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A13547 The parable of the sovver and of the seed Declaring in foure seuerall grounds, among other things: 1. How farre an hypocrite may goe in the way towards heauen, and wherein the sound Christian goeth beyond him. And 2. In the last and best ground, largely discourseth of a good heart, describing it by very many signes of it, digested into a familiar method: which of it selfe is an entire treatise. And also, 3. From the constant fruit of the good ground, iustifieth the doctrine of the perseuerance of saints: oppugneth the fifth article of the late Arminians; and shortly and plainly answereth their most colourable arguments and euasions. By Thomas Taylor, late fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge, and preacher of the Word of God, at Reding in Bark-shire. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1621 (1621) STC 23840; ESTC S118185 284,009 494

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iudgement or bee deceiued with toyes still The iudgement of the world is cleane contrary to the iudgement of Gods Spirit who is so farre from calling them substance as that they are made non-ens a meere nothing Thirdly men call them profits but how vnprofitable are they 1. They profit not in grace but are step-mothers vnto it and therefore the poorest men are chosen to be richest in grace And generally are not the richest in wealth poorest in good workes poorest Christians 2. They profit not in the day of sicknesse Prou. 11.4 Riches auaile not in the day of wrath No money will buy the fauour of a wrathfull King nor buy out the paine of one tooth 3. They profit not in the day of death cannot buy one houre for repentance not a quarter of an houre to set the house in order 4. They profit not in the Day of Iudgement a whole world cannot buy out one sinne vnrepented of Lastly men call wealth gaine as if all were gaine that is gotten But 1. What is the gaine of an handfull of earth perhaps with the losse of the soule and heauen 2. Our Sauiour Christ who best knew what riches are oppos●th them to the true gaine Luk. 16.11 12. Indeed if they could buy pardon of sin or merit eternall life or make a purchase of heauen as Papists teach vs then were they goods indeed and substance and profits and gaine but these titles which the Scriptures affoord them shew vs plainely how farre they be from such effects 2. Rule Take them from God in the right ends for which God hath reached them to thee Not to riot on lusts or imploy them as a furtherance to sin Not to lay them in thy heart a roome reserued for better purposes Not to make thee proud and swell thy heart to insult against others that haue not thy measure But for foure maine ends which the Lord intendeth 1. To exalt and aduance Gods mercy who hath giuen thee more than others being in thy selfe lesse than the least mercy and in way of thankfulnesse to honour God with thy wealth in vpholding his seruice and glory 2. For the necessary and honest sustentation of thy selfe and thy family in sobriety humility and moderation Thus Parents may lay vp for their children 3. For the common good to vphold the good estate of the Common-wealth in publike payments tributes taxes c. Rom. 13.6 4. For the reliefe of the poore members of Iesus Christ to bee rich in good workes to doe good and distribute 1. Timoth. 6.18 And thus to become as Iob fathers to the poore eyes to the blinde feet to the lame that the loynes of the poore may blesse vs. 3. Rule Consider seriously with thy selfe these three things Who thou art that hast receiued wealth What thou hast receiued And on what condition thou hast receiued First Who art thou that hast receiued wealth 1. Thou art not an Owner but a Steward the money and wealth is thy Masters thou must not hold it to thy selfe nor lay it out but at his appoyntment 2. Thou art not a Free-holder but a Tenant at will thou sittest not in thine owne but owest homage rent suit and seruice 3. Thou art not a Citizen but a stranger here in a strange Countrey If thy wealth were thy owne and might stay with thee yet canst not thou stay with it Secondly what hast thou receiued Goods thou sayest But I say Thy wealth is not good in it nature as not euill but in it selfe at the best indifferent and onely good in a good vse A worldlings goods are neuer goods till he come to dye for then they are set at liberty to doe others good though not himselfe They are not good to all men but to good men onely nor good further than they are seruants to a further good and helps to the chiefe Good euen God himselfe Thirdly on what condition hast thou receiued them Namely to be countable for them And what account can hee giue that hath defrauded both his Master and his fellow-seruants How dares a seruant bring that into accounts which hee hath spent on whores gaming drunkennesse Dice and Cards bolles and bowles contentions and friuolous suites of Law c Hence when at some time God calls the conscience to reckoning afore-hand that which was so sweet a morsell vpbraids him and is ready to choke him as Iudas and as the Prophet saith Ezek. 7.19 They shall cast their siluer into the streets and their gold shall be cast a farre off A worldly and wicked conscience once awaked shall wish the Master cast into the sea or vnder the bottome of the Mountaines so it might escape the account and reckoning 4. Rule Cast thine eye vpon true and substantiall riches First God in Christ is true riches what can be wanting to make a man fully happy who inioyes God as his portion Secondly Christ himselfe is the true Treasure in whom all treasures are hid and the Pearle for which the wise Merchant selleth all and Paul counts all but drosse and dung What a world of wealth is in the blood of Christ one drop of which redeemed a whole world How rich is his prayer and intercession Thirdly Godlinesse is the chiefe gaine that is the knowledge and profession of the Gospell this hath the possession of the rich graces of God Faith Loue Hope Patience Righteousnesse in comparison of which gold and pearles are but drosse Fourthly the Treasure of heauen is worth looking after Col. 3.1 To haue the conuersation in heauen Phil. 3.20 Sell all thou hast saith Christ and thou shalt haue treasure in heauen Now this wealth is vndeceiueable performes all that it promiseth contentment perfect freedome sound and stable peace fitnesse to doe good abundant and sure wages with continuance being a durable riches not left in earth but carried with vs to heauen not consumed with vse but increased And therefore was it so sought by the Saints Heb. 10.34 They ioyfully indured the spoyling of their goods because they knew they had in heauen a better and an induring substance The eager pursuit of these riches would soone and easily bring the other out of request 5. Rule Pray first for wisedome and vnderstanding to vse these things before thou prayest for the things themselues Pray first for goodnesse and then for goods For first they neuer become truly goods till grace make them so Secondly they are like wild beasts not more dangerous in keeping than in taking and must be well watched that we be not spoyled by them Thirdly this wisedome is promised to them that are good in Gods sight Eccles. 2.26 wisdome to prouide knowledge to vse and ioy in fruition or right vse To conclude this poynt If wee being to deale with a man in great matters were aduertised by a friend to looke well to ourselues because wee deale with a Cheater and one that hath deceiued almost all that euer dealt with him
sundry reasons First it considers aright who they be Why who be they Answ. 1. They are spirituall fathers to beget men to God by the preaching of the Gospell 1. Cor. 4.15 These Fathers giue vs a being in Christ being instruments by whom of children of the diuell we are begotten to be new-borne babes in Christ. 2. They are spirituall mothers that trauell in birth of vs till Christ be formed in vs sustaining great paines and sorrowes to bring vs forth to Gods Kingdome Other mothers beare children into a miserable world these into a happy estate 3. They are spirituall nurses to feede preserue and bring forward with much care and tendernesse 1. Thes. 2.7 gentle as a nurse cherisheth her childrē Other nurses are mercenary but these are nurses to their owne children more affectionate toward them 4. They are the spirituall light of the world which without them lyes in spirituall black darknesse and starres shining to others in the light of doctrine and good example in this life and in the life to come shall shine as Starres in glory Dan. 12.3 5. They are Stewards of Gods House Luk. 12.42 to whom are committed the keyes of the Kingdome to open and shut Math. 16.19 6. They are sauiours of men 1. Tim. 4.16 Saue thy selfe and others Obiect Christ onely saues vs. Answ. True by merit and efficacy but none are actually saued to whom this merit is not communicated and applied namely by the Ministery Secondly a good heart considers whence they bee 1. Embassadours sent from God in the stead of Christ 2. Cor. 5.20 called hence by a speciall prerogatiue Men of God not in the old Testament onely but in the New 2. Pet. 1.21 1. Tim. 6.11 2. Tim. 3.17 2. Bearing on them an image of Gods authority commanding in things spirituall binding Kings in chaines forcing the conscience Magistrates haue power to binde and lose mens bodies but the Minister saith Tradatur Satanae Deliuer such a one to Satan and hath power to binde or lose the soules of men and what he doth in earth is ratified in heauen Math. 18.18 3. Not onely from God but in their office and Ministery are called co-workers with God 1. Cor. 3.1 God forgiues sinne properly and they are said to remit sinne God properly saueth and they are said to saue God himselfe communicating his owne worke vnto them and so farre honouring them as he not onely calls the Angels their fellow-seruants but them by the name of Angels Thirdly a good heart considers to what they are appoynted 1. In the stead of Christ to seeke and saue what is lost not the health lost as Physicians nor wealth lost as Lawyers but the lost soule namely by applying the meanes appoynted by Christ Iob 33.14 To deliuer the man that he goe not into the pit not by working the meanes but applying them and pronouncing him absolued 2. They are earthen vessels that carry an heauenly treasure to dispose the secrets of God set ouer men by the Lord and for the Lords businesse beseeching exhorting correcting and instructing by whose Ministery as by Gods owne arme men are drawne out of hell sinne the world to turne to God and beleeue in Iesus Christ Esa. 53.1 Act. 26.18 and whereby being naturally voyd of the Spirit without faith and destitute of grace they attaine the Spirit and faith and other graces And hence they are called Ministers by whom we beleeue 1. Cor. 3.1 and Ministers of the Spirit righteousnesse and grace 2. Cor. 3.6 8 9. 