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

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purpose Of the concurrent judgment of Protestants concerning the Interest of Reason in matters of Religion The more the understanding of a Christian discerneth the Evidences Pag. 14. §. 24. and true Reason of all things in Religion the far greater advantage his Will hath for the love of it and fixed resolution never to forsake it and for seriousness and constancy in an holy Self-denying Life and for patience in Sufferings and joyful hopes of Heavenly Glory For Grace worketh on Man as Man That is as a rational free Agent whose Will must be guided by the light of his understanding So they And yet we must say that there are many Points in Religion which Mans Reason without Divine Supernatural Revelation could never discover as ver 9. the Mystery of the Trinity the Incarnation of Christ c. Though part of the Christian Religion be evident by the Light of Nature yet what is not of Natural Revelation the soundest and strongest Reason and Understanding of Man could never reach unto without the help of Supernatural Revelation As there is no seeing without Light so there is no Knowledge without some intelligible Evidence Again This we must not hold That what is Supernaturally revealed though in it self never so much above the reach of Natural Reason is not to be doubted of but must be concluded infallibly certain Though we may not take any thing to be the Word of God without Reason Mr. Baxt. of Self-denial pag. 280. yet when we have Reason to take it to be his Word we must believe and submit to all that is in it without any more reason for our Belief Since it is evident by many Infallible proofs that the Scriptures are the Word of God the God of Truth that cannot Lye we have good reason indeed to yield our ready and full assent to whatsoever is taught and held forth in the Sacred Scriptures And it is unreasonable not to believe the Word of God that God who is Omniscient and All-wise that he cannot be deceived and who is infinitely Holy and Good that he cannot deceive Thus those high Points of Faith which could never be cleared by natural proof or evidence yet we are to receive as unquestionable Verities upon account of God's Veracity they being revealed by him in his holy Word In such cases to acknowledg the short-sightedness of our imperfect understandings is but reasonable But to deny or question the truth of Divine Revelation is most unreasonable and impious Yet it must be noted That this no way befriendeth those who would impose new Articles of Faith upon Christians or put a false sense on any part of Scripture that it may be thought to favour their Errors and Absurdities Such are like the false Prophets of old Ezek. 13.7 that would tell the People The Lord saith it albeit he had not spoken Thus the Papists would father the first-born of Monsters and grossest of Absurdities their Transubstantiation upon God and Jesus Christ A Doctrine full of Contradictions contrary to common Sense and Reason and to many plain points of Faith But from what Scripture do they learn or can they prove it that a Priest hath power by mumbling over a few words to turn Bread and Wine into the very Body and Blood of Christ It 's true we read This is my Body And so it is Sacramentally and Representatively notwithstanding it is naturally Bread still And how oft is it called Bread even after Consecration shewing that its substance is not changed by its Consecration but only its use It is Bread still when Consecrated when Administred when Eaten 1 Cor. 11.26 27 28. As often us ye eat this Bread c. Whereas the Papists contrary to plain Scripture and to all our Senses will needs have it to be no more Bread One thing more must be laid down here that Man's Reason and understanding Faculty since the Fall is naturally blind and dark depraved whence it is apt to judg sinisterly and falsly of Spiritual things unable spiritually and savingly to discern them without the special Illumination of the holy Spirit Yet it will not follow that Men must lay aside their Reason either waiting for immediate Revelations with the Enthusiasts or subscribing to the dictates of Men hand over head right or wrong true or false with the Papists But they are to use their own Vnderstandings the best they can to get Instruction from the Word of God which was written to make wise the Simple not leaning to their own Vnderstandings which are so lame but earnestly calling in the help and guidance of the Spirit of Truth to lead them into all Truth And they are in the most hopeful way to find the Spirit 's assistance here who are most diligent and careful in the use of those means whereunto he directs Men such as Reading Hearing the