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A03342 CVIII lectures vpon the fourth of Iohn Preached at Ashby-Delazouch in Leicester-shire. By that late faithfull and worthy minister of Iesus Christ. Arthur Hildersam.; Lectures upon the fourth of John Hildersam, Arthur, 1563-1632.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1632 (1632) STC 13462; ESTC S119430 700,546 622

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should ioyne together in it as one man 122 123. Q. Questions disputing See Conference Neuer any prooued a good Scholler in any learning but he that had doubts would moue questions 322. How far forth it is lawfull to make question of or to reason against Gods Word or Workes 230 231. R. Reading We should exercise our selues in the reading of the Word 172. 291. Reason A great sin to examine Religion by carnall reason and to beleeue no more then we can see reason for 151. Reformation What properties are required in true reformation and leauing of sin 85. Regeneration Notes to try it by 5. Religion There is but one true way to saluation 139. It is the strength of a state 429. 279. Religious duties Great force in a conscionable vse of them to keepe a man from vncleannesse and other sins 93. And to breed in a man a confortable assurance of his saluation 343. Repentance There is more required to it then most men dreame 84 85. Late repentance is dangerous 442. Sins repented of though neuer so many and hainous will make vs neuer the lesse acceptable to God 95. No man hath an vpright heart that forsakes not all knowne sins 470. Notes to try our sincerity in leauing of sin 471 Repentance 470. Repentance of regenerate and naturall men distinguished 471. Reproofe The Minister must plainely and particularly reprooue sin 63. Great wisdome is required in reproouing sin 63 Motiues to perswade Ministers to faithfulnesse in this 66. How they may make their reproofe effectuall 66. He that hath grace will take reproofe well loue him the better that deales faithfully with him this way 106. 112 113. Three things that keepe men from accepting it and preseruatines against them 106. Though mens lewdnesse may restraine vs from reprouing them in priuate yet may it not their Minister from publike reproofe 294 295. Men disdaine to be reprooued by such as are no better then themselues and foure remedies against that corruption 364 365. 369 370 Fret not against the publike reproofe of thy sin in the ministry of the word 108. 373. 374. A common sin it is and dangerous not to endure reproofe 109. Reuerence Though outward reuerence be not sufficient yet can we performe no duty of Gods worship well especially in publique without some signification of reuerence euen in the outward gesture of our body 115. 120. Reasons for bodily reuerence in all parts of Gods worship 116. Rules for it 119 120. 125. More reuerence should be shewed at the hearing of the Word read then preached 126. We can performe no seruice to God well without feare and reuerence 115. S. Sacraments Our Sacraements are more cleere and effectuall then those vnder the law ●…0 In the administration of them we should make vse of our eye and behold what is done 127. Sacrifices What they and their manner of offering them did signifie 189. Samaritans The Papists resemble them much 36. Scripture The vndoubted certainty of euery thing that is written therein 249. It is much more full and perfect now then it was vnder the Law 207. To humble and honest hearts they are not obscure 349. 212. What are the causes why they are obscure 213 Pretense of their obscurity will not excuse the neglect of reading them 173. Scriptures ought to bee the rule of tryall for what is taught 174. Secret sins The Lord can discerne and is priuy to our most secret sins 69. Sin is neuer the lesse dangerous to a man because it is cunningly and closely committed 75. Securitie The false ground on which ignorant wicked men secure themselues 76. 429. Generall sec●…rity is a signe of generall calamitie approching 42●… Seducers They are cunning and who are most in danger to take hurt by them 138. Seruants They should loue their Masters and desire and seeke their comfort 492. Sundry other duties they owe but this is the roote of all 493. Cautions limiting their duty 495. Three things wherby they should shew their loue to their Masters 495. Seueritie Required in the Magistrates and all Christi ans in the discountenancing punishing of whoredome and other sins 78. Sicknesse See Delay Signes It is not simply vnlawfull to desire signes for the confirming of our faith 404. Signes of iudgement approaching 428 429. Silence From good words not alwaies vnlawfull 293 Sin Great is the necessity of an effectuall knowledge of sin 6●… 65. The sins of the elect how hainous soeuer shal not hinder their saluation but tend to their good 95. Dangerous to hide our sins and that is done foure waies 104. It will bring Gods curse vpon the house and place where it is committed 158. It is a most loathsome thing and defiles a man 4. Sathan drawes men to sin through some error of their mind and by deceiuing them 73. Of sinning against the Meanes see Meanes It will certainely bring sorrow 438 452. Sinceritie The Lord makes great reckoning of the vprightnesse of the heart 465. Necessary to examine whether our hearts be vpright 53 54. 481. Notes to try that by 53. ●…9 471. 473. 476 480 The Lord delights in the weakest seruices that are done in spirit and truth 192 193. 465. He that hath an vpright heart may know he hath it 239. We should labour by diligent examination to find whether our hearts be vpright 465 466. Sorrow Properties required in the sorrow for sin 85. Extremity if it will disable vs from praying and profiting by the Word 433. Moderate is very profitable necessary 4●…3 We must striue against that that is excessiue and immoderate 43●… Foure remedies against such 436. There is great difference between that of the regenerate that of the carnall man 437. Sin will bring sorrow and great sins great sorr●…wes 438. Soule All mens chiefe care should bee for their soules 450. Speech To speake wickedly is a greater degree of sin then to thinke ill 228. Filthy speech a great sin 87. So is the delight to heare it 88. Spirit The spirit of God in whomsoeuer it dwels is like vnto water in foure respects 3. Why God is called a spirit 196. By the testimonie of the spirit the faithfull are assured of their saluation and hee that hath it may know he hath it 339. The Lord requires delights in the seruice of the spirit see Worship Superiors Disdaine not to be admonished or reproued by thy inferior 107. Superstition Papists are many waies grossely superstitious 156 157 Supper of the Lord. It should bee administred in the publike assembly 122. T. Talke see Speech Tractablenesse A good signe of election to receiue the truth with all readinesse 312 313. Affliction opens the eare and makes men tractable 397. We should pray for a tractable heart foure notes to trie it by 423. The danger of such as cannot be perswaded of many truths though they bee neuer so cleerely taught and confirmed to them 424 425. This hypocrisie is in all by nature that they scorne to be taught
and Church is called oft the Kingdome of heauen Matth. 13. 44. 47. And that promise that is made Esay 33. 24. the people that dwell there shall haue their sinnes forgiuen though it be to be vnderstood of the Church Catholique as it is in our Creed and not of any particular visible Church Yet may it thus farre forth be applied to the Church visible as that a man may say boldly none can ordinarily attaine to saluation that is not a member of the true visible Church Now there is but one true Church and Religion there may be in matters of lesse moment sundry differences in the true Church as betweene vs and the Lutherans and Brownists and among our selues but these make vs not seuerall Churches because in the fundamentall points of Religion the knowledge whereof is absolutely necessary to saluation and the profession whereof maketh a true Christian we all agree It is a damnable conceit of some that a man may be saued in any Religion There is but one faith Ephes. 4. 5. one way to life and one gate Matth. 7. 13. Gods promise is to all his Elect that he will giue them one heart and one way Ier. 32. 39. It stands men therefore vpon to enquire diligently which is the onely true Church which is the onely true Religion 3. Such as are not well grounded in Religion and carefull to attaine to certainty and resolution in it are in continuall danger to be seduced and to fall from their profession either on the right hand or on the left The Apostle giues the reason why hee desired the Colossians might attaine to all riches of the full assurance of vnderstanding least any should beguile them Col. 2. 24. That that is halting is easily turned out of the way and therefore it is necessary to goe steddily and strongly in the right way Heb. 12. 13. They that are children in vnderstanding and wauering will bee easily carried away with euery wind of vaine doctrine Ephes. 4. 14. Whom did the seducers in old time preuaile with 2. Tim. 3. 6 7. With simple women that were euer learning and neuer able to come to the knowledge of the truth And 2. Pet. 2. 14. With vnstable soules And no maruell For though we are wont to wonder at the absurdities of euery contrary Religion and thinke a simple man may easily be able to answer whatsoeuer they can say And the confidence we haue in our selues this way is a chiefe cause why we doe not more carefully seeke to ground our selues in the knowledge of the truth yet it is certaine that the grossest aduersaries of the truth are able to vse such reasons and perswasions as haue in them great probability and shew of truth The Apostle saith of the Seducers of his time that they had Coloss. 2. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Ephes. 4. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a notable veine in perswading a great deale of cunning euen such as cheaters and coggers at dice doe vse much craft to beguile and circumuent them that they deale with 4. No man can be saued vnlesse hee bee willing to suffer for his Religion yea euen to die for it If any man will come after mee saith our Sauiour Luke 9. 23. let him deny himselfe and take vp his Crosse daily and follow mee And Luke 14. 26. If any man come to mee and hate not his owne life that is bee not willing to part with it for my sake hee cannot bee my Disciple And Reuel 3. 10. Be thou faithfull vnto death and I will giue thee the crowne of life And who can doe that but he that is well grounded and certaine of the truth of his Religion No man can haue peace in his conscience nor comfort in the euill day in the houre of death or time of great affliction that is vncertaine in his Religion 5. A good conscience that giues a man assurance that he is in the state of grace in the right way to life will yeeld a man vnspeakeable comfort at all times when a man is sure that God accepteth his worke then may he well say to himselfe Goe eate thy bread with ioy and drinke thy wine with a cheerefull heart Eccl. 9. 7. Yea in the time of greatest affliction such a one may haue much comfort On the other side how can he haue comfort in that day that is vnresolued when he shall consider that he must either goe to heauen or hell and that there is but one way to heauen and that he is vncertaine whether he be in that one way or no how can he chuse but be in extreame perplexity As the man that trauells in a tempestuous weather ready to be benighted and knowes not the way and is sure that if he misse the right way he shall fall into the hands of theeues or other certaine perill of his life must needs be in extreame feare and anguish of heart so it is in this case Say such an one doe vse to pray and doe good workes all this can yeeld him no comfort He that doubteth saith the Apostle Rom. 14. 