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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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day of Tryal to take heed of admitting any thing against our conscience which the Apostle compares to a ship fraughted with precious wares such as faith love joy with other graces Now if wee crack our ship of conscience wee make shipwrack of faith and the other graces which good conscience had preserved 4 Faith being the free gift of God who is the author and finisher of it a means to stablish it is fervent and continual prayer as the Apostles knew well enough Luk. 17.5 saying Lord increase our faith and that good man Mark 9.24 Lord I beleeve help my unbeleef Christ praies for the not failing of thy faith wilt not thou pray for thy own The least faith can pray for more A special mark of the least measure of faith is that it can pray for more III. When thou feelest Satan assaulting thy faith and hiding from thine eyes the love of God then set before thine eyes Gods gracious promises made and to bee made good to thee in Jesus Christ both because 1 of the generality of them which run without excepting thee if thou doest not except thy self as also 2 Because they are built and grounded not upon thy sense and feeling but upon Gods unchangeable love as also 3 Because hee hath commanded thee to beleeve Object Oh but would you have me beleeve when I feel nothing but corruption in my self and correction and displeasure in God Answ Yes for faith must bee where is no feeling and may bee one thing is the being of a thing another the discerning of it Doth not the sun shine though a cloud or some other thing bee between our sight and it Nay then when sense and feeling cease faith begins her chief and most glorious work Was it not Abrahams commendation that hee beleeved against beleef and hoped against hope when all nature and sense was set against him hee held the word of promise against sense and nature Nay our blessed Saviour in whom was no grudgings of infidelity but assured faith in his Father yet in respect of his present sense and feeling cryed out My God My God why hast thou forsaken mee David beleeved in the word of God and not his eyes and so must thou that thou hearest God speak and not that thou seest Thomas when hee would beleeve no more than that hee saw and felt our Saviour said to him Bee not so faithless but faithful In the strongest encounter wait still till Christ come to case thee hee is not far off and commit thy self in well doing into his hands as into the hands of a faithful Creator say with Hester I will go to the King if I perish I perish it may bee hee will reach out his scepter graciously and I shall live but if I must needs perish I will perish under the wing of my Lord and Husband So much of Satans second drift in the first temptation In the third place he seeketh to make Christ doubt of his Divinity and call in question whether he was the Son of God or no from his present necessity as if he had said Seest thou not in what famine and need thou art thou hast fasted here these forty days of my knowledge VVhat is become of thy Father and of his providence whose Son thou art proclaimed Is this the care thy father hath of thee Doth he think thou canst live of air or feed of winde or digest stones Art thou weak creature and starven he that must prevail against the gates of Hell Art thou the Messiah that hast not a morsel of bread to put in thy mouth No if thou wert the Son of God he would care a little more for thee no natural father that had a drop of affection would leave his child so destitute VVhence we may learn that Satans drift is to make men call in question the truth of their adoption in their 〈◊〉 Doct. 3. Satan seeketh to make the members of Christ as well as the Head call in question their adoption and salvation for present adversity and want A notable instance hereof we have in Job whom when the Devil by Gods permission to bring him to blaspheme God had robbed him of his goods had slain his children had afflicted his body with most painful and loathsome botches then he sets upon him and sets all his friends upon him to make him beleeve that God also is his enemy and hath brought his sin upon his head And this he taught his instruments the wicked rulers or rather raylers Matth. 27.41 when Christ was in most extream torments and terrours of body and soul hanging on the Cross they said in scorn If he be the Son of God let him come down from the Cross and we will beleeve on him He trusted in God let him now deliver him if hee will have him for he said he was the Son of God As if they had said Is not this a notable deceiver to say hee was Gods Son and now is in extreame danger ready to perish shamefully and no hope of any deliverance If he were the Son of God would hee suffer him to perish So it is his ordinary temptation to any beleever Doest thou not see thy self poor and despised in want and sorrow Seest thou any one sign of Gods favour Art thou not deprived almost of all the pleasures of the world Seest thou not that God cares for beasts and fowls which he feedeth in due season but thou art neglected Reasons 1 This comes to pass because of Satans malice towards God himself hee would not only falsify his word who hath said that No man knoweth love or hatred by all the things afore him Eccles 9.1 but also impeach his providence and care over his children who whatsoever their outward estate seem to bee are still as dear unto him as the apple of his eye and when they be as most unknown yet are they known 2 Because of Satans malice to piety and religion which by this means hee seeks to chase out of the earth for the world keeps it under and commonly it riseth to no great matters Now if God respect it not neither who would bee godly what profit were it to serve the Lord 3 Satan herein hath much strength from our own corruptions and ploweth often with our own heifers for we desire rather to walk by sense than by faith we hardly beleeve without pawns and pledges every man trusts his own eyes and thinks wisdom good with an inheritance Hence this temptation finds the easier entrance and better entertainment 4 Satan ever in these temptations hath a further reach than he shews namely that he may hence perswade men by some unlawful means to releeve themselves and better their estate no longer to depend upon God who hath cast off the care of them but to shift for themselves and as hee moved Christ himself to make stones bread 5 Satan hath gotten no small advantage against Gods dear children by this kind of temptation and
of words and sharp reproaches unless there bee added also a direct answer and satisfaction to the matter in hand he therefore most fully answereth by the Scriptures even the Devil himself not contenting himself by his power to repel him which Satan now beginneth to feel unless also by the power of the Word hee convince him and thereby award the dart and break the temptation into pieces Which must bee our rule in dealing with vain and jangling adversaries not to answer them according to their foolish disposition or provocation not to bee like them in frowardness or stifnesse in heat and perversnesse but to answer them with words of Wisdome with sound matter and moderation both to convince them and beat down self-conceit in them which is the meaning of those two Precepts Prov. 26.4 5. which seem contrary but are easily reconciled by the due respect of persons places times and other circumstances Ever remember one rule that no adversary suppose the Devil himself is to bee answered by affection or passion but by judgement and sound reason Yea if wee have no hope to win our adversary or do him much good as Christ had none of the Devil yet wee must testify to God and his truth for the confirmation of our selves and others The testimony alledged is out of Deut. 10.20 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God thou shall serve him and Deut. 6.13 An universal and affirmative precept by which every creature is bound to his Creator and him alone to perform Divine worship unto him And it is aptly applyed by Christ to this dart of Satan