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A26892 A Christian directory, or, A summ of practical theologie and cases of conscience directing Christians how to use their knowledge and faith, how to improve all helps and means, and to perform all duties, how to overcome temptations, and to escape or mortifie every sin : in four parts ... / by Richard Baxter. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1673 (1673) Wing B1219; ESTC R21847 2,513,132 1,258

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will of that which they are most afraid of thinking As the spirits and blood will have recourse to the part that is hurt The very pain of their fears doth draw their thoughts to what they fear As he that is over-desirous to sleep and afraid lest he shall not sleep is sure to wake because his fears and desires keep him waking so do the fears and desires of the Melancholy cross themselves And withall the malice of the Devil plainly here interposeth and taketh advantage by this disease to tempt and trouble them and to shew his hatred to God and Christ and Scripture and to them For as he can much easier tempt a cholerick person to anger than another and a flegmatick fleshy person to sloth and a sanguine or hot tempered person to lust and wantonness so also a melancholy person to thoughts of blasphemy infidelity and despair And ost-times they feel a vehement urgency as if something within them urged them to speak such or such a blasphemous or foolish word and they can have no rest unless they yield in this and other such cases to what they are urged to And some are ready to yield in a temptation to be quiet and when they have done they are tempted utterly to despair because they have committed so great a sin and when the Devii hath got this advantage of them he is still setting it before them 27. Hereupon they are further tempted to think they have committed the sin against the Holy Ghost not understanding what that sin is but fearing it is theirs because it is a fearful sin At least they think they shall not be forgiven not considering that a temptation is one thing and a sin another and that no man hath less cause to fear being condemned for his sin than he that is least willing of it and most hateth it And no man can be less willing of any ☞ sin than these poor souls are of the hideous blasphemous thoughts which they complain of 28. Hereupon some of them grow to think that they are possessed of Devils and if it do but enter into their fantasie how possessed persons use to act the very strength of imagination will make them do so too so that I have known those that will swear and curse and blaspheam and imitate an inward aliene voice thinking themselves that it is the Devil in them that doth all this But these that go so far are but few 29. Some of them that are near distraction verily think that they hear voices and see lights and apparitions that the Curtains are opened on them that something meets them and saith this or that to them when all is but the errour of a crazed brain and sick imagination 30. Many of them are aweary of their lives through the constant tiring perplexities of their minds and yet afraid of dying some of them resolutely famish themselves some are strongly tempted to murder themselves and they are haunted with the temptation so restlesly that they can go no whither but they feel as if somewhat within them put them on and said Do it do it so that many poor creatures yield and make away themselves 31. Many of them are restlesly vexed with fears of want and poverty and misery to their families and of imprisonment or banishment and lest some-body will kill them and every one that they see whisper they think is plotting to take away their lives 32. Some of them lay a law upon themselves that they will not speak and so live long in resolute silence 33. All of them are intractable and stiffe in their own conceits and hardly perswaded out of them be they never so irrational 34. Few of them are the better for any Reason conviction or Counsel that is given them If it seem to satisfie and quiet and rejoyce them at the present to morrow they are as bad again it being the nature of their disease to think as they do think and their thoughts are not cured while the disease is uncured 35. Yet in all this distemper few of them will believe that they are melancholy but abhor to hear men tell them so and say it is but the rational sense of their unhappiness and the forsakings and heavy wrath of God And therefore they are hardly perswaded to take any Physick or use any means for the cure of their bodies saying that they are well and being confident that it is only their souls that are distressed This is the miserable case of these poor people greatly to be pittyed and not to be despised by any I have spoken nothing but what I have often seen and known And let none despise such for men of all sorts do fall into this misery learned and unlearned high and low good and bad yea some that have lived in greatest jollity and sensuality when God hath made them feel their folly § 3. The causes of it are 1. Most commonly some worldly loss or cross or grief or care which made too deep an impression on them 2. Sometime excess of fear upon any common occasion of danger 3. Sometime over-hard and unintermitted studies or thoughts which screw up and rack the fantasie too much 4. Sometime too deep fears or too constant and serious and passionate thoughts and cares about the danger of the soul. 4. The great preparatives to it which are indeed the principal cause are a weak Head and Reason joyned with strong Passion which are oftest found in Women and those to whom it is natural 5. And in some it is brought in by some heynous sin the sight of which they cannot bear when Conscience is but once awakened § 4. When this disease is gone very far Directions to the persons themselves are vain because they have not Reason and free-will to practise them but it is their friends about them that must have the Directions But because with the most of them and at first there is some Power of Reason left I give Directions for the use of such § 5. Direct 1. See that no errour in Religion be the cause of your distress especially understand well Direct 1 the Covenant of Grace and the Riches of mercy manifested in Christ. Among others it will be useful to you to understand these following truths 1. That our thoughts of the Infinite Goodness of God should bear proportion with our thoughts Special Truths to be known for preventing causeless troubles concerning his Infinite Power and Wisdom 2. That the Mercy of God hath provided for all mankind so sufficient a Saviour that no sinner shall perish for want of a sufficient satisfaction made for his sins by Christ nor is it made the condition of any mans salvation or pardon that he satisfie for his own sins 3. That Christ hath in his Gospel-Covenant which is an Act of oblivion made over himself with pardon and salvation to all that will penitently and believingly accept the offer And that none perish that hear the Gospel but
Direct 6. It must be well considered how powerful and dangerous things sensible are and how Direct 6. high and hard a work it is in this our depraved earthly state to live by faith upon things unseen and to rule the sense and be carryed above it that so the soul may be awakened to a sufficient fear and watchfulness and may fly to Christ for assistance to his faith It is no small thing for a man in flesh to live above flesh The way of the souls reception and operation is so much by the senses here that its apt to grow too familiar with things sensible and to be strange to things which it never saw It s a great work to make a man in flesh to deny the pleasures which he seeth and tasteth and feeleth for such pleasures as he only heareth of and heareth of as never to be enjoyed till after death in a world which sense hath no acquaintance with O what a glory it is to faith that it can perform such a work as this How hard is it to a weak believer And the strongest find it work enough Consider this that it may awake you to set upon this work with that care that the greatness of it requireth and you may live by faith above a life of sight and sense For it is this that your Happiness or misery lyeth on § 9. Direct 7. Sense must not only be kept out of the Throne but from any participation in the Government Direct 7. and we must take heed of receiving it into our counsels or treating with it or hearing it plead its cause and we must see that it get nothing by striving importunity or violence but that it be governed despotically and absolutely as the Horse is governed by the Rider For if the Government once be halved between sense and reason your lives will be half bestial And when Reason ruleth not Faith and Grace ruleth not For faith is to reason as sight is to the eye There are no such Beasts in humane shape who lay by all the use of Reason and are governed by sense alone unless it be idcots or madmen But sense should have no part of the Government at all And where it is chief in power the Devil is there the unseen Governour You cannot here excuse your selves by any plea of necessity or corstcaint For though the sense be violent as well as entising yet God hath made the Reason and Will the absolute Governours under him and by all its rebellion and violence sense cannot depose them nor force them to one sin but doth all the mischief by procuring their consent Which is done sometime by affecting the fantas●e and passions too deeply with the pleasure and alluring sweetness of their objects that so the higher faculties may be drawn into consent and sometime by wearying out the resisting mind and will and causing them to remit their opposition and relax the reins and by a sinful privati●n of restraint to permit the sense to take its course A head-strong Horse is not so easily ruled as one of a tender mouth that hath been well ridden And therefore though it be in the power of the Rider to rule him yet sometime for his own case he will loose the reins and a Horse that is used thus by a slothful or unskilful Rider to have his will when ever he striveth will strive when ever he is crossed of his will and so will be the Master As ill-bred Children that are used to have every thing given them which they cry for will be sure to cry before they will be crost of their desire So is it with our sensitive appetite If you use to satisfie it when it is eager or importunate you shall be mastered by its eagerness and importunity And if you use but to regard it over much and delay your commands till sense is heard and taken into counsel it s two to one but it will prevail or ar least will be very troublesome to you and prove a traytor in your bosome and its temptations keep you in continual danger Therefore be sure that you never loose the reins but keep sense under a constant government if you love either your safety or your ease § 10. Direct 8. You may know whether Sense or Faith and Reason be the chief in Government by Direct 8. knowing which of their objects is made your chiefest End and accounted your Best and loved and delighted in and sought accordingly If the objects of sense be thus taken for your Best and End then certainly sense is the chief in Government But if the objects of faith and Reason even God and life eternal be taken for your Best and End then faith and reason are the ruling power Though you should use never so great understanding and policy for sensual things as Riches and honour and worldly greatness or fleshly delights this doth not prove that Reason is the ruling power but proveth the ☜ more strongly that sense is the Conquerour and that Reason is depraved and captivated by it and truckleth under it and serveth it as a voluntary slave And the greater is your learning wit and parts and the nobler your education the greater is the victory and dominion of sense that can subdue and rule and serve it self by parts so noble § 11. Direct 9. Though sense must be thus absolutely ruled its proper power must neither be disabled Direct 9. prohibited nor denyed You must keep your Horse strong and able for his works though not head-strong and unruly And you must not keep him from the use of his strength though you grant him not the Government Nor will you deny but that he may be stronger than the Rider though the Rider have the ruling power He hath more of the power called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 natural power though the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be yours So is it here 1. No man must destroy his bodily sense The quickest sense is the best servant to the soul if it be not headstrong and too impetuous The Body must be stricken so far as to be kept under and brought into subjection 1 Cor. 9. 27. but not be disabled from its service to the soul 2. Nor must we forbid or forbear the exercise of the senses in subordination to the exercise of the interior senses Heb. 4. 14. It is indeed a smaller loss to part with a right hand or a right eye than with our salvation But that proveth not that we are put to such streights as to be necessitated to either unless persecution put us to it 3. Nor must we deny the certainty of the sensitive apprehension when it keepeth its place as the Papists do that affirm it necessary to salvation to believe that the sight and taste and smell and feeling of all men in the world that take the Sacrament are certainly deceived in taking that to be Bread and Wine which is not so For if all the senses of all
Thess. 5. 5. They that were sometimes darkness are light in the Lord when they are converted and must walk as the children of the light Ephes. 5. 8. In the dark the Devil and wicked men may cheat you and do almost what they list with you You will not buy your wares in the dark nor travel or do your work in the dark And will you judge of the state of your souls in the dark and do the work of your salvation in the dark I tell you the Devil could never entice so many souls to Hell if he did not first put out the light or put out their eyes They would never so follow him by crowds to everlasting torments by day-light and with open eyes If men did but know well what they do when they are sinning and whither they go in a carnal life they would quickly stop and go no further All the Devils in Hell could never draw so many thither if mens Ignorance were not the advantage of temptations § 3. Another sort among us that are Ignorant of the things of God are sensual Gentlemen and Schollars Cum qu●m paenitet p●c●asse pene innoce●s est Maxima p●rgationum pars est volunta ia poe●i●entia d●licto●um Scal. Thes. p. 74● Fa●ilius iis ignos itur q●i non pe●severa●e sed ab ●r●ato se rev●care mo●i●ntur est enim h●r a●●m peccare sed belluin●m i● errore pers●verare Cicero in Vat. Even Aristotle could say that he that believed as he ought of the Gods should think as well of himself as Alexander that commandeth so many men Plutarch de Tranquil Anim. p. 155. Nullus suavior animo cibus est quam cognitio vt●itatis Lactant. Instit. l. 1. c. 1. It is a marvelous and doleful case to think how ignorant some people live even to old age under constant and excellent Teaching Some learn neither words nor sense but hear as it they heard not Some learn words and know the sense no more than if they had learnt but a tongue unknown And will repeat their Creed and Catechism when they know not what it is that they say A worthy Minister of Helvetia told me that their people are very constant at their Sermons and yet most of them grosly ignorant of the things which they most frequently hear It is almost incredible what ignorance some Ministers report that they have found in some of the eldest of their auditors Nay when I have examined some that have professed strictness in Religion above the common sort of people I have found some ignorant of some of the fundamentals of the Christian faith And I remember what an ancient Bishop about twelve hundred years ago saith Maximus Taurinensis in his Homilies that when he had long preached to his people even on an evening after one of his Sermons he heard a cry or noise among the people and hearkening what it was they were by their outcry helping to deliver the Moon that was in labour and wanted help His words are Quis non moleste ferat sic vos esse vestrae salutis immemores ut etiam coelo teste peccetis Nam cum ante dies plerosque cum cupiditate pulsaverim ipsa die circiter vesperam tanta vociferatio populi extitit ut irreligiositas ejus penetraret ad coelum Quod cum requirerim quid sibi clamor hic velit dixerunt mihi quod Laboranti Lunae vestra vociferatio subveniret defectum ejus suis clamoris adjuvaret Risi equidem miratus sum vanitatem quod quasi devoti Christiani Deo ●erebatis auxilium Cla●abatis enim ne ●acentibus vobis elementum tanquam infirmus enim imbecillis nisi vest●is adjuvaretur vocibus no● poss●t luminaria defendere quae creavit It is cited also by Papiriu● Massonus in vita Hilarii Papae ●ol 67. Therefore Popery is suitable to the children of darkness and unsuitable to the children of light because it greatly befriendeth ignorancé hindering the people from reading the holy Scriptures and quieting them with the opiate of an easie implicite faith in believing as the Roman Church believeth though they know not what it believeth or mistake and think it believeth that which it doth not Ockam lib. de Sa ram Altar cap. 1. citeth Innocent Extra de sum Trin. to prove the great benefit and efficacy of implicite faith that it would prove an error to be no sin In tantum inquit valet fides i●plicita ut dicunt aliqui ut si aliquis eam habet quod scilicet credit quicquid Ecclesia credit si false opinatur ratione naturali motus quia pater est vel prior filio vel quod tres p●rjonae sint t●es ●●s ab invicem distantes non est hae●eticus nec peccat d●mmodo hunc errorem non defendat hoc ipsum credit quia credit Ecclesiam sic crede●e suam opinionem fidei Ecclesiae supponit Quia licet sic male opin●tur non tamen est illa fides sua immo fides sua est fides Ecclesiae This implicite faith being nothing but to believe that the Church erreth not is not an Implicite faith in God to believe that all that God revealeth is true which all men have that believe in God as rational an excuse for ignorance and error as a belief in the Church of ●ome This is too short and easie a faith to be effectual to the true ends of faith Si igitur tantae sit efficaciae fides impl●c●●a ut excuset ignoranter erra●tem ci●ca illa quae in Scriptura Canonica sunt expressa multo magis excusa●it ignoranter opina●tem aliq●id quod nec in Scrip●u●a Canonica reperitu● expressum Okam ibid. that have so much breeding as to understand the words and speak somewhat better than the ruder sort but indeed never knew the nature truth and goodness of the things they speak of They are many of them as ignorant of the nature of faith and sanctification and the workings of the Holy Ghost in planting the Image of God upon the soul and of the Saints communion with God and the nature of a holy life as if they had never heard or believed that there is such a thing as any of these in being Nicodemus is a lively instance in this case A Ruler in Israel and a Pharisee and yet knew not what it was to be born again And the pride of these Gallants maketh their ignorance much harder to be cured than other mens because it hindereth them from knowing and confessing it If any one would convince them of it they say with scorn as the Pharisees to Christ Iohn 9. 40. Are we blind also Yea they are ready to insult over the Children of the Light that are wise to salvation because they differ from the loose or hypocritical Opinions of these Gentlemen in some matters of Gods Worship of which their Worships are as competent Judges as the Pharisees of the doctrine of Christ or as Nicodemus of Regeneration or
back from him as a stranger to thee and lookest away from him as an unsuitable good § 19. Direct 3. Imagine not God to be far away from thee but think of him as alwayes near thee Direct 3. and with thee in whose present Love and Goodness thou dost subsist Nearness of Objects doth excite the faculties we hear no sound nor smell no odour nor taste no sweetness nor see no colours that are too distant from us And the mind being limited in its activity neglecteth or reacheth not things too distant and requireth some Nearness of its object as well as the sense Especially to the excitation of affections and bodily action A distant danger stirreth not up such fears nor a distant misery such grief nor a distant benefit such pleasure as that which is at hand Death doth more deeply affect us when it seemeth very near than when we think we have yet many years to live So carnal minds are so drowned in flesh and captivated to sense that they take little notice of what they see not and therefore think of God as absent because they see him not They think of him as confined to Heaven as we think of a friend that is in the East Indies or at the Antipodes who is if not out of mind as well as out of sight yet too distant for us delightfully to converse with Remember alwayes O my soul that none is so near thee as thy God A Seneca could say of good men that God is with us and in us Nature taught Heathens that in him we live and move and have our being Thy friend may be absent but God is never absent from thee He is with thee when as to men thou art alone The Sun is sufficient to illuminate but one part of the earth at once and therefore must leave the rest in darkness But God is with thee night and day and there is no night to the soul so far as it enjoyeth him Thy life thy health thy Love and Joy is not nearer to thee than thy God He is now before thee about thee within thee moving thee to good restraining thee from evil marking and accepting all that is well disliking and opposing all that is ill The light of the Sun doth not more certainly fill the room and compass thee about than God doth with his goodness He is as much at leisure to observe thee to converse with thee to hear and help thee as if thou wert his only creature As the Sun can as well illuminate every Bird and Fly as if it shined unto no other creature Open the eye of Faith and Reason and behold thy God Do not forget him or unbelievingly deny him and then say he is not here Do not say that the Sun doth not shine because thou winkest O do not quench thy Love to God by feigning him to be out of reach and taken up with other converse Turn not to inferiour delights by thinking that he hath turned thee off to these And love him not as an absent friend But as the friend that is always in thy sight in thy bosome and in thy heart the fewel that is nearest to the flames of love § 20. Direct 4. All other Graces must do their part in assisting Love and all be exercised in subservience Direct 4. to it and with an intention directly or remotely to promote it Fear and watchfulness must keep away the sin that would extinguish it and preserve you from that Guilt which would frighten away the soul from God Repentance and mortification must keep away diverting and deceiving objects which would steal away our Love from God Faith must shew us God as present in all his blessed attributes and perfections Hope must depend on him for nearer access and the promised felicity Prudence must choose the fittest season and means and helps from our special approaches to him and teach us how to avoid impediments And obedience must keep us in a fit capacity for communion with him The mind that is turned loose to wander after vanity the rest of the day is unfit in an hour of prayer or meditation to be taken up with the Love of God It must be the work of the day and of our lives to walk in a fitness for it though we are not alwayes in the immediate lively exercise of it To sin wilfully one hour and be taken up with the love of God the next is as unlikely as one hour to abuse our Parents and provoke them to correct us and the next to find the pleasure of their love or one hour to fall and break ones bones and the next to run and work as pleasantly as we did before § 21. And we must see that all other Graces be exercised in a just subserviency to Love and none of them degenerate into noxious extreams to the hinderance of this which is their proper end When you set your selves to Repent and Mourn for sin it must be from Love and for Love That by ingenuous lamentation of the injuries you have done to a gracious God you may be cleansed from the filth that doth displease him and being reconciled to him in Christ may be fit to return to the exercises and delights of Love When you Fear God let it be with a Filial fear that comes from Love and is but a preservative or restorative for Love Avoid that slavish fear as a sin which tendeth to hatred and would make you fly away from God Love casteth out this tormenting fear and freeth the soul from the Spirit of bondage The Devil tempteth melancholy persons to live before God as one that is still among Bears or Lyons that are ready to devour him For he knoweth how much such a fear is an enemy to Love Satan would never promote such fears if they were of God and tended to our good You never found him promoting your Love or Delight in God! But he careth not how much he plungeth you into distracting terrors If he can he will frighten you out of your Love and out of your comforts and out of your wits A dull and sluggish sinner he will keep from fear lest it should awaken him from his sin But a poor melancholly penitent soul he would keep under perpetual terrors It is so easie to such to fear that they may know it is a sinful inordinate fear For gracious works are not so easie And resist also all humiliation and grief that doth not immediately or remotely tend to help your Love A Religion that tendeth but to grief and terminateth in grief and goeth no further hath too much in it of the malice of the enemy to be of God No tears are desirable but those that tend to clear the eyes from the filth of sin that they may see the better the loveliness of God § 22. Direct 5. Esteem thy want of Love to God with the turning of it unto the creature to be Direct 5. the Heart of the old man
soul came from him and therefore naturally should tend to him It is from him and for him and therefore must Rest in him or have no Rest. We delight in the house where we were born and in our Native country and in our parents and every thing inclineth to its own Original And so should the soul to its Creator § 8. Direct 7. Corrupt not your Minds and appetites with contrary delights Addict not your selves to fleshly pleasures Tast nothing that is forbidden Sorrow it self is not such an enemy to spiritual Delights as sensual sinful pleasures are O leave your beastly and your childish pleasures and come and feast your souls on God Isa. 55. 1 2 3. Away with the Delights of lust and prid● and covetousness and vain sports and gluttony and drunkenness if ever you would have the solid and durable Delights Think not of joyning both together Bethink your selves Can it be any thing but the disease and wickedness of thy heart that can make a play or a feast or drunken wanton company more pleasant to thee than God What a heart is that which thinketh it a toil to meditate on God and Heaven and thinks it a pleasure to think of the baits of pride and covetousness What a heart is that which thinks that sensuality wantonness and vanity are the pleasure of their families which must not be turned out and that Godliness and Heavenly discourse and exercises would be the sadness and trouble of their families which must not be brought in lest it ma●r their mirth That think it an intollerable toil and slavery to Love God and Holiness and Heaven and to be imployed for them and thinks it a delightful thing to Love a whore or excess of meat or drink or sports Can you say any thing of a man that is more disgraceful unless you say he is a Devil It were not so vile for a child to Delight more in a Dog than in his Parents or a Husband to delight more in the ugliest Harlot than in his Wife as it is for a man to delight more in fleshly vanities than in God Will you be licking up this dung when you should be solacing your souls in Angelical pleasures and foretasting the delights of Heaven O how justly will God thrust away such wretches from his everlasting presence who so abhor his ways and him Can they blame him for denying them the things which they hate or set so light by as to prefer a lust before it If they were not haters of God and Holiness they would never be so averse even to the Delights which they should have with him § 9. Direct 8. Take heed of a Melancholy habit of body For Melancholy people can scarce delight Direct 8. in any thing at all and therefore not in God Delight is as hard to them as it is to a pained member to find pleasure or a sick stomack to delight in the food which it loaths They can think of God with trouble and fear and horror and despair but not with delight § 10. Direct 9. Take heed of an impatient pievish self-tormenting mind that can bear no cross and Direct 9. of overvaluing earthly things which causeth impatience in the want of them Make not too great a matter of fleshly pain or pleasure Otherwise your minds will be called to a continual attendance on the flesh and taken up with continual desires or cares or fears or griefs or pleasures and will not be permitted to solace themselves with God The soul that would have pure and high Delights must abstract it self from the concernments of the flesh and look on your body as if it were the body of another whose pain or pleasure you can choose whether you will feel when Paul was rapt up into the third Heaven and saw the things unutterable he was so far freed from the prison of sense that he knew not whether he was in the Body or out of it As the separated souls that see the face of God and the Redeemer do leave the Body to be buried and to rot in darkness and feel not all this to the interrupting of their joys so faith can imitate such a Death to the world and such a neglect of the flesh and some kind of elevating separation of the mind to the things above If in this near conjunction you cannot leave the Body to rejoyce or suffer alone yet as it self is but a servant to the soul so let not its pain or pleasure be predominant and controll the high operations of the soul. A manly valiant believing soul though it cannot abate the pain at all nor reconcile the flesh to its calamity yet it can do more notwithstanding the pain to its own delight than strangers will believe § 11. Some women and passionate weak-spirited men especially in sickness are so pievish and of such impatient minds that their daily work is to disquiet and torment themselves One can scarce tell how to speak to them or look at them but it offendeth them And the world is so full of occasions of provocation that such persons are like to have little quietness It is unlike that these should delight in God who keep their minds in a continual ulcerated galled state uncapable of any delights at all and cease not their self-tormenting § 12. Direct 10. It is only a life of faith that will be a life of holy heavenly Delight Exercise your Direct 10. selves therefore in believing contemplations of the things unseen It must not be now and then a glance of the eye of the soul towards God or a seldom salutation which you would give a stranger but a walking with him and frequent addresses of the soul unto him which must help you to the Delights which Believers find in their communion with him § 13. Direct 11. Especially let faith go frequently to Heaven for renewed matter of delight and Direct 11. frequently think what God will be to you there for ever and with what full everlasting delight he will satiate your souls As Heaven is the place of our full delight so the foresight and foretast of it is the highest delight which on earth is to be attained And a soul that is strange to the foresight of Heaven will be as strange to the true Delights of faith § 14. Direct 12. It is a great advantage to Holy Delight to be much in the most Delightful parts of Direct 12. worship as in Thanksgiving and Praise and a due celebration of the Sacrament of the Body and blood of Christ Of which I have spoken in the foregoing Directions § 15. Direct 13. A skillful experienced Pastor who is able to open the treasurie of the Gospel and Direct 13. publickly and privately to direct his flock in the work of self-examination and the heavenly exercises of faith is a great help to Christians spiritual delight The experiences of believers teach them this How oft do they go away refreshed and
his head His clothing you may read of at his crucifying when they parted it As for money he was fain to send Pet●r to a ●●●●h for some to pay their tribute If Christ did scrape and care for Riches then so do thou I● he thought it the happiest life do thou think so too But if he contemned it do thou contemn it If his whole life was directed to give thee the most perfect example of the contempt of all the prosperity of this world then learn of his example if thou take him for thy Saviour and if thou love thy self Though he was rich yet for our sakes he became poor that you through his poverty might be rich 2 Cor. 8 9. § 31. Direct 10. Think on the example of the primitive Christians even the best of Christs servants Direct 10. and see how it condemneth worldliness They that by miracle in the name of Christ could give limbs to the lame yet tell him Silver and Gold have we none Acts 3. 6. Those that had possessions sold them and laid the money at the Apostles feet and they had all things common to shew that faith overcometh the world by contemning it and subjecting it to charity and devoting it entirely to God Read whether the Apostles did live in sumptuous houses with great attendance and worldly Che●●●●stome saith his enemies ●harged him with many crimes but never with Cov●tousness or Wanton●ess And so it was with Christ and his enemies plenty and prosperity And so of the rest § 32. Direct 11. Remember to what ends all worldly things were made and given you and what a Direct 11. happy advantage you may make of them by renouncing them as they would be provision for your lusts and by devoting your selves and them to God The use of their sweetness is to draw your souls to taste Et si●u● in patria De●s est speculum in quo reiucent creaturae sic è converso in via creaturae sunt speculum quo creator videtur Paul Sca●iger in Ep. C●th l. 14. Thes. 123. p. 689. by faith the heavenly sweetness They are the Looking-glass of souls in flesh that are not yet admitted to see things spiritual face to face They are the provender of our bodies our travelling furniture and helps our Inns and solacing company in the way they are some of Gods Love-tokens some of the lesser pieces of his Coin and bear his Image and superscription They are drops from the Rivers of the eternal pleasures to tell the mind by the way of the senses how good the Donor is and how amiable and what higher Delights there are for souls and to point us to the better things which these foretell They are messengers from Heaven to testifie our Fathers care and love and to bespeak our thankfulness love and duty and to bear witness against sin and bind us faster to obedience They are the first Volume of the Word of God The first Book that man was set to read to acquaint him fully with his Maker As the Word which we read and hear is the Chariot of the Spirit by which it maketh its accesses to the soul so the delights of sight and taste and smell and touch and hearing were appointed as an ordinary way for the speedy access of heavenly love and sweetness to the Heart that upon the first perception of the goodness and sweetness of the creature there might presently be transmitted by a due progression or deep impression of the goodness of God upon the soul That the creature being the Letters of Gods Book which are seen by our eye the sense even the Love of our great Creator might presently be perceived by the mind and no letter might once be lookt upon but for the sense no creature ever seen or tasted or heard or felt in any delectable quality without a sense of the Love of God That as the touch of the hand upon the strings of the Lute do cause the melody so Gods touch by his mercies upon our hearts might presently tune them into Love and Gratitude and Praise They are the Tools by which we must do much of our Masters work They are means by which we may refresh our brethren and express our love to one another and our love to our Lord and Master in his servants They are our Masters stock which we must trade with by the improvement of which no less than the Reward of endless Happiness may be attained These are the Uses to which God gives us outward mercies Love them thus and Delight in them and Use them thus and spare not yea seek Even Dyonisius the Tyrant was bountiful to Philosophers To Plato he gave above fourscore Talents Laert. in Plato●e and much to Aristippus and many more and he offered much to many Philosophers that refused it And so did Croesus them thus and be thankful for them But when the creatures are given for so excellent a use will you debase them all by making them only the fuell of your lusts and the provisions for your flesh And will you love them and dote upon them in these base respects while you utterly neglect their noblest use You are just like children that cry for Books and can never have enouw but its only to play with them because they are fine but when they are set to learn and read them they cry as much because they love it not Or like one that should spend his life and labour in getting the finest clothes to dress his Dogs and Horses with but himself goeth naked and will not wear them § 33. Direct 12. Remember that God hath promised to provide for you and that you shall want Direct 12. nothing that is good for you if you will live above these worldly things and seek first his Kingdom and the righteousness thereof And cannot you trust his promise If you truly believe that he is God Matth. 10. 30. Luke 12. 7. and that he is true and that his particular providence extendeth to the very numbring of your hairs you will sure trust him rather than trust to your own forecast and industry Do you think his provision is not better for you than your own All your own care cannot keep you alive an hour nor cannot prosper any of your labours if you provoke him to blast them And if you are not content with his provisions nor submit your selves to the disposals of his love and wisdom you disoblige God and provoke him to leave you to the fruits of your own care and diligence And then you will find that it had been your wiser way to have trusted God § 34. Direct 13. Think often on the dreadful importance and effects of the Love of Riches or a Direct 13. worldly mind 1. It is a most certain sign of a state of death and misery where it hath the upper The mischiefs of a worldly mind Look upon the face of the calamitous world and enquire