23. is condemned if he eate because he doth it not of faith and whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Euen the doubts that the faithfull feele in themselues though they be not quite void of faith and certainty cause much discomfort to them as it appeares by the teares that that poore man shed 〈◊〉 ●…is vnbeliefe Mar. 9. 24. and by that sadnesse and sorrow of heart which ●…e two Disciples of Emaus felt in themselues when they doubted whether Christ were the true Messiah Luke 24. 17. How much more such as haue no faith no certainty at all mixed with them Therefore the Lord bids them that would find rest to their soules vse all meanes to finde out the good way and walke in it Ier. 6 16. And the Apostle giues this for one reason why he did so much desire that the Colossians might attaine to all riches of the assurance of vnderstanding that their hearts might bee comforted Col. 2. 2. 2. The example of the Papists Though this haue beene a maine principall in their Religion that ignorance is the mother of deuotion yet now euen women among them grow perfect and ready in the grounds of their Religion and are able to giue a reason of that they hold and to teach their children also And what shame is that for vs 1. For exhortation to diligence in the vse of all meanes whereby we may grow to certaintie in our Religion 1. We must liue vnder and frequent an ordinary Ministry For that is ordained for this end that we may be no longer as children tossed to and fro with euery wind of doctrine Ephes. 4. 14. And ye heare of few seduced either by Papists or Brownists that did enioy an ordinary and setled Ministry 2. We must giue our selues to reading of good bookes specially of the Scriptures for they are able to make vs wise
here opposed either vnto a false worship or vnto hypocrisie but vnto the ceremoniall worship So that in both these words one and the selfe same thing is vnderstood by our Sauiour and it is as if he should haue said the true worshippers now shall worship God without ceremonies Yet are neither of these words superfluous but as spirit is opposed to the ceremoniall worship as it was an externall and carnall worship so truth is opposed to it as it was full of shadowes and figures And thus is this word truth taken Dan. 7. 16. I asked him the truth of that is the meaning and that that was signified by all this so he told me and made mee the interpretation of the things All the ceremonies were shadowes Colos. 2. 7. The whole Tabernacle was a figure Heb. 9. 9. Yea Heb. 10. 1. The Law had the shadow of good things to come and not the very liue picture of them Now our Sauiour saith that the truth and substance of those things that were shadowed by the ceremoniall worship shall be in our worship vnder the Gospell We shall finde that the ceremonies were shadowes and figures not onely of Christ and of those good things we receiue by him but also of those graces and good things as should be in the faithfull the members of Christ. 1. Circumcision was but a shadow What was the truth and substance of it Surely the circumcising and cutting off by true mortification the corruption of the heart Rom. 2. 28. That is not circumcision which is outward as if he should say that was but a shadow then verse 29. Circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter The Iew had but the shadow of circumcision euery true worshipper now hath the truth and substance of it 2. The casting of leauen out of all their houses in the feast of the Passeouer Exod. 12. 15. was but a shadow What was the truth and substance of it That they that would serue God with comfort and ioy must purge out the old leauen of malitiousnesse and wickednesse and keepe this feast with the vnleauened bread of sincerity and truth 1. Cor. 5. 7 8. The Iew had but the shadow of the Passeouer euery true worshipper now hath the substance of it 3. The Iewes had in their worship many propitiatory sacrifices for the obtaining of the remission of all kind of sinnes that they had committed against God Heb. 9. 22. Without shedding of bloud there was no remission And the Law was that whosoeuer brought one of these sacrifices to God must in presenting it to be offered by the Priest put his hand vpon the head of it and leane vpon it or else it could not be accepted of the Lord for his attonement Leuit. 1. 4. And that when it was slaine by the Priest the blood of it must be sprinkled vpon the people Exod. 248. Now this was but a figure and a shadow what was the truth and substance of it Surely that no man euer shall haue Christs Sacrifice accepted of God for his attonement vnlesse by a liuely faith he can apply Christ vnto himselfe leaning and relying with confidence of heart vpon him vnlesse he be able to say this is my sacrifice this is he that hath borne my sinnes and my punishment as Gal. 2. 20. He hath loued me and giuen himselfe for mee And Esay 53. 4. Surely he hath borne our infirmities and carried our sorrowes The blood of Christ will doe a man no good vnlesse it be sprinkled and applyed to his owne conscience by the Spirit of God 1. Pet. 1. 2. The Elect are to be saued through the obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Christ which is therefore called the blood of sprinkling which speaketh better things then the blood of Abel Heb. 12. 24. 4. They had also many Eucharisticall Sacrifices Sacrifices of thankesgiuing which were called Peace-offerings When they would solemnely professe their thankefulnesse to God for any blessing receiued they were wont to doe it by sacrifices and peace-offerings yea as the cause of their thanksgiuing did exceed so were they wont to exceede and abound in these Sacrifices So it is said of the people of God after their returne to Ierusalem out of their captiuity Neh. 12. 53. The same day they offered great Sacrifices and reioyced for God had giuen them great ioy And of Salomon it it is said that at the dedication of the Temple he offered a sacrifice of two and twenty thousand bullocks and an hundreth and twenty thousand sheepe 2. Chron. 7. 5. Now this manner of seruing God was but a figure and shadow What was the truth and substance of it Surely the spirituall sacrifices whereby Christians are to praise God and shew themselues thankefull vnto him for his mercies were figured and shadowed by those Sacrifices as namely 1. A contrite heart When a man out of the consideration of Gods mercy can vnfainedly repent and lament that he hath by his sinnes offended so good a Father this is a true Sacrifice of thanksgiuing Psal. 51. 17. the Sacrifices of God are a broken spirit 2. Obedience When a man can in thankefulnesse to God for his mercies sacrifice himselfe vnto God resigne himselfe wholly vnto his obedience and seruice this is a true sacrifice of thankesgiuing Romanes 11. 1 2. I beseech you by the mercies of God that you giue up your bodies a liuing sacrifice holy acceptable to God which is your reasonable seruing of God and fashion not your selues like vnto this world but bee you changed by the renewing of your mind 3. Prayer When a man can finde that the experience hee hath had of Gods goodnesse stirreth him vp to goe oft to God in prayer and so to depend vpon him for all good things this is a true sacrifice of thankesgiuing Heb. 13. 15. Let vs therefore by him offer the sacrifice of praise alwaies to God that is the fruit of the lips which confesse his name And Psal. 116. When Dauid had said verse 12. What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards me He resolues himselfe verse 13. I will take the cup of saluation and call vpon the name of the Lord. And Psal. 50. When the Lord had shewed to the Iewes how small pleasure he took in all their sacrifices he sets downe verse 14 15. What are the true sacrifices of thankesgiuing which he delighted in Offer vnto God praise and pay thy vowes to the most high and call vpon me in the day of trouble 4. Good workes When a man in thankefulnesse and loue to God for all his mercies doth deale iustly and mercifully with all men for the Lords sake then offereth he to God a true sacrifice of thankesgiuing Heb. 13. 16. To doe good and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifices God is well pleased So Paul calls the reliefe which the Philippians sent him when he was in prison at Rome An odour that smelled sweet a sacrifice
3. It is a maine hinderance to grace in the vse of the word and prayer as we haue heard in the Doctrine Pro. 15. 13. By the sorrow of the heart the spirit is broken 4. It giues great aduantage to Sathan It is an old saying that Melancholia est vehiculum Daemonum And experience proues that we are neuer so weake so apt to receiue the temptations of Sathan so vnable to resist them as when we are oppressed with melancholy and sadnesse of heart And this is that that is said Neh. 8. 10. The ioy of the Lord is our strength In this respect Paul chargeth the Corinthians to comfort the incestuous person and take heed lest he were not swallowed vp with ouermuch heauinesse lest Sathan saith he circumuent vs. For we are not ignorant of his enterprises 2. Cor. 2. 11. Lecture the ninetie fourth Iuly 23. 1611. IOHN IIII. XLIX L. THe last day we began to speake of the answer that this Ruler returned vnto Christ when he had beene rebuked of him and charged with infidelity which answer is set downe in this verse I haue now read vnto you And in it we obserued that he neither denies nor acknowledgeth the fault Christ charged him and his Nation with Secondly he neither shewes himselfe troubled with it by confessing his infidelity and seeking pardon nor doth he excuse or lessen it any way Thirdly though he esteemed highly of Christ and counted him a Prophet yet seemes he not at all to regard or be moued one whit with this sharpe reproofe he had receiued from him Fourthly no other cause can be imagined of his senslesnesse and stupidity but onely this That his griefe and care for his sonne was so very extreme that it tooke vp all his thoughts and affections it did so oppresse him that he could minde nothing else nothing else could affect him And from hence we receiued this Doctrine That extremity of worldly griefe will make the minde and heart of man vncapable of heauenly things It makes a man vnfit to receiue benefit by the Word and it makes a man also vnapt to pray with comfort For the Word though the heart of man be neuer so apt to profit by it neuer so teachable as it is in the time of affliction and heauinesse if it be moderate yet when it is in extremity it so oppresseth the heart that neither the threats of the Law though they be pressed vpon it by a sonne of thunder nor the sweet promises of the Gospell though they be applyed by such an one as Barnabas a sonne of consolation will be able to moue it or doe it good And as for prayer though we are neuer so fit for it as in time of affliction and heauinesse if it be moderate and secondly the spirit of prayer is such a grace and of that immortall nature as no affliction be it neuer so extreme is able vtterly to quench it or to depriue a man of it that did euer truely enioy it yet if affliction and sorrow be extreme it will make the best of Gods children vnfit to pray with that comfort they were wont And the reason of this I shewed you is the great weakenesse and impotency of mans nature Then came we to make our Vse of the Doctrine And the first Vse was to perswade euery Christian to learne the right way how to preuent and keepe his owne heart from immoderate sorrow specially for worldly things But because most men are apt to stumble at this exhortation and this age is so secure and so set vpon iollity and carnall mirth that it may seeme more needfull for vs to vse all our skill to humble men and bring them to remorse of conscience than to teach them to striue against sorrow I did therefore propound vnto my selfe this order in handling of this first Vse of the Doctrine First to shew you how far forth sorrow is fit and necessary for Christians Secondly that yet they must take heede of excessiue sorrow Thirdly how and by what meanes a man may best preserue and confirme his heart against it And of these three points I finished the two first the last day but the time would permit me to goe no further It now remaines that we proceed to the third and last and so come to the second Vse of the Doctrine All men esteeme it a miserable thing to haue a heart oppressed with griefe and seeke to shun it by all meanes And on the other side all men esteeme it an happy thing to haue a chearefull and merry heart but most men are miserably deceiued in the meanes whereby the heart may be preserued from excessiue sorrow and brought vnto true ioy But we must know that true peace is the peace of God as the Apostle cals it Phil. 4. 