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B15559 A practicall catechisme: or, A view of those principall truths according to godlinesse, which are contayned in the catechisme diuided into three parts: and seruing for the vse, (as of all, so) especially of those that first heard them. By D.R. B. of Divin, minister of the Gospell. D. R. (Daniel Rogers), 1573-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 21166; ESTC S116040 309,840 430

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daylie life so doth the soule all her workes in Christ Christ in her prayes preaches prospers suffers and in a word doth all her workes in her as Esay 26. Q. What is the life of faith in estates and first in Prosperity A. The cleauing of the soule to God in the promise of his Al-sufficiency Gen. 17.1 and 1 Cor. 3. end Al things are yours and ye Christs It s the Lord Iesus our head who being Lord of all made himselfe no body that we might haue right to all promises Faith then cleaues to this promise First That if God hath made vs a feast in the mountaines much more hee will in the valleyes Esay 25. And looke what blessing so euer he see good it 's mine life good daies good marriage children family health successe recouery credit wealth it 's mine A childe of God beleeues no temporall promise otherwise than a spirituall both purchased by Christ alike although if he see them vnfit I am to beleeue a supply otherwise as good or better but else faith cleaues to a temporall in the full right to Christ without ifs or ands as well as the other And not onely so but serues Gods prouidence for them with holy confidence setting the Lord aboue his owne labours in the secret blessing of a promise going to worke without indirect courses without sinne or sorrow beleeuing that whatsoeuer his portion be more or lesse it 's his giuen him by his father and therefore best and any other should be worse and to conclude accounting the commonest blessing to be no common loue to him but vouchsafed in kindnesse to his seruant and therefore not snared thereby and nailed to the earth but raised vp rather as by wings to the giuer to serue the Lord with a good and cheerefull heart for all his blessings Q. What is the life of faith in the estate of aduersity A. It is the cleauing of the soule to God in the promise of his protection and redemption 1 Cor. 1.30 The poore soule saith with David on his death-bed The Lord liueth who hath deliuered my soule out of all aduersity sword of Saul pursuit enemies in battell and now will deliuer me in deat● And how first as it was with Christ that no trouble nor yet one houre sooner befell him than God preordained so shall a poore soule beleeue that no enemy shall hurt or afflict in any kind then or vntil the Lord see meet but as he so thou shalt passe through all so also 2. If any doe assault thee sickenesse poverty suits prison malitious enemies thou shalt say with Christ This is their houre they are come in season they are meet read 1 Pet. 1.6 they are no accidents they are the allottings of my Father for speciall good 3. When they doe lye vpon thee yet the Lord shall bee thy light in darkenesse and shall bee thy defence and couer thy head in the day of battell See Micah 2.7 Psal 84. end hee shall make thy bed in sicknesse and walke with thee in the Fornace hee shall be thy peace of heart thy strength to endure hee shall purge thee by them and bring thee out as gold out of the Fornace So that thou shalt say Perhaps the Lord shall doe me good for this crosse this day make me better than if I had not had it It is good for mee that I was afflicted And after a tolerable passage read Ier. 29.6 7. he shall deliuer me out of all one way or other so that the spirit of glory and the conquest of Christ rests vpon me and by his promise Ioh. 16. vlt. I haue ouercome the world I shall take good courage and say Micah 7.8 I shall rise when I am fallen and afterward I shal with the Lord Iesus be out of the gunshot of all afflictions yea as the estate of a beleeuer is through his whole life so shall it be comfortablest at death and the last day shall be his best a rest from all labours Q. What is the life of faith in meanes vsing A. It is the cleauing vnto God by the promise for the power and blessing of and vpon all his ordinance which point seeing it will fall into Article 4. vse 3. therefore thence fetch direction Q. What is the life of faith in duties A. It s the cleauing of the soule to God by a promise for strength to giue vs the grace to doe what hee commandeth of which also seeing I treat in Article 3. vse 4 there looke Q. What is the life of faith in Graces A. It 's the soules cleauing to God in the promise and in the grace of the Lord Iesus for a supply of grace conuenient for it selfe both for number and measure Ioh. 1.17 from his fountaine we receiue grace for grace like for like so many for so many In the strength of this promise a poore barren soule comes to the Lord and hearing what treasure is in Christ and for whom comes with confidence and pleades for it selfe Oh Lord as empty a wretch as I am of mercy of compassion of righteousnesse of loue of patience thou hast put all into the nature of Christ Emanuel though I am pestred with a peeuish froward proud worldly spirit yet thou hast sayd where sinn hath abounded grace abounded much more thou delightest to honour thy Sonnes grace in purging such sinfull ones from their cursed qualities thou wilt haue thy grace pointed at Oh! who would haue euer haue looked to see such a proud wretch humble so worldly an one heauenly minded Nay the Lord can vse those weapons of sinne to bee weapons of righteousnesse choler to turne zeale for God prodigality to turne bounty to the poore members of Christ I see where the Lord creates the new creature hee also creates the graces thereof where he marryes he giues the marriage Ring beset with all Iewels of faithfulnesse humblenesse and the like Why then should a poore member pine away for want when the head is full and full for his members Oh! I see all things are mine in Christ all meanes duties yea and graces mine Didst thou not say so Lord and causedst me to trust thee for it that out of thy Fountaine I should haue for both number those that are most wanting and for measure that which may strengthen a feeble heart Euen as Haman hearing what should be done to a fauorite answered he meanes me whom else so the poore soule heere The Lord hath renued mee and whom should he bestow Graces vpon to beautifie sooner Q. Goe forward to the second branch of our Communion with God wherein doth it consist A. In the exercise of the graces of his spirit For looke how Merchants and Chapmen haue the policy and traffike for wares and mony so the godly haue their commerce with the Lord for grace Read Phillip 3.19 But our conuersation is in heauen And this stands in these three things First in the encrease of their graces for the experience of the sweete
our iustification and that else God cannot in Iustice acquite vs. They say The elect doe sustaine one person with Christ in all his acts and suffrings and they are all made theirs But thus they make Christ serue to no other ends but to become our owne Mediator and to destroy his owne The error of this conceit arose from a confounding of the valor or worth of this righteousnesse with the substance of righteousnesse it selfe For although wee cannot be iustified without imputation of the fulnesse of the merit yet wee are not capable of that which merited except wee will become infinite Branch 3 Thirdly it confutes those Sectaries who affirme that God seeth no sin in any of his if hee haue once imputed Christs righteousnesse to them This error arizes from not distinguishing these two Imputation of perfect righteousnesse and perfect imputing or accepting of imputed righteousnesse No man is iustified without the former but our faith fayling in the acceptance must needs bee looked vpon by God I confesse hee sees no sinne but hee pardons it to his in Christ vpon Faith and Repentance but hee punishes it for their good in mercy Againe what if we grant God sees no sinne in them in respect of their iustification Is therefore their sanctification perfect Why then did Dauids adultery displease the Lord Or why doe we pray Forgiue vs our debts or why saith our Sauiour Say when all is done yee are vnprofitable Fourthly it confutes all such as cut off the Actiue obedience Branch 4 of Christ from the satisfaction 2 Sam. 10.4 as they cut the garments of Dauids seruants by the middle I blame them not as Papists for denying Christ to bee our price but for their curious diuiding of one member of it from another It may bee granted them that the Passiue is the more immediate cōsummation of the satisfaction but to conclude the Actiue is most audacious They say Christ was bound to the obeying of the Law as a man made vnder it I answere Yea but except hee had beene so made purposely for vs hee needed neuer to bee so at all therefore his willing being so made the merit the greater and although being a man he must obey yet seing his being a man was that hee might obey for vs it must bee of greater desert Againe as the Passiue is the neerer merit in respect of the estate in which we stood accursed So the Actiue is as essentiall in respect of recouering that Image of righteousnesse which makes vs like GOD and in which wee were created Neither was it Hell could haue hurt vs without sinne Besides to say truth if Adam after his sinne had not beene accursed yet in sinning onely he had beene miserable It is therefore as essentiall to Iustification that hee bee made iust as rid of guilt and brought to Heauen as rid of Hell But of this before Q. Bee there any other vses b●sides confutation Vse 3 A. Yea. And first to teach all Gods people to abhorre the slauery of hypocrites who if they could shun Hell would neuer care for righteousnesse Gods people although they could sinne vnseene and vnpunished yet would loath it They take as deep thought for God as for their owne welfare 2 Sam. 14.30 When Absalon was pardoned yet he set Ioabs corne on fire because hee might not bee admitted to the Kings presence chuzing rather to dye then to hang in such suspence And shall a beleeuer rest in his pardon more then in the righteousnesse of God which may make them accepted and beloued Eph. 1.5 No the liuery they weare is The Lord our righteousnesse Oh till I be restored to my blood to my dignities to stand before the Lord to please him to feele his Spirit of peace ioy and righteousnesse and my Conscience purged to serve God in holinesse I can feele no comfort Vse 4 Secondly let it raise the price of the Lord Iesus his loue in the hearts of all his children Should he that was glory and holinesse bee content not onely to become a worme base and vile to his enemies but to lose the repute of holinesse and become sinne rather then sinne should not become righteousnesse and glory how great is this loue then and how deare should he be in the taking of our imputed sinne and blemish vpon him Vse 5 Thirdly to touch his Passion a little how should it teach vs to abhorre all enemies of the Crosse Atheists Papists Iewes and Pagans to whom it is eyther a stumbling block or foolishnesse yea all such as hold vpon a Christ in profession but farre from an humbled suffring and crucified Christ carrying themselues rather so in their haire fashions and oathes the loftinesse of their stomacks as if their Christ were rather some great Epicure Libertine or Champion of the world Fourthly If this death of the Lord Iesus be our satisfaction Vse 6 and the freedome from sinne and curse our pardon peace and Heauen where is the dwelling of our hearts vpon it the delight of our soules in it Commonly wee will weare our choise Iewell neerest our heart and why is this Iewell which cost the blood of the Sonne of God so farre off it Surely except this be our soules crowne more then the crowne of the aged are their children or the Ministers crowne his people or the husbands his deare wife not to speake of gold pleasures or outward welfare how can it bee well with vs If the perfection of loue be ioy and the perfecter the obiect is the greater the loue How is it that each base shadow of ioy can affect vs when this can not If our hope were heere onely in Christ of all others 1 Cor. 15.19 we were most miserable Nothing heere can keepe thee from misery what is then thy happinesse This satisfaction onely Let it be all in all to thee the seasoning of thy blessings supply of all wants if thou wert left as an owle in the desart Hab. 3.17 if no calf were left in the stall yet let God be thy saluation Let thy life be bound vp in it as Iacobs in Beniamin Fifthly and especially let the chiefe streame of this points Vse 7 vse be this To all Ministers to teach it and the people to apply it to themselues in all their feares yea the greatest agony yea death it selfe whatsoeuer thou forgoest hold this For Ministers let them remember their office as hee to Archippus and fulfill it Paul presses it compare 2 Cor. 5.21 with 20. Him that knew no sinne hee made sinne that wee might bee his righteousnesse And what of this We being Embassadors of God as if Christ by vs did entreate you so we vrge Bee reconciled to God Be no Idols non Preachers bee no Preachers of any thing before this Preach not with a veile as Moses stand with open face and hold this mirror to poore sinners that they may behold The Lord their righteousnesse 2 Cor. 3 1● If the worth of a
