Wrath without Horrour and while they lie under the fierceness of his Wrath while they feel the weight and heat of it while they are scorching in the flames of his Wrath how is it possible to put off such thoughts 5. There is also a gracious holy filial Fear A Godly Fear and a Fear proper to the Godly Which is not only a fear of God as a Judg but as a Father not only a fear of Punishment but of the Offence a fear proceeding from Love An humble and reverent respect to his Presence Majesty and Excellency a careful shunning of what we know to be displeasing to him not only in regard of his Greatness Power Holiness Justice but also in regard of his Goodness and Mercy Psal 136.4 Hos 3.5 There is a Natural Fear as we have heard but this is a Spiritual Fear A Grace a choice fruit of the Sanctifying Spirit who is therefore called the Spirit of Fear Isa 11.2 There is a Sinful Fear which is forbidden as the Fear of Man c. but this is a great Duty commanded A special means to keep from sin Exod. 20.20 There is a Servile Fear but this is a Fear of Sons not of Slaves it well agrees with the Spirit of Adoption There is a Penal Fear but this is no Punishment but a special Blessing a rare and excellent gift of God As that is a precious Promise Jer. 32.40 I will put my Fear in their hearts Now I shall apply these things to the Text objected in these following Conclusions 1. It is not to be expected that the highest degree of love found in any Saint upon Earth should quite expel and cast out all natural Fear Christ's Love was absolutely perfect yet was he not without a natural fear of Death only that natural passion was in a perfect subjection to his Reason and Will the higher powers of his Soul and these in perfect subjection to the will of God his Father Note it is the work of Grace here not to extirpate natural Passions but to rule and govern them And the Self-denial Faith Love Patience Constancy of the Saints would not be tried by their sufferings if these were things that they had no fear of no natural reluctancy unto 2. So far as the love of God prevails so far carnal fear is expelled And some very learned Men think Quem timorem intelligi praestat nisi negation is auctorem quam dilectionem perfectam adfirmat nisi fugatricem timoris animatricem confessionis Tertull advers Gnostic the Apostle John speaketh of this kind of fear So Grotius and Dr. Hammond As the Fearful that are joyned with the Vnbelieving Rev. 21.8 may well be understood of such as are overpowr●d with carnal fear Such as are possessed with that spirit of fear 2 Tim. 1.7 of such a base cowardly timerous spirit that they dare not own the truth and ways of God when any danger may attend it Much might be said for this exposition It cannot well be denied but carnal fear is a tormenting thing But such is the power of holy love that it will raise the Soul ordinarily above such fear It will endue a Christian with a spirit of fortitude to bear the greatest torments Men can inflict as was seen in the Martyrs But as love in the Saints is not absolutely perfect here so neither are they wholly freed here from carnal fear nor are they wholly under the power of it It riseth sometimes and puts them into great disorder and confusion for a time but it is quelled and suppressed again 3. As the love of God gets ground in the heart servile fear is giving place The more vigorous and lively our love to God is the clearer evidence we have of his love to us that ordinarily we shall be more freed from that tormenting fear of being under his wrath And while we act from love it is certain we are not only or chiefly irrepelled by fear If love to God and his service be the chief moving principle then fear of punishment is not the chief And further the more we love God the more unwilling we shall be to entertain hard and black thoughts of him The more we love him the more lovely he appears to us And while our hearts are united and cleave to him in love we are secured from that fear which drives Souls from him 4. A true filial Fear of God is so far from being contrary to that it is a good evidence of love to God As on the contrary if we do not stand in awe of him if we care not to offend and displease him it is an argument that we do not love him True love to God will make us tender of his Honour and most sollicitous to keep in his Favour Res est solliciti plena timoris amor Thus if we have the Love of God in us we shall fear and shun what we know to be displeasing and a dishonour to him And when we fear sin more than punishment it argues that we love God above our selves that his Honour is dearer to us than our own ease or interest Yet all fear of punishment is not contrary to the love of God nor will prove one of a slavish spirit A Child of God is
