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A58208 A guide to the Holy City, or, Directions and helps to an holy life containing rules of religious advice, with prayers in sundry cases, and estates ... / by Iohn Reading ... Reading, John, 1588-1667. 1651 (1651) Wing R447; ESTC R14087 418,045 550

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same sometimes want of patience want of love to God and charity to men in fine such a general debility or distemper of the inward man that hee readily concludeth with Paul I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing for to will is present with mee but how to perform that which is good I finde not for the good that I would I do not but the evil which I would not that I do O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death These are great maladies of the soule and wounds of the spirit but the sense hereof as I sayed is a good sign of a bad cause where these are and the sinner is not sensible thereof they are desperate Symptoms For comfort herein let us as was proposed in case of the precedent distresse consider 1. That the very same measure of grace which to the present sense of a regenerate man seemeth incompetent may yet be a sufficient measure to save him and he is then strong by the power of Christ resting upon him and shewing it perfection in mans weaknesse when crying out for God's assistance he is most weak in his own sense so in Paul's distresse the Lord thus answered his petitions My grace is sufficient for thee hee saith not it shall be as relating to a greater supply but it is sufficient as speaking of the present measure of grace which then hee had when hee seemed to himselfe weakest 2. That the saints present measure of assurance is such as that they must not only give diligence to make their calling and election sure that so an entrance may be administred to them abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of Christ but though it be God which worketh in them both to will and to do they must also work out their own salvation with fear and trembling 3. All unbeleefe concludeth not a reprobate sense there is an unbeleefe in the elect before and a perplexing remainder thereof after their calling yea in their best estate here why else did the Apostles pray Encrease our faith and why did our Saviour upbraid them with unbeleefe 4. That saving faith differeth in degrees so that there is a stronger and a weaker faith yet both true and justifying so do all other graces one hath a greater and more excellent measure of the spirit of prayer then another one hath a more discerning and attentive spirit of hearing then another and yet in either instance the least may be true and sufficient for to every man is given according to the measure of Christ one hath ten talents another but two yea in one and the same mans faith there is sometimes a greater sometimes a lesser measure of confidence and assurance and so wee must judge of other gifts sometimes there is more fervency in praier sometimes lesse the sun-beams fall not on us at all times alike neither doth the light of grace 5. That a true saving faith may be very weak and the beleever may have very little sense thereof for the time and yet the gates of hell shall never prevaile against it as may appear in Peter's example 6. That there are doubtings and failings in the best on earth because wee are here but partly spirit wee are not yet come to perfection faith here must receive contintuall encreases and be subject to tryals so must all other graces 7. That true faith can never never shall finally fall away or utterly faile though it be subject to intension and remission because Christ intercedeth for us as hee said to Peter Behold Satan hath desired that hee may sift you as wheat but I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not because his grace by which wee are called and stand is immutable in the counsell and decree of God and because hereto wee are scaled up by the holy spirit of promise and the like wee are to judge of all the fruits of sanctification which being the gifts and graces of God are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such as God repenteth not of neither finally with-draweth Wee must here againe examine the conscience I have spoken something concerning the examination of faith in the 2. Chap. but intend here onely those things which concerne this present Argument of comforting the afflicted soule aske thy conscience therefore whether 1. Thou hast indeed a true sense of thy spirituall wants and grievest at thy corruptions of heart which on every occasion breake out into acts of sin against God is this a grievous burden unto thee be comforted thy sin is out of it proper place a stranger unto thee for nothing in it owne place is heavy The danger is want of sense and taking pleasure in unrighteousnesse if a man feele not when hee is wounded hee is either dead or in some dangerous ectasie No part hath sense but the living though it were for the present more comfortable to be whole yet sense of smart in thy wounds concludeth life and indeed in God's cures who maketh all things work for the best to them that love him a better state in respect of the quiet fruits of righteousnesse accrewing to them that are thereby exercised and the ulcerous corruptions of our souls often necessitating our wounding that we may be healed then the secure prosperity of sinners it is good at the last for the saint that he hath been troubled When thou hearest or readest the Scriptures doest thou feele the want of saith assurance sanctification the spirit and fervency of praier be comforted as the sunnes eclipse and failing of light towards us can be discerned by no light but it own so neither can the want of grace be possibly discerned by any thing but grace 2. Hast thou an hearty desire to have these wants of grace supplied feare not that very desire of grace is grace without which thou couldst not desire it Blessed are they who doe hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for they shall be filled God will never famish that soul which desireth him and his saving health none can hunger but the living none hunger for grace but hee that liveth thereby but thy desire of grace must be hearty not languid such as cannot rest unsatisfied with any thing else in the world there may be a feeble or oblique appeti●e of salvation in Balaam for feare of damnation but hee more loved the wages of unrighteousnesse the most happy thirst for the waters of life is that which afflicteth the soule till it be obtained which can never rest or joy in any thing without it so that indeed this very condition which so much afflicteth and affrighteth thee is the most secure and happy and thou shalt once know that which hee said in the happy event of his unhappy ship-wrack Wee had perished if wee had not thus perished And when thou hast received the spirit of God in such
a sicknesse of the mind proceeding from severall causes indignation anger envy so Caine to Hamon were impatient sorrow apprehension of injuries affliction deluded hopes and the like as the diseased body can neither indure heat nor cold so neither can an impatient and discontented minde comply with prosperity or adversity every present estate disliketh it because it cannot make good use of any it is not only a sinne but a punishment of the sinne of ingratitude to God therefore God threatned to send them trembling hearts sorrow of minde pendulous thoughts and feare In the morning thou shalt say would God it were even and at even thou shalt say would God it were morning sick of this wayward distemper was he who being at Rome liked Tybur best at Tybur Rome The sick man changeth roomes and beds as the wounded Hart goeth from brake to brake but cannot find ease in any because he carrieth that messenger of death the fatall Arrow in his side so doe impatient malecontents change between dislike of present and vaine hopes of future but he changeth the aire not his minde who only goeth beyond Sea where ever thou goest thou findest thy selfe in whom as the evill is not in the externall condition so must it be cured so must the remedy be as small matters distemper not a man in good health the least thing will the sick he will rest any where but the sick in a bed of Gold or Wood in the Pallace o● cottage is alike restlesse so is it here a sound mind will rest contented in any estate I have learned said Paul in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content and that very minde is health to the sick enlargment to the Prisoner and better then a Kingdome to the possessour the sick mind is troubled and discomposed with every trifle I doe well said pettish Jonah to be angry even unto death 't was but for a poore Gourd when many a thousand lives at stake troubled him not The way to cure is not by change of any thing externall but by cleering the mende of the malignant perturbations which disaffect it and to strengthen it by a right information of the understanding and rectifying the distempered affections untill the mind enjoy a calme of patience Patience is afflictions cordiall despares antidote Daughter and Nurse of hope the Saints share with Christ. the way to the inheritance and Heb. 12. 1. The proceed of confidence Jam. 1. 3. Heb. 6. 12. The operatory of perfection Jam. 1. 4. The seale of salvation 2. Pet. 1. 10. Symptome of Faith and Hope in Christ. 1. Thes. 1. 3. 2. Thes. 1. 4. Patience is an equanimity in bearing adversity and a fruit of charity as it is written the fruit of the spirit is Love Joy Peace Long-suffering Gal. 5. 22. and Charity suffereth long 1 Cor. 13. 4. Impatience is a perturbation of the mind a selfe-fretting tormenting bitternesse of the Soule proceeding of impotency or levity of minde a secret contest with and repining at the providence of God the shame of Rich men and vexation of the poore the Mother of despaire sad fury and Asmodeus of the inward house every roome and recesse whereof it disturbeth with hideous cries like Ziim and Ohim dolefull beasts in the desolations of Babylon it is a folly and sober madnesse wherein the sick minde rejecteth all remedy striketh at the Physitian recrudeth and teareth open it own wounds an heart-eating canker the inward mans wolfe which devoureth that which feedeth it the worme which biteth the Soule which Prometheus-like feeds the vulture which afflicteth it delighted in that which grieves it nor is this sicknesse peculiar to the wicked the best men have some fitts Davids expostulation with himselfe why art thou so sad ô my soule and why art thou so disquieted within me declareth it yea Christ who bare all our sorrowes without sinne in the sense of his fathers wrath acknowledged that his soule was heavy to the death and wrestling with that most sad passion he cryed on the Crosse my God my God why hast thou forsaken me he could no otherwise feel the torments of Hell due to us in his humane soule then by loosing the present sense of the Dei●ies assistance which wheresoere it is makes Heaven he lost in that agony a present sense not an indeficient interest for even then he called God his God which sheweth a vast distance between the impatience of desperate unrecoverable sinners and the estate of the soule-sick holy men who though like the Israëlites marching with the Egyptians into the same waters have there a way opened to their promised rest where the enemy is drowned Concerning this evill we must know it groweth on by degrees first in unadvised anger mixt with sorrow which are the seeds of impatience next to a dislike of every accident and estate then to an inward murmuring so like a Gangren it invadeth the Souls vitalls hope content and cheerefull dependance on Gods providence creeping on to violent despare so that it concerneth a man highly to prevent this evill by staying its beginnings learning to make a prudent use of every affliction and to expell all those discomposed thoughts which any way feed it to practice in the whole course of life that Saint like patience and moderation which becometh those who depend on the providence of God which that thou maist doe consider these like motives to Patience and contentednesse 1. God commandeth it Rom. 12. 12. 1 Thes. 5. 18. 1 Tim. 6. 8. Heb. 13. 5. Psal. 37. 7. c. 2. Consider the disadvantages of Impatience and the advantages of Patience no man can be happy who doth not think himselfe so what matter is it what thy condition is if tho● thinkest it evill the patient man is happy in every estate because God will heare him Psalm 40. 1. Psal. 37. 7. The patient is better then the proud in spirit Eccles. 7. 8. The Lord will give him eternall life Rom. 2. 7. By patience a man poss●sseth his own soule Luke 21. 19. All affliction to him is but bitter Physick which he willingly swalloweth because 't is given to cure him and to bring him the quiet fruits of righteousnesse Heb. 32. Herewith Godlinesse is great gaine I Tim. 6. 6. Patience maketh a burthen lighter and therein defeateth the malicious adversary the fruit of whose injury is the griefe and impatience of the injured when Job bare patiently the Devill was beaten at his own weapon as the Balas if it be solodged that it cannot move or shoote bringeth the Sayling ship to rights but otherwise foundreth her so is it with Patience in the soule it was a blessed victory obtained at Job's first encounter at which the Angells of heaven could doe no lesse then give a plaudite when Satan had charged him with all his machinations and Job received all those fierce blowes on his shield of patience the