soule were knowne by vs and the blood of soules prized and pitied hen the preaching declaring of this righteousnesse Iob 33. would bee the scope of our labours Wee are Ministers or the Law but onely so as seruing the Ministery of reconciliation Let vs mainly looke to this to saue our selues and them that heare vs if wee haue wrought the vse of the last Article of the former part vpon them learne the skill of this second and linne not with God till he say to vs Deliuer him Iob 33.24 Mat. 13.44 Gen. 29.20 I haue receaued a ransome If wee could find this veine and the treasure hid in this field all our worke would bee as Iacobs seuen yeeres for the loue of Rachel sweet and easie For people also secondly Consider yee who haue truly felt that Serpent of the Law sting ye mortally in the other part come apply the remedy in this looke vpon this brazen Serpent and liue and first I say feele the strength secondly take hold of it and make peace for the former know without a promise from God there is no peace vnto yee and promise there can bee none without this satisfaction This is the strength of an offer and a promise it s else as he spake of the Serpent Nehushtan and a piece of brasse As sinne is the strength of the Law so is this price of the blood of Christ the strength of the promise Thou hast to deale with the Father in the point of iustifying thee ponder well then this strength as thou wouldst try the waight of Gold in the ballance If thou canst feele this strenght so farre as to say Esay 27 4. or to heare the Lord say 2 Cor. 1.10 Anger is not in mee I am appeased thou beginst well Anger abides in God without this price and thou art but as the bushes and dry stubble before it Be assured then that no promise speakes to thy soule and to thy heart except it haue this strength of Christ in whom each one is yea Amen Looke vpon a promise if thou need it as it s furnished with this for hence comes all wrath to be turned to loue this will make God willing to offer faithful to performe els not That bottomlesse depth of mercy in thy Iudge enemy cannot be gaged without this bucket by this thou mayst reach it Againe as this is sufficient strength so it is that onely which can redeem thee Let that Mountebanke of Rome who would bring thee to the treasure of Saints merits be odious to thee Say thus Mica 6. What shall I giue the Lord for the sin of my soule My gold or pearles Oyle or wine or the first borne of my body No he hath shewed me the onely way to be his righteousnes He redeemed vs sayth Peter not with pearles but with the precious blood of his Lambe Wilt thou go to the holy ones in earth Alas they were as vile as thou but for this and they haue no more of it then will serue their turnes Wilt thou go to Heauen to Saints and Angels Alas Esay 63. Abraham knowes thee not What then Mat. 25.6 wilt thou go to thy duties performances grace Alas they haue no blood of expiation in them all these will say Satisfaction is not in vs. Where then Surely heere onely If so abandon all cling to this onely And that is the second branch Take hold of this sufficient onely sufficient strength as the Prophet bids thee Iob 9.15 1 Pet. 3.19 Carry it with thee to thy Iudge make supplication to him in this strength Peter calles it the answer of a conscience good in the resurrection of Christ What euer enemy pursue thee at the heeles this is thy refuge that heere thou mightst haue strong consolation in all feares against all enemies Fearest thou the sins of youth or age The Lord Iesus was conceaued in the wombe that the infant elect which neuer saw light might be saued by him youth notwithstanding her disobedience age for all her rebellion might be forgiuen Do thy morall sinnes of murther stealth vncleannes swearing distresse thee This Lord Iesus fulfilled all righteousnes for thee Do thy spirituall wickednesses oppresse thee and the penalties of them an vnbeleeuing secure hard heart by the contempt of the Gospell The Lord Iesus suffred the powring out of his blood to breake the heart of those that pierced him vpon the crosse Art thou poore Thy Satisfier was so Rich He was the Lord of all Are thy sinnes great He dyed for Noahs drunkennesse Lots incest Dauids adultery Small Lo euen thy least vaine word cost him his life-blood 2 Cor. 5. ●1 But perhaps not some sinnes but sinne it selfe and the body of death troubles thee He was made sinne that knew none Oh then whatsoeuer sinne can say yet go on to the throne of grace as Heb. 4.16 and looke to finde mercy in time of need Doth the Deuill the gates of Hell conscience or the iustice of GOD threaten thee They can not saue for sinne if they doe thy conscience hath her answere to God against all And so plead this thy pardon to the Lord. Say thus Oh Father euen thou cuttest off thy plea in giuing this price in accepting it in offring of it to mee I Lord am heere before thee pinched and damned by my sinne if thou do not reckon it vnto mee Oh Lord I put this blessed price betweene me and wrath LORD haue no power to deny it me Euen I if I were left with an orphans estate could not keepe it from him LORD I am fatherlesse my orphans stocke is in thy keeping thou tookest it to bestow it Lord let my soule haue strong consolation in her seeking refuge to thee because this price warrants mee If a debtor be in prison and be bid to come forth he will answer I am heere for debt I cannot but if vrged he will lay hold vpon this Strength Surely some Surety hath payd my debt and then his heart answers I will come out Oh! so let this strength be layd hold on by thee if thou looke for deliuerance In the end of this second part I shall adde somewhat touching faith Meane time let this be as the riuer leading to the Sea Q. But what is the word of Imputation so oft vsed by the Holy Ghost in the matter of Iustification A. I am glad you haue mentiond it in so good season I answer that as this whole righteousnes is the materiall so this act of God the Father is the forme and beeing of a sinners iustification And it s such an act of God as being satisfied takes this righteousnes and reckons it to the needing soule as her owne although not hers to put vpon her an estate of as full and perfect freedome acceptance as if she had neuer sinned or had fully satisfied For looke how he dealt with our Sur●ty made him sinne for vs th●t is imputed it which imputation
over to all lasciviousnesse and uncleannesse even with greedinesse as they who never had enough of their lusts But since ye came to the knowledge of God in Iesus Christ ye have heard and learned a new lesson since the truth of Gods love and mercy shined in yo yee came to beleeve your selues pardoned reconciled and restored to the fauour of God againe Walke therefore as forgiuen ones and let this grace renue and reforme your liues But ye will obiect saith Paul what is pardon of sinnes to a changed and renewed course Surely saith he ●hey are very agreeable each to other If ye haue been taught the truth as it is in Iesus If ye haue been iang●ers onely of faith and deceaued your selues with a bare shadow of Iesus I wonder not if yee aske this question But if ye haue sate at Iesus his feete as true disciples of his then ye cannot but know that Pardon and Reconciliation in Iesus is renouation of heart and change of conuersation for Iesus sake Euen that yee put off the old man and put on the new is the truth of Iesus and when hee forgaue yee his true and plaine meaning was that you should change your mannors and walke in another frame then ye did before yee knew Iesus Q. I well conceaue ye Now what doth the text it selfe containe and what are the parts thereof A. Generally it describes the state of new obedience which one that is in Christ ought to walke in Particula●ly it expresseth three things First The implication in the generall therof and that in ver 23. That ye be renued ie the spirit of your mind that is the truth of Grace in Iesus hath this implication in it that euery one that is in him be renued and changed The Second thing in the description is the distribution of this generall into his parts where first note the order he begins with the Negatiue part and then addes the affirmatiue Then the substance first That ye put off concerning c. There is the purging out of the old man Secondly that yee put on the new the former in v. 22. the later in 24. The third is in the 25. verse and that conteines the effect of this renuing within to wit the change of the conuersation without that it be as free from open euils as the heart from secret and that it be as full of outward fruits as it 's of inward graces and hee expresses two contraries of lying and speaking truth as a taste of the rest Q. Open now the phrases of the Apostle in order A. In the generall implication we haue First the necessity of it vrged in vers 23. thus whereas perhaps yee Epesians are of mind that it 's sufficient for ye to haue beleeued in Iesus to saluation and as for other fruits ye need take no thought how your life be ordered I tell ye no the Lord lookes that yee be also renued and say not that it will come of it selfe no let it be your care Be ye renued looke yee to it it 's weighty it will cost much paines for although it's Gods worke in you yet you may shrewdly resist it by an idle loose heart but do you yeelde vp your selues in all meeknesse of spirit to this creating work of the Spirit be you moulded to it and fashioned not to old lustes or this present world but to the renuing of the holy spirit ye haue the Spirit of God in yee but stirre vp that grace of it which ye haue receiued let it not lye dead but accommodate your selues in all selfe-denial to this work that faith may breake out in renuing Secondly We haue the work it selfe Renouation that is the same thnig wich he doth in the end of the 24 verse repeat againe and calles it the creation of the Image of God in righteousnesse and true holinesse if we put these together they amount to this First that a beleeuer in Christ must bee no patcht peeced and broken stuffe halfe old and halfe new but an whole cast molten new peece or vessell all new pulld down to the ground quite and cleane built vp al new sticke and stone so that no man can guesse what manner of frame the old was no more than a Barne can bee seene when a Lordship is set vp in the steed of it This is to be a renued workemanship Patcht things must reteane the old frame of necessity though halfe new but a meere Renuing changes frame and all Then Secondly this renued worke is a new Creation It 's Gods worke it s after God none but hee can create for creation is a producing of something out of nothing God creates this new man out of nothing The new creature consists of no power out of his owne matter but is meerely made of nothing out of Gods matter and stuffe Ioh. 3.6 That which is borne of the Flesh is Flesh that which is borne of the Spirit is Spirit Ioh. 1.13 This creature is not of blood or the will of flesh nor of the will of man but of God Thirdly It is created according to Gods Image marke this a beleeuer in Christ must not onely be begotten to God by reconciliation but must haue also his Image stamped vpon him and be like him as hee hath borne the image of the old man so he must also of the new as hee beleeues for his owne saluation so hee must bee conformed to Christ for the honor and glory of him that hath forgiuen him As the wax takes the print of the seale so doth the beleeuer the stampe of God Fourthly This image is no new outside of face or members a Christian hath the same members and body and shape and soule he had before for substance but hee hath new qualities and gifts put into him as true light of truth into his mind true warmth of holines to God righteousnesse to man and purenesse to himselfe put into him euen Gods Image in his diuine nature and properties This is the third The last is the Subiect wherein these are That is the Spirit of the mind It is not denyed by Paul but the body and the soule and all the powers thereof are sanctified and renued also as 1. Thess 5.18 but by this phrase he imports That the true seate of renouation is the inner man or the spirit of the minde that is the best and chiefe part of the soule the best part of the mind that which is the eye and guide of the soule and the best of the will that to the bent and purpose of the heart this Spirit is as the Prince in his Priuy Chamber if he command all obey if the Spirit once bee renued all the inferiors bow This is the sence of the generall implication Q. Proceede to the order and to the parts A. The order is that first the Apostle vrges the negatiue of putting off To shew that the Spirit of God neuer planteth holinesse till he haue purged out vncleannesse