3. They are faithfull shepheards ouer the flocke of Christ to feed his sheepe in greene pastures to call them backe from their wandring and to refresh them with the waters of consolation healing the brused and afflicted soule as hauing a tongue of the learned to speake a word in due season Esa. 50.4 4. They are powerfull intercessors betweene God and vs to speake from God to men whom wee cannot heare in his owne voyce and liue and to speake from men to God as Mediators rising vp in the gap able to lay open their wants to confesse their sins to craue pardon for them to giue thankes in their names of mercies and to offer vp all their spirituall sacrifices to God for them as Samuel professeth 1. Sam. 12.23 God forbid that I should sinne against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you but I will teach you the good and the right way Fourthly a good heart considers that all their word shall be fulfilled and God will see to that for his owne faithfulnesse sake Esa. 44.26 He confirmeth the word of his seruant and performes the counsell of his messengers that their worke shall not bee in vaine nor their word fall to the ground as of Samuel 1. Sam. 3.19 And what is done to them in reiecting or receiuing their persons and doctrine Christ takes as done to himselfe Luk. 10.16 Exod. 16.7 A good heart considering all these things together with the necessity of the Ministery for without vision the people must perish Prou. 29.18 1. Knoweth reuerenceth and honoureth them as the Ministers of Christ 1. Thes. 5.12 Know them that labour among you haue them in double honour for their worke sake whom God hath appoynted Ministers of reconciliation giue testimony how you honour the Word in them as Cornelius gaue reuerence to Peter Act. 10.24 2. It loues affects and receiues them gladly more than fathers of the flesh being fathers of the spirit they being instruments of generation these of Regeneration By them thou art a man by these a new man a Christian man They by a mortall seed begat thee into a wretched world these by immortall seed into an happy estate in a better world How ioyfull was Lydia to receiue Paul Act. 16.15 and the Iaylor ibid Phil. 2.28 Receiue Epaphroditus with all gladnesse and make much of such The Galatians receiued Paul as an Angell yea as Christ himselfe Gal. 4.14 A good heart will esteeme their feet beautifull much more their faces 3. It will seeke the Law at his mouth for he is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts Mal. 2.7 and submit it selfe to the doctrine Heb. 13.17 Obey them that haue the ouersight of you yea in doctrines of selfe-denyall in doctrines vnpleasing to flesh and blood knowing it is not they but the Spirit that speakes in them Math. 10.20 and that without their salt their corruptions would neuer be seasoned therefore it concludes with Naamans seruant that there cannot be an easier commandement than to wash and be cleane and will take warning of iudgements from these Watchmen Eze. 33.4 5. 4. It will euery way be helpfull to them and comfortable First with cheerfull and honorable maintenance will not sticke at trifles yea deare things will be parted with The Galatians would haue pulled out their eyes to doe Paul good It will acknowledge it owes it selfe and his soule for them Philem. 15. and if it reape spirituall
is necessarily required moisture of grace as to the fruits of earth moisture in the earth But what moisture is in a stone A stone indeed may be moyst on the outside in moyst weather The walls and Marbles seeme to weepe and drops stand on them in rainy seasons not because moisture is in them but moisture offers it selfe vnto them but they hold it not so as they remaine as hard and dry within as euer before So with this stony heart where hardnes of heart raigneth no moisture of Grace no relenting or giuing within Indeed in foule weather when the storme of God is risen an inuincible hard heart as hard as a Marble may seeme soft Pharaoh yeelds and giues againe on the outside You may see drops of water standing in Esaus eyes who wept when the blessing was gone Iudas seemes moystened with repentance Balaam melts a little and wisheth to die well Foelix moulders a little and trembles But we must distinguish this from sound moysture of grace 1. These be flashes and sudden motions and as seldome as the weeping of walls 2. This moysture comes not from an heart softened but from slauish feare or present smart euen from the present disposition of the weather from without 3. So soone as faire weather comes againe the stones are as dry as euer they were so these returne to their former lusts so soone as the foule weather is ouer as Pharaoh Foelix c. Vse 1. Doest thou heare the Word preached without any great fruit Then lay the blame where indeed it is Some impute it to the difficulty of the Word Others to the fault of the Minister who pleaseth them not either in the matter or manner But it were far more commendable for thee to impute thy vnprofitablenesse to the hardnesse of thine owne heart and so take thy sinne home to thy selfe so did the Apostle Paul Rom. 7.14 when he perceiued that the Law of God was not so efficacious to him as he desired he accused not the Law but maintayned it to be spirituall but himselfe as sold vnder sinne He condemned himselfe not the Word so doe thou for the Gospell is the power of God to saluation it is spirit and life and mighty in operation If it worke not so mightily on thy hart then see thy hardnesse bewaile it let godly sorrow and griefe daily dropping make this stone hollow till it haue broken it Vse 2. That of the Apostle Hebr. 3.7 To day if ye will heare his voyce harden not your hearts All the seed cast vpon an hard heart is lost as if a man should sowe on a rocke where is no place for root or moysture Beware of an hard heart there is no curse to that almost no sinne to that Better that all thy field were couered ouer with stones than thy hart should Nay it were better for thee to be a dead stone than a liuing stone Now the markes to know an hard heart are these 1. When Gods Word makes no impression or gets not within the heart to renew or reforme the man though sometimes it may scratch the outside and restraine him When the Law is threatened hee either blesseth himselfe or turneth his eare from it or applies it to others not himselfe And the Gospell enters not because the Law hath not pierced nor been as a needle to make way Let all the mercies of the Gospell be shewed to the wicked he will not repent nor learne to doe well 2. Neglect or light ouer-passing the workes of Gods Mercy or Iustice vpon himselfe or others For mercies when the goodnesse of God leades him not to repentance Rom. 2.4 5. Our Lord makes this a cause euen in his owne Disciples in whom the sin raigned not that they forgat the matter of the loaues because their hearts were hardened Mark 6.52 For the Iudgements of God his workes of Iustice doe moue somewhat more than Mercies but nothing to amendment Pharaoh when iudgement puts him to a plunge could say I haue sinned here is a little scratch on his heart as on a Stethy but the hardnes recoyles the stroke that should breake the heart to pieces so as after all the strokes of God there is no reformation 3. Vnfeelingnesse of hardnesse and vnwillingnes to feele it no mislike of it no desire to vnderstand the danger of it When men desire to sit quiet in sin and nothing so offends them as to heare their sinne disgraced when they turne their backes and stop their eares Zech. 7.11 Being as loth to bee drawne to a Sermon powerfull against sinne as Israel to come neere the Mountaine Whereas a soft heart is most sensible of much hardnesse in it and counts no burthen comparable thereto 4. For the maintaining their estate credit and fauour in the world or their lusts and pleasures to oppose and dislike such Doctrines courses and persons as haue the Word on their sides Pharaoh must not seeme to be ouercome by such meane people and therefore seeing euidently the Lord stand for them he obdured himselfe The Scribes and Pharises conuinced in their conscience of the truth of Christs Doctrine and the innocency of his person did out of hardnesse of heart euer oppose both his Doctrine and Person because they must maintaine their credit in the world and vphold their pompe and glory against him though hee had truth and equity and innocency on his side The like of all hardened persecutors of the poore Saints 5. Out of resolution of following a mans owne present course whatsoeuer perswasions or Doctrines he heareth to the contrary to fly occasions and companies which might touch or worke vpon his conscience Some cannot abide to heare strict Preachers that allow them no vnlawfull liberty no not affoord them a looke on the forbidden fruit Others cannot endure the society of a faithfull friend that will truly tell them of thēselues No such string must be touched This argues a soule or soyle settled in hardnesse 6. Habits and customable sins which make the heart as a path-way A soft heart smites it selfe for once sinning and for small sinning Dauids heart smote him for cutting off the lap of Sauls garment How would it haue smote him for cutting off his head But custome of sinne hardeneth exceedingly Heb. 3.13 Take heede lest any be hardened through the deceitfulnes of sin And by hindring repentance it holds men in the trade of sinne Hardnesse and the heart that cannot repent are ioyned together Rom. 2.5 Vse 3. As euer thou wouldest heare the Word to saluation labour for a soft and melting heart such as good Iosias had whose soule melted to heare the words of the Law read The greatest blessing heere below is an heart flexible and bowed to the obedience of God And hereunto consider these Motiues 1. That it is a note of a child of God to haue his natiue hardnesse mollified and his naturall stubbornnesse corrected and altered by the Spirit of sanctification 2. Thes. 2.13