Prayer for one ready to receive the Lords Supper pag. 111. A private Prayer after re●eiving the Lords Supper pag. 112. Another private Prayer immediately after receiving the Lords Supper pag. 113. 15 Of the Sabbath the name institution things considerable for the sanctification the beginning and ending reasons of the institution the change of the Lords day now to be observed of all Christians how we must sanctifie it p. 114. A Prayer for the Sabbath day morning pag. 125. To the ordinary evening prayer may be added this private prayer for the Sabbath p. 128. 16 Of Love and Charity what they are how they differ in their objects love to God considerable in the object and measure severall states degrees perpetuity and opposition signes thereof common lets meanes on our part to be used c. motives to incite us thereto pag. 129. A prayer for love to God pag. 14● 17 Of love to our selves kinds thereof love to our neighbour the necessity and excellency thereof conditions and signes of friendship what and how excellent it is the true end and lawes thereof what choice we are to make of friends and whom to avoid of love to our enemies we ought to love them without any malice and to make a right use of them p. 144. A Prayer for Love and Charity p. 180. 18 Of the soule affections mind and thoughts in generall corruption of the heart danger difficulty of the cure necessity of a right ordering our thoughts rules of practice pag. 181. 19 Of right ordering the thoughts in respect of some particular passions affections and perturbations of the mind in their distempers of love delight joy rejoycing mirth sorrow anger hatred malice envy impatience discontent a contented mind pag. 201. The Prayer for patience pag. 226. 20 Of Hope Feare Cares Iealousies pag. 227. A prayer for hope p. 233. A Prayer against feare p. 240. A Prayer against cares pag. 241. A Prayer for sanctification of the thoughts pag. 250. 21 Guidance of the tongue excellent use abuse evils of the tongue concluding the necessity of a right guidance thereof motives thereto rules by which it may be done pag. 252. A Prayer pag. 265. 22 Of externall actions in generall whence the good are how requisite how regulated rules concerning them pag. 266. The Prayer pag 270. 23 Government of Families duties of Masters and Servants motives to their duties pag. 271. A short morning prayer with a Family p. 277. Another Morning Prayer for a Family pag 278. A short Evening Prayer p. 282. An Evening Prayer for a Family more enlarged p. 283. 24 Of Marriage institution end and fruits thereof of choice in generall and particular who are to be avoided Duties of the married mutuall and peculiar advice to widdowes p. 287. the prayer pag 299. 25 Duties of Parents and Children honour to parents want of children good parents of evill children duty of the parent rules thereto belonging duties of children rules thereof motives there●to p. 299. the parents Prayer p. 310. the childrens prayer p. 315. 26 Of the wounded spirit or afflicted conscience what it is how great an affliction what the conscience i● How comfortable the peace thereof why God afflicteth his What things principally wound the conscience What they who are afflicted with the apprehension of Gods wrath against their sinnes must consider What they must examine and practise p. 316. the prayer p. 336 27 Sense of spirituall wants afflicteth but not so much endangereth the soule what we are herein to consider examine and practise p 337. the prayer 344. 28 Of the conscience afflicted with feare of tentations and falling away what we are herein to consider examine and practise pag 346 an ejaculation to be used as soone as thou awakest pag 354 another for thy last waking pag. ib. the prayer of a wounded spirit against temptations p. 355. 29 Guidance of the mind in encrease of wealth afflictions common their fruit in good men poverty a great tryall riches great temptations commonly mistaken how to guide the minde in encrease of riches or a full inheritance pag. 357. the rich mans petition pag. 364. 30 Poverty a great temptation yet having a capacity of true happinesse what we are to consider herein and what to practise pag. 365. the poore mans petition pag 373 31 Of liberty and restraint misplaced by an injurious world comforts for prisoners rules hereto appertaining p 374 the prisoners petition pag 384. 32 Of Banishment severall kinds generall cause what we must doe to be comforted herein pag. 391. the banished mans petition pag. 399. 33 Of old age common evills thereof the foundation must be happily laid in youth how the evills of age may be les●ed or more patiently borne by what rules of practise it may be improved to comfort pag 400. the old mans supplication pag 414. 34 Meditations for women neere their travell all misery is from sin sins pardoned in Christ why the punishments are not taken away womens comforts therein directions necessary thereto p. 415 a prayer for them in or neere their travaile pag 422. ● thankesgiving pag 425. 35 Directions for the sicke as all afflictions sanctified so sicknesse is profitable for Gods children many waies how it may become so to us duties of those that visit the sick pag 425. a prayer for the sicke pag 430. thankesgiving for health recovered pag 434. another after the ceasing of the plague p. 435. 36 Meditations concerning death seeing all must dye how to prepare that death may not be terrible meanes to comfort in death of deare friends comforts against death pag 439 a prayer for him that is at the point of death or hath received the sentence of death in himselfe pag 454. ERRATA Pag. 2. marg read inven●rint p. 4. m. r. placat p. 5. m. sin r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 7. l. 2. our soules p. 8. l. 3. r. Satan Subtile p. 13. m. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p 15. m. r. hac mundi domo ib. l. 32. r he must therefore p 17 l. 28. the first cause 22. l. 18. holy ascentions p. 24. l. pen●lt r. marketh the Church p. 25. l. 10. was reserved 29. l. 35 by the power p. 31. l ult so was fulfilled p. 32 l. 16. r. as the heire ib. l. ult changes p. 37. l. 4. the place p. 38. l. ●3 encrease thy p. 48. l. 9. r. in thee ib. r. Concerning the Holy Ghost § 1. what we are p. 51. l. 2. r. whereof he ●b l. 3. sheepfold p. 52. l. 6. are but on● p. 62. l. 2. there is entire p. 64. l. 3. what use we p. 66. l. 16. bearing in life p. 72. l. 21. beare all p. 74. 19. the confidence p. 78. l. 33. he looketh on 79. l. 11. his brethren 93 l. 27. preserve thee 95 l. 30. to the deafe 98. l. 7. in their legends 117 l. 14. to intimate 137. l. 14. and have his 146. l. 19. not so for it ●nd 174. l. 4. feeding on thee
Sonne Jesus thou hast indeed said Whosoever believeth in him shall not perish but have life everlasting but faith is thy gift who hast also said Aske and ye shall have As therefore in the sense of our owne impotency so in assurance of thy truth we humbly in●reat thee to take from us all hardnesse of heart and unbeliefe and to worke in us a true saving faith in Christ Jesus establish the thing which thou hast wrought in us make us worthy of thy calling and fulfill all the good pleasure of thy goodnesse towards us and the worke of faith with power It is thy mercy that we believe helpe thou our unbeliefe Lord increase our faith let the little graine thereof which thy free spirit hath sowed in our hearts flourish into a tree of life that our troubled thoughts may build in the branches and rest under the shadow thereof O Lord consider our weaknesse the continuall incounters and violent assaults wherewith our soules enemy chargeth us restraine his malice beate backe all his ●iery darts that they may never touch our hearts holy Father pu● thou on us thy whole armour that we may be able to resist in the ●vill day that having finished all things we may stand fast above all give us the shield of faith seeing we are to wrestle not onely against flesh and bloud but against principalities powers worldly governours the princes of darknesse of this world and against spirituall wickednesse which are in the high places Our helpe standeth onely in thy name O Lord who hast made heaven and earth forsake us not in our trials O blessed Saviour who didst once pray for Peter that his faith might not faile him looke on our greater infirmities intercede for us present these our prayers in the precious censer of thine owne merits that we may continue grounded and established build us on the rocke that neither winde storme or flouds of trials may overthrow us nor the gates of hell prevaile against us O Lord thou hast beene pleased in our baptisme to engraft us into the mysticall body of thy Sonne Jesus l●t that sweet ointment which dwell●th fully in him descend upon ●s even the comfortable grace of thy holy Spirit which may worke in us a full assurance of our salvation Lord seale up thine owne covenant our redemption in our hearts and consciences by the sure and infallible testimony of the holy sanctifying Spirit say unto our soules that thou art our salvation let not our faith waver in any surges of afflictions try us not above that thou wil● make us able to beare chearfully and constantly give us assurance of thy mercies in Christ Jesus unto our ends and in our ends till our faith may be accomplished in the salvation of our soules and our soules fully satisfied in the seeing and living with our blessed Saviour and eternall enjoying all that which we have believed through him O Lord encline thine eare O Lord consider and doe it for the same thy beloved Sonne our onely Saviour Jesus Christ his sake AMEN CHAP. III. What we are to believe concerning God § 1. That there is a God § 2. That there is but one God § 3. That he is one in essence and trinity of persons the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost § 4. How we must labour to know him 1. THat which we are to believe concerning God is first that there is a God he that cometh to God must believe that he is where we must know that it is not enough to believe God to be such as a carnall heart may imagine him never any nation as I noted was so barbarous but that they believed there was some God though when men forsooke the true light of Gods Word and followed their owne inventions they quickly left the knowledge of the true God and his will hence came such varieties of superstition and monstrous formes of idolatry into the Heathen world for there is but one strait line of truth but