Maintaine and hold this right and Title of thine Thinke not that this Spirit of Grace and Supplication is spent though thou see not God so clearely in it for all ends as thou desirest yet giue it not ouer thy sinne hath bound thee in cheynes but Prayer is not bound rather it bindeth the Lord by promise to thee The eare of God is not heauy that hee should not heare Hee is not as a man that he should be distracted by multitude of praying Suppliants at once a thousand to him are as one and one as a thousand Beware of Atheisme in this kinde Secondly Goe in the Lord Iesus by a promise hauing thy wants in a readinesse and thy faith on wing let not thy course in praying issue from a formall platforme though I iudge not any man for reading a prayer but a liuely feeling and humble pinching of soule for thy Necessities Thirdly shake off all extremities of a corrupt heart by faith which must hold thine eye fixed upon thy Mediator by his Spirit vpholding thy faintnesse and groning within thee against all thy presumptions commonnesse dulnesse deadnesse coldnesse and beseech the Lord to stirre thee vp to pray as he shall suggest vnto thee by the present occasion well digested either for the Church others or thy selfe Tye thy selfe to no punctualnesse but as the holy men in Scriptures have done so let confession sometimes goe before or follow prayer and either of both thankesgiuing Come not to the Lord with either an heart moyling and lowring with discontent without faith or bold and ventrous without humiliation but let both haue their due weight If thou wouldest be heauenly in prayer first abase thy selfe as a worme dust and ashes yea as Master Bradford hell and the sinke-hole before the Lord who is heauen and holinesse if the Lord haue any speciall draught for thy net he will put thee out of conceit with thy owne Art and thy selfe as Peter was when hee had toiled all night and catcht nothing Emptinesse is the onely raiser of our minds in prayer Oh! how hard is it to get and then secondly by faith be quickned to wait for 〈◊〉 ●nswer these two will fill thee with heauenly affections and rid thee of thine owne inuentions manner and ends Fourthly Adde these meet qualities of Prayer viz. fervent importunity as one whom God cannot bee rid of till thou speed and frequency as hauing sped well already If in prayer thou finde little stirring know it is not because Prayer is not Gods Ordinance but he would try whether forme and the worke done bee not aboue spirit and faith in thee if they be not persist and goe against the edge of thy owne deadnesse resting in that measure gladly which the Lord sees best for in this case thou wilt pray oftnest as 2 Cor. 12.10 Fifthly and aboue all come not to pray with any tainted knowne sin I say not onely grosse but euen secret and close through a lazy heart loth to cast them off or a loose heart louing them better than the things thou prayest for lest the Lord iustly leaue thee to be wearisome to him and thy selfe Cast out thy wrath and earth and disdaine and censures and vncharitablenesse yea let thy praying awe thee against them ere thou pray that it may arme thee when thou hast done Til prayer become thy familiar friend bring thee into acquaintance with God for a supply of wants pardon of daily sinnes helpe for all duties of conuersation And so looking vp to thine Aduocate for a couering of thy weakenesse this duty shall be a speciall helpe to godlinesse vnto thee Touching the Lords Prayer I send my Reader to the speciall Treatises thereof Q. Adde somewhat of meditation and leaue the rest A. Touching this Ordinance I may call it the high-way to all good conuersation yea I may say it 's as the smoke of the sacrifice in which the Angell Iudg. 13.20 went up to heauen in I set it not aboue prayer but magnifie it to set an edge vpon people who will not know it And surely if that be an helpe to God which both takes away lets and both in the act and effects of it is so admirable iudge what an helpe meditation is Tell mee then first what are the cheefe lets to grace in them who otherwise want not knowledge Surely either giddinesse of mind or vnsavourinesse of spirit The former like a sieve out of the water loseth all it gets suffers nothing either truths heard or workes seene to abide long in the heart But Meditation settles them in the Spirit that they leake not out Heb. 2.1 Thus the life of a thousand Sermons of mercies and occasions is preserued In stead of the latter it seasons the heart with the sap the life the savour of good things They are not heaps upon heaps leauing vs a thirst but we drink of them digest them and make our soules merry with them Euen as an enuious man so long chewes the cud of his malice in his bed till hee haue het his heart and deuised reuenge so is meditation a reall grace on the contrary and whetteth vpon the promises and works of God till it be fired with the love of them Againe it makes the meaning view scope and order both of particular doctrines and the whole frame of Religion to become our owne And lastly wee come hereby to the ease of practice the fruit hereof Experience so that if once we haue found crosses to doe vs good wee feare not when new ones approach if wee haue felt the gaine of a Sabbath we get a delight therein in a word whatsoeuer is easie it becomes sweete and therefore if this be worth somewhat to find the yoke of God easie and his burthen light as to say the truth it is the vpshot of goodnesse well may wee then say Meditation is a diuine helpe to a good course Oh! how it s to bee lamented that men know it not they get no matter to chew vpon they seperate not themselues to it thinking they may meditate while they ●e at worke they doe not curbe their wild and wandring hearts from other obiects and so this piece of Gods Worship is irkesome vnto them Thus much for a tast of some of the priuate Q. But are the extraordinary helpes so too A. There need be the lesse question of that because as their nature is more solemne so is their vse if they be attended accordingly And first that of Fasting Of which I say this that if wee esteeme that receit aboue all which doth cure a disease that no other medicine could then surely fasting deserues account Our Sauiour tels vs This kinde of Diuels goeth not out Mar. 9.29 saue by fasting and prayer that is all the ordinances of God are effectuall but this aboue all for this end Wherefore briefely whither we bring the Churches or our owne cases either sinnes or sorrowes before the Lord to be done away Let vs first arme
Church Commonwealth What obnoxiousnesse to Satan to his instruments temptations mischiefe bondage to the vngodly suites seruices dependances with hard conditions crosses streights pursuites losses forfeits death of friends imprisonment accidents and shrewd turnes bad tydings confusion in the state famine warre pestilence and a 1000. waies for him to goe wofully out who came but one way into the world Besides griefe of minde melancholy passions and distempers of the spirit bad conscience ill marriage lewd children ill successe Ruine of estate and at last a miserable death And yet the vpshot of all is worst after viz. A finall separation ●rom God and losse of his eternall presence with the sence of vnutterable intolerable vnauoidable wrath of God in Hell vpon the whole man for euer without the least hope of helpe or redresse Q I partly conceaue this view and mappe of the misery of the fall now conclude the Article with some vse of it A. First heere is confutation of all Papists who flatly deny this Article and tell vs that our Nature is indeed shrewdly Vse 1 may med and wounded much like him who fell among theeues betweene Ierusalem and Iericho Luke 10.30 and left halfe dead But as for vs that maintaine this dying the death this quite and cleane deadnesse in sins and trespasses they cannot abide No say they there be left euen in the vnregenerate such abilities and devotions as may congruously dispose God to pardon them And by some helpe of grace merit also full f●rgiuenesse Yea they boast themselues of their performances and d●ties whereas Paul tels vs that all boasting is cut off And tels vs Rom. 3.27 Baptisme washeth away all originall sinne which yet Paul grones vnder the burden of bei●g regenerate Also all P l●gians or their adherents who affi●me that old Adam is as one in a darke dungeon who by reason of darknesse cannot see but if he haue a light put in hath his eyes very quicke and can see any thing and so wee want but light and then wee are able to discerne and apprehend any truth put into vs of our selues Also such as blanch the matter with the color of Grace added to our nature for by that say they nature being holpen can put on the cordes as Ieremy in the dungeon and addresse himselfe to come forth What hath a dead man with all the light and helpe in the World to addresse himselfe to liue Vse 2 This also reprooues all Naturall Papists that dote upon their ciuill morall or religious duties and deuotions and cannot abide to heare that those who so duly pay all debts all dues who giue so many almes to the poore heare so many sermons keep so many Sabbaths read so many good books keep so much good company commend the Ministers and welcome them and maintaine them should yet bee as the Publicanes and sinners I doe not say yee are but I say this Except ye also deny your selues and behold this misery of your Natures yee will fate wo●se in time euen by your righteousnesse then if yee had non● for ●hy doe ye not graffe upon a rotten stock and guild a rotten post So also such as commend mens natures in the point of religion saying Oh such are so sweetly natured courteous lo●ing mild and harmelesse that there is but little betweene them and Heauen Alas how many of these sweet creatures are as bitter enemies to Gods grace as friends to ciuility and faire carriage Also such as aime at religion onely thus far to colour their wings and tip their tongues or their outward dealings with some outside but as for that heart within and nature they suspect not And to conclude such as being told of their passions defend thē by their nature It 's my nature to be so hot I haue soone done why poore foole thinkst thou thy nature is more excusable then thy passion and yet what is so common with men to say then this If I were an adulterer or drunkard I were willing the Minister should thus sharply rebuke mee but to be so bitter