Word Meditation Prayer Conference But observe as to the sight of an Object these three things are joyntly-necessarily required Scil. 1. The Eye or Visive Faculty 2. The Object to be seen 3. The Light to irradiate the Object So to the knowledg of Religion and the Doctrine of Salvation these three things are no less necessarily concurring 1. Our Reason or understanding Faculty 2. The Object or Doctrine of Truth to be known 3. Nam et oculus sic factus est ut videre lumen possit sed videre non potest nisi se illi lumen infuderit Fulgent Epist 6. That the holy Spirits's enlightning the Mind or opening the Understanding to apprehend and discern this Object Which illumination of the Spirit is twofold common or special Pardon this Digression For several Reasons I have thought it not unseasonable at this time to speak something of the Interest of Reason in the matters of Religion Concerning which for fuller Satisfaction peruse those few sheets forecited But thus that denying of our selves which Christ calleth us unto doth not include a renouncing of the use of Reason 4. When we are required to deny our selves the meaning is not that we should destroy our selves or unnecessarily do any thing tending thereunto Self-denial is an eminent and precious Grace but Self-murder a very great and dreadful Sin To be ready to lay down our lives when God calleth to it is an eminent act of Self-denial but to cast away our lives in a discontened humour or by neglect is quite another thing 5. To wrong our selves by denying our selves the needful comforts God alloweth us is not Christian Self-denial As some poor melancholy persons almost famish themselves To deny our selves a sober moderate use of Creature-comforts that we have need of is more than the Lord requires Some there are so covetous that though they have great Wealth and Riches yet they have not power to eat thereof Here is Self-denial even from the basest selfishness A denying of natural self for worldly self But the greatest wronging of our selves is a rejecting Grace offered This is Self-undoing not right Self-denial 6.
the Christian Society As Colledges have their Statutes and other Companies and Societies their particular Orders This is an Order for all that are of Christ's School And without renouncing Self we cannot rightly depend on Christ without forsaking Self we cannot follow Christ without crossing Self we cannot comply with the Will of Christ without denying self we cannot be ready to confess Christ we cannot be willing and prepared to die to suffer for Christ How easily are Men brought to deny the Faith and Truth to deny God and Jesus Christ that have not learnt to deny themselves Will Lovers of themselves will Self-seekers stick to Christ and his Truth when put upon trial whether indeed they are content to sell all for the Pearl of price Whether they can forsake all for Christ When the Cross shall follow those that follow Christ will not such flinch from him then Yea before any such Trials come all that have not learnt to deny themselves have denied God and Christ already in their Hearts and are daily denying him in their Works and Lives Though Men have a form of Godliness yet while they deny the power thereof so far they deny God And to deny the power of Godliness is a sad preparation and introduction to the grossest and most shameful denial of God and Christ when a Temptation thereunto shall come No wonder therefore that Christ says here Whosoever will come after me let him deny himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him utterly deny himself The simple Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is as much as to deny that with this Preposition added it seems to signifie more to deny with an Emphasis to deny with contempt and abhorrence of ones self Quest But what is it to deny our selves Answ 1. In the Negative 1. We must not deny our selves to be what indeed we are as we must not feign our selves to be what we are not As the Prophet Ahijah said to the disguised Wife of Jeroboam Why feignest thou thy self to be another It is one thing to disguise and another to deny our selves The Hypocrite that seems to be what he is not and would not appear to be what he is is yet far from that Self-denial Christ calls us to he deceives himself and others while he does not deny himself So likewise many a sensless Sinner when admonished of his Faults will not acknowledg that he is the Man whom such a repoof concerns He will justifie himself though his Lips prove him perverse and though it may further provoke the Lord to plead with him as Jer. 2.35 To deny the Truth here is quite opposite to Self-denial Again Some there are in another Extream For whom God hath done much yet being clouded with Melancholy c. they