sand and the fall is great how needfull therefore is it for vs to bee fully settled and rooted in our grounds of Religion Quest. How shall I know I am thus rooted in the Doctrine of faith Answ. By a spirit of discerning which enlightens the minde and supplies euen to simple ones a sharp insight and cleernesse of iudgement through vse of the Word in all needfull matters of saluation For faith brings in the Spirit which leads into all truth and the eye-salue still cleering the sight more and more 2. By building our hearts on this foundation and that is by beleeuing it for thus it is a foundation not in it selfe onely but vnto vs when by faith we are coupled and knit vnto it 3. By growing vp on that foundation and yeelding obedience vnto it This note our Sauiour giues Math. 7.24 He that heareth these words and doth the same is a wise builder that layes his house on a Rocke c. Secondly looke well to thy rooting in the grace or gift of faith Content not thy selfe with any thing but onely that faith which is called vnfained 1. Tim. 1.5 and the faith of the Elect Tit. 1.2 This is the faith by which the iust shall liue Hab. 2.4 Quest. What is the rooting in the grace of faith Answ. It is a sound worke of Gods Spirit whereby the heart attaines a true assurance and perswasion of remission of sinnes and the fauour of God in Christ. A worke of the Spirit because no man is borne a Beleeuer but new borne A sound worke for true faith is no empty or windy thing but a subsistence and ground without hollownesse and deceit as all the speciall workes of Gods Spirit in the hearts of the Elect are A true assurance and perswasion because many are deceiued by a temporary faith by blind hopes of mercy at the last by colours either of ciuill honesty or religious performances are misse-led with the example of such as they admire for wisdome place or power and mistake a conceit for faith that because they be not so ill as they were wont to be they be as good as they need be But this man out of good grounds riseth to good assurance Quest. How may I know my selfe soundly rooted in the gift of faith Answ. By fiue notable effects of it 1. Sound affection to Iesus Christ prizing him aboue all the world and counting all but dung in comparison in so much as our life is not deare vnto vs but as Paul wee dare dye for him And this affection is alway ioyned with affiance in Christ or holding fast our assurance by him For as God will still owne his people euen in the furnace in the deepest trouble so must they owne him Zech. 13. vlt. yea when Christ may seeme to withdraw and neglect them as the woman of Canaan Abraham rested in the naked promise and beleeued aboue hope Rom. 4. so must we not hasting to euill meanes in the want of good Esa. 28.16 He that beleeueth shall not make haste 2. If it purge and renue the heart from all kinde of sinnes especially secret and inward Till faith come the heart is full of raigning guile and deceitfulnesse and hollownesse cannot hold out but faith purifieth and garnisheth the heart as a Temple So faith and inward purity grow together 3. If it keepe the heart humble and hungring For it is a light in the bowels causing a man daily to see his sinne more cleerly and to seeke pardon for it in Christ casting it out daily by confession and godly sorrow and still it hungers after righteousnesse insatiably 4. If it be ioyned with good conscience These two goe vndiuided Now a good conscience being perswaded of Gods loue in Christ first excuseth the man that his sinnes are pardoned and then in way of thankfulnes hath respect to all the Commandements and endeuoureth obedience to all Also it hateth feareth and auoideth all sinne because it offendeth God 5. If it be a shield enabling thee to withstand the tentations of Satan and such as runne with thy owne naturall inclinations now it is well grounded That faith which shall stoutly withstand all sinne in time of prosperity shall preuaile mightily against all troubles in time of triall But if thy faith giue thee vp to bee led away to vanity or any ordinary preuailing sinne now in the time of peace suspect it trust it not for time of triall Such as fall from the Religion of God when times of change come being led away either by the seduction of deceiuers or persecution of Tyrants are such as shall finde by examination that the faith they pretended was neuer of power against some knowne sinne and so was neuer strongly rooted in Christ. This faith thus qualified is strongly rooted Cast it into the fire it will come forth purer than gold 1. Pet. 1.7 And when the best faith of hypocrites forsaken of carnall helps on which it stayed it selfe shall proue drosse and be consumed this faith shall set the Christian on a rocke safe in the middest of stormes and waues of aduersity Thirdly looke to thy rooting in the profession and holding forth of thy faith For faith well rooted will breake forth in confession profession and defence of Gods truth 2. Cor. 4.13 I beleeued and therefore I spake and Act. 4.20 We cannot chuse but speake say the Apostles Quest. How may I know I am soundly rooted in the profession of faith Answ. 1. If policy or feare hinder thee not from the profession of the truth by day Many cast themselues into the night with Nicodemus as if it were a worke of darknesse to professe the light Common faith holds it no wisedome to be so forward pulls in the tender horne if any scornes losses or oppositions be abroad Carnall reason swayes against it Master pitty thy selfe it shall not bee so vnto thee Carnall friends easily perswade a man not to bee too busie The feare of a chaine or the wrath of superiours quite blast it 2. If by these cold and pinching times thou abate not thy affection or loue to God his Word and his children 3. If thou gettest courage yea and aduantage by opposition as a strong tree is stronglier rooted for shaking winds Whereof we haue an example Ierem. 36.32 When the profane King had burnt the Booke Ieremiah caused the same to be written againe with many moe words The more euill men oppose holy Doctrine concerning holy life and the worship of God for matter manner time c. the more godly men will iustifie and maintaine it This confession is an acceptable thing to Iesus Christ and honourable and Christ lookes for it Math. 9.28 saying to the two blind men Doe you beleeue that I can doe it Not that hee was ignorant of their faith but for them that were present he would haue them confesse him plainly shewing that it is not enough to beleeue with the heart but confession
to sauour the things of God And it is sufficient that we haue liued in such lusts but now let vs walke no more after the will of man but of God 1. Pet. 4.3 Shall our Profession bee Christian and our practice Heathen What doe such a number of Heathens in a visible Church whose heads hearts and hands are more stuft with cares feares and distractions than the most Heathenish Heathens For men to follow the world with a full spirit to place their felicity heere and make it their chiefe ioy to increase their estate heere is to liue like an Heathen For after all these things doe the Gentiles seeke 2. Because the things of this life are not worth such distracting care in the due estimate of them For first they are but for this present world which is indeed a world of vanity and a mappe of misery Secondly they are but for a mortall and changeable life which passeth as a vapour though men that entertaine them vainely suppose they shall not dye at least not yet They are for a life common with vs to the brute beasts which want vnderstanding and reason and yet their life is passed without any such cares or distractions by that generall prouidence that feedeth Sparrowes who neither spinne nor carry into the Barne But there are cares for a better world which as it is a Kingdome of glory and happinesse so it is vnshaken of perpetuity and eternity There are cares for the life of the soule which as it is more excellent than the body so are all the good things belonging to it And these cares are worthy of roome and place in a Christian heart There is a life not common with beasts but with the Angels to bee cared for nay common with Iesus Christ the care of which our Sauiour hath commended to vs aboue all other cares in the world when reprouing Martha for her too sollicitous and busie care in entertaining his own blessed Person he told her and vs in her One thing is necessary and this care is of the good part which shall neuer be taken from vs. 3. These distrustfull cares argue both impiety and folly The former in that they would fasten vpon God want of knowledge power or will to relieue our wants For if God take knowledge and bee able and willing to supply them what need I vexe my selfe further For his knowledge Math. 6.32 Your heauenly Father knoweth that you haue need of all these things For his power Goe into the Wildernesse behold him feeding Israel forty yeeres without all earthly meanes giuing them bread from heauen which ordinarily comes out of the earth and water out of hard Rocks than which nothing is dryer preseruing their clothes from wearing while they were worne forty yeeres together For his Will Psa. 37.28 The Lord forsaketh not his Saints they shall bee preserued for euermore But these distractfull cares deny the Lord the honour of wisedome power and mercy and so are expresse signes of an vngodly heart Secondly they argue a foolish mind two wayes 1. That when a little will serue a man in his way homeward thorow a strange Countrey he will lode himselfe with needlesse burthens Nature is content with little Grace with lesse Iacob craues no more of God but food and rayment And wee are commanded If we haue food and raiment to bee therewith content 1. Tim. 6.8 2. What an extreme folly is it when a man hath enough for the present nay and for his time if he were to liue ouer two liues yet to spend his dayes in scraping and gathering not so much for himselfe as hee knowes not for whome It may be for a foole Eccles. 