to fear disinheriting and an everlasting separation from God upon supposition of apostacy and falling off from God And this fear of Hell and Condemnation upon supposition if he should fall away is a means to keep him in the love of God Such a fear is no enemy to Grace but very much befriends it is a preservative of Grace So likewise a Child of God may and ought to fear Divine chastisements And such a fear Faith will work As a sound Faith gives credit to the whole Word of God to Threatnings as well as Promises And see concerning this Psal 89.30 31 32. with a multitude of other texts And such a fear tendeth to promote Holiness and spiritual Watchfulness And we have need to make use of all means and Arguments that the Lord hath given and thought meet for our quickning And indeed when afflictions would not be so greatly dreaded though grievous to sense but as they are expressions of God's fatherly displeasure surely this is Child-like Would it not argue that the Child has a loving and dutiful respect to his Father when he could better bear the smart of the Rod than his Fathers angry looks in laying it on It 's true a fear of punishment and suffering only or chiefly is the note of a slave Yet an ingenuous Child will fear the Rod too But there is this difference a slave fears his Masters displeasure chiefly because he is like to smart for it and to suffer by it whereas a loving Child feareth the Rod most as it declares his Fathers displeasure 5. An holy reverential admiring and adoring Fear being moved and sutably affected with God's transcendent Greatness and infinite Excellencies is never cast out but continues when love is made perfect in Heaven This part of filial Fear well becomes Angels and Saints in Heaven How do they for ever reverence and adore him To this fear of reverence we may apply that expression of the Psalmist The Fear of the Lord is elean enduring for ever There is no penal Fear in Heaven no Fear that has any torment in it there is no fear of God's anger or of Gods hiding his face any more yet when love is perfected an holy reverential fear shall be perfected together with it Obj. 2. Fear is of some evill but God is the cheifest Good and therefore no proper object of fear Ans 1. As Moralists speak of Fear it is of evil and evil to come for if the evil be present then not the passion of fear but sorrow is exercised about it But though thus God be not properly and directly the object of Fear he is the object of Fear indirectly as one that may inflict evil yea greater evil than others can So we should fear him who is able to destroy both Body and Soul in Hell Mat. 10.28 yea as he is the cheifest Good we should fear the loss of him as the greatest evil Thus we should fear the Lord and his Goodness Hos 3.5 That he is Goodness it self infinitely good it is best for us to enjoy him it is the Creatures highest felicity to be united to him and admitted to a blessed fruition of him and consequently it is the greatest misery to lose the favour and fruition of God The loss of infinite Goodness is certainly the greatest loss that ever befell us What we love and prize we fear to lose As we love our lives and therefore fear Death Thus if God ought to be loved above all as the chiefest Good the loss of him is to be feared above all losses as the greatest evil 2. The Grace of Fear is a more free ingenuous thing than the passion of Fear The Grace of Fear includes reverence as hath been said And that which excites reverence is an apprehension of God's infinite Excellencies and his soveraign Authority Job 13.11 Shall not his Excellency make you afraid Job 25.2 Dominion and Fear are with him For his Majesty and Dominion he is to be feared God is to be feared as infinitely above us though we should not apprehend him to be against us Now I come to the Question How the true Fear of God may be known 1. By the ground of it 1. The true fear of God ariseth from a sound Knowledg of God Spiritual Knowledg as I have shewed before is the ground-work of all saving Grace And they that know not God aright cannot fear God aright Pro. 15.33 The fear of the Lord is the instruction of wisdom Junius and Tremel read it thus anteit reverentiam Jehovae eruditio sapientiae The instruction of wisdom goes before the fear of the Lord. So Solomon prayed 1 King 8.43 That all the people of the Earth may know thy Name to fear thee So there must be a Knowledg of God in his Attributes The Name of God is dreadful Deut. 28.58 That thou mayest fear this glorious and fearful Name the Lord thy God He is to be feared for his absolute Soveraignty Mal. 1.14 I am a great King saith the Lord of Hosts and my Name is dreadful among the Heathen Jer. 10.7 Who would not fear thee O King of Nations for to thee doth it appertain For his Immensity That he fills Heaven and Earth with his Presence and the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain him Surely the Lord most high is terrible For his Almighty Power None can stay his hand or say unto him What dost thou Those that walk in Pride how high soever he is able to abase Dan. 4.35 37. And should we not fear him which after he hath killed hath power to cast into Hell Luk. 12.5 For his Omniscience That all things are naked and open unto his eyes with whom we have to do For his Infinite Holiness and Purity Rev. 15.4 Who shall not fear thee O Lord for thou only art holy For his glorious Justice Job 37.23 24. Men do therefore him fear Yea for his abundant goodness and rich Mercy As in those Texts fore-cited Psal 