cannot see so clear as otherwise they might and thereupon soon question yea deny any good wrought in them The condition of these is far better than the others spoken of before Yet they are to be pittied and such an Humour not to be fed or encouraged It is one thing to deny our selves and another to deny God's goodness to us It is no way contrary to Self-denial for a Christian to say with the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.10 By the Grace of God I am what I am Some go further yet and charge themselves more deeply than there is just cause As some poor troubled Spirits will not down with it but that they have sinned the unpardonable Sin c. But though we are not to deny our selves we are not falsly to accuse our selves 2. We are not to deny our selves in that sense wherein it is said that God cannot deny himself 2 Tim. 2.13 He abideth faithful he cannot deny himself He is ever as good as his Promise constant to his Word We may not in this sense deny our selves may not go back from lawful promises made either to God or Men. We should not use lightness yea and nay 3. We are not to renounce the use of our Reason That is no piece of Self-denial intended or required here That would be to make the Christian Religion unreasonable And how great a reproach would that cast upon Religion What is Man but Animal rationale or Ens ratione praeditum a Creature endued with Reason That it is as natural to him as congruous to that form and kind of being which his Creator has given him that he should use his Reason as that the Sun Moon and Stars should shine and give forth their light And it is certainly the highest and noblest use our Reason serves for to help us in the discovery of Truth and to direct us in the choice of Good Therefore no doubt we may be the Servants of Christ upon more Honourable terms than Nahash would have put upon the Men of Jabesh-Gilead Christ never required his Followers in this sense to put out their right Eyes though we must part with our dearest Lusts which have been as our right Eyes yet when these are pluckt out we should see never the worse But it is the way of Antichrist to perswade Man to an implicit Faith and to blind Obedience It is the drift and design of the Synagogue of Satan to get Men hood-winkt that they may be content to see with the Eyes of their Rulers and Leaders and follow them which way they please But we should be ready always to give an answer to every Man that asketh us a Reason of our Faith 1 Pet. 3.15 And can we give a Reason of our Faith without using our Reason And how oft doth the Lord reason with Men about Matters of Religion See Isa 46. from ver 5. to ver 9. Then would he not have Men use their Reason here Yea how does he upbraid Men that they used their Reason no better that they did not shew themselves Men See Isa 44.19 Chap. 27.11 It is a People of no understanding And it is plain the Scriptures that are a Rule for our Faith and Practice could not be rightly applied and made use of without putting forth our Reason Mat. 22.29 31 32. Where Christ telleth the Sadducees that denied the Resurrection Ye do err not knowing the Scriptures No Man could discover the Resurrection of the Dead in that Scripture brought for it without the use and exercise of Reason And farther We must have Reason to convince those who as yet believe not the Divine Original and Authority of the Scriptures How else should Heathens Infidels be convinced and converted Would we have them change their Way and Opinions without seeing any Reason for it And while Hereticks and Men of unsound Minds abuse their Reason setting it against the Truth should not we use and improve our Reason in defence of the Truth Can we 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 confute Gain-sayers without using our Reason And the Apostle would have Christians not as Children but Men in understanding 1 Cor. 14.20 And that is a weighty passage which some have laid down who have written to good
Christians yet a poor weak Christian should not conclude he has no Grace because he hath not so much as others Thou mayst have the truth of Grace in thee tho at present thou canst discern little or no growth Christ's Family is made up of Saints of different stature his School consists of Scholars of several Ranks and Forms Some are but Babes in Christ some grown Christians There are some little Children weaklings some young Men grown up to some strength some Fathers old Disciples Christians of great standing and experience Some are but Novices some are riper and by reason of use have their Senses more exercised and their Graces more improved Thou that art but weak be humble what cause hast thou to be humble when the best of Saints such as far excel thee have no cause to