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A92054 The spirits touchstone: or, The teachings of Christs spirit on the hearts of believers. Being a cleare discovery, how a man may certainly know whether he be really taught of the spirit of God, being very useful for these times. / By J.R. late student of Merton Colledge in Oxford. Roys, Job, 1633-1663. 1657 (1657) Wing R2161; Thomason E1663_1; ESTC R203429 176,299 389

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of a dove upon our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Mat. 3.16 Were they ever truly affected with Gods distinguishing love and mercy in that his Spirit should teach them as they say and let others lie in darkness Did the spirit drive away from amongst them the dust and the chaff of their vain and frothy minds Did the spirit ever enable them to overcome the bent of their natural inclinations If Socrates by the help of moral instructions was able to bridle his loose disposition much more may they who are taught by the spirit Did the spirit ever make them of unwilling willing to receive Jesus Christ and to take his yoke upon them The Spirit is resembled by the wind which in its blowing is arbitrary Joh. 3.8 irresistible full of might and efficacy scattering the dust and dispolling the clouds Do their hearts burn within them at the hearing of the things of God as the two disciples hearts did with whom Christ had conference after his resurrection The Spirit of God came down upon the brethren in the form of fiery flaming tongues It is an easie thing for a man to say he is taught and enlightned by the Spirit of God but how few are they that are so indeed Beloved Christian I have given thee some light into this mystery concerning the teachings of the Spirit which if improved by thee will bring much comfort to thy precious soul and much joy to him who is thine and the truths friend I R. A Brief summary of those generall heads which are in this ensueing Treatise FIrst the readiest way to win dissenting brethren to the obedience of the truth is to deal with them in the spirit of meeknesse Under which head is containd the handling of those who are of a contumacious spirit still opposing the shinings forth of divine truth 1 Admonition which must be once again 2 Sharp reproof and that openly before many witnesses 3 A Disowning them and a rejecting them from being of the Church This admonition includes two things as 1 A demonstration of the absurdity of the things which they hold 2 A secret insinuating unto them the truth and the excellency of the opposite to which they hold 2 The best and the most precious doctrine that is meeting with an unsanctified heart is opposed and had in derision 3 That is the best preaching which works upon the affections stirring us up to our spirititual duty that we may serve God acceptably in reverence and godly fear all the daies of our life as well as informs our judgements 4 The Embassadors of Jesus Christ and of the Gospel of his grace must be men of peace and not study to make factions and parties in the Church of God 5 For believers to call themselves by the names of their spiritual guides be they never so holy and religious men or by strange names taken up by the contumelies of ungodly men is an unchristian thing and disagreeing to the minde of the spirit 6 The word of God considered absolutely in it self as the word of God ought to be the rule and ground of our faith 7 For men to preach their own inventions and new fangled notions and the fancies of their own intoxicated braines or for men to allegorize Scriptures according as their mind serves them neglecting the pure fountain of the word of God is to build mans faith upon humane wisedome and not upon the power of God 8 A servant of Jesus Christ must sute his style and matter according to the judgement and capacity of his hearers 9 There are secrets in Gods own keeping which all the learning in the world can never attain unto onely the spirit reveals them 10. Those that have the Spirit of God cannot but know the things of God 11 There is no other way but by the Spirit to know the things of God 12 Only the Saints have this priviledge to enjoy the Spirit which the world cannot receive 13 The Spirit of God comes by receiving as a free gift of God unto believers 14 The spirit of the world is acted with a divers spirit from the Spirit of God 15 The World hath a double evill spirit 1 Satan 2 That inbred spirit of wickednesse which is within it 16 Satan is a Spirit because of his working which is sutable to the nature of spirits He is the spirit of the world upon a double account 1 Because he acts in the world 2 Because the world is willingly acted by him A double Antichrist 1 Mystical sin 2 Personal That man of sin 17 Whatsoever opposeth Jesus Christ or sets it self up in the plaoe of Christ is Antichrist 1 Our own righteousness is Antichrist 2 The divel is Antichrist 3 The world is Antichrist 4 All moral wisdom and humane knowledge is Antichrist unless it be sanctified by the Spirit of God 18 The children of God are acted by a double spirit opposite to the spirit of the world 1 The Spirit of God 2 The regenerate part within them which is called a spirit 19 The Spirit the third person in the blessed Trinity proceedeth from the Father the Son 20 The Holy Spirit is God which is proved 1 By Scripture 2 By reason as 1 Because those attributes are applied to the Spirit which are only proper to God 2 Those works 3 That adoration and worship which only belongs to God 21 God gives all things freely in opposition to merit and in opposition to compulsion Under this conclusion is answered an objection arising from the death of Jesus Christ 22 None can know the things of God but those who have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts Vnder this Conclusion is shewed 1 The various acceptations of the word Spirit in Scripture 2 What the teachings of the Spirit are 1 By way of praemonition that it is very difficult to know them 2 Positively 3 How the teachings of the Spirit may be distinguished from the motions and from the impressions of the Spirit 4 How the Spirit teacheth 1 By enlightning our understandings that we may see the things of God 2 By removing the enmity that is in our wills against them 5 What things more especially the Spirit teacheth 1 To know God 1 His love to believers in Jesus Christ 2 His holy nature 3 The exact justice of God against every sin 2 The Spirit only hath shewed us the mysterie of the blessed and incomprehensible Trinity 3 The mysterie of the Incarnation of Christ 4 The evil nature of sin Where is proved that the first motions to sin are sin and an objection arising from them dissolved 5 To understand the word of God aright 6 Several other things the Spirit teacheth Many other practical duties the Spirit teacheth 6 What manner of teachings the Spirits teachings are 1 Infallible teachings Here is shewed the difference between the Divels revelations and the teachings of the spirit Wherein is answered an objection arising from the insallibility of the Spirit 2
which Christ hath purchased for us upon a cordiall acceptation of them and receiving of them by the hand of faith then the purchase of Christ doth not hinder but that the things of eternity may be free to us 2. There are some things which Christ cannot properly be said to purchase for us but God out of the abundance of his mercy added as it were an over-plus to the death and sufferings of Jesus Christ Heaven and eternall glory and the beatificall vision is not strictly said to be purchased by Christ but it is a redundancy of the Fathers love The immediate effect of Christs death is Justification a redeeming us from the curse of the Law and from the wrath of God which was due to our sinnes The more remote and consequentiall effect is heaven and eternall glory Having explained the words I come now to raise some Observations from them From the matter implied That the teachings of the Spirit are absolutely necessary to know the things of God Observe this Note That none can know the things of God but those who have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts From the words expressed observe 1. That worldly men or the men of this world are led by a worldly spirit 2. That the spirit of the world is altogether opposite to the Spirit of God 3. That all that are the people of God have or shall receive the Spirit of God 4. That the end why they receive the Spirit is that they may know the things of God 5. That all things are given to us freely of God The Observation which is the subject of my ensuing discourse is drawn from the thing implied which is this That none can know the things of God but those that have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts In the handling this Observation I shall shew First The various acceptation of the word Spirit and that here is meant the Spirit of God Secondly What are the teachings of the Spirit 1. By way of premonition that it is a very hard thing to know them 2. Positively according to the Scripture phrase what they be Here briefly I shall distinguish between the motions impressions and flashes of the Spirit and the teachings of the Spirit Thirdly How the Spirit teacheth to wit 1. By enlightning our understandings 2. By taking away that enmity which is upon our wils against the things of God Fourthly Shew what more peculiar things the Spirit teacheth Fifthly What manner of teachings they are Sixthly Prove the conclusion That none can know the things of God but they that have the Spirits teachings Seventhly Make application 1. By way of Information to shew that the greatest part of Christians are void of the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts 2. By way of Exhortation to stirre you up to seek after the teachings of the Spirit and this Exhortation is pressed home upon a threefold account And a threefold cord is not easily broken 1. From the excellency of the Spirits teachings and of that light which comes thereby above all other teachings and above all other knowledge whatsoever 2. Because if the Spirit teacheth thee it is an evident sign thou art the friend of God 3. If the Spirit teacheth thee it is a sign thou art instated into the Covenant of grace Eighthly I shall give severall signes whereby we may know we are taught of the Spirit Ninthly Shew how we may distinguish between the more extraordinary teachings of the Spirit upon our hearts which are peculiar to more eminent Saints and other teachings Tenthly Shew the times wherein the Spirits teachings are most manifest 1. In times of affliction 2. Near the time of death Eleventhly Answer some doubts and questions arising from the Spirits teachings Twelfthly Shew that it is the duty of every one to walk up to the light which he hath received The various acceptations of the word Spirit in Scripture I. The Spirit is put in opposition to the body Luke 24.39 A spirit hath not flesh and bones c. so the gross foul of a beast is called a spirit The spirit of a man goeth upward Eccl. 3.21 and the spirit of a beast goeth downward II. It is applied to any tenuious nimble or subtile substance So the winde may be called a Spirit Job 4. A spirit passed before my face i.e. a nimble substance resembling the gliding motion of a spirit So we commonly say the spirits of wines because of the refinedness of them III. Any strong impetous or violent inclination Burroughs upon this place in his Comment upon Hosea or full purpose to do a thing may be called a spirit Hosea 4. 12. The spirit of whoredoms hath caused them to erre i. e. a strong inclination and full bent of will to go a whoring from God hath caused them to erre IV. For the heart of man wherein listh the affections in opposition to the will and the understanding and the memory according to the intellectuall part of it 1 Thes 5.23 I pray God that your whole soul spirit and body may be kept blameless till the coming of Jeses Christ By the soul is meant the understanding and the will and by the spirit the heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherein lieth the affections Rem 1 9. God whom I serve with my spirit Luke 8.55 You know not of what spirit ye are of i. e. of what affections Though some have another interpretation of it as you may see hereafter V. It is taken Quo plus materiae co plus potentiae quo plus formae co plus actus Quo plus potentiae viz. passivae co plus corruptibilitatis quo plus actus co plus substantia ●ic Philosophi aiuns 1. For strength and courage 2. For incorruptibility Isa 31.3 Their horses are flesh and not spirit i.e. subject to corruption and not abiding weak and not strong What is weaker than flesh all flesh is as grass What is stronger than a spirit spirits are of vast strength and operation What is more corruptible than flesh the word flesh notes corruption What is more abiding than a spirit a spirit is of a durable nature in respect of it self though God can suddenly destroy it Luke 1.17 It is said of Jesus Christ that he shall come in the Spirit and in the power of Elias i. e. in the courage strength and power of Elias The Scripture usually puts one word for the further explanation of the other VI. It is taken for the soul of man Luke 23.40 Father into thy hands I commit my spirit Zech. 13.1 The Lord formeth the spirit of man i.e. the soul of man so saith Stephen Act. 7.59 Lord Jesus receive my spirit VII For life Isa 57.16 I will not contend for ever neither will I be allwaies wroth for the spirit would fail before me i.e. the life and the souls which I have made When God comes to contend with sinners for their sins there is no standing before him