men though never so sound and rational be certainly deceived in this we know not when they are not deceived and there can be no certainty of faith or knowledge For if you say that the Church telleth us that sense is deceived in this and only in this Deny not sense with the Papists I answer If it be not first granted that sense as so stated is certain in its apprehension there is no certainty then that there is a Church or a man or a world or what the Church ever said or any member of it And if sense be so fallible the Church may be deceived who by the means of sense doth come to all her knowledge To deny faith is the property of an Infidel To deny Reason is to deny Humanity and is fittest for a mad man or a Beast if without reason reason could be denyed But to deny the certainty of sense it self and of all the senses of all sound men and that about the proper objects of sense this sheweth that ambition can make a Religion which shall bring man quite below the Beasts and make him a Mushrome that Rome may have subjects capable of her Government and all this under pretence of honouring faith and saving souls Making God the destroyer of nature in order to its perfection and the deceiver of nature in order to its ☜ edification § 12. Direct 10. Sense must not be made the Iudge of matters that are above it as the proper objects Direct 10. of faith and reason nor must we argue negatively from our senses in such cases which God in nature never brought into their Court. We cannot say that there is no God no Heaven no Hell no Angels no souls of men because we see them not We cannot say I see not the Antipodes nor other Kingdoms of the world and therefore there is no such place so we say as well as the Papists that sense is no Judge whether the spiritual body of Christ be present in the Sacrament no more than whether an Angel be here present But sense with reason is the Judge whether bread and Wine be there present or else humane understanding can judge of nothing Christ would have had Thomas to have believed without seeing and feeling and blesseth those that neither see him nor feel and yet believe but he never blesseth men for believing contrary to the sight and feeling and taste of all that have sound senses and understandings in the world Their instance of the Virgins conception of Christ is nothing contrary to this For it belongeth not to sense to judge whether a Virgin may conceive Nor will any wise mans Reason judge that the Creator who in making the world of nothing was the only cause cannot supply the place of a partial second cause in Generation They might more plausibly argue with Aristotle against the Creation it self that ex nihilo nihil fit but as it is past doubt that the infallibility of sense is nothing at all concerned in this so it is sufficiently proved by Christians that God can create without any pre-existent matter Reason can see much further than sense by the help of sense and yet much further by the help of Divine Revelation by faith To argue Negatively against the conclusions of Reason or Divine Revelation from the meer negation of sensitive apprehension is to make a Beast of man We must not be so irrational or impious as to say that there is nothing but what we have seen or felt or tasted c. If we will believe others who have seen them that there are other parts of the world we have full Reason to believe the sealed testimony of God himself that there are such superiour worlds and powers as he hath told us We have the use of sense in hearing or seeing Gods revelation and we have no more in receiving mans report of those Countreys which we never saw § 13. If they will make it the Question whether the sense may not be deceived I answer we doubt not by distance of the objects or distempers or disproportions of it self or the Media it may But if the sense it self and all the means and objects have their natural soundness aptitude and disposition it is a contradiction so say it is deceived for that is to say it is not the sense which we suppose it is If God deceive it thus he maketh it another thing It is no more the same nor will admit the same definition But however it is most evident that the senses being the first entrance or inlet of knowledge the first certainty must be there which is presupposed to the certain judgement of the intellect But if these err all following certainty which supposeth the certainty of the senses is destroyed And this error in the first reception like an error in the first concoction is not rectified by the second And if God should thus leave all men under a fallibility of sense he should leave no certainty in the world and I desire those that know the definition of a lye to consider whether this ☞ be not to feign God to lye in the very frame of nature and by constant lyes to rule the world when yet it is impossible for God to lye And if this Blasphemy were granted them yet it would be mans duty still to judge by such senses as he hath about the objects of sense For if God have made them fallible we cannot make them better Nor can we create a Reason in our selves which shall not presuppose the judgement of sense or which shall-supply its ordinary natural defects So that the Roman faith of Transubstantiation denying the reality of Bread and Wine doth not only unman the world but bring man lower than a Beast and make sense to be no sense and the world to be governed by natural deceit or lyes and banish all certainty of faith and reason from the Earth and after all ☞ with such wonderful enmity to charity as maketh man liker the Devil than else could easily be believed they sentence all to Hell that believe not this and decree to burn them first on earth and to depose Temporal Lords from their dominions that favour them or that will not exterminate them from their Lands and so absolve their Subjects from their Allegiance and give their Dominions to others All this you may read in the third Canon of the Laterane General Council under Innocent 3. § 14. Direct 11. Look not upon any object of sense with sense alone nor stop not in it but let reason Direct 11. begin where sense doth end and alwayes see by faith or reason the part which is invisible as well as the sensible part by sense By that which is seen collect and rise up to that which is unseen It God had given us an eye or ear or taste or feeling and not a mind then we should have exercised no other faculty but what we had But sure he
that hath given us the higher faculty requireth that we use it as well as the lower And remember that they are not meer co-ordinate faculties but the sensitive faculty is subordinate to the Intellectual And accordingly that which the sensible creature objectively revealeth through the sense unto the Intellect is something to which things sensible are subordinate Therefore if you stop in sensible things and see not the Principle which animateth them the Power which ordereth and ruleth them and the End which they are made for and must be used for you play the Beasts you see nothing but a dead carkass without the soul and nothing but a useless senseless thing You know nothing indeed to any purpose no not the creature it self while you know not the use and meaning of the creature but separate it from its Life and Guide and End § 15. Direct 12. First therefore see that you ever look upon all things sensible as the products of the Direct 12. will of the invisible God depending on him more than the Sunshine doth upon the Sun and never see or ta●●e a creature separatedly from God Will you know what a plant is and not know that it is the earth that beareth and nourisheth it Will you know what a Fish is and yet be ignorant that he liveth in the water Will you know what a branch or fruit is and yet not know that it groweth on the Tree The nature of things cannot be known without the knowledge of their causes and respective parts It is as no knowledge to know incoherent scraps and parcels To know a hand as no part of the body or an eye or nose without knowing a head or a body without knowing its life or soul is not to know it for you make it another thing It is the difference between a wise man and a fool that Sapiens respicit ad plura insipi●ns ad pauciora A wise man looketh comprehensively to things as they are conjunct and takes all together and leaveth out nothing that is useful to his end but a fool seeth one thing and overseeth another which is necessary to the true knowledge or use of that which he seeth see God as the Cause and Life of every thing you see As a carkass is but a ghastly sight without the soul and quickly corrupteth and stinketh when it is separated so the Creature without God is an unlovely sight and quickly corrupteth and becomes a snare or annoyance to you God is the beauty of all that 's beautiful and the strength of all that 's strong and the glory of the Sun and all that is glorious and the wisdom of all that 's wise and the goodness of all that 's good as being the only original total cause of all You play the Brutes when you see the creature and overlook its Maker from whom it is whatsoever it is Will you see the Diall and overlook the Sun Remember it is the use of every Creature to shew you God and therefore it is the use of every sense to promote the knowledge of him § 16. Direct 13. See God as the Conductor orderer and disposer of all the creatures according to their natures as moved necessarily or freely and behold not any of the motions or events of the world without observing the interest and over-ruling hand of God Sense reacheth but to the effects and events but Reason and faith can see the first cause and disposer of all Again I tell you that if you look but on the particles of things by sense and see not God that setteth all together and doth his work by those that never dream of it you see but the several wheels and parcels of a Clock or Watch and know not him that made and keepeth it that setteth on the Poise and winds it up to fit his ends Ioseph could say God sent me hither when his Brethren sold him into Aegypt And David felt his Fathers Rod in Shimei's curse § 17. Direct 14. See God the End of every creature how all things are ordered for his service and Direct 14. be sure you stop not in any creature without referring it to a higher end Else as I have oft told you you will be but like a Child or illiterate person who openeth a Book and admireth the workmanship of the Printer and the order and well forming of the Letters but never mindeth or understandeth the subject sense or end Or like one that looketh on a comely picture and never mindeth either him that made it or him that is represented by it Or like one that gazeth on the Sign at an Inn-door and praiseth the workmanship but knoweth not that it is set there to direct him to entertainment and necessaries within And this folly and sin is the greater because it is the very end of God in all his works of Creation and Providence to reveal himself by them to the intellectual world And must God shew his Power and Wisdom and Goodness so wonderfully in the frame of the creation and in his daily general and particular providence and shall man that daily seeth all this overlook the intended use and end and so make all this glorious work as nothing or as lost to him Sense knoweth no End but its own Delight and the natural felicity of the sensitive creature such as things sensible afford But Reason must take up the work where sense doth end its stage and carry all home to him that is the End of all For OF Him and THROUGH Him and TO Him are all things to whom be Glory for ever Amen Rom. 11. 36. § 18. Direct 15. Besides the General Use and Ultimate End of every creature labour for a clear acquaintance Direct 15. with the particular Use and nearer End of every thing which you have to do with by which it is serviceable to your Ultimate End And suppose still you saw that special use as subserving your highest End as the Title written upon each creature As suppose upon your Bible it were written The Word of the Living God to acquaint me with himself and his will that I may please and glorifie and enjoy him for ever And upon your godly friend suppose you saw this Title written A Servant of God that beareth his Image and appointed to accompany and assist me in his service unto life everlasting Upon your meat suppose you saw this Title written The provisions of my Father sent me as from my Saviours hands not to gratifie my sensuality and serve my inordinate desires but to refresh and strengthen my body for his service in my passage to everlasting life So upon your Clothes your Servants your Goods your Cattel your Houses and every thing you have inscribe thus the proper use and end § 19. Direct 16. Know both the final and the mediate danger of every thing that you have to do Direct 16. with and suppose you still see them written upon every thing you see The final
danger is Hell The mediate danger in general is sin But you must find what sin it is that this creature will be made a Temptation to by the Devil and the Flesh. As suppose you saw written upon money and riches The bait of Covetousness and all evil to pierce me through with many sorrows and then to damn me And suppose you saw written upon great buildings and estates and honours and attendance The great price which the Devil would give for souls and the baits to tempt men to the inordinate Love of fleshly pleasures and to draw their hearts from God and Heaven to their damnation Suppose you still saw written upon Beauty and and tempting actions and attire The bait of lust by which the Devil corrupteth the minds of men to their damnation Suppose you saw written on the Play-house door The Stage of the Mountebanck of Hell who here cheateth men of their pretious time and enticeth them to vanity luxury and damnation under pretence of instructing them by a nearer and more pleasant way than Preachers do The like I say of Gaming Recreations company See the particular snare in all § 20. Direct 17. To this end be well acquainted with your own particular inclinations and distempers Direct 17. that you may know what creature is like to prove most dangerous to you that there you may keep the strictest watch If you be subject to pride keep most from the baits of Pride and watch most cautelously against them If you be subject to Covetousness watch most against the baits of Covetousness If you are inclined to lust away from the sight of alluring objects The knowledge of your temper and disease must direct you both in your dyet and your Physick § 21. Direct 18. Live as in a constant course of obedience and suppose you saw the Law of God Direct 18. also written upon every thing you see As when you look on any tempting beauty suppose you saw Rom. 7. 7. Matth 5 28. Ephes. 5. 5. Heb. 13 4. 1 John 2. 15. this written on the forehead Thou shalt not lust Whoremongers and Adulterers God will judge They shall not enter into the Kingdom of God See upon the forbidden dish or cup the prohibition of God Thou shalt not eat or drink this See upon money and riches this written Thou shalt not cove● See upon the face of all the world Love not the world nor the things that are in the world If any man love the world the Love of the Father is not in him Thus see the Will of God on all things § 22. Direct 19. Make not the objects of sense over tempting and dangerous to your selves but take Direct 19. special care as much as in you lyeth to order all so that you may have as much of the benefit and as little of the snare of the creature as is possible Would you not be gluttonous pleasers of your appetite Choose not then too full a Table nor over-pleasant tempting drinks or dishes and yet choose those that are most useful to your health Would you not over-love the world nor your present house or lands or station Be not too instrumental your selves in guilding or dulcifying your bait If you put in the sugar the Devil and the flesh will put in the poyson Will you make all as pleasant and lovely as you can when you believe that the overloving them is the greatest danger to your salvation Will you be the greatest tempters to your selves and then desire God not to lead you into temptation § 23. Direct 20. Let not the tempting object be too near your sense For nearness enrageth the sensitive Direct 20. appetite and giveth you an opportunity of sinning Come not too near the fire if you would not be burnt And yet use prudence in keeping the usefulness of it for warmth though you avoid the burning Distance from the snares of pride and lust and passion and other sins is a most approved remedy and Nearness is their strength § 24. Direct 21. Accustom your souls to frequent and familiar exercise about their invisible objects Direct 21. as well as your senses about theirs And as you are daily and hourly in seeing and tasting and hearing the creature so be not rarely in the humble adoration of him that appeareth to you in them Otherwise use will make the creature so familiar to you and disuse will make God so strange that by degrees you will wear your selves out of his acquaintance and become like carnal sensual men and live all by sense and forget the holy exercise of the life of faith § 25. Direct 22. Lose not your humble sense of the badness of your hearts how ready they are as tinder Direct 22. to take the fire of every temptation and never grow fool-bardy and confident of your selves For your holy fear is necessary to your watchfulness and your watchfulness is necessary to your escape and safety Peters self-confidence betrayed him to deny his Lord. Had Noah and Lot and David been more afraid of the sin they had been like to have escaped it It is a part of the character of the beastly Hereticks that Iude declaimeth against that they were spots in their feasts of charity when they feasted with the Church feeding themselves without fear vers 12. When the knowledge or sense of your weakness and sinful inclination is gone then fear is gone and then safety is gone and your fall is near PART II. Particular Directions for the Government of the Eyes § 1. Direct 1. KNow the uses that your sight is given you for As 1. To see the works of God Direct 1. that thereby your Minds may see God himself 2. To read the word of God Prov. 3. 21. Luk 11. 34. Mat. 6. 21. Psal. 145. 15. Psal. 123. 2 3. Prov. 28 27. that therein you may perceive his mind 3. To see the servants of God whom you must Love and the poor whom you must relieve or pity and all the visible objects of your duty To conduct your body in the discharge of its office about all the matters of the world And in special often to look up towards Heaven the place where your blessed Lord is Glorified and whence he shall come to take you to his glory § 2. Direct 2. Remember the sins which the eye is most in danger of that you may be watchful Direct 2. and escape 1. You must take heed of a Proud and Lofty and Scornful eye which looketh on your Psal. 35. 19. Prov. 10 10. Prov 30. 17. Isa. 5. 15. Isa. 3. 16. Prov. 30. 13. Prov. 23. 33. Prov. 27. 20. Eccles. 1. 8. Eccles 4. 8. Prov. 23. 5. selves with admiration and delight as the Peacock is said to do on his tail and on others as below you with slighting and disdain 2. You must take heed of a lustful wanton eye which secretly carryeth out your heart to a befooling piece of dirty flesh and
as well as they are from him For of him and through him and to him are all things This Argument I draw from Nature which can have no beginning but God nor any end but God The 2. I draw from the Divine intention in the fabrication and ordination of all things God made all things for himself and can have no Ultimate end below himself The 3. I draw from his Ius dominii his right of Propriety which he hath over all things and so over families as such they are all absolutely his own alone And that which is solely or absolutely a mans own should be for his use and employed to his honour and ends much more that which is Gods seeing man is not capable of such a plenary propriety of any thing in the world as God hath in all things 4. I argue à Iure Imperii from Gods Right of Government If he have a full right of Government of families as families then families as families must honour and worship him according to their utmost capacities But he hath a full Right of absolute Government over families as families Therefore The consequence of the Major is grounded on these two things 1. That God himself is the end of his own Government this is proper to his Regiment All Humane Government is said by Polititians to be terminated ultimately in the Publick good of the society But Gods Pleasure and Glory is the end of his Government and is as it were the Publick or Universal good 2. In that Nature teacheth us that Supream Honour is due to all that are Supream Governours therefore they are to have the most honourable Titles of Majesty Highness Excellency c. and actions answerable to those Titles Mal. 1. 6. If I be a Father where is mine honour If I be a Master where is my fear Fear is oft put for all Gods Worship If then there be no family whereof God is not the Father or Founder and the Master or Owner and Governour then there is none but should honour him and fear or worship him and that not only as single men but as families because he is not only the Father and Master the Lord and Ruler of them as men but also as Families Honour is as due to the Rector as Protection to the Subjects and in our case much more God is not a meer Titular but Real Governour All Powers on earth are derived from him and are indeed his power All Lawful Governours are his Officers and hold their places under him and act by him As God therefore is the proper Soveraign of every Commonwealth and the Head of the Church so is he the Head of every family Therefore as every Commonwealth should perform such Worship or Honour to their Earthly Soveraign as is Due to Man So each Society should according to their Capacities perform Divine Worship and Honour to God And if any object That by this Rule Commonwealths as such must meet together to worship God which is impossible I answer They must worship him according to their Natural Capacities and so must Families according to theirs The same General Precept obligeth to a divers manner of duty according to the divers capacity of the Subject Commonwealths must in their Representatives at least engage themselves to God as Commonwealths and worship him in the most convenient way that they are capable of Families may meet together for prayer though a Nation cannot As an Association of Churches called a Provincial or National Church is obliged to worship God as well as particular Congregations yet not in one place because it is impossible Nature limiteth and maketh the difference And that the obligation of families to honour and worship God may yet appear more evidently Consider that Gods Right and Propriety and Rule is twofold yet each Title plenary alone 1. He is our Owner and Ruler upon his Title of Creation 2. So he is by his Right of Redemption By both these he is not only Lord and Ruler of persons but families all societies being his And the Regiment of persons being chiefly exercised over them in societies All power in Heaven and Earth is given unto Christ. Matth. 18. 18. and all judgement committed unto him John 5. 22. and all things delivered into his hands John 13. 3. and therefore to him shall every knee bow both of things in Heaven and things in earth and things under the earth either with a bowing of Worship or of forced acknowledgement and every tongue shall confess that Iesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father Phil. 2. 10. Bowing to and confessing Christ voluntarily to Gods glory is true Worship All must do this according to their several capacities And therefore families according to theirs A third Consideration which I thought to have added but for Illustration may well stand as an argument it self and it s this Argument 3. If besides all the forementioned opportunities and obligations families do live in the presence of God and ought by faith to apprehend that presence then is it Gods Will that families as such should solemnly Worship him But the former is true therefore the latter The Consequence of the Major which alone requires proof I prove by an Argument à fortiori from the honour due to all earthly Governours Though when a King a Father a Master are absent such actual honour to be presented to them is not Due because they are not capable of receiving it further than Mediante aliqua persona vel re which beareth some representation of the Superiour or Relation to him yet when they stand by it is a contemptuous subject a disobedient Child that will not perform actual honour or humane Worship to them Now God is ever present not only with each person as such but also with every family as such As he is said to walk among the Golden Candlesticks in his Churches so doth he in the families of all by his common presence and of his servants by his gracious presence This they easily find by his directing them and blessing the affairs of their families If any say We see not God else we would daily worship him in our families Answ. Faith seeth him who to sense is invisible If one of you had a Son that were blind and could not see his own Father would you think him therefore excusable if he would not honour his Father when he knew him to be present We know God to be present though flesh be blind and cannot see him Argument 4. If Christian families besides all the forementioned advantages and obligations are also societies sanctified to God then is it Gods Will that families as such should solemnly worship him But Christian families are societies sanctified to God Therefore The Reason of the Consequence is because things sanctified must in the most eminent sort that they are capable be used for God To sanctifie a person or thing is to set it apart and separate it from a common or
breach almost uncurable because no professions of repentance or future fidelity can be trusted Thus I have partly shewed you the Malignity of Perjury and Covenant-breaking § 3. Direct 2. Be sure that you make no Vow or Covenant which God hath forbidden you to keep Direct 2. It is rash vowing and swearing which is the common cause of Perjury You should at the making of your Vow have seen into the bottom of it and foreseen all the evils that might follow it and the Temptations which were like to draw you into perjury He is virtually perjured as soon as he hath sworn who sweareth to do that which he must not do The preventive means are here the best § 4. Direct 3. Be sure you take no Oath or Vow which you are not sincerely resolved to perform Direct 3. They that Swear or Vow with a secret reserve that rather than they will be ruined by keeping it they will break it are Habitually and Reputatively perjured persons even before they Lege distinctionem Grotii inter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aanot. in Matth. 5. 33. Modern Policy supposed Dr. Sand rosts Princ. 7. 1. We are ready to interpret the words too kindly especially if they be ambiguous and its hard to find terms so positive but that they may be eluded indeed or seem to us to be so if we be disposed 2. Some are invited to illicite promises qua illicite because they know them to be invalid 3. Some are frighted into these bonds by threats and losses and temporal concernments and then they please themselves that they swe●r by Du●e●s and so are disengaged 4. Some are Oath-proof c. break it Besides that they shew a base hypocritical profligate conscience that can deliberately commit so great a sin § 5. Direct 4. See that all fleshly worldly interest be fully subdued to the interest of your souls Direct 4. and to the will of God He that at the heart sets more by his body than his soul and loveth his worldly prosperity above God will lye or swear or forswear or do any thing to save that carnal interest which he most valueth He that is carnal and worldly at the heart is false at the heart The Religion of such an Hypocrite will give place to his temporal safety or commodity and will carry him no further than the way is fair It is no wonder It is one of Solons sayings in Laertius p. 51. Probi●itate●n ●u●●●●rando certiorem habe What will not an Atheistical impious person say or swear for advantage that a proud man or a worldling will renounce both God and his true felicity for the World seeing indeed he taketh it for his God and his felicity even as a Believer will renounce the world for God § 6. Direct 5. Beware of inordinate fear of man and of a distrustful withdrawing of your hearts Direct 5. from God Else you will be carryed to comply with the will of man before the will of God and to avoid the wrath of man before the wrath of God Read and fear that heavy curse Ier. 17. 5 6. God is unchangeable and hath commanded you so far to imitate him as If a man Vow a Vow unto the Lord or swear an oath to bind his soul with a bond he shall not break his word he shall do according to all that proceedeth out of his mouth Numb 30. 2. But man is mutable and so is his interest and his affairs And therefore if you are the servants of men you must swear one year and for swear it or swear the contrary the next when their interest requireth it you must not be thought worthy to live among men if you will not promise or swear as they command you And when their interest altereth and requireth the contrary you must hold all those bonds to be but straws and break them for their end● § 7. Direct 6. Be sure that you lose not the fear of God and the tenderness of your consciences Direct 6. When these are lost your understanding and sense and life is lost and you will not stick at the greatest wickedness nor know when you have done it what you did If faith see not God continually present and foresee not the great approaching day Perjury or any villany will seem tolerable for worldly ends For when you look but to mens present case you will see that the righteous and the wise and their works are in the hands of God no man knoweth Love or hatred by all that is before them All things come alike to all there is one event to the righteous and the wicked to the good and to the clean and to the unclean to him that sacrificeth and to him that sacrificeth not as is the Good so is the sinner and he that sweareth as he that feareth an ●ath Eccles. 9. 1 2. But in the end men shall discern between the righteous and the wicked Mal. 3. 18. Therefore it is the believing foresight of the end that by preserving the fear of God and tenderness of Conscience must save you from this and all other heynous sin § 8. Direct 7. Be not bold and rash about such dreadful things as Vows Run not as fearlesly Direct 7. upon them as if you were but going to your dinner The wrath of God is not to be jeasted with Usq ad aras was the bounds even of a Heathens kindness to his friend Meddle with Oathes with the greatest fear and caution and circumspection It 's terrible here to find that you were mistaken through any temerity or negligence or secret seduction of a carnal interest § 9. Direct 8. Especially be very fearful of owing any publick doctrine or doing any publick act Direct 8. which tendeth to harden others in their Perjury or to encourage multitudes to commit the sin To be Nunc nun● qui s●dera rumpit Ditatur Qui servat ●get Claud. an● forsworn your selves is a dreadful case but to teach whole Nations or Churches to forswear themselves or to plead for it or justifie it as a lawful thing is much more dreadful And though you teach not or own not Perjury under the name of Perjury yet if first you will make plain perjury to seem no Perjury that so you may justifie it it is still a most inhumane horrid act God knoweth I insult not over the Papists with a delight to make any Christians odious But with grief I remember how lamentably they have abused our holy profession while not only their great Doctors but their approved General Council at the Laterane under P. Innocent the third in the third Canon hath Decreed that the Pope may depose Temporal Lords from their Dominions and give them unto others and discharge their Vassals from their Allegiance and fidelity if they be hereticks or will not exterminate Hereticks even such as the holy men there condemned were in the Popes account To declare to
is the inherent evidence 3. The miracles of the spirit is the concomitant attestation or evidence 4. And the sanctifying work of the spirit is the subsequent attestation renewed and accompanying it to the end of the World So that the Argument runs thus That doctrine which hath this witness of the Holy Ghost antecedently in such prophecies inherently bearing his image so unimitably accompanyed by so many certain uncontrouled miracles and followed and attended with such matchless success in the sanctification of the body of Christ is fully attested by God to be his own But such is the ☞ doctrine of the Gospel Therefore c. The Major you are not to take upon trust from your Teachers though your esteem of their judgement may the better dispose you to learn But you are to discern the evidences of truth which is apparent in it For he that denyeth this must by force of argument be driven to deny 1. Either that God is the Governour of the World or that he is the supream but say he is controuled by another 3. Or that he is Good and True and must affirm that he either Governeth the world by meer deceits and undiscernable lyes or that he hath given up the power to some one that so governeth it All which is but to affirm that there is no God which is supposed to be proved before § 25. 8. There now remaineth nothing to be taught you as to prove the truth of the Gospel 8. To know the matters of fact subservient to our ●a●●●● but only those matters of fact which are contained and supposed in the Minor of the two last arguments And they are these particulars 1. That there were such persons as Christ and his Apostles and such a Gospel Preached by them 2. That such Miracles were done by them as are supposed ☞ 3. That both Doctrine and Miracles were committed to writing by them in the Scriptures for the Est enim mirabil●● qu●dam continuatio seriesque rerum ut alia ex alia nexa omnes inter se aptae colligataeque videantur Ci● d● Natur. deor pag. 6. certainer preserving them to the Churches use 4. That Churches were planted and souls converted and confirmed by them in the first ages many of whom did seal them with their blood 5. That there have been a succession of such Churches as have adhered to this Christ and Gospel 6. That this which we call the Bible is that very Book containing those sacred Writings fore-mentioned 7. That it hath been still copyed out and preserved without any such depravation or corruption as might frustrate its ends 8. That the Copies are such out of which we have them Translated and which we shew 9. That they are so truly translated as to have no such corruptions or mistakes as to frustrate their ends or make them unapt for the work they were appointed to 10. That these particular words are indeed here written which we read and these particular Doctrines containing the Essentials of Christianity together with the rest of the material objects of faith § 26. All these ten particulars are matters of fact that are meerly subservient to the constitutingprinciples of our faith but yet very needful to be known Now the question is How these must be known and received by us so as not to invalidate our faith And how far our Teachers must be here believed And first it is very useful to us to enquire How so many of these matters of fact as were then existent were known to the first Christians As How knew they in those dayes that there were such persons as Christ and his Apostles that they preached such Doctrines and spake such Languages and did such Works and that they wrote such Books and sent such Epistles to the Churches and that Churches were hereby converted and confirmed and Martyrs sealed this with their blood c. It s easie to tell how they were certain of all these Even by their own eyes and ears and sensible observation as we know that there are Englishmen live in England And those that were remoter from some of the matters of fact knew them by such report of those that did see them as those among us that never saw the King or Court or his Restoration do know that such a thing there was and such a person there is Thus they knew it then § 27. From whence I note 1. That in those dayes it was not necessary to the being of true faith that any supernatural testimony of the Spirit or any other sort of proof than their very senses and reason should acquaint them with those matters of fact which they were eye-witnesses of 2. That credible report or history was then the means for any one that saw not a matter of fact to know as much as they that saw it 3. That therefore this is now the way also of producing faith Some things we have yet sight and sense for as that such Bibles and such Churches are existent that such holy effects this Doctrine hath upon the soul which we see in others by the fruits and after feel in our selves The rest we must know by History Tradition or Report § 28. And in the reception of these historical passages note further 1. That humane belief is here a naturally necessary means to acquaint us with the matter of our Divine belief 2. That there are various By all this it is easie to gather whether a Pastor may do his work per alium Saith Grotius de Im● p. 290 291. Nam illud Quod quis per alium facit per se facere videtur ad eas duntaxat pertinet actiones quarum causa efficiens proxima à jure indefinita est Yet people should labour after such maturity and stedfastness that they may be able to stand if their Pastors be dead or taken from them by persecution yea or forsake the truth themselves Victor U●i● saith of the people in Africk when their Pastors were banished and others might not be ordained in their steads Inter haec tamen Dei populus in fide consistens ut examina apum cereas aedificantia man●iones crescendo melleis fidei claviculis firmabatur Quanto magis affligebantur tanto magis multiplicabantur Victor p. 382. degrees of this belief and some need more of it by far than others according to the various degrees of their ignorance As he that cannot read himself must know by humane belief in great part that the Preacher readeth truly or that such words indeed are in the Gospel as he saith are there But a literate person may know this by his eye sight and not take it upon trust So he that understandeth not Hebrew and Greek must take it upon trust that the Scripture is truly translated But another that understandeth those Tongues may see it with his eyes 3. History being the proper means to know matters of fact that are done in times past and out of our
those doctrines against which no Minister shall be allowed to preach and according to which he is to instruct the people 3. To be a testimony to all neighbour or forreign Churches in an heterodox contentious and suspicious age how we understand the Scriptures for the Confuting of scandals and unjust suspicions and the maintaining Communion in Faith and Charity and Doctrine Quest. 144. May not the Subscribing of the whole Scriptures serve turn for all the foresaid ends without Creeds Catechisms or Confessions Answ. BY Subscribing to the Scriptures you mean either Generally and Implicitly that All in them is True and Good though perhaps you know not what is in it Or else particularly and explicitly that every point in it is by you both understood and believed to be true In the first sense it is not sufficient to salvation For this Implicite faith hath really no act in it but a Belief that all that God faith is true which is only the formal object of faith and is no more than to believe that there is a God for a Lyar is not a God And this he may do who never believed in Christ or a word of Scripture as not taking it to be Gods Word yea that will not believe that God forbiddeth his beastly life Infidels ordinarily go thus far In the second sense of an explicite or particular Actual belief the belief of the whole Scriture is enough indeed and more than any man living can attain to No man understandeth all the Scripture Therefore that which no man hath is not to be exacted of all men or any man in order to Ministration or Communion While 1. No man can subscribe to any one Translation of the Bible that it is not faulty being the work of defectible man 2. And few have such acquaintance with the H●brew and Chaldee and Greek as to be able to say that they understand the Original Languages perfectly 2. And no man that understands the words doth perfectly understand the matter It followeth that no man is to be forced or urged to subscribe to all things in the Scriptures as particularly understood by him with an Explicite faith And an Implicite is not half enough 2. The true Mean therefore is the antient way 1. To select the Essentials for all Christians to be believed particularly and explicitely 2. To Collect certain of the most needful Integrals which Teachers shall not preach against 3. And for all men moreover to profess in General that they implicitely believe all which they can discern to be the holy Canonical Scripture and that all is true which is the Word of God Forbearing each other even about the number of Canonical Books and Texts And it is the great wisdom and mercy of God which hath so ordered it that the Scripture shall 1 Cor. 8. 1 2. 13. 1 2 3 4. 1 Cor. 8. 3. Rom. 8. 28. have enough to exercise the strongest and yet that the weakest may be ignorant of the meaning of a thousand sentences without danger of damnation so they do but understand the Marrow or Essentials and labour faithfully to increase in the knowledge of the rest Quest. 145. May not a man be saved that believeth all the Essentials of Religion as Coming to him by Verbal Tradition and not as contained in the holy Scriptures which perhaps he never knew Answ. 1. HE that believeth shall be saved which way ever he cometh by his belief So be it it be sound as to the object and act that is If it contain all the Essentials and they be predominantly Believed Loved and practised 2. The Scriptures being the Records of Christs Doctrine delivered by Himself his Spirit and his Apostles it is the Office of Ministers and the duty of all Instructers to open these Scriptures to those they teach and to deliver particulars upon the authority of these Inspired sealed Records which contain them 3. They that thus receive particular truths from a Teacher explaining the Scripture to them do receive them in a subordination to the Scripture Materially and as to the Teachers part though not formally and as to their own part And though the Scripture authority being not understood by them be not the formal object of their faith but only Gods authority in general 4. They that are ignorant of the being of the Scripture have a great disadvantage to their faith 5. Yet we cannot say but it may be the case of thousands to be saved by the Gospel delivered by Tradition without resolving their faith into the authority of the Scriptures For 1. This was the case of all the Christians as to the New Testament who lived before it was written And there are several Articles of the Creed now necessary which the Old Testament doth not reveal Matth. 16. 16. Rom. 10. 9 10 13 14 15. 2. This may be the case of thousands in Ignorant Countreys where the Bible being rare is to most unknown 3. This may be the case of thousands of Children who are taught their Creed and Catechism before they understand what the Bible is 4. This may be the case of thousands among the Papists where some perverse Priests do keep not only the Reading but the Knowledge of the Scriptures from the people for fear lest they should be taught to resolve their faith into it and do teach them only the Articles of Faith and Catechism as known by the Churches tradition alone Quest. 146. Is the Scripture fit for all Christians to read being so obscure Answ. 1. THe Essentials and points necessary to salvation are plain 2. We are frequently and vehemently commanded to delight in it and meditate John 5. 39. Psalm 1. 2. Deut. 6. 11. Psal. 19. 7 8 9 10 11. 2 Tim. 3. 15. Psal. 119. 98 105. 133. 148. Acts 17. 11. Acts 8. in it day and night to search it to teach it our very children speaking of it at home and abroad lying down and rising up and to write it on the posts of our houses and on our doors c. 3. It is suited to the necessity and understanding of the meanest to give light to the simple and to make the very foolish wise 4. The antient Fathers and Christians were all of this mind 5. All the Christian Churches of the world have been used to Read it openly to all even to the simplest And if they may Hear it they may Read the same words which they hear 6. God blessed the ignorant Ethiopian Eunuch when he found him Reading the Scriptures though he knew not the sense of what he read and sent him Philip to instruct him and convert him 7. Timothy was educated in the knowledge of the Scriptures in his childhood 2 Tim. 3. 15. Rom. 15. 4. Mat. 12. 24. 8. That which is written to and for all men may be read by all that can But the Scripture was written to and for all c. Object But there are many things in it hard to be understood Answ.