For it implyeth 1 That hee himself as now standing in this conflict with Satan is a creature of God as hee is man though otherwise as God hee hee equal to his Father As man hee is subject to the Law and to this precept among the rest 2 That Satan is not God as hee pretendeth by his unjust claimes nor any way equal to God 3 That therefore neither must hee being a creature give the least divine worship from God nor hee that thus claimes it can by any means bee capable of it 4 That the Scriptures of God reserve unto God his due worship and forbid that any creature shall share with him Christ stands not to dispute whether the sight presented were a shadow or substance nor whether hee would give it him or no but holds him to the Scripture which upholds his Fathers right Quest But why doth our Saviour change and adde to the text of Scripture as not regarding that terrible woe denounced against such as adde or take away from the word and contrary to that in Deut. 12.32 Here our Saviour 1 Changeth Moses saith Thou shalt fear Christ saith Thou shalt worship 2 Addeth for Moses hath not the word only which is of Christs putting to that text Answ 1 Here is some difference indeed in words but not in sense and therefore it is no corruption of the Text nor letting out the life of it which stands not in the words but in the true sense 2 Our Lord both in great wisdome changeth the word fear into Worship and just cause for 1 Moses useth fear which is a general word in which is contained all such Divine duties as godly men ought to perform unto God and our Saviour mentions one special which is included in that general which thing Moses speaks as well as he in the general as he that commands a whole commands every part inward and outward 2 Hereby our Saviour aptly meets with Satans temptation If thou wilt worship me he useth the same word not tying himself to Moses his words but keeping the sense but to Satans word and 3 He noteth the nearness and undividedness of Gods fear and his worship as where the cause is there will bee the effect so true fear and worship goe together where one is there will be the other and for this cause one is put for the other not here only but elsewhere as Isa 29.13 Their fear toward me was taught by the precept of men Christ alleadging it Mat. 15.9 saith You worship me in vain As for the word only added which is not in the Law it no way addeth any contrary or diverse sense to Moses but only expoundeth or giveth a fit commentary to the text and speaketh that plainly in one word which Moses doth in more as Deut. 2.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him and walk after no other gods which is all one with our Saviours Thou shalt serve him only As he that saith The King is the supream Governour and none but hee saith in effect The King is the only supream Governour 3 Christ and his Apostles had a priviledge in alleadging Scriptures without error and were in●a●●ble expounders as well as alleadgers 4 This alteration of words is made by Christ to warrant us that Scriptures alleadged by teachers according to their right sense although with alterations and additions are to be taken as true expositions and allegations we being not tied so strictly to words as to sense For otherwise all our Sermons and Expositions which serve to beat out the true sense of Scriptures and apply it to several uses might be condemned as idle additions to Scripture which is blasphemous 5 To warrant us that Principles of Religion expounded by warrant of Scripture are truly interpreted though the Scriptures in so many formal words express them not As for example In the Doctrin of Justification by faith we say we are justified by faith only before God here the Papists exclaim on us as accursed Hereticks because we read not the word only in all the Scripture But we read it in effect and in true sense Rom. 3.28 and Ephes 2.8 By faith without works which exclusive is all one as to say only by faith as our Saviour interprets the exclusion of other gods by the word only As if I should say I did such a thing without help is it not all one as to say I only did it If Christs interpretation be true and warrantable so must ours in the point of justification And if the Devil himself had not yeelded to Christs allegation he might have said Thou thrustest in the word only and addest to Gods Word and therefore art not the Son of God But the Papists deal more impudently with us than the Devil did with Christ who said no such thing but yeelded to evidence of truth which they will not In the precept it self are three things 1 The person 2 The matter 3 The object 1 The peson thou the whole man and person which consisteth of a body and soul thou any reasonable Creature that challengest God to be thy God 2 The matter shalt worship and serve Worship is two-fold Civil or Divine I. Civil is a prostrating or bowing of the body or any outward testification of an high and reverent respect of man And this is due to men two ways 1 Of duty when men are to bee
your sanctification Colos 1.10 filled with the knowledge of his will and wa●k worthy of the Lord c. thou must not only speak for but live to the credit of thy Master in thy speech actions attire eating drinking and whatsoever else carry thy self like a Christian else thou discreditest thy Masters house and dishonourest himself Were not hee a notable Traytor that being sworn of the Kings guard and professing all service to the King should instead of the Kings armes and coat wear the enemies so the thing it self speaketh against him who professeth Christ his Lord and yet never appears or sheweth himself in the street or abroad but in Satans livery his swearing his covetousness his filthiness his lying his whole life lead in all intemperance bewrayeth to whom hee hath given himself to obey 3 It is his will also that wee obey as well in suffering as in doing his pleasure and the reason is plain he is my Lord I am but a servant if he please to buffet and blow mee I must with all meekness submit my self yea and more be thankful for his government 2 Sam. 15.26 If hee say I have no delight in thee let him do whatsoever seemeth good in his eyes 1 Sam. 3.18 When the Lord had threatned heavy things against Heli his whole house hee answered It is the Lord let him do whatsoever seemeth good in his eyes I was dumb and opened not my mouth saith David because thou LORD didst is Psal 39.9 Thus must wee obey Christ as a Lord giving up our bodies and souls unto him by living unto him and dying unto him and this is the Apostles ground wee are the Lords Rom. 14.7 and therefore none of us liveth unto himself and none of us dyeth unto himself but living and dying wee are the Lords otherwise what a trifling and mockery were it onely to yield him a title of Lord or Master and deny him his service Why call yee mee Master Master and do not the things I speak Luk. 6.46 All which if it bee true how few shall finde Christ a Saviour for how few make him their Lord few there are that esteem this well-beloved above other well-beloveds not a few are ashamed of him and his profession many white-livered souldiers are daunted with Peter at the speeches of silly and simple persons most men never look to the hands of this Lord to acknowledge either receit of Talents or return of accounts fewest of all obey him in faith who yet are overcarried with presumption of his favour or in true sanctification though they can pretend it or in patience if they could get out of his hands if it were by flying to the Devil for help Well if Christ have no more but a title of a Lord from thee thou shalt have but a title of salvation from him and not the thing it self and if a name that thou livest content thee when thou art but dead the time commeth that when thou commest to seek thy name among the number that are saved by him thou shalt finde thy name left out of that role and set in the number of those that shall dye in their sins Christ being our Lord no other Lord can lay 〈◊〉 unto us Secondly if Christ bee the Lord of all Then have wee obtained much freedome by him both from all spiritual bondage and all that tyranny which those hard Lords Sin Death Hell Satan exercised over us our Lord hath paved the uttermost farthing and wrought a glorious redemption for us and hee having thus set us free wee are free indeed both from the guilt the punishment and service of sin Wee are free also from all Papal bondage for wee have but one Lord in Heaven who can save and destroy to whom simple obedience belongeth and to whom the Conscience is only subject The man of sin indeed would bee Lord of all and maketh laws to bind conscience where God hath left it free but as the Scriptures acknowledge but one Lord no more do wee and say more that wee cannot serve two Masters commanding such contrary things Wee are also hence freed from the fear of all earthly Tyrants if wee belong to this Lord for if hee stand with us who can bee against us Matth. 