the Spirit upon thee Besides dost thou know how long the Spirit will move upon thy heart how long the prosperous gales will laft which if thou hadst sailed along with would have brought thee to heaven Dost thou know how long the Spirit will strive with thy heart crying out Why sinner how long shall it be ere Christ shall be thy Lord and Saviour Beloved Christian though there be hope as long as the pool is open and thou art alive and livest under the Ordinances of grace that the Spirit may descend again upon thee yet seeing thou hast sinned so often against the pleadings of the Spirit and hast quenched the Spirit so long who can tell whether ever he will come down in mercy again upon thy soul for ever For God hath a time in this life to bid his Spirit to let sinners alone and never to strive with them more but let them be filthy if they will be filthy Though this time God hath reserved in his own wisdom secret from men that they should not know it The black book of reprobation is known only to God and none may say positively God hath rejected him unless he is certain he hath sinned against the holy Ghost as too many weak Christians under desertion are apt to say and how knowest thou thou hast sinned the sin against the holy Ghost if thou hast a desire to repent for thy sinnes if thou art willing to receive Jesus Christ for thy Lord and Saviour never fear it Christian all is well thou art in a good condition yet I beseech thee do not quench the motions of the Spirit upon thy heart XI The Spirit is put for a state or a condition or a calling as some interpret We have not received the spirit of bondage Rom. S. but the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father i. e. not a state or condition of bondage but a state of adoption so Ravanellus Likewise when Christ said to his Disciples You know not of what spirit ye are of Luk. 9.55 i. e. of what state of what calling of what condition ye are of It is not suitable to men of your profession of your coat to be so fiery and so impatient so Aretius Yet I rather follow the judgement of a judicious Divine in our daies who in the forementioned place in the Romans means by spirit not a state there but a person i. e. the third person in the blessed Trinity very judiciously explaining the words after this manner Shewing that when once the Spirit hath been the Spirit of adoption that Spirit is never after the spirit of bondage again unto us this in no waies hindering but that a childe of God after the Spirit of adoption may have the fears of bondage again for though the Spirit doth not contradict his testunony yet he may withdraw his rest mony for a time and leave us in the dark yea the devil may trouble and affright us and our own consciences may condemn us XII By Spirit may be meant a pretence and opinion of some revelation Dr. Goodwin in his excellent Book called A childe of light walking in darknels concerning something which a mans own private conceit or imagination inclined him so to think 2 Thess 2.1 Be not troubled neither by spirit nor by word to think the day of judgement is at hand By spirit i. e. if any pretend a revelation that the day of judgement is at hand do not beleeve him 1 John 4.1 Try the spirits i. e. those pretended revelations which men feign and see whether they are of God or no. Beleeve not every spirit because that many false Prophets are gone out into the world XIII The Spirit is taken for the graces of the Spirit in you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Revel 1. To the seven Spirits of the seven Churches i. e. to that Spirit which is seven-fold in respect of its graces to the seven Churches The Spirit of God dwelleth within you that is according to some not the Spirit it self but the graces of the Spirit Gal. 5. These are the fruits of the Spirit love joy peace meekness temperance patience c. XIV The Spirit is taken for those unclean lusts which the devil brings along with him in the hearts of those in whom he lodgeth Matth. 12.45 When the unclean spirit returneth he bringeth with him seven other spirits worse than the former i. e. many other filthy lusts more abominable than the former XV. Consule Pareum in Genesin na hunc locum interpretatur viz. Spiritum illic accipi pro vi seu officacia divina Cap. 1. Geneseos The Spirit is taken for Divine force and efficacy Judg. 14.19 And the Spirit of the Lord came upon him i. e. a Divine force from on high came upon Sampsons spirit whereby he set upon the enterprize of killing the Ashkelonites XVI The word Spirit fignifieth a new quality of holiness created and wrought in all the Elect by the Spirit of God whereby all the powers and faculties of the soul and body are renewed according to the Image of God in wisdom holiness and righteousness otherwise called the Regenerate part Rom. 8. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit XVII Spirit is taken for the chief and excellent faculties of the soul called reason and understanding 1 Cor. 2.11 XVIII The Spirit is taken for the vigour and efficacy of the understanding Be ye renewed in the spirit of your minde More particularly First The Angels are called spirits 1. Good Who maketh his Angels spirits and his Ministers a flame of fire Heb. 1. 2. Evil Mark 5.4 We reade of a man possessed with an unclean spirit and saith Christ What is thy name saith the unclean spirit again My name is Legion for we are many A Legion of devils in one poor man Secondly By way of eminency God is called a Spirit John 4.24 God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth God is a Spirit if you take God essentially for the Deity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or personally for the three persons Father Sonne and holy Ghost Thirdly More particularly the third Person in the blessed Trinity distinguished from the Father and the Sonne is called a Spirit Often times in Scripture he is called by the Name of the holy Ghost Matth. 3.16 I saw the holy Ghost descend upon him like a Dove Having done with the ambiguity of the word Spirit I come to shew what are the teachings of the Spirit upon the hearts of Beleevers In handling of this I shall premise That it is a very difficult thing to know what the teachings of the Spirit are As thou canst not tell how the bones grow in her that is with child or what properly be the influences of the starres Eccl. 11.5 or how-one spirit communicates its minde to another or the causes of naturall sympathy or antipathy as thou canst not tell whence the winde cometh John
word and addes more clearness to it in respect of our selves that we may know the things of God 1. A creating a new light within us As God in the naturall creation created light out of darkness so it is in the spirituall creation when the new man the infant of grace is born in us Eph. 5.8 Ye were sometimes darkness but now are ye light in the Lord. In the Lord that is Jesus Christ by his Spirit hath enlightened our mindes in the knowledge of him 2 Cor. 4.6 God who caused the light to shine out of darkness hath caused the light of the Gospel to shine into our hearts through the face of Jesus Christ This light wrought by the Spirit it is a creation for before this light ariseth before the sunne of righteousness ariseth upon us we were altogether darkenss we were darkness it self And as it is said of the people amongst whom the light of the Gospel shined Isa 9.2 that the people that sate in darkness and in the region of the shadow of death saw marvellous light so we poor souls before the Spirit enlightened us were in utter darkness as in a dungeon where there is not the least crany to let in any light Jude 13. Blackness of darkness i. e. in utter darkness according to the Gospel phrase Extream darkness where there is not the least light not any light at all We were in a spirituall sense as it were in the blackness of darkness but when the Spirit was pleased to come into our hearts he created light out of darkness Non ex materiâ quasi componente sed quasi ex termino à quo that is from darkenss he hath translated us into marvellous light Yea I may say the Spirits setting up a light in the new creature is more than a creation if I may so speak For it is harder to create a thing out of its opposite in the abstract out of darkness it self to create light than to create a thing out of nothing Excellently therefore did the Spirit of God set down this portion of Scripture to note unto us the great work of the Spirit in setting up a light in the heart of man 2 Cor. 4.6 God who caused the light to shine out of darkness I may say that spirituall darkness which is upon the hearts of unregenerate men hath a positive entity in it opposing the light of the Spirit for a time The light shined round about Iohn 1.5 but the darkness comprehended it not It is a willfull darkness and a wilfull ignorance but that first darkness was a non-ens a meer privation and as soon as ever the light shined the darkness vanished away As to make a man that is born blinde to see is a work equivalent to the work of creation as Christ did So to remove that blindness which is upon our mindes that naturall blindness whereby we are as blinde as beetles in the things of God We have eyes and see not to remove that blindness and to make us see it is a work of creation and the only work of the Spirit 2. A new light That is a more excellent light a more transcendent light More excellent than the light of nature or the light of conscience more excellent than the light of Ordinances the light of means the light of naturall improvements More excellent than the light of knowledge or any light whatsoever The light of the Spirit is the most excellent light It may truly be said In thy light O blessed Spirit Psal 36.9 we shall see light in thy comfort we shall have comfort by thy teachings only we shall know the things of God Blessed are they that walk in the light of the Spirit Revel 5.8 The four beasts and the twenty four Elders fell down before the Lamb ●nd they sang a new song saying c. a new song i. e. a more excellent song a new light i. e. a more excellent light 2. A new light in respect of that abyss of darkness we were in before A new thing is either a rare thing or otherwise a thing that never was before There is no new thing under the sunne Eccl. 1.9 that is there is nothing but what hath been before Which light in our consciences enkindled by the Spirit Conscientia est judicium rationis practicae circa particularia per ratiocinatiouem deductum è principits universalibus contentis in synteresi Sic Philosophi Synteresis est habitus sive conservatio printipiorum practicorum doth in all things correspond with the light of the Word The conscience it is an act of the practicall understanding together with the memory bearing witness unto God by accusing or excusing us accordingly as our