error is manifold men framing to themselves both God and religious worship all erred in a confused variety making them Gods like unto themselves in bodily lineaments complexion habit manners and affections so the Aethiopians made them blacke the Thracians yellow the Barbarians rusticke the Grecians more court-like the wisest well knowing they erred but knew not in the darknesse of their minds how to finde the right way as many appeare by that one voyce of the Heathen I would said he I could as easily finde out truth as convince falshood We must therefore believe God to be such as he hath revealed himselfe in his holy Word for whatsoever else is imagined is an idol of mans owne heart and not God 2. The Scripture hath revealed First some things concerning Gods attributes Secondly and some things concerning the persons of the sacred Trinity Concerning his attributes these five conclusions are necessary to be knowne 1. We can understand what God is not he is not a body not gold nor silver nor any thing materiall or obvious to humane sense or apprehension whatever thou canst comprehend know that it is not God 2. No attributes can fully and according to Gods incomprehensible beeing expresse to us the nature of God because that which is finite can neither expresse nor apprehend an infinite 3. The attributes of God in holy Scripture doe sufficiently expresse him to us and declare as much as concerneth us to know of him for the wisedome of God can neither be limited nor defective though his essence be incomprehensible and unspeakable yet his Spirit in the holy Scripture descended to our capacity and in certaine attributes described by his owne essence 4. The attributes of God are either affirmative or negative they expresse the perfection of God as farre as we can understand as when he is called Jehovah wise good almighty just mercifull c. these divide or separate from him the imperfections of the creatures and shew his admirable perfections by a tacit comparing him with the imperfect as when he is called infinite incorruptible immortall 5. The attributes of God are either proper or ●igurative the proper are those which are properly spoken of God in respect of that which they import though improper if we consider their manner or measure of signifying The ●igurative attributes are those which are borrowed from humane conditions to bring things of themselves ineffable nearer to our apprehensions as when an eye an hand anger jealousie or the like are attributed to God and we must know that some of his proper attributes are incommunicable to any creature as Jehovah infinite omniscient omnipotent c and some are communicable according to an analogy measure or degrees of subordination as Lord King Wise c. 3. Concerning Gods essentiall properties we must know that there are not in God many or divers properties because he is one of a most simple pure and indivisible essence but in respect of our
understanding there are many Concerning which we must hold First That the essentiall properties of God are all really the one essence of God for there is nothing in God which is not God there is no accident in him a man hath wisedome power justice but not of himselfe not ever not infinitely neither as his essence for the wisedome power justice c. of a man are not man but whatever is in God is of God and his eternall essence of himselfe subsisting independently inseparably neither are they after his essence but coeternall and coessentiall though they have not alwaies beene declared to the creatures so his wisedome and omnipotency was from all eternity though they were not manifested till that time he had appointed for the creation of the world wherein he made men and Angels witnesses thereof the same is to be understood of his other properties mercy justice patience c. Secondly That these properties are not parts of Gods essence for that which is infinite hath no parts and that which hath parts cannot be infinite but every essentiall property is the being of God who is indivisible and truly one Thirdly The essentiall properties of the deity are inseparable and incommunicable so that no creature can become a deity or have such an essence as is infinite omnipotent omnipresent c. Fourthly Some things absolutely spoken of God are in the abstract to intimate his selfe-being as when we say he is life wisedome goodnesse c. Some things in the concrete to import to us the reallity of his existence as when we say he is good just holy c. in both we understand that whatsoever is attributed to him herein is the essence of God Fifthly We are taught in Gods Word that he is an uncreated Spirit of selfe-being infinite perfect eternall immense immutable everlasting life it selfe infinitely blessed wise omniscient good gracious loving mercifull just true holy omnipotent freely and by his owne independent power doing whatsoever he will in heaven and in earth and all creatures of infinite glory and majesty 4. The foole hath said in his heart there is no God none but the foole can think so considering 1. What we reade in the booke of Nature where that which may be knowne of God is manifest Rom. 1. 19. the admirable forme masse making preservation of the world with the diversities and perpetuities of motions demonstrate a present God whence could all these things at first come who set that admirable order and constant lawes who reduced those vast and discordant seeds of this great fabricke of the world into the harmony which still preserveth it can any man thinke of an effect without a cause thou wilt say how shall we know that God made this who saw him creating why if thou seest an house thou canst easily conclude it had some builder if none but the builders were privy to it and wilt thou not believe Gods worke except thou see him that all see this none can Whatsoever thou canst see is not God Neither let this seeme strange that he is invisible thou feelest the stormy winds thou believest they are winds without the testimony of thine eies thou knowest thou canst not see them thou thinkest speakest movest and livest by thy soule didst thou ever see it if thou canst not see the creatures part of thy selfe wouldst thou examine thy invisible Creatour with carnall eies with what sense canst thou apprehend a spirit The eye cannot see him except hee be coloured the eare cannot receive him except he bee some sound the feeling cannot perceive him except he be a body hee might therefore needs passe by thee as Job said and thou not see him being obvious to no sense and above and more pure then any created understanding Thou wilt say all these things are by nature such And what is nature but the ordinary power of God Which when he pleaseth he dispenseth with parting the red sea smiting the rock and bringing the fountaines thence dividing Jordan restraining the Babylonish sier and the like that all may know that he only is Lord of the creaturs who but spake and they were made whose will is his word and his word his worke Thou seest the heavens incessantly and without any rest turning about day and night in uniforme and unwearied motion who could have set up and furnished those admirable starres and planets with a never-failing light who could move them thus but a God of infinite power thou seest and treadest on this vast ball of earth hanging in the midst of heavens which turne about it who could substaine it but God thou seest the sea ebbing and flowing the wonders of the deepe on earth the plants and flowers keeping the first law of their creation preserved by a kind of mortall immortality dying and reviving as it were in a yearly resurrection who can do the least of these things amongst all the creatures where is he in heaven or earth can imitate these things which can give life to the poorest fly when thou hast considered all thou shalt know that none but a stupid foole can thinke there is no God 2 If we consider the testimonie of mans own conscience trembling at the apprehension of suddaine dangers stormes earthquakes thunders as Caligula was wont feare of death sheweth an Atheist the same if there be nothing after death nor God to punish the wicked what art thou afraid of 3 If we consider the punishments of the wicked in this life so following sinnes that it appeareth no fortuitous hand or chance that strooke them but the all-seeing just God so fitting his rods to mens sinnes that the punishment pointeth out the crime so in Sodoms unnaturally burning lust punished with a supernaturall shower of fire and brimstone so in Pharoahs drowning Adonibezecks cruelty requited with the like it were too long to recite all the remarkable instances of this kinde wherein the consciences of wicked men convincing them they have confessed with those Egyptian●orcerers ●orcerers this is the singer of God 4 If we consider the constancy of the Martyres suffering death where sometimes the casting one graine of incense upon an alter might have saved their lives they constantly resolving we will not serve your Gods our God whom we serve is able to deliver us When they endure such varieties of torments under the wearied hands of tormenters in hope of that which God hath promised them who suffer for his truth we may certainly conclude that neither the consent of so many nor the perseverance of dying men would be vaine or dis●embled and that patience it selfe could never have willingly endured such tortures without the admirable assistance of God 5 If we consider predictions of things to come and their certaine fulfilling in the appointed time and manner who but God
could foretell what he meant to doe For who hath been his counsellour Who could have named Cyrus and foretold so many yeares before that he should give command for the repaire of Jerusalem but God who alone had appointed it Who could have foretold of a deluge of waters to drowne the whole world and that an hundred and twentie yeares before while the Arke was building Who but only he Who could have told of Abrahams oppression in Egypt and inheriting the Land of Canaan by his posterity but only God It were too long to repeat the sundry particulars hereto belonging all conclude a certaine providence and prescience and that a Godhead 6 If we consider the order of causes which cannot run into infinites but must quickly come in the computation to the cause which is God 7 If we consider the common assent of all Nations in all ages acknowledging that there is a God and to be adored all which proceedeth from the weake unextinguished light of nature the slender remainer of the knowledge of God left in the conscience of man after his fall 8. Lastly if we consider the excellency of mans soule and body tell me Atheist who made that soule of thine by which thou livest and hast sense and motion who did kindle that divine sparke and lampe of reason in thee who made thee capable of knowledge could any but the God of wisedome who enlightened that eie of thine by which thou ●ow seest could any but he that created light who framed those admirable parts of thy body so as that nothing is wanting nothing superfluous nothing otherwise could be devised or framed so convenient dost thou dreame of a naturall propagation tell mee then what is nature and who made the lawes thereof Is it not as we said the ordinary power of God who thus appointed Who made the first man If he had power to make himselfe he might more easily have repaired himselfe and why then doe we dye By this and by innumerable demonstrations it may appeare that there is a God though unseen of any and unknowne of all wicked unbeleevers There is but one God for 1 So the Scripture the infallible word of truth hath revealed the Lord our God is Lord onely Deut 6. 4. Exod 20. 2. 3. Deut 5. 6 7. Psal 18 31. 2. Sam 7. 22. Mal 2. 10. Ephes 4. 5. 6 1. Tim 2. 