upon an absolute obedience to your Commanders in all things consistent with Direct 6. your obedience to God and the Soveraign power Disobedience is no where more intolerable than in an Army Where it is often unfit for a Souldier to know the reason of his commands and where self-conceitedness and wilfulness is inconsistent with their common safety and the lives of many may pay for the disobedience of a few If you cannot obey undertake not to be Souldiers § 7. Direct 7. Especially detest all murmurings mutinies sidings and rebellions For these are to Direct 7. an Army like violent Feavors to the body or like a Fire in a City and would make an Army the greatest plague to their King and Countrey How many Emperours Kings and Commanders have lost their dignities and lives by the fury of mutinous enraged Souldiers And how many Kingdoms and other Common-wealths have been thus overthrown and betrayed into the enemies hands And how many thousands and millions of Souldiers have thereby lost their lives In your discontents and murmuring passions you may quickly set the house on fire over your heads and when you feel your misery repent too late Passion may begin that which fruitless penitence must end The leaders of mutinies may easily have many fair pretences to enflame an Army into discontents They may aggravate many seeming injuries they may represent their Commanders as odious and unworthy by putting an ill appearance on their actions But in the end it will appear that it was their own advancement which they secretly aimed at and the destruction of the present Government or the Souldiers ruine which is like to be the effect A mutinous Army is likest Hell of any thing I know among Gods creatures and next Hell there is scarce a worse place for their Commanders to be in § 8. Direct 8. Use not your power or liberty to the robbing or oppressing or injuring of any Though Direct 8. military Thieves and oppressors may scape the Gallows more than others they shall come as soon to Hell as any If you plunder and spoil and tyrannize over the poor people under pretence o● supplying your own wants there is a God in Heaven that will hear their cryes and will avenge them speedily though you seem to go scot-free for a time You may take a pride in domineering over others and making your selves Lords by violence of other mens estates and when you see none that will question you for it you may take that which you have most mind of But the poor and oppressed have a just defender who hath a severer punishment for you than the Sword or Gallows And though he take you not in the very fact and his sentence is not presently executed yet be certain of it that your day is coming § 9. Direct 9. Take heed lest custome and the frequency of Gods judgements do harden your hearts Direct 9. into a reprobate stupidity Many a man that formerly by the sight of a Corpse or the groanings of the sick was awakened to serious thoughts of his latter end when he cometh into an Army and hath often seen the dead lye scattered on the earth and hath often scaped death himself groweth utterly senseless and taketh blockishness to be valour and custome maketh such warnings to be of no effect You can scarce name a more strange and lamentable proof of the madding and hardning nature of sin That men should be most senseless when they are in the greatest danger And least fear God when they are among his dreadfullest judgements And least hear his voice when his calls are lowdest And live as if they should not dye when they look death so often in the face and see so many dead before them That they should be most regardless of their endless life when they are nearest it and sense it self hath such notable advantage to tell them of all this What a monstrous kind of sottish stupidity is this Think whither the soul is gone when you see the carkass on the earth and think where your own must be for ever § 10. Direct 10. Take heed of falling into drunkenness and sensuality though Temptations and Liberty Direct 10. be never so great It is too common with Souldiers because they are oft put to thirst and wants to think they may lawfully powre it in when they come at it without moderation or restraint Even as many poor men take a gluttonous meal for no sin because they have so many dayes of hunger so is it with such Souldiers in their drink till drunkenness first have wounded their consciences and afterwards grow common till it have debauched and seared them and then they have drowned Religion and Reason and are turned sottish miserable bruites § 11. Direct 11. If necessity deprive you of the benefits of Gods publick or stated Worship see that Direct 11. you labour to repair that loss by double diligence in those spiritual duties which yet you have opportunity for If you must march or watch on the Lords Dayes redeem your other time the more If you cannot hear Sermons be not without some profitable Book and often read it And let your meditations be holy and your discourses edifying For these you have opportunities if you have hearts § 12. Direct 12. Take heed that Command or Successes do not puff you up and make you over-value Direct 12. your selves and ineline you to rebell against your Governours What lamentable effects hath England lately seen of this A silly half-witted Souldier if he be but made a Captain doth carry it as if he were wiser than the Preacher or the Judge As if his dignity had added to his wit When Victories have laid the power at mens feet and they think now that none is able to controll them how few are they that abuse not such success to their own undoing and are not conquered by the pride of their own hearts when they have conquered others How ordinarily do they mis-expound the Providence of God and think he hath put the Government into their hands because they have the strength and from the Histories of former successful Rebels and the fairness of their opportunity encourage themselves to Rebell and think they do but what 's their duty How easily do they justifie themselves in those unlawful deeds which impartial by-standers see the evil of And how easily do they quiet their consciences when they have but power enough to raise up flatterers and to stop the mouth of wholsome reprehension How lamentably doth prosperity make them drunk and sudden advancement overturn their brains and their greatness together with ther pride and fury preserveth them from the accesses of wisdom and of sober men that so their malady may have no remedy And there like a drunken man they rave a while and speak big words and lay about them and glory in the honour of a pestilence that they can kill men and we must not speak to them
Superiour must be reproved by a private inferiour And when it is done it must be done with great submission and respect An angry pievish person must be dealt with tenderly as you handle thorns but a duller sottish person must be more earnestly and warmly dealt with So also a greater sin must be roughly handled or with greater detestation than a less § 6. Direct 6. Take a fit season Not when a man is in drink or passion or among others Direct 6. where the disgrace will vex and harden him but in secret between him and you if his conversion be your end § 7. Direct 7. Do all in love and tender pity If you convince not the hearer that you do it in unfeigned Direct 7. love you must usually expect to lose your labour because you make not advantage of 2 Thess. 3. 15. 2 Cor. 2. 4. Gal. ● 1. 2 Tim. 2. 25. 1 Thess 5 13. his self-love to promote your exhortations Therefore the exhorting way should be more frequent than the reproving way For reproof disgraceth and exasperateth when the same thing contrived into an exhortation may prevail § 8. Direct 8. Therefore be as much or more in shewing the Good which you would draw them to as Direct 8. the evil which you would turn them from For they are never savingly converted till they are won to the Love of God and Holiness Therefore the opening of the riches of the Gospel and the Love of God and the Joyes of Heaven must be the greatest part of your treaty with a sinner § 9. Direct 9. And labour so to help him to a true understanding of the nature of Religion that Direct 9. he may perceive that it is not only a necessary but a pleasant thing All love delights It is the slander and misrepresentation of godliness by the Devil the World and the Flesh which maketh mistaken sinners shun it The way to convert them and win their hearts to it is to make them know how good and pleasant it is and to confute those calumnies § 10. Direct 10. Yet alwayes insert the remembrance of death and judgement and of Hell For Direct 10. the drowsie mind hath need to be awakened and Love worketh best when fear subserveth it It s hard to procure a serious audience and consideration of things from hardened hearts if the sight of death and Hell do not help to make them serious Danger which must be escaped must be known and thought on These things put weight and power into your speech § 11. Direct 11. Do all as with Divine authority and therefore have ready some plain Texts Direct 11. of Scripture for the duty and against the sin you speak of Shew them where God himself hath Col. 3. 16. said it § 12. Direct 12. Seasonable expostulations putting themselves to judge themselves in their answer Direct 12. hath a convincing and engaging force As when you shew them Scripture ask them Is not this the Word of God Do you not believe that its true Do you think he that wrote this knoweth not better than you or I c. § 13. Direct 13. Put them on speedy practice and prudently engage them to it by their promise Direct 13. As if you speak to a drunkard draw him to promise you to come no more at least of so long time into an Ale-house Or not drink Ale or Wine but by the consent of his Wife or some sober houshold friend who may watch over him Engage the voluptuous the unchaste and gamester to forsake the company which ensnareth them Engage the ungodly to read the Scripture to frequent good company to pray morning and night with a Book or without as they are best able Their promise may bring them to such a present change of practice as may prepare for more § 14. Direct 14. If you know any near you who are much fitter than your selves and liker to Direct 14. prevail procure them to attempt that which you cannot do succesifully At least when sinners perceive Ezek. 33. 34. Gal. 6. 1. Tit. 2. 4. that it is not only one mans opinion it may somewhat move them to reverence the reproof § 15. Direct 15. Put some good Book into their hands which is fittest to the work which you would Direct 15. have done And get them to promise you seriously to read it over and consider it As if it be for the conversion of a careless sinner Mr. Whateleys or Mr. Swinnocks Treatise of Regeneration or some other Treatise of Repentance and Conversion If it be for one that is prejudiced against a strict Religious life Mr. Allens Vindication of Godliness If it be an idle voluptuous person who wasteth pretious Time in Playes or needless recreations in gaming or an idle life Mr. Whateleys Sermon called The Redemption of Time If it be a prayerless person Dr. Prestons Saints Daily Exercise If it be a drunkard Mr. Harris Drunkards Cup And for many reigning particular sins a Book called Solomons Prescription against the Plague For directions in the daily practice of Godliness The Practice of Piety or Mr. Thomas Gouges Directions c. Such Books may speak more pertinently than you can and be as constant food to their sober thoughts and so may further what you have begun § 16. Direct 16. When you cannot speak or where your speaking prevaileth not mourn for them Direct 16. and earnestly pray for their recovery A sad countenance of Nehemiah remembered Artaxerxes of his Ezek. 9. 4. 2 Pet. 2. 7 8. duty A sigh or a tear for a miserable sinner may move his heart when exhortation will not He hath a heart of stone who will have no sense of his condition when he seeth another weeping for him § 17. Quest. But it is alwayes a duty to reprove or exhort a sinner How shall I know when it is Quest. my duty and when it is not Answ. It is no duty in any of these cases following 1. In general When you have sufficient reason to judge that it will do more harm than good and will not attain its proper end For God hath not appointed us to do hurt under pretence of duty It is no Means which doth cross the end which it should attain As prayer and preaching may be a sin when they are like to cross their proper end so also may reproof be 2. Therefore it must not be used when it apparently hindereth a greater good As we may not pray or preach when we should be quenching a fire in the Town or saving a mans life So when reproof doth exclude some greater duty or benefit it is unseasonable and no duty at that time Christ alloweth us to forbear the casting of pearls before Swine or giving that which is holy to Prov. 9. 7. 8. Matth 7. 6. Dogs because of these two Reasons forementioned It is no means to the contemptuous and they will turn again and all to
that greater measure is but his smallest measure and he himself is capable of increase to the last And so great a measure at first is as rare as his greater measure at last in his full growth is rare and scarce to be expected now § 4. And if God should give a great measure of Holiness at first to any now as possibly he may yet their measure of gifts is never great at first unless they had acquired or received them before conversion If Grace find a man of great parts and understanding which by study and other helps he had attained before no wonder if that man when his parts are sanctified be able in knowledge the first day For he had it before though he had not a heart to use it But if Grace find a man ignorant unlearned and of mean abilities he must not expect to be suddenly lifted up to great understanding and high degrees of knowledge by Grace For this knowledge is not given now by sudden infusion as Gifts were extraordinarily in the Primitive Church You need no other proof of this but experience to stop the mouth of any gain-sayer Look about you and observe whether those that are men of knowledge did obtain it by infusion in a moment Or whether they did not obtain it by diligent study by slow degrees Though I know God blesseth some mens studies more than others Name one man that ever was brought to great understanding but by Means and Labour and slow d●grees Or that knoweth any Truth in Nature or Divinity but what he read or heard or studied for 〈…〉 e result of what he read or heard The person that is proudest of his knowledge must confess that 〈…〉 me to it in this way himself § 5. But you 'l ask What then is the Illumination of the Spirit and enlightening the mind which the Scripture ascribeth to the H●ly Ghost Hath not our understanding need of the Spirit for light as well as the Heart ●r Will f●r Li●e Answ. Yes no doubt and it is a great and wonderful mercy and I 'l tell you what it is 1. The Holy Spirit by immediate inspiration revealed to the Apostles the doctrine of Christ and caused them i●●allibly to indite the Scriptures But this is not that way of ordinary illumination now 2. The Holy Spirit assisteth us in our hearing reading and studying the Scriptures that we may come by diligence to the true understanding of it but doth not give us that understanding without hearing reading or study Faith cometh by hearing Rom. 10. It blesseth the use of means to us but blesseth us not in the neglect of means 3. The Holy Spirit doth open the eyes and heart of a sinner who hath heard and notionally understood the substance of the Gospel that he may know that piercingly and effectually and practically which before he knew but notionally and uneffectually so that the knowledge of the same truth is now become powerfull and as it were of another kind And this is the Spirits sanctifying of the mind and principal work of saving illumination Not by causing us to know any thing of God or Christ or Heaven without means But by opening the heart that through the means it may take in that knowledge deeply which others have but notionally and in a dead opinion and by making our knowledge clear and quick and powerful to affect the heart and rule the life 4. The Holy Spirit sanctifieth all that notional knowledge which men had before their renovation All their learning and parts are now made subservient to Christ and to the right End and turned into their proper channell 5. And the Holy Ghost doth by sanctifying the heart possess it with such a Love to God and Heaven and Holiness and Truth as is a wonderful advantage to us in our studies for the attaining of further knowledge Experience telleth us how great a help it is to knowledge to have a constant love delight and desire to the thing which we would know All these wayes the Spirit is the ●nlightner of believers The not observing this Direction will have direful effects which I will name that you may see the necessity of avoiding them § 6. 1. If you imagine that you are presently men of great understanding and abilities and holiness T 〈…〉 r of 〈◊〉 ●● ●●ur young 〈◊〉 o● 〈◊〉 while you are young beginners and but new born babes you are entring into the s●are and condemnation of the Devil even into the odious sin of Pride yea a Pride of those spiritual gifts which are most c●ntr●ry to Pride yea and a Pride of that which you have not which is most foolish Pride Mark the words of Paul when he forbids to choose a young beginner in Religion to the Ministry 1 Tim. 3. 6. Not a N●vice that is a young raw Christian lest being lifted up or besotted with pride he fall into the condemnation of the Devil Why are young beginners more in danger of this than Qui d●s●ipulum ●udem clatum habet 〈◊〉 ventum adver●●●●●mine navigat Se●pentem nutrit aco●itum ●●colit hostem do●● P●● arch Dial. 41. li. 2. other Christians One would think their Infancy should be conscious of its own infirmity But Paul knew what he said It is 1. Partly because the suddenness of their change coming out of darkness into a light which they never saw before doth amaze them and transport them and make them think they are almost in Heaven and that there is not much more to be attained Like the Beggar that had an hundred pound given him having never seen the hundredth part before imagined that he had as much money as the King 2. And it is partly because they have not knowledge enough to know how many things there are that yet they are ignorant of They never heard of the Scripture-difficulties and the knots in School-divinity nor the hard cases of Conscience Whereas one seven years painful studies will tell them of many hundred difficulties which they never saw and forty or fifty years study more will clothe them with shame and humility in the sense of their lamentable darkness 3. And it is also because the Devil doth with greatest industry lay this Net to entrap young Converts it being the way in which he hath the greatest hope 2. Your hasty conceits of your own goodness or ability will make you presumptuous of your own strength and so to venture upon dangerous temptations which is the way to ruine You will think you are not so ignorant but you may venture into the company of Papists or any Hereticks or deceivers or read their Books or be present at their Worship And I confess you may scape but it may be otherwise and God may leave you to shew you all that was in your hearts as it is said of Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32. 31 25 26. 3. And your overvaluing your first grace will make you too secure when your souls have need of holy
awfulness and care to work out your salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. and to serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear as knowing that he is a consuming fire Heb. 12. 28 29. And security is the fore-runner of a fall 4. It will make you neglect the due labour and patience in the use of means for further knowledge and increase of grace while you think you are so well already And so you will be worse than those B●atus est ●ui vel in ●enectute contigei● ut ●●p●entiam ver●●que opiniones consequi possi● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that are ever learning and never come to any ripe knowledge For you will think you are fit to be Teachers when you have need to be taught that which you will not submit to learn And then When for the time ye ought to have been Teachers you will have need to be catechized or taught again which be the first principles of the Oracles of God as having need of milk and not of strong meat Mark here how the Holy Ghost maketh Time and exercise necessary to such growth as must enable you to be Teachers Heb. 5. 24. 13 14. Therefore he addeth But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil Mark here how wisdom and strength is to be expected 5. This over-hasty conceit of your own ability will tempt you to run into Controversies and matters that you are not fit for and so divert you from necessary and seasonable studies 6. It will make you over confident of all your own opinions and stiff in all your own conceits Too like him Prov. 14. 16. The fool rageth and is confident How many and many a time have I heard a man that understood not what he talkt off and could scarce speak sense to plead for his opinion so confidently as to scorn and pitty the wisest contradictor when his ignorance and phrenetick confidence and rage did make him a real object of pitty to men of ordinary understandings There is a kind of madness in this disease that will not leave you wit enough to know that you are mad 6. It will make you also very censorious of others This ignorant Pride will make you think other mens knowledge to be ignorance if thou be not just of your fond opinions and other mens graces to be none if they be not of your mind and way None are so ready as such to censure those that are better than themselves or that they have no acquaintance with as being but Civil moral men or being erroneous or deluded It 's a very loathsome thing to hear an ignorant self-conceited fellow to talk of those that are an hundred times wiser and much better than himself as Magisterially with a proud compassion or contempt as if he were indeed the wise man that knoweth not what he saith 7. And it will make you rebellious against your Governours and Teachers and utterly unteachable Even when a Teacher is impatient with his peoples unpro●●tableness they oft think high●est of their knowledge and they are proud while their dulness tireth out their Guides For Quo quisque est solertior ingeniosior hoc docet iracundius laboriosius Quod enim ipse celeriter arripuit id quum tarde percipi videt discruciatur Ci●●●●o p●o Ro. as despising those that should instruct and rule you You will think your selves wiser than your Teachers while you are but in the lowest form It is such that Iames speaks to James 3. 1. My brethren be not many Masters or Teachers knowing that ye shall receive the greater condemnation And that whole Chapter well worth your studying is spoke to such 8. And thus it will entangle you in Heretical Opinions to which there is no greater preparatory than pride possessing half-witted young beginners in Religion 9. And so it will make you troublers of the Church contending unpeaceably for that which you understand not 10. And it tendeth to hypocrisie making you give thanks for that which you never had as puffed up with a knowledge that is not enough to keep you humble and wanting the Charity which would edifie your selves and others 1 Co● 8. 1. 11. And it tendeth to delude you in point of assurance of salvation taking your own over-valuing self-esteem for true assurance which is not ordinarily to be expected till grace be come to greater strength 12. Lastly It tendeth to corrupt your apprehensions of the nature of Christianity it self while you will judge of it in others according to your own over-valued measure When if you knew it as it is in the Heart and Practice of the sober wise humble charitable peaceable mortified heavenly believer you would see that it hath a higher glory than any that 's manifested by you § 7. I have named to you all these sad effects of overvaluing your beginnings in Religion that as you love your souls you may avoid them I take it to be a matter of exceeding great moment for your safety and perseverance that while you are Infants in Grace you know your self to be such that you may keep your form and learn first the lessons that must first be learnt and walk humbly with your God and obey those that are over you in the Lord Heb. 13. 7. 17. 1 Thess. 1. 5 12. and may wait on the Spirit in the use of means and may not rejoyce the Tempter by corrupting all that you have received and imitating him in falling from your state of hope Direct 6. BE not discouraged at the difficulties and oppositions which will rise up before you when you begin resolvedly to walk with God § 1. As discouragements keep off multitudes from Religion so they are great temptations to many Against discouragements in tryalls young beginners to turn back and as the Israelites in the Wilderness ready to wish themselves again in Aegypt Three sorts of discouragements arise before them 1. Some from the nature of the work 2. Some from Gods tryals 3. And some from the malice of the Devil and his instruments or all these § 2. 1. It cannot be expected but that Infants and weaklings should think a little burden heavy and an easie work or journey to be wearisome young beginners are ordinarily puzzled and at a loss in every Trade or Art or Science Young Scholars have a far harder task than when they are once well entered Learning is wondrous hard and unpleasant to them at the first But when they are once well entered the knowledge of one thing helps another and they go on with ease So a young Convert that hath been bred up in ignorance and never used to Prayer or to Heavenly discourse nor to hear or joyn with any that did will think it strange and hard at first And those that were used to take their pleasure and fulfill the desires of the flesh and perhaps to swear and talk filthily or
never yet found cause to repent or be ashamed of it Remember that the fruit of sin was bitter and that when your eyes were opened and you saw your shame you would fain have fled from the face of God and that then it appeared another thing to you then it seemed in the committing Remember what gr●ans and hearts grief it hath cost you and into what fears it brought you of the wrath of G●d 〈…〉 how long it was before your broken bones were healed and what it cost both Christ and you And th●s will make the very name and first approach of ●in to cast you into a preventing fear A B●ast that hath once fallen into a Gulf or Quick-sand will hardly be driven into the same again A F●sh that was once s●●icken and scap't the hook will fear and fly from it the next time A Bird that hath once escap t the S●are o● the Tallons of the Hawk is afterwards afraid of the fight or noise of such a thing Remember where you fell and what it cost you and what you scaped which it might have cost you and you will obey more accurately hereafter § 19. Direct 6. Remember that this is your day of tryal and what depends upon your accurate 〈…〉 obedience God will not cr●wn untryed Servants Satan is purposely suffered to tempt you to try whether you will be true to God or not All the hope that his malice hath of undoing you for ever ●●nsisteth in his hope to make you disobedient to God Methinks these considerations should awaken you to the most watchful and diligent obedience If you were told before hand that a Thief or ●●t purse had undertaken to rob you and would use all his cunning and industry to do it you would then watch more carefully than at another time If you were in a Race to run for your lives you w●uld not go then in your ordinary pace Doth God tell you before that he will try your obedience by temptation and as you stand or fall you shall speed for ever and will not this keep you watchful and obedient § 20. Direct 7. Avoid those tempting and deluding objects which are still enti●ing your hearts from Direct 7. your obedience and avoid that diverting crowd and noise of company or worldly business which drowns the v●i●e of Gods commands If God call you into a life of great temptations he can bring you safely through them all But if you rush into it wilfully you may soon find your own disability to resist It is dangerous to be under strong and importunate temptations lest the stream should bear us down But especially to be long under them lest we be weary of resisting They that are long solicited do too often yield at last It is hard to be alwayes in a clear and ready and resolute frame Few men have their wits much less their graces alwayes at hand in a readiness to use And if the Thief come when yo● are dropt asleep you may be robbed before you can awake The constant drawings of temptation do ofttimes aba●e the habit of obedience and diminish our hatred of sin and holy resolutions by ●low ins●nsible degrees before we yield to commit the act And the mind that will be kept in full subjecti●n must not be so diverted in a crowd of distracting company or business as to have no time to th●●k on the motives of his obedience This withdrawing of the fewel may put out the fire § 21. Direct 8. If you are unavoidably cast upon strong Temptation take the Allarm and put on all Direct 8. t●e 〈◊〉 of God and call up your souls to watchfulness and resolution remembring that you are now a●●ng your enemies and must resist as for your lives Take every temptation in its naked proper sense ●s coming from the Devil and tending to your damnation by enticing your hearts from your subjection unto God suppose you saw the Devil himself in his instruments offering you the bait of preferment o● honour or riches or fleshly lusts or sports or of delightful meats or drinks to tempt you to excess and suppose you heard him say to you plainly Take this for thy salvation Sell me for this thy God and thy soul and thy everlasting hopes Commit this sin that thou maist fall under the judgement of God and be tormented in Hell with me for ever Do this to please thy flesh that thou maist displease thy God and grieve thy Saviour I cannot draw thee to Hell but by drawing thee to sin And I cannot make thee sin against thy will nor undo thee but by thy own consent and doing Therefore I pray the● consent and do it thy self and let me have thy company in torments This is the naked meaning of every temptation Suppose therefore you saw and heard all this with what detestation then would you reject it With what horror would you fly from the most enticing bait If a Robber would entice you out of your way and company with flattering words that you might fall into the hands of his companions if you knew all his meaning and design before hand would you be enticed after him Watch therefore and Resolve when you know before hand the Design of the Devil and what he intendeth in every temptation § 22. Direct 9. Be m●st suspicious fearful and watchful about that which your flesh doth most desire Direct 9. ●● finds the greatest pleasure in Not that you should deny your bodies all delight in the mercies of God If the body have none the mind will have the less Mercy must be differenced from punishment and must be valued and relished as mercy Meer Natural pleasing of the senses is in it self no m●ral good or evil A holy improvement of lawful pleasure is a daily duty Inordinate pleasure is a sin All is inordinate which tendeth more to corrupt the soul by enticing it to sin and turning it from God than to ●it and dispose it for God and his service and preserve it from sinning But still remember it is not sorrow but Delight that draweth away the soul from God and is the fleshes interest which it sets up against him Many have sinned in sorrows and discontents but none ever sinned f●r sorrows and discontents Their discontents and sorrows are not taken up and loved for themselves but are the effects of their love to some pleasure and content which is denyed them or taken from them Therefore though all your bodily pleasures are not sin yet seeing nothing but the pleasures of the flesh and carnal mind is the End of sinners and the Devils great and chiefest bait and this only causeth mens perdition you have great reason to be most afraid of that which is most pleasing to your flesh and to the mind as it is corrupt and carnal escape the delusions of fleshly pleasure and you escape damnation You have far more cause to be afraid of prosperity than of adversity of riches than of poverty