4.8 It may bee for a waster and spend-thrift it may be for a stranger chap. 2.19 nay it may be for an enemy as Haman for Mordecai 4. We professe our selues children of God and therefore these distracting cares are most vnbeseeming vs. We must rather imitate children who because they depend vpon their father and rest on his allowance they put off all care and thought what they shall eate drinke put on or what portion they shall stand to hereafter And if we see a man drudge and droyle in the world and making shift for himselfe we will say Surely such a man hath no father to care for him 5. God often doth alwayes might reuenge these great cares with great vvants and the more carefull men be the more needfull often they are God most righteously punishing the vnbeliefe of their hearts and paying them vvith their ovvne coyne They vvithdravv their confidence from him and he vvithdravves his blessing from them Then they labour and thriue not earne money and put it into a broken bagge and God ouerthrovves their conceits they thinke their care must doe all but the more they care the lesse they haue to teach them that if they vvould care lesse they should neede lesse Meanes to thrust off these carking cares 1. Labour to get assurance of thy adoption For if a man be persvvaded of this he can easily stay himselfe vpon God for all needfull things The prayer is first Our Father and then Giue vs this day our daily bread No maruell if men be vnquiet in their hearts vvho haue neither care nor assurance of their adoption Math. 6.30 Christ makes them a signe of incredulity O ye of little faith 2. Learne the lesson of contentation as Paul Phil. 4.11 I haue learned in whatsoeuer state I am to bee content I know how to want and to abound Where in what schoole Not in the schoole of nature for that teacheth impatience and discontentment in wants but in the Schoole of Christ through Christ inabling me A man comming out of this Schoole is as comfortable and cheerfull as if his small portion were the whole world 3. Because these cares will euer bee incroching and thrusting in we must know vpon whom to turne them off 1. Pet. 5.7 Cast all your care on him for hee careth for you Cast them off farre away from thee as a man pressed with a burthen or somthing that hurts him But with this difference hee casts his burthen on the earth thou must cast vp thine into heauen Psalm 55.22 Cast thy burthen vpon the Lord and hee will nourish thee as an Anchor is cast to stay the Ship against all waues and billowes of diffidence and distrust Quest. How should I cast my care vpon God Answ. 1. By faith beleeue his gracious promises and apply them to thy selfe 2. In nothing be carefull but let your requests be shewed Phil. 4.6 Prayer is a casting of our care on the Lord therefore call vpon on him and commend thy wants vnto him 3. Keepe him in sight and set him still before thee Phil. 4.3 4. The Lord is at hand in nothing be carefull there is no cause of these choking cares and distractions seeing we haue the Lord so neere and may with confidence call on his Name for the
man soone espyed and if you come once to be noted you may be no small loser by it So rich men wil say Your doctrine is good and I would the times would beare it and wee might bee allowed to follow it but I haue many eyes vpon me c. 2. They hinder the practice and obedience of the Word as we shall see in some instances 1. The Word perswades to humility and lowe conceit of our selues But riches doe swell vp the heart with lothsome pride and make a man thinke of himselfe so much better than of another as he hath gotten wealth perhaps by wicked meanes aboue others wheras wealth well gotten makes no man better but ill gotten farre worse How contumeliously did Nabal vse Dauid 1. Sam. 25 Because hee was wealthy he was proud and haughty 2. Gods Word perswades to trust and confidence in God who is our life and the length of our dayes onely of power to doe vs good But wealth easily perswades the heart to make gold the hope Holy Iob disclaimes this practice of a wicked man Chap. 31.24 If I said to the wedge of gold Thou art my confidence If I reioyced because my substance was great or because my hand had gotten much c. it had been iniquity for I had denyed God aboue The rich mans riches is his strong Tower in his conceit hee thinkes himselfe well-walled and intrenched within his wealth and rests vnder the shadow of the wing of his wealth which hee is not content to haue vnlesse it haue him his heart and trust 3. Gods Word perswades to workes of charity and mercy and to be rich in good workes But loue of riches choketh this Word shuts vp the bowels of compassion against his brother shrinkes vp the hand that should open and stretch it selfe to the necessity of the Saints suffers not to honour God with our riches nor to prouide for our selues any other wealth but that in earth Thus the miserable man hath riches while he liues and when he dies they are goods neuer doe good before 4. Gods Word teacheth to leaue our riches for Christ and that naked Christ is wealth enough But loue of the world chokes that Word and makes vs for an handfull of the world to forsake Christ and the holy profession as we see in the young man who went away heauily because hee had great possessions Iudas must haue thirty pieces more than hee could gaine by his Master The like of Demas 5. Gods Word teacheth to restore ill-gotten goods as by vsury deceit oppression lies c. Zacheus so soone as he was conuerted restored foure-fold But the loue of the world choketh this Word and hindreth obedience worldly men part with vnlawfull profits as with their ioynts nay will rather part with their soules 6. Gods Word teacheth that euery man should maintaine himselfe and his family in a lawfull and honest course of life and not to esteeme that penny his for which he may not praise God as the giuer But this Word is choked in a number both Ministers of iustice and Ministers of the Gospell and Trades-men that receiue a great deale of wealth from the diuell and not from God in a number of vnconscionable courses And especially they that liue by wicked and vnlawful Trades Dicing-houses filthy houses Play-houses and such places of idle and hellish resort which one not vnfitly calls The diuels house of Office And such Victuallers Vintners and Ale-sellers as suffer brutish creatures to wash away their reason and discretion so they may licke away their money as if it were not a foule sinne to liue on the foule sinnes of others Thus riches choke the obedience of the Word and suffer not a man to serue God or obey his Word further than serues his owne commodity Vse 1. Take notice of that vanity with Salomon Eccles. 5.13 who obserued riches reserued to the hurt of the owners Men haue giuen them the name of goods as if there were no danger in them or euill to the possessor by them who yet we see may easily dispossesse himselfe of Christ and saluation by them How many haue we seene while they were in lowe estate in the world humble gentle meeke forward and zealous who now in prosperity are growne fat proud disdainfull and slothfull in spirituall things How many in their lowe estate were diligent Hearers profitable conferrers of the Word carefull obseruers in sanctifying the Sabbath fruitfull instructers of their families But now the world is come in vpon them and the businesse of it thrusts in and the poore man that cannot serue two Masters at once is gone backe and growne lazie yea and at length lothing that good Word the sweetnesse of which he hath tasted and decreased in the Spirit as fast as he increased in the flesh As the Moone neuer suffers Eclypse but in the full So these in their fulnesse suffer the earth to come betweene them and their Sunne who in their wane were safe enough Heere for our further instruction we will consider two things 1. The Markes of a man in whom the world choketh the Word 2. The Remedies I. The Markes are fiue 1. In his whole desires hee is more earnest after goods than after grace Psalm 4.6 Who will shew vs any good This is the speech of many But a few say Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs. The blessing of Esau the fat of the earth most men desire most But the blessed dewes of heauen and sauing grace in the meanes are as refuse wares not asked after Tell a man of a good bargaine or a good purchase he will giue you both his eares he will bestirre himselfe and his onely feare is to bee preuented Tell him of the bargaine of heauen and of the purchase of that inheritance among the sanctified yea saith he God send vs that inheritance aboue all but if God send it not he will neither bee at paines nor cost for it If God should put many of vs to our choyce whether we would haue wisdome or wealth or long life or power ouer enemies wee would scarce with Salomon chuse wisedome in the first place but would either haue wisedome vvith an inheritance or an inheritance vvithout vvisedome 2. His speeches vvill bevvray him in vvhom the vvorld choketh the Word For as he chiefly sauours the things of the vvorld and affects them so out of the abundance of the heart his tongue runnes chiefly on them 1. Ioh. 4.5 They are of the world therefore speake they of the world Follovv this man from a Sermon you shall marke that presently being out of the Church he falls into discourse of vvorldly matters and earthly things as if the Word heard vvere not vvorth speaking of his earthly heart is carried naturally to his center Follovv him from a Play or from the Market you shall heare him tell the vvhole story accurately and articulately from poynt to poynt or discourse as he comes