deeds be whether good or evil Or it is a spark of that primitive light left within us since the fall whereby in some measure we are able to distinguish between good and evil and accordingly to judge and consure our selves Now because the light of the Spirit it is a diffusive light spreading it self over all the powers and faculties of the new creature And not only a diffusive light but a perswasive convincing directive irresistable light which dispelleth all the darkness which is upon the soul such a light which is the life being and vigour of the spirituall life For as knowledge is the life of the naturall soul so is the light of the Spirit the life of the spirituall soul giving life heat and motion unto it The light was the life of men Now because the light of the Spirit is a superadded light to that naturall light which is within us the light of conscience which light consists of the practicall part of the understanding and the memory both concurring together therefore though the first work of the Spirit is to enlighten our understandings yet because our consciences wherein is the seat of spirituall life are benummed and dead and the Spirits teachings according to the practicall part of them which is the greatest part of them reach to the conscience therefore I place the hearts or consciences which in Scripture phrase are Synonymicall the subject of the light of the Spirit Correspond with the Word The light of the Spirit and the light of the Word do not clash one against another but in all things do agree in respect of the subject matter though the light of the Spirit is far the clearer ut antea By which light of the Spirit we come to know the things of God Whereupon David praies Give me O Lord thy good Spirit which may leade me into the Land of uprightness Now I come to shew how the Spirit teacheth 1. By opening the eyes of the understanding and making us to see the things of God A naturall man hath eyes but they be shut he hath ears but they be stopt Now the work of the Spirit is to open our eyes and unstop our ears that we might hearken to the things of God We
unclean heart Besides the Spirit takes away those objections which are in carnall mens hearts against the purity of religion What needs this preciseness this Pharisaism muchness in duty to be alwaies praying and alwaies hearing and the like It is a wearisomness to the flesh it duls the spirit and makes one melancholy it is more then needs be required As long as our hearts are upright with God and we desire to glorifie him in all his waies and we have upright intentions this is sufficient for heaven though we are not so much in duty as the pharisaicall men are Now the Spirit setting home the love of Christ upon our hearts and shewing us what he hath done for us brings us off from this lure to a perfect resignation of body and soul to his service Moreover he sheweth us that we must be holy in all manner of conversation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That we must walk exactly and as much as in us lies keep every circumstance that is contained in the Law of God And truly there is not a more certain sign of an upright heart than to have an universall respect to all the Commandments of God When out of a conscience to the command of God we would not commit the least sin or omit the smallest duty When the enmity is removed and the prejudice taken out of our hearts and all our misgivings and misapprehensions rightly placed we can easily hearken to the voice of the Spirit What things more peculiarly the Spirit teacheth 1. Thou canst not know God aright without the Spirits teachings Malè vivitur ubi de Deo non benè creditur A childe of God may know more of God in one Chapter of the Book of God which is the minde of the Spirit than all the writings of all the men in the world are able to shew forth without this word of God It is the Spirit alone that can ravish our hearts to the love of God in Jesus Christ 1. Gods love That can make us see the heighth depth and breadth of Gods love unto us Who would ever have thought that apostates rebels enemies should ever have become the sonnes of God heirs joynt-heirs and coheirs with Jesus Christ but that the Spirit hath made it clear Behold with what manner of love hath the Father loved us that we should be called the sonnes of God Philosophers could tell you that the Being of beings the first mover the first Cause of all causes must be infinite just mercifull and the like but that God through Jesus Christ should finde out such a way of reconciliation that sinners should be called the sonnes of God and that they should be one with the Father and with the Son Jesus Christ and that they should have communion with him for ever and ever this only the Spirit teacheth It is the Spirit only which sheweth the most holy nature of God 2. The holy nature of God 1 Joh. 1.5 In God is light and in him there is no darkness He is holiness it self therefore saith God Be ye holy as I am holy We are apt to think that God is such an one as our selves that he mindes not our iniquities that he walks aloft in the heavens and cares not for the things which are done upon the earth but the Spirit hath declared unto us Hab. 1. That God is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity Psal 5. The foolish shall not stand in thy sight thou hatest all the workers of iniquity I have read of some Nations that because they have thought their Gods to have delighted in some vice therefore they have addicted themselves in the imitation of their Gods to the same vice Some have thought their Gods delighted in uncleanness some in drunkenness others in cruelty and therefore they have been drunken unclean and cruell but we have learned God otherwise by the mind of the Spirit that there is no iniquity in the God of Israel Mercy and truth goes before his face justice and judgement is the habitation of his Throne The Spirit alone hath shewed us the exact justice of God against every sinne 3. The exact justice of God that the least sinne unrepented of and not washed away by the blood of Christ though it be but an evil thought or an idle word shall be punished with everlasting destruction Origin with some others have thought that it could not stand with the mercy of God to punish a sinner everlastingly in hell and therefore they have jumpt in with the Popish purgatory thinking that after the soul hath been punished so many years in hell fire it shall be released and set at liberty But this is contrary to the Spirit of God in many places of Scripture 2. The mystery of the blessed Trinity The Spirit only hath shewed us the mystery of the blessed and incomprehensible Trinity That there should be three persons Father Sonne and holy Ghost and yet these three but one God There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one All the great Rabbies of the world will never attain this mystery it is only the Spirit that teacheth it What Pla. to writes of the blessed Trinity it is supposed he had it out of Moses his writings or else some other way This doctrine of the Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity that there should be three persons and but one God and one God and yet three persons that the Father should be God the Son should be God and the holy Ghost should be God it is a doctrine of faith and not of reason a doctrine which ought to be beleeved because the Spirit hath revealed it and therefore not to be disputed of The Schoolmen whose foolish hearts are darkned have become vain in their imaginations concerning this transcendent and exceeding great mystery 3. It is the Spirit alone that teaches us the great mystery of the incarnation of Christ that there should be two natures the humane and the Divine united together and yet but one person The union or the two natures in Christ is 〈…〉 by a fiery flaming sword or rather by the similitude of a branch engrafted into a stock of another tree where there is not a mixture of the nature of these trees nor a constitution of a ●hird out of them but a drawing of one of them into the others subsistance Dr Field this is the mystery of mysteries And without controversie great is the mystery of godliness God manifested in the flesh justified in the Spirit seen of Angels beleeved on in the world and received up into glory John 1.14 The Word was made flesh and dwelt amongst us and we saw the glory as the glory of the only begotten Sonne full of grace and truth Was made flesh This destroys the Heresie of the Marcionists who said that Christ was not made flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est articulus
the Spirit how couragious was he in the work of the Lord he that formerly was mad with fury against the Church of God how strongly doth he row the other way As soon as ever Ananias had said Brother Saul receive thy sight Act. 9. his eyes were opened and his heart enlarged in the knowledge of God he presently goes about his Masters business to win souls over by the evidence of the Spirit to the obedience of the word Yea he was ready not only to be bound for the Lord Jesus ☞ but to suffer for him A spiritual man he chooseth and pitcheth upon mature and serious deliberation with himself being helped by the light of the Spirits teachings I say he chooseth God for his God and Christ for his Christ and the Spirit for his Spirit and the Word for his rule and Gods Commandments for his delight An implicit faith Many Christians have but an implicit faith for what they believe some believe the Word of God because they were taught so and so were instructed by education others believe so because it is the generall opinion of most men others because this way seems the best to their corrupt naturall reason others there are because such a man said so because they are perhaps engaged to him in Church-society when they have no ground in their own consciences why they close with this rather than with that The devil will have a shrewd combate with this mans faith in the hour of temptation when he shall come to die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 efflagitavit The devil hath desired to winnow thee as he did Peters faith He will try thee of what mettall thou art made whether thou art dross or silver he will sift thee throughly and if thou art found wanting as I am sure thou wilt be found for this faith hath no foundation thou shalt be cast forth as chaff out of Christs floor to be burned for ever What is the reason that we drive on so slowly for heaven why it is because of the unsetledness of our spirits We do not walk by fixed principles Go to this point whether the Word be the Word of God were you never under the buffetings of Satan for a while concerning this thing hardly any but some times or other have been under such a cloud of temptation If you were really fixed upon this principle that the Scripture is the Word of God reading what judgments attends sinners in their evil courses and what happiness follows the Saints there could not be such a general spirit of prophanness amongst men as there is and that little care to walk exactly according to the preciseness of the Gospel The Spirit quiets our mindes concerning this doubt by discovering unto us the majesty purity and perfection of it A spiritual man can say I know whom I have believed 2 Tim. 1.12 I know what I speak I know that God is true and that there is no unrighteousness in him God is in me of a truth Besides have we not Atheisticall thoughts of God like that fool Psal 14.1 who said in his heart there was no God denying the providence of God When we see the wicked men of the world prosper and we our selves counted the offscouring of it are we not ready to say like David 1 Sam. 27.1 I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul or that we shall fall of everlasting happiness God hath cast us off for ever calling the servants of God liars who speak unto us in the name of the Lord and to distrust the word of promise Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor forsake thee where there are five negatives for the confirmation of it I will never never never never never leave thee nor forsake thee Psal 73. Now as David when he went into the Sanctuary of God he was better principle'd and understood their latter end that God had set them in slippery places that they might fall and not rise again So if we would wait till the Spirit comes down upon our hearts we should have all these carnall reasonings and these fleshly doubts removed and we should be setled in the truths of God When a man is taught by the Spirit he doth not stand to reason with flesh and blood shall I do this or shall I do that shall I choose heaven or shall I choose hell shall I choose sinne or shall I choose grace shall I choose God or shall I choose Baal he doth not stand reasoning the case Shall I be religious or shall I not Shall I trust all upon Gods bare promise or shall I close with the pleasures of sin which are really present but he presently renouncing all those carnall reasonings which arise from flesh and blood presently sets upon the work of the Lord knowing that his labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. So did Paul Gal. 1. 