7. and true ioy is the gift of God And euery Christian should be able to call the Lord the God of his ioy and gladnesse as Dauid doth Psal. 43. 4. and make no reckoning of that peace and ioy whereof God is not the author So that if we would attaine to true peace and ioy indeed we must seeke it by such meanes as God hath directed vs to vse and not by any other Now I finde foure things especially which God hath in his Word directed vs to vse as remedies and preseruatiues against excessiue griefe and meanes to bring vs to true ioy The first is to get a true iustifying faith and good assurance of our saluation This is a sure way to keepe the heart from excessiue griefe and make it chearefull no ioy comparable to this Lord lift vp the light of thy countenance vpon vs thou hast put gladnesse in my heart more then in the time that their corne and their wine increased Psal. 4. 6 7. The ioy that growes from this ground is vnspeakeable and glorious 1. Pet. 1. 8. This is able to make a man reioyce when he hath neuer so many meanes to make him heauie being iustified by faith we glory in tribulations Rom. 5. 1. 3. this made Paul and Silas sing so merily euen in the stockes at midnight Acts 16. 25. For true faith giues a man many grounds and reasons of sound comfort First it assures him of the pardon of his sinne and when he knowes that no affliction neede trouble him Matth. 9. 2. Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee for sin is the very sting of death and of all affliction 1. Cor. 15. 56. Secondly he knowes he shall neuer lose the fauour of God after he hath once obtained it how many signes of Gods anger soeuer may be vpon him Rom. 8. 38 39. I am perswaded that neither life nor death nor principalities nor powers c. shall bee able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ our Lord. Thirdly he knowes God will haue tender respect to his weakenesse in whatsoeuer affliction he shall lay vpon him that it shall not exceede his strength God will by the
one belieueth what he teacheth not by an humane Credulity from his Author but by a diuine faith from the Word and because he belieueth he therefore speaketh and speaking from faith in his owne heart he speaketh much more powerfully vnto the begetting and strengthening of faith in the Hearer The priuate Christian in the diligent suruey of this Treatise shall obserue liuely decyphered the scornefull vanity of corrupt Nature the lothsomenesse and desperate danger of sin the wonderfull power of Gods Grace in the conuersion of a sinner the tryall of a mans own deceitfull heart the amiable life of Gods grace in the regenerate the comfortable benefit of afflictions sundry sweet consolations of a troubled spirit the vanity of Popery the necessity of a faithfull Ministry the beauty of Gods Ordinances holily administred and the resolution of sundry cases of conscience fitting these times and all deliuered with such euidence of Scripture-light and Christian experience that the hearts of the godly Readers will at once blesse God who hath giuen such gifts to men and blesse the Writer who hauing spent the strength of his yeares in a faithfull and fruitfull Ministry to the great comfort and succour of many Ministers and people far and neare round about him doth now at last adorne his hoarie head with this Crowne of glory to bring forth his workes to more publike Light now more at the last then at the first My hearts desire is that God would adde yet many daies more to the Authors life and support him still both in body and spirit to bring to light many other such monuments of his fruitfull labours not only that elaborate Commentary vpon the 51. Psalme but likewise such Sermons or Treatises or Letters touching cases of Conscience as haply haue lyenby him these many yeares Why should any Talent lye buried in a Napkin or candle lye hid vnder a bushell which being set on a candlesticke might giue light to all that are in the house Such Opuscula little Treatises as himselfe would hardly acknowledge vnder his owne Name might be of speciall vse and much esteeme with others Witnesse those questions and Answers wherein he hath comprized the doctrine of the Lords Supper which though without his Name they be annexed to a little Treatise of the like Argument set forth by a godly learned Diuine M. William Bradshaw yet haue they beene of singular good vse to many poore soules for their worthy preparation to that Ordinance And in very deed they do more fully furnish a Christian to that whole spirituall Duty then any other in any language that I know in so small a compasse yea and that one Letter of his to a Gentlewoman against the separation which without his consent a separatist printed and refuted hath so strongly and clearely conuinced the iniquity of that way that I could not but acknowledge in it both the wisedome of God and the weakenesse of the separatist His wisdome in bringing to light such a beame of the Light of his truth by the hand of an aduersary against the Authors mind and the weakenesse of the other to aduance the hand of his aduersary to giue himselfe and his cause such a deadly wound in open view as neither himselfe nor all his associates can be able to heale In which respect I conceiue it was that the industrious Doctor Willet in his Dedicatory Epistle to CHRISTS Colledge before his harmony vpon the first of Samuel stileth this our Author Schismaticorum quivulgò Brownistae Malleum the Hammer of Schismatiques whom they commonly call Brownists Now the God of all grace prosper the workes of his seruants to those good ends himselfe hath appointed and they haue aimedat the glory of his owne great Name in the edification and saluation of his people in Christ. So I take leaue and rest desirous to prouoke my selfe and thee to a thankfull and fruitfull vse of such mercies The vnworthiest of the least of Gods Mercies and Seruants I. C. A Table of some principall Points that are handled in these Lectures Abstinence See Fasting Admonition See Reproofe Adoption A. NO man can worship God aright till he haue the Spirit of Adoption and can conceiue of God as of his louing Father pag. 182 Foure notes to try whether we do indeed know God to be our Father pag 183. Adoration Worship See Reuerence The whole worship of God is called Adoration pag. 111. Admiring of men It is folly and sin to admire any man much pag 40. Affection He that hath an vpright heart serues God with affection pag. 480. No seruice pleaseth God that is not done with feeling and affection pag. 198 199. Naturall Affection See Parents Affl●…ction In it owne nature it is a curse neither is it a signe of Gods loue to all pag. 394. The greatest may not hope to be exempted from it pag. 388. All men should prepare for it and how 389 It is greatly profitable and necessary for Gods Elect pag. 394. It is no signe of Gods wrath but of his loue rather pag. 398. We may be sure God will doe vs good by it and remoue it when it hath wrought kindly on vs and support vs in it and giue a comfortable end vnto it pag 399. It is a signe of election to profit by it and the contrary of reprobation pag 401. In euery affection we should take notice that God is angry with vs pag. 402. Sixe degrees of Gods proceeding in sanctifying aff●…ctions to vs which may be so many notes to try whether our aff●…ctions be san-ctified pag. 40●… 40●… Extremity of it will make vs vnfit both to profit by the Word and to pray pag. 433 Alacrity See Cheerefulnesse Antiquity How far forth it is to bee regarded in the matter of Religion pag 141. It is dangerous to ascribe too much to it 144 Our Religion is most antient 145. The popish plea touching the antiquity of theirs is most vaine and insufficient ibid. Apostacie See Perseuerance How farre forth the good things that haue beene in a man may be lost ●…0 51. A dangerous thing to fall from grace or to decay in it 54. Two chiefe causes of it ibid. Comfort for the faithfull that liue in times of generall Apostacie 430 431. Apostles Christ hath taught his Church the whole will of his Father by them 207. Apparell See Attire Appearance of euill is to be auoided 86. Application Ministers must apply the Word and hearers must endure it 373 374. Assemblies See Church-Assemblies Assurance of saluation See Certainty of saluation Attention All should attend diligently at the hearing of the Word 125. 134. 135. Meanes to keepe our hearts attentiue from wandring in prayer c. 198. Attire Modesty in attire required of Christians 87. Authority The wicked are apt to abuse the authori●…y and credit of holy men to the disgrace of Gods truth 35 273. This honour is due to Christ alone to be belieued in matter of Doctrine vpon his bare Word 149. Nothing is to be