5. there is no other God but one for though there be many that be called Gods whether in heaven or earth yet there is but one God 2 The wonders which he hath done as they are recorded in the old and new Testament declare his unitie being such as could proceed from none but an Almightie and infinite power and two almighties or infinites there cannot be therefore the Psalmist said there is none that can doe like thy workes 3 By reason it must be so for one Sun is able to enlighten the world one soule to animate man how much more can one God who alone created all of nothing rule governe and maintaine his owne worke 4 That which hath selfe-being can be but one such is God 5 God is most perfect and there can be but one such as but one omnipotent one eternall 6 The government of the world admitteth but one God for if we should suppose it distributed into severall dynasts as Benadads servants dreamed 1. King 20. 23. there must bee confusion by the discord and contrarietie or at least a limitation of each others power determined to certaine parts and places either of which suppositions were impious and absurd in reason besides that humane partnership in kingdomes never began with fidelitie or ended without blood in irrationall polities nature bringeth all to order and subordination to one there is one king to swarme the bees one leader of the heard in the reasonable necessitie God and nature have appointed the subjects and superiours to avoid confusion of opinions and practices ever dangerous to publike interests which cannot subject without unity there must be some one generall in the army to command in chiefe and one Pilate at the helme and shall we thinke that the supreame celestiall power can be divided 'T is certaine that except the power of one doe unite all that this universe consisting of parts so different and unreconcilably contrary in nature as fire and water and the one prevailing over the other must extinguish his enemie and so destroy the whole neither could the contrary motions of bodies so vast continue but by the Almightie power of one to unite● and containe them all in subjection and order 7 God is omnipresent and every where therefore one for in every pluralitie there must be limitation and no infinitnesse one barring the other from being in all places 8 Lastly the wiser sort of heathens though they knew not God aright confessed that hee is onely one S. Paul citing Aratus his words for we are his generation Act 17. 28. sheweth that he spake but of one Orpheus is expresse saying there is but one selfe being and Sybilla of whom Plato and Aristophanes speake is more expresse there is only one God Thales Miletius Pythagoras Anaxagoras Aristotle Cicero and many more of them knew that there could be but one true God in so much that Varro who wrote of all the fabulous Pagan Gods acknowledged that they worship the true God who beleeve him to be the Governour of the universe the Oracles of the devill speaking in them for his other advantages confessed one God Thus much I have spoken for their sakes who are infirme We must beleeve that there are three persons in one Godhead unity in trinity and trini●● in unity this Christ taught Math. 28. 19. commanding his disciples to baptise In the name of the Father Sone and Holy Ghost and at the baptisme of Christ this appeared the Father saying from heaven This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased the sonne was baptised and the holy Ghost descended in the likenesse of a dove and these three are one 1. Joh 5. 7. the same is grounded in many places of Scripture Joh. 14. 16. 17. Gal 4. 6. Cor 13. 13. For the better understanding hereof wee must knowe the difference betweene an essence and a person the essence of God is one eternall spirituall simple selfe-being having being of and in no other but giving being to all things created To this belong all his essentiall attributes of which we speake A Person is a subsistence or being in the essence or substance of God and all the sacred persons in the Godhead have a mutuall relation one to the other and are distinguished one from another not in substance or Godhead for they are all one substance and one Godhead but by some property not common to any one with the other as the father from all eternity is ingenitus unbegotten the sonne from all eternity
Babylonish fornace the midst of the sea So may the way thou travellest on the bed thou liest on but if it be in thy choice take that place which is freest from distractions most decent private and accommodate whether thou prayest alone or with thy family 't is never importune to any state or condition it will make thy prosperity secure and thy afflictions tolerable only when ever thou prayest doe it as with deepest sense so with greatest humility and reverence of body and soule in as●urance of God's mercy He that dares speake to thee said the souldier to Caesar knowes not thy Majestie he that dares not thy Clemency He knowes not the dreadfull Majestie of God who dares any way be prophane or irreverend in prayer and hee is ignorant of Gods mercy who will not be confident to pray unto him A Prayer for the spirit of Prayer O Lord God of truth and father of mercy and compassion who art clothed with Majestie and glory and yet so regardest man man vile dust and earth yet that worke of thy hands which beareth thyne owne image as that thou framest his heart and enclinest thyne eare to his petitions heare us now calling on thy holy name and let thine eare be open to our requests Lord we humbly acknowledge that we are lesse then the lest of all thy mercies spirituall and secular and their continuation as in respect of our manifold sinnes whereby we have provoked thy justice so also for our undervalewing thy inestimable favours offered us in the most easy and gracious conditions of mercy which thou hast proposed unto us concerning remission of sinnes deliverance from judgments and all blessings of this life and that which is to come whereof thou saiest but aske and have we have yet so much neglected the meanes of our being happy that we haue amongst many other sinnes of omission either forgotten and neglected to pray or formally drowzily and carelessely performed the same so many haue our failings herein been that whensoever we haue prayed for blessings or forgivenesse we had need againe to pray that thou wouldst forgiue the sinnes of those prayers lest they should awake thy justice instead of pacifying it and imploring mercy And now O Lord seeing thou art a God of pure eies dreadfull Ma●●stie and asearcher of hearts as we are a people of unhallow thoughts and polluted lipps wherewith all shall we come and bow our selues before the most high thou hast indeed shewed us what is good and what acceptable but we have not done justly loved mercy nor in that humility we ought walked with thee when thou wouldst instruct us we have hardened our hearts and refused to obay when thy chastning have beene upon us we have not powred out our prayer nor in our trouble visited thee as appeareth this day now when thyne arme is streched out over us with dreadfull judgements threatning utter ruine and desolation of this whole nation so stupid is our security and hardnesse of heart such a spirit of slumber is fallen up●n us that yet we cannot or will not understand those things which concerne our peace and attonement with thee now when the Tents of Israel are beset with destroyers so much worse then Amalekites comming against us by how much more dwelling amongst us we cannot yet repent and cry for mercy in our prayers we soone let fall cur fainting hands for want of those supports of faith fervency and resolution never to hold our peace day nor night nor to give thee rest untill thou establish us and restore our religion and peace now when the houre of darknesse is at hand the dispersion of thy litle flock to be feared and dangerous tentations by seducers able if it were possible to beguile the very elect now when the great day of of the Lord draweth neere and hasteth on us when the sound thereof in warres and rumours of warres affrighteth us on every side a day of wrath trouble distresse and desolation a day of darknesse and gloominesse a day of trumpet and alarme so senselesse a security hath taken away our hearts that we still goe on in our sins corrupting our waies and so wounding our own consciences that wee are not only become loathsome in thy sight miserable in our present condition and helplesse in our selves but also heartlesse to fly to the Sanctuary of thy mercy and saving health our owne consciences deterring us because we cannot but know that we deserve thy justice who so long centemned thy mercies and that thou maist most justly stop thine eares to our prayers as we have ours to thy precepts and leave us comfortlesse in our distresse who have so many yeares beene fruitlesse in our abundance of peace and prosperity yet Ô Lord our God in assurance that thou art true and faithfull who hast promised saying aske and yee shall have and trusting in his merit and mediation who hath said Come unto me all yee that are weary and heavy laded and I will give you rest wee come unto thee humbly praying thee to be reconciled unto us to open our eyes that we sleep not in death to pardon all our sinnes our neglects and defects in prayer to frame our hearts and tongues thereto to helpe our infirmities who know not what to pray as we ought to assist us with the powerfull evidence of that spirit of Christ Jesus which enditeth all those prayers to which thou hast made the promise of obtaining to send downe that heavenly fire fervency of spirit which may direct and make this spirituall incense ascend up holy and acceptable in thy sight through his mediation who now sitteth at thy right hand to make requests for us so that we may have a cheerfull assurance of being heard Lord restraine the vigilant malice of the tempter take from us all hardnesse of heart unbeleefe doubting wandering thoughts drouzinesse and deadnesse of spirit and whatsoever else hath hitherto made us unapt to pray and lesse successeful in our prayers give us true humilitie holy reverence of body and soule and that wisedome to behave our selves in thy dreadfull presence that thou maist be pleased gratiously to accept our petitions that we may carry backe a comfortable answer to the assurance of our hearts and consciences before thee and further encouragement to continue our supplications unto thee through Jesus Christ our Lord and only Saviour AMEN CHAP. XIII § 1. Of hearing Gods word § 2. Motives thereto § 3. The usuall lets § 4. Conditions requisite to profitable hearing § 5. Rules of practice thereto appertaining 1 SInne to Gods dishonour and mans misery invaded the soule principally by the eare and it is Gods pleasure to beat it out againe by the same doore that as in our first parents we heard Satans seducements to our ruine so for our repaire we should heare the voice of Christ which is our life our wisedome and blessednesse if we keepe it 2. No word can binde and stay the conscience