10.28 Fear not them which can kill the body onely but him who can cast both body and soul into Hell The true fear of him will eat out all those false fears of men Observ 3 Thirdly If Christ be Lord of all Then wee and all beleevers are fellow servants All beleevers are fellow servants to this Lord. and therefore ought to live and love together making no dissention or schism in our Masters house which is the Apostles reason Eph. 4.4 perswading the Ephesians to keep the Unity of faith because there is one Lord. This shall bee done if all of us who profess Christ could learn to deny our selves to follow his will not our own or other commanders yea to follow his blessed example learning daily of him to bee humble and meek patient and tender-hearted one to another forbearing and forgiving offenders hard to exasperate and easy to bee intreated And these things should wee rather strive in that according to the Apostles precept the same minde might bee in us which was in Jesus Christ Phil. 2.5 Vers 37 Yee know the word which came through all Judea beginning in Galilee after the Baptism which John Preached THE holy Apostle here beginneth the confirmation of that which hee had formerly spoken that Christ is the Messias and Lord of all to prove which hee beginneth orderly with the History of his life and death of which even these Gentiles could not bee ignorant therefore hee saith yee know the word Where if it be asked how they should come to know the doctrin of the Gospel seeing the Apostles were not yet turned to the Gentiles and Peter was now sent extraordinarily to teach them concerning Christ which had been in vain if they knew the word before we must observe Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that by the word here is not meant the word preached as in the former verse but as the word is different in the original so also is the signification and betokeneth rather a thing done than a word uttered as Matth. 18.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word or fact be confirmed Luke 2.15 Let us goo to Bethlem and see this word that is this thing which the Lord hath brought to passe The plain sence then is this Yee know the word that is the same of Christ which was quickly dispersed through all Judea in the mouthes of common men Which fame that they should not mistake him or themselves he describeth 1 By the place where it arose beginning in Galilee 2 By the time when it most prevailed after the Baptism which John preached which some expound thus After the Baptism of Christ by
distinguish between being tempted and being led into temptation in our Saviours sense the former is a work of Gods mercy to try exercise or chastise any of his Children the latter is a work of Justice in which God leaves a man to himself so as the temptation is prevailing against him Now wee pray onely against the latter which is to bee left and so overcome in temptation neither doth God so lead us into temptation but to make us in the end more than Conquerors so as still wee may bid Temptations welcome and with cheerfulness submit our selves unto them Vse 3 In every tryal see that the Spirit lead thee for this is a sure ground of comfort and hath assured hope in it of a good end Christ was not led into temptation by private motion neither did hee thrust himself unto it no more must wee rashly run into or pull dangers upon us or through presumption object ourselves unto temptations if wee do Wee must not thrust our selves into tryals but expect the leading of the spirit wee must needs fall and cannot expect safety because wee tempt the Lord and provoke him to with-draw his Fatherly protection from us whereas there is no danger in following the leading and guidance of the Spirit Many a man is of so strong a faith that nothing can harm him hee is for all courses and all companies But how can a man bee safe where Satans throne is Peter thought himself strong enough to go into the High-Priests Hall but hee found in the end it was no fit company for him Others through vain presidence of Gods protection run in times of contagion into infected houses which upon just calling a man may but for one to run out of his calling in the way of an ordinary visitation hee shall finde that Gods Angels have commission to protect him no longer than hee is in his way Psalm 91.11 and that being out of it this arrow of the Lord shall sooner hit him than another that is not half so confident Others are bold-hardy to set upon the Devil in his own holds they dare enter into and lodge in houses given up by God to the Devils possession which is if it bee out of ones lawful Calling to cast a mans self into most probable danger for whereas wee ought to use all good and lawful means for the preventing of imminent danger this is to seek danger and hurt and commonly they that seek it justly find it The issue of such presumption wee may see in the sons of Sceva Act. 19.16 who took upon them to do as the Apostles did namely to name Christ over those that were possessed but the Devil seeing their want of calling thereunto ran upon them and overcame them so as they fled out of the house naked and wounded Others through temerity and rashness bring on themselves much woe who follow the motions of their own spirits in their courses and never or seldome consider whether they have Gods Spirit before them or no they look not for warrant out of Gods Word in the things they do or speak they begge not Gods direction and assistance they spy not in what ambush Satan lyeth what advantages hee easily taketh and so for want of Christian watchfulnesse lay themselves open to many evils and dangers wherein they can meet with no great comfort because they cannot say with a good conscience Lord thou hast led mee into this estate but rather I have cast my self into this danger If therefore thou wouldest finde comfort in troubles keep thee in thy way that thou mayest never bee without the leading of the Spirit Three notable effects from assurance of the spirits guidance in trials and then this will bee the issue 1 Being led by the Spirit thou wilt follow willingly thou wilt lay aside all reasonings excuses and delaies as Christ did hee murmures not delaies not doth not first return to Nazareth bids not his Parents and friends farewel consults not with flesh and blood but was driven out with a strong motion ot the Spirit This is the same free Spirit which dwelleth in the hearts of Christians hee leads them too and they obey and follow Abraham follows him from his own Countrey and Moses into Egypt 2 If thou see the Spirit leading thee thou shalt not faint under the Cross no not when thou lookest upon the greatest danger that can be threatned because the other eye is upon the Spirit which helpeth thy infirmities and according to the measure of affliction ministreth a sound measure of comfort 1 Pet. 4.14 therefore the Saints rejoyce in affliction because the Spirit of glory and of God resteth upon them A valiant Captain leading the way incourageth the most timorous souldier to follow with courage and resolution So this Spirit which leadeth is a spirit of strength and of power not in himself alone but supplying with new strength those that give up themselves to bee led by him 3 If thou see the Spirit leading thee into tryal it will keep thee from seeking to winde thy self out by any unlawful or unwarrantable means thou wilt follow him to bee led out by him as well as thou wast led in by him thou wilt wait his leisure for the removal of thy Tryal in whose good pleasure it lyeth most seasonably to deliver thee This is often the reason why God giveth his children to bee led by the Spirit to try whether they will abide with him in temptation or no. And those who will shift themselves out of trouble by lying swearing and the like or avoid crosses and losses by wicked means as poverty by breaking the Sabbath sickness by sorcery and witchcraft what spirit soever led them in certainly the evil spirit hath led them out the remedy is worse than their disease and their escape is made only by breaking the prison Vse 4. As Christ was led by the Spirit in all his course of life so should Christians for as many as are the Sons of God are led by the Spirit of God Rom. 8.14 So the Apostles in their Ministry went hither and thither stayed or departed preached and prophecyed by the Spirit They were forbidden by the Holy Ghost to preach the Word in Asia and Bithynia Act. 16.6 7. 