belieued and receiued in religion vpon the credit and authority of any man 1●…0 B. Baptisme It is both vnprofitable and hurtfull to the wicked 5. The whole congregation should continue together at the Administration of it 120. It should be administred in the publike assembly 12●… Blessing The ecclesiasticall Blessing pronounced by the Minister is not to be neglected ibid. What behauiour is fittest for the people to vse then 126. Body Care is to be had euen of our body and of the body of our neighbour 256 257. The sin of them that by disorder ouer throw their health 258. God requires bodily seruice of vs as well as spirituall 189. 190. Christ in the daies of his flesh shewed his miraculous power most in curing the bodies of men 445. Brownists See Church Their sinne is great in separating from our Churches 1●…7 C. Calling A man may be soundly religious and yet follow diligently his wordly Calling 238. Cautions for them that leaue the workes of their Calling to follow Sermons on the weeke daies 2●…0 Calling how far it may be neglected ibid. Calling to the Ministry Wherein the inward calling doth principally consist 261. Catechising It is a profitable and necessary duty of the Minister 205. Censures of the Church The neglect of them towards scandalous sinners is a great contempt done to Gods Worship 132 133. Ceremonies Difference in iudgement about Ceremonies should not alienate the affections of brethren 301. 303. 30●… Ceremoniall Law See Worship It was a carnall Worship 184 185. It was abrogated at Christs Passion 188. The Ceremonies were shadowes and we haue haue in our Worship the substance of that that was signified by them 186. 188. Popery exceeds iudaisme in Ceremonies and therein discouers much hypocrisie 197 198 Certainty in Religion The Elect and such as haue good hearts may attaine vnto it 140 212. 214. Meanes whereby we may attaine to it 140. Comfort for Gods people that complaine they want it 215. All men are bound to seeke for it 138. 141. They that haue historicall faith are certainely perswaded of whatsoeuer God hath reuealed in his Word 332. The faithfull are certaine that the Scripture is the Word of God and that it is God himselfe that speaketh to them in his Word 349. Certainty of saluation All the faithfull are not in the same measure certaine of their saluation 333. They that haue the greatest certainty are not without al doubts distrusts 333. 348. 349. Nor feele this certainty at all times 336. They that haue most assurance must yet liue in feare 334. Yet may the faithfull in this life be certaine of their saluation 334. 341. All are bound to seeke for this certainty 341. 342. The meanes wherby it may be obtained 343 The notes wherby true assurance may be discerned from that which is counterfeit 345 Comfort to the faithfull that complaine they want it 215 216. Cheerefulnesse Required in all the duties of Gods seruice 263 It is a sin in the faithfull to be vncheerefull ●…0 They haue iust cause to be cheerefull and to serue God willingly notwithstanding their infirmities 265 266. 461. Chambering See Dalliance Children They should seeke to requite their parents loue 391. Christ. He is the greatest gift that euer God gaue to man 11. How far He was abased for our sakes 12. Why he is called Christ and Messiah 200. 202. The benefit and merit of his death belongs not to all men 329. Yet is it necessary that the benefit men receiued by him should be expressed in most generall tearmes 330. Poore sinners should go boldly to him in all their distresses 450. We should not rest contented with any blessing till we haue Christ 14. Notes to know whether Christ be ours 15. He did constantly vse prayer and other parts of Gods worship and why 163 164. He is in the ministry of the Word to be offred vnto all in a most generall manner 330. Church Papists giue more credit to it then to the Word 150. 348. We may not separate from a true Church that enioyes the Word and professeth the Doctrine of saluation for the corruptions that are in it 165 166. 384 385. Yet may we not communicate with a true Church in any corruption 167. Euery man is bound to ioyne himselfe vnto and to be a member of the true Church 138 The profession of the true Doctrine of Christ is the only proper and certaine note of the true Church 167. How farre forth the testimony of the Church helpes to bring vs to faith 348 349. Church-Assemblies They are a meanes of our protection safety from all dangers 382. The most publike and solemne Church-Assemblies are greatly to be esteemed and frequented 129. 153. The sin of such as neglect them 128. The greatest are hound to carry themselues reuerently in them 117. Circumcision What it signified 180. Comfort To be found in Christ in all our distresses 450 No worldly thing can yeeld comfort to the distressed in minde 44 45. The Spirit of grace and regeneration is able to doe it abundantly and nothing else 46. They that feare God haue cause to be comfortable and vpon what grounds 90. Fine rules of comfort for such as are afflicted in minde 346 347. See Prayer Commonnesse of sin Sin is neuer the lesse dangerous to a man be-because it is generall 74. 384. How to carry our selues in euill times when foule sins grow common generall 428 429 It should trouble vs and cause vs to looke for some common calamity ibid. Company Haunting bad company argues a bad heart 87 What they should doe that liue in euill times and places 429. Common-Wealth The true causes why God spares our land though sin abound in it 429. Conference Cautions for them that conferre and moue questions of Religion 499 500. Confession The properties required to true confession 85. No man is bound to acknowledge all his sins to a priest 102. He that is truly penitent will be ready to acknowledge his sin euen vnto men when he is charged with it 103. It is profitable and necessary to confesse some sins euen vnto men dangerous to hide them 103 104. Conscience A good Conscience will breed vnspeakeable peace and ioy 437. 438. And assurance of a mans saluation 343. Constancie Constancie in obedience a good signe 481. Contentment Grace breeds Contentment 3. Controuersies Euery Christian is not bound to study controuersies nor to meddle with them 136. Yet some are 137. Conuersion No man by nature can doe any thing to helpe forward his owne conuersion 20. It is a miraculous worke of God 29. They that are truly religious will be carefull to w●…nne others to God 224. 235. Who are most charged and haue most opportunity to do good this way 236. Note of a true Conuert 239. True Conuerts shew great respect reuerence vnto their Ministers 215. Conuersion of man depends on Gods free grace 250. Foure things required in them that would win others to God 236. Priuate Christians
haue many waies whereby they may ●…in others 245. All men are bound to doe what they can to win others to God 3●…4 Gods manner of working in mans conuersion is diuerse and wonderfull 325. 326. Country Euery man owes a duty to the place of his birth and breeding 351. Credit A great sin for a man to be carelesse of it 86. Custome The good customes of a Church are not to be broken or neglected 143. 144. Yet it is dangerous in matter of Religion to ascribe too much vnto it 144. Most men make common custome the rule of their conscience 426. Remedies against this corruption 427. D. Dalliance Wanton dalliance is dangerous sinfull 90. Death Faith will make a man willing to die 337. Euery man should looke and prepare for sudden death 44●… 443. Delay It is dangerous to put off the making of peace with God till sicknesse 442. 443. Delight Naturall and worldly meanes of delight are not vnlawfull and what cautions are to be vsed in this 439. 440. Desire An vnfained desire of grace is a singular grace 9. Fiue differences in this desire betweene the naturall man and the regenerate 9. He that hath sauing knowledge will feele the want of it and desire it 22. Disputing It is dangerous to dispute against knowne truths 151. Dissention How far forth Ministers should seek to agree and the meanes how that may be 301. Difference in iudgemēts should not alienate godly mens affections one frō another 302 Domesticall Instruction and Worship We should vse the exercises of Religion in our families 157. How and by what meanes a man should best instruct and win his family vnto God 241 Doubting Doubtfulnesse and vnsetlednesse in matters of our faith religion is dangerous 137. 140 Euen the doubting of the truth of ought God hath said is a dangerous sin 413 414. E. Examination Christians should examine that that is taught them 151 152. And the good things seeme to bee in our selue 53. Euery affliction should driue vs to examine what it is that hath thus prouoked God ●…04 Examples The examples of some men doe great hurt in hardening of others 74. Many make this the rule of their conscience and remedies against this corruption 426. It is not safe to make the best mans examples the rule of our conscience 428. Exercises of Religion See Christian domest●…call worship Euery man is bound to spend some part of euery day in them 241. The conscionable vse of them will preserue vs from sin 93. Eye A couenant is to be made with our eye 91. F. Faith Motiues and encouragements to beleeue in Christ 13 14. How to know whether wee haue truly receiued Christ 15. In it there is a particular application of Christ 310. There is great certainty and assurance in true saith 3. 8. 332. It workes 1 peace of conscience 2 ioy in the Holy Ghost 3 boldnes in prayer 4 willingnesse to die 335 336 337. True faith is grounded vpon the word only neither vpon sense or experience 348 349. Most men ground their faith not vpon the Word but vpon sense onely 420. He that hath true faith hath an vpright heart and none but he 484. Foure notes to trie it by 484. It is imperfect in the best 333 334. It breeds in the heart true ioy and that vpon fiue grounds 436 437. Falls of the godly How farre the regenerate man may fall from grace 50 51 54. Great difference betweene them and the sins of the wicked 455. 471. 473. Family See Domesticall Sin will bring Gods curse vpon the house and place where it is committed 158. Piety will bring Gods blessing vpon our houses and dwellings ibid. Fasting Christ put no holinesse in fasting nor was giuen vnto it ●…56 Fathers No cause why we should so relie vpon the Fathers as many doe 39. The Papists giue not more due honour to them then we 38. What respect is to be had to our Fore fathers in the matter of Religion 142 143. We do not condemne our Fore Fathers 145. Feasting Though it be lawfull yet it must not be ordinary 92. Fewnesse of Beleeuers Comfort for the faithfull that liue where they haue few or none that ioyne with them in piety 430 431. Fornication It is a most hainous sin 71. Foure causes of the commonnes of it now 74. Both Magistrates and priuate men should shew their zealous hatred to it 78 79. Fornicators must looke for Gods iudgements euen in this life 79 80. They haue also cause to feare the iudgement of finall impenitency hardnes of heart 84 We may not giue men cause to suspect vs to be giuen to this sinne and that is done foure waies 87. Seuen Preseruatiues from this sin 90. Frugality A Christian should be frugall and seeke to increase his worldly estate 238. G. Gestures Rules for bodily gestures in Gods worship 118 119. Gifts All difference in gifts among Ministers doth not make an inequality betweene them because one may excell in one gift and one in another 307 308. The variety and difference among Gods seruants makes much for his glory 308. They should bee teachable and receiue the word with all readinesse and wherein it consisteth 312 213. God hath giuen a variety of gifts to all men not all to any one man 308. Variety of gifts and graces increases loue and vnity among men 319. It is a sin against God and contempt done vnto his good gifts not to make vse and profit of them 320. Gods children ought to make vse of their Ministers gifts in priuate 321. That gift is to be esteemed best which edifies most 287. 291. God Why he euen the whole Trinity is called Father 148. His loue is vnchangeable 180. 340. The knowledg of his omni-presence omniscience is of great necessity and vse 67. 70. He hates and is seuere against the sins euen of his owne people 95. Gods seruants in priuate may forbeare to reprooue some 293. Grace The loue of God in Christ to vs is most free 14 Grace and the meanes therof is highly to be esteemed 53. Grace may be knowne 463. Notes whereby grace may be knowne 468. The diuersity of the gifts of God in men commeth of his free disposition 308. H. Hardnesse of heart Wicked men harden themselues in sin euen by the Word 57 58. They are apt to harden their owne hearts against Gods corrections 402. Hearing A great sin to heare with delight filthy songs and talke 88. The necessity of constant hearing of the word 278. Cautions and encouragements for them that follow Sermons on the weeke daies 240. Heare as oft as thou mayst 172. What behauiour is fittest at the hearing of the Word preached 125 126. 134. The best way to win others to God is to draw them to heare 246. Hearers Be willing to heare one truth as well as another 59. A good signe to like that Ministry best that doth most effectually discouer to a man his sin 112 113. Examine that that is taught