15 16. When the Lord had endued him with his Spirit sutable for his calling whereunto he was called he stood not to reason with flesh and blood but presently sets upon his great Masters business Jesus Christ The great danger there is in consulting with flesh and blood This consulting with flesh and blood hinders many a poor soul from a through closing with Jesus Christ Flesh will say Do not close with Jesus Christ do not serve God you had better take a certainty for an uncertainty and those present enjoyments here and live merrily In consulting with flesh and blood you consult with the enemy of Jesus Christ of the Gospel of his grace and with an enemy to your own souls Be sure the flesh will decide the controversle on the devils part against Jesus Christ Now the Spirit of God determines the matter on Christs part against the devil teaching thee the insufficiency of all the creatures to make thee happy and the true happiness only resides in God putting thee into the way wherein God is to be found and preserving thee in the same that at length thou maist reap everlasting life Seventhly The teachings of the Spirit are consonant to the Word they agree with the Word of God As the minde of the Spirit in one place of Scripture agrees with the minde of the Spirit in another and there is a sweet harmony in the Word of God So the teachings of the Spirit upon our hearts they also are correspondent with the word Saith Paul to the Galatians Gal. 1.8 If an Angel from heaven should deliver any other doctrine unto you than what you have received let him be accursed And the Apostle by a resumption or ingemination repeats it again If any man teach any other Gospel unto you than what you have received let him be accursed ● 11 12. And why My Doctrine is not of flesh nor of the will of man but of God Note this well ☜ As if the Apostle had said My word which I have delivered unto you being the Word of God
is so far from being proud that he will stoope and condescend to the meanest Christian for their souls good The heart of man is full of wickedness it is a nest full of unclean birds for if a world of iniquity be in the tongue Jam. 3.6 How much iniquity is there in the heart Now when the Spirit shall lead us into every cell and corner of our hearts as the Lord did the Prophet Ezekiel c. 8. and shall shew the still greater and greater abominations and shall rip up every fester'd corner therein and let out all the ill blood certainly this cannot but humble a child of God the more a man sees his own vileness the more he admires the goodness of God unto him and is sensible of the evil of his sin Jam. 4.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ex adverso seponit As God communicates himself to none but to the humble spirit God resisteth the proud but he giveth Grace unto the humble so none have the teachings of the Spirit but those that are humble 2. If there be the teachings of the Spirit upon the heart there will follow more joy then can well be conceived of Archimedes when he had found out a Mathematical demonstration cryed out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have found it I have found it how much more wilt thou rejoyce when thou shalt know the things of God! If Simon when he saw Christ in the Temple cryed out Now Lord let thy servant depart in peace Luk. 2.29 for mine eyes have seen thy salvation O how wilt thou rejoyce when thou shalt see Christ in thy heart dwelling there by a lively faith It is not Christ come in the flesh that saves us but Christ come in the heart Christ in us is the hope of glory Col. 1.27 Knowledge is better then life how much better is the Knowledge of God If it be such a pleasure to a man to know that which he never knew before what a pleasure is it to know by the witness of the Spirit upon our hearts that God in Christ is reconciled to us Saith the Spouse to Christ Cant. 1.2 Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth for his love is better then Wine These words hold forth three things 1. The great familiarity between Christ and his Church As a kiss is a sign of homage and obedience Psal 2. Kiss the Son least he be angry i. e. Obey the Son do homage to him so it is a sign of familiarity and love therefore saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 16.20 Greet ye one another with a holy kiss you know friends after long absence use at their meeting to salute each other with a kiss of love The familiarity of Christ a Believer is in the kisses of his mouth i. e. the teachings of the Spirit to shew their mutual joy at their meeting together again 2. That this familiarity and mutual love between Christ and his Church comes in by his Word and by the teachings of his Spirit he doth not say with the kisses of his lipps but with the kisses of his mouth the word Kisses is taken in Scripture for flattering soft and pleasant words shewing forth some love and charity Prov. 27.6 Faithful are the wounds of a friend but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful The Churches desire is that Christ would instruct her by his Word and Spirit for his love is better then wine 3. The love of Christ in the kisses of his mouth to his Spouse is better then wine all the comparisons in this book of Canticles are drawn from things which do most of all title our minds and delight our senses Wine amongst those things which belong to the taste is the sweetest The love of Christ in the teachings of his Spirit is better then all things better then Wine then Wine which maketh glad the heart of man If Christs love in the kisses of his mouth be better then wine then certainly the joys which come in by the teachings of Gods Spirit are better then the joys which come in by wine all the joyes which come in by these carnal delights are of a perishing nature as soon as the act is past the pleasure is past A drunkard as soon as his cup is down the pleasure vanisheth but the joyes that come in by the Spirits teachings are abiding joyes all other joyes have a sting at the end of them sin it hath a fair entrance The disference between the joyes of the Spirit and other joyes but at the length it bites like an Adder and stings like a Scorpion but the joy that comes from the Spirit is without sorrow it is not adulterate Wine but pure and sweet Wine Psal 122.1 I was glad when they said unto me let us go into the house of the Lord. Psal 27.4 One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his Temple As the Doctrine of Christ exceedeth all other Doctrine so it breedeth a greater delight and joy in the heart then other Doctrines do He that hath the light of the Spirit will discern therein a secret and hidden Manna which the world knoweth not of As the dew descendeth upon the ground and rejoyceth the earth and maketh it to flourish so the Spirits teachings are by the dew to refresh the barren and drooping Spirit Hos 14.5 I will be at the dew unto Israel he shall grow as the Lily and cast forth his roots as Lebanon Dent. 32.2 My doctrine shall drop as the rain my speech shall distil as the dew as the small rain upon the tender herbe and as the showers upon the grass As the dew in Spring and Autume when the Aire is temperate and clear doth fresh the ground and make the herbs to flourish and to give a sweet smell so the teachings of the Spirit they cause our hearts to rejoyce they come as the rain upon the dry ground and as the dew upon the tender herbe Phil. 4.4 A Christian should alwayes be of a joyful Spirit Rejoyce in the Lord always and again I say unto you rejoyce 2 Cor. 11 30. saith Paul I rejoyce in my infirmities what if thy sins were never so many Did not Christ satisfie for thy sins Are thy afflictions heavy upon thy Spirit the joyes which flow in from the Spirit of God will superabound and exceed all thy afflictions besides the Spirit will teach thee Heb. 12.10 1. That all thy afflictions are but to make thee partaker of the holiness of God Rom. 8.28 2. That they shall work for thy good all things shall work for the good of them who love God 3. All thy afflictions cannot hinder God from loving of thee God loves a Saint in prison in nakedness in famine in distress God loved Job on the Dunghill Lazarus with
last day in glory power and majesty we shall stand in need of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper for the confirmation of our faith and to remember the death and sufferings of our blessed Saviour till he shall come to judgement Prayer also is a standing duty required of all Christians while they are on this side heaven that thereby their faith and hope in God might be exercised We are commanded to pray continually that is to let no time wherein this duty is required of us 1 Thess 5. 4. Because a Believer stands in need of continual food and nourishment that the tent of the word and the Bread and Wine Sacramentally so understood should be continually put in his mouth whilst he is under age in respect of that perfection and ripeness he shall attain unto when this mortal life shall be swallowed up in glory that his soul might be nourish'd up unto everlasting life Likewise here bebelow we stand in need of many things strength of grace to overcome sin patience under adversity the arm of God to support us under all our weaknesses heavenly comforts daily supplies of the spirit of grace renewed arts of Divine assistance continually bread for our bodies food for our souls therefore we ought to make our requests by prayer unto God daily for all temporal and spiritual blessings Obj. When we have the greater light what need have we of the lesser when we have the Sun-light what need have we of the Star-light when we have the light of the spirit what need have we of the light of the word when we have that which supplieth all our wants what need we pray what need have we of the Sacraments the spirit can supply all our wants without the use of the means 4. In respect of our selves the light of the spirit is to be preferred before the light of the word but seeing that the light of the word is subordinate to the light of the spirit and that the light of the word and the light of the spirit do not differ in respect of the subject matter but onely in respect of manifestation and the spirit enlightens in and by the word therefore the light of the spirit doth not take away the use of the light of the word besides the comparison doth not hold because the collation between the light of the Sun and Stars and the light of the word and of the spirit halts and is imperfect The spirit enlightens our minds in and by the word but the Sun shines of its self and not in and by the Stars The spirit likewise though it can supply all our wants without the use of means yet it never ordinarily doth without the use of the means God gives his spirit onely to those that pray for it and when we have the spirit we are still to desire God that his spirit may exert his power upon us and act in us and by us that we may not onely have the spirit but feel the operations of the spirit upon our hearts God knows what we want before we pray and can give us them without our asking but God will have us pray that thereby we might acknowledge his power his goodness his mercy and the like and that thereby our faith and patience might be made manifest If upon the account of the