21.4 certain Disciples told Paul by the Spirit that hee should not go up to Jerusalem And it is the duty of all true Beleevers to resign themselves in subjection to Gods Spirit Quest How shall I know when I am led by the Holy Ghost Answ By these rules 1 Gods Spirit works in and by the Word therefore if thou enquirest in every thing what is the good and acceptable wil of God Three rules to know a mans self led in every thing by the Holy Ghost Rom. 12.2 thou art led by the Spirit 2 Discern his guidance by the mortification of the deeds of the flesh for the life of the Spirit is opposed to the life of the flesh Rom. 8.13 Therefore
dangerous and near of kin to obstinacy For till the truth of God come to his place again in the conscience it wil stiffen it self in error even to the death So as by this stratagem Satan usurps the conscience which is Gods right and so leads men at his pleasure 2 His malice sets him clean contrary to God in his proceedings God hath given his Scripture to save men by and therefore it is called a word of salvation now Satan would herein cross the Lord in perverting the word to mens condemnation The Scripture is in the Church as a Law to the Common-wealth to contain men in the compass of faith and godly life whence it is called Statutes and precepts and judgements But Satan seeks to enforce it as a Law to thrust men from faith and obedience The Scripture is a word of truth of holiness of wisdom every way resembling God the Author Satan therefore being the greatest enemy to Gods Image is the greatest enemy to the Scriptures and desireth to pervert them by establishing by them Errours Heresies false Doctrins wicked and foolish opinions and practices 3 His subtilty and policy is not inferiour to his malice for 1 He hath a special slight and trick of his own by pretending truth to impugn it and with Scripture to fight against Scripture which hee hath taught his special Factors Hereticks and Seducers for why else did Christ forbid the Devil to witness to him but that even that truth he speaks ever tends to destroy the truth And in the text why cites he the truth but to draw Christ into an error 2 He will gain to himself some credit by this practice for seeing speeches and testimonies depend much upon the credit of the speaker by his quoting of Scripture he would be taken as if the truth of Scripture depended upon or needed his witness 4 Satan must doe thus if hee will prevail against Christ or his Servants for Scripture in the true sense of it is no patron of sin nor ever stands on the Devils side Use Of all temptations beware most of them which come armed with Scripture for hardlier can wee espy the subtilty and danger of these than those which are directly against the Scripture And by temptations of this kind Satan mightily prevaileth in points both of doctrin and practice which it shall not be amiss to give some taste of and in both wee shall observe how Satan doth not so much use as abuse Scripture I. In matters of doctrin 1 For the establishing of the Head-ship of the Church in the Pope the ordinary Papists have found a Scripture in Joh. 21.16 where Christ saith Feed my sheep I answer First that place speaks not of any Head-ship or Spiritual government but of feeding by the Word and Sacraments which the Pope never doth Secondly it is a commandement not given to Peter alone but to all the Apostles who were equally Apostles with him but applied to Peter specially not to note any Primacy but secretly to check him for his three-fold denial whereby he made himself unworthy to be a Disciple Obj. But Peter saith he hath two swords and therefore the Pope hath both Spiritual and Temporal jurisdiction Sol. This is a place of Satans alleadging when that which is spoken literally is wrested into a figurative sense And where Peter is commanded Act. 10.13 to kill and eat the Pope may kill and slay and eat up whom he will or can Prince with people But this is a place literally to be taken and one part of the argument hangs with another as the dream of a sick man for the Pope if he be Peters Successor must feed the sheep nor feed on them But Bellarmine who would make the world beleeve his wit is thinner hath devised a farre more sufficient place 1 Pet. 2.6 Behold I put in Sion a chief corner stone elect and precious that is the Pope In his Preface to the Controversie De Rom. Pontif. and lib. 4. cap. 5. But what may wee think to reap from him that dares begin his Controversie with so high a blasphemy and lest wee should think it fell inconsiderately from him he takes it up again For doth not both Paul and Peter teach that this stone can be meant of none but of Christ doth not both of them adde He that beleeveth in him shall not bee ashamed must we now beleeve in the Pope And who is this living stone that gives life to all that are built upon him besides Christ himself None can arrogate it to himself or attribute it to another without high blasphemy Therefore I conclude this point boldly affirming that the Devil could not more impiously abuse this place than hath blasphemous Bellarmine 2 For the point of Justification by Works is alleadged that place of James 2.21 wherein they adde unto the text 1 A false gloss by works of the Law 2 A false distinction saying that they justify as causes whereas we grant that as effects they justify that is declare a man to bee justified So did Abrahams works declare him to be just and this is not the justification of the person which is onely by faith but of the faith of the person which is manifestly dead without them 3 In that great sacramentary controversy they alledge This is my body wherein Satan hath taught them to abuse Scripture in taking that literally which is figuratively spoken as often to writhe that into a figure which is spoken literally and whereas they exclaim against us for denying the words of Christ as Hereticks wee are far from denying Christs words but disclaim their false meaning which destroies the Scripture seeing Scripture stands not in words but in sense 4 To establish the false Doctrin of Free-will they furnish themselves with that place in Jer. 17.7 Blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord and whose hope the Lord is But what do they else but imitate the Devil in cutting off that part of the Text which makes against them for in the next verse it followeth The heart of man is deceitful above all things who can know it shewing that man in himself is utterly destitute of all grace 5 For the Jesuitical trick of equivocation or mental reservation they have Scripture and Example Joh. 1.21 they asked John if hee were a Prophet hee said No whereas he was one for Zachary called him the Prophet of the Highest and Christ said that there was not a greater Prophet than John therefore John equivocated Answ Whatsoever was the true meaning of the Question that John answered plainly unto If they meant to ask him if hee were that singular Prophet whom they fancied to come together with their Messiah hee truely answered No. If hee were any of the ancient Prophets who were long before Christ hee truely answered in that sense No. If hee were a Prophet by his proper office hee truely answered no. For howsoever he was by grace and power a Prophet being sent of God to