for mens infirmities and against that which we cannot doe with nor heale and auoide and against vnbeleefe or the like me thinkes he might be wiser Oh God would faine draw thee from the open to the secret sins of thy heart lest thy freedome from the grosser should destroy thee He would euen weary and tyre thee by thy cursed nature when thou seest all thy other defences are but dawbings with vntempered morter Thirdly This should cause thee to look vpward and to gage the greatnesse of Christs loue which could finde in his heart to Vse 3 satisfie for such a misery and to fetch happinesse out of the depth of it Euen in this Article is layd the foundation of thy esteeme of Christ in the next p●rt of the Catechisme Christ will be little set by the height and depth of mercy cannot bee sounded till thou take measure of it by a Reede of thy misery Little sinne to forgiue will make Christ little loued As we see at the Assyses that base theefe that thinkes to conceale some of his robberies and is loth to haue all come out at once fearing the mercy of the Iudge when his inditements come to bee read the second time loses his life Let vs beware lest it bee so with vs. Let not vs lessen and minse our sinnes in hope of more easie pardon but if we would magnifie the grace of Christ let vs first magnifie and enlarge our sin to the vttermost if Christ see that we rather hope in our small sin then his great grace we are dead men The way to get pardon is to equall his price to all our misery Say thus If Lord my sin had beene onely a share in Adams eating and no more or in some actuall few euils or if in the meere priuation of some good things or in sin only and not in penalties or if in bodily only and not spirituall or if spirituall onely and not eternall somewhat might seeme to lessen thy loue but surely that loue that would satisfie for all rather then any should condemne me is of vnspeakeable dimensions Oh! learne by this how to esteeme the price of grace If each step of this first part if each of these Articles make thee not miserable● then other no Article of the second part shall be able to comfort thee Be confounded vnder the ruine of thy misery and vow with that good Iabez If the Lord will indeed rid me of all this great euill that it may not grieue me If he will enlarge my coast and bring me out of this heape of woe then he shall be my God and I will make songs of his mercy Oh! let all that haue beene sayd of this misery make thee goe as she Luke 13.11 bowed together vnder an intolerable burden Lay all together to make vp such a loade as may pinch thy shoulders and cry out Who shall deliuer me who could't thinke such
hee should so much as thinke of a recouery much lesse be able to comprehend any way to get out of it Q. What vse is to be made hereof A. Still each staire must bring this wofull soule lower and lower till it can fall no further These Articles serue to plucke out each of them one or other and all of them all those false crootches and props which corrupt self-holds vpon to keep her from catching this deadly fall vnder her misery If there bee any evasion for flesh and blood any starting hole to get out at shee will bee sure to find it This is the last stoppe of all which should quite sinke the proud heart of a sinner though he carry his chin all this while aboue water To all the former this one of vtter irrecouerablenesse and desperate impossiblenesse to get out should euen kill the hopes of a wretched heart and burst the belly of it Hopelesse misery should make an helplesse soule lying panting at the mercy of a Sauiour and gasping for breath that if there bee no more for her out of her selfe then within her shee may giue ouer all And while shee sees no hope in her selfe shee may despaire in her selfe Till this last Lecture be read and beleeued by the soule in vaine is Christ offred to her while she hath a wing of her owne to fly ouer him with neglect Those that come to Christ must bee wholly beaten out of all holds and those strong holdes of selfe-hopes and self-loues either of nature meere or mixt with some helpe supernaturall Christ will neuer bee sought to if any other can bee deuised Sleidan reports that when some souldiers were surprized in their Castle and all throwne downe from the top of it to bee dasht in pieces one of them among the rest falling through the bowes of a mulbery tree clasping thereon with both Armes stuck by it and saued himselfe from death Wee may conceaue hee was loth to dye Much more are wee From the top of the first Article of this first Part to this last and lowest stayre the Lord throwes downe the soule of a sinner to kill his spirit and humble him but so long as the least crootch lasts the soule that loues her owne corrupt life abhorres to bee killed But in Gods feare let this put an end to all fancies and corrupt conceits of flesh and let it bring the soule to the earth and cast downe euery high thing and strong hold which sets vp it selfe against the need of a Christ and the necessity of faith Giue vp now all weapons and say If it bee thus Lord thou hast ouercome I am bereft of all and I must stand to the mercy of a Conqueror I haue nothing to merit or help mee it remaines now that vtter misery prouoke mercy at the hands of a mercifull God with whom the fatherlesse shall find it To conclude put case the Angels should mediate for vs yea if a man were for his owne part as free of sin as Adam yet for that which is past the offence of an infinite Maiesty he could not say any thing to it it is a matter of higher nature Q. What vse of this A. It quasheth all Popish pride and arrogancy all Pelagian and Popish conceit of the remnant of free will in vs towards our owne recouery Not onely in deuising or feeling need of any help but accepting it beeing offred by the helpe of supernaturall light and grace presented Man is as truely blind in himselfe as in a dungeon of darkenesse Though l●ght bee offered hee is as impotent to see it as vnable to procure it in the want of it The very roote of all errour and euill heresy and profanenesse being nothing else haue their Ignorance of originall thraldome vnder sin It should greatly abase vs that wee are thus hurt and know not how much lesse how to outgrow it This vse our age greatly needeth wherein formality is ready to blot out the impression of all truths of this kind and nouzle it selfe in an easie religion void of power Secondly it teacheth what a mystery grace is It is true which Paul saith Great is the mystery of godlinesse which Christ manifested When Christ came and brought light foure thousand yeeres after the Creation it was as strange as at first And now when grace findes any man how doth it preuent him euen as the light comes vpon the drunkard in the depth of his snorting and surfet Oh the sweet peace the sinner findes in his misery As Israel made their bondage an ease so wee hell it selfe our Heauen by custome Wee adde delusions to our blindnesse and senslesnesse by false errours of our owne and others Wee sleepe as Peter betweene foure quaternions of our keepers Deuill Sinne Law and Wrath. The Prouerbe is verified The life of an idiot is the sweetest of all for hee hath nothing to trouble him So heere the life of a man dead in sinne is not to bee aware of it pinch burne wound him it s nothing to him threaten allure all is one preach terror or hope woe or weale hee is dead The Law curse Christ and grace hope of Heauen are indifferent Nay such a fearefull offence is the Word to a dead sinner that euen that which should occasion conuincement and feare works confidence in him the Iewes tooke the Law a killing letter to bee the way and obiect of iustification Nothing can worke the soule to humiliation saue wofull experience when all is too late Thus much for this Q. Is there any way then from the LORD to come to the reuealing of this misery A. Yea and that is the morall Law of GOD Art 6 soundly preached to the Conscience See 1 Tim. 1.5 The Law is not giuen to the righteous but to the disobedient c. where the Apostle diuides the Worke of the Law into two sorts by implication One is vpon the righteous as its an eternall patterne and direction of righteousnesse and so it concernes the third Part of the Catechisme but in this sence it belongs not to this place Secondly as its a meane to vrge the vngodlie and to reueale to them their sinfull and cursed condition Note this double vse of the Law to auoyde confuzion which thousands runne into both in writing and hearing the Word preached Q. What say you then of such as want this Law A. They are of many sorts yet truly it may bee said of all They are withou● the true knowledge of the Law Touching Heathens Turkes and Infidels the question will bee the lesse because they wholly want the reuealing of the Law and therefore of them it s verified That although sinne reigneth among them in the guilt and curse of it on Gods part yet not on their part by vertue of any light from God For sinne is not imputed without a Law that is Rom. 5.14 not laid to their charge by Gods enlighting their conscience concerning the true obiect roote nature or fruit
is the chayn of the law and so are the words couched together that being by one and the same spirit ordained he that brakes one violates all as he that breaks any linke of a golden chaine breakes the coherence Men thinke otherwise But as hee who breakes his neighbours fence trespasses him aswel as if he ranged all ouer his ground because the bond is broken so heere It were strange to tell a drunkard he broke more then the seuenth Commandement But to tell him that he had broken all as indeed he hath were strange to him Not perhaps in actuall deed but yet in power and effect because he hath broken the bond of that God who hath made all the rest And yet there is a further thing in it then so for in a sort some actuall sinne breakes all As one hath described it in couetousnesse so might I doe it in drunkennesse For what drunkard makes not his cup and companions an Idoll what cares he for Gods worship daring to bee drunke in an Ale-house within the sound of the Preacher What conuersation toward man looks hee at in family neighborhood oathes vowes to God or men What Sabbaths doth he not breake What parents and Magistrates doth he care for but rather vndoes the estate of the one and contemnes the censure of the other What cares hee in his cups to breake the head of yea to stabbe his fellow What vncleannesse and bastardy is hee not guilty of What booty by the high way will he balke and perhaps with bloodshed to get money to drinke What lyes and slanders what colors and shifts to defend his villanies and couer his sin will he forbeare This is meet to thinke of to open the harmony of a law But howeuer this bee sure it is there is no sinner not onely grosse but euen secret who is not guilty of all the Law in the breach of any Commandement because his vndue carriage fights against the Lord of the whole Law The discouery of this light might bee as much as some mens soules are worth for what is the speech of men As for vnrighteousnesse I aske GOD no mercy As for stealing saith one or for adultery saith a second or slander or murther or vsury I neuer feare what GOD can alledge against mee Indeed such or such a sinne I aske him mercy for Well said but in the meane time it s no thanke to thee GOD and prouidence suffred thee not for th●● wouldst haue broken all aswell as one thy heart was bad enough if hee had not limited thee Oh this light well receiued prepares way for conuiction Q. How thirdly A. The Law discouers it selfe to the soule in the point of her Royalty So Saint Iames cals it Chap. 2.8 That as a King is not prescribed against by the quality of any subiect offending why hee may not hold him guilty so in this No person is accepted with GOD in this kind Oh! it s a great discouery of errour the hear● of man is proud and soone exempts and dispenseth with it selfe by some priuiledge But this Royal Law is impartiall As a glasse will shew a Queene her spots aswell as a poore woman Paul labors this point Rom. 2. against the Iewes priuiledges No difference with God All both bond and free Barbarian Scythian Iew Gentile none excepted God hath shut