and new functions were wont to bee confirmed by miracles 378. We need none now 378. Popish miracles are false and counterfeit 379. They are not done by the power of Christ 449 Christ shewed his power most in curing the bodies of men 445. 447. Sixe points obserued in these miraculous cures 446. Difference betweene Christs miracles and those of the Prophets Apostles 447 448 Multitude Faults that the common sort are especially addicted vnto 2●…4 It is no safe thing to do as the most doe 427. Comfort for the godly that are scorned for their singularity because they will not doe as the most do 430. 431. N. Name A man is bound to haue care of his good name 86. Why Hebrew names are vsed in the new Testament and why we giue Hebrew names to our children 202. Nature See how void of all goodnesse and full of corruption euery naturall man is 26 28. How much goodnesse may bee in a naturall man 174. Nazaret Why our Sauiour did shun preaching in Nazaret aboue all other places 351 352. O. Obedience No seruice pleaseth God but that that is done in obedience to his Word 160. This is a certain note of an vpright heart 473 Seuen notes of sincere Obedience 474. Regenerate able to obey 473. Difference betwixt obedience of regenerate and other ibid. Others saluation to be sought 246. Obstinacie See hardnesse of heart This greatly aggrauates sin 422. Most men that liue in the Church sinne obstinately 424. Foure signes of a heart that is not hardened nor obstinate in sin 423. The fearefull state of the obstinate 423. P. Painting Painting of the face is vnlawfull 87. Papists They are like to the Samaritans in many things 36 37. They are Idolaters worship the diuell 163 Parents Great is their affection to their children 391. This should confirme vs in the assurance of Gods loue to his children 392. They must take heed of ouer louing their children and how wee may best doe them good 392. What respect is to bee had to the example of our parents in the matter of Religion 143. The hope and comfort Christian Parents may haue concerning their children 180. Their sinnes will bring Gods curse vpon their children and what sins chiefly 393. What a kind of seruice and solemnity it was 380. Patience The faithfull haue beene very patient in affliction and shewed it foure waies 398. The meanes to breed it in vs 398. 399. Peace of conscience It is a fruit of true faith 336. There is a false peace see presumption Euery affliction should driue vs to make peace with God and that three waies 404. Peace-offerings What they signified 187. People See Hearers Persecution None can be saued that is not willing to suffer and euen to die for the truth 139. To deride a Minister is to persecute him 28●… Perseuerance The regenerate shall perseuere and are carefull so to do 481. He that is truly regenerate shall neuer fall fi nally nor totally yea he may be in this life certaine of it 339 341. Our chiefe care must be to be best at our end 274 275. Phisicke They sinne greatly that despise or neglect it 256 257. Pilgrimage Reasons against it 156. Pouertie The poore that are godly haue no cause to murmur or distrust God 33. The frequenting of religious exercises with an honest heart will begger no man 244. Prayer Helps to keepe the heart from wandring in it 198. Euery man must aske and cry for grace yea all whom God meaneth to saue shal do it 5 Obiection against the necessity of prayer an swered 5 6. All that can vnfainedly seeke to God for grace shall be sure to haue it 8. The weakest Christian should not be discouraged from prayer 9. Spirituall blessings rather to bee prayed for then temporall 9. Faith breeds boldnesse in prayer 336 337. God seemes oft to neglect the prayers of his people and that foure waies 407. Comfort for Gods people in this case 408 409 Labour to pray so as thou maist speed 411. Christ himselfe vsed much to pray 203. God delights greatly in the prayers of his people 193. Affliction driues the faithfull to it 3●…6 Promises vpon which we should ground our faith in prayer 407. Three reasons why God seemes oft to neglect and reiect the prayers of his people 408. Signes whereby we may know God accepts our prayers though he grant not our Suit 410 411. We should inquire after the successe of our prayers 411 412. Properties requisite in the prayer that would speed well 412. Poore sinners should goe boldly to Christ for helpe in all their distresses 450. Preaching See Minisry A man may try his estate by the iudgement he hath to discerne of sound teaching 113 It is lawfull to keepe Lectures to frequent them euen on the weeke daies 243. Some are bound to goe to Sermons euen on the weeke day 242. Euen they that cannot should yet desire to do it 243. How to iudge of the best Preachers and Preaching 291. The necessity of it 278 279 280. Preparation We can do no duty of Gods seruice wel without it 487. It is a great and necessary helpe for our profiting by the Word 487. This preparation consists in sixe points 489. Thinke of the euill day prepare for it 488 Presumption Lewd men haue no cause to hope they shall repent and find mercy 82 83. They can haue no sound comfort in the knowledge of Gods mercy 99. 452. They are confident of their saluation and the notes wherby true faith may be discerned from this presumption 345. Pride Noe sin makes vs more odious to God 394. The greatest must beware they be not proud either against God or men 388. All men are strangly prone to this soule sin 295. Affliction is a singular meane to abate it 395 Prophanesse The sin of such as carry themselues prophanely in Gods publike worship 134 135. Profession We should all be willing and ready to make profession of our faith 349 350. Professours Poore men young men such as haue been formerly scandalous and women haue beene vsually most forward in Religion 222. This hath beene euer a great scandall to the Word and why 224. Preseruatiues against this scandall 225. Professours should striue to remooue this scandall and how they may do it 226. Prouidence God by his prouidence gouernes all things orders them for the good of his Elect 217. The knowledge of this is vsefull many waies 219. Psalmes It is fit they should be sung in the Congregation 121 122. How we should behaue our selues in singing them 126. Publike worship See Church-Assemblies It is necessary all should be present at euery part of it 121. 128. 129. To be preferred before any priuate 129 130. 153. All should come to the beginning and stay till the end of it 120. 131 132. Rules for reuerence in it see Reuerence All may profit by euery part of it and euery part of it hath good warrant in the Word 121. 122. The whole congregation
of the prayers and to grant the requests of his seruants Psal. 145. 19. He will fulfill the desire of them that feare him he also will heare their cry and will saue them specially the prayers they make for spirituall things The speech pleased the Lord that Salomon asked this thing 1. Kin. 3. 10. Luk. 11. 13. How much more shall your heauenly Father giue the holy Spirit to them that aske him as if he should say that is a gift which you may be sure to obtaine if you beg it and which is meet for your heauenly Father to giue Insomuch as the Lords manner hath beene to meet his seruants as it were in the mid-way whom he hath seene comming towards him this way and to preuent them Esa. 65. 24. Yea before they call I will answer and while they are yet speaking I will heare As the Father of the Prodigall did Luk. 15. 20. When he was yet a great way off he saw him and had compassion on him and ran c. 3. He that desireth grace must needs haue the spirit for this desire cannot come of nature Phil. 2. 13. It is God that worketh in you both to will and to do of his owne good pleasure Yea this is a singular grace Ye haue begun saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 8. 10 not onely to do but also to be willing making it a greater grace to be willing and desirous to do well then it is to do the thing that is good and thereupon inferreth verse 12. If there be first a willing mind a man is accepted according to that he hath and not according to that he hath not Yea this is almost all that the faithfull haue many times to comfort themselues withall that they find in themselues an vnfained desire to please God This was all that Nehemiah could say of himselfe and the rest of his brethren Neh. 1. 11. that they did desire to feare Gods name And the Church Esa. 26. 8. The desire of our soule is to thy name and to the remembrance of thy holinesse and Vers. 9. with my soule haue I desired thee in the night This was Pauls comfort Rom. 7. 18. To will is present with me They must needs be sure therefore of grace that haue an vnfeined desire of it for they haue it already No man can vnfainedly desire faith that hath not faith nor repentance that hath not repented c. This Doctrine serueth first for the comfort of such as mourne in Sion because of their great want of grace Their faith knowledge hatred of sinne c. are so weake that they cannot discerne them and therefore doubt they are not in the state of grace Let such for their comfort apply this doctrine to themselues Thou desirest nothing in the world more then Gods fauour and grace thou mournest for the want of it Be of good comfort God accepteth graciously of this vnfained desire Remember to thy comfort Christ will not quench the smoking flaxe Mat. 12. 20. Remember how he accepted the weake faith of that poore man Mar. 9. 24. the truth whereof appeared most in a desire to belieue They that can but sobbe vnto God vnfainedly haue the Spirit of prayer though they know not what to pray as they ought Rom. 8. 26. 27. This thy desire is a certaine signe thou art in the state of grace and that thou shalt increase in grace also To euery one that hath and by exercising it doth shew that he hath any measure of true grace shall be giuen saith our Sauiour Mat. 25. 29. and he shall haue abundance And though thou do not yet thou shalt be sure one day to find comfort according to that propheticall prayer of Dauid Psal. 40. 16. which also implieth a promise in it Let all those that seeke thee be glad and reioyce in thee For exhortation vnto two duties 1. That what grace soeuer any of vs want wherein we find our selues most weake and defectiue as who feeles not in himselfe many defects we should seeke with faith and confidence to draw it out of the walls of saluation as the Prophet speaketh Esa. 12. 3. by this bucket of hearty prayer 2. Be in thy prayers more earnest and plentifull for heauenly then for earthly blessings For first no prayer pleaseth God so well Secondly In no prayer thou canst haue so much assurance to preuaile 3. This is the readiest and surest way euen to obtaine earthly blessings if thou canst seeke heauenly first and more earnestly according to that promise Mat. 6. 33. First seeke the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all these things shall be added vnto yon For the reproofe and terrour of vngodly men First Is there not so much in thee as vnfainedly to desire Gods grace and thine owne saluation then art thou certainly quite void of all grace and consequently in a most miserable estate For the smallest measure of true grace that can be in a man is to hunger after grace in the want thereof Secondly This discouereth the fearefull estate of all such as shall perish euerlastingly They must needs be all inexcusable that perish because they did not so much as desire saluation nay like prophane Esaus they contemned it The Lord would haue saued them and they would not as Christ complaineth of the Iewes Mat. 23. 37. Insomuch as in the day of the Lord the father shall not pitie his owne child that is damned nor the child his owne father but euen in this that shall be fulfilled in that day which the Prophet speaketh in another case Psal. 58. 10. The righteous shall reioyce when he seeth the vengeance But against all that hath beene said of this point it may be obiected that this is a hard and absurd Doctrine may any man be saued that will that desireth saluation is there any man so mad that would not be saued Doe we not read of Balaans Numb 23. 10. and of sundry others Mat. 7. 2●… and 25. 11. Luke 13. 24. that haue desired to be saued and yet haue perished euerlastingly I answer it is true and I say further that if euery one that hath a kind of desire to be saued might come to heauen there would be but a few in hell But this I say also that none of all those haue missed of saluation or of sauing grace that haue desired it vnfainedly Fiue differences may be obserued betweene the desires of those men whose examples haue beene obiected and the desires of Gods children 1. They desire it not vnfainedly because they desire it not earnestly for they will take no paines to obtaine it nor vse the means with any diligence Pro. 13. 4. The sluggard lusteth but his soule hath nought and 21. 25. The desire of the slothfall slayeth him for his hands refuse to worke They will forgoe nothing for it The rich Ruler seemed earnestly to desire saluation Mar. 10. 17. but indeed he did not there were other things he