above in a Heavenly conversation and then your souls will be alwayes Direct 11. in the light and as in the sight of God and taken up with those businesses and delights which put them out of rellish with the baits of sin § 43. Direct 12. Let Christian watchfulness be your daily work And cherish a preserving though Direct 12. not a distracting and discouraging fear § 44. Direct 13. Take heed of the first approaches and beginnings of sin Oh how great a matter Direct 13. doth a little of this fire kindle And if you fall rise quickly by sound repentance whatever it may cost you § 45. Direct 14. Make Gods Word your only Rule and labour diligently to understand it Direct 14. § 46. Direct 15. In doubtful Cases do not easily depart from the unanimous judgement of the generality of the most wise and godly of all ages § 47. Direct 16. And in doubtful Cases be not passionate or rash but proceed deliberately and Direct 15. prove things well before you fasten on them § 48. Direct 17. Be acquainted with your bodily temperature and what sin it most enclineth you Direct 16. to and what sin also your Calling or converse doth lay you most open to that there your watch may be the stricter Of all which I shall speak more fully under the next Grand Direction § 49. Direct 18. Keep in a life of holy Order such as God hath appointed you to walk in For Direct 18. there is no preservation for straglers that keep not Rank and File but forsake the order which God commandeth them And this order lyeth principally in these points 1. That you keep in Union with the Universal Church Separate not from Christs body upon any pretence whatever With the Church as Regenerate hold spiritual communion in faith love and holiness with the Church as Congregate and Visible hold outward Communion in Profession and Worship 2. If you are not Teachers live under your particular faithful Pastors as obedient Disciples of Christ. 3. Let the most godly if possible be your familiars 4. Be laborious in an outward Calling § 50. Direct 19. Turn all Gods Providences whether of prosperity or adversity against your sins If Direct 19. he give you health and wealth remember he thereby obligeth you to obedience and calls for special service from you If he afflict you remember that it is sin that he is offended at and searcheth after and therefore take it as his Physick and see that you hinder not but help on its work that it may purge away your sin § 51. Direct 20. Wait patiently on Christ till he have finished the cure which will not be till this Direct ●● trying life be finished Persevere in attendance on his Spirit and Means for he will come in season and will not tarry Hos. 6. 3. Then shall we know if we follow on to know the Lord His going forth is prepared as the morning and he shall come unto us as the rain as the later and former rain upon the earth Though you have oft said There is no healing Jer. 14. 19. He will heal your back-slidings and love you freely Hos. 14. 4. Unto you that fear his name shall the Sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings Mal. 4. 2. And blessed are all they that wait for him Isa. 30. 18. Thus I have given such Directions as may help for Humiliation under sin or hatred of it and deliverance from it DIRECT IX Spend all your dayes in a skilful vigilant resolute and valiant War against the Flesh Gr. Dir. 9. Our Warfare under Christ against the Tempter the World and the Devil as those that have covenanted to follow Christ the Captain of your Salvation § 1. THe Flesh is the End of Temptation for all is to please it Rom. 13. 14. and therefore is S●e my Trea 〈…〉 the greatest enemy The world is the Matter of Temptation And the Devil is the first mover or efficient of it and this is the Trinity of enemies to Christ and us which we renounce in Baptism and must constantly resist Of the world and flesh I shall speak Chap. 4. Here I shall open the Methods of the Devil And first I shall prepare your understanding by opening some presupposed truths § 2. 1. It is presupposed that there is a Devil He that believeth not this doth prove it to others by shewing how grosly the Devil can befool him Apparitions Witchcrafts and Temptations are full proofs of it to sense besides what Scripture saith § 3. 2. It is supposed that he is the deadly enemy of Christ and us He was once an Angel and ●f the Temptations to hinder Conversion see before Chap. 1. sell from his first estate by sin and a world of evil Spirits with him and it is probable his envy against mankind might be the greater as knowing that we were made to succeed him and his followers in their state of glory For Christ saith that we shall be equal with the Angels Luke 20. 36. He shewed his enmity to man in our innocency and by his temptation caused our fall and misery But a●ter the fall God put an enmity into the nature of man against Devils as a merciful preservative against temptation so that as the whole nature of man abhorreth the nature of Serpents so doth the soul abhor and dread the diabolical nature And therefore so far as the Devil is seen in a temptation now so far it is frustrated till the enmity in nature be overcome by his deceits And this help nature hath against temptation which it seems our nature had not before the fall as not knowing the malice of the Devil against us § 3. There is a Natural enmity to the Devil himself put into all the womans natural seed But the moral enmity against his sinful temptations and works is put only into the spiritual seed by the Holy Ghost except what remnants are in the light of Nature I will be brief of all this and the next having spoken of them more largely in my Treatise against Infidelity Part. 3. page 190. § 13 c. § 4. The Devils names do tell us what he is In the Old Testament he is called 1. The Serpent Gen. 3. 2. The Hebrew word translated Devils in Levit. 17. 7. and Isa. 13. 21. signifieth Vi● Pools Sy 〈…〉 Levit. 1. 77 I●●hese later 〈…〉 th the 〈◊〉 disposition which Satan as a Tempter causeth and so he is known by it as his Off-spring ●●i●y as Satyrs are described and sometime Hee-goats Because in such shapes he oft appeareth 3. He is called Satan Zech. 3. 1. 4. An evil Spirit 1 Sam. 18. 10. 5. A lying Spirit 1 Kings 22. 22. For he is a lyar and the Father of it John 8. 44. 6. His off-spring is called A Spirit of uncleanness Zech. 13. 2. 7. And he or his Spawn is called A Spirit of fornication Hos. 4. 12. that is
Heaven and audience with God and is dearly beloved by him in Christ. Thou seest in flesh a companion of Angels and one that hath the Divine Nature and must shortly be above the Stars in glory and must be with Christ and must love and magnifie God for ever And is not the amiableness of God apparent in such mercy bestowed upon sinful man And should we not now begin to admire him in his Saints and glorifie him in believers who will c●me with thousands of his Angels to be glorified and admired in them at the last 2 Thess. 1. 10. O the abundant deliverances preservations provisions encouragements which all his servants receive ●●●● God! Who ever saw the just forsak●n even while they think themselves forsaken For the L●rd 〈…〉 h jud●●ment and forsaketh not his Saints they are preserved f●r ever The Law of his God is in ●●s heart none of his steps shall slide Mark the perfect man and behold the upright for the end ●● that man is peace Psal. 37. 25 28 31 37. Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints Ps●lm 116. 15. Ye that love the Lord hate evil he preserveth the souls of his Saints be delivereth them out of the hand of the wicked Light is sowen for the righteous and gladness for the upri●ht in heart Psal. 97. 10 11. O love the Lord all his Saints for the Lord preserveth the faithful and plentifully rewardeth the pr●ud doer Psal. 31. 23. § 32. Direct 11. Insist not so much on your desires after vision as to undervalue the lower apprehensions Direct 11. of Faith but love God by the way of Faith as in order to the Love of Intuition We are exceeding ●pt to be over-desirous of sight and to take nothing as an object fit to affect us which sense perceiveth not When we have the surest evidence of the truth of things unseen it hardly satisfieth us unless we may see or feel And hereupon our Love to God is hindered while we think of him as if he were not or take the apprehensions of faith as if they were uncertain and little differed from a dream Yea it proveth the ground of most dangerous temptations to Infidelity it self While we take that knowl●dge which we have of God in the way of Faith the Love and Communion which is exercised thereby to be as nothing we are next tempted to think that there is no true knowledge of God and communion with him to be attained And when we have been searching and striving long and find that we can reach no more we are tempted to think that the soul o● man is made but as the beasts for present things and is uncapable of those higher things which are revealed in the Gospel and that if there were indeed a life to come and man were made to enjoy his God we should get nearer to him than we are and know him more and love him better But is it nothing O presumptuous soul to see God in a Glass in order to a nearer sight Is it nothing to have the Heavenly Ierusalem described and promised to thee unless thou see it and possess it Wilt thou travel to no place but what thou seest all the way Wouldst thou have no difference betwixt Earth and Heaven What canst thou have more in Heaven than immediate intuition Wouldst thou have no life of tryal in the obedience of faith before the life of fruition and reward Or canst thou think that a life of sight and sense is fit for tryal and preparation to shew who is meet for the rewarding life Unthankful soul Compare thy state with that of bruits Is it nothing for thee to know thy Maker in the Works of his Creation and Providence and in the revelations of grace and the belief of promised immortality unless thou presently see him in his glory When these thy f●llow creatures know him not at all Compare thy self now with thy self as heretofore in the dayes of thy ignorance and carnality Hadst thou then any such knowledge of God as thou now undervaluest or any such communion with him as thou now accountest next to none When the Light first shined in thine eyes and thou hadst first experience of the knowledge of God thou thoughtst it something and rejoycedst in the light If then thou couldst have suddenly attain●d but to so much as thou hast now attained wouldst thou have called it Nothing Would it not have seemed a greater treasure to thee than to have known both the Indies as thine own O be not unthankful for the little which thou hast received when God might have shut thee out in that darkness which the greatest part of the world lyeth in and have left thee to thy self to have desired no higher knowledge than such as may feed thy fansie and pride and lust Art thou so far drowned in flesh and sense as to take Intellectual apprehensions for dreams unless thy sense may see and feel Wilt thou take thy soul thy self for nothing because thou art not to be seen or felt Shall no Subjects honour and obey their King but they that have seen his Court and him Desire the fullest and the nearest sight the purest and the strongest Love and desire and spare not the li●e where all this will be had But take heed of being too hasty with God and unthankful for the mercies of the way Know better the difference betwixt thy travail and thy home And know what is fit for passengers to expect Humbly submit to an obedient waiting in a life of faith And make much of the Testament of Christ till thou be at age to possess the inheritance Thou must live and love and run and fight and conquer and suffer by saith if ever thou wilt come to ●●●● and to possess the Crown § 33. Direct 12. It is a powerful means to kindle the Love of God in a believer to foresee by faith Direct 12. the glory of Heaven and what God will be there to his Saints for ever And thus to behold God in his Read 〈…〉 his Prognosti●on Si in ●●●●lis s●de 〈…〉 ha● s●●vatur ●ae●editus 〈…〉 quaedam t●pida p●oserun● aliqui putantes eam se percipere in te●rena Jerusalem Mille ann's existimant esse deli●iarum praemia proprietat● rec●ptur●● Qui i●●rrogandi sunt quomodo astruant delicias corporales dum dicatur hanc haeredita●em nec corrum ●i posse nec marcesce●e Didym● Alexand. i. Petr. 1. c●●●● Mill●nar GLORY is the use of GRACE Though the manner of knowing him thus by faith be far short of what we there expect yet it is the same God and glory that now we believe which then we must more openly behold And therefore as that Apprehension of Love will unconceivably excel the highest which can be here attained so the fore-thoughts of that doth excell all other arguments and means to affect us here and will raise us as high as means can raise us The greatest
me Denyal of our grace may seem to be humility but it tendeth to extinguish Love and Gratitude § 57. But you 'l say I must avoid soul-delusion and Pharisaical ostentation on the other side and few reach assurance how then should we keep up the Love of God Answ. 1. Though I am not come to the point of Trying and Discerning Grace I shall give you this much help in the way because it is so useful to the exercises of Love 1. If you have not Enjoying delighting Love yet try whether you have not Desiring seeking Love Love appeareth as truly in de●i●●ng and seeking Good as in delighting in it Poor men shew their Love of the world by Desiring and seeking it as much as rich men do in delighting in it What is it that you most desire and seek 2. Or if this be so weak that you scarce discern it do you not find a mourning and lamenting Love You shew that you loved your money by mourning when you lose it and that you loved your friend by grieving for his death as well as by delighting in him while he lived If you heartily lament it as your greatest unhappiness and loss when you think that God doth cast you off and that you are void of Grac● and cannot serve and honour him as you would this shews you are not void of Love 3. If you feel not that you Love him do you feel that you would fain Love him and that you Love to Love him If you do so it is a sign that you do Love him When you do not only desire to find such an Evidence of salvation in you but when you desire Love it self and Love to Love God Had you not rather have a heart to Love him perfectly than to have all the riches in the world Had you not rather live in the Love of God if you could reach it than to live in any earthly pleasure If so be sure he hath your hearts The Will is the Love and the Heart If God have your Will he hath your Heart and Love 4. What hath your Hearts if he have them not Is there any thing that you prefer and seek before him and that you had rather have than him Can you be content without him and let him go in exchange for any earthly pleasure If not it is a sign he hath your Hearts You love him sa●ingly if you set more by nothing else than by him 5. Do you love his holy Image in his word Do you delight and meditate in his Law Psalm 1. 2. Is it in your hearts Psalm 40. 8. Or do you pray Incline my heart unto thy Testimonies Psalm 119. 36. If you love Gods Image in his word the wisdom and holiness of it you love God 6. Do you love his Image on his Children If you Love them for their heavenly wisdom and holiness you so far Love God He that loveth the Candle for its light doth love the light it self and the sun He that loveth the wise and holy for their wisdom and holiness doth love wisdom and holiness it self The word and the saints being more in the reach of our sensible apprehensions than God himself is we ordinarily feel our Love to them more sensibly than our Love to God when indeed it is God in his word and servants that we love 1 Iohn 3. 14. Psalm 15. 4. 7. Though for want of Assurance you feel not the delights of Love have you not a heart that would delight in it more than in all the riches of the world if you could but get assurance of your interest Would it not comfort you more than any thing if you could be sure he Loveth you and could perfectly Love him and obey him If so it is not for want of Love that you delight not in him but for want of Assurance So that if God have thy heart either in a delighting Love or a seeking and desiring or a lamenting mourning Love he will not despise it or reject it He is ●igh to them that be of a broken heart Psalm 34. 18. A broken and contrite heart is his sacrifice which he will not despise Psalm 51. 17. The good Lord will have mercy on every one that prepareth their hearts to seek him though they do it not according to the preparation of the sanctuary 2 Cor. 30. 18 19. By these Evidences you may discern the sincerity of Love in small degrees and so you may make Love the occasion of more Love by discerning that Goodness of God which is manifested to you in the least § 38. 2. But suppose you cannot yet attain assurance Neglect not to improve that Goodness and Mercy of God which he revealeth to you in the state that you are in Love him but as Infinite Goodness should be loved who so loved the world as to give his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life John 3. 16. Love him as the most blessed merciful God who made you and all things and hath given to the world an universal pardon on condition of their penitent acceptance and offereth them everlasting life and all this purchased by the blood of Christ Love him as one that offereth you reconciliation and intreateth you to be saved and as one that delighteth not in the death of the wicked but rather that they turn and live and as one that would have all men to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth though he will save none but the penitent that do acknowledge the truth And when you love him sincerely on these accounts you will have the evidence of his special Love to you § 39. Direct 16. Improve thy sense of natural and friendly love to raise thee to the Love of God Direct 16. When thou seest or feelest what Love a parent hath to children and a Husband to a wife or a Wife to a Husband or faithful friends to one another think then What Love do I owe to God O how inconsiderable is the Loveliness of a child a wife a friend the best of Creatures in comparison of the Loveliness of God Unworthy soul Canst thou love a drop of Goodness in thy friend And canst thou not Love the Ocean of Goodness in thy God Is a spark in the creature more amiable than the fire that kindled it Thou canst Love thy friend for all his blemishes his ignorance his passions and manifold imperfections And canst thou not love thy God who hath none of these nor any thing to discourage or damp thy love Thou lovest and deservedly lovest thy friend because he loveth thee and deals friendly with thee But O how much greater is the Love of God Did ever friend Love thee as he hath loved thee Did ever friend do for thee as he hath done He gave thee thy being thy daily safety and all the mercies of thy life He gave thee his Son his Spirit and his Grace He pardoned thy sins and
a name above every name that at the name of Iesus every knee should bow of things in Heaven and things in Earth and things under the Earth and that every tongue should confess that Iesus is Christ to the glory of God the Father Phil. 2. 9 10 11. Pray therefore that the God of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of glory may give you the Spirit of Wisdom and Revelation in the acknowledgement of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightned that ye may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints and what is the exceeding greatness of his power to usward who believe according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead and set him at his right hand in the coelestials f●r above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but in that which is to come and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be Head over all things to his Church Eph. 1. 17 c. The Father hath glorified his name in his Son Iohn 12. 28. 13. 31 32. 14. 13. 17. 1. § 6. Direct 4. Behold God as the End of the whole Creation and intend him as the End of all the Direct 4. actions of thy life You honour him not as God if you practically esteem him not as your ultimate end even the Pleasing of his will and the honouring him in the world If any thing else be made your chiefest end you honour it before him and make a God of it § 7. Direct 5. Answer all his blessed attributes with suitable affections as I have directed in my Direct 5. Treatise of the Knowledge of God and here briefly Dir. 4. and his Relations to us with the duty which they command subjection Love c. as I have opened in the foregoing Directions We glorifie him in our hearts when the Image of his Attributes is there received § 8. Direct 6. Behold him by faith as allways present with you And then every Attribute will Direct 6. the more affect you and you will not admit dishonourable thoughts of him Pray to him as if you saw him and you will speak to him with reverence Speak of him as if you saw him and you dare not take his name in vain nor talk of God with a common frame of mind nor in a common manner as of common things By faith Moses forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King for he endured as seeing him that is invisible Heb. 11. 27. God is contemned by them that think they are behind his back § 9. Direct 7. Think of him as in Heaven where he is revealed in Glory to the blessed and magnified Direct 7. by their high everlasting Praise Nothing so much helpeth us to Glorifie God in our minds as by faith to behold him where he is most Glorious The very reading over the description of the Glory of the New Ierusalem Rev. 21. 22. will much affect a believing mind with a sense of the Gloriousness of God Suppose with Stephen we saw Heaven opened and the ancient of daies the Great Jehovah Gloriously illustrating the City of God and Jesus in Glory at his right hand and the innumerable army of Glorifyed Spirits before his throne Praysing and magnifying him with the highest admirations and joyfullest acclamations that creatures are capable of would it not raise us to some of the same admirations The soul that by faith is much above doth most Glorifie God as being neerest to his Glory § 10. Direct 8. Foresee by faith the coming of Christ and the day of the universal Iudgement when Direct 8. Christ shall come in flaming fire with thousands of his holy Angels to be Glorified in his Saints and admired in all them that do believe 2 Thes. 1. 10. § 11. Direct 9. Abhor all Doctrines which blaspheam or dishonour the name of God and would Direct 9. blemish and hide the Glory of his Majesty I give you this rule for your own preservation and not in imitation of uncharitable firebrands and dividers of the Church to exercise your pride and imperious humour in condemning all men to whose opinions you can maliciously affix a blasphemous consequence which either followeth but in your own imagination or is not acknowledged but hated by those on whom you do affix it Let it suffice you to detest false doctrines without detesting the persons that you imagine guilty of them who profess to believe the contrary truth as stedfastly as you your selves § 12. Direct 10. Take heed of sinking into flesh and earth and being diverted by things sensible from Direct 10. the daily contemplation of the Glory of God If your belly become your God and you mind earthly things and are set upon the honours or profits or pleasures of the world when your conversation should be in Heaven you will be glorying in your shame when you should be admiring the Glory of your Maker Phil. 3. 18 19 20. and you will have so much to do on earth that you will find no leisure because you have no hearts to look up seriously to God Directions for Glorifying God with our tongues in his Praises § 13. Direct 1. Conceive of this duty of Praising God according to its superlative excellencies as being Direct 11. the highest service that the tongue of men or Angels can perform To Bless or Praise or Magnifie How great a duty Praising God is God is not to make him Greater or better or happier than he is but to declare and extol his Greatness Goodness and felicity And that your hearts may be inflamed to this excellent work I will here shew you how great and necessary how high and acceptable a work it is § 14. 1. It is the giving to God his chiefest due A speaking of him as he is And when we have Christianus est homo dicens faci●●●●●●grata diabolo o●nans 〈…〉 am D●● ●●●●oris vitae à salutis suae B●cho●●●● spoken the highest how far fall we short of the due expression of his glorious perfections O how great Praise doth that Allmightiness deserve which created and conserveth all the world and over-ruleth all the sons of men and is able to do whatsoever he will Great is the Lord and Greatly to be praised and his Greatness is unsearchable One Generation shall praise his works to another and declare his mighty acts I will speak of the glorious honour of thy Majesty and of thy wondrous works And men shall speak of the might of thy terrible acts and I will declare thy Greatness Psalm 145. 3 4 5. What Praise doth that knowledge deserve which extendeth to all things that are or were or ever shall be and that wisdom which ordereth all the world He knoweth every thought of man
such a reward But he had rather have that reward of it self without Holiness 62. He may also Love and desire Christ as a means conceited to such an end And he may use much Religious duty to that end And he may forbear such sins as that End can spare lest they deprive him of his hoped-for felicity Yea he may suffer much to prevent an endless suffering 63. As Nature necessarily Loveth self and self-felicity God and the Devil do both make great use of this natural pondus or necessitating Principle for their several ends The Devil saith Thou Lovest Pleasure therefore take it and make provision for it God saith Thou lovest felicity and fearest misery I and my Love are the true felicity and adhering to sensual pleasure depriveth thee of better and is the beginning of thy misery and will bring thee unto worse 64. God commandeth man nothing that is not for his own good and forbiddeth him nothing which is not directly or indirectly to his hurt And therefore engageth self-love on his side for every act of our obedience 65. Yet this good of our own is not the highest nor all the good which God intendeth and we must intend but it is subordinate unto the greater good fore-mentioned 66. As a carnal man may have opinionative uneffectual convictions that God and his Love are his spiritual felicity better than sensual yea and that God is his ultimate End above his own felicity it self so the sanctifying of man consisteth in bringing up these convictions to be truly effectual and practical to renew and rule the Mind and Will and Life 67. Whether this be done by first knowing God as the Beginning and End above our selves and then knowing effectually that he is mans felicity or whether self-love be first excited to Love him as our own felicity and next we be carryed up to Love him for himself as our highest End it cometh all to one when the work is done And we cannot prove that God tyeth himself constantly to either of these methods alone But experience telleth us that the later is the usual way and that as Nature so Grace beginneth with the smallest seed and groweth upward towards perfection And that self-love and desire of endless felicity and fear of endless misery are the first notable effects or changes on a repenting soul. 68. And indeed the state of sin lyeth both in mans fall from GOD to SELF and in the mistake of his own felicity preferring even for Himself a sensible good before a spiritual and the Creature before the Creator And therefore he must be rectified in both 69. And the hypocrites uneffectual Love to God and Holiness is much discovered in this that as he loveth dead Saints and their Images and Holy-dayes because they trouble him not so he best loveth opinionatively and least hateth practically the Saints in Heaven and the Holiness that is far from him and God as he conceiveth of him as one that is in Heaven to glorifie men But he hateth practically though not professedly the God that would make him holy and deprive him of all his sinful pleasures or condemn him for them And he can better like Holiness in his Pastor neighbour or child than in Himself 70. Therefore sincerity much consisteth in the Love of self-holiness but not as for self alone but as carrying self and all to God 71. As the Sun-beams do without any interception reach the eye and by them without interception our sight ascendeth and extendeth to the Sun so Gods communicated Goodness and Glorious Revelation extend through and by all inferiour mediums to our understandings and our wills And our Knowledge and Love ascendeth and extendeth through all and by all again to God And as it were unnatural for the eye illuminated by the Sun to see it self only or to see the mediate creatures and not to see the Light and Sun by which it seeth nay it doth least see it self so is it unnatural for the soul to understand and Love it self alone which it little understandeth and should Love with self-denyal and the Creatures only and not to Love God by whom we know and Love the creature 72. It is possible to Love God and Holiness and Heaven as a conceited state and means of our sensual felicity and escape of pain and misery But to Love God as the true felicity of the Intellectual nature and as our spiritual Rest and yet to Love him only or chiefly for our selves and not rather for Himself as our highest end implyeth a contradiction The same I say of Holiness as Loved only for our selves The evidence whereof is plain in that it is Essential to God to be not only better than our selves and every creature but also to be the Ultimate End of all things to which they should tend in all their perfections And it is Essential to Holiness to be the souls devotion of it self to God as God and not only to God as our felicity Therefore to Love God only or chiefly for our selves is to make him only a means to our felicity and not our chief End and it is to make our selves Better and so more Amiable than God that is to be Gods our selves 73. This is much of the sense of the Controversie between the Epicureans and the sober Philosophers as is to be seen in Cicero c. The sober Philosophers said that Virtue was to be loved for it self more than for Pleasure Because if Pleasure as such be better than vertue as such than all sensual Pleasure would be better than Vertue as such The Epicureans said that not all pleasure but the pleasure of Vertue was the chief good as Torquatus his words in Cicero shew And if it had been first proved that a mans self is his just ultimate end as the finis cui or the personal end than it would be a hard question whether the Epicureans were not in the right as to the finis cujus or the Real end which indeed is but a medium to the personal cui But when it is most certain that no mans person is to be his own ultimate end as cui but God and then the Universe and societies of the world as beforesaid it is then easie to prove that the sober Philosophers were in the right and that no mans Pleasure is his ultimate end finis cujus Because no mans Pleasure is either such a demonstration of the Divine perfection as Vertue is as such nor yet doth it so much conduce to the common good of societies or mankind and so to the pleasing and glorifying of God And this way Cicero might easily have made good his cause against the Epicureans 74. Though no man indeed Love God as God who Loveth him not as Better than himself and therefore Loveth him not better and as his absolutely ultimate end and though no man desire Holiness indeed who desireth not to be devoted absolutely to God before and above himself yet is it very common to