to the wicked Princes and Priests is treason against the City Pauls madnesse to Festus moving of sedition and heresie to Tertullus and blasphemie to the Jewes 5. Pride as 't is written they dealt proudly and he●rkned not unto thy commandements they who in the height of a carnall heart resolve not to change their resolutions cannot abide to heare any thing dissenting the proud heart cannot endure any contradiction 6. Love of the world the tares thereof choke up the good seed so that it cannot finde roome in the heart to fructify this makes the negotiators excuse their not comming to the spirituall feast they must prove their Oxen and survey their new purchases the married thinke they owe no excuse this makes Felix put off hearing the Gospell to some convenient time when Satan and the world will this makes the formall hypocrite who will seeme a great servant and lover of the word goe away heavy if it bid him sell and give to the poore or secretly murmur if it touch his fraud of fals weights resolving to follow the word no further then it will comply with his gains the Prophet describeth such they heare thy words but they will not doe them with their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetousnesse c. 7. Satans subtilty distracting their thoughts so that they attend not and catching away that which is sowed in their heart perverting the sense embittering wholsome doctrine with some dislike distast irksomenesse of the hearer or suggesting some impertinent thoughts so to sill and busie the mind that it cannot attend to nor receive the word the mind of a good hearer must be like the arke of the testimony in which was onely the tables of the Law The conditions necessary to profitable hearing are that we take heed 1 Whom 2. What. 3. and how we heare 1. Christs sheep will not hearken to a stranger Joh. 10. 5. and God saith of seducers Thou shalt not hearken to the voyce of that Prophet 2. We must take heed what we heare Mark 4. 24. Evill Words corrupt good manners 3. We must he cautious how we heare Luk 8. 18. The gate of life and death had need be guarded with all diligence while Eve left it open to the Serpent shee quickly perished The conditions of hearing are that we must heare 1. Faithfully without which the word profiteth not the learner must beleeve specially in Gods schoole wee must not perversely affect to bring Gods assertions to the touchstone of our sense or carnall ●eason to make the Lawes of our owne faith with Thomas I will not beleeve except I see or to require demonstration and proofe of Gods truth whose part it is to pronounce not to proove because he is the onely competent witnesse to himselfe all the creatures can adde no credit to his assertions it is enough to conclude a thing true if we can prove that God said it because he is essentially truth whatsoever is not true is neither God nor of God It is impossible for him to lye as 't is impossible for him not to be or to change his being true now because wee are not capable of the infinite counsell and truth of God he complieth with our capacity and speaketh after the manner of men by litle litle destilling that dew of heaven on our understandings which may not overwhelme and drowne them but make them fruitfull not powring out his depths of knowledge on us as he can speake but as we can apprehend Therefore we must adore those mysteries which we cannot examine and beleeve every syllable of Gods word to be infallibly true though our reason come infinitely short of sounding the depth thereof 2. Attentively we must come to a sermon not for feare or fashion but with an hearty desire to be edified and therein shake off all oscitancie carelesse drouzinesse and wandering thoughts which will else render all our worke fruitlesse the Auditors thirst to heare is the speakers supply when they attend the spirit powreth out abundantly as the widowes oyle encreased while there were vessels to receive it bee thou present in minde indeed to receive the word or else a bodily presence will no more profit thee then did Satans appearance among the Saints advantage him bring me an heart free from all worldly distractions said Chrysostome hearing is the port of wisdome the sense of descipline admirable is the power of the tongue which the good God gave to be the soules interpreter that the spirits of men otherwise close prisoners in those hou●es of clay might convay a mutuall intelligence and communicate their secret senses to each other through the eare the heathens intimated 〈◊〉 their legends of Amphion building the walls of Thebes and Orpheus charming the eare with notes so sweet that he made brutes attentive brought some from the dead we better knowe the morall in the admirable power of speaking able to unite men in civill societies and an holy communion to edifie and by the power of Gods spirit working therein to raise the dead in sinne to newnesse of life but all this must be done with an attentive eare the hearing eare so the Hebrewes put 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cor audiens for an understanding heart 1 King 3. 9. without whose attention it cannot be 3. Prudently which is 1. By resolving to obey Gods word in every part this is the end of our hearing not the hearers but the doers of the Law shall be justified be yee doers of the word and not hearers only deceiving your own selves Happy are they who heare and do thereafter too many are all for hearing and nothing for practice like those monstrous Fanetii who had eares disproportionably great for the body if the whole were hearing where were the smelling 't is the symtome of a queazie stomacke to desire to tast many things and to be able to digest nothing The word of God is quicke and active like the snow and raine it doth not in vaine descend but doth his will who sent it making the good grow up to the blessing and the evill like fowle weedes more ranke for the fire 't is as the Arke at Obed Edoms house a blessing at Ash●od a curse we must not thinke 't will lye dead it maketh the disobedient like the first sinner slie and strive to hide from God it leaves him excuselesse to the more stripes by how much more he knew his masters will and would not doe it read Deut ●9 19 20 21. wee many times wonder why the Lord afflicteth us we may easily know 't is for the contempt and neglect of his word we heare but obay not except where we please which is indeed to idoll our own affections not to serve God we at our pleasure make free choice which of Gods
neither subject to time nor age the motions thereof are eternall it apprehendeth things present absent past and future it deliberateth formeth directeth discourseth judgeth doubteth concludeth so excellent is it that the Oratour said God hath not given any thing so divine to man and that there are certaine lineaments thereof more beautifull then of the body the body is adorned by the soule without which beauty it selfe becommeth gastly and good Abraham saith give me a possession of a burying place that I may bury my dead out of my sight the soule cannot be deformed by any unevennesse discomposure or disproportion of the body which it animateth as a beautifull feature is the same in a poore cottage and in a magnificent palace so is it in the beauty of the soule which is vertue with which could wee but see the soule of a Saint there 's no embellishment on earth so glorious no created beauty here of so divine a lustre The soule though now shut up in his darke prison having onely some diviner breathings in the rapts and heavenly contemplations which sometimes call it up like Moses to the mount or like a Jacobs ladder landeth it in God's presence hath some knowledge of its originall by grace unspeakable joy in the apprehension thereof which arresteth the desire as appeared in Peter seeing Christ transfigured and Paul wishing to be dissolved it being a great signe of our interest in heaven that wee feare not to part hence he knoweth whether he shall goe who remembreth whence he came but what shall bee the beauty of an holy soule in its separation when it shall be restored to its native heaven when it shall be all light and God shall be all in all Christs raiment on the mount became shining white as snow so as no Fuller on earth could white them Moses face he having talked with God became so glorious that Israel could not behold it without a vaile what shall our glory be when we shall be like Christ 2. The faculties of the soule are the understanding will memory affections and senses internall and externall My purpose being not to enter the lists with Philosophers but to direct Christians I shall not further consider these then as some of them doe very much concerne the practicall part and right ordering the thoughts of the heart and minde to the service of God and our mortification whereby we may be accommodated thereto 3. The heart in scripture often taken for the principall seat of the rationall soule imparteth any faculty hereof the mind is the inward act the result and proceed of its reason and discourse the thoughts as they say animus consilii est anima vitae the minde is the fountaine of counsell the soule of life and againe we understand by the minde and live by the soule This minde of man is sometimes a soveraigne to governe in vertue and sanctimonie it selfe and the body sometimes a tyrant and indulging to vice which like the worme bred in the wood destroyeth its own originall misled by tumultuous passions lusts vaine desires and other perturbations of a discomposed minde which having unthroned reason dangerously usurpe the command a prudent man whose cogitare is his vivere in the light height and use thereof differing him not only from the brutes but ignorant men doth principally enjoy himselfe in his minde and inward man There is indeed in humane possessions nothing great and excellent but a great and good minde contemning externall greatnesse or supposed excellencies as power strength riches beauty obvious to sense in respect of tha● which is within apprehensible by the enlightned understanding and certainly the all-wise God w●o created the affections ordained them to none but some excellent end use in the soule as handmaides to devotion and religion neither would he in our regeneration kill but correct them by moderating them where they grew extreame and retrenching them into their own channels where they overflow their banks like over ranck water sources becomming muddy and troubled with that which they fetch in from without or reducing them where they ar● exorbitant All extreames are foolish and dangerous a Stoicall apathie is incompatible with a well composed minde and violent passion with a prudent the dead calme corrupteth aire water and violent blasts disturb them the moderate more safely purify the meane is best Affections are as they said of Caligula there is no better servant nor worse master good commanded mischievous reigning like fire and water there necessary here destructive without love there can be no acceptable service without anger no zeale without feare no coërcive power in the soule without hope no comfort which bringeth us to a necessary consideration of the hearts corruption vanity and exorbitancy of the thoughts and the necessity of their regulation by some rules of practice 1. The Corruptions of the heart are all only evill continually the heart is the fountaine of sinne hence are adulteries murders thefts rapine rebellions all the sinnes of man all iniquitie is here forged as 't is written Isai 32. 6. his heart will worke iniquitie hence words of falshood are conceived and uttered here is the root of war and mischiefe here errour frowardnesse and that hardnesse which excludeth all capacity of hearing and understanding Gods word and judgments that they may repent and be healed is hatched The heart is deceitfull above all things who can knowe it Jer 17. 9. Here lodgeth hypocrisie Jer 3. 10. Here secret sinnes like that unseene multitude which rangeth through the paths of the deeps such is counsell in mans heart Prov 20. 5. Nor is this the condition of some few but the secret corruption of all naturall men nor are the regenerate absolutely freed from these pollutions being yet partly flesh 2. The dangers hereof hence appeare first in that these are the seeds of every sin and fomenters thereof yea that which barreth from remedy faith and repentance Secondly as the Physitians say if there be a fault in the first concoction there will follow the like in the rest so is it here the hearts faults are derived to the tongue and all the actions of man it is a people said the Lord that doe erre in their hearts and they have not knowne my waies As the eye is deceaved through a fals medium so is the minde through the cloude of false opinion and the very thought of foolishnesse is sinne into which they must needs runne who set not their heart aright and whose spirit is not stedfast with God Thirdly God fearcheth the secrets of all hearts and will once make all the thoughts thereof manifest Fourthly hee requireth the heart Prov 23. 26. If a man regard iniquitie there hee cannot be heard Psal 66. 16. The thoughts of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord.