be proud Yet be not thou discouraged Christ will not break the bruised Reed nor quench the smoking Flax. He will gather the Lambs with his Arm and carry them in his Bosom and will gently lead those that are with young And yet out of weakness thou mayest be made strong And though thy beginning be but small thy latter end may greatly encrease And further note touching the signs of Grace I have here laid together what a * Dr. Manton on Jam. 1.22 pag. 188 189. Learned Man hath There are three sorts of Marks some are only exclusive others inclusive and between these a middle sort of Marks which he calleth positive Exclusive Marks are to shut out bold pretenders The inclusive Marks are to shew the measures and degrees of Grace and are rather intended for Comfort than for Conviction which if they be found in us we are safe and in the state of Grace but if not we cannot conclude a nullity of Grace The use of these Notes is to comfort or to convince of want of growth Again there is a middle sort of Marks which he calleth positive and they are such as are always and only found in an Heart truly gracious So he These positive Marks and Signs I confess are fewer As Mr. Baxter † Method for peace of Conscience Direct 11. pag. 88 c. See also Sermon of Right Rejoicing p. 26 27. hath laid down five expressing the nature of saving Grace which may be comprised and summed up in this one scil A preferring God and Christ Grace and Glory before any way of Sin before any carnal Self-interest before all the Honours Riches and Pleasures of the World a preferring the former I say in our practical estimation in our deliberate and hearty choice and in our true serious and faithful endeavours Get this one Point well cleared and then thou mayest know thou art one of another Spirit from the Men of the World a Citizen and Heir of Heaven And therefore know I had no Design in laying down so many Notes and Signs of the several Graces here described to set weak Christians on the Rack or to encrease and multiply their Doubts and Fears As I have already granted the truth and being of Grace may be known by a Few well cleared And I hope upon a serious and deliberate reading it will not be difficult to observe which are most necessary and most satisfying by which especially we are to try our selves But I doubt not ad bene esse and for fuller satisfaction it may be of great use and advantage to Christians thus to understand the true Nature several Properties and genuine proper Acts and Effects of every Grace And thus indeed the Treatise may serve not only as a guide in the trial and discovery of Grace but also as a Rule and Directory and help to the kindly exercise of Grace Now Reader if thou art serious give me thy hand and joyn with me in this I hope I can say hearty request That the God of all Grace would vouchsafe his Blessing to accompany it Which if he deny thou mayest have an handful of leaves here but no Fruit. The Author hath also Published 1. Good-will to Men or a Treatise of the two Covenants Sold by Samuel Richards Book-seller in Nottingham 2. Fifty Queries seriously propounded to those that question Infants Right to Baptisme Sold by Nevil Simons and Jonathan Robinson in St. Pauls Church-Yard 3. A few Notes upon T. G's Antiqueries with an Abstract of Mr. Baxter's Plain Scripture proof for Infants Church-Membership and Baptism c. Now in the Press There is lately published A BODY of DIVINITY or the Sum and Substance of Christian Religion Catechistically-propounded and explained by way of Question and Answer methodically and familiarly handled for the use of FAMILIES To which is now adjoyned IMMANVEL or the Mystery of the Incarnation of the Son of God By the most Reverend James Vsher late Arch-Bishop of Armagh The seventh Edition carefully corrected from very many Errors in former Editions To which is now added the Life of the Author containing many remarkable passages and an Alphabetical Table never before published Sold by Jonathan Rohinson at the Golden Lion in St. Paul's Church-yard London ERRATA PAge 2. l. 19. blot out not P. 27. l. 8. read expresly P. 44. l. 9. r. steaming up l. 11. for their r. the. P. 60. l. 5. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P. 85. l. 24. r. and we P. 90. l. 1. r. inflict P. 107. l. 5. r. as well as P. 116. l. 5. for and r. of one P. 119. l. 19. for ver 9. r. v. g. P. 121. l. 26. r. old Testament P. 165 last line for of r. to P. 169. l. 28. r. making Him P. 201. l. 5. make a full stop at in love P. 202. l. 8. for heat r. heart P. 216. l. 3. r. inoffensively P. 224. beginning for reverend r. reverent P. 232. l. 14. r. impelled P. 240. l. 22. r. Suffer or Sin P. 244. l. 4. r. they are not P. 248. l. 19. r. principle P. 289. l. 21 22. r. take occasion P. 293. l. 27. blot out the first not Also P. 296. l. 20. blot out not P. 305. l. 18. there is a full stop for a comma and And thus for this is P. 318. l. 14. for place r. pace P. 351. l. 24. for Soul r. House P. 357. l. 26. r. Hypocrisie P. 412. l. 1. blot out of By reason of the Authors far distance from the Press other Errata possibly are escaped which the Reader is entreated to correct or pardon OF Spiritual Knowledg COL 1.9 And to desire that ye might be filled with the Knowledg of his Will in all Wisdom and Spiritual Understanding Multitudes perish for lack of Knowledg Hos 4.6 and many perish with Knowledg Saving-Knowledg is rare The Knowledg of the most will aggravate their Condemnation The clearer their Light here the hotter their Flames hereafter Luk. 12.47 That Servant which knew his Lords Will and prepared not neither did according to his will shall be beaten with many Stripes Rom. 2.9 Tribulation and anguish upon every Soul of Man that doth evil of
hold on by consent and affiance Or thus there is the primary and principal Object of Faith and the secondary and less principal Object The primary and principal Object of Faith are the fundamentals essentials and most necessary points of the Christian Religion Such Divine Doctrines Promises and Precepts without assent and consent unto which we cannot believe unto Salvation or be sound Christians Yet I shall not contend with those that make Christ the only Mediator and Saviour the principal Object of Faith forasmuch as I doubt not but we are agreed that the belief of all that is necessary to be known and believed of Christ doth suppose and include the belief of all other points that are absolutely necessary to Salvation And as he is the Chief and principal Means of bringing us to God the Scriptures have a chief reference and respect to Christ Luk. 24.44 Joh. 5.39 The secondary and less principal Object of Faith takes in other things contained in the Word that are of good use indeed Rom. 15.4 2 Tim. 3.16 But though all Scripture be of use and profitable yet all that is there written is not absolutely necessary to be distinctly known and explicitely believed And yet you may not hence infer that if you know and believe so much as is absolutely necessary to Salvation there needeth no more None are to stand at a stay in Religion All that are in the School of Christ must be making proficiency growin Faith and Knowledg We should diligently improve the means that the Word of Christ may dwell in us richly that we may be filled with the knowledg of his Will And further as a late Writer noteth there are points of Faith secondarily fundamental Fowler Design of Christianity p. 235. the disbelief of which cannot consist with true Holiness in those to whom the Gospel is sufficiently made known And all such Doctrines as are with indisputable clearness revealed to us the belief of these is absolutely necessary from an external cause though not from the nature of the points themselves viz. in regard of their perspicuity that nothing can cause Men to refuse to admit them but that which argueth them to be stark naught and to have some unworthy and base end in so doing or in the phrase of Scripture 2 Tim. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reprobate concerning the Faith Note one thing more touching the Object of Faith scil That more is taken into the necessary Object of Faith now under the Gospel than was necessary before The Mystery of our Redemption by Christ being more fully unfolded in the Gospel a more distinct explicite Faith in Christ is required of us than was required of those to whom less was revealed Revelatio est mensura Fidei Le Blanc Though Noah Abraham and all the faithful before Christ were justified and saved by Faith yet not by that special kind of Faith that such as live under the Gospel are saved by I mean there are new Articles of Faith relating to Christ his Office and Undertaking as Mediator essential to a Gospel-Faith that were not essential to Faith before the promulgation of the Gospel Nor did the Apostles themselves believe some of them till after Christ's Resurrection concerning whom excepting Judas we have no doubt but they were true Believers Next to shew you the special and proper Acts of Faith They speak much in a little that call Faith a practical Assent and a fiducial Consent I cannot exclude any of these three Acts Assent Consent and Affiance The two last are plainly expressed in the shorter Catechism and all three fully in the Confession of Faith forecited And so the learned and holy Bishop Vsher Body of Divinity p. 197. Edit 1648. to the Question What is true Saving-Faith Answereth It is such a firm Assent of the Mind to the Truth of the Word as flows into the Heart and causeth the Soul