over them but his Vicar neither love they the truth in the Canonical Scripture further than it will stand with their Popish Canon Law Or if a man come to read out of custom and coldly without fervency and love experience will tell him though thus he read much his profit shall bee but small 3 With repentance and faith and a good heart 2 Cor. 3.14 when the heart of Israel shall be converted to the Lord the veil shall be taken away this veil is natural ignorance and infidelity VVhere the former is no marvel if the word read and known be not understood as a blind man cannot see the Sun shining in his strength VVhere faith is absent and is not mingled with the word it must needs become unprofitable Impossible it is that the wisdom of God can dwell in a wicked heart no man puts precious liquor into a fusty cask This is the cause that men of great learning want sound understanding because they want sound conscience Hos 14.10 The ways of God are right but the wicked fall in them 4 With a purpose not only to know but to practise Joh. 7.17 If any man will doe my will he shall know whether my doctrine be from heaven The scope of the Scripture is not only to beleeve in the Son of God but to walk in the obedience of faith Now if men read over all the Bible an hundred times either for knowledge only or for vain-glory or to advance themselves into preferments or to oppose the truth as Hereticks and Papists doe no marvel if they never attain the true sense of them 5 With prayer for the Spirit to lead us into all truth because the Scriptures were inspired by Gods Spirit at first and the same Spirit is only able to acquaint us with his own meaning If any man want wisdom he must ask it of God Jam. 1.5 so did David Psal 119.18 Open mine eyes that I may see the wonderful things of thy law Is it any marvel that they who flie the judgement of Gods Spirit and stand to the Church Pope Councils and only swallow that sense which they give and never look after Gods Spirit should miss of the true meaning of the Holy Ghost and fall into and tumble in a number of errors and heresies To these might bee added meditation diligence keeping of order and time special application and the like These things let them be brought to the reading of Gods Word and no man shall lose his labour hee shall bee taught of God who hath promised to reveal his secret to them that fear him So much of the qualification of the person II. Now follow some rules which a person thus qualified must learn and keep by him to try when a Scripture is wrested or no. Rule 1 The first is that in our text conference of Scripture there the Spirit of God by plain places expoundeth those which are more difficult Thus Nehem. 8.8 Ezra opened the Scripture by comparing it with it self and so made the people to understand as Junius noteth out of the original So the Bereans having heard the doctrine of the Apostles searched the Scriptures that is compared their doctrine with the doctrine of the Old Testament Thus the Apostles themselves teaching Christs resurrection Acts 2.16 prove it out of the Old Testament viz. Psal 16.10 Thou wilt not suffer thine holy one to see corruption And to prove that those words cannot be meant of David himself he appeals to another testimony in 1 King 2. where it is said that David slept with his fathers and lay buried in his Sepulchre and so saw corruption This is a special way whereby the Scripture giveth wisdom to the simple Psal 19.7 And for this purpose the Lord hath in great wisdom tempered the Scripture with some hard places to exercise mens senses and try their diligence in comparing of Scripture whereof there were no need if there were no hard places How comes it that many pervert the Scripture to their own destruction but because they conferre not one part with another which would lead them into the right sense How come the Arrians when they hear Christ say The Father is greater than I and other such sayings to hold to the death that Christ is not true God co-essential and co-equal with his Father but that they doe not compare this with other places as Job 1.1 That word was God Philip. 2.6 He thought it no robbery to be equal with God Rom. 9. which is God blessed for ever And consequently that the former place speaks of his Human nature the latter of his Divine nature How could the Papists suffer shipwrack of faith and Heretically erre in the foundation of Religion teaching justification by the works of the Law out of Jam. 2.21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works but that they conferre not other places to help them into the right sense as Rom. 4.2 and 3.20 We are justified by faith without the works of the law and Tit. 3.5 Not by the works of righteousness which we had done but according to his grace he saved us Which places being compared shew that one speaks of justification before God as Paul the other of justification before men as James the former of justifying the person the latter of justifying the faith of the person When they read such places as these Awake thou that sleepest and Turn you turn you O house of Israel hence they conclude man hath free-will in his own conversion Whereas would they compare these with other places as Gen. 6.5 The whole imagination of mans heart is only evil continually and it is God that works both the will and the deed c. the reconciling of such places would force them to see that till God work us wee are meer patients and after that acts agimus being moved we move for his grace must not bee idle in us The lewd and disordered Libertine when he reads that wee are justified by faith without works casts off all care of his conversation What can his works doe what need they But he could not thus pervert the Scripture to his destruction if he compared it with such Scriptures as say that faith without works is dead and that faith works by love The reconciling whereof would teach them that although works be excluded from justification yet not from faith they must bee in the person justified though not in the justification of his person This conference of Scripture is either in places parallel and like or in such as seem to be opposed and unlike The conferring of like places bringeth great light to the reader As for example 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing If we would understand what is meant by this nothing compare we it with Gal. 5.6 In Christ Jesus neither uncircumcision availeth any thing nor circumcision where nothing is to avail nothing and is not referred to Circumcision or uncircumcision it self but to the person it is
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the twinkling of an eye which is indeed no time but the beginning rather of time seeing there is no distinction between time past and time to come Howsoever wee must take it for a very short space of time and that the sight was gone before Christ could well consider of it For so the like phrase is used concerning Sodome that it was destroyed in a moment for the Sun rose very fair and before ever they could consider of such a storm the Lord showred down fire and brimstone Now the reason why the Devil used such a speedy and quick representation was to ravish Christ suddenly and stir up his affections by the absence of it to desire to see it again dealing with Christ as we with our little children when wee would make them earnestly desire a thing wee let them see it and hide it again give it them into their hands and suddenly take it away again So did Satan Secondly Satan might have another trick in it to disturb the minde of our Saviour for as a suddain flash or light doth dazle the eyes of the body so doth a suddain flash or sight of this or that object easily dazle the eyes of the minde and instead of pleasure with it at least it brings some trouble and perturbation However he thought it would fit and bring on his temptation Thirdly shadows will abide no looking on no examining and therefore the Devil is so quick in taking them in Doct. 1 It is an