whatsoever the will desireth is either as an End or as a Means That which is not desired as a Means to some Higher end is desired as our ultimate end it ●●●● in that act But God only is mans lawful ultimate end He is a good Christian that remote●● and ultimately referreth all the creatures unto God and eateth and drinketh c. more to fit him for Gods service than to please the flesh But it is much more than this which the Creature was appointed for even for a present communication of the sense of the goodness of God unto the heart As the Musician that touchem but the Keys of his Harpsical or Organs causeth that sweet harmonious sound which we hear from the strings that are touched within so God ordained the order beauty sweetness c. of the Creature to touch the sense with such a pleasure as should suddenly touch the inward sense with an answerable delight in God who is the giver of the life of every Creature But a as where is the Christian that doth thus eat and drink and thus take pleasure in all his Mercies When contrarily our hearts are commonly so diverted from God by the Creature that so much delight as we find in it so much we lose of our delight in God yea of our regard and remembrance of him 2. Because it is against an express command 1 Cor. 10. 31. whether ye eat or drink or whatever ye do do all to the glory of God 3. Because else we shall take Gods creatures in vain and cast them away in waste 4. And we shall lose our own Benefit to which the Creature or Pleasure should be improved 5. And we shall silence Reason when it should direct and we shall suspend the Government of the will and give the government so long to the flesh or bruitish appetite For that faculty ruleth who object is our end These reasons clearly prove it a sin to terminate our desires in any act of flesh-pleasing as our end and look no higher when it is a matter of moral choice and deliberation 11. But the sin here is not simply that the flesh is pleased but that the duty of referring it to a higher end is omitted so that it is a sin of omission unless we proceed to refer hetter things as a means to it 12. The intending of Gods Glory or our spiritual good cannot be distinctly and sensibly re-acted in every particular pleasure we take or bit we eat or thing we use But a sincere Habitual Intention well laid at first in the Heart will serve to the right use of many particular Means As a man purposeth at his first setting out to what place he meaneth to go and afterward goeth on though at every step he think not sensibly of his end so he that devoteth himself to God and in general designeth all to his Glory and the furtherance of his duty and salvation will carry on small particulars to that ●nd by a secret unobserved action of the soul performed at the same time with other actions which only are observed He that intendeth but his health in eating and drinking is not remembring his health at every bit and cup and yet hath such a Habit of care and caution as will unobservedly keep him in his way and help him to fit the means unto the end As the accustomed hand of a Musicion can play a Lesson on his Lute while he thinks of something else so can a resolved Christian faithfully do such accustomed things as eating and drinking and cloathing him and labouring in his calling to the good ends which he first actually and still habitually resolved on without a distinct remembrance and observable intention of that end 13. The body must be kept in that condition as far as we can that is fittest for the service of the soul As you keep your Horse neither so pampered as to be unruly nor yet so low as to disable him for travel But all that health and strength which makes it not unruly maketh it the more serviceable It is not the Life of the Body but the Health and the Cheerfulness which maketh it fit for duty And so much pleasing of the flesh as tendeth but to its Health and Cheerfulness is a duty where it can be done without greater hurt the other way A heavy body is but a dull and heavy servant to the mind yea a great impediment to the soul in duty and a great temptation to many sins as sickly and melancholy persons and many dull and phlegmatick people know by sad experience It is as great a duty to help the Body to its due alacrity and fitness for service as it is to tame Yet it 's true which Petrarch saith li. 2. Dial. 3. Valetudo infirma Comes injucunda est sed fidelis quae te crebro vellicet iter signet conditionis admoneat Optimum in periculis monitor fidus Et i. 1. Dial 3. Multis periculosa pestilens sanitus est qui tutius aegrotassent Nusquam pejus quam in sano corpore aeger animus habitat Et Dial. 4. Quamvis mala quamvis pessima aegritudo videatur optabile malum tamen quod mali remedium sit majoris it and bring it under by fasting and sackcloth when it is proud or lustfull And they that think fasting on certain days in a formal manner is acceptable to God when the state of the body is not helpt but rather hurt and hindered by it as if it were a thing required for it self do mistakingly offer a Sacrifice to God which he requireth not and take him to be an enemy to man that desireth his pain and grief when it tendeth not to his good A Mower that hath a good Sythe will do more in a day than another that hath a bad one can do in two every Workman knoweth the benefit of having his Tools in order And every Traveller knows the difference between a cheerful and a tired Horse And they that have tryed health and sickness know what a help it is in every work of God to have a healthful body and cheerful spirits and an alacrity and promptitude to obey the mind When the sights of prospects and beauteous buildings and fields and countrys or the use of walks or gardens do tend to raise the soul to holy contemplation to admire the Creator and to think of the glory of the life to come as Bernard used his pleasant walks this Delight is lawful if not a duty where it may be had So when Musick doth cheer the mind and fit it for thanks and praise to God And when the Rest of the Body and the use of your best Apparel and moderate feasting on the Lords Day and other days of Thanksgiving do promote the spiritual service of the day they are good and profitable but to those that are more hindered by fulness even abstinence on such days is best So that the use of the body must be judged
this to encrease and multiply your pleasure Is not health and friends and food and convenient habitation much sweeter as the ●ruit of the Love of God and the fore-tastes of everlasting mercies and as our helps to Heaven and as the means to spiritual comfort than of themselves alone All your mercies are from God He would take n●ne from you but sanctifie the● and give you more § 26. Direct 5. See that Reason keep up its authority as the Governour of sense and appetite And Direct 5. so take an accoun● what●ver the Appetite would have of the Ends and Reasons of the thing and to what it doth c●●duce Take nothing and do nothing meerly because the sense or appetite would have it but because you have Reason so ●● do and to gratifie the appetite Else you will deal as Brutes if Reason be laid by in humane acts § 27. Direct 6. Go to the G●ave and see there the end of fleshly pleasure and what is all that it Direct 6. will do for you at the last One would think i● should cure the mad desire of plenty and pleasure to see where all our wealth and mirth and sport and pleasure must be buryed at last § 28. Direct 7. Lastly be still sensible that flesh is the grand Enemy of your souls and flesh-pleasing Direct 7. the greatest hinderance of your salvation The Devils enmity and the worlds are both but subordinate to this of the Flesh For its Pleasure is the End and the world and Satans temptations are both but the means to attain it Besides the malignity opened before consider 1. How contrary a voluptuous life is to the blessed example of our Lord and of his servant Paul The enmity of the Flesh. and all the Apostles Paul tamed his body and brought it into subjection left having preached to others himself should be a castaway 1 Cor. 9. 27. And all that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof Gal. 5. 24. This was signified in the antient manner of baptizing and so is still by Baptism it self when they went over head in the water and then rose out of it to signifie that they were dead and buried with Christ Rom. 6. 3 4. and rose with him to newness of life This is called our being Baptized into his death And seems the plain sense of 1 Cor. 15. 29. of being Baptized for the dead that is for dead or to shew that we are dead to the world and must dye in the world but shall rise again to the Kingdom of Christ both of Grace and Glory 2. Sensuality sheweth that there is no true belief of the life to come and proveth so far as it prevaileth the absence of all grace 3. It is a home-bred continual traytor to the soul A continual tempter and nurse of all sin The great withdrawer of the heart from God and the common cause of Apostacy it self It still fighteth against the Spirit Gal. 5. 17. And is seeking advantage from all our Liberties Gal. 5. 13. 2 Pet. 2. 10. 4. It turneth all our outward mercies into sin and strengthneth itself against God by his own benefits 5. It is the great cause of our afflictions For God will not spare that Idol which is set up against him Flesh rebelleth and flesh shall suffer 6. And when it hath brought affliction it is most impatient under it and maketh it seem intollerable A flesh-pleaser thinks he is undone when affliction depriveth him of his pleasure 7. Lastly It exceedingly unfitteth men for Death For then Flesh must be cast into the dust and all its pleasure be at an end O doleful day to those that had their good things here and their portion in this life When all is gone that ever they valued and sought and all the true felicity lost which they brutishly contemned If you would joyfully then bear the dissolution and ruine of your flesh O master it and mortifie it now Seek not the ease and pleasure of a little walking breathing clay when you should be seeking and fore-tasting the everlasting pleasure Here lyeth your danger and your work Strive more against your own flesh than against all your Enemies in Earth and Hell If you be saved from this you are saved from them all Christ suffered in the flesh to tell you that it is not pampering but suffering that your flesh must expect if you will reign with him CHAP. V. Further Subordinate Directions for the next great duties of Religion necessary See the Directions how to spend every day Tom. 2. Chap. 17. to the right performance of the former Directions for REDEEMING or well improving TIME § 1. TIME being Mans opportunity for all those works for which he liveth and which his Creator doth expect from him and on which his endless life dependeth the REDEEMING or well improving of it must needs be of most high importance to him And therefore it is well made by holy Paul the great mark to distinguish the Wise from fools Ephes. 5. 15 16. See then that ye walk circumspectly not as fools but as wise Redeeming the time So Col. 4. 5. I shall therefore give you special Directions for it when I have first opened the nature of the duty to you and told you what is meant by Time and what by Redeeming it § 2. Time in its most common acception is taken generally for all that space of this present life What 's meant by Time which is our opportunity for all the works of life and the measure of them Time is often taken more strictly for some special Opportunity which is fitted to a special work which we call the season or the fittest time In both these senses Time must be Redeemed § 3. As every work hath its season which must be taken Eccles. 3. 1. So have the greatest works What are the special seasons of duty assigned us for God and our souls some special seasons besides our common time 1. Some Times God hath fitted by Nature for his service So the Time of Youth and health and strength is specially fit for holy work 2. Some Time is made specially fit by Gods Institution As the Lords Day above all other dayes 3. Some Time is made fit by Governours appointment as the hour of publick Meeting for Gods Worship and Lecture-dayes and the hour for family-worship which every Master of a family may appoint to his own houshold 4. Some Time is made fit by the temper of mens Bodies The Morning hours are best to most and to some rather the Evening and to all the Time when the Body is freest from pain and disabling weaknesses 5. Some Time is made fit by the course of our necessary natural or civil business as the day is fitter than the sleeping time of the night and as that hour is the fittest wherein our other imployments will least disturb us 6. Some Time is made fit by a special showr of Mercy publick
a continual su●vitv affording still fresh delights though thou meditate on him a thousand years or to all eternity Thou maist better say that the Ocean hath not water enough for thee to swim in or that the Earth hath not room enough for thee to tread upon than that there is not matter enough in God for thy longest Meditations and most delighting satisfying thoughts The blessed Angels and Saints in Heaven will find enough in God alone to employ their minds to all eternity O horrid darkness and atheism that yet remaineth on our hearts that we should want matter for our thoughts to keep them from feeding upon air or filth or want matter for our delight to keep our mind● from begging it at the creatures door or hungring for the husks that feed the Swine when we have the Infinite God Omnipotent Omniscient most good and bountiful our life and hope and happiness to think on with delight § 3. Direct 3. If you have but an eye of faith to see the things of the unseen world as revealed Direct 3. in the sacred Word you cannot want matter to employ your thoughts Scripture is the glass in which 3. The world to come you may see the other world There you may see the Antient of Dayes the Eternal Majesty shining in his Glory for the felicitating of holy glorified Spirits There you may see the humane nature advanced above Angels and enjoying the highest Glory next to the uncreated Majesty and Christ reigning as the King of all the world and all the Angels of God obeying honouring and worshipping him you may see him sending his Angels on his gracious messages to the lowest members of his body the little ones of his flock on earth you may see him interceding for all his Saints and procuring their peace and entertainment with the Father and preparing for their reception when they pass into those mansions and welcoming them one by one as they pass hence There you may see the glorious celestial society attending admiring extolling worshipping the Great Creator the Gracious Redeemer and the Eternal Spirit with uncessant glorious and harmonious Praise you may see them burning in the delicious flames of holy Love drawn out by the Vision of the face of God and by the streams of Love which he continually powreth out upon them you may see the magnetick attraction of the uncreated Love and the felicitating closure of the attracted Love of holy Spirits thus united unto God by Christ and feasting everlastingly upon him you may see the ravishments of joy and the unspeakable pleasures which all these blessed Spirits have in this transporting Sight and Love and Praise You may see the extasies of Ioy which possess the souls of those that are newly passed from the Body and escaped the sins and miseries of this world and find there such sudden ravishing entertainment unspeakably beyond their former expectations conceivings or belief You may see there with what wonder what pity what lothing and detestation those holy glorified souls look down upon earth on the negligence contempt sensuality and profaneness of the dreaming and distracted world You may see there what you shall be for ever if you be the holy ones of Christ and where you must dwell and what you must do and what you shall enjoy All this you may so know by sound believing as to be carried to it as sincerely as if your eyes had seen it Heb. 11. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 7. And yet can your thoughts be idle or carnal or worldly and sinful for want of work Are your meditations dry and barren for want of matter to employ them Doth the fire of Love or other holy affections go out for want of fuell to feed it Is not Heaven and Eternity spatious enough for your minds to expatiate in Is not such a world as that sufficient for you to study with fresh and delectable variety of discoveries from day to day or that which is more delightful than variety Would you have more matter or higher and more excellent matter or sweeter and more pleasant matter or matter which doth nearlier concern your selves Get that faith which all that shall be saved Live by which makes things absent as operative in some measure as if they were present and that which will be as if it now were and that which is unseen as if it were now open to your eyes and then your Thoughts will want neither matter to work upon nor altogether an actuating excitation If this were not enough I might tell you what Faith can see also in Hell which is not unworthy See in my Tract on Heb 11. 1. called The Life of Faith of your serious Thoughts What work is there what direful complaints and lamentations what self-tormentings and what sense of Gods displeasure and for what But I will wholly pass this by that you may see there is delightful work enough for your thoughts and that I set you no unpleasant task § 4. Direct 4. Get but the Love of God well kindled in your Heart and it will find employment Direct 4. even the most high and sweet employment for your Thoughts Your selves shall be the Judges whether 4. The work of Love your Love doth not for the most part rule your thoughts assigning them their work and directing them when and how long to think on it See but how a lustful lover is carried after a beloved silly piece of flesh Their thoughts will so easily and so constantly run after it that they need no spur Mark in what a stream it carrieth them how it feedeth and quickneth their invention and elevateth an ordinary fancy into a Poetical and passionate strain What abundance of matter can a Lover find in the narrow compass of a dirty Corpse for his thoughts to work on night and day And will not the Love of God then much more fill and feast your thoughts How easily can the Love of money find matter for the thoughts of the worldling from one year to another It s easie to think of any thing which you love O what a happy spring of Meditation is a rooted predominant Love of God Love him strongly and you cannot forget him You will then see him in every thing that meets you and hear him in every one that speaketh to you If you miss him or have offended him you will think on him with grief If you taste of his Love you will think of him with Delight If you have but hope you will think of him with Desire and your Minds will be taken up in seeking him and in understanding and using the Means by which you may come to enjoy him Love is ingenious and full and quick and active and resolute It is valiant and patient and exceeding industrious and delighteth to encounter difficulties and to appear in labours and to shew it self in advantageous sufferings and therefore it maketh the mind in which it reigneth exceeding busie and findeth the
of the Letters Syllables and Words without understanding the sense and end yet those that with holy and illuminated minds come thither to behold the footsteps of the Great and Wise and bountiful Creator may find not only matter to employ but to profit and delight their thoughts They may be rapt up by the things that are seen into the Sacred admirations reverence Love and praise of the glorious Maker of all who is unseen And thus to the sanctified all things will be sanctified and the study of common things will be to them Divine and Holy § 11. Direct 11. Be not a stranger to or neglectful disregarder of the wonders of providence in Direct 11. Gods administrations in the world and thou wilt find store of matter for thy thoughts The dreadfulness 11. Providence about the World of Iudgements the delightfulness of mercies the mysteriousness of all will be matter of daily search and admiration to thee Think of the strange preservations of the Church of a people hated by all the world how such a flock of Lambs is kept in safety among so many ravenous Wolves Think of Gods sharp afflictions of his offending people of his severe consuming judgements exercised sometimes upon the wicked when he means to set up here and there a monument of his justice for the warning of presumptuous sinners Go see how the wicked are deceived by befooling pleasures Prov. 1. 52. and how the prosperity of fools destroyeth them how they flourish to day as a green Bay-tree ●●●●●7 or as the flower of the field and then go into the Sanctuary and see their end how to morrow they are cut down and withered and the place of their abode doth know them no more Go see how God delighteth to abase the proud and to scatter them in the imagination of their hearts to put down the mighty from their seats and to exalt them of low degree to fill the hungry with good things and to send the Rich empty away Luk. 1. 51 52 53. How great are his signs and how mighty are his wonders His Kingdom is an everlasting Kingdom Dan. 4. 3. He ruleth in the Kingdom of men and giveth it to whomsoever he will vers 26. 32. For wisdom and might are his and he changeth the times and the seasons he removeth Kings and setteth up Kings he giveth wisdom to the wise and knowledge to them that know understanding Dan. 2. 20 21 22. He revealeth the deep and secret things he knoweth what is in darkness and the light dwelleth with him The Lord is known Ps●● 1●5 ●● S●e P●●●● 1●4 1●5 1●6 107. 122. 124 135. 136. 145. 1●7 1●8 14● by the judgements which he executeth the wicked is snared in the work of his own hand Psal. 9. 16. M●rk how the upright are afflicted daily and how the feet of violence trample on them and yet how they rejoyce and adhere to that God who doth afflict them and pitty and pray for their miserable persecutors and oppressors and how all things do work together for their good Rom. 8. 28. Wonderful are all the works of God sought out of them that have pleasure therein Psal. 111. 2. The Histories of former ages and the observation of the present may shew thee a world of matter for thy thoughts § 12. Direct 12. Understand all the lineaments and beauty of Gods Image upon a holy soul the Direct 12. excellency and use of every Grace and the harmony of all and thou wilt have store of profitable matter 12. Gods Image for thy thoughts Know the nature of every Grace and the place and order of it and the office use and exercise of it and the means and motives the opposites dangers and preservatives of it Know it as Gods Image and see and Love thy Maker and Redeemer and Regenerator in it Know how God loveth it and how useful it is to our serving and honouring him in the world and how deformed and vile a thing the soul is that is without it Know well what Faith is what wisdom and prudence are what Repentance and humility and mortification are what Hope and fear and desire and obedience and meekness and temperance and sobriety and chastity and contentation and justice and self-denyal are especially know the nature and force of Love to God and to his servants and to neighbours and to enemies Know what a holy resignation and devotedness to God is and what is watchfulness diligence zeal fortitude and perseverance patience submission and peace Know what the worth and use the helps and hinderances of all these are and then your Thoughts will not be idle § 13. Direct 13. If thou be not a stranger to the spirit of grace or a neglecter of his daily motions Direct 13. and perswasions and operations on thy heart the attendance and improvement of them will keep thy thoughts 13. The daily mo●ions of the spirit from rusty idleness and a vagrant course It is not a small matter to be daily entertaining so noble a guest and daily observing the offers and motions of so great a benefactor and daily receiving the gifts of so bountiful a Lord and daily accepting his necessary helps and daily obeying the saving precepts of so great and beneficent a God! If you know how insufficient you are without him to will or to do to perform or to think or purpose any good and that all your sufficiency is of him If you knew that it is the great skill and diligence requisite in all that will Sail successfully to the desired Phil. 2. 13. 2 Cor. 3. 5. 2 Cor. 12. 9. Land of Rest to know the Winds of the Spirits helps and to set all your Sails to the right improvement of them and to bestir you while such gales continue you would find greater work than wandering for your thoughts § 14. Direct 14. Be not ignorant or neglective of that frame and course of holy duty to God and Direct 14. man in which all your lives should be employed and you cannot want matter to employ your thoughts 14. All our Duty to God and Man upon Your pulse and breath and natural motions will hold on whether you think of them or not But so will not moral holy motion for that must be rational and voluntary You have all the powers of soul and body to exercise either upon God or for God You must know him fear him love him obey him trust him worship him pray to him praise him give thanks to him bewail your sins and hear his Word and reverently use his Name and Day And is not the understanding and learning how to do all this and the seasonable serious practice of it all sufficient to keep the Thoughts from idleness O what a deal of work doth a serious Christian find for his thoughts about some one of these about praying aright or hearing or receiving the Sacrament
use And though I cannot say that Grace immediately maketh any alteration on the senses yet mediately it doth by altering the mind and so the Will and then the imagination and so the sensitive appetite and so in exercise the sense it self We see that Temperance and Chastity do not only restrain but take down the appetite from the rage and violence which before it had Not the natural appetite but the sensitive so far as it is sinful § 2. The Sanctifying and Government of the senses and their appetite lyeth in two parts First In guarding them against the entrance of sin and Secondly In using them to be the entrance of good into the soul. But this latter is so high a work that too few are skilled in it and few can well perform the other § 3. Direct 1. The principal part of the work is about the superiour faculties to get a well informed Direct 1. judgement and a holy and confirmed will and not about the sense it self Reason is dethroned by sin and the will is left unguided and unguarded to the rapes of sensual violence Reason must be restored before sense will be well governed for what else must be their immediate Governour It is no sin in Brutes to live by sense because they have not Reason to rule it And in man it is ruled more or less as reason is more or less restored When Reason is only cleared about things temporal as in men of worldly wisdom there sense will be mastered and ruled as to such temporal ends as far as they require it But where Reason is sanctified there sense is ruled to the ends of sanctification according to the measure of grace § 4. Direct 2. It is only the high eternal things of God and our salvation objectively setled in the Direct 2. mind and will and become as it were connatural to them and made our Ruling End and interest that can suffice to a true and holy Government of the senses Lower things may muzzle them and make men seem temperate and sober as far as their honour and wealth and health and life require it But this is but stopping a gap while most of the hedge lyeth open and an engaging the sense to serve the Flesh the World and the Devil in a hansome calm and less dishonoured way and not so filthily and furiously as others § 5. Direct 3. The main part of this Government in the exercise is in taking special care that no Direct 3. sensitive good be made the ultimate End of our desire nor sought for it self nor rested in nor delighted in too much but to see that the soul having first habitually fixed on its proper higher end and happiness d● direct all the actions of every sense so far as it falls under deliberation and choice to serve it remotely to those holy ends For the sense is not sanctified if it be not used to a holy end and its object is not sanctified to us if it be not made serviceable to more holy objects A meer negative restraint of sense for common ends is but such as those ends are for which it s done When the eyes and ears and taste and feeling are all taught by reason to serve God to his glory and our salvation then and never till then they are well governed § 6. Direct 4. To this End the constant use of a lively belief of the Word of God and the things unseen Direct 4. of the other world must be the first and principal means by which our Reason must govern every sense b●th a● to their restraint and their right employment And therefore living by sight and living by faith are opposed in Scripture 2 Cor. 5. 7. For we walk by faith not by sight that is sight and sense is not our principal guiding faculty but subservient to faith nor the objects of sight the things which we principally or ultimately seek or set by but the objects of faith As it is before expounded 2 Cor. 4. 18. While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen For the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Therefore Faith is described to be the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Heb. 12. 1. Believing is to a Christian instead of seeing because he knoweth by Gods testimony that the things believed are true though they are unseen And you know that the objects of sense are all but trifles to the great astonishing objects of faith Therefore if faith be lively it must needs prevail and over-rule the senses because its objects utterly cloud and make nothing of the transitory objects of sense Therefore the Apostle Iohn saith 1 John 5. 4. Whatsoever is b●rn of God overcometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh the world even our faith And Moses by seeing him that is invisible overcame the desires of Aegypts treasures and the fear of the wrath of the King Heb. 11. 26 27. having respect to the recompence of reward Stephen easily bore his cruel death when he saw Heaven opened and Christ standing at the right hand of God Acts 7. 56. I dare appeal to that man that is most sensual and saith I am n●t able to deny my appetite or rule my senses whether he would not be able if he did but see at the same time what 's done in the other world If he saw Heaven and Hell the glorified and the damned and saw the Majesty of that God who commandeth him to forbear would he not then be able to let alone the Cup the Dish the Harlot the Sport which is now so powerful with him I would not thank the most beastly sensualist among you to live as temperately as to the act as the strictest Saint alive if he did but see the worlds which departed souls now see It is not possible but it would overpower his sensual desires yea and call off those senses to serve him in some enquiry what he should do to be saved Therefore if Believing the unseen world be instead of seeing it with our eyes its most certain that the means to overcome sensuality is faith and lively Belief must rule our senses § 7. Direct 5. The more this Belief of God and glory doth kindle Love to them the more effectual in Direct 5. will be in the Government of the senses Our common Proverb saith Where the Love is there is the Fye How readily doth it follow the heart Love will not alter the sense it self but it commandeth the Use of all the senses It will not clear a dimm decayed sight but it will command it what to look upon As the stronger love of one dish or one sport or one company will carry you from another which you love more faintly so the Love of God and Heaven and Holiness will carry you from the captivity of all sensual things § 8.