Rebecca cry I am weary of my life because of the daughters of Heth. Now though it be true he that doubteth whether he ought to worship God and honour his parents rather wanteth stripes then arguments yet seeing the corrupt nature of man is prone to all impiety I will hereto adde some motives to this duety 1. It is the only commandement with promise of reward Honour thy father and thy mother that thy dayes may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee that it may goe well with thee the son of Sirach saith Honour thy father and thy mother that a blessing may come upon thee from them 2. This is just before God and pleasing to him releeving thy father shall not be forgotten in the day of thy affliction it shall be remembred 3. A third motive may be taken from the contrary curse to him that any way dishonoreth father or mother 1. Cursed is he that setteth light by his father or his mother there is no more evident signe of an impious minde then contempt of parents 2. He that wasteth his father and chaseth away his mother is a son that causeth shame and whosoever robbeth father or mother and saith it is no transgression the same is the companion of a destroyer 3. The eie that mocketh at his father and despiseth to obey his mother the ravens of the valley shall pick it out 4. Whoso curseth his father or his mother his lamp shall be put out in obscure darknesse every one that curseth his father or his mother shall surely be put to death his blood shall be upon him so he that smiteth father or mother there is no lesse punishment severe enough for such an unnatural prodigie as a parricide or hee that retributeth injury where he oweth highest gratitude 5. Lastly I wish all disobedient children to read Deut. 21. 18 c. If a man have a stubborn and rebellious son which will not obey the voice of his father or the voice of his mother and that when they have chastened him will not hearken unto them then shall his father and his mother lay hold on him and bring him unto the Elders of his city c. and the men of the city shall stone him with stones that he dye so shalt thou put away evil from among you A Praier for children to use O Lord God who hast ordained strength in the mouthes of babes and sucklings sanctifying them from the womb open our lips that wee may shew forth thy praise holy Lord Jesus who taking up children into thy sacred armes declaredst that unto such belongeth the kingdome of God who for our redemption becamest an infant and for our instruction obedient to humane parents who art the eternal son of God have mercy on us sanctify us bodies and soules unto thy kingdom and service keep us in our tender years by thy holy spirit from all the errors sins and pollutions of youth make us sincerely obedient to our God that in him wee may honor and obey our parents in all things in reverence and thankefulnesse for their tender care over us blesse their endeavours to provide for us spare them that they may live to bring us up in thy faith feare and love that thy great name may be glorified and they comforted in us and we with them preserved unto thine everlasting kingdom through Jesus Christ our ever blessed Lord and Saviour AMEN CHAP. XXVI Of the wounded spirit or conscience afflicted by the apprehension of Gods wrath against some great sinnes spiritual wants or fear of tentations § 1. What a wounded spirit is how great an affliction what the conscience is how comfortable the peace thereof why God afflicteth his § 2. What things principally wound the conscience § 3. What they who are afflicted with the apprehension of Gods wrath against them must consider § 4. What they must examine § 5. What they must practice 1. I Have spoken concerning the guidance of the Thoughts Words and Actions in generall and in some particular relations to external dueties I shall now endeavour to give directions suitable to some conditions first of the inward man and next of the outward The spirit of man will bear his infirmity but a wounded spirit who can beare saith Solomon The word signifieth a smitten contrite or broken spirit It is a manner of speaking borrowed from bodily afflictions by stripes contusions bruises or wounds wherein by cutting or hurting the sinews and veins the body weakened and endangered without cure to death disabled so that it cannot support it self is apt to inflammations and distempers every light touch hurteth it it depriveth a man of rest so that he is impatient of this present posture and more grieved at the change To expresse the intense sorrow of the soule weak confidence and enfeebled life of the spirit God calleth it a wounded spirit 2. This affliction is so great as it exceedeth all other temporal sorrows and is such as none can truely judge of but they who have with David seen confinia inferni as he saith Psal. 116. 3. The sorrowes of death compassed me and the paines of hell gat hold upon me or found me Other sorrowes may be eased by giving the afflicted something equivalent to that whose losse grieveth him as where one treasure is lost and another found or by some compensation and repair as Job had a second brood and encrease of wealth Elkanah intimated such a medium consolationis when hee said to afflicted Hannah Am not I better to thee then ten sonnes but so can this never be if you give a man of an afflicted spirit riches company of dearest friends or that which might relieve refresh or delight some others you do no more ease him then you could the broken bones by putting on some purple or rich robes no no the grief is within and there must be cured nothing external can do it in other griefes time will mitigate sunt verba voces excellent lenitives of sorrow in some other kindes wine merry company musick or the like meanes may have some part as the wise man saith Give strong drink to him that is ready to perish and wine to those that be of heavy hearts let him drinke and forget his poverty and remember his misery no more So Davids harp could for the time refresh Saul and charme the evil spirit but this grief admitteth of no efficacy in such comforts In other pressures wee may be eased or conveyed away from the evil as Paul was from the Jews conspiracy as David from Saul but there is no flight from a wounded spirit Whither ever we goe we carry our affliction with us our secret tormenter in us In fine as it is in sense of a separation from God the reality whereof is the second death so no creature in heaven or earth can cure it there can be
quickly to the throne of Grace to implore mercy before wrath come out against thee catch hold quickly on this second table repentance who hast lost the first of innocency condemne thy selfe and Christ will justifie thee hee onely expecteth thy voice when thou sayest I have sinned hee saith I forgive thee Doe but mark how quickly the pardon followed David's confession no sooner had hee said I have sinned against the Lord but the Lord said by the Prophet the Lord also hath put away thy sinne Peter quickly repented and as quickly found mercy Esau staied too long and so found no place for repentance though hee sought it carefully with teares If the grando fiered be suddenly cast back againe it proves only the assailants harme or danher such shall Satan's fire-works prove if thou presently cast out his tentations and heartily repent thee where any of his darts touch thee 9. Give not thy selfe over to pensive dedolency worldly sorrow and fruitlesse solitarinesse that will but feed the bitternesse of spirit think not too much of thy afflictions but sweeten them with the frequent remembrance of God's mercy toward thee take heed of worldly sorrow that is unto death cheer up thy selfe in God as David did Why art thou so sad O my soule and why art thou so disquieted within mee trust in God for I shall yet praise him a merry heart doth good like a medicine but a broken spirit drieth the bones A merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance but by the sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken 10. Hearken diligently to the word of God hee is the God of all consolation and the word is his minde and revealed will for our good that is a full store-house there is no affliction incident to man which may not there finde a proper cure here thou shalt finde rules to guide thee and keep thee from sinne here thou shalt finde the sweet mercy of God in Christ Jesus to wash away the guilt of all thy transgressions but be thou not only a hearer but a constant doer of the word and lay the gracious promises up in thine heart so shalt thou in due season feele the work of God's spirit distilling the former and the later rain upon the seed to make it take root and be fruitfull 11. Hereto adde zealous and frequent prayer as the Saints have done in all their distresses and be assured that hee will not leave thee comfortlesse but at last coming with great assurance of thy salvation will abundantly recompence thy patience in suffering and perseverance in praying for pardon Satan is never more foiled and fooled in his own work then when hee gets leave to wound the hearts of the elect for as Romanus the martyr told the tormenter look how many wounds hee gives them so many mouthes hee setteth open for them to cry to God for helpe and indeed these jewels cannot come to their glorious lustre without hard grinding by afflictions A Praier for them who are of a wounded spirit in respect of their grievous sins O Lord God gracious and merciful rebuke not in thine anger neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure my soule is sore vexed and Lord how long Have mercy on mee for I am weak Lord heale my soule and deliver it O save mee for thy mercy sake I am weary of my groaning mine eie is consumed with griefe Lord heare my supplications receive my praier I am sorely afflicted Lord quicken mee according to thy word in thy loving kindenesse and multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions wash me throughly from my sinnes cleanse me from all mine iniquities the greatnesse and number whereof is such as that I am ashamed and afraid of thy blessed presence I acknowledge my selfe unworthy to look up to heaven to appeare before thee with petition for mercy who have so uncessantly provoked thy justice the filthy leprosie of my sinnes stop mine own mouth my heart answereth that I am unworthy that ever thou shouldst encline thy gracious eare unto so wretched a sinner These terrors of conscience wherewith thou hast now afflicted my soule are thy just judgments the fears of hell and eternal condemnation wherewith thou hast wounded mee are incomparably lesse then my sinnes but Lord remember them not who canst not forget the sufferings of thy holy sonne Jesus for them all I am not able to answer thee one of a thousand nor can thy justice require that of mee for which my Saviour and redeemer hath satisfied therefore I renounce my