old practice of the Devil to let death into the soul by the window of the senses and especially by the sight for here hee would overcome Christ by the sight of the World and the glory of it Thus hee had gained Eve to sin by the sight of the apple which was beautiful to the eye by hearing that shee should bee as God if she did taste it by touching tasting and pleasing all her senses with it The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair and took them to them for wives which was the cause of the deluge Ahab saw the vineyard of Naboth lye so conveniently to his demeans as he must needs compass it by murther Reason 1 The Senses are the near servants of the Soul if Satan can make them untrusty he knows he can by them easily robb the soul yea and slay it For senses work affections and affections blind judgement David sees Bathsheba presently affects her his violent affection blinds his judgement he must have her company though it cost Uriahs life I saw said Achan among the spoyl a goodly Babylonish garment and two hundred sheckels of silver and a wedge of gold of fifty shekels and I coveted them and took them Josh 7.21 How was Adam otherwise deceived by Eve but first in his affection and then in his judgement 2 As Satan lays his baits in all the Senses to steal the heart so especially in the eyes dealing as the Chapman that would vent his wares he lays it forth on the stall that men may see it and oftentimes the very sight of it without further offer draws on the buyer to a bargain He knows he loseth not all if he gain but an unlawful look because there is sin begun though not perfected 3 The Sense is to the Soul as a door to the house A man that would come in or send any thing into an house must goe in and send it in by the door Even so although the Devil by his spiritual nature can and doth apply himself to our spirits without our senses yet other tempters cannot reach the soul so immediately Eve could not work Adams heart directly but by the outward senses of hearing and seeing especially sent in the temptation Poysons cannot reach the heart unless by the senses they bee drawn in So wicked Mates cannot convey their corruption one into another but by the outward senses hearing their wicked and incentive speeches and seeing their graceless and infecting actions But besides this so full of malice is our spiritual adversaty that he would not only immediately take up our hearts but fill up all our senses and by them continually sendeth in burning lusts and by the same door covetous desires and by the same ambitious and aspiring thoughts and by the same revengeful intentions and such like till the house be full of wickedness 4 Satan knows that God hath appointed the senses for the good and comfort both of body and soul especially the sight and hearing to bee the senses of Discipline to furnish the mind with knowledge of God with faith which is by hearing with hope of his gracious promises with heavenly meditations and contemplation of his great Works which our eyes behold Now Satan would cross all this gracious constitution of God and make the lights of the body be means to blind the mind he would fill up the senses and take them up with such objects as shall not only corrupt the heart but keep out those means of grace which the Lord would by them convey into the heart so that the soul should be further poysoned by the same means which the Lord hath prepared as an Antidote by which natural poyson and corruption should be expelled Vse 1. This doctrine enjoyneth a diligent custody of the senses A good Housholder suspecting Theeves and Robbers will bee sure to keep his doors and windows fast And we knowing that our senses are the doors and windows of our souls must look to these doors lock them barre them bolt them fast that the Devil enter not this way True it is that the inside must first be made clean for out of the heart proceeds an evil eye Mark 7.22 But whosoever is resolved to keep his heart in any rightness must think it his next care to shut out and keep out whatsoever might be let in to decline it and turn it from God again What made the holy Prophet Psal 119.37 pray so earnestly that God would turn his eyes from beholding vanity but that hee knew that even a good heart such as his was could never hold out unless the outward senses especially the eyes which by a Synecdoche are there put for the rest both because they are special factors of the soul and because of the multitude of their objects and in regard of the quickness of sight above all the rest of the senses laid together were well safe-guarded Can the heart or Market-place of a Town or City be safe from the siege of the enemy if the Gates be cast open or the Wall demolished or the Ramparts bared of their sence and munition Why did Job make such covenants with his eyes but that he knew that without such a sence every object would be as a snare to entrap his soul Job 31.1 Nay let an heart never so seasoned with grace suffer the senses to leak the soul is in danger of shipwrack Was there ever heart of ordinary man or woman more innocent or more filled
Isa 40.26 Lift up your eyes aloft and behold who created all these things This use David maketh Psal 8. When I see the heavens the earth and the works of thy hands then said I Lord what is man that thou art so mindful of him and concludes the Psalm thus How excellent is thy name through all the World And why 1 The invisible things of God his Power and Divinity and Eternity were made visible to the very Gentiles by things created Rom. 1.20 And shall wee either not look on them or so look upon them as they to make us inexcusable shall wee onely injoy the natural use and no spiritual or Divine use from them 2 Consider that God for this purpose hath made the Countenance of man not as the Beasts groveling on the Earth but erected unto Heaven and he hath made the eye of man not as the Beasts but as Anntomists observe hath given it one muscle which they want whereby hee can turn his eye directly upwards with admirable quickness that it should not so fix it self upon any thing below as the Covetous eye doth but by occasion of things below turn it self upward to their Creator Yea hee hath compassed our eyes with brows and lids and fences from dust and earth that though wee look sometimes on the earth yet the least dust or earth should not get into them 3 Let us labour to use our senses in beholding Gods works as they in Joh. 2.23 that saw the works of Christ of whom it is said Many beleeved in the name of Christ seeing the works that he did So let the works which wee see God hath done bee at least inducements to beleeve him so much the more Fourthly God made our senses in respect of our brethren both to benefit them and our selves by them 1 Our eyes to behold their misery to pity them to releeve them Turn not thine eyes from thine own flesh Herein the unmerciful Priest and Levite were condemned by the pitiful Samaritan Our ears to hear the cry of the poor Prov. 21.13 Hee that turns his ear from the cry of the poor himself shallery and not bee heard Numbers never make this use of their ears but God hath a deaf ear for them 2 Our eyes to see the good example of our brethren to imitate them to glorify God for them Our ears to hear their Godly Counsels Admonitions Reproofs and so bee bettered by them 3 Our eyes to see and consider their danger to pull them out of their infirmities the fire and to cast out the more of their eyes Our ears to hear what is fit to bee spoken of them to defend their good names if they bee traduced For God hath given us two ears not rashly to receive every information but to reserve one for the party lest hee be condemned unheard unconvinced Fiftly and Lastly God made our senses in respect of ourselves not only to bee faithful keepers of the body but diligent factors and agents for our own souls as 1 That our eyes should ever bee looking homewards and to the end of our way as quick and expedite travellors and not fix themselves upon everything wee see here below This is done by heavenly conversation 2 Our ears should bee bored to the perpetual service and obedience of our God as our Lord