indwelling of the spirit in the hearts of the godly they should forbear to pray I would know of those who say so why the Spirit of God is termed the spirit of prayer and supplication as in the prophecy of Zachariah Zech. 12.10 but onely because it stirs up in us good desires and holy affections and puts words into our mouths acceptable words whereby our petitions may be accepted of God Let them likewise answer the portion of Scripture if they can in the sixth of the Ephesians 18. Praying alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the spirit and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all Saints 5. If we should onely hearken to the voice of the spirit and to the spirits teachings in our hearts there would be no certainty of the true Religion when there can be no Character given by which the spirit of Christ might be distinguished from our owne proper spirit as from the spirit the divel which sometimes transforms himself into an Angel of light That is the pretences of a mans own spirit or of the divel in the hearts of others may seem so true and real to a man himself as if they were doctrines taught by the blessed Spirit Now how should we try the spirits whether they be of God or no but by the word of God Obj. It is a true signe of Divine instinct when of that which we believe or do we are perswaded of and rooted in without any ambiguity or doubting Ans This is a false sign for the Turks and Infidels are as much obstinated and setled in their own doctrines Traditions yea more setled then most of those Christians who pretend so much to the spirit Q. But some may say though we grant you that the teachings of the spirit do not in themselves make us to be above the Ordinances of God and the meanes of Grace yet may we not then when we come to be perfect Christians high-grown Saints and have lived under the teachings of the Spirit along while may we not then cast off the use of the Word the Sacraments and Prayer and only depend upon the Spirit for his supply I answer No. 1. Because the best grown Christians in this life are not above the teachings of the word but ought to minde the light of the Word as well as the light of the Spirit Rom. 1.14 I am debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians both to the wise and to the unwise Heb. 5.14 But strong meat belongeth to them that are of age Strong meat the Word and Sacraments which through long custom have their wils exercised to discern both good and evil 1 John 2.13 I write unto you fathers because ye have known him that is from the beginning c. 1 Pet. 1.1 The Apostle Peter writes to the elect ones and to those who are born again as appears by the fourteenth verse of the same Chapter 1 Cor. 10.15 I speak as unto them which have understanding Phil. 3.15 Let us therefore as many as be perfect be thus minded 1 Cor. 11.26 Eph. 4.12 13. He gave some Apostles some Prophets c. Till we all meet together in the unity of the faith and the acknowledgement of the Son of God unto a perfect man and unto the measure of the fulness of the stature of Christ which fulness shall not be till after this life as appears by that place 1 Cor. 13.9 10.11 For we know in part and we prophesie in part but when that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shall be abolished 2. Because the highest grown Christians in this life are
in their infancy as it were till they arrive at heaven Ob. What do you say to that place in Joel Joel 2.28 where it is said that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh and your sonnes and your daughters shall prophesie c. And to that place in the Prophet Isaiah where it is said Isa 30.26 that the light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sunne and the light of the Sunne seven fold And to that place in John 1 John 2.27 where it is said that you have rectived the unction of the holy one and you need not that any man teach you Ans I answer that in these places of Scripture is only held forth a more plentifull giving of the Spirit under Gospel-times than under the former dispensations Therefore it is said that the Spirit was not yet given because Christ was not yet ascended The performance of which prophesie was upon the Apostles together with other elected Saints Act. 2. Hence then is no place given for Enthusiasms because it is usuall with the Prophets of the old Testament when they did speak of the restauration or amplification of the Church of God to set it forth Tropically under figures and shadows Zach. 14. Mal. 1.11 with many other places For that place in the Epistle of St John it holds forth unto us this that for those fundamentall truths which the Saints had received from him from which the false Apostles did seek to remove them they needed not again to be re-established in these truths being set home upon their spirits by the Spirit of God but only words of exhortation to stirre them up to execute and to put in practice those fundamentall truths which they had received Ob. But what say you to that passage of Scripture in the 2 of Peter 1.19 where it is said We have also a more sure word of prophesie whereunto you do well that ye take herd as unto a light that shineth in a dark place untill the day dawn and the day starre arise in your hearts Ans The Apostle in these words doth not take away the use of the word and other means of grace but the scope of the place as I gather from the context rather tends to the establishing of the word and other means of grace till Christ who is the morning starre the day starre in the morning of the resurrection shall arise in the hearts of his elect ones after a more glorious manner than when they were in this body of flesh in this world which is rather a state of darkness than of the light in comparison of that light of knowledge of joy and of comfort which shall be to the Saints in heaven To explain the words The Apostle having before in the foregoing words declared the certainty of the doctrine of the Gospel both from his own experience and from the testimony of God the Father now in these words he confirms the certainty of it from the consent of the Prophets under the old Testament As if the Apostle should have said The Doctrine of the Gospel is confirmed by the Prophets of old therefore the Doctrine of the Gospel is most true and certain therefore if ye mistrust me in commending the Gospelunto you I remit you unto the Prophets of old whose doctrines are a more surer word than this testimony of mine in respect of your selves as yet unto which word of Prophesie you do well to attend as a light which shineth in a dark place as to that light which now under the state of non-conversion and of blindness may do you some good till the vail is taken off from your hearts and Christ the morning starre whom you so much despised arise upon you by his blessed Spirit to unfold this word of prophesie unto you which will then not be a light in a dark place but a true light unto you indeed Christ by his Spirit having unvaild your hearts that you may see that was the Messiah of the world that was the true Christ whom you have crucified and of which this more sure word of Prophesie or all the Prophets have spoken of How this interpretation and explanation of the words may take with many I cannot tell but as yet till God shall give in a further light upon my soul I think it most agreeable to the minde of the Spirit Aretius Lucifer est plena Christi cognitio postquam drsinet usus Propheticae doctrinae The day-starre is the full knowledge of Jesus Christ after the use of prophesying shall cease which is if it be meant of all believers then the words must be thus understood That when the time comes 1. When Ordinances shall cease and the means of grace shall cease which will not be till the end of the world till the dawning of the morning of the resurrection the day starre shall arise in our hearts that is a full and perfect knowledge and enjoyment of Christ 2. If in respect of the Jews to whom he wrote scattered up and down the Nations then the words may be thus interpreted That they do well to attend to the word of prophesie which speaks of Jesus Christ as unto a light in a dark place that is as yet though but a darkish dispensation till Christ the morning starre shall arise and take the vail from off their hearts that so they may see he was the very Messiah of the world whom they have crucified of whom the Prophets of old have foretold Qu. Whether are the teachings of the Spirit upon our hearts a sufficient call for us to undertake the Ecclesiasticall Function No. 1. Because then all elected converted persons should be Pastors of Churches 1 Cor. 12.17 And if all the body were an eye where is the ear for all true believers are taught of the Spirit 2. Because the Spirits teachings are not revelations of high mysteries of things to come a declaring of the whole minde and will of God in respect of every circumstance a furnishing a man in a generall way to know more than is meet for him as a private Christian to know but a writing of all those things in his heart which pertain to life and godliness and which are necessary for him to know as one that must be saved by Jesus Christ 3. Because a man may have the Spirits teachings upon his heart and yet be ignorant of many truths of God because the Spirit teacheth successively ut antea 4. Because we never reade in Scripture that any took upon them to be publick Pastors of Churches but only as it were auxiliaries and helps for the promoting of the work of the Lord in the planting of Churches in the Primitive times as Aquila Priscilla and Apollos were unless besides these teachings they had an immediate call from God or a mediate by man yea though they had extraordinary teachings upon their hearts 5. Because besides the inward call of Gods Spirit which is a secret testimony that
They are inward teachings 3 Evident teachings 4 Irresistible teachings 5 Arbitrary teachings 6 Determinating fixing and quieting teachings 7 They are consonant to the Word of God 8 Effectuall powerfull transforming teachings 9 Quiet and comfortable teachings 10 Abiding teachings 11 Uniform teachings 12 Only teachings 6. Prove the conclusion that only those that know the things of God can have the teachings of the spirit upon their hearts Where that place of Scripture is opened 1 Cor. 2.14 The naturall man receiveth not the things of the spirit of God because they are spiritually discerned Because all the men that have not the spirit are either bewitched or besotted or overcome with the power of some domineering lust or drunken with the pleasures of sin or have no other light to judge by but that little sparke which is left within them since the fall which is overpressed with the corruptions of sin or are guided by sense which is not able to judge aright of spiritual things 7. Make application 1. By way of insormation to shew that the greatest part of Christians are void of the spirit from that place of Scripture 2 Cor. 3 17. Where the spirit of the Lord is there is liberty Now most Christians are in a state of bondage Wherein you have three respects how the spirit is called a spirit of liberty 2. By way of exhortation to stir you up to seek after the spirits teachings upon a three fold account 1. It is a singular blessing to be taught by the spirit 2 The teachings of the spirit are better then all other teachings and the wisedome of the spirit is better then all other wisdom whatsoever for these reasons 1. All other knowledge it breeds distraction of mind and pierceth the soul through with many sorrows 2. A little knowledge with true grace is better then all the knowledge in the world without the light of the spirit 3. Other knowledge it puffeth up but the light of the spirit it humbleth 4. All other knowledge it doth but furnish a man that he might be a more able instrument for the Divel and to carry on his designs in the world 5. All other knowledge will but aggravate our condemnation because it is not sanctified by the spirit 6. All other knowledge it is subservient to the light of the spirit 7. All other knowledge will never make a man a good Christian 8 All other knowledge will never satisfie and quiet our souls 9. All other knowledge is but vanity and