you aske was he no more They will say yes he was more aske what more then they will say that is too deepe a question they were neuer asked the like before 2. Yea they are not onely so extremely ignorant but they desire not knowledge nor the meanes thereof but say vnto God in their hearts like those Iob 21. 14. Depart from vs for we desire not the knowledge of thy wayes If they be thus questioned withall though by their Minister yet they are all the while like the fish out of the water desirous as may be to be rid of his company yea they loue their foolishnesse and ignorance they hate and despise flout and scorne all meanes of knowledge and such as seeke after them as the Holy Ghost speaketh Fooles despise wisdome and instruction saith Salomon Pro. 1. 7. and Ver. 22. How long ye simple ones saith he will ye loue simplicity and the scorners delight in their scorning and fooles hate knowledge They hate knowledge you see yea they hate it with a perfect hatred and this is that that makes their estate so fearefull Pro. 1. 28. 29. They shall seeke me early but shall not find me for that they hated knowledge This is that that will cause the Lord to deny them all comfort of his mercy when they shall most desire it because they hated knowledge and the meanes thereof The second vse of this doctrine is for the direction of euery one whom God hath charged with the care of other mens soules to labour first in this to bring them to knowledge till then they can haue no good affection no desire or care of their saluation 1. The Minister is bound to labour in this to bring the people to knowledge and therefore bound to teach diligently 2 Tim. 4. 2. and to teach plainely also The Leuites caused the people to vnderstand the Law Neh. 8. 7. 8. they read in the booke in the law of God distinctly and gaue the sense and caused them to vnderstand the reading Thinke it not enough to tickle the eare or to moue the affections but lay a good foundation of Doctrine teach soundly and substantially Reproue rebuke exhort with all long-suffering and doctrine saith the Apostle 2. Tim 4. 2. Doctrine must be the ground and foundation of all exhortations and reproofes Yea he must catechise as well as preach 1. Cor. 3. 2. He must giue milke to the babes as well as strong meat to growne men 2. The Magistrate is bound to see that the people be taught and instructed this was Iehoshaphats care 〈◊〉 Chron. 17. 7. Yea he is bound also to compell them to the vse of the meanes of knowledge Luke 14. 23. Compell them to come in saith the Lord to his seruant and the Magistrate is Gods seruant as well as the Minister is in this worke 3. The Master of the family is bound to vse all meanes to bring them that are vnder him to knowledge Traine vp a child in the way he should go in saith the Lord to the parent Pro. 22. 6. and Deut. 6. 7. Thou shalt teach my words diligently to thy children Parents we see are bound themselues to instruct their children in religion yea and they must also bring them to the publike meanes of knowledge as is plaine by the fourth commandement Exod. 20. 10. 4. Euery Christian is bound to seeke by all meanes to draw others to knowledge Col. 3. 16. Teach one another Yea he is bound to perswade them also vnto the meanes of knowledge saying as Esa. 2. 3. Come ye let vs go vnto the mountaine of the Lord and as Philip did to Nathanael Ioh. 1. 46. specially his friends and kindred as Cornelius did Act. 10. 24. We all complaine of the prophanesse of the people and of their contempt of the Word The Minister complaines of the stubbornesse and vnthankfulnesse of his people and of their prophanesse and contempt of the Word in his Ministry The Magistrate also finds cause oft times to complaine of the ouer-much pronesse of the people to naughtinesse of the increase of thieues and murderers The parents of their childrens vnnaturalnesse disobedience and riot The master of his seruants idlenesse vnfaithfulnesse and stubbornesse All men of the badnesse of the times and that small fidelity and loue and piety that is to be found among men But few or none looke to the cause and fountaine of all this few or none lay any part of this vpon themselues we may complaine in this case as the Prophet doth Ier. 8. 6. No man repenteth him of his owne wickednesse and neglect of duty no man saith what haue I done haue not I beene a great cause of all this The cause of all this is the want of the knowledge of God There is no knowledge of God in the land and that is the chiefe causes why by swearing and lying and killing and stealing and committing adultery men breake out and bloud toucheth bloud as the Prophet complaineth Hos. 4. 1. 2. And because there is in men naturally neither knowledge nor desire of it but a scornefull contempt and hatred of it euery one of vs in our places should haue done as much for them as the friends of the Palsy-man did Mar. 2. 3. We should haue done what we could to bring them to the meanes of knowledge as they did take great paines to bring him to Christ who had otherwise neuer come to him Mar. 2. 3. And if we had done this for them with as good a heart as they did that for that poor man we should haue no cause to doubt but Christ would haue had been as ready to accept and blesse our labour in it as he was theirs of whom it is said Ver. 5. that Christ when he saw their faith did as much for the poore man as they desired and more too for he not only cured him of his palsy and restored life and sense to the members of his body but pardoned his sin and so reuiued his soule also And certainly on the other side if we haue not doue our endeauour to bring them to knowledge we haue made our selues guilty of all their sinnes The third vse of the Doctrine is to perswade vs to a diligent vse of all meanes that may bring vs to knowledge I say to the vse of all meanes 1. Hearing of which our Sauiour saith Mar. 4. 24. that proportionable to our frequency and diligence in it our growth in knowledge and grace shal be With what measure you mete saith he it shal be measured to you againe And to you that heare shall more be giuen 2. Reading by the diligent vse whereof the Lord saith Deut. 17. 19. We shall learne to feare him and to keepe all the words of his law 3. Conferring and questioning with others wherein while the Disciples that were iournying towards Emaus did reuerently and deuoutly exercise themselues Christ drew neare and ioyned himselfe vnto them and opened the Scriptures vnto them as
especially that want yeares or such other means of learning should do any great good that they cannot belieue See this in Christs country-men Mat. 13. 55. 57. They were offended at him and could not honour him as they ought because they knew the meannesse of his parentage and education This doctrine serueth first generally to exhort euery one of vs to take notice of this vile corruption in our selues and to striue against it Take heed brethren saith the Apostle Heb. 3. 12. least there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeliefe Consider with thy selfe 1. Thou canst haue no comfort in God vnlesse thou haue faith Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please him 2. Though it may seeme an easie thing to belieue while thou art in peace and in abundance of all good means of comfort as Papists say this is too easie a way to be the right way to heauen thou wilt find it hard in the time of extremity when that euill day shall come which the Apostle speaks of Eph. 6. 13. Of all things that God hath commanded vs this most needeth the mighty hand of God and the exceeding greatnesse of his power to make vs able to performe it and so speakes the Apostle of it Eph. 1. 19. 3. Thou hast no true faith vnlesse thou canst belieue whatsoeuer God hath said or if thou do distrust the Lord when the meanes do faile Be not therefore too well perswaded of the strength of thy faith but pray and vse all other meanes to get it increased in thee and to haue the infidelity of thy heart subdued more and more The remedy and means for the subduing of it is the consideration of these three points 1. That which the Scripture hath reuealed touching the omnipotency of God Gen. 18. 14. Shall any thing be hard to the Lord ler. 32. 27. I am the Lord God of all flesh is there any thing too hard for me The Lord can do more then he will doe he can of stones raise vp children vnto Abraham Mat. 3. 9. Christ could by prayer haue obtained of his Father more then twelue legions of Angels to rescue him from his enemies Mat. 26. 53. God could haue kept Christ from drinking the cup of his wrath for vs Mar. 14. 36. Yet may no man build on Gods power nor can haue true comfort in it or say God can do this or that if it please him vnlesse he haue his reuealed will to build vpon as well as his omnipotency The Papists in their doctrine of the reall presence and many carnall Protestants in their contempt of the ordinary means are grossely mistaken in this point Therefore the faithfull professing the comfort they tooke in the faith of Gods power vse to ioyne his power and his truth or faithfulnesse together as Psal. 89. 8. O Lord God of hosts who is a strong God like vnto thee or to thy faithfulnesse round about thee And where we haue his word and promise for any thing we may build vpon it and be fully assured that he will performe it be it neuer so vnlike because he is able to do it Thus is the strong faith of Abraham commended by the Apostle Rom. 4. 21. He was fully perswaded that what God had promised he was able also to performe And thus doth Dauid magnifie and set forth the omnipotency of God Psal. 115. 3. Our God is in the heauens he hath done whatsoeuer he pleased See this proued by sundry plaine experiments for of this truth we may say as Psal. 119. 140. Thy word is proued most pure by good experience therefore thy seruant loueth it And these experiments are to be obserued in three points 1. He hath done mighty things by very weak means By three hundred he ouerthrew the huge host of the Midianites and Amalakites who were like Grashoppers in multitude and their Camels without number Iudg 6. 7. 12. 