once got in If it have but tainted your very fantasie or memory as tempting sights will almost unavoidably do it hath there spawned the matter for a swarm of vain and sinful thoughts It is almost impossible to rule the Thoughts without ruling the eye And then the passions are presently tainted and the cittadel of the Heart is taken before you are aware You little know when a lustful look or a covetous look beginneth the game to how sad a period it tendeth Many a horrid adultery and murther and robbery and wickedness hath begun but with a Look A Look hath begun that which hath brought many a thousand to the gallows and many millions to Hell § 9. Direct 9. Keep both eye and mind employed in continual duty and let them not be idle and have Direct 9. leisure to wander upon vanity Idleness and neglect of spiritual and corporal duty is the beginner and the nurse of much sensuality Let your spiritual work and your lawful bodily-labours take up your time and thoughts and command and keep your senses in their services § 10. Direct 10. Beg daily of God the preserving assistance of his Grace and providence Of his inward Direct 10. grace to confirm you and assist you in your resolutions and watch and of his providence and gracious disposals of you and objects to keep the Temptations from before your eyes And when others will run and go on purpose to gaze on vain or tempting shews or to admire like children the vanities of the playful pompous world do you go to God with Davids prayer Psalm 119. 37. Turn away mine eyes from beholding vanity and quicken me in thy way And imitate him vers 148. Mine eyes prevent the night watches that I might meditate in thy word And make every look a passage to thy mind to carry it up to God and pray Psal. 119. 18. Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law Observe these with the General Directions fore named PART III. Directions for the Government of the Ear. § 1. Direct 1. IMploy your ears in the dutys which they were made for and to that end understand Direct 1. Gen. 49 2. Exod. 19. 9. Deut. 1. 16. 4. 10 5. 1 25 27. 31. 13. Prov. 1. 8. 19. 20 27. 22. 17. Ec 5. 1. 7. 5. Jam. 1. 19. Isa. 66. 4. 65. 12. 30. 9. Ezek. 12. 2. Mal. 2. 2. Act. 3 23. Lev. ● 1. Deut. 13. 12. those dutys Which are as followeth 1. To be the organe of reception of such communications from others as is necessary for our converse in the world and the dutys of our several relations and vocations 2. To hear the word of God delivered publickly by his appointed Teachers of the Church 3. To hear the counsel of those that privately advize us for our good and the reproofs of those that tell us of our sin and danger 4. To hear the Praises of God set forth by his Church in publick and particular servants in private 5. To hear from our ancestors and the learned in historie what hath been done in the times before us 6. To hear the complaints and petitions of the poor and needy and distressed that we may compassionate them and endeavour their relief 7. To be the passage for grief and hatred to our hearts by the sinful words which we hear unwillingly § 2. Direct 2. Know which are the sins of the ear that you may avoid them And they are such as follow 1. A careless ear which heareth the word of God and the private exhortations of his servants as if it heard them not 2. A sottish sleepy ear that heareth the word of God but as a confused sound and understandeth not nor feeleth what is heard 3. A scornful ear which despiseth the message of God and the reproofs and counsel of men and scorneth to be reproved or taught 4. An obstinate stubborn ear which regardeth not advice or will not yield 5. A prophane and impious Direct 2. ear which loveth to hear oaths and curses and prophane and blasphemous expressions 6. A carnal ear which loveth to hear of fleshly things but savoureth not the words which favour of holiness 7. An airy hypocritical ear which loveth more the musick and melody than the sense and spiritual elevation of the soul to God and regardeth more the numbers and composure and tone than the matter of preaching prayer or other such dutys and serveth God with the ear when the heart is far from him 8. A curious ear which nauseateth the most profitable sermons prayers or discourses if they be not accurately ordered and expressed and sleighteth or loseth the offered benefit for a modal imperfection in the offer or the instrument and casteth away all the gold because a piece or two did catch a little rust And perhaps quarrelleth with the style of the sacred Scriptures as not exact or fine enough for its expectations 9. An itching ear which runs after novelties and a heap of Teachers and liketh something extraordinary better than things necessary 10. A selfish ear which loveth to hear all that tends to the confirmation of its own conceits and to be flattered or smoothed up by others and can endure nothing that is cross to its opinions 11. A proud ear which loveth its own applause and is much pleased with its own praises and hateth all that speak of him with mean undervaluing words 12. A pievish impatient ear which is netled with almost all it heareth and can endure none but silken words which are oyled and sugared and fitted by flattery or the lowest submission to their froward minds and is so hard to be pleased that none but graduates in the art of pleasing can perform it 13. A bold presumptuous ear which will hear false Teachers and deceivers in a proud conceit and confidence of their own abilities to discern what is true and what is false 14. An ungodly ear that can easily hear the reproach of holiness and scorns at the servants and ways of Christ. 15. A neutral indifferent ear that heareth either good or evil without much love or hatred but with a dull and cold indifferencie 16. A dissembling temporizing ear which can complyingly hear one side speak for holiness and the other speak against it and suit it self to the company and discourse it meets with 17. An uncharitable ear which can willingly hear the censures backbitings slanders revilings that are used against others yea against the best 18. An unnatural ear which can easily and willingly hear the dishonour of their parents or other near relations if any carnal interest do but engage them against their honour 19. A rebellious disobedient ear which hearkneth not to the just commands of Magistrates Parents Masters and other Governours but hearkneth with more pleasure to the words of seditious persons that dishonour them 20. A filthy unclean adulterous ear which loveth to hear filthy ribbald speeches
in the sense of your natural sin and misery to stir up the lively sense of the wonderful Love of God and our Redeemer and to spend all the day in the special exercises of Faith and Love And seeing it is the Christian weekly festival or day of Thanksgiving for the greatest mercy in the world spend it as a day of Thanksgiving should be spent especially in Ioyful Praises of our Lord and let the hu●bling and instructing exercis●s of the day he all subordinate to these laudatory exercises I know that much time must be spent in teaching and warning the ignorant and ungodly because their poverty and labours hinder them from other such opportunities and we must speak to them then or not at all But if it were not for their meer necessity and if we could as well speak to them other dayes of the Week the Churches should spend all the Lords Day in such praises and thanksgivings as are suitable to the ends of the institution But seeing that cannot be expected methinks it is desirable that the antient custome of the Churches were more imitated and the morning Sermon being fuited to the state of the more ignorant and unconverted that the rest of the day were spent in the exercises of Thanksgiving to the Joy and encouragement of believers and in doctrine suited to their state And yet I must add that a skilfull Preacher will do both together and so declare the Love and Grace of our Redeemer as by a meet application may both draw in the ungodly and comfort those that are already sanctified and raise their hearts in Praise to God § 4. Direct 4. Remember that the Lords day is appointed specially for publick worship and personal Direct 4. Communion of the Churches therein see therefore that you spend as much of the day as you can in this publick worship and Church-communion especially in the celebration of that Sacrament which is appointed for the memorial of the death of Christ untill his coming 1 Cor. 11. 25 26. This Sacrament in the Primitive Church was celebrated every Lords day yea and ofter even ordinarily on every other day of the week when the Churches assembled for Communion And it might be so now without any hinderance to Preaching or Prayer if all things were ordered as they should be For those Prayers and instructions and exhortations which are most suited to this Eucharistical action would be the most suitable Prayers and Sermons for the Church on the Lords dayes In the mean time s●e that so much of the day as is spent in Church-communion and publick worship be accordingly improved by you and be not at that time about your secret or family services but take only those hours for such private duties in which the Church is not assembled And remember how much the Love of Saints is to be exercised in this Communion and therefore labour to keep alive that Love without which no man can celebrate the Lords day according to the end of the institution § 5. Direct 5. Understand how great a mercy it is that you have leave thus to wait upon God for the receiving and exercise of grace and to cast off the distracting thoughts and businesses of the world and Direct 5. what an opportunity is put into your hand to get more in one day than this world can aff●rd you all your lives And therefore come with gladness as to the receiving of so great a mercy and with desire after it and with hope to speed and not with unwillingness as to an unpleasant task as carnal hearts that Love not God or his Grace or Service and are aweary of all they do and gl●d when it is done as the Ox that is unyoaked Isa. 58. 13 14. If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day and call the Sabbath a Delight the holy of the Lord honourable and shalt honour him not doing thine own waies nor finding thine own pleasu●e nor speaking thine own words then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord The affection that you have to the Lords day much sheweth the temper of the heart A holy person is glad when it cometh as loving it for the holy exercises of the day A wicked carnal heart is glad of it only for his carnal ease but weary of the spiritual duties § 6. Direct 6. Avoid both the extreams of Prophaneness and Superstition in the point of your external rest And to that end Observe 1. That the work is not for the day but the day for the holy Direct 6. work As Christ saith Mark 2. 27. The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath It is appointed for our good and not for our hurt 2. The outward rest is not appointed for it self but as a means to the freedom of the mind for inward and spiritual employments And therefore all those outward and common labours and discourses are unlawful which any way distract the mind and hinder either our outward or inward attendance upon God and our edification 3. And whatever it was to the Jews no common words or actions are unlawful which are no hinderance to this communion and worship and spiritual edification 4. Yea those things that are necessary to the support of nature and the saving of the Life or health or estate and goods of our selves or our neighbours are needful duties on that day Not all those works which are truly charitable for it may be a work of mercy to build Hospitals or make Garments for the poor or Till their ground but such works of mercy as cannot be put off to another day and such as hinder not the duties of the day 5. The same word or action on the Lords day which is unlawful to one man may be lawful to another as being no hinderance yea a duty to him As Christ saith The Priests in the Temple break or prophane the Sabbath that is the outward rest but not the command and are blameless Matth. 12. 15. And the Cook may lawfully be employed in dressing meat when it were a sin in another to do it voluntarily without need 6. The Lords day being to be kept as a day of Thanksgiving the dressing of such meat as is fit for a day of Thanksgiving is not to be scrupled The primitive Christians in the Apostles time had their Love-feasts constantly with the Lords Supper or after on the Evening of the day And they could not feast without dressing meat 7. Yet that which is lawful in it self must be so done as consisteth with care and compassion of the souls of servants that are employed about it that they may ●e deprived of no more of their spiritual benefit than needs 8. Also that which is lawful must sometimes be forborn when it may by scandal tempt others that are loose or weak to do that which is unlawful not that the meer displeasing of the erroneous should put us out of the right
more to hinder them from the same priviledge than what is of Necessity § 14. Direct 14. At Supper spend the time as is aforesaid at Dinner Alwayes remembring Direct 14. that though it be a day of Thansgiving it is not a day of gluttony and that you must not use too full a dyet lest it make you heavy and drowsie and unfit for holy duty § 15. Direct 15. After Supper examine your Children and Servants what they have learnt all Direct 15. day and sing a Psalm of praise and conclude with prayer and thanksgiving § 16. Direct 16. If there be time after both you and they may in secret review the duties Direct 16. and mercies and failings of the day and recommend your selves by Prayer into the bands of God for the night following and to betake your selves to your rest § 17. Direct 17. And to shut up all let your last thoughts be holy in the thankful sense of Direct 17. the mercy you have received and the goodness of God revealed by our Mediator and comfortably trusting your souls and bodies into his hands and longing for your nearer approach unto his Glory and the beholding and full enjoying of him for ever § 18. I have briefly named this order of duties for the memory of those that have opportunity to observe it But if any mans place and condition deny him opportunity for some of these he must do what he can but see that carnal negligence cause not his omission And now I appeal to Reason Conscience and Experience whether this employment be not more suitable to the principles ends and hopes of a Christian than idleness or vain talk or Cards or Dice or Dancing or Ale-house haunting or worldly business or discourse And whether this would not exceedingly conduce to the increase of Knowledge Holiness and Honesty And whether there be ever a worldling or voluptuous sensualist of them all that had not rather be found thus at death or look back when Time is past and gone upon the Lords days thus spent than as the idle fleshly and ungodly spend them CHAP. XIX Directions for profitable Hearing the Word Preached OMitting those Directions which concern the external modes of Worship for the Reasons mentioned Tom. 2. and known to all that know me and the time and place I live in I shall give you such Directions about the personal internal management of your duty as I think most necessary to your Edification And seeing that your Duty and benefit lyeth in these four General points 1. That you hear with understanding 2. That you Remember what you hear 3. That you be duly affected with it 4. And that you sincerely practise it I shall more particularly Direct you in order to all these ends and duties Tit. 1. Directions for the Understanding the Word which you hear § 1. Direct 1. REad and meditate on the holy Scriptures much in private and then you will be Direct 1. the better able to understand what is Preached on it in publick and to try the doctrine whether it be of God Whereas if you are unacquainted with the Scriptures all that is treated of or alledged from it will be so strange to you that you will be but little edified by it Psal. 1. 2. Psal. 119. Deut. 6. 11 12. § 2. Direct 2. Live under the clearest distinct convincing teaching that possibly you can procure Direct 2. There is an unspeakable difference as to the edification of the hearers between a judicious clear distinct and skilful Preacher and one that is ignorant confused general dry and only scrapeth together a Cento or mingle-mangle of some undigested sayings to fill up the hour with If in Philosophy Physicks Grammar Law and every Art and Science there be so great a difference between one Teacher and another it must needs be so in Divinity also Ignorant Teachers that understand not what they say themselves are unlike to make you men of understanding as Erroneous Teachers are unlike to make you Orthodox and Sound § 3. Direct 3. Come not to hear with a careless heart as if you were to hear a matter that little Direct 3. concerned you but come with a sense of the unspeakable weight necessity and consequence of the holy word which you are to bear and when you understand how much you are concerned in it and truly Love it as the word of Life it will greatly help your Understanding of every particular truth That which a man Loveth not and perceiveth no necessity of he will hear with so little regard and heed that it will make no considerable impression on his mind But a good understanding of the Excellency and Necessity exciting Love and ●●rio●s attention would make the particulars easie to be understood when else you will be like ●● stopt o● narrow mouthed bottle that keepeth out that which you desire to put in I know that understanding must go before affections But yet the understanding of the concernments and worth of your own souls must first procure such a serious care of your salvation and a general regard to the word of God as is needful to your further understanding of the particular instructions which you shall after hear § 4. Direct 4. Suffer not vain thoughts or drowsie negligence to hinder your attention If you mark Direct 4. not what is taught you how should you understand and learn set your selves to it as for your Pr●● 4. 1 20 ● 〈…〉 7. 24. lives Be as earnest and diligent in attending and learning as you would have the Preacher be in Teaching If a drowsie careless Preacher be bad a drowsie careless hearer is not good Saith M●ses D●ut 32. 46. Set your hearts to all the words which I testifie among you this day Ne● 1 6. 1● Psal. 130. 2. Prov. 28. 9. 47. For it is not a vain thing for you because it is your life You would have God attentive to your p●ayers in your distresses and why will you not then be attentive to his words when the prayers of him are abominable to God that turneth away his ear from hearing the Law ●●ik 19. 48. All the people were very attentive to hear Christ. Neh. 8. 3. when Ezra read the Law from morning till mid day the ears of all the people were attentive to it when Paul continued his Lords day exercise Act 16. 14. Act. 10. 9. and speech untill midnight one young man that full asleep did fall down dead as a warning to them that will sleep when they should hear the message of Christ. Therefore you are excused that day from worldly business that you may attend o● the Lord with out distraction 1 Cor. 7. 35. Lydia's attending to the words of Paul accompanied the opening of her heart and her Conversion Act. 16. 14. § 5. Direct 5. Mark specially the design and drift and principal doctrine of the Sermon Both because Direct 5. that is the chief thing
desired by qualifying our selves for it as if indeed they moved the mind of God to a real change Even as he that is in a Boat and by his hook layeth hold of the banck doth as truly by his labour get nearer the banck as if he drew the banck to him § 4. Direct 3. Labour above all to know that God to whom you pray To know him as your Maker Direct 3. your Redeemer and your Regenerater as your Owner your Ruler and your Father Felicity and End as All-sufficient for your relief in the infiniteness of his Power his Wisdom and his Goodness and to know your own dependance on him and to understand his Covenant or Promises upon what terms he is engaged and resolved either to give his mercies or to deny them He that cometh to God must believe that He is and that He is the Rewarder of them that diligently seek him Heb. 11. 6. He that calleth on the name of the Lord shall be saved But how shall they call on him on whom they have not believed Rom. 10. 13 14. § 5. Direct 4. Lab●ur when you are about to pray to stir u● in your souls the mo●t lively Direct 4. and ●●ri●u● b●lief of th●se u●seen things that your Prayers have respect to and to pray as if you saw them all the while Even as if you saw God in his Gl●ry and saw Heaven and Hell the glorified and the damned and Iesus Christ your Mediator interceding for you in the Heavens As you would pray if your eyes beheld all these so strive to pray while you believe them And say to your selves Are they not as sure as if I saw them Are they not made known by the Son and Spirit of God § 6. Direct 5. Labour for a constant a●cuaintance with your selves your sins and manifold Direct 5. wants and nec●ssi●ies and also to take an actual special notice of your case when you go to prayer If you get not a former c●●stant acquaintance with your own case you cannot expect to know it aright upon a sudd●n as you go to pray And yet if you do not actually surv●y your h●●●●ts and lives when you go to prayer your souls will be unhumbled and want that lively sense of your necessities which must put life into your prayers Know well what sin is and what Gods wrath and Hell and Iudgement is and wh●t sin you have committed and what duty you have omitted and failed in and what wants and corruptions are yet within you and what mercy and grace you stand in need of and then all this will make you pray and pray to purpose with all your hearts But when men are wilful strangers to themselves and never seriously look backwards or inwards to see what is amiss and wanting nor look not forwards to see the danger that is before them no wonder if their hearts be dead and dull and if they are as unfit to pray as a sleeping man to work § 7. Direct 6. See that you hate hyp●crisie and let not your lips go against or without your hearts Direct 6. but that your hearts be the spring of all your words That you love not sin and be not ●●th to 〈…〉 quum navis t●●pesta●e q●●●●e e●u● 1 lique D●●s invocarent S●l●te inquit ne●v●s ●●c illi n●●igar● s●nt●ant 〈…〉 p 55. leave it when you seem to pray against it and that you truly desire the grace which you ask and ask not for that which you would not have And that you be ready to use the lawful means to get the mercies which you ask and be not like those lazy wishers that will pray God to give them increase at harvest when they lye in bed and will neither plow or sow or that pray him to save them from fire or water or danger while they run into it or will not be at the pains to go out of the way O what abundance of wretches do offer up hypocritical mock-prayers to God! blaspheming him thereby as if he were an Idol and knew not their hypocrisie and searched not the hearts Alas how commonly do men pray in publick that the rest of their lives hereafter may be pure and holy that hate purity and holiness at the heart and deride and oppose that which they s●em to pray for As Austin confesseth of himself before he was converted that he prayed against his filthy sin and yet was afraid lest God should grant his prayers So many pray against the sins which they would not be delivered from or would not use the means that is necessary to their conquest and deliverance Let him that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity 2 Tim. 2. 19. If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Psal. 66. 18. See Ezek. 14. 3 4 14. Alas how easie is it for an● ungodly person to learn to say a few words by rote and to run them over without any sense of what he speaketh while the tongue is a stranger to the heart and speaketh not according to its desires § 8. Direct 7. Search your hearts and watch them carefully lest some beloved Vanity alienate Direct 7. them from the work in hand and turn away your thoughts or prepossess your affections so that you want them when you should use them If the mind be set on other matters prayer will be a heartless lifeless thing Alas what a dead and pitiful work is the prayer of one that hath his heart ensnared in the Love of money or in any ambitious or covetous design The thoughts will easily follow the affections § 9. Direct 8. Be sure that you pray for nothing that is disagreeable to the will of God and Direct 8. that is not for the good of your selves or others or for the honour of God And therefore take heed lest an erring judgement or carnal desires or passions should corrupt your prayers and turn them into sin If men will ignorantly pray to God to do them hurt it is a mercy to them if God will but pardon and deny such prayers and a judgement to grant them And it is an easie thing for fleshly interest or partiality or passion to blind the judgement and consequently to corrupt mens prayers An Ambitious or Covetous man will easily be drawn to pray for the grant of his sinful desires and think it would be for his good And there is scarce an heretical or erroneous person but thinketh that it would be good that the world were all reduced to his opinion and all the opposers of it were born down There are few zealous Antinomians Anabaptists or any other Dividers of the Church but they put their Opinions usually into their prayers and plead with God for the interest of their S●cts and Errors And its like that the Jews that had a persecuting Zeal for God Rom. 10. 2. did pray according to that Zeal as well as persecute as its like Paul himself
sense and reason but will wish that they had Loved God and sought and served him not formally in hypocritical complement but with all their heart and soul and might § 9. Direct 8. Labour also to fortifie the minds of your friends against all fears of suffering for Direct 8. Christ and all impatience in any of their afflictions Say to them The sufferings as well as the pleasures of this life are s● short that they are not worthy once to be compared with the durable things of the life to come If I have past through a life of want and toil if my body hath endured painful sickness if I have suffered never so much from men and been used cruelly for the sake of Christ what the worse am I now when all is past Would an easie honourable plentiful life have made my death either the safer or the sweeter O no! It is the things eternal that are indeed significant and regardable Neither pleasure nor pain that is short is of any great regard Make sure of the Everlasting pleasures and you have done your work O live by faith and not by sense Look not at the temporal things which are seen It is not your concernment whether you are rich or poor in honour or dishonour in health or sickness but whether you be justified and sanctified and shall live with God in Heaven for ever Such serious counsels of dying men may make their sickness more fruitful than their health CHAP. XXXI Directions to the Friends of the Sick that are about them § 1. Direct 1. WHen you see the sickness or death of your friends take it as Gods warning Direct 1. to you to prepare for the same your selves Remember that thus it must be with you Thus are you like to lye in pain and thus will all the world forsake you and nothing of all your honour or wealth will afford you any comfort This will be the end of all your pleasures of your greatness and your houses and lands and attendance and of all your delicious meats and drinks and of all your mirth and play and recreations Thus must your carkasses be forsaken of your souls and laid in a grave and there lie rotting in the dark and your souls appear before your Judge to be sentenced to their endless state This certainly will be your case and O how quickly will it come Then what will Christ and Grace be worth Then nothing but the favour of God can comfort you Then whether will it be better to you to look back on a holy well-spent life or upon a life of fleshly ease and pleasure Then had you rather be a Saint or a Sensualist Lay this to heart and let the house of mourning make you better and live as one that looks to dye § 2. Direct 2. Use the best means for the recovery of the sick which the ablest Physicions shall advise Direct 2. you to as far as you are able Take heed of being guilty of the Pride and folly of many self-conceited ignorant persons who are ready to thrust every Medicine of their own upon their friends in sickness when they neither know the nature of the sickness or the cure Many thousands are brought to their death untimely by the folly of their nearest friends who will needs be medicining them and ruling them and despising the Physicion as if they were themselves much wiser than he when they are meerly ignorant of what they do As ignorant Sectaries despise Divines and set up themselves as better Preachers so many silly Women despise Physicions and when they have got a few Medicines which they know not the nature of nor how to use they take themselves for the better Physicions and the lives of their poor friends must pay for their pride and folly No means must be trusted to instead of God but the best must be used in subservience unto God And one would think that a small measure of wit and humility might serve to make silly women understand that they that never bestowed one year in the study of Physick are not so likely to understand it as those that have studied and practised it a great part of their lives It is sad to see people kill their dearest friends in kindness even by that ignorance and proud selfconceitedness which also maketh them the destroyers of their own souls § 3. Quest. But seeing God hath appointed all mens time what good can Physick do If God hath Quest. appointed them to live they shall live and if he have appointed them to dye it is not Physick that can save them Answ. This is the foolish reasoning of wicked people about their salvation If God have appointed Answ. me to salvation I shall be saved if he have not all my diligence will do no good But such people know not what they talk of God hath made your duty more open and known to you than his own decrees And you separate those things which he hath joyned together As God hath appointed no man to salvation simply without respect to the means of salvation so God hath appointed no man to live but by the means of life His Decree is not Such a man shall be saved or Such a man shall live so long only But this is his Decree Such a man shall be saved in the way of faith and holiness and in the diligent use of means and Such a man shall live so long by the use of those means which I have fitted for the preservation of his life So that as he that liveth a holy life may be sure he is chosen to salvation if he persevere and he that is ungodly may be sure that he is in the way to Hell so he that neglecteth the means of his health and life doth shew that it is unlike that God hath appointed him to live and he that useth the best means is liker to recover though the best will not cure uncurable Diseases nor make a man immortal The reasoning is the same as if you should say If God have appointed me to live so long I shall live though I neither eat nor drink But if he have not eating and drinking will not prolong my life But you must know that God doth not only appoint you to live that is but half his Decree but he decreeth that you shall live by eating and drinking § 4. Direct 3. Mind your friends betimes to make their Wills and prudently by good advice to settle Direct 3. their estates that they may leave no occasion of contending about it when they are dead This should be done in health because of the uncertainty of life But if it be undone till sickness it should then be done betimes The neglect of it oft causeth much sinful contending about worldly things even among those near relations who should live in the greatest amity and peace § 5. Direct 4. Keep away vain company from them as far as you can conveniently
Repent of your sinful life and yet set your Heart upon the life to come and Love God and Holiness better than the world and fleshly pleasure and trust your soul on Christ as your Redeemer and he will certainly forgive you and reconcile you unto God and present you justified and spotless in his sight Think of your sin till you abhor your self and think of your sin and misery till you feel that you are undone if you have not a Saviour and then think what Love God hath shewed you in Christ in giving him to be incarnate and die for sinners and offering you freely to pardon all that ever you have done and to justifie and save you and bring you to endless Glory with himself if yet as last you will but give up your self to Christ and accept his mercy and return to God What joyful tidings is here now for a sinful miserable soul Yet this is the certain truth of God This is his very Covenant of grace which is founded in the blood of Christ and which he is now ready to make with you and seal to you by his spirit within and his Sacrament without if you do but Heartily and unfeignedly Consent Believe in Christ and Turn to God from the world and the flesh and resolve upon a Holy life if you should recover and then I can assure you from the word of God that he will freely pardon you and take you for his Child and save your soul in endless Glory As late as it is he will certainly receive you if you return to him by Christ with all your heart And doth not your heart now rejoice in this unspeakable mercy which is willing to save you after all the sin that you have committed and after all the time that you have lost Do you not Love that God that is so abundant in Goodness and in Love and that Saviour who hath purchased you this pardon and salvation Is it not better think you to Love and praise and serve him than to live in fleshly lusts and pleasures And is it not better to dwell in Heaven with him in endless Ioys than to live awhile in the vain delights of sinners and thence to pas● to endless misery O beg of God now to give you a New Heart to Believe in Christ and Repent of sin and Love him that is most Holy Good and gracious And take heed that you sleight his grace no longer and that you do not now take on you in a fear to be that which you are not or to do that which you would not hold to if you should recover And to make all sure will you now sincerely enter into a Covenant with Christ I mean but the same Covenant which you made in Baptism and the Sacrament of the Lords supper and which would have saved you if you had sincerely made and kept it Let me therefore help you both to understand it and to do it by these questions which I intreat you to answer sincerely as one that is going to the presence of God Quest. 1. Do you truly Believe that you are a Rational creature differing from bruits being made to Love and serve your Maker and have an immortal soul which must live in Heaven or Hell for ever And that there is indeed a Heaven of Ioyes and a Hell of punishments when this life is ended Quest. 2. Do you believe that in Heaven the souls of the Iustified at death and the Body also at the Resurrection shall be joined with the Angels and shall dwell with Christ and see the Glory of God and be perfected in Holiness and filled with the sense of the Love of God and with the greatest Ioyes that our nature can receive and shall live in the most delightful Love and Praise of God for ever Quest. 3. Seeing you are certain that all the pleasures of this life are short and will end in death and leave the flesh which desired them in corruption do you not firmly believe that the Ioyes of Heaven are infinitely better and more to be desired and sought than all the pleasures and profits of this life And that it is most reasonable that we should Love God above all Creatures even with all our heart and soul and might Quest. 4. Seeing then that the Love of God is both our Duty and our Happiness is it not reason that we should be kept from the Love of any thing in the world which would steal away our hearts from God and hinder us from Loving him and desiring and seeking him and that we should mortifie the love of worldly riches honours and delights so far as they are against the Love of God Quest. 5. Seeing God is the absolute Lord and Ruler of the world is it not reason that we obey him whatsoever he commandeth us though we did not see the Reason why he doth command it And yet is it not plainly Reasonable that he command us to Love and honour and worship him and to Love one another and to deal Iustly with all and do as we would be done by and to●●e careful of our souls and temperate for our bodies and not to neglect or dishonour our maker nor to neglect our own salvation nor abuse our bodies by beastly filthiness or excess nor to wrong our neighbours nor deny to do them any good that is in our power This is the sum of all Gods laws and this is the nature of Holiness and obedience And do you not from your heart believe that all this is very reasonable and good Quest. 6. When the sinful world was faln from Happiness into misery by turning away from God and Holiness to sensuality and God sent his Son to be their Redeemer and Saviour to be a Sacrifice for sin and a Teacher and Pattern of a Holy and Obedient life and to make a new Covenant with them in which he giveth them the pardon of all sin and everlasting happiness if they will but give up themselves to him as their Saviour and Sanctifier and by true Repentance turn to God do you not verily Believe that miserable sinners should gladly and thankfully accept of such an offer and abundantly Love that God and Saviour that hath so tenderly loved them and so freely Redeemed them from the flames of Hell and so freely offered them everlasting life And do you not Believe that he who after all this shall slight all this mercy and refuse to be renewed by sanctifying grace and shall neglect his God and soul and this salvation and rather choose to keep his sins doth not deserve to be utterly forsaken and to be punished more than if a Saviour and Salvation had never been offered to him Quest. 7. Hath not this been your own case Have you not lived a fleshly worldly life neglecting God and your salvation and minding more these lower things and have you not refused the word and spirit of Christ which would have brought you to Repentance and a holy