vp ●ll vnder one disobedience Oh it s a great abating of a proud heart One sin one hell one wrath one Tophet for Princes for subiects for learned for idiots for noble and base for Pharises and Publicanes This cuts the combe of the sinner Psalm 149.8 He bindeth Kings in Cheynes and Nobles in fetters of yron Neither can the poorest scape at a little mash nor the richest at a great Againe his Lawes are no copwebs Apply this as it is the scope of the fourth Article sup●à to thy selfe Q. How fourthly A. It discouers it selfe to the sinner in the point of integrity and soundnesse of her light That is opens sinne to the soule in one kinde aswell as another Such is the corruption of Adam that it will suffer much of the body of sin to vanish in the suruey If sinne bee either of knowledge or ignorance although knowledge shall bee of some note yet ignorance will vanish If other sinnes bee of omission or commission omission sinnes will faile in the reckoning If againe sin b●e of presumption or infirmity Sinnes of infirmity are nothing If presumptuous sins be either of particular presumption or or totall reuolt Particulars seeme nothing to a selfe-louing rotten heart But where God enlightens lo he discouers sin in all her sexes male and female strong and weake remembred forgotten ignorance or knowledge and in a word one and other And this also is a great discouery for want of which many a soule neuer comes to the bar of Gods conuiction But now this rule will not onely tell the soule the differences of these to wit that one is of greater crime then other one may both omit and commit sin and yet know neyther he may sin of knowledge yet not of presumption necessarily because he may be preuented by feare Satan violent lust and not voluntarily consent he may also presume with a different heart yet the least of these in their nature is damnable Q. How fiftly A. The Law reaches forth to the soule her key of knowledge in the poynt of her extent She who hath her Ladyes keyes knowes all and can fetch out of ech boxe So cannot the poor droile in the kitchin So this is the priuiledge of one that hath the Law to be hers It is a great piece of the light of the Law to extend it selfe in the soule to al parts and degrees of sinne First in poynt of Spiritualnes of the Law teaching vs not to rest onely in open grosse morall offences but to goe to spirituall wickednesses The Law is spiritually morall aswell as externally Thus Paul Rom. 7.12 The Law is holy and good I sold vnder sinne And 1 Tim. 1.5 The end of the Commandement is loue out of a pure heart good Conscience and fayth vnfeined Then it must be very spirituall and aswell meet with infidelity hypocrisy vnthankfulnes impiousnes profanenesse of spirit security hardnes of heart contempt of Word Sabbaths c. as open leudnes of life riot stealth or adultery And so also it enlarges the chiefe breach of a Law to all lesser degrees and steps to it As the seuench commandement reaches not onely to grosse incontinenty but to intemperancy drunkennes riot voluptuousnes of sences c. Secondly her Inquisition and Search For the Law Heb. 4.12 is very searching and piercing diuides betweene the ioynts and marrow dare and can go to any part of the whole man and fetch out any poizon out of any corner hath an vnlimited Commission from the Law-giuer to fetch out and bind any malefactor not onely seene and manifest words and deeds but also the most retyred and close
thoughts and intents of the heart the Power of GOD is with his Law to search for the King all vaults and dungeons and nothing is hidden to the eye no more then the earth to the Sun Sinnes of great consequent euils or lesse small sinnes in mens esteeme and great still and crying hidden from man and open to his view granted or defended carrying color or condemned by the world Old ones or new in a word The Law inquires vpon sinne according to the Anomaly of it not onely the circumstances And this was our Sauiours chiefescope in that holy Sermon Math. 5.6 7. Chapters correcting those base limitations of the Law which the Pharises made tying men onely to a grosse literall sence Thirdly in her aggrauating power whereby she enlarges sinne by her Circumstances causing it thereby to seeme the more odious and setting the worse colours vpon it as because such a person committed it a publique man against such light when he needed not from meere malignity of spirit in the midst of blessings against mercy Gospell vowes couenant c. which I do not speake as if all sinnes were alike but because all are sins and culpable Fourthly in her Purity The Law doth not go to tell the soule of each sin but sets the Mirror of Gods purenesse before her that she may according thereto discerne and iudge of sin good and bad ●rue and euill Truth wee say is a Rule of her selfe and her contraries There is a secret purenes in the Law whereby the soule discernes an euill in things which the world sees none in and againe sees none in some wherein an hypocrite sees much For the former A soule that hath cleer and thorow light in himselfe is a Law to himselfe in some things of specialty and accuses it selfe for the departing from the pure manner ends ground and measure which GOD requires as sometime in the keeping of Sabbath in vse of liberties in speech or silence in doing or abstayning hath a Law within him not so much what this morall precept bids or forbids as what the purenesse of it imports So that looke what sorts most with will flesh case or the inclination of nature she suspects yea euen in doubtfull cases yet withdrawes for safety rather then ventures vpon termes of her owne abhorres appearances as well as substance of euill And as in matters of God so in matters of men this Purenesse Rules the case when perhaps no Law is at hand as Phil. 4. Finally brethren whatsoeuer is Holy whatsoeuer pure honest of good report c. An heart enlightned can better iudge by this Rule then any thing sooner espies what is honest sauoury then any other can d● yea and by this casts off al those base additions o● man which want a word and therefore although they carry a shew of holines yet are base copper coine both makers and creatures as Col. 2.23 beeing far from pleasing GOD for lacke of a word to carry his purenes into them This I thought good to speake of the l●ght of the Law to giue a taste of the rest for a wise Reader will guesse at the Lyon by the paw Onely one thing I would adde that ● of these latter things I would craue the Reader to make vse of in the fourth Article of the third part so far as it may serue for vse of Christian direction and so I shall there spare this labor Q But is all this light requisite for a soule which seekes conuiction or may lesse serue A. I answere I do name these as helpes to serue the worke of the Law in conuncing not to forestall the worke of the Spirit The more sound light the soule hath the better howbeit God is free to worke in what way and measure hee please It s one thing to say what light the Law can afford to some and doth toward conuiction another with what degree it may please the Lord to bee content to worke Hee can vse these helpes or perhaps the sight of originall sinne to abase a wretched heart with greater light or lesse may serue him as hee pleaseth But the truer the light the sounder the Conuiction The Lord doth in this case as the state of the soule best admits sometimes keeps away exceeding light in all these lest the sule should lye opprest vnder her burden culling out some sinne with due circumstances of vilenesse and shame to bring the soule vpon her knees in a most kindly manner Hee nis or bound heerein Q. How doth the Law present the Penalties with light to the soule A. To adde so much here as may make vp that of the third Article this I say That the Lord shewes the like power authority and efficacy of light in these as the other He takes away all distinctiō of veniall mortall from a man presents himselfe to him in his full iustice of reuenging al sin without exception remoues all cauills and subtill extenuations of punishment aswell as of sin makes all sin appeare mortall to the soule without Christ veniall with him Tells the soule Deferring of punishment is no remoouall of it That some sins go before some follow after but all meet earlyer or later in iudgement Eccles 12.1 2. 1. Tim. 5.24 That all sinnes deserue all punishments That the least cost the Lord Iesus his blood and he that beleeues it not shall pay for it in hell That God doth indifferently hate and punish all Tribulation and anguish is to ech soule that sinneth Cursed is euery one There is no lying hid from Gods eye no shift or euasion besides fayth and Repentance No amity or Combination of sinners no ioyning hand in hand no counsel can preuaile against God who hath all penalties and executions in his hand to worke by That the Court of God is not as the Popes no Relaxations Commutations of penance Dispensations to bee had there That the hauing our hell heere is no Release or Heauen for heereafter but if wee haue not had heere wee shall there haue all if we haue had heere we shall there haue the full summe of punishment without Christ And by this the Lord prepares the sinner for conuiction following in a far deeper measure as in the point of terror shall appeare Q. How doth the Lord reueale originall sinne to the soule A. To adde a little of this also to the third Article the Lord doth this many wayes First by the speciall termes of his Word Secondly by comparison of actuall sins Thirdly by the properties of this originall Touching the 1. the Lord is in no one thing so emphatical as in the names hee giues to this poyson He calls it The Old man Rom. 7.1 2 Rom. 7.7 Rom. 7.23 24 25. Gal. 5.17 Rom. 8. ● The flesh Lust Concupiscence The law of the members The Law of sin reigning in the members The Old husband who hath the wife in subiection The body of death and the like Which affectionate termes sought for the nonce
sit heere we are but dead men and wee can bee no worse by the Aramites then by famine So they made into their Campe. Thus doth a cast-downe troubled sinner resolue to doe If there bee a way of possible escape the matter is not now whether I shall find it but I know I shall surely perish without it and sure I cannot be worse then I am I may be better I will venture the triall The vse briefly is First To obserue how God preuents a sinner by this Wisedome For what is all the complaint of a poore soule when the promise is offred Oh it s true if I were loden I doubt not of ease Thou lyest against thy selfe thou dost doubt of ease by the promise for of the former thou canst not doubt hauing been enlightned cast downe and conuinced by the Law That then which is the more easie to grant the Lords workes first as part of the condition of Grace for euen legall bondage is the first part of it that is to be loden that when the harder comes to bee vrged that is Faith then the Condition already wrought might bee ready to comfort the poore soule Secondly Wonder therefore at this wisedome which by contraries most sitly to the soules condition doth euen worke by contraries life out of death and order out of confusion Thirdly and lastly in all the Ministery of the Word let the Minister and people of GOD still fixe their eye vpon the scope of GOD moouing onwardes with him and going euen pase with his ordinance for the effecting of his owne ends and the glory of his Grace in our saluation Let vs both so teach and so heare that still the Starre may guide vs and then our iourney shall not be tedious to vs. Q. Conclude with the extremities and abuses of this legall worke A. First for the extremities they are two legall presumption and finall despaire Touching the first I call it legall because there is another and more dangerous one by the Gospell Secondly this presumption is twofold One this when the sinner waxes bold and ventrous to shake off this yoke of the Law before his spirit be conuinced and cast downe And this is that solemne caueat Deut. 29. If any shall applaud himselfe hearing the curse and say I shall haue peace adding drunkennesse to thirst the wrath of GOD s●all smoke ag●●● 〈◊〉 man Such there are then yea surely bondage is of it se●fe