selfe that I may be found in thy Christ not having on our owne righteousness according to the condemning letter of the law but that I may be clothed in his righteousnesse who hath long since cancelled the hand-writing of ordinances that were against me and payed the debt for me Lord for his sake I humbly entreat thee to turne this judgement under which I now labour into mercy let it beget in my soule a true loathing of all sinne a stedfast purpose to forsake all my evil waies a comfortable experience of thy mercy pronouncing pardon to my afflicted conscience by the infallible evidence of thy holy spirit and assurance of peace with thee make mee to hear of joy and gladnesse that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice in thee cast me not away from thy presence take not the holy Spirit the comforter from mee but restore mee to the joy of thy salvation and uphold mee with thy free spirit despise not a broken and contrite heart but heale my wounded spirit then will I teach transgressors thy way that they may fear thee who art so terrible in thy justice and convert unto thee who art so abun●amt in thy mercy Lord heare mee Lord encline thine eare to a poore distressed soule Lord consider and do it for thy only sonne our Saviour Jesus Christ his sake to whom with thee O heavenly father and the holy spirit be all honour and glory in heaven and earth from this time forth and for ever Amen CHAP. XXVII § 1. Sense of spiritual wants afflicteth but not so much endangereth the soule § 2. What we are herein to consider § 3. How we must examine the conscience § 4. Rules of practice hereto necessary THe second thing wounding and afflicting the conscience is sense of defects and spiritual wants as want of faith hope assurance of salvation want of sanctification purity of heart the spirit of praier and hearing want of ability rightly to performe other holy dueties In these the spirit is stupified and fearfully darkned in the saint for a time a man sometimes feeleth dulnesse to and want of fervency in praier and want of comfortable assurance that God heareth or regardeth it because hee doth not presently answer or not at all grant that which wee aske sometimes hee feeleth a deviation of his minde and discomposure of thoughts in attention and unbeleef in hearing the word or reading the
a measure as thereby to know the things that are freely given thee of God thou shalt finde that Blessed is the man whom the Lord chasteneth and teacheth in his law that hee may give him rest from his daies of adversity 3. In sense of spiritual wants aske thy soule whether ever thou hadst that whereof thou now feelest the want if thou hadst be assured it shall revive againe and finally overcome as it is written Whosoever is born of God overcometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh our faith And this sense and sorrow is a certain token of thy recovery and soules health as that seven times neesing of the Shunamites sonne before hee opened his death-closed eies was of his lifes returning If thou never yet hadst the grace whereof thou now beginnest to feele the want it appeareth by this sense that now thou shalt have it and this trouble of thy soule is but as the moving of Bethesda waters a certain signe of an healing power descended thereinto 4. Aske thy conscience as the Prophet saith Hast thou not procured this unto thy selfe this of which thou complainest of hast thou not neglected the appointed meanes Suppose want of faith perplexe thee hast thou not carelesly heard the Gospel hast thou layed it up in a carefull heart hast thou valued it and begged it fervently and frequently of God above all things in the world Thou complainest of want of the spirit of praier hast thou not neglected this duety in times past doest thou duely prepare thyself thereto doest thou use that vigilancy which Christ enjoined Watch and pray by re-calling thy profane and wandring thoughts from their extravagancies and in all attention of spirit fixing them on Jesus Christ thou feelest the want of sanctification in thy heart tongue and actions Ask thy conscience if thou hast not heretofore buried the checks thereof for some vaine pleasure or profit's sake If thou wouldst have the effect cease remove the cause God will have his ordinances duely observed wherein they shall never want their promised effect 5. Ask thy conscience whether thou doest not live in some grievous sinne It is but folly to cry out of the heat and still cast oil on the fire if it be an Achan's wedge hidden search for the cursed thing and the plague in thine own heart in the cure whereof thou shalt be comforted if it be a sleeping Jonah cast him over-board as Eliphaz said If thou return to the Almighty thou shalt be built up thou shalt put iniquity farre from thy tabernacles the Almighty shall be thy defence then shalt thou have delight in the Almighty and shalt lift up thy face unto God thou shalt make thy praier unto him and he shall hear thee The rules of practice are 1. Heare God's word preparedly that is as hath been said renew thy repentance and pray for a blessing thereon heare it reverendly and attentively faith is by hearing so is sanctification Gods spirit working upon his own ordinance to make it active thereto The very cause why so many hear so often and so few so seldome practice and receive true comfort thereby is because they prepare not but are like men that sow among thorns 2. Let faith and all other graces be precious to thee for his sake whom it apprehendeth God will never bestow his inestimable gifts on men who sleight and undervalue them how few set a right estimate on precious faith the spirit of praier or memory of good things till it be too late things of this world are rated high enough but where is the man that riseth early late takes rest eats the bread of carefulnesse ventureth sea and land to get faith and sanctity doe but thou so value and desire these best gifts and God will not with-hold them from thee Psal. 84. 11. 3. Jesus said Hee that beleeveth in mee out of his belly shall flow rivers of living waters that is the abundant graces of the holy Ghost labour for this faith but if thou wilt attain it endeavour to remove all lets and obstructions thereto resolution to continue in any known sin and true faith are inconsistent Hardnesse of heart is like the great stone on the mouth of the well at Padan-Aram which keepe men from the refreshing waters these must first be removed sin in the affections is like a venemous toad in the mouth of the fountain stopping up the waters of life 4. Consider God's work in thee by comparing thy condition with others thou art possibly not heard in thy prayers not to say Doest thou aske according to his will I say mark Gods work which is to save thee and make thee eternally blessed if he do that by a means which he knoweth best Wilt thou be impatient with Naaman if thou art not healed and helped according to thy way which thou proposest Is it not enough that hee will do that which is best for thee and canst thou judge so well of that as God nay but subject to God's good will and infallible wisedom thou maist erre in asking who hath not but hee cannot in giving for the best it may be hee seeth best to try thy perseverance patience whereof I confess I know no harder object then opinion of his not hearing our praiers It was no small tryal when David cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee why art thou so far from helping mee and from the words of my crying It was the greatest when our Saviour repeated the same Moses was denied entrance into Canaan but received into heaven the cup did not passe away from Christ but Gods will was done in the work of mans redemption and so hee was heard Thy faith beareth many sharp charges of the tempter mark Gods work therein Doth hee not even by this means more confirm it Is not every temptation as the shaking of the trees which loosning the ground maketh them take the deeper root thou feelest great defects of sanctification and thence many dubious conflicts between the spirit the flesh making thy soul cry w th Rebecca perplexed with her wrestling twins why am I thus despair not but consider Gods work thus he forceth thee often to fly to him and to consult his oracles thus hee exerciseth thee to humility without which the most excellent graces could not save thee He that prayed for Peter fallen could have kept him from falling into that sin but thus he kept him from presumption and fitted him to confirm his brethren 5. Begge holinesse of God who hath said Aske and yee shall have it is a vehement motive hereto to consider that God is holinesse and certainly hee cannot chuse but love his own image in us and give us that which hee loveth it pleased God that Solomon before riches revenge and life it selfe begged of him Wisedom so that he did not only grant his request but over and above gave him riches
tryal of affliction a tribulation but yet such as there may be made an happy use thereof seeing to be poore and good is as they say the golden poverty of spirit Not to insist on those fruits hereof which relate to temporal advantages as it will shew thee who are thy true friends which riches can hardly do here is no flattery to beguile and carry vain minds to greaten their ruine here is the schoole of humility which any but a desperate soule will learne and thereby to be more secure I say a poore man may be truely happy which may appeare in that 1. God taketh care and often catitioneth for them charging that which is given them as a father for his children upon his own account 2. Hee hath chosen them to be rich in faith and heires of the kingdome which hee hath promised to them that love him 3. Not only many of the deare saints of God of whom the world was not worthy have wandred destitute and afflicted but also our Saviour Christ blessed for ever became poore for our sakes that wee through his poverty might be rich insomuch that the Lord of all having for our redemption taken on him the forme of a servant possessed not so much as whereon to rest his head For the more easie and comfortable bearing this burden it is necessary to consider 1. That it is sometimes a defect in the minde which thou takest to be a want in thy outward estate and the cure must be in the ease of the malady A feverish place maketh every thing bitter the cure must be of the disaffected sensory not so much in the change of dyet so here 2. Consider what state any man hath or can have in this world where is perpetual change as it were by a natural law I am a stranger here said King David Wee have here no continuing city saith the Apostle Man is of few daies and full of trouble hee cometh up like a flower and is cut down saith Job Riches are not for ever and doth the crown endure to every generation saith Solomon Our present habendum tenendum can make no certain state to our