knoweth the reason of his own commands It is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve Matth. 4. 10. If God should command us nothing how is he our Governour and our God And if he command us any thing what should he command us more fitly than to worship him And he that will not obey him in this is not like to obey him well in any thing For there is nothing that he can with less shew of Reason except against seeing all the Reason in the world must confess that worship is most due to God from his own Creatures § 12. These Reasons for the Worship of God being undenyable the Objections of the infidels and Object ungodly are unreasonable As Obj. 1. That our worship doth no good to God for he hath no need of it Answ. Answ. It pleaseth and honoureth him as the making of the world and the happiness of man doth Doth it follow that there must be no world nor no man happy because God hath no need of it or no addition of felicity by it It is sufficient that it is necessary and Good for us and pleasing unto God § 13. Obj 2. Proud men are unlikest unto God and it is the Proud that love to be honoured and Object praised Answ. Pride is the affecting of an undue honour or the undue affecting of that honour Answ. which is due Therefore it is that this affectation of honour in the Creature is a sin because all honour is due to God and none to the Creature but derivatively and subserviently For a subject to affect any of the honour of his King is disloyalty And to affect any of the honour of his follow subjects is injustice But God requireth nothing but what is absolutely his due And ●e hath commanded us even towards men to give fear and honour to whom they are due Rom. 13. 7. § 14. Direct 3. Labour for the truest knowledge of the God whom you worship Let it not be said Direct 3. of you as Christ said to the Samaritan Woman Joh. 4. 22. Ye worship ye know not what nor as it is said of the Athenians whose Altar was inscribed To the unknown God Act. 17. 23. You must know whom you worship or else you cannot worship him with the heart nor worship him sincerely and acceptably though you were at never so great labour and cost God hath no pleasure in the sacrifice of fools Eccl. 5. 1 4. Though no man know him perfectly you must know him truly And though God taketh not every man for a Blaspheamer and denier of his Attributes whom contentious pievish wranglers call so because they consequentially cross some espoused opinions of theirs yet real misunderstanding of Gods nature and attributes is dangerous and tendeth to corrupt his worship by the corrupting of the Worshippers For such as you take God to be such Worship you will offer him For your worship is but the honourable acknowledgement of his perfections And mistakingly to praise him for supposed imperfections is to dishonour him and dispraise him If to know God be your eternal life it must needs be the life of all your worship Take heed therefore of ignorance and errour about God § 15. Direct 4. Understand the office of Iesus Christ as our Great High Priest by whose Mediation Direct 4. alone we must have access to God Whether there should have been any Priesthood for sacrifice or intercession Heb. 8. 3. if there had been no sin the Scripture telleth us not expresly but we have great reason to conjecture there would have been none because there would not have been any reasons for the exercise of such an office But since the fall not only the Scriptures but the practice of the whole world doth tell us that the sinful people are unmeet immediatly thus to come to God but that they must come by the Mediation of the Priest as a Sacrificer and Intercessour So that either Nature teacheth sinners the Necessity of some Mediator or the Tradition of the Church hath dispersed the Knowledge of it through the World And certainly no other Priest but Christ can procure the acceptance of a sinful people upon his own account nor be an effectual Mediator for them to God Heb. 7. 27 28. Heb 9. 26 28. unless in subserviency to an effectual Mediator who can procure us access and acceptance for his own sake For all other Priests are sinners as well as the people and have as much need of a Mediator Heb. 10. 19 20 21 22. Heb. 10. 13 14. for themselves 1. See therefore that you never appear before God but as sinners that have offended him and have deserved to be cast out of his favour for ever and such as are in absolute necessity of a Mediator to procure their access and acceptance with God Come not to God without the sense of sin and misery 2. See also that you come as those that Have a Mediator in the Heb. 6. 20. Heb. 7. 25 26. Matth. 1● 5. Joh. 11. 42. presence of God even Jesus our High Priest who appeareth before God continually to make intercession for us Come therefore with holy boldness and confidence and joy having so sure and powerful a friend with God the beloved of the Father whom he heareth alwayes § 16. Direct 5. Look carefully to the state of thy soul that thou bring not an unholy heart to Worship Direct 5. the most Holy God Come not in the Love of sin nor in the hatred of Holiness For otherwise thou hatest God and art hated of him as bringing that before him which he cannot but hate And it 's easie to judge how unfit they are to worship God that hate him and how unlike they are to be accepted by him whom he hateth Psal. 5. 3 4 5 6 7. My voice shalt thou hear in the morning O Lord in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee and will look up For thou art not a God that hath pleasure in wickedness neither shall evil dwell with thee The foolish shall not stand in thy sight thou hatest all the workers of iniquity Thou shalt destroy them that speak leasing the Lord will abhor the bloody and deceitful man But as for me I will come into thy house in the multitude of thy mercies and in thy fear will I worship towards thy holy Temple Psal. 66. 18. If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not hear me Psal. 15. 1 2. Who shall abide in Gods tabernacle but he that walketh L●v. 10 3. uprightly and worketh righteousness God will be sanctified in them that come nigh him and are unsanctified persons fit for this and can the unholy offer him holy worship The carnal mind is enmity against God is it fit then to serve and honour him Rom. 8. 7 8. See 2 Cor. 6. 15 16 17 18. Let him that nameth the name of Christ depart from
c. He goeth on to confirm it at large by argument § 20. Rule 9. An Oath is to be taken and interpreted strictly Sandersoa saith Iuramenti obligatio Rule 9. est stricti juris that is non ut excludat juris interpretationem aequitate temperatam sed ut excludat juris interpretationem gratia corruptam not as excluding an equitable interpretation but as excluding an interpretation corrupted by partiality that it be a Iust interpretation between the extreams of Rigid and favourable or partial and in doubtful cases it is safer to follow the strict than the benign Sand. p. 41 42 4● 44. Ubi de justo sensu ambigitur longe satius est naturae rei accommodatius strictiore quam benigniore uti interpretatione Sand. pag. 44. or favourable sense It is dangerous stretching and venturing too far in matters of so sacred a nature and of such great importance as Vows and Oaths § 21. Rule 10. In the exposition of such doubtful oaths and Vows 1. We must specially watch against Rule 10. self-interest or commodity that it corrupt not our understandings 2. And we must not take our oaths or Sand. pag. 45. any part of them in such a sense as a pious prudent stander-by that is impartial and no whit interested in the business cannot easily find in the words themselves § 22. Rule 11. In doubtful cases the greatest danger must be most carefully avoided and the safer Rule 11. side preferred But the danger of the soul by perjury is the greatest and therefore no bodily danger should Sand. p. 46. so carefully be avoided And therefore an oath that in the common and obvious sense seemeth unlawful should not be taken unless there be very full evidence that it hath another sence Sand. p. 46. Nititur autem c. This reason leaneth on that general and most useful rule that in doubtful cases we must follow the safer side But it is safer not to swear where the words of the oath proposed do seem according to the common and obvious sence of the words to contain in them something unlawful than by a loose interpretation so to lenifie them for our own ends that we may the more securely swear them For it is plain that such an oath may be refused without the peril of perjury but not that it can be taken without some danger or fear The same Rule must guide us also in keeping Vews § 23. Rule 12. It is ordinarily resolved that imposed Oaths must be kept according to the sense of Rule 12. the imposer See Sanders p. 191 192. But I conceive that assertion must be more exactly opened and bounded 1. Where justice requireth that we have respect to the will or right of the imposer there the oath imposed must be taken in his sence But whether it must be kept in his sence is further to be considered 2. When I have done my best to understand the sence of the imposer in taking the Oath and yet mistake it and so take it without fraud in another sense the Question then is somewhat hard whether I must keep it in the sense I took it in or in his sense which then I understood not If I must not keep it in my own sense which I took it in then it would follow that I must keep another oath and not that which I took For it is the sense that is the oath And I never obliged my self to any thing but according to my own sense And yet on the other side if every man may take Oaths in their private sense then oaths will not attain their ends nor be any security to the imposers § 24. In this case you must carefully distinguish between the formal obligation of the Oath or Vow as such and the obligation of justice to my neighbour which is a consequent of my Vow And for the former I conceive with submission that an Oath or Vow cannot bind me formally as such in any sense but my own in which bonâ fide I took it Because formally an oath cannot bind me which I never took But I never took that which I never meant nor thought of if you so define an oath as to take in the sense which is the soul of it § 25. But then in regard of the consequential obligation in point of Iustice unto man the question I think must be thus resolved 1. We must distinguish between a lawful imposer or contracter and a violent usurper or robber that injuriously compelleth us to swear 2. Between the obvious usual sense of the words and an unusual forced sense 3. Between a sincere involuntary misunderstanding the imposer and a voluntary fraudulent reservation or private sense 4. Between one that I owe something to antecedently and one that I owe nothing to but by the meer self-obligation of my Vow 5. Between an Imposer that is himself the culpable cause of my misunderstanding him and one that is not the cause but my own weakness or negligence is the cause 6. Between a case where both senses may be kept and a case where they cannot being inconsistent Upon these Distinctions I thus resolve the question § 26. Prop. 1. If I fraudulently and wilfully take an oath in a sense of my own contrary to They were ill times that Abbas Urspergensis describeth Chron. pag. 320. Ut omnis homo jam sit perjurus praedictis facinoribus implicatus ut vix excusari possit quin sit in his sicut populus sic sacerdos O that this calamity had ended with that age Et pag. 321. Principes terrarum Barones arte diabolicâ edocti nec cu●abant juramenta infringe●e nec fidem violare jus omne confundere the sense of the Imposer and the common and just sense of the words themselves I am guilty of perfidiousness and prophaneness in the very taking of it Prop. 2. If it be long of my own culpable ignorance or negligence that I misunderstood the Imposer I am not thereby disobliged from the publick sense Prop. 3. When the Imposer openly putteth a sense on the words imposed contrary to the usual obvious sense I am to understand him according to his own expression and not to take the oath as imposed in any other sense Prop. 4. If the Imposer refuse or neglect to tell me his sense any otherwise than in the imposed words I am to take and keep them according to the obvious sense of the words as they are commonly used in the time and place which I live in Prop. 5. If it be long of the Imposers obscurity or refusing to explain himself or other culpable cause that I mistook him I am not bound to keep my oath in his sense as different from my own unless there be some other reason for it Prop. 6. If the Imposer be a robber or usurper or one that I owe nothing to in justice but what I oblige my self to by my oath I am not then
bound at all to keep my oath in his sense if my own sense was according to the common use of the words Prop. 7. Though I may not lye to a robber or tyrant that unjustly imposeth promises or oaths upon me yet if he put an oath or promise on me which is good and lawful in the proper usual sense of the words though bad in his sense which is contrary to the plain words whether I may take this to save my liberty or life I leave to the consideration of the judicious that which may be said against it is that Oaths must not be used indirectly and dissemblingly that which may be said for it is 1. That I have no obligation to fit my words to his personal private sense 2. That I deceive him not but only permit him to deceive himself as long as it is he and not I that misuseth the words 3. That I am to have chief respect to the publick sense and it is not his sense but mine that is the publick sense 4. That the saving of a mans life or liberty is cause enough for the taking a lawful oath Prop. 8. In case I misunderstood the imposed Oath through my own default I am bound to keep it in both senses my own and the imposers if both be consistent and lawful to be done For I am bound to it in my own sense because it was formally my oath or Vow which I intended And I am bound to it in his sense because I have in Justice made the thing his due As if the King command me to Vow that I will serve him in wars against the Turk And I misunderstand him as if he meant only to serve him in wars against the Turk And I misunderstand him as if he meant only to serve him with my purse And so I make a Vow with this intent to expend part of my estate to maintain that War whereas the true sense was that I should serve him with my Person In this case I see not but I am bound to both Indeed if it were a promise that obliged me only to the King then I am obliged no further and no longer than he will For he can remit his own right But if by a Vow I become obliged directly to God himself as a party then no man can remit his right and I must perform my Vow as made to him § 27. Rule 13. If any impose an ambiguous oath and refuse to explain it and require you only to Rule 13. swear in those words and leave you to your own sense Dr. Sanderson thinketh that an honest man Sand. p. 193. Ca● 4● should suspect some fraud in such an oath and not take it at all till all parties are agreed of the sense pag. 193 194. And I think he should not take it at all unless there be some other cause that maketh it his duty But if a Lawful Magistrate command it or the interest of the Church or State require it I see not but he may take it on condition that in the plain and proper sense of the words the oath be lawful and that he openly profess to take it only in that sense § 28. Rule 14. If any power should impose an Oath or Vow or promise which in the proper usual sense Rule 14. were downright impious or blaspheamous or sinful and yet bid me take it in what sense I pleased though I could take it in such a sense as might make it no real consent to the impiety yet it would be impious in the sense of the would and of such heynous consequence as will make it to be unlawful As if I must subscribe or say or swear those words There is no God or Scripture is untrue though it 's easie to use these or any words in a good sense if I may put what sense I will upon them yet the publick sense of them is Blaspheamy and I may not publickly blaspheam on pretence of a private right sence and intention § 29. Rule 15. If the Oath imposed be true in the strict and pr●per sense yet if that sense be not Rule 15. vulgarly known nor sufficiently manifest to be the imposers sense and if the words are false or blaspheamous in the vulgar sense of those that I have to do with and that must observe and make use of my example I must not take such an oath without leave to make my sense as publick as my oath As if I were commanded to swear that God hath no fore-knowledge no knowledge no will c. It were easie to prove that these terms are spoken primarily of man and that they are attributed to God but analogically or metaphorically and that God hath no such humane acts formaliter but eminenter and that forma dat nomen and so that strictly it is not knowledge and will in the primary proper notion that God hath at all but something infinitely higher for which man hath no other name But though thus the words are true and justifiable in the strictest proper sense yet are they unlawful because they are blaspheamy in the vulgar sense And he that speaks to the Vulgar is supposed to speak with the Vulgar Unless he as publickly explain them § 30. Rule 16. If the supream power should impose an oath or promise which in the ordinary obvious Rule 16. sense were sinful and an inferiour officer would bid me take it in what sense I pleased I might not therefore take it because that such an officer hath no power to interpret it himself much less to allow me to take it in a private sense But if the Law giver that Imposeth it bid me take it in what sense I will and give me leave to make my sense as publick as my oath I may take it if the words be but dubious and not apparently false or sinful so there be no reason against it aliunde as from ill consequents c. § 31. Rule 17. If any man will say in such a case when he thinketh that the imposers sense is bad I Rule 17. take not the same Oath or Engagement which is imposed but another in the same words and I suppose not inferiour officers authorized to admit any interpretation but I look at them only as men that can actually execute or not execute the Laws upon me and so I take a Vow of my own according to my own sense though in their words as a means of my avoiding their severities As this is a collusion in a very high and tender business so that person if the publick sense of the oath be sinful must make his professed sense as publick as his Oath or promise It being no small thing to do that which in the publick sense is impious and so to be an example of perfidiousness to many § 32. Rule 18. Though an Oath imposed by an Usurper or by violence is not to be taken in formal obedience Rule 18. nor at all unless
future What Understanding Will or Power ar● formally in God How he knoweth future contingents with a hundred such like Then remember that you make use of this rule and say with M●ses D●u● 29. 29. The secret things belong to the Lord our God but those things that are revealed unto us and to our children for ever that we may do all the words of his Law There are many rare profound discoveries much glory●d of by the Masters of several Sects of which you may know the sentence of the Holy Ghost by that instance Col. 2. 18. Let no man beguile you of your reward in a v●luntary humility and worshipping of Angels intruding into th●se things which he hath not seen vainly puft up by his fleshly mind Reverently withdraw from things that are unrevealed and dispute them not § 17. Direct 6. Be a careful and accurate though not a vain Distinguisher and suffer not ambiguity Direct 6. and confusion to dec●ive you Suspect every word in your Question and anatomize it and agree ☜ upon the sense of all your common terms before you dispute with any adversary It is not only in S●e my Preface b●fore the second Part of the Sai●●s Rest. Edit 3. c. A man of judgement shall hear igno●●n● m●n d●ffer and know that ●h● mean one thing and yet ●●●●y themselves will never agree L. Baco● Ess. 3. many words but in one word or syllable that so much ambiguity and confusion may be contained as may make a long dispute to be but a vain and ridiculous wrangling Is it not a ridiculous business to hear men dispute many hours about the Cur credis and Into what faith is to be resolved and in the end come to understand that by Cur one of them speaks of the Principium or Causa Veritatis and the other of the Principium pat●factionis or the Evidentia Veritatis or some other cause And when one speaks of the Resolution of his faith as into the formal Object and another into the subservient testimony or means or into the proofs of Divine attestation or many other causes Or to hear men dispute Whether Christ dyed for all when by for one man meaneth for the benefit of all and another means in the place or stead of all or for the sins of all as the procuring cause c. Yet here is but a syllable to contain this confusion What a tedious thing it is to read long disputes between many Papists and Protestants about Justification while by Iustification one meaneth one thing and another meaneth quite another thing He that cannot force every word to make a plain confession of its proper signification that the Thing intended may be truly discerned in the Word he will but deceive himself and others with a wordy insignificant dispute § 18. Direct 7. Therefore be specially suspicious of Metaphors as being all but ambiguities till an Direct 7. explication hath fixed or determined the sense It is a noisome thing to hear some dispute upon an unexplained ☜ Metaphorical word when neither of them have enucleated the sense and when there are proper words enow § 19. Direct 8. Take special notice of what kind of beings your enquiry or disputation is and let Direct 8. all your terms be adapted and interpreted according to the kinds of beings you dispute of As if you ☜ be enquiring into the nature of any Grace as Faith Repentance Obedience c. remember that it is in genere moris a moral act And therefore the terms are not to be understood as if you disputed about meer Physical acts which are considered but in genere entis For that Object which must essentiate one Moral act containeth many Physical particles which will make up many Physical acts As I ●ave shewed in my Dispute of Saving Faith wi●h Dr. Barlow and of Iustification If you take such a man for your King your Commander your Master your Physicion c. if you should at the Barr when you are questioned for unfaithfulness dispute upon the word take whether it be an act of the phantasie or sense or intellect or will c. would you not be justly laught at So when you askt What act Faith or Repentance is which contain many particular Physical acts When you dispute of Divinity Policy Law Warr c. you must not use the same terms in the same sense as when you dispute of Physicks or Metaphysicks § 20. Direct 9. Be sure in all your disputes that you still keep distinguished before your eyes the Direct 9. Order of Being and the Order of Knowing that the questions de esse lying undetermined in your way ☜ do not frustrate all your dispute about the question de cognoscere As in the question Whether a man should do such or such a thing when he thinketh that it is Gods Command How far Conscience must be obeyed It must first be determined de esse whether indeed the thing be commanded or lawful or not Before the case can be determined about the obligation that followeth my apprehension For what ever my Conscience or Opinion say of it the Thing either is Lawful or it is not If it be Lawful or a duty the case is soon decided But if it be not Lawful the error of my Conscience altereth not Gods Law nor will it make it lawful unto me I am bound first to know and then to do what God revealeth and commandeth and this I shall be bound to what ever I imagine to the contrary and to lay by the error which is against it § 21. Direct 10. Be sure when you first enter upon an enquiry or dispute that you well discover how Direct 10. much of the controversie is verbal de nomine and ●ow much is material de re And that you suffer not ☜ your adversary to go on upon a false supposition that the Controversie is de re when it is but de Non ex verbis re● sed ex rebus verba esse inquirenda ait Myso● in Laert. p. 70. Basil Edit nomine The difference between names and things is so wide that you would think no reasonable man should confound them And yet so heedless in this point are ordinary disputers that it is a usual thing to make a great deal of stir about a controversie before they discern whether it be de nomine or de r● Many a hot and long dispute I have heard which was managed as about the very heart of some material cause as about mans Power to do good or about the sufficiency of Grace or about Iustification c. when the whole contest between the Disputers was only or principally It is a noble work that Mr. Le Blanck of Sedan is about to this purpose stating more ex●ctly than hath yet been done all the Controversies between us and the Papists which how excellently he is like to perform I easily conjecture by the Disputes of his
by decisive Iudicial ●entence Nor any Universal Civil Monarch of the world 2. The publick Governing Decisive judgement obliging others belongeth to publick persons or Officers Eph. 4. 7 13 14 15 16. of God and not to any private man 1 Cor. 12. 28 29. 17. 3. The publick decision of Doubts or Controversies about Faith it self or the true sense of Gods Word and Laws as obliging the whole Church on Earth to believe that decision or not gainsay it Acts 15. See my Key for Catholicks because of the Infallibility or Governing authority of the Deciders belongeth to none but Jesus Christ Because as is said he hath made no Universal Governour nor Infallible Expositor It belongeth to the Law-giver only to make such an Universally obliging Exposition of his own Laws 4. True Bishops or Pastors in their own particular Churches are Authorized Teachers and Guides in Expounding the Laws and Word of Christ And the people are bound as Learners to reverence their Teaching and not contradict it without true cause yea and to believe them fide humanâ in things pertinent to their Office For oportet discentem credere 5. No such Pastors are to be Absolutely believed nor in any case of notorious Error or Heresie where the Word of God is discerned to be against them 6. For all the people as Reasonable creatures have a judgement of private discerning to judge what they must Receive as Truth and to discern their own duty by the help of the Word of God and of their Teachers 7. The same power of Governing-Iudgement Lawful Synods have over their several flocks as a Pastor over his own but with greater advantage 8. The power of Judging in many Consociate Churches who is to be taken into Communion as Orthodox and who to be refused by those Churches as Hereticks in specie that is what Doctrine they will judge sound or unsound as it is Iudicium discernendi belongeth to every one of the Council ●ingly As it is a Iudgement obliging themselves by Contract and not of Governing each other it is in the Contracters and Consenters And for peace and order usually in the Major Vote But with the Limitations before expressed 9. Every true Christian believeth all the Essentials of Christianity with a Divine faith and not by a meer humane belief of his Teachers though by their Help and Teaching his faith is generated and confirmed and preserved Therefore no essential Article of Christianity is left to any obliging decision of any Church but only to a subservient obliging Teaching As whether there be a God a Christ a Heaven a Hell an Immortality of souls whether God be to be believed loved feared obeyed before man Whether the Scripture be Gods Word and true Whether those that contradict it are to be believed therein Whether Pastors Assemblies publick Worship Baptism Sacrament of the Lords Supper be Divine institutions And the same I may say of any known Word of God No mortals may judge in partem utramli●et but the Pastors are only Authorized Teachers and helpers of the peoples faith And so they be partly to one another 10. If the Pope or his Council were the Infallible or the Governing Expositors of all Gods Laws and Scriptures 1. God would have enabled them to do it by an Universal Commentary which all men should be obliged to believe or at least not to contradict For there is no Authority and Obligation given to men yea to so many successively to do that for the needful decision of Controversies which they never have Ability given them to do For that were to oblige them to things impossible 2. And the Pope and his Council would be the most treacherous miscreants on earth that in so many hundred years would never write such an Infallible nor Governing Commentary to end the differences of the Christian world Indeed they have judged with others against Arrius that Christ is true God and one with the Father in substance c. But if they had said the contrary must we have taken it for Gods truth or have believed them 11. To judge who for Heresie or Seandal shall be punished by the Sword belongeth to none but the Magistrate in his own dominions As to judge who shall have Communion or be excommunicated from the Church belongeth as aforesaid to the Pastors And the said Magistrate hath first as a man his own Iudgement of discerning what is Heresie and who of his subjects are guilty of it in order to his publick Governing Judgement 12. The Civil Supream Ruler may Antecedently exercise this Judgement of Discerning by the Teaching of their proper Teachers in order to his consequent sentences on offenders And so in his Laws may tell the subjects what Doctrines and practices he will either Tolerate or punish And thus may the Church Pastors do in their Canons to their several flocks in relation to Communion or non-communion 13. He that will condemn particular persons as Hereticks or offenders must allow them to speak for themselves and hear the proofs and give them that which justice requireth c. And if the Pope can do so at the Antipodes and in all the world either per se or per alium without giveing that other his essential claimed power let him prove it by better experience than we have had 14. As the prime and sole-universal Legislation belongeth to Jesus Christ so the final Judgement universal and particular belongeth to him which only will end all Controversies and from which there is no appeal Quest. 29. Whether a Parents power over his Children or a Pastor or many Pastors or Bishops over the same Children as parts of their flock be greater or more obliging in matters of Religion and publick Worship THis being toucht on somewhere else I only now say 1. That if the case were my own I would 1. Labour to know their different Powers as to the matter commanded and obey each in that which is proper to his place 2. If I were young and ignorant Natural necessity and natural obligation together would give my Parents with whom I lived such an advantage above the Minister whom I seldome see or understand as would determine the case de eventu and much de jure 3. If my Parents commanded me to hear a Teacher who is against Ceremonies or certain Forms and to hear none that are for them natural necessity here also ordinarily would make it my duty first to hear and obey my Parents And in many other cases till I came to understand the greater power of the Pastors in their own place and work 4. But when I come to Church or know that the judgement of all Concordant Godly Pastors condemneth such a thing as damnable Heresie or Sin which any Father commandeth me to receive and profess I would more believe and follow the Judgement of the Pastors and Churches Quest. 30. May an Office Teacher or Pastor be at once in a stated Relation of a Pastor and a