himself was Psal 40.7 Thou hast bored mine ear alluding to that Ceremony in the Law Exod. 21.6 If a servant would not part from his Master his ear must bee bored and nailed to the Post of the house and thus hee became a perpetual Servant hee was nailed and fixed to that house and service So wee must yeeld an obedient ear as Solomon calls it unto the Counsels Will and Commandement of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ 3 Our eyes were made to bee Conduits of tears for our own sin and misery and for the sin and wretchednesse of other men Psalm 139.136 Davids eyes gushed out rivers of tears because men keep not the word how wept hee then for his own sins that wept so for others Good Lot his righteous soul was vexed in hearing and seeing the unclean conversation of the Sodomites Thus should our senses bee so far from conceiving pleasure in sinful obects as these must bee the continual grief of our souls And can wee indeed look upon our selves and not see something which is a brand of our sin or can wee behold any Creature and not see some express Prints and marks of our sin and vanity upon it Surely this one meditation would be effectual to keep us from casting our eyes upon unlawful objects and so from making our selves a prey to the Devil Vse 2. This serves to reprove such as fail in this watch of the senses for who doth not yet some far more dangerously Such as have in their houses Popish Pictures and Images which are alluring harlots corrupters of the heart which is an opening of the door to the Devil a sign of a man willing to bee seduced Experience shews that when a man is in love with such Images hee easily falls out with Gods Image in himself and Gods Children 2 Such as delight in lascivious Pictures and filthy portraytours of naked men or women in whole or such parts as may stir the corruption of the heart which should bee beaten down by all means Wee need bring no Oyle to this flame Yet the Devil hath gotten such pictures in request in this wanton age wherein every thing is almost proportional 3 Such are far from this watch of their senses as so attire and disguise themselves or lay open their nakedness to insnare the senses of others Let them not say they think no hurt in it unless they can bee sure that no other think hurt by it 4 Such as like the Images have ears and hear not eyes and see not care not to hear the Word or read it never taste Gods goodness in it neither doth the breath of heavenly life ever pass through their noses 5 Such as frequent wicked company and delight in the ungracious actions and speeches that they hear and see or can digest them without reproof or dislike manifested The Devil hath a thorow-fare among such companies who are conspired against God and goodness Add unto these such as read or have in their houses Lascivious and wanton books teachers of lewdness Adde also Stage-Players and their beholders that cast open all gates and walls to the Devil 6 The Covetous eye whereof Solomon saith Ecc. 4.4 his eye is not satisfied with Riches neither doth hee say For whom do I thus labour In that Satan would draw Christ to the love of the World and thereby makes no doubt but to insnare and cast him down wee learn that Doctr. 2 The love of the World easily maketh a man a prey and spoil to the Devil Satan well knew that if hee could get Christ to fall down to the World hee would easily fall down to him Where by the World I
apart to their several offices by laying on of mens hands upon them even so God laid his hands on these that is Christ immediately by his own voyce called these to be witnesses unto him which was one of the priviledges of the Apostles 2 The Apostle in the words expresseth himself by limiting them to themselves to us namely Apostles who ate and drunk with him not only who before his death lived as it were at bed and board with him but after hee rose from the dead that we might not be deceived in our witnesse of him 3 To us whom be commanded to preach and testifie namely to the whole world these things together with his coming again to judgement Now for the further clearing of this publick witnesse of the Apostles wee will consider three things 1 That these twelve were appointed by Christ himself to this witnesse which the Apostle Peter plainly concludeth Act. 1.22 where speaking of one to be elected into Judas his room he saith he must be chosen of one of them which have companied w●th us all the time that the Lord Jesus was conversant among us beginning at the Baptism of John unto the day that he was taken up implying that whosoever was not thus qualified he was not fit to be made such a publick witnesse with them of his resurrection because to the making of an Apostle was necessary either an ordinary converse with Christ upon earth or else an extraordinary sight of him in Heaven by which latter Paul who made an honourable accesse to that number proved himself an Apostle T●e second thing is how they were furnished to this witnesse By what means the Apostles were furnished to their witness and this was su●●y ways 1 By their senses they ate and drunk with him that is were in a familiar sort conversant with him after he rose again 2 By word of mouth he gave them charge and commandement to doe it of both which wee are to speak in the text 3 By a Sacrament or sign of breathing upon them he confirmed them to their vocation saying As my Father sent me so I send you 4 By adding thereunto the thing signified for he opened their understandings and made th●m able to conceive the Scriptures and unfold all the Mysteries therein so farre as was behoveful for the Church 5 By bestowing sundry other great gifts upon them sending the Holy Ghost upon them in the likeness of fiery Tongues whereby they received the gift of Tongues he gift of Miracles of casting out Devils of healing the Sick by imposition of hands of preserving from poyson and deadly things of the Apostolical rod whereby death it self was at the command of their word either to take place as in Ananias and Saphira both struck dead with the word of the Apostle or to give place as in Dorcas who by a word of the Apostle was raised to life being dead By these means the Lord put into the hands of the Apostles great power to give witnesse of the resurrection of Christ Act. 4.33 The third thing is By what means they witnessed or gave testimony to Christ Ans Because they were to bee authentical and faithful witnesses to all the world and that both in the age wherein they lived as also in all the succeeding ages to the end of the world therefore was it necessary that they should give witnesse two wayes 1 By zealous and painful preaching by voyce while they lived 2 Even after their death by the holy Doctrin left behind them in their Works and Writings and thus doe they still remain publick witnesses to us on whom the ends of the world are come Doct. Hence observe that the office of the Apostles was to give testimony unto Christ after a peculiar manner Acts 1.8 When the Holy Ghost shall come upon you yee shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem Judea Samaria and to the uttermost parts of the earth I say they were to bee witnesses after a peculiar manner for these reasons The Apostles were to bee peculiar witnesses to Christ and why 1 To distinguish their witness from ours who are ordinary Ministers for every Minister is called of God to give witness to Christ but properly to speak they are rather Preachers and Publishers of things witnessed than witnesses or if witnesses yet herein they differ from the Apostles that they are not oculate or ear-witnesses nor such sensible witnesses as they were for this is an Apostolical speech and manner of preaching not derived to ordinary Pastors and Teachers to say That which wee have heard and seen and our hands have handled that we testify unto you 1 Joh. 1.1 2 They were all faithful witnesses and faithful men endued with faith and full beleef of the things they wrote and testified as all ordinary Ministers are not Whence the Evangelist John professeth of them all that they knew the testimony to bee true Joh. 21.24 True for the matter for they delivered the whole Counsel