130.4 Hos 3.5 Should we not fear to offend and displease so good and gracious a God! Here take notice the fear of the most is from very short and inadequate conceptions and apprehensions of God One while they conceit him to be made up all of Mercy and then they fear him not at all but only presume on his Goodness Another while they conceit him to be made up all of Justice and severity and then they can do nothing but fear then they meditate nothing but terrour Further The Relations God stands in towards us his Creatures are a ground of his fear He is our Lord and Master Mal. 1.6 Our Father Mal. 2.10 Have we not all one Father hath not one God created us And they that are not come to own him as their Lord and Master and see their whole dependance on him as their Father cannot fear him aright Further The Works of God are a ground of his fear The work of Creation Psal 33.8 9. Works of Providence Jer. 5.22 particularly works of
no signs of an humble heart 7. Humility would not suffer us to be led away with predominant self-conceit The humble have low thoughts of themselves their Gifts Abilities and Performances The proud are contrary over-valuing themselves thinking highly of themselves and of what they do 1. Humility will not suffer one to be conceited of his Wisdom and Knowledg Pro. 26.12 Seest thou a Man wise in his own conceit there is more hope of a fool than of him He is a proud fool and worse than a fool that is in any measure sensible of his foolishness and willing to acknowledg and to be cured of it There is more hope of such a one who would be more teachable more tractable The humble Soul is more ready to take notice of its darkness its ignorance than of its knowledge is very sensible of its short-sightedness and sees the need it hath to learn When proud spirits though very shallow think they know enough already Like young Scholars that when they have got a little smattering of Learning fancy themselves taller by the head than others when seven years more spent in diligent study might help them to see how little they know how much they are still in the dark Novices that know least are commonly most puffed up with a conceit of their Knowledg And hence it is that such are most subject to fall into errours They think themselves wiser than their Teachers And the conceit they have of their own knowledge will not bear a contradiction from any nor suffer them to question or suspect their own Opinions to take things into sober consideration Yet I would not plead for Scepticism or perswade you to doubt of every thing Nor would I have Christians deny the knowledg that God hath given them As Knowledge is a gift of God we ought to reflect on what he hath given to be thankful for it And indeed Knowledge in the very nature of the thing is manifest to them that have it You may as well go about to perswade a Man out of his senses that he does not see or hear what he sees and hears as that he does not know what indeed he knoweth He that is awake knows he is awake and you cannot make him think that he does but dream He that is enlightened with the sound knowledg of God and Christ is assured of the truth of those things which were but notions and fancies to him before And it highly concerneth Christians to be so grounded in the knowledg of the Truth that they may hold fast the profession of it without wavering that they may be ready to give a reason of their Faith and Hope to any that shall ask and demand it of them and that it may not be in the power of the most learned and subtile Jesuite or Sophister to wrest it from them and that they may be able to keep their ground to stand fast though there should be never so great and general Apostacy and falling away from the Truth though they should be censured as singular proud and self-conceited that took themselves to be wiser than all the World besides It is neither pride nor obstinacy but stedfastness and constancy to hold fast known Truth though we were left alone had none about us that would own it or own us in the profession of it As was said of Athanasius Vnus Athanasius contra totum Mundum the whole World against Athanasius and Athanasius against the World But this is Pride when one conceiteth himself to be knowing while he is very ignorant It is Pride that makes one seem to himself more knowing than he is So also when one hath high thoughts of admires himself for what he knows he is proud knowning nothing as he ought They that know most of God and the things of God have no such ground to be conceited of themselves for what they know as they have indeed to be humbled to blush and be ashamed that they know no more 2. Humility will not suffer one to be conceited of his abilitiy and sufficiency An humble Soul dares not encounter Temptation in its own strength dares not undertake and set upon Duty in its own strength As Paul though an eminent Apostle says of the Work he was called unto Who is sufficient for these things 2 Cor. 2.16 And chap. 3.5 not that we are sufficient of our selves to think any thing as of our selves but our sufficiency is of God The humble Soul is really sensible of its Infirmities and of