yrkesome but when it meets with a bold heart and is not set home by the Law commonly it prouokes wearines and then seeing that GOD seconds not his Word alway with plagues and death and curses indeed the deferring of sentence sets the heart on gog to euill and perhaps worse then before Thus Psalm 50. the hypocrite growes to thinke God to be like himselfe This sinne made Adam and all vs cursed presumption against threats Oh when wee thus fall to our old trade the Deuill falls to his finding the soule thus swept returnes with seuen worse then himselfe Let vs tremble at it and learne to inure our selues to heare all threats with feare Learne to beleeue this doctrine which I haue at large described I speake not now of sauing faith but against presumptuous boldnesse against the Law To credit the Word to be Gods who cannot lye may fall into a supernaturall conuiction although not yet sauing The second presumption is When the consternation of the Law ceazing without the addition of the Gospell causes the soule to waxe confident of it owne welfare because it hath beene humbled and perhaps holds some impression of it still not daring to resist her light But this is rare and dangerous for its a signe that the heart is secretly false and vnpurged Rest in no checkes of conscience where conscience her selfe is not first purged both to check and also to excuse and comfort the soule in the Satisfaction of CHRIST Q. What is Desperation A. The other contrary offending as much on the left hand through the excesse of terror Thus Saul and Iudas And it commonly growes from the first Satan neuer seeking more to poizon with presumption and dallyance with the Law then where he meanes to snare with the contrary of despaire How oft was Saul conuinced of his malice and persecution But returinng to his vomit brought soule and body to a desperate end So Cain and Iudas by their hidious sinnes brought themselues to this that mercy and Christ were not able to doe them good their sinnes were growne beyond forgiuenes A wofull fruit of boldenesse And yet iust for he who will vndervalue grace in the worth thereof is iustly left to ouerualue sinne in the merit of it He that neuer can find season to beleeue the Word beeing offred is iustly left to seeke it with violence when the season is ouer And so eyther its neuer time with them as he spake of marriage or else past time Many compare these sinnes with great adoe but the wiser way is to preuent both and the latter in the former Doubtles it is the sinne of the damned to liue in the perpetuall despaire of release and in perswasion that Grace is vnable to do them good Let vs know farre worse sinnes then these may destroy let vs neuer presume to venture so farre as to dye by these Vse And for vse of the point learne wee dayly to roote this cursed Roote of bitternes out of vs by two ●hings e●suing First A spirit of humility and feare to keepe ou●selues vnder the bondage of ou● Schoole-master rather then to aff●ct the liberty of presumers and in so doing to beseech the LORD o proportion out our stripes according to ou● strength a●d to keepe our despaire within the compasse of our selu●s and any thing in vs but to bee farre from the least thought of inlarging our basenesse aboue the infinitenesse of mercy Secondly To nourish in our hearts aboue all those Meditations of Mercy and Grace in CHRIST which may set vs vpon a Rocke about our selues and all fearefull distrust and carry vs in the streame thereof with holy irresistiblenesse Frequent holy and louing thoughts of God are the surest remedies against this hidious monster Q. What lastly is the abuse of this worke of the Law A. Double ech contrary to the other First On the right hand many not of the worst abuse it when they nourish themselues in a needlesse bondage whereas they know that they are in case to hearken after the remedy and will not pretending they haue not yet beene cast downe or troubled enough What madnesse is this to nourish a disease against Physick or to thinke that our trouble pleaseth GOD or to thinke that to bee of substance of Grace which onely is for preparation vnto it And yet many sullen and Melancho●●que ones are thus abuzed by Satan to thinke their Babel and captiuity yea their Hell another Heauen Let them rather hast themselues out of it when God calles them and know the Lord
of present helpe himselfe stepped forth to helpe it out he of duty the Lord of meere goodnesse but thus he did found out a way to set man vpon dry land againe out of the gulfe and depth of misery so that the one was not so hidious as this is precious and gracious Q. More particularly what do they conteine A. A sweet view of the chiefe parts of this Redemption First the first hidden and secret eternall Workeman of this deliuerance and that is God the Father In whose bosome this depth lay before all worlds who fore-seeing this ruine and his endlesse Iustice against sinne yet purpozed not to abandon all grace out of his heart towards desolate man but to retaine some still in the bottom of his wisedome good pleasure And note that this appeared not at first yet it was there then and appeared after This is the cause why GOD the Father is heere called our Sauiour and why he is said to Saue vs in ver 5. viz. as in 2 Cor 5.17 he is said to Reconcile vs not by meriting it but by first and originall ordaining it as the first agent in the working of the Trinity the deuizer of this Saluation and of the Lord Iesus the meriter of it Now marke this act of God is described by a double argument The first is the impulsiue cause set down by three words Kindnesse Loue Mercy Whereof the latter interprets the former Kindnesse and Loue noting the remainder of that Goodnesse of Creation as if the Apostle should say The sin of man could not root out this goodnesse so as to take it from God but still he had a bottomlesse goodnesse and kindnesse left in himselfe But the third word Mercy add● to them both q. d. The Lord imparted himselfe to Adam in this goodnesse of his ere hee was fallen but hee shewd him no mercy for hee needed none But beeing become miserable Lo he addes mercy to goodnes and enlarges his first kindnes and loue by a second compassion pity respecting him now in his blood and misery in which he exceeds the former as much as the Sun at noonetyde doth the rizing mercy being the perfection of loue The second argument is from the deniall of contraries Not by workes of righteousnes c. The summe is this eternall mercy was free in the conception of it The LORD foresaw not who should in time embrace this mercy nor left it in a middle doubtfull vncerteinty who should and who not suspending his pleasure vpon mans will but he did out of the freedome of grace and mercy when as yet no good in vs was foreseene much lesse actuall when no naturall or supernaturall goodnes was to bee seene in vs euen then hee saued vs because he would so doe Q. What is the second branch of this description A. The inst●umentall meriting cause of this saluation set forth in those wordes when this loue appeared and againe vers 6 Which he shed abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauior Note the sweet phrase which Paul delights in to stile both the Father and Christ our Sauiours the latter flowing from the former Now in this point note first he sayth It appeared As we see the like word Chapter second verse 11. The summe is whereas it had bin impossible for man or Angel euer to haue diued into the depth of this mercy Lo the Lord caused it to appeare in the fulnes of time and brake open this sealed fountaine of his bosome by the manifesting thereof in his Sonne for no man at any time hath seene the Father but the onely begotten Sonne of GOD comming out of his bosome hath reuealed him And which is this Appearer who made mercy appeare in himselfe Iesus Christ our Sauior It must bee so that howsoeuer mercy was hidde in the Father yet it could not appeare but by Iesus our Sauior he truly God and man in obeying suffering must bring iustice to kisse this mercy by appeasing that infinite anger of the Father for sinne and performing such a righteousnes for man as might afford a sufficient satisfaction to GOD in his vttermost iustice Christ and none else could thus do or suffer none else may satisfy he himselfe without all this both obedience and blood could not doe it none of his loue or prayers or pouerty but Iesus our Sauiour in this his full payment as a surety and a Sacrifice of blood could saue vs Q. All this is euident but what else addeth the Apostle to make vs this description of deliuerance A. The third point is the obiect vpon whom this blessing is bestowed intimated in these words Towards man and saue vs and shed on vs c. By which as he implieth that Man in his misery the selfe same man that fell frō God to hell was the obiect of mercy so the Number of all those to whom the Lord doth sauingly appeare in this mercy of his electiō in Christ are the ful obiect of mercy al that mercy can bestow The Church of Christ is she who is the sole and equall obiect of Christ all he did and suffred was not for the reprobate Ephe. 5. but the Elect these he redeemed gaue him selfe for that he might make them a peculiar spouse to himselfe without spot or wrinkle as he sayth to the Ephesians in plainer termes Q. And what are those excellent things which IESVS our Sauiour hath purchased doth this Text mention them A. Yea verie fully and that both in generall speciall For the first he sayth he saued vs. Which is as if hee had sayd he restored and set vs in as good an estate as we lost and quit vs as fully of all our misery as euer old Adam did plunge vs into it If hee lost vs Christ saued vs if hee betrayd vs to bondage He redeemed vs if he brought vs to vtter hatred He reconciled vs if he condemned vs Christ forgaue vs hee did deliuer vs in a word from all sinne and curse and layd a plaster on vs full as broad as the sore Rom. 5. Yet this must bee added that Not as the offence is so is the gift For in Adam wee were so made the Image of GOD that we lost it presently but the second Adam so saued vs pardoned and reconciled vs as neuer to be lost neuer to bee cursed neuer condemned the second time And more yet Adam was not created to any happinesse saue immortality vpon earth in a created righteousnesse We to an vncreated Vnion and Communion with God in Heauen in the presence of God This in generall More particularly the words heere are three Saued vs Regenerated vs Renewed vs. By the first of them vnderstand the negatiue part of this deliuerance viz. from what he freed vs Sinne Law Satan Wrath Death Iudgement By the latter two the positiue good things purchased vs. First by Regeneratiō and Renewing he meanes all those graces which concerne our estate in the grace of Iustification standing in