vexation of spirit 10. All other knowledge it rather hinders then promotes the salvation of men 11. God hath a time when he will blast upon all humane unsanctified knowledge 2. If thou art taught by the spirit it is an evident sign thou art the friend of God 3. If thou art taught by the spirit it is a true sign that thou art instated into the Covenant of grace 8. Give several signs whereby we may know we are taught of the spirit 1. He that is taught by the spirit of God is of an humble spirit 2. He is of a joyful spirit 3. He that is taught from above will not grudge at the dispensations of God to others but will do what lies in his power to teach others 4. He that is taught of the spirit is a man of another spirit then he was before 5. He is of a meek spirit Wherein you have the several kindes of meeknesse opened and what it is to be of a meek spirit 6. He that is taught of the spirit is one that seareth God Wherein you have the several kinds of fear declared and what it is to fear God aright 7 He that is taught of the spirit will still desire to have further discoveries of the spirit upon his heart 8 He that is taught of the spirit is of a heavenly mind and can perform all duties in a spiritual manner 9. Shew what are the extraordinary teachings of the Spirit from the ordinary 10. This head is discovered in four particulars Declare the times wherein the spirits teachings are most manifest 1. In times of affliction 2. Neer the time of death 11. Answer several doubts and questions arising from the spirits teachings 12 Declare that it is the duty of every Christian to walk up to that light which God hath given him 1 To the light of nature 2 To the light of conscience 3 To the light of naturall improvements morall education good examples 4 To the light of the word which includes both Law and Gospel 1 Those that have only the light of the Law ought to walk up to that light 2 It highly concerns all Christians to walk up to the light of the Gospel because of the nature of this most excellent light and the aggravations of their sins who sin against it 5 To the sight of the conviction of the Spirit of God Reasons 1 Because every one shall be judged according to what measure of light he hath received 2 From the nature of light which manifests to us our evil deeds that thereby they may be reformed 3 Because he that walks not up in some cases to the light of his conscience offends in not so doing Where is shewed in what cases we may walk according to the light of our own consciences The Teachings OF CHRIST'S SPIRIT Upon the Hearts of BELIEVERS 1 COR. 2.12 Now we have received not the spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things which are freely given unto us of God IN the former Chapter the blessed Apostle of the Gentiles after his wonted salutation to this Church of Corinth in the 10th verse of the same Chapter he exhorts them to unanimity and concord of spirit to wit that there be no dissentions among them but that they be knit together in one minde and in one judgment And to bring them over to this oneness of spirit of being knit together in love he doth not come in a rigorous way pleading his authority as the Apostle of Christ or the power of the Keyes or Church censures or denouncing the threatnings of the Law and the curses of God but by a sweet and alluring compellation calling them brethren and befeeching them in the Name of Jesus Christ he winnes them over to the obedience of the truth Hence observe That the readiest way to win gainsaying bretheren to the obedience of the faith Note is not to be of a fiery spirit as James and John were and presently to count them as disjoyned and disunited from the body of Christ and to count them enemies to the power of godliness and to excommunicate and dismember them but as good spirituall bone-setters according to the Apostles word Gal. 6.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 6.1 Metapho ra à Ghirurgis artus dissolu tos leviter connect entibus Mal. 3.2 3 To restore our fallen brethren with the spirit of meekness and to pray for them daily and to expect their re-union when the light
of the spirit shall shine into their hearts through the face of Jesus Christ Till Christ shall sit as a refiners fire and purifie the hearts of his people as the Prophet Malachy hath it and shall make them willing in the day of his power to receive the truth in the love of it But yet we ought to distinguish Psal 110.3 Rom. 14.1 and to make a difference between the pretious and the vile between him that is weak in the faith and him that offends out of malice and obstinacy and knows that he is in a wrong way and will not be reformed With the later we are to deal in a more severe way openly 1 Tim 5.20 Mat. 7.6 Mat. 18.17 rebuhing them before many witnesses and if they still persist turn to Dogs and rent us then let them be unto us as Heathens or Publicans and let them be given over to Satan for the destruction of the flesh 1 Cor 5.5 that their spirits may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus I finde that the Scripture useth severall Greek words to express and shew forth the various waies we ought to proceed withall in handling those that have erred from the faith 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Admonition a friendly and courteous telling them that they are not in the right way and that as long as they stick to these principles and adhere to those false conclusions they are to seek in the things of God Beseeching them to examine them by the light of the Word and the Spirits speaking in the hearts of others who have further discoveries upon their hearts of the truths of God and of those things which accompany salvation than they and to judge according to the analogy and proportion of Faith Rom 12.6 To beseech them to examine upon what grounds they close with these opinions and of the ground of their faith and of the reason of their hope For we are not upon Trust and upon bare Tradition to close with any Doctrine delivered unto us though it comes with never so fair a species of truth 1 Joh 4.1 but to try the Spirits whether they be of God or no and be alwaies ready to render a reason of our Faith 1 Pet. 3.15 and of the work of Grace upon our hearts to every one that shall require it of us And to search into the lives of those men who endeavour to draw us to their opinions Gal. 6.13 whether they are those that seek themselves and their honour and the pleasing of their own humour or the advancement of the Kingdom of Jesus Christ in the hearts of his people Now this admonition it must not be once but again and again till by the power of the Word and the bright shining forth of truth they being overcome by the beauty and the excellency and the power of it for what is stronger then truth they be over-weaned and prevailed upon to a sincere and hearty affection to it Now this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Admonition includes 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 falsae doctrinae a demonstration of the absurdity and the falsity of the opinion they are in love withall as the Apostle Paul did who proved Justification to be of Grace and not of Works shewing the impossibility of it by an Antithesis between Works and Grace If it is of Works Rom. 11.6 it is not of Grace otherwise Grace is no more Grace We must first shew them that they are in a wrong way before we can perswade them of the right Saith Solomon Prov. 14.12 There is a way which seems right to a mans eyes but the ends of those waies are death Now till a man sees that death and destruction follows and attends his waies he will never seek after Wisdoms path and the waies which tend to life Act. 8.3 Act. 9.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As long as Paul was nurtur'd up in the Jewish doctrine and insensible of the depravation of it he was inraged in his spirit against the Church of God haling men and women to the Judgement seat but when once the Spirit had convinced him of the weakness of that dispensation under which he lived Rom. 10.1 and that the Law was not able to bring any thing to perfection and the Ceremonial Law is Statutes which were not good Ezek 20.25 as the Prophet Ezikiel cals them and that he cannot be justified by the works of the Law he presently disclaims whatsoever formerly he imbraced counting all things but loss and dung in comparison of the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ 2. A secret insinuating unto them the truth and the excellency of the opposite to which they hold saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 12.16 I beguiled you i. e. I caught you as fishes are caught in a net before you were aware by the power of the Word upon your hearts We ought to strike the iron while it is hot and to work upon mens hearts when they are stirred up by a holy compunction of spirit to search into the nature of things Every time is not fit to deal with men for their souls good because the spirits of men according to mens various assections stirred up at such a time rather then another are more sutable to receive an impression than at another time as the stories of Amaziah and Asa will clearly shew 2 Chron. 25. We read of Amaziah that having hired an hundred thousand valiant men out of Israel of the Tribe of Ephraim to assist him against the children of Seir the Propher came to him in the Name of the Lord commanding him to separate these men from the men of Judah that they might return to their own place Here Amaziah readily obeyed the Word of the Lord by the Prophet though to his own damage with the loss of the hundred Talents of silver Yet we finde in the following verses of the same Chapter that the same King Amaziah when the Prophet came to reprove him for serving the Gods of the Nations whom he had overcome he was wrath with the Prophet and disobeyed the Word of the Lord. O what a happy issue might many of Gods people have had of their admonitions and reproofs upon the souls of others if they had done it when the soul was of a tender frame of spirit sensible of its own infirmity and under the sense of its insufficiency kept low in its own eyes desiring above all things to be taught by the Spirit I have known many who at the first onset of a reproof though sugar'd over with many sweet words which is a great oversight in the people of God Psal 141.5 and farre from Davids temper who said If the righteous smite him it shall be as a pretious balm which shall not break his head who afterwards were as Lambs apt to be guided by the weakest hand 2 Sam. 15.6 As Absolon is said to steal away the hearts of the men