an absolute need of the Spirits assistance to help its infirmities as Rom. 8.26 Humility and self-confidence do not agree 3. Humility will not suffer one to be highly conceited of his best services It will teach a Man to have low thoughts of all he does This takes away the Grace of any performance when a Man is proud of what he has done Who so active for God as Paul was yet he was not puft up with his services but served the Lord with all humility of mind Act. 20.19 He arrogated nothing to himself I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me Gal. 2.20 I laboured more abundantly than they all yet not I but the Grace of God which was with me 1 Cor. 15.10 Not I but Christ in me not I but the Grace of God with me And did not his face shine more for this veil on it And 1 Tim. 1.12 I thank Christ Jesus our Lord says he who hath enabled me So 1 Cor. 7.25 he speaks of himself as one that had obtained mercy of the Lord to be faithful had obtained mercy to do his Duty The more he was enabled to do for God to serve God faithfully the more he saw himself obliged to God's Mercy Humble Souls will acknowledg their own righteousness to be but as filthy rags Isa 64.6 As rags that are not sufficient to cover them as filthy rags that have so much sin in them as would render them more polluted still if the Lord should behold them with the strict eye of his Justice only The truely humble can see more evil in their best Duties than natural Men are wont to discern in their plain and gross transgressions When Nehemiah had been most active for God yet he saw need of pardoning Grace and Mercy Neh. 13.22 Remember me O my God concerning this also and spare me according to the greatness of thy Mercy Ita fiduciam ponit Wolph non in meritis suis sed in misericordia Dei Thus Humility is opposit to self-conceit 8. Humility is opposite to a predominant affectation of humane applause and vain-glory It will teach us to say as in Psal 115.1 Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy name give Glory The Humble Soul would not set up for it self Laert. in Biam l. 1. p. 61. Bias could say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what good thou dost refer it unto God let God have the praise He sets his heart as the heart of God as
Servants may take comfort in Hezekiah though a King found no such Cordial in the World He could take comfort in this even when sick unto death when he had received the Sentence of Death Isa 38.1 3. And this was their rejoyceing who had little in the World to take comfort in 2 Cor. 1.12 when they were as sorrowful and having nothing yet they would not have parted with the joy of their Sincerity for all the World God is so pleased with Sincerity that where he sees it he is ready to overlook Infirmities As true Gold has its grains of allowance Heb. 8.10 12. And all the paths of the Lord are Mercy and Truth to such as walk before him in Truth and Sincerity He will be a Sun and Shield to such and no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly Psal 84.11 They shall have his favour and countenance here His Countenance doth behold the Vpright Psal 11.7 They have his most gracious and benign Aspect And they shall be taken into and enjoy his Glorious Presence hereafter Whereas an Hypocrite shall not come before him the Vpright shall dwel in his presence Psal 140.13 Who shall dwel in God's holy Hill The Psalmist tells you Psal 24.3 4. He that hath clean hands and a pure heart Psal 15.1 2. Such as walk uprightly Thus indeed the end of the perfect and upright Man shall be peace perfect peace and endless happiness But there is a twofold Integrity or Uprightness There is a Natural or Moral Integrity and there is a Spiritual Integrity 1. There is a Natural or moral Integrity which is the effect of common restraining Grace As God gives the Consciences of some natural Men that power and quickness that in many particular actions they are seen to carry well following the dictates of their Consciences Thus they are kept from gross Sins and shew forth many commendable Vertues and that not out of Cunning but of Conscience Their Consciences will not suffer them to do otherwise As Joseph's Brethren said We are true Men we are no Spies So many natural Men are true to their Principles Many of the Heathen of whom we read in their Writers were just honest plain-dealers would speak as they thought and what ever they lost or suffered would not break their words they were homines quadrati Square-men and such indeed as quite shame and will condemn many that are called Christians who having banished or seared Conscience live in those sins that many an honest Heathen would have chosen to die rather than commit And the Lord himself gives testimony to the Integrity of Abimelech so far that if he had known Sarah to have been another Man's Wife he would not have taken her to his House Gen. 20.6 Yea I know thou didst this in the Integrity of thy heart Yet we have no ground to suppose that Abimelech at that time was a Saint a truly Upright Man 2. There is a Spiritual Integrity which is the effect of special renewing Grace The effect of God's writing