to embrace it as good and to build its eternal Happiness on it And it should not seem strange that so much is taken into the nature of true Faith As Divines now generally place it not in the Vnderstanding only or in the Will only but in both faculties conjunct if they be distinct faculties and not the very essence of the Soul disposed and acting differently towards the Object considered in a different notion and respect And methinks it is plain in Scripture that the Faith to which Salvation is promised doth not consist in one single Act for there are these diverse Acts even now mentioned attributed to it 1. It is an Assent An Assent to the Truth of the Word in general and particularly to the Promise of Salvation by Christ Though I shewed before that Faith consists not barely in Assent that this is not the whole of Faith yet we cannot deny but this is part of it We find Faith thus described again and again that we must acknowledg it one Act of Faith It would be strange indeed if a belief of the Truth be no part of Faith Then Martha answered nothing to the Question Joh. 11.26 27. when she said yea Lord I believe that thou art the Christ So see Rom. 10.9 But how does Faith assent to Divine Truth 1. Faith assenteth really not feignedly A true Believer doth not only profess or confess with his Mouth but believes in his Heart as he professeth to believe 2. Faith assents firmly not waveringly It riseth higher than opinion It is more than a Semi-perswasion of the Truth As they said We believe and are sure Not as Agrippa almost thou perswadest me to be a Christian I grant that as all Christians have not the same measure of Spiritual-Knowledg and as there are different degrees of Faith so all Believers have not the same degree of firmness of Assent And Faith does not wholly exclude all doubtings but overcometh them Indeed sometimes very horrid thoughts arise or are injected that would put the Soul upon questioning all but they are not entertained but ordinarily abhorred and rejected as they come As one says Herb. Palmer Paradoxes p. 64. §. 72. He is sometimes so troubled that he thinks nothing is true in Religion and yet if he did think so he could not be at all troubled It is true thus a Believer sometimes is sore shaken yet not quite taken off from all but rather put upon earnest Prayer and indeavours to be more rooted and grounded in Faith So these shakings are wont to end in his more firm establishment And take the weakest Believer out of such a swounding-fit and he has ordinarily a deeper sense of Divine Truths and a stronger assent to them than others whose Faith is unsound though these may have a far greater measure of Notional Knowledg even such an Assent that he dare venture his Soul and all his hopes and concerns deliberately upon them 3. Faith assents freely In this sense it is true that with the Heart Man believeth Some are convinced of the Truth but sore
the Truth and in the Cause of God Answer 1. It concerns you to be well assured that it is God's Truth you are Zealous for How many that take their own private conceits for Divine Truths 2. All Truths are not of equal importance And though the least Truth may not be denied or opposed yet lesser Truths may be silenced and concealed when a Zealous contending for them would be to the wrong and prejudice of far greater and more necessary Matters That is not to defend but to betray the Interest of God and his Truth when Men care not perdere substantiam propter accidentia to lose the substance of Religion for Accidents and Circumstances And that is Erratick Zeal and Mischievous like Fire out of its place when Men are so hot and earnest in contending about lesser Points that they themselves neglect and do what in them lieth to hinder others minding the main of Religion Zeal like Fire in its proper place is of great use and benefit But out of its place very dangerous and destructive And remember Sirs that true Zeal for God is most for those Truths and Duties wherein the great interest of Religion lieth And is most against such things whereby God is most dishonoured the Gospel obstructed Religion most wronged discredited c. 8. Right Zeal is joyned with Christian Moderation is for Christian Concord One of a truly zealous Spirit is also of an healing closing Spirit is of a publick Spirit Right Zeal is more for the common interest of Religion than for private Opinions It is no Firebrand no Incendiary in the Church It is moved at what it sees amiss it is for Reformation but will not hurry Men upon disorderly actings in their passionate sense of Disorders It is against extreams on both Hands Passionate Transports and rash heady Courses are not the effects of an holy but of a bitter Zeal Right Zeal keepeth within due compass It is