of Israel from his Father David so we are to win mens affections to our selves by our plausible and affable carriage and allure them by a self-denying frame of spirit to yield unto us As the Poet saies Peragit tranquilla potestas Quod violenta nequit It is reported of Musculus that by his gracious behaviour to the Anabaptists in his time visiting them in prison exhorting them and beseeching them to be reclaimed he did more prevail upon them to their conversion than the Magistrates could do by their imprisonments and punishments 2 Tim. 2.24 But the servant of the Lord must not strive but must be gentle towards all men apt to teach suffering the evil Instructing them with meekness that are contrary minded proving if God at any time will give them repentance that they may acknowledge the truth 2. To rebuke them sharply Greek Tit. 1.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cuttingly to lay open the Word before them that two-edged Sword and to press it home to the conscience v. g. as if they were to deal with one that denies the resurrection as the Saducees did to set home with the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit that is plainly and powerfully that place of Scripture which Christ objected against them Mat. 22.32 I am the God of Abraham of Isaac and of Jacob the God not of the dead but of the living This is it which Ecclesiastes speaks of Eccles 12.11 when the Word is nailed home by the Masters of Assemblies 2 Tim. 2.15 this is rightly to divide the Word of God giving to the stout-hearted sinner its portion Ministers are not to fear the face of man Eph. 6.20 because they are the Ambassadours of the ever living God but to particularize sinners as Nathan did David 2 Sam. 12.7 saying Thou art the man Saith God by his Prophet Hosea Hos 6.5 I have slain them by my Prophets The Word of God it kils the unregenerate part and makes us dead to the customs of the world but quickens the regenerate part within us It either divides between Christ and us and then it is the savour of death unto death 2 Cor. 2.16 or either between us and our sinnes between us and the world between us and our carnall corrupt reason and then it is the savour of life unto life It is called a fire Jer. 23.29 because as the fire consumes the dross and purifies the metall so the Word it purifies the dross in our hearts and of reprobate silver it makes us fit for the use of our spirituall Master Jesus Christ And although they may resist thee and shift off the truth and hate the light and are become thine encmies because thou dealest plainly and powerfully with them as Paul speaks of the Galatians Gal. 4.16 Am I become your enemy because I tell you the truth Act. 7.54 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Instar serrae dentes frendebant Yea though they may gnash upon thee with their teeth as the malitious Jews did at Stephen yea though they may persecute you for your zeal yet know this that thou hast performed thy duty and delivered thy own soul Rom. 12.20 i. e. Either by thy rendring good for his evil thou hast gained thy Brother and caused him to render love for love For love is a certain secret fire enkindled in mens hearts by a sympathy with the object which allures still blazing forth and aspiring to be united with the thing loved Or if thou shalt not gain thy brother by thy Christian carriage thou shalt heap coals of fire and brimstone upon his head to his everlasting torment and thy reward is with God Thou hast heaped coals of fire upon his head and fuell for his everlasting burning But thy reward shall be as great as if thon hadst reclaimed him seeing thou hast not been wanting on thy part to do thy duty 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3.10 i. e. Recusare repudiare To give them over to the swing of their lust and to let them have their liberty in their pernicious waies and for a time to divorce them from our company from having any communion or society with us as a Husband doth divorce his Wife who is given over to a spirit of Whoredom so to give them as it were a bill of divorce for the future to have any spirituall commerce with them as the word imports till God by his blessed Spirit shall bring them out of the snare of the devil Analogicall to this is the Apostles phrase he that loves not the Lord Jesus let him be Anathema Maranatha that is 1 Cor. 16.22 let him be accursed till the Lord comes till Christ who is the Lord shall arise in his heart and dispell the clouds of sin and ignorance and the day-starre arise in his heart Like to this is the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deflectere to turn aside from them till their eyes shall be inlightened to discern between truth and errour saith Christ Mat. 18.18 Whose sinnes you binde on earth shall be bound in heaven c. So that the Church of Christ which includes both Pastor and People excommunicating a prophane Esau or a licentious Libertine or a scoffing Ishmael or a false-hearted Disciple or a rotten member that hath a postatized from the faith or one that hath fallen into some gross sin to the scandall of Religion till they have repented is seconded by God in heaven as acting that Discipline and Jurisdiction which he hath enacted in his Church Simile As a dead member in a mans body joyned to the living members doth but annoy and hinder them as if a man had one leg which were quite dead and utterly useless it were better it were cat off than that is should remain united to the rest for it rather hinders the rest of the members than profits them so it were better that all these dead members fruitless branches in Jesus Christ Joh. 15.2 walking Saints talkative Christians were separated from the Church of God especially if they are discovered to be so by some notorious fault or Apoflacy till they are renewed again by repentance than that they should defile and annoy the Church of God Saith the Prophet Haggai Hag. 2.12 An unclean thing may defile a thing which is clean though a clean thing cannot purifie an unclean ☜ Aster an unclean person or an hypocrite is discovered if they cast him not forth and excommunicate him he defiles the Church and the Ordinances of God but if he be not discovered and goes for a Saint and hath a name that he lives when he is dead Rev. 3.1 and according to the Apostles phrase Heb. 10.29 2 Pet. 2.1 for one that was sanctified by the blood of the Covenant and bought by Jesus Christ though in Gods sight he be a wicked wretch and abominable hypocrite he defiles not the Church because he is not discovered After the
and deportment in preaching the Gospel to them to this end to breed Schisms in the Church for saith he I was with you in weakness and in fear Yers 3. and in much trembling that is he was so farre from being pust up with those gifts and graces which God had indued him with that he was among them with much infirmity in much affliction and in much contempt as he saith Who is weak and I am not weak we are fools for Christs sake 1 Cor. 4.10 but ye are wise we are weak but ye are strong ye are honoured but we are despised In the 2. Cor. 10.10 For say they his Letters are weighty and powerfull but his bodily presence is weak and his speech coutemptible So that the Apostle was no promoter of Sects and Separations and Parties in the Church but these divisions came from their lusts from their carnality and fleshly mindedness 1 Cor. 3.3 4. For whereas there is among you envying and strife and divisions are ye not carnall and walk as men For when one saith I am of Paul and another I am of Apollo are ye not carnall So saith the Apostle James Iom 4.1 From whence are warres and contentions among you are they not hence even from your lusts that warre in your members It is a sign thou art of a proud impetuous and of an ambitious spirit if thou art a breeder of dissentions in the Church of God and that which was falsly charged upon Paul that he was a seditious person and a disturber of the Nation and upon Jeremy Act. 24.5 Ier. 15.10 that he was a man of ftrife may be justly charged upon thee who for a very light occasion makes a departure from the Church of God Pro. 13.10 From pride cometh contention saith Solomon so thou art of a proud spirit if thou art of a contentious spirit Hence observe Note That the Ambassadors of Jesus Christ and of the Gospel of his grace must be men of peace and not study to make factions and parties in the Church of Christ They should endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace Eph. 4.3 They should endeavour to preserve the truth of God that so the truths of God may preserve them For as long as they stand up in Gods cause in opposition to the flesh the world and the devil God will stand by them and plead for them and smite through the loins of them that shall rise up against them Jude v. 3. They must contend earnestly for the faith that was once delivered unto the Saints and plead with that Whore of Babylon by the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God and vindicate the Scriptures from all those foul aspersions which the locusts of the bottomless pit together with the Socinians Arminians Anabaptists and Quakers of these times have cast upon it The Church it is the House of God and the Word is Gods Looking-glass which he hath set up in his House whereby all the defects and spots and blemishes which are in Gods people may be discerned and this word is committed to the hands of the Ministers as Trustees and Stewards to give out and to dispense to every soul its portion as time and occasion shall require Now this treasure is in earthen Vessels 2 Cor. 4.7 that the praise might not be of men but of God and the people are not to be their own carvers as now adaies many are but to require the word at their mouths and to obey them in all lawfull commands examining by the Scriptures whether those things be true or no which they preach as the Beraeans did Act. 17.11 and highly to honour them for their work sake But now if they shall contrary to Gods Word set up new Lights in Gods Church and offer up strange fire as Nadab and Abibu did Lev. 10.1 and a new Looking-glass in Gods House and appoint those things which God never commanded neither came it ever into his thoughts to require and rend the seamless Coat of Christ that is the Church by their inventions and traditions and seek new doctrines and new opinions and vent them forth that others may follow their pernitious waies by reason of which 2 Pet. 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exitiis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Blaspemabitur 2 Pet. 3.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 torquēt Rack the Scriptures the way of truth is evil spoken of and captivate the understandings of others by their carnall reasonings and sinfull objections whereby they wrest the Scripture to their own damnation and giddy the spirits of weak Christians by their deep notions and Allegoricall interpretations and set themselves up for the only men and to have other men called by their name and by that party they are of What is this but to be of a seditious spirit and to be the incendiaries of the Churches peace The Kingdom of Christ is a Kingdom of peace Omnes literae in nomine Jehovah sunt literae quiescentes quo observandum est Deum ipsissimum fore pacis fontem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and God is a God of peace and Christ is the Prince of peace and the Gospel is the Gospel of peace Why therefore should not Christs Ambassadors be the Ambassadors of peace I am not here against the communion of the Saints by way of Church fellowship joyntly to serve God and Jesus Christ in way of distinction and separation from the profane world But against that venomous humour which is in some men that to get themselves a name in the world do seek out and invent some strange and uncouth opinion and vent it forth with all the fair pretences of truth that possibly can be that thereby adopting to themselves proselytes they may walk in the light of their own fancies and delight in the vanity of their own imaginations Observe again That for Beleevers to call themselves by the names of their spirituall guides be they never so holy and religious men or by strange names taken up by the contumelies of ungodly men it is an unchristian thing The word Brethren is very often used in the Acts of the Apostles in the Epistle to the Romans and in several other places Act. 9.30 10.13 16.2 17.10 18.18 Rom. 12.1 and disagreeing to the minde of the Spirit Those be the best names which the Scripture useth as Brethren Beloved in the Lord Saints Christians Servants of Jesus Christ c. It was Luthers charge to his followers that after his death they should be sure not to call themselves by his Name that is not to be called Lutherans by his Name Luther and why Did Luther die for you or Christ If Christ died and was crucified for you let him be your Lord and Master But if Christ did not die for you and I died for you then let me be your Lord and Master and be ye called by my Name This argument the