without which nothing can please God Heb. 11.6 No action speech almes prayer hearing preaching all without it is defiled and sinne and the labour lost 4. Faith is the comfort and strength of Christian life no loue no ioy in Christ before he bee beleeued and apprehended 1. Pet. 1.8 No hope for hereafter if faith beleeueth not no peace with God till wee bee iustified by faith Rom. 5.1 No boldnesse in prayer till by faith wee can call God Father no strength in tentation no ioy in affliction no comfort in death till faith haue gotten Christ his victory his strength his life then the bands of tentations afflictions and deadly things dismay him not 5. Faith opens heauen and makes way to see things within the Vayle to obtaine by the prayer of faith the wealth of heauen yea and the glory of heauen for the end of faith is saluation Whereas an vnbeleeuer shuts heauen against himselfe Reuel 21.8 Without shall bee vnbeleeuers If weaknesse of faith shut Moses out of earthly Canaan much more must want of faith shut men out of heauenly Canaan Therefore a good heart labours for soundnesse of faith and the rather because much faith is counterfeit and many things are taken for it and there is no better argument of a good heart than to cast out deceit from faith lest it be mistaken in so great a commodity 1. It hungers and thirsts after righteousnes aboue all things in the world sighes and grones vnder his ●owne wants feeles a want of Christ who onely can giue a perfect righteousnesse couer his imperfect 2. It is in some measure satisfied according to the promise For clasping fast the promises it comes to a true perswasion of Gods fatherly affection beleeues the remission of sinnes and comes confidently into his presence as a father appeased as the poore Prodigall Luk. 15.18 comes to his father with shame in his face and sorrow in his soule for sinne but yet with confidence in his heart that hee should not bee cast off and so was satisfied aboue his desire he would haue been but as a seruant but lo he is accepted as a sonne 3. This good heart not only beleeues the Word but rests on it to bee happy as the onely good tydings and most thankfully accepting the promises bindes it selfe as fast to God in duty as God hath bound himselfe to it in mercy 4. It will haue a faith to liue by such as shall bring in a new life into the whole man For faith being an instrument to vnite vs vnto Christ by it as by the bond of our vnion we receiue life and motion from Christ that now the heart is purified the conscience pacified the spirit of our minde renewed the will changed the affections altered the whole man moued and quickened to all good duties So in all occasions it will expresse the life of faith which shall now gouerne the whole life First in our labour and actions it makes vs diligent in the worke but leaue the successe to God Secondly in suffering for well-doing it vpholds it selfe with a patient expectance of a good issue and waiting the Lords leisure makes not haste Thirdly in prosperity and the middest o● blessings it vseth them with blessing but swells not by them trusts not in them but furthers his reckoning Fourthly in aduersity and temporall wants it saith with Abraham God will prouide it will vse no vnlawfull courses to helpe it selfe and lookes more for the staffe of bread than bread it selfe Fifthly in tentation it will rest on the naked promise it will goe against sence and feeling and apprehending nothing but wrath will reare vp it selfe to trust in Gods mercy Iob will trust still if the Lord should kill him Thus in euery thing the good heart may say I liue not now but Christ liueth in me Galat. 2.20 5. As euery life must bee maintained in naturall things so also must this life of faith Therefore a good heart will bee very diligent in the meanes of preseruing and increasing faith It will bee much in hearing the Word by which it is begotten and fed much in meditation and conference by which it is excited stirred vp much in prayer Lord I beleeue helpe my vnbeliefe and as the Disciples Luk. 17.5 Lord increase our faith 6. It desires to come to the end of it and wisheth for the comming of Christ Reuel 22.17 The Spouse saith Come It waites for the hope of the glory of God Rom. 5.2 But an euill heart cares not for this faith vnfained 1. It contents it selfe with a name and supposition of faith not the thing or rests on knowledge hope or presumption of Gods mercy in stead of faith 2. It prizeth not remission of sinnes at a due rate thinkes it selfe neuer the richer for it holds it impossible to get assurance of it so neuer attempts it nay it sees the want of euery thing but faith 3. It cannot bee brought to labour seriously in the application of Christs merits and righteousnesse thinkes not application to be of the nature of faith or onely applies it for saluation not sanctification or change of the heart and life 4. It can talke of faith not liue by it cannot beleeue for lesser things as meate and drink but vseth vnwarrantable meanes much lesse for greater higher things cā thank God for prosperity but makes too much haste in aduersity 5. It dares make no profession of faith for feare of men like Nicodemus will doe nothing nor suffer nothing for Christ because it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is no substance in it 6. It can boast of sound faith with the best but it was neuer begot by the Word nor founded in repentance nor cherished with the meanes nor conflicted with sence of vnbeliefe nor workes any change nor cares for any but feares to come to the end of it it loues not the Lords appearance c. Therefore all this is a fancy not faith a dead carcase not the body of sauing faith by which the good heart liueth The fourth spirituall grace which is a marke of a good heart is sound pacification or peace in the holy Ghost 1. with God 2. with it selfe 3. with others 1. Peace with God is next to iustification by faith Rom. 5.1 And this is first through absolution that is sence of remission of sinnes for sinne onely breeds enmity and separation from God who is neuer pacified till sinne be forgiuen and then they can walke friendly together Secondly through acceptation by meanes of Christ apprehended the Prince of our peace and our Peace-maker Esa. 9.6 Ephes. 2.21 Now a good heart knowing that all happinesse stands in peace with God in whose fauour is life and that the wrath of this King is the messenger of death and what an vncomfortable thing it is for a Tenant at will to liue in the displeasure of his Landlord is most carefull to make vp his
as Gods fauour Psalm 4 6. Lord lift thou vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs. 2. For spirituall mercies able to satisfie the better part namely the soule of man as appeareth by the method of the Lords Prayer 3. For blessings proper to the Saints sauing faith sound repentance c. Lastly for mercies of continuance such as last both here and hereafter 3. The manner of true prayer standeth 1. In a faithfull eying and apprehending the promises A good heart will aske nothing but what God hath promised 2. In feruency and instance through sence of want and loue of Grace The Spirit of God stirres vp strong cryes and causeth a man to preuaile with God by wrestling as the Canaanitish woman 3. In repentance and humility seeing God heareth not sinners Ioh. 9.31 that is such as purpose to liue in knowne sinnes 4. Especially presenting them in the Name of Christ Ephes. 3.12 By whom wee haue entrance and boldnesse with confidence of faith And by the hands of Christ Reuel 8.3 who is the Angell at whose hands the Lord receiues the odours of the Saints This prayer forceth the Lord that hee craues dimission Exod. 32. Genes 32.26 where the father saith Domine quis te tenet Lord who holdeth thee that thou canst not get away Now thus an euill heart cannot pray For first it cannot pray in the Spirit because the Spirit is not there It can draw neere with the lips when the heart is remoued It cannot pray in humility because a proud heart neuer saw his wants It can say words of prayer and doe the action but without faith without affection And it is regardlesse of the promises and leanes on second causes Secondly the heart and tongue are at variance the prayer of the lip and the practice of the life at discord It can say Hallowed bee thy Name but sweare vainly falsly ordinarily profanely It can say Thy Kingdome come but persecute Preachers and Professors and abet Popery or profanenesse It can say Thy will be done but not by it selfe and when God hath reuealed his will it can be impatient fretfull c. It can say Giue vs this day our daily bread but be couetous vniust lye sweare depend on vnlawfull meanes not Gods allowance It can seeme to pray for pardon of sinne but not against the practice of sinne nor with repentance yea when they meane to liue and dye in sinne It can say Leade vs not into tentation but runne into euery snare all companies courses no corrupt fashion but it soone can become a leader in it But the prayer of the Spirit is no such thing it will indeed practise what it prayes Thirdly an euill heart either prayes not or speeds not What swarmes of Atheists are there who out of a gracelesse contempt of all Religion neglect this duty that whereas godly men are denominated such as call on the Name of the Lord 1. Cor. 1.2 these call not on God Psalm 14.4 And whereas the godly are such as thinke on the Name of the Lord Mal. 3.16 these seldome or neuer thinke on his Name but in oathes blasphemies and