2. He hath done mighty things without any naturall and ordinary means he ouerthrew the mighty wals of Iericho and deliuered the City into his peoples hands onely by the blowing of trumpets of Rams hornes and the shouting of the people Iosh. 6. 20. which made Asa cry to him 2. Chro. 14. 11. It is nothing for thee to helpe with many or with no power 3. He hath done mighty things when all meanes haue seemed as it were to be armed against him and quite contrary to the nature of ordinary means that he might shew himselfe to be indeed the Lord of Hosts as in the case of Israels passing through the Red Sea Exo. 14. 21. 22. And in the preseruation both of the three noble Iewes in the fiery fornace Dan. 3. 27. and of Daniel in the Lions den Dan. 6. 22. 2. To consider how highly God is prouoked with this sinne Psal. 78. 21. 22. 22. 40. 41. They prouoked and grieued him how by tempting and limiting him when Elisha had said To morrow a measure of fine flower should be sold for a shekell because the Prince did but say Though the Lord would make windowes in heauen could this thing come to passe The Prophet in Gods name threatned he should see it for increase of his miserie but not taste of it and so it came to passe for he died a strange and base death 2. King 7. 19. 20. When Zachary a man iust before God and one of whose tongue God might haue had more vse then of many others did but make a doubt vpon this ground he was smitten dumbe for forty weekes Luke 1. 20. Moses and Aaron for doubting vpon this ground also of Gods promise see how seuerely they were punished for it Num. 20. 12. 3. The consideration of the nature of this sinne for as faith is the root of all other good things in vs It is that that purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. It is that that setteth loue and euery grace on worke faith worketh by loue saith the Apostle Gal. 5. 6. It is that whereby in our whole conuersation we are enabled to liue a holy life The iust shall liue by his faith saith the Prophet Hab. 2. 4. And there is nothing wherein we so much giue glory to God as by our faith Rom. 4. 20. Num. 20. 12. So on the other side nothing so much corrupteth the heart of man as infidelity doth no sinne that we can commit doth the Lord so great dishonour as when we do thus limit him and cannot trust him further then we see him Ioh. 5. 10. He that belieueth not hath made him a lyer And what greater disgrace can you put vpon any man then to giue him the lie Infidelity as it was the first sinne whereby Satan deceiued and poisoned mankind he called Gods truth in question and sought to bring them into a doubt of it Gen. 3. 4. so is it the root of all other our sinnes whereby we depart from God Heb. 3. 12. Therefore doth our Sauiour mention it as the only sinne that the
4. But let euery man prooue his owne worke and then shall he haue reioycing in himselfe and not in another The more pretious this treasure is the more need thou hast to take heed thou be not deceiued in it As the wise Merchant did when he had found the true treasure he hideth it and for ioy thereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 subducit sese he withdraweth himselfe to consider well and try whether it were true treasure indeed before he sells all that he hath to buy the field where it was Matth. 13. 44. 3. Thou maist if thou wilt try certainely discerne this 1. Cor. 2. 12. The Spirit is giuen vs to that end that we may know the things that are giuen vs of God Some rules I will giue thee whereby thou maist know whether the good things that are in thee be the fruits of grace indeed 1. If they be done by the direction and warrant of the Word thus is Iosias goodnesse commended by the Holy Ghost to be true goodnesse indeed it was according to that which was written in the Law of the Lord as we reade 2. Chron. 35. 26. 2. If thy intent in doing of them be to please serue and honour God not to serue thy selfe or men By this note the Apostle describeth truth of grace both in himselfe and in others Of himselfe he saith Gal. 1. 10. that he did not in his Ministery seeke to please men but that he serued God in his spirit in the Gospell of his Sonne Rom. 1. 9. And of others he saith Rom. 14. 6. that he that did either regard or not regard a day was not to be despised or iudged an hypocrite so long as he did that which he did vnto the Lord and in a care to please and approoue himselfe vnto him 3. If thou doest what thou doest in loue to him because thou knowest how much he is delighted with and honoured by thy obedience For the Apostle saith Gal. 5. 6. that that is true faith and such as will auaile a man and stand him in stead that worketh by loue and causeth him to doe euery good worke that he doth out of loue vnto God And our Sauiour by this argument comforts Peter and assureth him that the fall that he had taken was not vnto perdition because as hee proueth by appealing to his own Conscience Ioh. 21. 15. there was still notwithstanding he denied him with his mouth in his heart an vnfained loue vnto him 4. Ifthou doe what thou doest of faith and the loue thou bearest to him grow from thy assurance that he loueth thee in Christ and that thou art his child that he hath forgiuen thee all thy sins this was the roote of Marios loue Luke 7. 47. shee loued much because she knew many sinnes were forgiuen her 3. To exhort such as haue receiued any grace to take heede of going backe This doctrine tends not to licentiousnesse as Papists slander it For 1. We grant the best may fall and cannot choose but fall vnlesse he take great heed 2. God will be as angry with their sins and correct them as sharpely as others God is very terrible in the assembly of his Saints saith the Prophet Psal. 89. 7. as is euident in the example of his seuerity towards Dauid 2. Sam. 13. 11. 12. Though they cannot fall to death they may receiue such bruises and maimes as they shall neuer clawe of haply while they liue and loose the sense of Gods fauour which they esteeme more of then of all the world Dauid professeth Psal. 46. 7. that there was no ioy in the world comparable vnto the ioy that he found Thy loue is better then wine saith the Spouse Cant. 1. 2. 3. If euer they recouer as they that euer had truth of grace shall certaine doe yet they shall doe it with more difficulty then any other sinner as wee may see in the example of Dauid Psal. 51. Obserue therefore and take heede of those things whereby the good estate of thy soule may be impaired And those are two principally 1. As it is with the state of the body with-hold food and rest and exercise from it and the strongest body will decay so is it with the state of the soule with-hold from it the meanes of grace and it will decay 1 Thess. 5. 19. 20. If Prophecyings be despised the spirit will be quenched yea Pro. 29. 18. Where there is no vision the people will decay Yea Heb. 3. 13. If we doe not daily by all good meanes exhort and stirre vp our selues we are in danger to be hardened 2. As it is with the body by poysoning or wounding it the life of it if it be not quite taken away yet will be endangered and the health and strength of it impaired greatly so it is with the soule by sinning against conscience which is as poyson and a stabbe giuen vnto it it is greatly impaired See this in Dauid and Peter after they had yeelded once to sinne against their conscience they grew weaker and weaker more and more vngratious When Dauid had once yeelded to his lust then he cloakes it and addes sinne to sinne in a strange manner Peter when he had denyed once his Master then he doth it with oathes and execrations and strange impudency THE TWELFTH LECTVRE ON APRILL XXV MDCIX IOH. IIII. XV. The Woman faith vnto him Sir giue me this water that I thirst not neither come hither to draw OVr Sauiour hauing in the two former verses prooued that the Water of life which he had to giue was farre more excellent then the water of Iacobs Well this poore woman though she had before obiected and reasoned against it is now through the diuine power that shee felt in his word conuinced and beleeueth that he had indeed a water to giue that was better then that of Iacobs Well which he that hath once drunke of shall neuer thirst againe And out of this perswasion she had of the truth of that he had said shee did now beare a reuerent estimation to his person whom at first she esteemed basely of as of an ordinary Iew she desireth this water that he had spoken of and saith vnto him Sir giue me of that water yet still conceiuing that this thirst he had spoken of was but the thirst of the body and the Water of life but a materiall water she desires it onely out of a carnall respect she had to her owne profit and ease for so she saith Sir giue me of that water that I may not thirst and come hither to draw First then in that this woman being yet a naturall and wicked woman beleeues now the word of Christ likes it and was affected with it and desires this water he had spoken of and yet doth all this in a carnall respect to her profit and ease We learne That the principall thing the naturall man respecteth in the affection he seemes to beare vnto the Word is his carnall ease and contentment
as Rom. 16. 18. They that are such serue not our Lord Iesus Christ but their owne belly And thus much for the first point 2. The second point wherein I told you the truth of this Doctrine may appeare is this That there is no truth which the naturall man receiues but he turnes and applies to his carnall aduantage he reades and heares onely in hope to find contentment to his flesh The most holy and wholsome parts of Gods truth he vnderstandeth carnally and applies to the feeding of his owne humour and contentment of his flesh This is the onely vse tha●… they make of all that they heare and read that they may sinne with more contentment and quiet of mind Euen as the spider that gathereth poyson of euery flower Unto them that are defiled and vnbelieuing is nothing pure but their minds and consciences are defiled Tit. 1. 15. Whensoeuer they come to heare Gods Word they bring with them an Idoll in their heart some corruption or other and whatsoeuer they read or heare they turne to the seruice of their owne Idoll Ezek. 14. 1 3. These men haue set vp their Idoll in their hearts and put the stumbling block of their iniquity before their face Yea it is certaine that many wicked men receiue not that confirmation that quiet and contentment to their heart in their sinne by any thing in the world as they do by the blessed and holy Word of God Such there were in the Apostles dayes Rom. 3. 8. who did affirme that the Apostles said Let vs do euill that good may come of it They wrest the Scriptures saith the Apostle 2. Pet. 3. 16. to their owne destruction They turne the grace of our God into lasciuiousnesse saith another Apostle Iude 4. Thus most men peruert these most comfortable Doctrines that are taught in sundry places in the holy Scripture as that in Mat. 24 24 that it is not possible for the elect to be deceiued or to perish And that in Rom. 4. 5. To him that worketh not but belieueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse And that Rom. 6. 14. Ye are not vnder the Law but vnder grace And that 1. Ioh. 2. 1 2. If any man sinne we haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world And that sentence wherewith we begin our Lyturgie which though not in the same words yet in sense and effect is deliuered by the Prophet Ezek. 18. 21 22. At what time soeuer a sinner doth repent him of his sinnes from the bottom of his heart I will put all his wickednesse out of my remembrance saith the Lord. And this is also the cause why they will heare and conferre with and moue questions to the best Preachers of the Word because they are in hope to get some what from them that they may make to serue for their purpose and if they can it will quiet and comfort them more then the speeches or iudgements of an hundred other men It is true indeed they loue the corruptest teachers best the good fellow Priest Mic. 2. 