his Laws in the heart When being renewed in the spirit of our mind we put on the new Man which after God is created in Righteousness and Holiness of Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Eph. 4.23 24. When not only a Man's Conscience but his Will also is for that which is right not only in some particular actions but in his general course When a Man intirely without reserve resignes and gives up himself to God heartily resolved for God and ordinarily acting for him with respect to his Will and to his Honour and Glory in what he does Thus Integrity includes both being Vpright in heart and being of upright Conversation Psal 11.2 with 37.14 They that are upright in heart will be of upright conversation will walk uprightly and none can be of upright conversation none can walk uprightly without an upright heart This uprightness is perfect for kind though but imperfect as to degree As a Child has all the parts of a Man though not in that full proportion as a Man hath but is growing toward it But that Integrity which may be found in a natural Man is but an imperfect Embrio or a False-Conception Sincerity and Uprightness to speak properly is not a particular distinct Grace but a necessary mode of all true Grace It is the right mode of every Grace and of every good Work too So we read of the Sincerity of Love 2 Cor. 8.8 of Love unfeigned 2 Cor. 6.6 And of Faith unfeigned 1 Tim. 1.5 Sincerity in a Christians Graces is as a Golden-twist in a Bracelet or Neck-lace of Pearls it goes thorow every Grace or as the Veins in the Body that run thorow all the Parts and Members Yea Sincerity is as the Soul of Religion without Sincerity we can have no more than a form of Godliness like a dead Carcass Now to shew how Sincerity and Uprightness may be known O that I might be a welcom Messenger to some to shew some their Uprightness who cannot rest but long to be satisfied in this Point 1. The Upright Man though simple plain is not stolid Though there is an holy simplicity joyned with Sincerity 2 Cor. 1.12 yet a brutish stolidity gross ignorance and integrity are utterly inconsistent Pro. 19.2 3. That the Soul be without Knowledg is not good In our old Translation thus For without Knowledg the mind is not good The foolishness of Man perverts his way Indeed ignorance is both Mother and Nurse of Impiety but no friend to Integrity Prov. 2.13 Walking in the wayes of darkness is opposed to keeping the paths of Vprightness As the Simple and such as err are put together Ezek. 45.20 Pro. 1.22 How long ye simple ones will ye love simplicity There is a simplicity that is no vertue It is the Man of understanding that walketh uprightly Pro. 15.21 Not the fool Pro. 19.1 He is perverse Some rest in their good meanings and boast of their good and honest hearts while they have no care to know what is the good and acceptable and perfect will of God such are not upright 2. The Upright Man is for knowing the whole Will and Counsel of God He is willing to hear of his duty to learn his whole duty He would not stop his ear against any Message that comes from God The single eye sees best Mat. 6.22 It would not shut out any light that comes from above from the Father of Lights The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we translate Sincerity some would have taken from the Eagles trying of her young holding them forth to the full view of the Sun who as they say rejects those as spurious and not her genuine brood which cannot with open eye behold the Sun or as most take it the word is translated from Wares that are right good that one is not afraid to shew and bring forth into the light of the Sun When Men hate the Light and will not come into the
believes any Truth upon the Testimony of God in his Word upon the same ground for the same reason must believe the truth of whatsoever God hath said in his Word So he that obeyeth in this or that particular because God hath commanded it hath a will to obey all that God hath given in Command Thus the upright Man's obedience to one Command is upon a general Ground common to all God's Commands And hereupon he is uniform in his Obedience But the obedience which the Hypocrite performeth is upon lame unsound Reasons and partial Grounds and so his obedience is lame short and partial like the Grounds of it But attend well to this note I am upon To walk Uprightly is to walk in all the Commandments of the Lord as Zacharias and Elizabeth did Luk. 1.6 And so 1. The Upright Man hath a respect to both Tables An Upright Heart is another Arke where the Tables of God's Laws are kept even both Tables Those which God hath joyned one after God's Heart would not separate Such a one would keep a Conscience void of offence both towards God and towards Men Act. 24.16 Look what kind of honesty to Man that is which is not accompanied with Religion towards God the same sayes Mr. R. Bolton is that Religion towards God which is not attended with honesty to Men. Both in one predicament as he sayes How can he be Upright before God who does not make Conscience of Duties to God Job was Perfect and Vpright and one that feared God as we read Job 1.1 And further