Sonne of GOD. Heere was a worke indeed of some d●fficulty at which not onely the deepest conceit of mortall man but euen the Angels themselues may stand and wonder and vanish Oh! ●hat he view of this might rauish our soules with the worth of grace to say The least dramme of grace is more worth then the whole worke of Nature who is carried by this meditation aboue whatsoeuer this world is in respect of the New Creature to compt the whole creation as vanity Dauid Psal 8. admireth man in that first workmanship of his as aboue a●l others in the world what then may be sayd of man renued and restored to a second Image of God if the breath o● Creation were such a thing what is Regeneration that cost not a breath but so grea● a workmanship of this Actiue and passiue satisfaction Q. ●eeing all this is doubtlesse the maine Satisfaction goe to the vses o b●th these in due order first tell me why you do put them together A. For the latter I answer Because as one saith this price is like the price of a Diamond payd for ten malefactors which is n●y●her all payd ●or any one nor any seuerall part for one and ●nothe● for the other but generally the wh●le for them al and e●ch h●uing sha●e in the whole Let th●re●ore whatsoeuer is spoken dstinctly of the benefit hereof bee inclusiuely taken as that which issueth frō the insparable merit of both ioyntly Now for the vses First let vs abhorre the cocceit of such Sectaries as imagine that there was no necessity at all of any such price paying to Iustice nor any barre in Gods Iustice at all why hee might not haue shewed mercy to sinners without any such satisfaction made at all It s an horrible derogation to the Scriptures and to the wisdome of GOD and sauoreth of a profane audacious spirit making sinne and grace of small esteeme Rather let it present to vs the hideous nature of sinne and iustice Salomon bids vs behold the drunkard in his rednes of colour bluenesse of wounds that wee might loath his sinne But rather behold it in this glasse of the Lord Iesus his satisfaction Esay 63.1 Who is he that commeth from Bozra with his red garments I haue trod the wine presse of the wrath of the Lord c. If the glasse of the Law haue not done it let this do it yea behold the sinnes which we count most veniall in this obiect of Iustice Not the pettyest oath or least of our vaine wordes could be payd for with the price of a lesser thing then the blood of Christ Iustice would admit of no other And the Father spared not his onely Sonne in this point but would haue him drinke the dregs of his wrath What shall become of such wretches then as despise this price How shall they struggle with this infinite wrath of GOD which the Lord Iesus had bin crusht vnder as vnsupportable if his Godhead had not held him vp Now while sinne is in her element it s counted as light as feathers but being vnder the weight of iustice and the sence of wrath it will prooue intolerable Let vs count it so now whiles wee may get it shrowded vnder the Lord Iesus let vs sweat water and blood and feele that in vs which caused those outcryes My GOD my GOD why hast thou forsaken mee Not to become Mediators to our selues but to driue vs to him that ouercame this anguish Hebr. 5. and was heard in that he feared If sin in our selues will not breake our hearts let it breake them in the view of CHRIST broken by them let vs Zach. 12.10 See him whom we haue pierced and mourne Not as Papists who whip their bodies and cry out of them that betraied accused scourged and crowned Christ and crucified him but as those who were the Actors of this Tragedy our selues Act. 2.38 that if by any meanes our hearts may be pricked as theirs who heard Peter vrge the killing of the Lord of Life Oh vnspeakable loue to be willing to be pierced for Murtherers that they might escape To say Oh Father heere is the surety lay no debt or punishment vpon these debtors I haue taken all vpon me if thou wilt needs haue the vttermost powre out thy wrath vpon him that can satisfie not vpon them that cannot Try whether there be any drop of mourning in thee by this due sight of sinne and iustice and say Oh Lord if I were left to bee my owne satisfier if thou shouldst haue said to Christ as once to Moses Them that sinne against mee I will punish of thee I will require nothing Oh how terrible had our condition beene Secondly let this doctrine confute Vse 2 First all Sectaries who that they might be singular to say Branch 1 no more teach heere of late among vs that Christ had no guilt of sinne cast vpon him by iustice for then hee could haue beene no satisfier confounding sinne imputed and sinne inherent that Christ suffred nothing in his soule from Gods wrath seazing vpon him nor yet in either body or mind but that which man could inflict by eyther pai●● or discontent But God keepe them that are the broachers of such stuffe from such a satisfaction as this in the day of their distresse And whereas they adde Gods Iustice accepted this for an equall price of sinne I answer Who hath taught them to dreame of an acceptance of that which is not equivalent to Iustice Might they not aswell ouerthrow any necessity of a satisfying Iustice as teach Iustice to accept that which is not Iustice Is it not well for vs that the Lord will accompt a truly iust satisfaction of a surety to answer our debt which was more then he ought vs but wee must goe about to corrupt the price it selfe and dreame of an imputing of equall satisfaction to an vnequall price Let vs abhorre such nouelties and know if Christ suffred no more then the malice of man there remayneth a necessity of a second suffring for vs from iustice Let vs beware while we goe about to minse and lessen the suffrings of Christ lest we destroy the truth of a Mediator and bereaue the soule of that which should vphold her in her conflict with Iustice Not to speake of vnsauory dallyance with those Texts which are brought to confute them Esay 53. 2 Cor. 5.21 and others To conclude except Christ suffred more then from man we may say that many Martyrs exceeded him in their patience of whom we read no such outcryes as Christ made Branch 2 Secondly let it teach vs to abhorre the opinion of those Lutherans who teach that our Iustification stands in the so applying of Christ righteousnesse to a sinner that hee may pleade it from the tenor of the Law Doe this and liue Meaning that wee must be possessed with the very selfe-same righteousnesse wherewith Christ obeyed and suffred And this they imagine to be the matter of
to be difficult as especially the two latter for as I freely grant faith to be the gift God wrought by his Spirit so I would faine know what you meane by those two latter viz. The condition of faith and the relying of the Some vpon the offer of God Expliaine these A. I will endeauor it And for the former as before in the point of Vocation I shewed what I meane by the Condition of faith so briefly I answer it is such a Qualification as God requires of one who may beleeue the promise of reconciliation to belong to him True it is if wee looke at the power of God he could in a moment set a man in state of grace out of the state of corruption but in this wee must looke at his will reuealed and what is most agreeable to the spirit of Bondage The Lord knowes it is no easy thing to beate a man out of himselfe when the sence of his burden lyes vpon him therefore he so prepares him that he shall not deny but that he meanes him well euen when he deserues least And surely it ought not to seeme so strange a point if wee weigh the Scriptures which neuer speake in any other language We read in Zach. 12.10 and 13.1 that when the Lord would set open a fountaine to his Church for sin and transgression he first put into them the Spirit of grace and compassions or Supplications causing them to see him whom they had pierced and mourne bitterly If we see the fulfilling heereof in the Gospell wee shall find that this Spirit of mourning went before faith as a preparatiue Reade Act. 2.37 when those murtherers of CHRIST heard that he was the Lord of life who offred life vnto them by Peter they were pricked in their heart saying Men and Brethren c. Now the Apostle answers Repent and beleeue Read these seuerall conditions of fayth Mat. 5. Blessed are they who thirst they who are poore in spirit they that mourne for theirs is the kingdome they shall be satisfied and Mat. 11.30 Come to me all that are loden and I will ease you What thinke we are not these conditions of a thing as yet wanting to wit of beeing comforted eased and satisfied The like I may say of that Ezek. 36. touching Seeking God I will doe this for them pardon them yet I will be sought for it by them So that its playne that the Lord meaning to bring the soule to beleeue prepares it first Q. What is it which workes these preparations is it any other thing in the world then that which worketh fayth A. No doubtlesse The Spirit of grace accompanying the offer of GOD in the Gospell doth worke both in the soule howbeit by degrees the former at the first and the latter after and that according to the measures of enlightening perswasion which the soule is capable of As wee see in deepe Melancholy and Sorrow that which at the first seemes harsh and cannot be endured yet by degrees the Spirit is glad to embrace In the morning wee see there is more light comming from the S●nne then that which followes the rising of it for it sends more and more light before it rize So here The offer of Christ to the soule and the goodnes o● the offrer doth imprint in the soule some steps and prints of it in a more remote degree as to see a possibility of mercy to stay the soule from faynting when yet it is farre from resting in it And as the Spirit addes more light and sauor of it so it workes the heart to the making more toward it if some barre of Satan or corruption let not as by mourning for that sinne which offended such a good GOD although yet I apply not this goodnes and so by desiring it to bee my portion and seeing all other things to be drosse to it and so of the rest The summe is the Lord by these meanes enlarges the heart more and more to thinke that mercy to belong to her which she feeles to be dayly presented in more orient colors and to be the offer of him that needed not to offer it and whereof she feeles more and more need so that as the purpose of God appeares more cleerly to it so the timorous soule makes neerer and neerer to it till it come to rely it selfe at last vpon it And who feeles not the experience of this in himselfe that as light encreases so the soule is bolder to venture and feeles eft one step eft another to be wrought of hope stay good affections of sorrow of desire when yet she dare not iudge such a Iewell as mercy to be her portion And to end this what our sence may conclude in the scattering of darknes by degrees in the aire vpon the approach of light although till the Sunne rise the day is not perfect the like may bee sayd heere in the wanzing of feares more and more by the approach of the promise when yet the day starre of righteousnes is not risen Q. But I obserue that many doubt of this for sundry causes first they obiect Nothing can please GOD without faith now its sure Godly sorrow and desire please God and therefore what need wee seeke a further way when Faith may be said to containe them all How answer you this A. I say this It pleaseth God that these steps toward Faith be wrought in the soule though I deny that they form●lly p●ease God as acts proceeding therefrom For there are three acts of the Spirit in them that heare The first a meere common worke which hypocrites may haue The second a gracious sauing worke as faith proper to the Elect. The third I take to be a middle worke which as it is not grace formally so neyther is it a common worke but such a worke of the Spirit as stands in order to faith certainly following and this is good in respect of that it produceth to with Grace it selfe which shall not bee hindred but perfited in due time And of this sort are these preparations Now to make these the worke of Faith is inconuenient for although a soule to bee conuerted hath a seed of Grace remotely cast in by the Spirit which shall be perfected yet how absurd were it to say That a man hath that which hee mournes for the want of or which hee desires to haue I say in that respect in which hee mournes and desires it otherwise I doe not doubt but where there is true Faith there may bee a mourning after more It is obiected Faith may be and not discerned I answer For a time it may and in some degree or temptation holding vnder but not in an habited and settled manner of absence Q. What say you to the second doubt This opinion seemes to crosse a truth That conuersion is wrought in an instant A. I deny it not by this assertion for as it is in the wombe that there are some preparations naturall in the fruit to