Father Mother c. for his service and swearing to prefer it and his safety before them all See Martinius reciting the Oath out of divers Authors This is our sense of the word Let no man now that taketh it in other sense pretend therefore that we differ in doctrine 2. Seeing it is no Scripture word it is not of necessity to the faith or peace of the Church but when disputers agree not of the sense of the word they are best lay it by and use such terms whose sense they can agree on 3. The name Sacrament is either taken from the Covenant sworn to or from the Sign or Ceremony of Consent by which we oblige our selves or from both together 4. The Covenant of Christianity is different from a particular Covenant of some Office And accordingly the Sacrament is to be distinguished 5. As Civil Oeconomical and Ecclesiastical Offices are distinct so are their several Sacraments 6. The solemn renewing of the sacred Vow or Covenant without any instituted obliging sign is to be distinguished from the renewing it by such a sign of Gods institution And now I conclude 1. As the word Sacrament is taken improperly secundum quid from the nobler part only that is the Covenant as a mans ●oul is called the Man so there are as many Sacraments as Covenants and there is in specie but one Covenant of Christianity and so but one Sacrament of Christianity variously expressed 2. As the word Sacrament is taken properly and fully according to the foresaid description so there are properly two Sacraments of Christianity or of the Covenant of Grace that is Baptism the Sacrament of initiation most ●ully so called and the Lords Supper or the Sacrament of Confirmation Exercise and Progress 3. As the word Sacrament is taken less properly defectively secundum quid for the same Covenant of Grace or Christianity renewed by any arbitrary sign of our own without a solemn Ceremony of Divine institution so there are divers Sacraments of Christianity or the Covenant of Grace that is Divers solemn renewals of our Covenant with God As 1. At our solemn transition from the state of Infant-membership unto that of the Adult when we solemnly own our baptismal Covenant which Calvin and many Protestants and the English Rubrick call Confirmation 2. The solemn owning the Christian Faith and Covenant in our constant Church-assemblies when we stand up at the Creed or profession of our saith and all renew our Covenant with God and dedication to him 3. At solemn dayes of Fasting or humiliation and of Thanksgiving when this should be solemnly done Specially upon some publick defection 4. Upon the publick Repentance of a particular sinner before his absolution 5. When a man is going out of the world and recommending his soul to God by Christ All these are solemn renewings of our Covenant with God in which we may use any Lawful Natural or Arbitrary signs or expressions to signifie our own minds by as speaking subscribing standing up lifting up the hand laying it upon a book kissing the book c. These Sacraments are improperly so called And are Divine as to the Covenant renewed but Humane as to the expressing signs 4. Ordination is not improperly or unfitly called a Sacrament because it is the solemnizing of a mutual Covenant between God and man for our dedication to his special service and his reception of us and blessing on us though Imposition of hands be not so solemn a Ceremony by meer Institution as Baptism and the Lords Supper But then it must be noted that this is not Sacramentum Christianita●is a Sacrament of the Christian Covenant but Sacramentum Ordinis vel officii particularis a Sacrament of Orders or a particular Office but yet of Divine institution 5. The solemn Celebration of Marriage is an Oeconomical Sacrament that is a solemn obligation of man and woman by Vow to one another and of both to God in that relation which may be arbitrarily expressed by lawful signs or ceremonies 6. The solemn Covenant of a Master with his servant is on the same account an Oeconomical Sacrament 7. The inauguration of a King in which he is sworn to his subjects and dedicated to God in that Office and his subjects sworn or consent to him is a Civil Sacrament whether Unction be added or not And so is a Judges entrance on his Office when it is done so solemnly by an obliging V●w or Covenant 8. Confirmation in the Papists sense as conferred by Chrysm on Infants for giving them the Holy Ghost is but an unwarrantable imitation of the old miraculous operation by the Apostles and neither a Christian Sacrament nor a warrantable practice but a presumption 9. The same may be said of their Sacrament of Extream Unction 10. Their Sacrament of Marriage is no otherwise a Sacrament than the Inauguration of a King is which is approved by God as well as Marriage and signifieth also an honourable Collation of Power from the Universal King 11. Their Sacrament of Penance is no otherwise a Sacrament than many other fore-mentioned renewings of our Covenant are 12. Therefore the Papists seven Sacraments or septenary distribution is confused partly redundant partly defective and unworthy to be made a part of their faith or Religion or the matter of their pievish and ignorant contendings And they that peremptorily say without distinguishing that there are but two Sacraments in all do but harden them by the unwarrantable narrowing of the word Quest. 100. How far is it lawful needful or unlawful for a man to afflict himself by external Penances for sin Answ. Neg. 1. NOt to the destroying of his body life or health or the disabling or unfitting Isa. 58. ● 5 6 7 8 c. Matth. 9. 13. 12. 7. Matth. 6 1 3 5 6 17. Z●ch 8. 19. 2 Cor. 2. 7. Col. 2 22 23 24. Joel 1. 14. 2. 15. Dan. 9. 3. A●●●● 10. 13. 1 Cor 7. 5. ●uke 2 37. Ma●●h 4. 2. ● S●m 12. 22. ●uke 18. 12. body or mind for the service of God 2. Not to be the expression of any sinful inordinate dejection despondency sorrow or despair 3. Not so as may be an outward appearance of such inordinate passions or as may be a scandal to others and deter them from Religion as a melancholy hurtful thing 4. Not as if God would accept the meer external self-afflicting for it self or as if he loved our hurt or as if we merited of him by our unprofitable voluntary troubles But 1. It is a duty to express true godly sorrow by its proper exercise and signs so far as either the acting of it or the increase or continuance by the means of those expressions is profitable to our selves 2. And also so far as is needful to the profiting of others by shewing them the evil of sin and drawing them to repentance 3. And so far as is necessary to the satisfying of the Church of the truth of our Repentance in
in the Assembly Answ. 1. We may use them in that measure of suitableness to our cases which they have You may joyn with a man in prayer who expresseth part of your wants though he express not all Else you must joyn with no man in the world 2. If ungodly men are present when the faithful speak to God must we not speak our proper case because they are present The Minister in Church-administrations speaketh principally in the name of the faithful and not of hypocrites Must he leave out of his prayers all that is proper to the Godly meerly because some wicked men are there No more must the Church do in singing unto God 3. They that cannot speak every word in a Psalm just as their own case may yet speak it as instructive Otherwise they might not read or say it James 5. 13. Ephes. 5. 19. Col. 3. 16. But the Sectarian Objections against singing Davids Psalms are so frivolous that I will not tire the Reader with any more Quest. 125. May Psalms be used as Prayers and Prayses and Thanksgivings or only as Instructive Even the Reading as well as the Singing of them Answ. THe sober Reader who knoweth not what errors others hold will marvel that I trouble men with such questions But I have oft been troubled with those that Psal. 72. 20. Psal. 90. Title Psal. 86. Title Psal. 17. Title c. having no other shift to deny the Lawfulness of written and set forms of prayer do affirm that Psalms are neither to be read or sung at all as Prayers but only as doctrinal Scriptures for Instruction But that this is false appeareth 1. In that those that are real material prayers and prayses and thanksgivings and were penned for that very use as the Titles shew and those that were so used by the Jewish Synagogues where Christ was ordinarily present may be so used by us But such are the Psalms both as said and sung 2. And those that we are commanded to sing as Psalms and have Christs example so to use who sung a Hymn or Psalm of Praise at his last Supper we also may so use But c. 3. And those that are by Gods Spirit fitted for our use in Prayer Praise and Thanksgiving and never forbidden so to be used may by us be so used But such are the Psalms c. I will weary you with no more Quest. 126. Are our Church-Tunes Lawful being of mans invention Answ. YEs They are a lawful invention allowed us by God and fitted to the General Rules of Edification Scripture is no particular Rule for such Modes and Circumstances Object They breed a carnal pleasure by the melody which is not fit for spiritual devotion Answ. It is a lawful sensitive pleasure sanctified to a holy use not hindering but greatly helping the soul in spiritual worship Either you call it carnal because it gratifieth the sinful corrupt inclinations of man or only because it is sensitive or a pleasure in the imagination and lower faculties If the former 1. There is nothing in it which is a necessary cause of any sinful pleasure nor an impediment to spiritual pleasure 2. But a lustful person will turn all sensitive pleasure into sin Our Meat 〈…〉 12. 17 〈…〉 16. 〈…〉 2● and Drink and Clothes and Houses and Friends and Health The Bread and Wine in the Sacrament may be thus abused 2. But you must know that as our Bodies are here united to our souls so they act together and while the sensitive part is subordinate to the rational it is serviceable to it and not a hi●derance When you come to have souls that are separated from the body you shall use no bod●ly instruments And yet even then it is uncertain to us whether the sensitive powers of the soul do not accompany it and be not used by it But certainly in the mean time he that will not use sense shall not use reason And he that acteth not sensibly acteth not as a man It is not a sin to be a man And therefore not to see to hear to taste to smell c. Nor is it a sin to taste sweetness in our meat or drink nor is it a sinful pleasure for the eyes to behold the Light or the variety of the beauteous works of God or to take pleasure in them His works are great sought out of all them that have pleasure therein Psal. 111. 2. You know not what it is to be a man if you know not that God hath made all senses to be Rom. 8. 18 32. T●tus 1. 15. Rom. 14. 20. 1 Cor. 3. 21. 2 Cor. 4. 15. the inlets of objects and so of holy pleasure into the soul. Would he have given us eyes and ears and appetites and made his creatures sweet and beauteous that all might either be sin or useless to us No all things are sanctified and pure to the pure The sense is the natural way to the Imagination and that to the Understanding And he that will have no sensible and natural pleasure shall have no spiritual pleasure And he that will have none but sensitive pleasure were better have none at all It is therefore a foolish pretence of spirituality to dream of acting without our senses or avoiding those delights which may and must be sanctified to us Harmony and Melody are so high a pleasure of the sense that they are nearest to Rational delights if not participating of them and exceedingly fitted to elevate the mind and affections unto God And as it is the very nature of true Holiness to be so suited to Holy things as that they may be our Delight and he is the genuine Saint and the best of Christians who most Delighteth in God and Holiness So that is the best means to make us the best Christians which helpeth us best to these Delights And if any thing on Earth be like to Heaven it is to have our Delight in God And therefore if any thing may make us Heavenly it is that which raiseth us to such delights And therefore a Chore of holy persons melodiously singing the Praises of Iehovah are likest to the Angelical Society Psal. 150. Quest. 127. Is Church-Musick by Organs or such Instruments lawful Answ. I Know that in the persecuted and poorer times of the Church none such were used when Rev. 14. ● 3. The voice of Harpers harping with their Harps is ordinarily expounded of publick Worship they had not Temples nor alwayes a fixed meeting place And that the Author of the Quest. Resp. in Iustin Martyr speaketh against it which Perkins and others cite to that purpose And I grant 1. That as it is in the power of weak diseased Christians to make many things unlawful to their brethren lest we be hurtful to them and to deprive us of much not only of our Liberties but our Helps so in abundance of Congregations Church-Musick is made unlawful by accident through their mistake For it is unlawful caeteris
absolutely subjected to God will obey none against him whatever it cost them as Dan. 3. 6. Heb. 11. Luk. 14. 26 33. Matth. 5. 10 11 12. therefore it hath proved the occasion of bloody persecutions in the Churches by which professed Christians draw the guilt of Christian blood upon themselves 12. And hereby it hath dolefully hindered the Gospel while the persecutors have silenced many worthy Conscionable Preachers of it 13. And by this it hath quenched Charity in the hearts of both sides and taught the sufferers and the afflicters to be equally bitter in censuring if not Rom. 14 15. detesting one another 14. And the Infidels seeing these dissensions and bitter passions among Christians deride and scorn and hate them all 15. Yea such causes as these in the Latine and Greek Churches have engaged not only Emperours and Princes against their own subjects so that Chronicles and Books of Martyrs perpetuate their dishonour as Pilate's name is in the Creed but also have set them in bloody Wars among themselves These have been the fruits and this is the tendency of usurping Christs prerogative over his Religion and Worship in his Church And the greatness of the sin appeareth in these aggravations 1. It is a mark of pitiful Ignorance and Pride when dust shall thus like Nebuchadnezzar exalt it self against God to its certain infamy and abasement 2. It sheweth that men little know themselves that think themselves fit to be the makers of a Religion for so many others And that they have base thoughts of all other men while they think them unfit to Worship God any other way than that of their making And think that they will all so far deny God as to take up a Religion that 's made by man 3. It shews that they are much void of Love to others that can thus use them on so small occasion 4. And it sheweth how little true sense or reverence of Christian Religion they have themselves who can thus debase it and equal their own inventions with it 5. And it leaveth men utterly unexcusable that will not take warning by so many hundred years experiences of most of the Churches through the World Even when we see the yet continued divisions of the Eastern and Western Churches and all about a humane Religion in the parts most contended about When they read of the Rivers of Blood that have been shed in Piedmont France Germany Belgia Poland Ireland and the flames in England and many other Nations and all for the humane parts of mens Religion He that will yet go on and take no warning may go read the 18th and 19th of the Revelation and see what Joy will be in Heaven and Earth when God shall do Justice upon such But remember that I speak all this of no other than those expresly here described Quest. 135. What are the mischiefs of mens error on the other extream who pretend that Scripture is a Rule where it is not and deny the foresaid lawful things on pretence that Scripture is a perfect Rule say some for all things Answ. 1. THey fill their own minds with a multitude of causeless scruples which on their principles can never be resolved and so will give themselves no rest 2. They make themselves a Religion of their own and superstition is their daily devotion which being erroneous will not hang together but is full of contradictions in it self and which being humane and bad can never give true stability to the soul. 3. Hereby they spend their dayes much in melancholy troubles and unsetled distracting doubts and fears instead of the Joyes of solid faith and hope and love 4. And if they escape this their Religion is contentious wrangling censorious and factious and their zeal flyeth out against those that differ from their peculiar superstitions and conceits 5. And hereupon they are usually mutable and unfetled in their Religion This year for one and the next for another because there is no Certainty in their own inventions and conceits 6. And hereupon they still fall into manifold parties because each man maketh a Religion to himself by his mis-interpretation of Gods Word So that there is no end of their divisions 7. And they do a great deal of hurt in the Church by putting the same distracting and dividing conceits into the heads of others And young Christians and Women and ignorant well meaning people that are not able to know who is in the right do often turn to that party which they think most strict and godly though it be such as our Quakers And the very good conceit of the people whom they take it from doth settle so strong a prejudice in their mind as no argument or evidence scarcely can work out And so Education Converse and humane estimation breedeth a succession of dividers and troublers of the Churches 8. They sin against God by calling good evil and light darkness and honouring superstition which is the work of Satan with holy names Isa. 5. 20 21. 9. They sin by adding to the Word of God while they say of abundance of Lawful things This is unlawful and that is against the Word of God and pretend that their Touch not taste not handle Col. 2. 22 23. not is in the Scriptures For while they make it a Rule for every Circumstance in particular they must squeeze and force and wrest it to find out all those Circumstances in it which were never there and so by false expositions make the Scriptures another thing 10. And how great a sin is it to Father Satans works on God and to say that all these and these things are forbidden or commanded in the Scripture and so to belye the Lord and the Word of Truth 11. It engageth all Subjects against their Rulers Laws and Government and involveth them in the sin of denying them just obedience while all the Statute Book must be found in the Scriptures or else condemned as unlawful 12. It maintaineth disobedience in Churches and causeth Schisms and Confusions unavoidably For they that will neither obey the Pastors nor joyn with the Churches till they can shew Scriptures particularly for every Translation Method Metre Tune and all that 's done must joyn with no Churches in the world 13. It bringeth Rebellion and Confusion into families while Children and Servants must learn no Catechism hear no Minister give no account observe no hours of prayer nay nor do no work but what there is a particular Scripture for 14. It sets men on Enthusiastical expectations and irrational scandalous worshipping of God while all men must avoid all those Methods Phrases Books Helps which are not expresly or particularly in Scripture and men must no● use their own Inventions or prudence in the right ordering of the works of Religion 15. It destroyeth Christian Love and Concord while men are taught to censure all others that use any thing in Gods Worship which is not particularly in Scripture and so to censure
your labour is in vain How easie is it for you to overlook some one thing among a multitude that must be seen about the Causes and Cure of diseases unless God shall open it to you and give you a clear discerning and an universal observation And when twenty considerable things are noted a mans life may be lost for want of your discerning one point more What need have you of the help of God to bring the fittest remedies to your memory And much more to bless them when they are administred as the experience of your daily practice may inform you where Atheism hath not made men fools § 5 Direct 5. Let your continual observation of the fragility of the flesh and of mans mortality Direct 5. make you more spiritual than other men and more industrious in preparing for the life to come and greater contemners of the vanities of this world He that is so frequently among the sick and a spectator of the dead and dying is utterly unexcusable if he be himself unprepared for his sickness or for death If the heart be not made better when you almost dwell in the house of mourning it is a bad and deplorate heart indeed It is strange that Physicions should be so much suspected of Atheism as commonly they are and Religio medici should be a word that signifieth irreligiousness Sure this conceit was taken up in some more irreligious Age or Countrey For I have oft been very thankful to God in observing the contrary even how many excellent pious Physicions there have been in most Countreys where the purity of Religion hath appeared and how much they promoted the work of Reformation such as Crato Platerus Erastus and abundance more that I might name And in this Land and Age I must needs bear witness that I have known as many Physicions Religious proportionably as of any one profession except the Preachers of the Gospel But as no men are more desperately wicked than those that are wicked after pious education and under the most powerful means of their reformation so it is very like that those Physicions that are not truly good are very bad because they are bad against so much light and so many warnings And from some of these it 's like this censorious Proverb came And indeed mans nature is so apt to be affected with things that are unusual and to lose all sense of things that are grown common that no men have more need to watch their hearts and be afraid of being hardened than those that are continually under the most quickening helps and warnings For it is very easie to grow customary and sensless under them and then the danger is that there are no better means remaining to quicken such a stupid hardened heart Whereas those that enjoy such helps but seldom are not so apt to lose the sense and benefit of them The sight of a sick or dying man doth usually much awaken those that have such sights but seldom But who are more hardened than Souldiers and Sea men that live continually as among the dead when they have twice or thrice seen the fields covered with mens Carkasses they usually grow more obdurate than any others And this is it that Physicions are in danger of and should most carefully avoid But certainly an Atheistical or ungodly Physicion is unexcusably blind To say as some do that they study nature so much that they are carryed away from God is as if you should say They study the work so much that they forget the workman or They look so much on the Book that they overlook the sense or that They study medicine so much that they forget both the patient and his health To look into Nature and not see God is as to see the creatures and not the light by which we see them or to see Trees and Houses and not to see the Earth that beareth them For God is the Creating Conserving Dirigent Final Cause of all Of him and Through him and To him are all things He is All in all And if they know not that they are the subjects of this God and have immortal souls they are ill proficients in the study of Nature that know no better the nature of man To boast of their acquisitions in other Sciences while they know not what a Man is nor what they are themselves is little to the honour of their understandings You that live still as in the fight of death should live as in the sight of another world and excell others in spiritual wisdom and holiness and sobriety as your advantages by these quickening helps excell § 6. Direct 6. Exercise your Compassion and Charity to mens souls as well as to their Bodies and Direct 6. speak to your patients such words as tend to prepare them for their change You have excellent opportunities if you have hearts to take them If ever men will hear it is when they are sick and if ever they will be humbled and serious it is when the approach of death constraineth them They will hear that counsel now with patience which they would have despised in their health A few serious words about the danger of an unregenerate state and the necessity of holiness and the use of a Saviour and the everlasting state of Souls for ought you know may be blest to their conversion and salvation And it is much more comfortable for you to save a soul than to cure the body Think not to excuse your selves by saying It is the Pastors duty For though it be theirs ex officio it is yours also ex charitate Charity bindeth every man as he hath opportunity to do good to all and especially the greatest good And God giveth you opportunity by casting them in your way The Priest and Levite that past by the wounded man were more to be blamed for not relieving him than those that never went that way and therefore saw him not Luk. 10. 32. And many a man will send for the Physicion that will not send for the Pastor And many a one will hear a Physicion that will despise the Pastor As they reverence their Landlords because they hold their estates from them so do they the Physicion because they think they can do much to save their lives And alas in too many places the Pastors either mind not such work or are insufficient for it or else stand at ods and distance from the people so that there is but too much need of your charitable help Remember therefore that he that converteth a sinner from the errour of his way shall save a soul from death and shall hide a multitude of sins Jam. 5. 20. Remember that you are to speak to one that is going into another world and that must be saved now or never And that all that ever must be done for his salvation must be presently done or it will be too late Pity humane nature and harden not your hearts against a man
of this but live as quietly and talk as pleasantly as if all were well with them and their souls were safe and their calling and election were made sure Alas if these souls were not hardned in sin we should see it in their tears or hear it in their complaints they would after Sermon sometime come to the Minister as they Acts 2. 37. Acts 16. 30. Sirs what must we do to be saved or we should see it in their lives or hear of it by report of others who would observe the change that grace hath made and Sermons would stick longer by them and not at best be turned off with a fruitless commendation and saying it was a good Sermon and there is an end of it Judge now by this true description which I have given you what a hardned sinner is And then the godly may so see cause to bewail the remnants of this mischief as yet to be daily thankful to God that they are not in the power of it § 10. Direct 7. Live if you can possibly under a lively quickning Ministry and in the company of Direct 7. seri●us lively Christian● It is true that we should be deeply affected with the truths of God how coldly soever they be delivered But the question is not what is our duty but what is our disease and 〈…〉 and the proper remedy All men should be so holy as not to need any exhortations to 〈◊〉 at all But shall Ministers therefore neglect such exhortations or they that need them ●●●● away their ●ars Hear if possible that Minister that first feels what he speaks and so speaks what ●● feels as tendeth most to make you feel Isa. 58. 1 2. Cry aloud spare not lift up thy ●●●●● like a Trumpet and shew my people their transgressions and the house of Israel their sins Though ●●c●●● seek me daily and delight to know my wayes as a Nation that did righteousness and forsook n●t ●●●● Or●inance● of their God God is the chief agent but he useth to work according to the ●●●●●● of the instrument O woful case to hear a dead Minister speaking to a dead people the living truths of the living God! As Christ said If the blind lead the blind both will fall into the ditch And if the dead must raise the dead and the ungodly enemies of a holy life must bring men to godliness and to a holy life it must be by such a power as once made use of clay and spittle to open the eyes of the blind It seems it was a Proverb in Christs dayes Let the dead bury their dead 2 ●●●● 13 ●1 But not Let the dead raise the dead God may honour the bones of the dead Prophet with the raising a Corps that is cast into its grave and toucheth them A meeting of a dead Minister and a dead people is like a place of graves and though it be a lamentable thing to hear a man speak without any life of life eternal yet God can concurr to the quickning of a soul. But sure we have no great reason to expect that ordinarily he should convert men so miraculously without the moral aptitude of means It is most incongruous for any man in his familiar discourse to speak without great seriousness and reverence of things concerning life eternal But for a Preacher to talk of God of Christ of Heaven and Hell as coldly and sleepily as if he were perswading men not to believe him or regard him that no more regards himself is less tolerable It is a sad thing to hear a man draw out a dreaming dull discourse about such astonishing weighty things and to speak as if it were the business of his art to teach men to sleep while the names of Heaven and Hell are in their ears and not to be moved while they hear the message of the living God about their life or death everlasting If a man tell in the Streets of a fire in the Town or a Souldier bring an Allarm of the enemy at the Gates in a reading or jeasting tone the hearers will neglect him and think that he believeth not himself I know it is not meer noise that will convert a soul A bawling fervency which the hearers may discern to be but histrionical and affected and not to come from a serious heart doth harden the auditors worst of all A rude unreverent noise is unbeseeming an Embassador of Christ But an ignorant saying of a few confused words or a sleepy recital of the most pertinent things do as little beseem them Christ raised not Lazarus by the lowdness of his voice But where the natural ears are the passage to the mind the voice and manner should be suitable to the matter Noise without seriousness and pertinent matter is like Gunpowder without Bullet that causeth sound and no execution And the weightiest matter without clear explication and lively application is like Bullet without Powder If you will throw Canon Bullets at the enemy with your hands they will sooner fall on your feet than on them And it is deadness aggravated by hypocrisie when a lifeless Preacher will pretend moderation as if he were afraid of speaking too lowd and earnestly le●t he should awake the dead whom lightning and thunder will not awake and when he will excuse himself by accusing those that are not as drowzie or dead as he and would make men believe that seriousness is intemperate rage or madness If you are cast upon a cold and sleepy Minister consider the matter more than the manner But choose not such a one for the cure of hardness and insensibility of heart § 11. Direct 8. Take notice how sensible tender hearted Christians are of sins far less than those Direct 8. that you make a jeast of And how close those matters come to their hearts that touch not yours And have not you as much cause to be moved as they and as much need to lay such things to heart Did you but know what a trouble it is to them to be haunted with temptations to the unbelief and Atheism which prevaileth with you though they are far from choosing them or delighting in them Did you see how involuntary thoughts and frail●ies make some of them aweary of themselves and how they even hate their hearts for believing no more and loving God no more and for being so strange to God and Heaven when yet there is nothing in the world so dear to them nor hath so much of their Estimation or Endeavour You would think sure that if such hearts had your sin and misery to feel they would feel it to their grief indeed unless the sin it self did hinder the feeling as it doth with you Let tender hearted Christians instruct you and not be witnesses against you § 12. Direct 9. Take heed of hardning Company Examples and Discours● To hear men rail and Direct 9. s●●ffe at Holiness and curse and swear and blaspheme the Name and Truth of God
will at first make you tremble But if you wilfully cast your self ordinarily into such Company by degrees your sense and tenderness will be gone and you will find a very great Hardning power in the company and frequent discourse and practices which your selves condemn § 13. Direct 10. Take heed of wilful sinning against knowledge much more of lying in such sin Direct 10. unrepented of It greatly hardneth to sin against knowledge and much more to commit such sins over and over This grieveth and driveth away the Spirit and dangerously provoketh God to leave men to themselves § 14. Direct 11. Take heed of being customary in the use of those means that must be the means of Direct 11. curing hardned hearts If once the lively preaching and holy living and fervent praying of the servants of God be taken by thee but as matters of course and thou go with them to Church and to prayers but as to eat or drink or kneel with them but for custom thou wilt be as the Smiths Dog that can sleep by the Anvile while the Hammers are beating and the Sparks are flying about his ears It is dangerous to grow Customary and dull under powerful lively helps § 15. Direct 12. Be often with the sick and in the house of mourning and read thy lesson in Direct 21. the Church-yard and let the grave and bones and dust instruct thee When thou seest the End of all the living perhaps thou wilt somewhat lay it to heart Sight will sometime do more than the hearing of greater things Fear may possibly touch the heart that hath not yet so much ingenuity as to be melted by the force of Love And ordinarily the humbling and softning of a hard impenitent heart begins in Fear and ends in Love The work of preparation is in a manner the work of Fear alone The first work of true Conversion is begun in a great measure of fear and somewhat of Love but so little as is scarce perceived because of the more sensible operations of Fear And as a Christian groweth his Love encreaseth till perfect Love in the state of perfection have cast out all tormenting fear though not our Reverence or filial fear of God Look therefore into the grave and remember man that thou must dye thou must dye it is past all controversie that thou must dye And dost thou know where thou must appear when death hath once performed its office Dost thou not believe that after Death comes Judgement Dost thou not know that thou art now in a life of tryal in order to endless Ioy or misery and that this life is to be lived but once and if thou miscarry now thou art undone for ever and that all the hope of preventing thy damnation is Now while this life of tryal doth continue Now is the accepted time this is the day of salvation If Hell be prevented it must be Now prevented If ever thou wilt pray if ever thou wilt be converted if ever thou wilt be made an heir of Heaven it must be Now O man how quickly will patience have done with thee and time be gone and then O then it will be too late Knowest thou not that all the care and labour and hope of the Devil for thy damnation is laid out this way if it be possible to find thee other work or take thee up with other thoughts or keep thee asleep with presumptuous hopes and carnal mirth and pleasures and company or quiet thee by delayes till time be gone and it be too late And wilt thou let him have his will and pleasure him with thy own perdition Dost thou think these are not things to be considered on Do they not deserve thy speediest seriousest thoughts At least use thy Reason and self-love to the awakening and moving and softning thy Hardned heart PART III. Directions against Hypocrisie § HYp●crisie is the acting the part of a Religious person as upon a stage by one that is not Religious 〈…〉 sin ●●●● obse●●a●eque cav●r● 〈◊〉 nequid de ●e me●●●● quam sit co●menda●e p●● mu fu 〈…〉 aliqua m●●a 〈◊〉 b●na qu●● ins●n●●ppar●●e facien●e ac ●ircumcid●●e ●oci● on nem f●ctionem I ●●●● i●●●●●●● Philosophia ●es ad●o difficili● est u●●●m ve● s●mulare magna sit par● philosophiae Pa●l ●●●●g It was one of the Roman ●aws of the 12. tables Impiu●●e audeto p●aca●e donis ●●am De●rum Let no ungodly person dare to goe about to appeale t●e ●●spleasure of the Gods by guifts viz. He must app●ase them first b● r●formation Bo●a ●●●●scien●ia p●od●re ●ult c●nsp●ci ●●●●● nequa 〈…〉 indeed A seeming in Religion to be what you are not or to do what you do not Or a diss●m●ling or c●unterfeiting that piety which you have not To counterfeit a state of Godliness is the sin only of the unregenerate who at the present are in a state of misery To c●●terfeit some particular act of Godliness or some higher degree is an odious sin but such as a regen●●●●● person may be tempted into This act of Hypocrisie doth not denominate the person an Hypocrite but the state of Hypocrisie doth Every Hypocrite therefore is an ungodly person seeming Godly or one that indeed is no true Christian professing himself a Christian. Of Hypocrites there be two sorts some desire to deceive others but not themselves but know themselves to be but dissemblers and these are commonly called Gross Hypocrites And some deceive both themselves and others and think they are no Hypocrites but are as confident of their honesty and sincerity as if they were no dissemblers at all But yet they are as verily Hypocrites as the former because they seem to be Religious and sincere when indeed they are not though they think they are and profess themselves to be true Christians when they are nothing less These are called Close Hypocrites because they know not themselves to be Hypocrites though they might know it if they would This is the commonest sort of Hypocrites § 2. There are also two Degrees of Hypocrites Some of them have only a General profession of Christianity and Godliness which is the professed Religion of the Country where they live and these are Hypocrites because they profess to be what they are not And others make a greater and extraordinary profession of special strictness in their Religion when they are not sincere And these are Eminently called Hypocrites Such as the Pharisees were among the Jews and many Fryers and Jesuits and Nuns among the Papists who by their separating Vows and Orders and Habits profess extraordinarily an extraordinary measure of devotion while they want the life of Godliness § 3. In all Hypocrisie there is considerable 1. The thing pretended 2. The pretence or means of seeming or the cloke of their deceit 1. The thing pretended by common Hypocrites is to be true Christians and servants of God and heirs of Heaven though not to be so zealous in