for Edification not for Destruction It is for Peace and Unity It is for Sodering and Cementing not for Separating such as should Joyn. As Fire though it separate Heterogenials congregates Homogenials Yea it will melt divers Metals into one Lump True Zeal is not for perverse Disputings tending to Strife but for godly Edifying in Faith It is not for kindling Dissentions or causing Offences and Divisions amongst Christians but is moved with great Grief at the sight of such things As the Apostle Who is offended and I burn not It is for maintaining the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace And they that are more zealous to maintain some By-opinions than to maintain Union and Communion with their Fellow-Christians are quite besides the Mark. The Churches Peace and Edifying one another in Love are far greater Matters than any unnecessary Opinions which too many too zealously contend for Yea Vnnecessary is too good a word for some of them I should have said unsound Opinions O that the Guilty here would seriously consider whether it would not be more for the Honour of God the Credit and Interest of the Gospel and the securing of true Religion amongst us to joyn with their Fellow-Christians so far as they can to hold together to their mutual help strengthening and encouragement than to be so hot for their Opinions which if they were true yet are far remote from the Foundation and so far from being necessary to Salvation that not one of hundreds that are saved and now in Heaven was ever of their Way and Opinion here To be so rigid in their Way to carry as if all were unfit and unworthy for them to hold Christian Communion with that come not over to such Opinions of theirs alas this is Wild-fire not true Spiritual Zeal And verily I cannot think of any thing that will probably more harden and encourage Papists at this Day than the sad Rents and Dissentions amongst Protestants As he said Is not the hand of Joab in all this So it is probable enough the Heads of Jesuites have been in this Divide impera They know a Kingdom divided against it self is not likely to stand long and hope to raise themselves on our Ruines 9. That is right Zeal when we are more moved with Indignities offered unto God than with any Injuries done to our selves When we are more zealous in God's Cause than in our own We find Numb 12.1 2. Miriam and Aaron speak against Moses yet he seemed not at all concerned for himself We find not any reply that he made He was meek in his own cause Whereas upon sight of the Peoples Impiety their Idolatry in the Cause of God he was presently all on a flame His anger waxed hot Exod. 32.19 To be mild in our own cause but zealous in God's is a sign that we are indeed zealous for God As it is a sign of the contrary when we are remiss as can be unmoved unless when our own Interest is wrapt together with God's Interest As most Parents and Masters can bear it well enough though Children fail never so grosly in respect of the Duty that they owe to God though Servants plainly neglect and contemn God's Service They can bear with their Impiety with their taking God's Name in vain with the prophaning of his Day c. And yet many times they are all Fire and Tow if such do but fail in point of good Manners to them if they be not very observant of them and their commands Now it is true the least Irreverence towards Parents and so negligence in Servants are Sins against God But if upon that account you are most moved and displeased then you will be displeased at other Sins as well and more displeased at greater Sins than you are at these You will be zealous for God when Self is not so much concerned 10. Right Zeal for God is joyned with real Love and true compassion towards Men towards Sinners Thus while we hate their Sins we should yet love and heartily wish well to their Persons While we cannot bear with them that are evil in that which is evil yet we should be glad to do them good and glad indeed if by any means we might be helping to make them better As great Enemies as the Jews were to the Gospel and to the Apostle Paul yet he could not but pity them and his hearts desire and prayer to God was for them that they might be saved Rom. 10.1 Zeal against Sinners hath anger and grief in it not hatred As in the Apostle 2 Cor. 12.21 True Zeal desires their Conversion rather than Confusion And would rejoyce more in their Reformation than in their Ruine Our Saviour checked the furious Zeal of the Disciples when they would fain have been calling down Fire from Heaven to consume those poor Creatures that would not receive him Ye know not what manner of Spirit ye are of Luke 9.54 55. They were too hasty at that time a spirit of Revenge was stirring in them which was not Elias's spirit