then serues for their purposes chopping and changing as Papists who leaue out the second Commandement quite and make vp tenne by making two of the last let vs abhor it Let vs abhor both their enlarging of duties beyond the Law where God hath made no sins there making sinnes and where he makes no Lawes making them to bind the Conscience vrging them more seuerely than faith and repentance Oh! it 's most intollerable And so their shortning of them and cutting them off by the middle making reach no further then the notorious euils of them But let this be our rule that look what God aymes at vnder the grossest let vs also ayme at and both abhorre each appearance of euill as well as the most odious and cleauing to good in the least as well as the greatest He that breakes the least Matth. 5.19 shall be the least in heauen and is guilty of the greatest If the scope of the second Commandement be next to the worship it selfe to prouide for the purity of it any will-worship should be to vs as an Idoll and all rebellion as witch-craft 1 Sam. 15.23 Fiftly we must conceiue the cōmandements as importing no patcht or peeced obedience to one or a few charges but an entire and whole one as the coagmentation of the Lawes of both Tables doth import Let vs alway conceiue the scope of the Law to require integrity and all partiall seruice to bee a forfeit to the whole Law and be farre from all such hipocrits and Ciuilians of whom the one colours his vnrighteousnesse by his pretensed deuotion which men cannot controle the other their impiety and prophannes of their hearts by the outward ciuility in some of the Commandements of the second Table both in truth breaking both Sixtly the Lawes of the former Table are generally to bee preferred to the duties of the second yet with an exception that we conceiue it upon equall tearmes thus that the commands of the first ranke in the former table haue precedency ouer the second not each branch of the former aboue the second in their first ranke It is generally more excellent that God haue his due then man not particularly the neglect or contempt of a Sermon is a fouler sin than the murther of a man Seuenthly Vnderstand the commandements to require at our hands the vtmost of our wit deuise and courage to serue God that if we be beaten off in one kind yet wee desist not till we see that we be denied altogether Else to take any occasion of perill perhaps supposed onely to neglect duty is to discharge our selues of seruice ere God doth Eightly Let vs obserue the Commandements of God neuer crosse each other if any such case occurre as wherein one cannot stand with the other let vs know the one must alway yeeld to the other as if the child bee set about his fathers lawfull businesse hee may not at the same time neglect his calling though to a religious end as to heare the word c. except the parent release him the prerogatiue of the first Table aboue the second notwithstanding Lastly Let vs note this that duties of necessity and mercy which cannot be otherwise done are to be preferred to duties of piety at that season as the Phisition to attend the patient or to help the Oxe out of the ditch rather than worship God first and suffer these to despaire the whilest Obedience in such cases is better than sacrifice and the omission of a duty is no contempt with God But I cease to mention any more seeing it 's lesse to my purpose Q. Conclude then the Article with some vses Vse 1 A. First it strongly confutes all enemies to the Law of God either old Athiesticall Antinomists or late Libertines and carnall hipocrites It 's no wonder that they are so rife in these daies of loosenesse for euen our Sauiour did touch vpon such Mat. the 5.17 the Apostle writes few Epistles but he meetes with such turners of the grace of God into wantonnesse men of corrupt mindes and Peter writes that many abused the Epistles of Paul to their owne destruction 2. Epist 3.16 It is no wonder if theeues might haue their will would suffer no watches to be kept or deformed women loath or break al true Glasses Let vs so much the rather abhorre them as odious enemies to God and vnder pretext of the Law of liberty wal●e as lawlesse libertines and ouerthrow the Law of Conuersation Vse 2 Secondly let vs consider how dangerous a thing it is to worship God according to our owne fancies and inuentions The Lord wee see will not trust his owne Familie of Beleeuers with prescribing of Lawes to themselues vnder colour of that faithfulnesse It was a good speech of old They are the best Lawes which giue least power to the Iudge God will haue no Iudge to be his Chancellor to make or interpret or change Lawes he knowes our boldnesse and Sacriledge in this kind Nay hee knowes that curiosity of our braines which being weary of his Lawes devise new and loue their owne better than his and so in time iustle out the Lords with our owne And as we can open our mouthes against Papists in this kind so let vs hate them in the roote and cast out of our selues all such selfe and selfe-loue as vnder a colour of reteyning Gods Lawes yet seeke a breadth of our owne in his narrow and make his Lawes our owne through our bad mixtures This is the sinne of hipocrites and time-seruers let vs if wee ignorant study this Law of God duely and when we see his will which is as the decrees of Medes and Persians let vs not descant vpon it and nibble at as a fish at the bate being fearefull of the hooke striuing by the rottennesse of our deceiued heart to bring Gods Lawes to the bent of our owne bowes and corrupt them in the simplicity of them There is little oddes betweene the carnall wil-worship of them that thrust vpon the Lord their owne and the spirituall wil-worship of them that take away from him his Thus did Balaam Num. 22.12 whom the Lord at first told plainely he should not go with Balacks seruants but that answer not pleasing him lo how he goes between barke and tr●e causing them to stay a night longer vers 19. What was this but to make the Lords charge a nose of waxe was it possible the Law of righteousnesse could stoope to a law of couetousnesse Beware wee of this hipocrisie least while we dally with God when we know it the Lord suffer vs to dash out our owne light and lay offences in our way and leaue vs to our selues that as hee when he would needes go with them and fetch inchantments from place to place yet being dazeled and besotted with his owne lust should not know himselfe to be an hipocrite nor be capable of conuiction what is more terrible then to heare such an hipocrite make himselfe beleeue that
in him Saying thus Oh Lord I am thine save mee Psal 119.94 Of thee I am who art made vnto me not onely Righteousnesse but Sanctification with growth and encrease in it I come therefore to plead my right in all humility If I had neuer come to birth or to the light I had so bin at an end but seeing thou hast not denied me the life of a child of thine doe not leaue mee to shift but Lord bring mee vp at thy cost and let mee haue my portion from thy Table and my daily bread from thy hand And as a good Parent thinkes it little to keepe the life of his childe that it sterue not but hee allowes all things for comfort as well as neede if hee be able that it may liue and prosper and grow vp and be like in him and enioy what hee hath to giue it when the due time is come so O Lord deale thou much more with thy seruant in Grace till Glory My Baptisme I already enioy in the death and life of Christ to make methine O Lord let also his Bloud Grace and Spirit run in the veines of my soule to strengthen me in the inner man with all long-suffering and well-pleasing and ioyfulnesse all grace of thy new Creature let it be mine As thou art in the Father so let mee bee thine as thou art Gods let mee be Christs dwell thou in mee and let mee dwell in thee by thy Spirit and grow vprighter stronger and holier while I haue a day to liue Let thy Sacrament of the Supper nourish mee also to eternall life Secondly Prepare thy soule to this feast of the mountains Esay 25. as oft as thou commest which must be oft 1 Cor. 11.29 30. and come not without thy feast Apparell And let this be one Rule vnto thee Doe not catch vp this Robe on the sudden but weare it daily betweene Sacrament and Sacrament Thy father is a King who can beteeme and maintaine thee to weare thy best clothes each day of the weeke and make thy Friday better than the poore mans holiday That faith in the Lord Iesus thou walkest or wouldest come with to the Supper liue by it daily Christ is the same in the promise and the Seale That Repentance thou walkest with to the Sacrament practise it daily better is a Souldier taken out of a Garrison than new prest That broken heart thou wouldest faine haue in the searching and lamenting of thy sinnes nourish daily he that in a great frost would keepe the yee thin must keepe it broken euery day So thou thy soule-issues lest thine heart harden That desire thou hast after Christ Sacramentall or wouldest nourish in the promise daily hunger and thirst each houre after him else it will not be with thy soule as with thy body that many hungry meales will make the next a glutton but rather thy emptinesse will make thee senselesse of it If thou wouldest not thinke it a burthen to doe thus Oh how sweet should preparation to the Supper bee to thee which now is tedious Thirdly Being thus come to the Supper set thy faith on worke say thus I know no Deuill in hell can seuer Iesus Emanuell my meat and drinke from these Elements but his Word hath vnited them for euer Why oh my soule hath the Lord care of Bread and Wine Or is it that by Sacramentall vnion with them as sensible he might vnite himselfe with me spiritually and really in this Seale of his that my impatient worldly dead distrustfull heart might bee purged and I filled with the Lord Iesus my Food and Restauratiue in all graces of Regeneration and that in a full festiuall manner Lord if I by vnbeleefe doe not no diuill can diuorce thy Christ Sacramentall from me Fourthly Seeing him there thine take him eat and drinke him and enioy him let thy soule apply him to thee for that thou lackest and hee serueth that is to supply thy wants where the hedge is lowest with thee to pare off thy superfluous part to fill vp and supply thy decayes and voydnesse I meane such gifts or graces as concerne thee either in thy particular calling or in thy generall beware thou doe not streighten this feast bring not thy owne browne bread in thy pocket scant not his bounty but take it as hee offers it by so much the more meet for him to giue by how much more thou unworthy And how much this feast seemes in thy eye to come short of Popish Masse-Christ for they giue him to God and take none of him from God by so much the more let it be to thee a spirituall Banquet of all refined Wines and fat things and if thou canst feed with the Saints thou needst care for Papists whom if thou didst sup with they would robbe thee of thy drinke which were to choke thee with thy meat Fifthly Lest thou shouldst stagger about thy right and part herein remember the end of the Sacrament is to rid thee of this feare For why it is Gods seale to the Couenant of his Grace to make thee his Sonne and Daughter and to sanctifie thee it s his vttermost security for any outward one nay it s his Instrument of conveying the greatest measure of his Spirit vnto thee Distrust him not in his cheefe euidence As a man when hee hath sealed up deliuered his writings and giuen vp the possession of all to thee can doe no more so this is Gods vttermost evidence whereby he hath made Iesus thy Sanctification and grouth in it as sure as heauen can make it Sixthly Hauing so receiued it liue by him depart as one well satisfied enlarge him both for number and measure of grouth to all parts of thy life all estates graces duties And in the strength of this Cake and Water 1 King 19.6 7. goe to thy iourney euen 40 dayes till thou come to the Horeb of heauen hold this thy comfort by prayer and watching and till thou come to a new bait liue vpon this and from one to another till thou grow to thy measure And so doing who can deny the Supper to be a cheefe helpe to goodnesse Q. May the like be said of the rest either publike or priuate as reading singing of Psalmes conference prayer meditation if yea then shew how and first of prayer A. For Prayer in a word to touch it and gather one or two eares out of an haruest of matter let me be conceiued to speak of it in each kind sauing due respects for breuity sake First then Retaine this heauenly ordinance of God in that due esteeme which the Lord hath graced it with for all ends both of humiliation and supplication The Lord and thy soule by experience doe know it to bee the key of all the coffers o● God and that High Priests liuing way made by the bloud of Christ whereby thou hast accesse daily yesterday to day and euer the oftner the welcomer to the holy of Holies to the seat of Mercy