selves or heires but hee begetteth a son and there is nothing in his hand as hee came forth of his mothers womb naked shall hee return and shall take nothing of his labour which hee shall carry away in his hand there is no man liveth so poore as hee was born be contented with thy something though it be not so much 3. Consider Gods promises hee hath said hee will not faile thee nor forsake thee the whole world hath no such assurance of constant supplies If all the Kings of the earth should enter into league and binde themselves by oath and under their broad seales never to forsake thee but to supply thee with all necessaries yet they might faile all power and will of the creatures is subject to obstructions and lets but God can neither be untrue nor defeated in his counsels though heaven and earth passe away his word shall not fail The poor mans security that he shall never want that which is best for him is in Gods hands and hee hath Gods promise for it now let him that is impatient of poverty but seriously consider first whether if he had riches in his own keeping as rich men have had he better security by his own keeping them then in Gods promise to supply and keep him and them But some may say I desire that God would keep them in my possession What can thy possession adde to thy security of having and enjoying them where God keepeth them What can finites adde to infinites I but saist thou if I had an estate in mine own possession I could live more confidently and comfortably the reason of that is not a greater certainty in thy estate for that is surest in Gods hands but a lesse faith in thee then becometh those who have the infallible trueth of God for their assurance and because thou repliest more on thy senses then on God's Oracles and the creatures then the Creator himself Thou saist But yet for all the promises my want is a great bitternesse to my soule yet if God seeth it good to cure that sick minde with bitter pills such as poverty is confessed and so to save thee which wouldst thou chuse if God should referre it to thee that which thou thinkest best for thee or that which God knoweth to be so to perish with riches or to be saved by poverty Unhappy sure were wee and must often perish if God would not in mercy deny us our choice and chuse for us 4. Consider how Gods deerest children have wanted and so do still See Job 30. 3 9. Hebr. 11. 37 38. 1 Cor. 4. 11. 2 Cor. 11. 27. Art thou better then those of whom the world was not worthy I neede not tell you of Curius Socrates Fabritius or the just Aristides poverty wee have examples enough of the Saints wants it is a doctrine abundantly exemplified in these our calamitous daies 5. Consider that hee is a poore man who is so in minde not in purse he only may be ashamed of his poverty said Aristides who is poor against his will there is no such wretched poverty as that which maketh a man impatient or unjust There 's no man poore to God-ward but the wicked as none rich but the holy they that seeme poore are herein rich if they want not and covet not more Hee cannot be unhappily poore who hath Gods promise and care to provide for him wee doe not think rich mens children poore though they possesse nothing because others who are more wise and able provide for them and can we think the children of God indigent for whom the Almighty provideth 6. Consider how God hath supplied the wants of his how the oile and meale lasted all the famine how hee fed Israël 40. yeers in the wildernesse with Manna how all that time their cloaths waxed not old upon them nor their shooe on their foot how he made the Eliah's purviours to bring him bread and flesh morning and evening how hee made the oile encrease for the widow of the prophet and her children Doe but remember how hee hath all thy life long provided for thee and I may say with Joshuah Ye know in all your hearts and in all your souls that not one thing hath failed of all the good things which the Lord your God spake concerning you and wilt thou now distrust him who never failed thee remember that hee saith hee will not famish the soule of the righteous 7. Consider that God hath not spared his own holy son Jesus for our sakes How should hee not with him give us all things necessary for us hath he bought thee body and soul not with corruptible things but with
no sanctuary for a troubled soul but only Gods favourable presence till hee return and comfort nothing can So terrible in the meane time is this affliction that the desperate Judas took death for his sanctuary against that which to him was more tolerable then death how heavily it sitteth upon the hearts of Gods elect may appeare in the words of Job and others Wherefore is light given to him that is in misery and life unto the bitter in soule which long for death but it cometh not and dig for it more then for hid treasures which rejoice exceedingly and are glad when they can finde the grave See Jer. 20. 14 15 16 17 18. 1 King 19. 4. Jonah 4. 8. 3. The conscience is the knowledge of the heart knowing that which God knoweth with it it is a divine light in us which we cannot extinguish if wee would a supream court in us above us a silent register of all we do or say a thousand witnesses accusing or excusing an impartial Judge which cannot be bribed to justifie the wicked or condemn the just the first revenge of impiety wherein none guilty can be absolved though there were none other Judge 4. In true peace of conscience the heart is cheerful in every estate and condition Rom. 5. 1. 3. it feareth no judge nor witnesse it is a continuall feast the soules Eden the mindes faire haven an unvalueable possession which maketh every owner happy a riches which shall never be taken away the first fruits of heaven an immoveable comfort as no winde can move or shake the sun beams so can neither life nor death prosperity or adversity this as long as this is safe though men receive many sharpe charges as did the citizens of Ai yet are they confident to resist they can resolve with Job though he kill me yet will I trust in him but if that faile and the smoke arise thence their hearts fail them 5. God woundeth and healeth it is his justice and mercy wee wound our selves by sin and God healeth us by afflictions as Chirurgions doe with the lancet and cautery Sins are the theeves which spoil us and leave us wounded by the way till the good Samaritan come with his wine and oile to cleanse supple and binde up our wounds he smiteth the conscience with sense of his anger danger and bitter smart to make us sensible of our sins and bring us to a loathing of them this he doth sometimes by external afflictions sometimes by the word of the Spirit the word preached wounding the heart terrifying the conscience and then Peters hearers cry out Men and brethren what shall wee do sometimes by smiting the conscience with an inward sense and apprehension of his fierce wrath and severe judgements imminent in which an horrible feare overtaketh them like the earth-quake at Hore● preceding the still voice of mercy in sense of a spiritual disertion while he hideth away his face spiritual wants or permission to some grievous tentation cold fits of despair and buffeting by the messengers of Satan in all which though there be meanes of comfort appointed yet none can prevaile till the spirit of God the comforter return and heale the same hand giveth vulnus opemque the wound and plaister as it was said the Assyrians and Jareb could not heal Judah and Ephraim of their wound so no creature can the wounded spirit till he who correcteth in measure cometh and bindeth up he onely hee healeth the broken hearts and bindeth up their wounds even hee who was wounded for our sins and bruised for our iniquities by whose stripes wee are healed 1. There are some things principally wounding and afflicting the conscience coming up like those Philistim spoilers in three companies to destroy and drive men into despair first apprehension of Gods wrath for some grievous sins committed so ●ain having murdered his brother cryed My sinne or punishment is greater then I can beare Judas having betrayed Christ durst not come to him to beg mercy because he apprehended an implacable anger in Christ it is true that the wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience for their sinnes that his wrath is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse and unrighteousnesse of men that the impenitent by their hardnesse of heart treasure up to themselves wrath against the day of wrath that there shall be indignation and wrath to them that obey not the trueth but when thou who art of a wounded spirit and broken heart hast well considered it may be thou shalt finde that these things concerne thee not but those who live in sin and so would do 2. The second thing wounding the conscience is sense of spiritual wants as of hope faith assurance of salvation the spirit of sanctification praier c. which being Gods grace and the presence of his holy Spirit in the regenerate may yet for the time be an hidden treasure an immortall seed under the frozen clods without any appearance of life and the saints may weep and complain like Magdalen in the garden of the losse of Christ when he is with them speaketh to them and they know him not 3. The third is fear of some strong tentations and trials in which the afflicted and affrighted conscience startleth as the Disciples when Jesus slept in the storm their ship filled with waves and ready to founder in the sea or like Peter on the water when he saw the rough billows coming and cryeth out Save Master we perish when 't is sure enough they cannot perish who are with Christ. Now concerning him that will receive any solid comfort in any of these cases it is very necessary that he 1. Well consider that state in which he seemeth to be 2. Examine his conscience throughly 3. Practice some rules proper for any of these estates Concerning the conscience afflicted with the apprehension of Gods anger against his sinnes let him consider that 1. As God is just so is he merciful he is no inexorable Radamanth he is easie to be entreated concerning whom we have a word more sure then any testimony of man God sufficiently known to himselfe onely hath thus proclamed himself Exod. 34. 6. The Lord God merciful and gracious long suffering and abundant in goodnesse and trueth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity and transgression Now if that which others said of the Kings of Israël that they were mercifull Kings could perswade them to seek mercy and desire quarter that they might be saved how much more should that which God who cannot lie as fame can and commonly doth hath declared of himself move the afflicted soule to submit and beg mercy of him more ready to grant it then wee are or can be to entreat it for aske it wee never could except his preventing grace moved us thereto 2. God