of God and kept nothing back that was fit to be known and true for the manner they all speaking as they were moved by the Spirit of God 2 Pet. 1.21 and therefore exempted from all error in their witness as we are not 3 And hence followeth that their witness is to bee beleeved as infallible being the witness of such as with their eyes saw his Ma●esty vers 16. who did not at any time deliver any thing which they either heard not of Christ or saw him not doing or suffering but all other ordinary Ministers are so far to bee beleeved as they consent with these and so far as they testify no other thing than what these oculate witnesses have left in writing Object But Christ needeth not the witness of any man hee hath a greater witnesse than John or than any Apostle therefore there is no use of the Apostles witness Answ Christ hath indeed three greater witnesses than the witness of his Apostles namely 1 His Father that sent him beareth witnesse of him 2 The Scriptures if they bee searched testify of him 3 His works that hee did bear witnesse of him Joh. 8.18 5.39 5.36 but yet howsoever in regard of himself hee need no other testimony of man that wee might beleeve and bee saved hee useth the witness of men 〈◊〉 John and the Apostles and of this Divine Testimony in the mouth of the Apostles may bee said as Christ did of the voice from heaven Joh. 12.30 This voice came not because of mee but for your sakes In divine things we must lean upon a sure word Vse 1. From this Doctrin wee learn how necessary a thing it is in causes of Faith to lean upon true and certain things and not upon tottring traditions or unwritten verities which are the main pillars of Popish Doctrin Oh how good hath our God been to this Church and Land of ours in giving us a surer word of the Prophets and Apostles to become a light unto us in
Motives to look to our Tongue 1 BEcause a good man cannot bee an evil speaker Motives to govern the tongue if the speech bee naught the Religion is vain Jam. 1.29 Lying and accusing is the devils work 2 Watching of good spe●ch keeps out evil words which ingendreth to evil Take up Davids resolution Psalm 39.1 I thought I will take heed to my wayes that I sin not with my tongue I will keep my mouth bridled while the wicked is in my sight And this is necessary because the tongue is an unruly member as fire and by this means shall become our glory James 2.6 8. and our brothers shield 3 God hath a time to call to reckoning the words that are thought but wind Psalm 50.20 21 even every idle word Matth. 12.36 CHAP. XVI Rules of Wisdome concerning our actions that in all of them wee may shew forth Chrstian prudence and circumspection and first in general FIrst Every Christian is to examine the work hee is to do whether hee Rules for our actions in general 1 Examine what thou art doing bee about a good work whereof hee may expect comfort Gal. 6.3 Let every man prove his own work and so hee shall have comfort in himself And good reason for his work must bee tr●●d afterwards and therefore it is wil some to try it before hand This Trial stands in four thin●● 1 Whether go d in the matt●● Deut. 12.32 〈◊〉 1.12 And the lam●●●● of examining it is now and shall bee hereafter This tria● stan●● in four things 1 Wheth●r it bee good in it self and in the matter of it if i● be● l●wful if it bee commanded The rule for the goodness of any action is the word of God What I command thee that do onely Or else it will ●ee a●ked Who required those things at your hands And for the matter of our a●tions wee have a spe●ial rule Phil. 4.8 Whatso ver things are true honest just pure Whatsoever things pertain to love and are of good rep●●t if there bee any vertue or praise think on these things And Rom. 12.17 and 1 Cor. 8.21 Prov● as things that are honest no● onely before the Lord but a so bef●re men ● It g●●● in he manner 2 Examine wh ther it bee good in the doer und●rtaken by vertue or a special calling and answ●rab●e to that ●●●y which hims●lf ow●●● to God or man God upholdeth t●e societ●●● of men by order which is when every man k●●p his own standing and every one m●●● 〈◊〉 the s●v●ral ●●ars but every one in his own sphere n●● troubling the motion of ●●●ner S. publick m●n should 〈◊〉 the publick offi●● and privat● m●n 〈◊〉 in private but l●t the publick alone For Christ reproved Peters curiosity in asking What John should do Joh. 21.21 And the 〈◊〉 of Scena wa●ted calling for an action that was good in 〈◊〉 and 〈…〉 were 〈◊〉 and w●●●ded of the Devil Act. 19 15 16. 3 If good in circumstances 3 Examine whether it bee good in the circumstances s●asona●●● and ●●nvenient or whether the season●●● not for some better action than that For wisd●me will intend of 〈…〉 the most necessary and 〈…〉 most profi●able 4 If good in the ends 4 Examine whether the 〈…〉 done bee good in the ●nds 〈◊〉 it which esp●cially are tw● 1 G●● glory 1 Cor. 10.3 Let 〈…〉 the glory of God 2 The good and ed●fi●ation of our brethr n 1 Cor. 14 2● Let all bee done to edifying yea ●●king their profit in some 〈…〉 own Then 2 ●inding the action good spoyl it no● by ill handling The right manner of doing a good acti●n in three things Secondly I● by examination w●● 〈…〉 ●●tions good in themselve 〈◊〉 us in circumstan●●● and ●●ds w●e must bee carefull 〈…〉 not good ●●●ons by ill handling but in 〈…〉 do good action● well a●d to 〈◊〉 matter adde a good manner of doing Now the right manner of doing a good a●tion well stand●●h three things To undertake th●m holily To do them sincerely And to finish them humbly The first i● when wee begin them with prayer For as in all matter● small and great wee are to take counsel at Gods mouth so wee are to beg lea●e and blessing at 〈◊〉 secretly to our selves without which n●thing is sanct●fied unto it T●● second is when wee do things sincerely as in Gods sight with a good 〈◊〉 and keeping good conscience that a man if hee b●● questioned in any 〈◊〉 may bee able to say with Abimele●h Gen. 2● 5 With an upright heart aid I this thing And whatsoever may befall him for well-doing hee may appeal to God with Hezekiah Isa 38.3 and say Lord remember that I have walked u●rightly before thee The third is when in effecting all our b●st action● 〈◊〉 labour to see our defects and wants and mourn that wee ●●●ther do that w●e should do not in the manner wee should Wh●r●of there will bee th●●● notable fruits 1 This will breed and nourish humi●i●● It will drive 〈…〉 Christ to get a covering 3 It will make us ascribe all the glory of our a tions to God of whom wee have not onely all the power but eve● the will and purpose Phil. 2.13 For it is God that worketh in you both the will and the deed according to his good pleasure CHAP. XVII Rules to carry works of Mercy wisely IF our actions concern others then they bee works either of Mercy Rules for works of mercy 1 Mercy must p●●c●ed from faith and love or of Justice For works of Mercy much wisdome is required and that is shewed in these particulars 1 See thy charity come from a good ground namely from a heart qualified with two graces 1 Faith For whatsoever is not of faith is sin Rom. 14.23 Thou must first give thy self to the Lord and then to his Saints 2 Cor. 8.5 Thy mercy must issue from the sense of Gods mercy in Christ to thine own soul apprehended by faith in Jesus Christ Joh. 15.1 Bring forth fruit in this vine 2 It must proceed from love Works of mercy must come from the fountain of a merciful heart Rom. 12.8 Hee that distributeth let him do it of simplicity that is out of meer compassion not out of any by a●d sinister respe●ts For if I feed the poor with all my goods and want love it profiteth mee nothing 1 Cor. 13. The reason is because the Lord looks more at the affecti●n than the action Whence many not giving out of a tender heart sympathizing and fellow-feeling their brethrens misery lose both th●ir gift and reward What comfort or help is in that work of mercy which i● wrung out by importunity or by strength of law or for shame lest a man should bee noted or by terror of conscience when a man would heal the gripes of a galling and accusing conscience by giving away at his death a little ill-gotten goods to the poor which were none of his to