have his command to the contrary his Word bids us not to do it How can we violate the authority of the sacred Majesty of heaven and earth How shall we be able to stand before God who is a consuming fire and commit these abominations in his sight What a good thing were it if Christians would make a Common-place-Book in their hearts out of Gods Word and by often reading of it and by that excellent duty of meditation laying it up that they may have spirituall matter to furnish their souls withall upon all occasions This is the true pondering of the Word of God So much of the Word of God as we meditate on and by meditation is concocted to the nourishment of our souls so much we have and no more This hiding of the Word within our heart is an excellent means to further the gift of prayer whereby we shall have store of matter at all times and upon all subects to render up our petitions unto God ☜ That is the best prayer that is founded upon the Word of God How sweetly doth the Spirit of God breathe forth in Davids Psalms and what heavenly expressions there are suitable for a Christians spirit to exercise his faith and comfort in God by in the greatest trials and most soul-dejecting desertions This hiding of the Word of God to wit the sweet promises which concern salvation contained therein to poor broken-hearted sinners affords abundance of peace of conscience and consolation of the spirit Saith David I have hoped in thy Word ☞ He is a true emblem of a faithfull soul A true sign of a beleeving soul who can trust God for his word sake and build upon the Word of consolation who can plead with God upon a bare word of promise Lord hast thou not said it and wilt thou not bring it to pass If we would by a lively faith suck eagerly at these breasts of consolation and dive deep into these wels of salvation and carry our buckets often to draw and look to Jesus Christ in whom all the promises are Yea and Amen for the earnest of his Spirit upon our hearts that they may be rightly applied to our everlasting comfort our souls would be satisfied abundantly as with marrow and fatness So likewise saith David Thy Word is a light unto my feet and a lamp unto my paths and in the same Psalm Psal 119.96 I have seen an end of all perfection but thy Commandments are exceeding large The literall Word of God though it hath a beginning and an end in respect of the letter yet the Word of God considered Doctrinally as it is the wisdom of God the Father it is infinite like God himself and hath unfathom'd depths of the riches of Gods grace to sinners in Jesus Christ contained in it Rom. 8. O the depths of the riches of the wisdom of God how unsearchable are his works and his waies past finding out ☜ It is a rich Mine of excellent discoveries of the Almighty God which never yet hath been searcht to the full though when we come to heaven we shall know abundantly more of it than we do now and all doubts concerning it fully satisfied which do so trouble us in the body of this flesh Let men of corrupt mindes talk what they will that they fully understand the minde of God in his word by the light of the Spirit speaking within them that they can unfold all mysteries and that they need not hearken to the word any longer but only hearken to the voice of the Spirit speaking in their hearts because the light of the Spirit is a greater light they say than the light of the word I am certain that they are grosly deluded by the father of lies for the Apostle Paul that knew as much of the things of God as any Enthusiast whatsoever yet did see but through a glass as it were imperfectly till this veil of the flesh being laid aside he shall see God face to face We know in part Now if the Word of God be exceeding large larger than the perfections of all the creatures so that there is no sinne that can be conceived of but is forbidden in it and threatned with eternall death and no grace but what is commanded and exhorted to under the promise of everlasting life and the means to eschue the evil and to imbrace the good fully declared unto us without all controversie this and this only is the Word of God and ought to be the ground and rule of our faith 2. That for men to preach their own inventions When men are much addicted to Allegorize Scripture suddenly they fall into some and new fangled notions and the fancies of their own intoxicated brains or for men to Allogorize Scriptures according as their minde serves them neglecting the pure fountain of the Word of God is to build mens faith upon humane wisdom and not upon the power of God We live in a Scepticall age deadly errour and are caught as it were in a snare before they are aware What a Solaecism upon his own body Origen the father of Allegories committed by Allegorizing that portion of Scripture Mat. 19.12 is known to all those that are verst in Ecclesiasticall History wherein most Christians being troubled with that itching humour the Apostle speaks of are all for novelties and vain questions which are nothing materiall to the establishing our souls in grace and neglect the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ They are all for light but little for zeal all for knowledge but little for practice all for notions but little for truth all for further discoveries of secret mysteries but little searching into their own hearts all for those truths that may inform the Judgement but little for those truths which may work upon the affections Lord A sweet ejaculation I pray thee to give me no more knowledge than what may work upon my heart to the joyning of a hearty obedience unto it and that above all other knowledge I may seek to know Jesus Christ and him crucified to be made partaker of his sufferings and of the fellowship of his resurrection that as he rose from the grave of death so I may arise from the grave of sinne unto newness of life Lord grant that while others dive into thy secrets and search after thy Decrees and do limit thee who art the holy one of Israel by speaking of thee irreverently and ascribing unto thee those things which are not convenient and as the fly about the candle never leave prying and approaching too near till they be consumed in the pride of their own hearts and in the vanity of their own imaginations I may sincerely and humbly with all fear and reverence to thy great and glorious Majesty take thy Name into my mouth and only speak of thee as the word speaks and no further Lord thou hast said that thou art Jehovah Jchovah Jah Eheie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
wisdom which flows from Christ by his Spirit Substance Jesch substantia a substantiall thing By substance we are not to understand riches as some understand for in common talk a rich man we commonly say is a substantiall man but reality and the truth of a thing By this phrase I make him that loveth me to inkerit substance is meant reality Spiritual wisdom is a reall thing it gives a reall reward to him that loveth her Spirituall wisdom is compared to most solid things to rubies to the most precious rubies and to the finest gold The word which signifies substance is put for wisdom Mic. 6.9 A man of wisdom shall see thy Name Hebr. A substantiall man Shall see thy name i.e. that he will reverence fear love and adore thy Name Words of sense commonly import their effects with them All other knowledge it is vanity when you have it and vexation when you cannot attain it It will do you no good at the day of judgement God at the day of judgement will not ask you what you know but what you have done how you have lived and whether you have walked up to that knowledge which God hath given you By all your knowledge you cannot supplant one vice you cannot implant one grace without the sanctifying Spirit of God All other knowledge it is but folly in the sight of God The wisdom of this world it is foolishness with God ☜ It is folly because it fails in obtaining the chiefest good and the last end That is the best wisdom which makes a man provident and furnisheth him with means to attain the highest end There is no wisdom but spiritual wisdom where by we shall ever come to have communion with God who is the best object and the chiefest good the first cause and the last end If it were so why did not Socrates Aristotle Pythagoras with many other knowing men in the world attain everlasting happiness which they are deprived of unless God out of his infinite mercy by a secret way unknown unto us receive some of the best of them into his mercy For my part I know no other way to salvation but by Jesus Christ to know him in his death and sufferings and to be made partakers of his resurrection and to be united unto him by a lively faith on our part and by the Spirit on Christs part and to worship the true God being rightly known by us according to that way and method he hath delivered unto us in his Word 10. Multi propter arbo rem scientiae amittunt arborem vitae August All other knowledge it rather hinders than promotes the salvation of men It puts a rub in their way to heaven They cannot submit to the plainness of the word to the foolishness of preaching to the wisdom of God Saith the Apostle Many for the tree of knowledge do lose the tree of life The World by wisdom knew not God that is by all their wisdom they could not attain to a right knowledge of him neither did they care for knowing of him The Gentiles did not like to retain God in their thoughts Multum ubique scientiae conscientiae parum There is a great deal of knowledg in the world but little of conscience In denying the wisdom of God they go about to establish their own wisdom which is folly in the sight of God The Gymnosophists of the world cannot away with this to hear that they must be taught by the Spirit And truly without the Spirit they are but bats in understanding knowing nothing as they ought to do They make a mock of the Spirit of God What do you tell us of the Spirit you spirituall men see you to it that you have the Spirit As Domitian scoffed at Saint John the Apostle when he had cast him into a cauldron of oyl with this saying Theu art one of the anointed ones So it is the common practise of licentious Esans and all vain-glorious persons who boast of their abilities to scoff at the godly Ministers of Jesus Christ with this saying Come let us hear what these spirituall men say let us hear what the Spirit speaks in them to day And to scoff at the godly calling them the anointed ones of Jesus Christ As for us we do not care whether we have the Spirit or no. We have learning enough to help us out As farre as we see we can discourse better of the things of God and speak more knowingly than you can which boast so much of the Spirit Alas you are poor silly creatures in comparison of us who are unacquainted with those things which are farre more excellent and admired by all than any thing you are capable of And thus they exalt and magnifie themselves in the pride of their own worth and in the vanity of their own imaginations These men live without God in the world and are strangers to the life of grace and to the power of godliness to the cross of Jesus Christ and to the love of God shed abroad in their hearts They are all for knowledge yet for the knowledge which will not profit they must be prying into the Ark and searching after Gods secrets but little minde the knowledge of God Who were the patrons and somenters of heresies were they not the Learned men in the world Ignorant men could never finde out such damnable heresies as have been vented forth in the world The Quakers a poor company of silly people carried away with divers lusts and misled by the delusions of the evil one could never dream of such blasphemies which they publish forth had not the Jesuiticall party the offspring of that triple crowned Monster at Rome put them into their heads that by sowing discord and dissention amongst the servants of Jesus Christ they might overthrow the Church and Commonwealth In Scholasticorum scriptis plus argutiarum quam doctrinae plus doctrinae quam usus Whitaker In the writings of the Schoolmen there is more of subtilty than of learning and more of learning than of use Non nisi in magnis ingeniis magni errores An argument why the Scripture is the Word of God Arius a great Scholar who invented the Arian Heresie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denying the Divinity of Christ Nestorius a great Scholar who broached the Nestorian Heresie who divided the Natures in Christ Eutiches a Scholar who broached that Heresie that the two Natures did not remain distinct in their properties but were confused and mingled together Unsanctified knowledge hath alwaies been a great prop to uphold vanities and delusions in the world and a great enemy to the truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ It is one clear and evident sign that the Scripture is the Word of God because there hath gone along with it publishing of it forth to the world such a prevalency and a power upon the hearts of those with whom they had