Uprightness teacheth to make Conscience of Duties towards Men. For which see Job's serious profession of his Upright carriage chap. 31. So the Apostle sayes Heb. 13.18 We trust we have a good Conscience in all things willing to live honestly So the Upright Man is a good Man Mic. 7.2 The good Man is perished out of the earth and there is none upright among Men. Psal 125.4 Those that be good and them that are Vpright in their heart go together The Upright set themselves to follow the rule of the Word which teacheth them to be good in their Relations As Psal 101.2 I will behave my self wisely in a perfect way I will walk within my Soul with a perfect heart The Upright Man will be a good Master Or such a one will make a good Servant if he be in that Relation Obeying not with eye-service but in singleness of heart Col. 3.22 not purloyning but shewing all good fidelity Tit. 2.10 The Upright Man is a just Man Job 12.4 The Just Vpright Man He is just in his dealings Uprightness and Injustice are at great odds as can be these will never agree while the World stands Sincerity will not mingle with fraud and deceit Sincerum quasi sine cerâ The honest heart is for honest dealing Such as are Sincere before God will deal truly sincerely fairly candidly with Men. As there is an expression Judg. 9.19 If ye have dealt truly and sincerely with Jerubbaal and with his House Such as make a trade of cozening defrauding wronging their Neighbours let their pretences be never so fair their course of practice will prove them false unsound How incongruous is it to have Jacob's Voice and Esau's rough hands Verily a cheating Professour is much worse than a known professed Cheater And see Deut. 25.13 14 15 16. Deceitful Weights and deceitful Measures are the inventions of deceitful Hearts How many that are enriching themselves with the wages of Vnrighteousness Such cannot say as the Psalmist Psal 18.23 24. I was upright before him Therefore hath the Lord recompensed me according to my righteousness according to the cleanness of my hands in his Eye-sight Nor are such ever likely to have any evidence of their Uprightness till they come to follow such Counsel as that Dan. 4.27 Break off thy Sins by Righteousness and thine Iniquities by shewing Mercy to the Poor As God smites his hand at Mens dishonest gain Ezek. 22.13 So will the Upright despise the gain of oppressions or deceits and shake his hands from holding of bribes Isa 33.15 Yea the Upright Man is not only just but Merciful Psal 112.4 Unto the Vpright there ariseth light in darkness he is gracious and full of compassion as well as righteous So the Merciful and Vpright are put together and opposed to the froward Psal 18.25 26. 2. The upright Man would not despise the least of Gods Commands He is for keeping them as the apple of his Eye as there is an expression Prov. 7.2 with all care and tenderness His care is to walk circumspectly exactly That preciseness which prophane spirits deride and scoff at he sees to be necessary That supposing a Man to keep the whole Law excepting one Point which he allows himself to offend in by contemning God's Authority therein his Obedience would thus be proved unsound and he be proved guilty in respect of the whole Law James 2.10 He thus despising that same Authority upon which the whole Law depends For one to allow himself in the breach of the least of Christ's Commands accounting it of little weight that it was no matter if he regard it not this is enough to shut one out of the Kingdom of Heaven Mat. 5.19 3. The upright Man though he does not despise and contemn the least of God's Commands yet he looks first and most to the greatest Commands He has a special regard to these As the contrary detected the Hypocrisy of the Scribes and Pharisees that as strict as they were in lesser matters yet they were grosly negligent of the greater and more weighty Mat. 23.23 24. To be very observant of and zealous about Circumstantials but careless of more necessary Duties and substantials of Religion is one ill-favoured mark of an Hypocrite whereby he may be known 4. The upright Man has a respect to the hardest Commands even to such Commands as are most cross to his Carnal interest and Natural inclination So this evidenced Abraham's integrity that when God called for his Isaac he withheld not his Son his only Son from him Thus on the other hand the unsoundness of the young Man that was ready to boast of his obedience was discovered Mat. 19.21 If thou wilt be perfect Mark 10.21 one thing thou lackest Go and sell that thou hast and give to the Poor and come and follow me Christ knew his mind how his heart was let upon the World and to shew that his heart was not right nor he so perfect as he took himself to be he tried him with a Command that was cross to his Carnal Interest and to his special Inclination which soon laid him open As willing and forward as he seemed to know and learn his Duty yet when he hears of selling all and taking up the Cross Mark 10.21 he leaveth this hard work for others 12. The upright Man carries uprightly in reference to holy Duties Here 1. He has a care to engage his heart to