cursing Or if they will needs bee said to pray yet they speed not for first their persons are not acceptable Psal. 34.15 16. His eares are open to the righteous but his face is set against the wicked yea their prayer is turned into sin Psalm 109.7 Secondly they turne their eare from hearing the Law and so it is abominable Prou. 28.9 And they make no conscience of other duties or not ordinarily as if all the promises belonged to one duty Nay they pray to serue their owne turne not to returne duty of any kinde vnto God And if the subiect will not heare the Prince iustly doth the Prince reiect his suites Thirdly such a man prayes sometimes not continually in affliction diligently Hos. 5.15 In time of Lent superstitiously Lectures and Church-prayers are nothing so good out of Lent Or it can pray at leisure times but cannot set all aside for prayer to waite vpon it For some things it can pray Nimis ardenter saith Augustine too feruently that is for temporals as corne and wine and oyle onely or chiefly Hos. 7.14 But in spirituall things it is neither frequent nor feruent nor constant Fourthly the voyce of prayer is drowned with the voyce of sinne The voyce of Abels blood cryed downe the voyce of Cains prayer The voyce of Sodoms sinne the voyce of Abrahams intercession So of the voyce of couetousnesse malice iniustice drunkennesse filthinesse Fifthly it can wish for pardon of sinne and reconciliation with God but speeds not because it will not be reconciled with his brethren Math. 5.24 Leaue thy gift before the Altar goe thy way first bee reconciled to thy brother A wicked heart can send out of the same mouth both blessing and cursing can pray for blessing on himselfe and the plague of God on his neighbour Papists can be at their Beads and Masses ●or prosperity while they call for fire from hell to burne Parliaments Yea roughnesse and pride of spirit doe often preuaile against good men that they are disordered in their families their prayers interrupted 1. Pet. 3.7 Lastly he can seeme to pray whiles he is an enemy to prayer Hee cannot abide these long prayers and constant course of holy exercise in families Oh beware of despising any of Gods graces especially this of prayer in any of his children Their prayers keepe Gods vengeance from off thee esteeme them as basely as thou canst The fourth sort of Rules concerning the Spirit of God is for spirituall growth Wherein a good heart is knowne by many excellent qualities 1. It knowes that something in grace is still wanting and all is not giuen at once and so still humbleth it selfe in the measure receiued Phil. 3.13 2. It knowes that without growth that which is begun decayes the one Talent not increased is taken away Math. 25. 3. Seeing the bitter fruit of declining and the wofull example of many that fall away it is carefull not to bee plucked away with the errour of the wicked but grow in grace 2. Pet. 3.17 18. 4. Because the good heart being one of the Lords plants is fruitfull in euery part of the life but more fruitfull in the age Psalm 92.14 It prouokes it selfe more forward more forcibly 5. Because sound grace cannot rest in beginnings but growes to perfection and is crowned with perseuerance being like to the light of the Sunne which increaseth in brightnesse till high noone Prou. 4.18 Therefore it is most carefull to grow in sound grace the soundnesse of which growth is discerned two wayes First by out-growing the ordinary sinnes of the age of his calling of his speeches and former behauiours and auoyding as well the euils of his heart as of his life A childe comming to bee a man outgrowes all childish behauiour so the Child of God 1. Cor. 13.11 Secondly by growing
whatsoeuer his Lord saith as Mary to the seruants Whatsoeuer he saith doe it As a man that is to plant an Orchard will be sure to get of euery good fruit some so a good heart will not know any fruit to be good but will carry some of it Particulars were infinite for workes spirituall and corporall duties to them within and duties to them without workes of iustice and workes of mercy in giuing and in forgiuing of incitation to good and hindering of euill 6. A good heart doth good duties constantly for first grace knits the heart to God that it may sticke to his seruice not looking backe secondly the writing of Gods finger that is the Law is neuer blotted out his workmanship neuer defaced and so what it is once by grace as it desires euer to be so it remaines thirdly it sees Christ before it finishing his worke Ioh. 4.34 and so it is his meate and drinke also to finish his worke fourthly it will not giue vp or cease to doe well for any crosses Iob 2.3 In all this Iob sinned not the loue of God and goodnesse in that heart is like a raging fire and much water cannot quench it fifthly it is loth after the suffering of many things to lose the Crowne promised onely to perseuerance Reu. 2.10 Bee thou faithfull vnto the death and I will giue thee a Crowne of life 7. A good heart doth good duties watchfully before-hand to apprehend occasions as Abraham sate in the doore of his Tent to entertaine passengers and after the doing to reuiew them as God did all the workes of his hands after the Creation to finde either peace and comfort in them if well done or trouble and disquiet in failing It knowes they shall enter into a strict examination of a strict Lord and Master therfore it selfe will first examine them whether they were done sincerely seasonably cheerfully humbly and according to the rules of well-doing Oh the wickednesse of our hearts who yet conceiue better of our selues 1. Some good actions we would doe but hate the light which should direct vs and such as walke in it 2. Some good deeds we would doe at our death but fearfully outstand the opportunities of grace and will know no season Christ mourneth ouer vs as ouer Ierusalem 3. How proud are we of a little glorying of our good works delighting to heare them praised whereas a good heart would dislike euery thing 4. How seldome measure we our actions by the rules of Gods glory good conscience and sincerity of heart but by multitudes and examples of men doing as the most do and for our owne crooked ends 5. Wee content our selues with the deed or action done neuer care with what affection which the Lord most respects as in the widowes two mites and rich mens superfluitie 6. God hath long manured vs but where is our abundant fruit for clusters wee cannot shew berries Can God be content to finde so little where he expects so much and may not hee expect much where he hath giuen so much Shall we neuer come to answere for our meanes which we are so vnanswerable in 7. How many are falne backe from their righteousnesse which shall neuer bee remembred They seemed to begin in the Spirit but are vnstable and peruerted whose latter end is worse than the beginning VII Markes of a good heart in respect of sinne It knoweth first that nothing is properly hated of God but sinne as being directly against his Law and his Image who is a God hating iniquity and as God himselfe is the chiefe and absolute Good so onely sinne is the chiefe and absolute euill Secondly that the proper effect of hatred being reuenge he is not more sure to sinne than God to reuenge one way or other yea vnto the third and fourth generation of them that hate him Thirdly that all and euery sinne is vpon record there is an hand-writing against euery sinner and an obligation in euery sinne binding the sinner who hath not one farthing to pay for an infinite debt or infinite forfeit Col. 2.14 Fourthly that all and euery sinne lies in the way betweene God and vs and separates from him and holds good things from vs shuts heauen curseth the earth and burthens all the creatures Fifthly that it exposeth to all misery within vs without vs both here and hereafter Within vs the destruction of all Gods Image the corruption and guilt of the whole nature all euill inclinations against God and our neighbour especially an euill conscience where sinne lyes at the doore either vexing and galling it or dogging and watching it which is a very hell before hell Without a man all the calamities of this life sicknesse pouerty madnesse shame death and corruption all the proper effects of sinne Gen. 2.17 In the day thou sinnest thou shalt dye the death And hereafter the extreme misery of sinne in all not deliuered by Christ is that eternall death which is the wages of it the vnsupportable curse denounced on all that continue not in all things Deut. 27.26 and to be executed on all Reprobates in the Day of the Lords appearing Math. 25.41 Goe ye cursed c. Hence 1. it sees the misery of sinne and grones vnder the burthen both the sinne of his nature for which Paul cries out of himselfe as a wretched man and Dauid Psal. 51.5 and of his life as the Prodigall who acknowledged himselfe not worthy to be called a sonne and the sinnes against the Gospell vnbeliefe despighting of Christ and his Spirit as the Iewes pricked in their hearts Act. 2.37 2. It truly repents for sinne for which this heart may be called an house of mourning an Hadadrimmon or the valley of mourning In which repentance is first confession against it selfe Psal. 32.5 It will not flatter it selfe but cast the first stone against it selfe and will say more against it selfe then all men can as Dauid hauing numbred the people before the Prophet Gad came cast the stone against himselfe saying I haue exceedingly sinned 2. Sam. 24.10 Secondly confession of all the sinnes it knowes as 1. secret and hid corruptions for the good heart knoweth that God loueth truth in the inner parts which made Dauid complaine of his originall corruption and brooding sinne which none tooke notice of but himselfe and the Apostle Paul of the law of euill rebelling against the law of his minde 2. Small and lesser euils it extenuates no sinne as little esteemes none as Gnats Moats or Mites which Gods Law takes order against It lookes not so much on the matter as on the forme It is burdened and takes notice of the least sinnes omissions failing in good things falling from the first loue c. Thirdly in repentance there is remorse or biting A good heart cannot commit sin without remorse not secret sinnes because it knowes nothing is secret in respect of God with whom it hath to deale
not most naturall and inbred sinnes to which it selfe is most inclineable because it knowes the more familiar the sinne the more dangerous not small sinnes Dauids heart smote him for Sauls lap as for his head the eye feeleth the least moat And this by small meanes as soft wax is soone impressed so is a good heart because of his softnesse It will melt and resolue more at the very hearing of Gods Iudgements denounced against others as Iosiah 2. Chron. 34.27 than an euill heart at the feeling of Gods most dreadfull Iudgements as Pharaoh Exod. 7.23 Peter when Christ onely lookes backe vpon him gets out and weepes bitterly It is true that a good man may lye a while without sound remorse as Dauid nine moneths after his adultery though not that time without grudgings but that time the euill and corruption of it preuailes and the Spirit will not suffer it to lye still but awake it must and no sooner wakened then humbled Fourthly in repentance there is reuenge on it selfe with holy indignation for playing the beast before God 2. Cor. 7.11 Thus the Publican knocked his brest and Iob abhorred himselfe in dust and ashes Chap. 42.6 And all this a good heart will doe both secretly and constantly Secretly because hee is a Iew who is one within and hee is praised whom God praiseth And it knowes that euery sound action of grace as mortification repentance humiliation must begin within and flow from thence the seat of soundnesse is the heart and to take notice of outward things to reforme them and neglect the heart and soule and secret passages is to begin at a wrong end Constantly because it sees such dayly ruines in the soule as make it continually mourne and put it to a continuall charge and labour in repairing it And this is to grieue sincerely for sinne as sinne as the offence of God not for punishment whence it is called godly sorrow 2. Cor. 7.10 3. A good heart because it knowes that the greatest happinesse stands in the pardon of sinne Psal. 32.1 and the conscience can neuer be rightly quiet but in declaration of forgiuenesse it labours most for assurance of the pardon of sinne with strong cryes for mercy Psal. 51.1 and to feele the ioy of saluation vers 12. in many seuerall petitions Wash me clense me purge me with Hysope with importunity as Dan. 9.19 and endlesse repetitions as ●he poore starued begger fo● relie●e or the condemned person for a pardon 〈◊〉 the poore Publicans prayer was God be mercifull to me a sinner It sees more need of Gods fauour then of life and therefore more eagerly desires it and pines till it feele the sence of it It sees his filthy nakednesse and is neuer quiet without a couer his horrible foulenesse and is euer washing and bathing in the Lauer of Christs blood and the teares of true repentance It feeles a deadly sore and cannot bee eased without application of Gods saluation 4. It feareth and watcheth all sinne to come as it hateth and shameth for all sinne past As nature shunnes and feares all Serpents euen little ones as well as great so grace shunnes all sinnes and hates them being the spawne of the serpent First it knowes all are hatefull to God all preiudiciall to the soule as one hole in a ship or one Swine in a Garden or one Fly in the Apothecaries box is enough to spoile all therefore it watcheth all Secondly seeing small sinnes are commonly Harbingers to greater it dares not venture on the smallest Thirdly it knowes that the way to auoyd finall defection or back-sliding is to feare staying a little Fourthly it feares the shew the taste the occasions the first appearances of sinne lest from the broth it easily fall to the flesh Fifthly it feares and hates his owne sins more than all other mens and not as it is said of Anthony He hated the Tyrant not tyrannie Rom. 7.15 I hate that I doe Sixthly it hates and feares his owne inward sinnes as much as the outward wisely damming the fountaine and Well-head and stocking vp the root Seuenthly it hates and feares the repetition of sinne and much more shakes off the habite of it lest hee should suddenly grow to expertnesse in the trade Lastly it hates and mournes for other mens sinnes and stops them when he can Psal. 119.136 Phil. 3.18 and now tell you weeping Yea the sinnes of others against God more smite a good heart with sorrow than their owne sinnes can an euill 5. It retaines and still renewes a full purpose of not sinning so as though it sinne the conscience can testifie that it is carried against the setled purpose of it Dauid sweares and vowes he will keepe the righteous iudgements of God and Away from mee ye wicked for I will keepe the Commandements Act. 11.23 with full purpose of heart cleaue to the Lord. Psal. 119.2 Surely they worke no iniquity they doe sinne but not as workemen they cannot plot it but are simple to doe euill Rom. 16.19 Now an euill heart may be humbled and grieued for some sinne but rather for some actuall sinne past than the sinne of nature and that not as sinne or an offence of God but either for some iudgement feared so Ahab put on sack-cloth 1. King 21.27 or some already executed Exod. 9.27 28. Or if there be any release and the iudgement be a little ouer it returnes afresh to the old course as a dog to the vomit 2. Pet. 2.21 2. It can make shew of repentance yet is but as a cloud without raine his teares are soone dryed vp he goes away and forgets he was washed he can be bold enough to sinne and is onely ashamed to confesse his sin or if he doe it is in grosse in the lumpe with excuses and extenuations 3. It will be at little or no paines for the pardon of sinne the assurance of it it thinkes either impossible or vnnecessary It cannot throughly resolue to leaue sinne and therefore cannot bee so earnest for forgiuenesse 4. It can purpose sinne and reioyce in a future sinne Esau saith the dayes of his fathers mourning will once come and then he will slay his brother Absalom carries a purpose of killing his brother Amnon two yeeres together and then doth it This plotting and contriuing of sinne is a sure signe of a wicked heart 5. It can repeate sin remorslesly till it can trade and come to bee expert by often committing ouer the same sins and let them grow to customes habits natures 6. It can defend and pleade for sinne cloking bad actions with good pretences or good meanings Saul saues the fat for sacrifice Absalom will be King to doe iustice and he will begin to execute iustice with rebellion and treason against his owne indulgent father 7. It can glory in sin Phil. 3.19 whose glory is their shame which is true of drunkards swearers proud persons c. all of them farre from
2. It is one branch of Gods Couenant which he ratifieth to the Elect and by which he begins his mercy I will put a new Spirit within their bowels I will take away the stony heart and giue them an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 3. Neuer canst thou bee framed to grace no fashion of the Word can be seene on thee till thou attaine a soft heart You cannot cast a stone in a mold as you can metall because it cannot melt 4. If thou bring an hard heart the very Word a meanes of softening others shall by thy malice be peruerted to thy further hardening The same Sunne that softeneth waxe hardeneth clay Therefore vse all good meanes to get thee a soft heart One is the Word of God the Law which is as a Plough to breake vp our fallow grounds and the Gospell which is as the warme Sunne to thaw our hard earth Be diligent in hearing and reading the continuall drops of this raine by often falling pierce the stone of the heart and breake it 2. Another meanes is in outward prosperity to meditate much and often on our inward misery For ease plenty and prosperity harden the heart Deut 32.15 and chap. 9.6 7. Thou art a stiffe-necked people remember and forget not how thou prouokedst the Lord. A third is in time of affliction to set in seriously with God who now intends the softening of our hearts Wisely apply vnto thy selfe the afflictions not of thy selfe onely but of others See Gods displeasure in the cause of them which is thine owne sinne Be not as Esau that lift vp his voice and wept but still kept reuenge within but put away a froward heart giue sinne a bill of diuorce hate it and put it away Fourthly looke much and often vpon the death of Iesus Christ and apply it to thy owne soule Goats blood warme they say softeneth the Adamant being put in it Get this Adamantine heart of thine broken by serious application of Christs death to thy owne soule The Gospell shewes sinne in a more ougly face than the Law can shewing it to bee the speare that went to Christs heart and that God is now offended by me whom he vouchsafeth in Christ to call a sonne Lastly pray often yea continually that the Lord would giue thee a soft heart which may be fashioned by the Word to his owne liking and likenesse Depend vpon the promise Ezek. 36.26 And praise him if thou hast receiued such a soft and sanctified heart wherein the seede of Gods Word shall rise vp with abundant increase of grace heere and of glory hereafter Because they haue no roots HAuing spoken of the inward positiue cause why the seed falling on this stony ground withered which was stoninesse or hardnesse now wee are to proceed to the inward priuatiue causes both heere and in the other Euangelists namely want of Moystnesse Earth Roots Now all these proceede from the former hardnesse For the heart being rocky and stony vnderneath it cannot affoord either earth or roots or moysture to the seed Which wee must not vnderstand as if there were no earth or roots or moysture For wee haue seene this ground bring forth much hopefull fruit which without all these it could not But as Marke saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it had not much earth but as a rocke couered with a little crust of earth aboue all stones below It wanted depth of earth Mark 4.5 So it had no roots that is no deepe roots no roots to feede the stalke and blade that was come no roots which could saue it from withering in time of heate This is implied by all the Euangelists who say Because it wanted roots it lasted but a while Againe for the same reason it wanted moysture that is sufficient moysture For the property of stony ground is 1. To be hot and dry and so drinkes vp moysture apace 2. It suffers not the moysture to descend deepe so as the externall heate soone drawes it and licks it vp Hence note what it is that makes many goodly Professors fall short of saluation after they haue gone a long time in a glorious profession to wit want of sufficient earth roots and moysture By sufficient earth I vnderstand a particular and distinct knowledge of the Word and of their owne part in it For they content themselues with a kinde of generall knowledge and agree to it in their vnderstanding that it is the Word of the Kingdome that saluation is by these glad tidings c. and reioyce in the taste of some sweetnesse of it But they giue it not entrance enough by applying their minde vnto it nor receiue it as a distinct direction in all things nor will trouble themselues with carefull examination of their whole way by it and much lesse with application of the signes of faith toward God or of Gods fauour toward themselues And so are iustly guilty of their owne withering for want of sufficient earth All their graces at length become like seeds sowne on the top of a rocke which sprout suddenly but wanting depth of earth to feede them wither as certainly By rooting here I vnderstand stability certainty and sincerity of faith and other graces which these Hearers want For although there bee some earth on the top yet it is but shallow and the shallower the root lies though the blade may sprout more speedily yet want of depth makes root and blade and all faile together So although there be some faith and ioy for a time with some other comely graces yet are they superficiall they giue not their whole hearts to the Word there is no sincerity in the bottome and consequently no rooting no stability Their care is more for the blade than for the root which beares it Their vnsettled faith is set not in sound inward apprehension but on outward causes which being changeable so is their faith themselues also carried about with euery waue of doctrine and with wheeling of times and at last led away with the sins of the times of their callings or of their owne hearts By moystnesse heere I vnderstand both the moystnesse of Vnction and of Compunction The former is a sound supply of sauing grace which continually feedeth and cherisheth the root For as the seed in the earth is brought to fruitfulnesse by continuall showres so is the seed of grace in the heart by continued and renewed acts of the Spirit whose graces are compared to water and said to be shed on vs in regard 1. of mollification 2. of ablution 3. of refrigeration and 4. of fructification Now this sound supply of grace these Hearers want and iustly though they want not all moysture but they goe not to the fountaine they draw from some spouts or some streames which are dryed vp in the summer heate Whereas were they by faith carried to the Fountaine it selfe Iesus Christ their waters would be indeficient and could not be exhausted for these waters
peace with God and onely is at rest in the signes and meanes of his reconciliation 2. It hath tranquillity and peace of conscience through sence of sinne not pardoned onely but healed in some measure This peace of conscience is the next thing to heauen and a very heauen vpon earth not when the conscience excuseth that a man hath not sinned but that his sinne being pardoned hee may goe and sinne no more 3. It hath peace with all men so farre as is possible with good men because of Gods Image and with euill because of his Commandement Obiect How can this bee seeing none are more conflicted with inward terrours and tentations or outward crosses and enemies Answ. This is true yet 1. In the world they may haue affliction in Christ peace their felicity is in Christ the Prince and procurer of it Psal. 25.13 Their soule shall dwell at ease if not their bodies 2. This peace is begun but yet imperfect as all graces bee the minde and will subdued to Gods minde and will but in part the flesh subdued to the mind and spirit but in part it can delight inwardly in the Law but seeth another law in his members rebelling against the law of his minde the Image of God we see but in part and cannot loue perfectly 3. This peace may be disturbed and interrupted for a time but the heart is then supported by patience vnder the crosse to the recouery of his peace 4. This peace cannot be abolished but perfected by troubles Your peace saith Christ shall none take from you Marke and consider the good man Psalm 37.37 the end of that man is peace A tree the more it is shaken with windes the better it is settled and rooted and so the trees of righteousnesse Now this peace is the portion onely of the Israel of God To these Christ had promised it namely the refreshing of soules Math. 11.28 To these he hath left it Ioh. 14.27 My peace I leaue with you But there is no peace to a wicked man saith the Lord. 1. None with God but onely a truce He dares liue in a state of enmity with God and bee still out in armes against him as a profest enemie Hee neither feeles nor feares sinne which is not peace but senslesnesse God in heauen proclaimeth peace he refuseth the conditions 2. None with himselfe but sometimes he is a terrour to himselfe that it is death to him to liue in such an estate witnesse Cain or Iudas Or if he be quiet and without accusation yet is hee without comfort which is but a dead sleepe of conscience which shall awake 3. None with others out of a peaceable disposition but being inraged he is fierce and cruell as Lions Esa. 11.6 Or as Ismael whose hand was against euery man and euery mans hand against him Yea he can cry out of Elias as a troubler of peace when it is himselfe and declaime against faction when himselfe is the onely factor The fifth spirituall grace is supplication or the gift of prayer the next to peace is accesse to the Throne of grace Rom. 5.2 For sinne shuts vs out of the presence of God And as Absalom might not come into Dauids presence till atonement was made by Ioab so Iesus Christ hauing made vp our peace with God we being shut out are admitted into presence nay of rebels not onely pardoned but honoured to become the Princes fauorites and familiars nay sons and children Now a good heart knowes 1. That as an Infant new-borne if it cry it is aliue if not it is still-borne so to send out strong cryes to the Throne of grace is a note of Gods Childe and a signe of the new-birth Rom. 8.26 Zech. 12.10 Therefore it comforts it selfe in crying 2. That it is bound by the Morall Law besides the Commandement of Christ and his Apostles to performe continually this part of worship to God namely by the affirmatiue part of the second Commandement which duty euen Adam in innocency free from sinne performed and needed to pray for perseuerance in the grace wherein he stood and else had he not kept the Law But a good heart seeing it selfe seazed on by sinne and the curse of the Law sees much more need in it selfe to performe this duty to the Lord and to it selfe 3. That this grace excellently vpholds the sweet society betweene God and a beleeuing soule For as strangenesse alienates and cooles the affections of friends whereas company and conference kindleth and inflameth them Euen so heerein as Iob saith chap. 22.21 wee acquaint our selues with God and grow into familiarity and fellowship with him He delights in vs while wee acknowledge him a God hearing prayer to whom all flesh must resort And the beleeuing soule hath exceeding comfort in his gracious answeres and supplies who is so ready to heare before we call and esteemes it no small grace that the Lord should not only admit it into his presence but set so easie a condition vpon his promises as for asking we shall obtaine them 4. It knowes that prayer being one of the chiefe Christian sacrifices the Lord will euer returne one token or other of his gracious acceptance For as the Legall sacrifices agreeable to Gods Institution were answered with a speciall signe of Gods approbation of the fire from heauen to consume them So will the Lord some way manifest his delight in these Christian sacrifices which himselfe compares to sweet Incense and Perfume yea to drops of honey dropping from the lips of the Church as from an honey-combe Cant. 4.11 And how can he but returne a comfortable answere on that which is so delightfull vnto him Therefore a good heart is carefull and frequent in this duty But not so much for the doing of it as to doe it well and therefore is carefull 1. for the mouer 2. the matter 3. the manner of his prayers 1. The mouer of prayer is not nature in the godly as it is in the wicked Nature teacheth that what we conceiue to be God is to be prayed vnto and the Heathen could pray to God as a Creator and Gouernour But the mouer in a good heart is the Spirit by which it cryeth Abba Father Rom. 8.15 True prayer is a proper action of the sonnes of God therefore Christ commanded vs in the entrance of prayer to say Our Father And it is the breath of the Spirit of God For he alone can leade vs into the sence of our wants He makes vs see the goodnesse of things that we craue He bends our affections and kindles our sacrifice without whom is no light or heat Let the Spirit remit but a little and the holyest men suppose Peter Iames Iohn shall bee fitter to sleepe than watch or pray in the very houre of tentation Math. 26.38 2. For the matter A good heart moued by the Spirit of supplication is most frequent and earnest 1. For things giuen by God in Christ