11. If a man walking in the spirit and falshood do lie saying I will prophecie vnto thee of wine and of strong drinke he shall euen be the Prophet of this people But yet they will not onely heare such but the best also in hope to heare from them somewhat that may serue their turne These are like Balaam that when God had giuen him his answer Num. 22. 12. yet out of this hope he waited still for another answer verse 19 20. So Ahab 1. King 22. 16. had wont oft to send for Michaia and to charge him to speake nothing but the truth why so It would haue comforted him more to haue gotten somewhat from Michaia for his turne then from all the foure hundred Prophets besides Thus you see then this second point confirmed which I obserued to you concerning the affection that a naturall man beares vnto the Word Now as this is a fearefull sinne so two things are to be obserued concerning the dangerous estate of these men 1. That in all the places where the Scripture speakes of them there the Holy Ghost sets a black marke vpon them and speakes of them as of Reprobates the Apostle Paul speaking of such as peruerted the Word and Doctrine that he taught whose damnation is past saith he Rom. 3. 8. And Peter speaking of them that wrested the Scriptures saith 2. Pet. 3. 16. that they did it to their owne destruction And Iude saith of them that turned the grace of God the doctrine of Saluation by Gods free grace onely into lasciuiousnesse that they were of old ordained vnto this condemnation Iude 4. 2. That the Lord hath threatned to feed these men in their humour so as such men do neuer lightly read or heare but somwhat they find that may serue their turne To Ahab that was vnwilling to be faithfully taught and acquainted with the will of God but willing to be flattered and deceiued God sent a lying spirit with efficacy of terrour Thou shalt perswade him saith the Lord 1. King 22. 22. And preuaile also go forth and do so And of euery one that hauing set vp his Idoll in his heart came vnto the Prophet the Lord saith Ezek. 14. 4. That he himselfe would answer that man according to the multitude of his idols 3. The third point The naturall man will be ready to forsake and renounce any truth that he hath seeme●… to haue beene best grounded in and to haue receiued with greatest comfort when once it becomes an occasion of losse or trouble to him in the world while peace and prosperity lasts he may seeme to like the Gospell and euery truth of it as well as any man but if he cannot professe it without interrupting his peace he is ready to renounce it See the proofe of this in the hearer of the Word that is resembled to the stony ground Mat. 13. 20. 21. He heareth the word and anon with ioy receiueth it but when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word by and by he is offended And in that rich man that had seemed for a time full of zeale and deuotion towards Christ Mar. 10. 17. 22. Of these the Apostle saith that because they are enemies to the Crosse of Christ and mind earthly things therefore their belly is their God and their end damnation Philip. 3. 18 19. 1. To teach vs how to iudge of others that make profession of Religion and shew loue to the Word Praise God when thou seest any how lewd soeuer they haue beene to do so and hope the best and fret not nor like worse of our assemblies and Religion for this as the Pharisees did of Christ because the Publicans resorted to him Luke 15. 2. But yet build not too much vpon this as if that
saith the Lord. Psal. 139 7. Whither shall I go from thy Spirit or whither shall I flie from thy presence Acts 17. 27. Doubtlesse he is not farre from euery one of vs for in him we liue and moue and haue our being 2. Because he is the Iudge of the whole World and is to iudge euery man righteously according to his workes God shall bring euery worke into iudgement saith the Holy Ghost Eccl. 12. 14. with euery secret thing whether it be good or whether it be euill For though he shall not want witnesses at that day yet it is necessary himselfe should haue perfect knowledge of all the actions of men Esa. 11. 3. He shall not reproue after the hearing of the eares Therefore Dauid Psal. 94. confuting the Atheisme of the wicked that said verse 9. The Lord shall not see vseth among other this argument to conuince them ver 10. He that chastiseth the Nations shall not be correct be that teacheth man knowledge shall not he know The vse of this Doctrine is double 1. This Doctrine if the Lord will be pleased to perswade our hearts to belieue it is most effectuall both to moue our hearts to speedy repentance for sinnes past and to restraine vs from sinne in time to come The thing that most emboldeneth to sinne is the hope of secrecy as we may see Gen. 39. 11. It is said of Iosephs Mistresse that he comming into the house when there was no body within but they two verse 12. Therefore she caught him by the garment c. True it is that there be many that are growne to that impudency that they dare speake or doe any thing whosoeuer be by They declare their sinnes as Sodome Esay 3. 9. Such a one was Absolon 2. Sam. 16. 22. Hee went in to his fathers Concubines in the sight of all Israel Such a one was the vniust Iudge Luke 18. 2. who neither feared God nor regarded man Yea that will the rather sweare and speake filthily when such are by as they know they may grieue by it as counting it a disgrace to be restrained by the presence and reuerence of any man but these are farre gone these sinne supernaturally these are in a fit of frenzie and madnesse company and mirth hath made them madd and desperate as indeed it will doe Eccles. 2. 2. For naturally and for the most part the knowledge of men will 1. Restraine them from sinning and 2. Will worke shame and trouble of mind in them when they haue sinned There are many sinnes that men would neuer commit but that they hope to keepe them secret the presence of a godly man would restraine them yea the presence of a little childe would restraine them Darkenesse and hope of secrecy is the principall encourager of men vnto most sinnes they cannot sinne securely vnlesse they may sinne in secret And in this respect amongst others all sinnes are called the workes of darkenesse Ephes. 5. 11. Therefore Iob speaking of sundry kinds of sinners saith Iob 24. 13. These are they that abhorre the light verse 15. The eye of the adulterer waiteth for the twilight and saith none eye shall see me and disguiseth his face and verse 17. If one know them they are in the terrours of death Now if the knowledge and priuitie that men haue of our sinnes bee of such force how much more would the knowledge the Lord hath of them doe it if men were fully perswaded of it For 1. A man may oft sinne so secretly that no man shall know of it but he hath the Lords eye vpon him at all times though no man seeth him God seeth him Yea hee knowes all our waies perfectly obserues them and takes notice of them so as he can neuer forget them 2. No man can possibly dislike or abhorre vs so much for any sinne as the Lord doth Iob 10. 4. Hast thou carnall eyes or dost thou see as man seeth Hab. 1. 12. Thou art of pure eyes and canst not see euill thou canst not behold wickednesse 3. The more cunning any shall vse in concealing his sin and keeping it secret the more the Lord abhorrs him for it Thus is Achans sin aggrauated Ioshua 7. 11. They haue euen taken of the accursed thing and haue also stollen and dissembled also And so is the sin of Israel 2. King 17. 9. The children of Israel did secretly those things that were not right against the Lord their God 4 As he seeth and disliketh all our sins so he certainely will one day charge vs with them either in this life to our saluation as to this woman here by the ministery of his word as he did that poore man that was before ignorant and vnbelieuing 1. Cor. 14. 24 25. which is indeed the naturall property of the word to do it is a discerner and discouerer of the thoughts and intents of the hart as the Apostle speaketh Heb. 〈◊〉 12. or in the life to come to our confusion as he threatneth wicked men that he will doe at one time or other I will reprooue thee and set thy sins in order before thine eyes saith the Lord Psal. 51. ●…1 and Eccl. 11 9. Know thou that for all these things God will bring thee to iudgement 5. He will also bring the secretest sins of men to light one day and lay them open euen to men Pro 10. 9 He that peruerteth his way shall be knowne 1. Tim. 5. 25. They that are otherwise cannot be hid He doth oft in this life discouer Hypocrites by giuing them vp to the committing of open sins Psal. 125 5. Such as turne aside vnto their crooked wayes the Lord will leade them forth with the workers of iniquity But this shall chiefly be done in the great day of the Lord then will the Lord lighten all things that are now hid in darkenesse and make the counsailes of the hearts manifest 1. Cor. 4. 5. This is the reason our Sauiour vseth to disswade men from hypocrisie Luke 12. 1 〈◊〉 For there is nothing couered that shall not be reuealed neither hid that shall not be knowne The conclusion then of this first Vse is that we would not flatter our selues in the secrecie of our sinnes but seeke the pardon of them and pray with the Prophet Psal. 19. 12. Cleanse thou me from secret faults Seeke to haue them blotted out of the Lords Booke of remembrance that he may neuer charge vs with them And the way to obtaine that is now in the time of grace to lay them open before the Lord and to charge our selues seriously with them with penitent and humbled hearts Pro. 28. 13. He that confesseth and for saketh his sins shall finde mercy For as he to whom sinne is forgiuen shall be sure to haue his sinne couered and hidden with the Lord Psalme 32. 1. So he that by remission and repentance hath them not blotted out shall be sure to haue them laid open and brought to light and though they were
Christ through whom onely we hope to finde mercy with God hateth sinne with an infinite hatred Exod. 23. 21. Prouoke him not for hee will not spare your misdeeds because my name is in him And it is a farre more fearefull thing for a wicked man though not for such a one as Dauid was to fall into his hands to haue his displeasure then the displeasure of all the men in the world Heb. 10. When the Apostle had said verse 30. Uengeance is mine I will recompence saith the Lord. And againe The Lord shall iudge his people Whereas some desperate sinner might haue said as now many doe if that be all I care not let me shunne the shame and punishment of the world and as for the Lord I shall doe well enough with him he addeth verse 31. It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the liuing God Psal. 75. 7. Thou euen thou art to be feared and who shall stand in thy sight when thou art angry This the Elect haue felt This made Dauid cry out Psal. 51. 4. Against thee thee onely haue I shunned and done this euill in thy sight His worldly punishment and shame neuer troubled him in comparison of this And this shall the wickedest man in the world feele one day when God shall awaken his conscience He shall wish rather hee had to deale with all the men in the world then with the Lord he will make no reckoning of the displeasure and contempt of the whole world in respect of the Lords wrath See an experiment of this in Iudas he cared not for displeasing the chiefe Priests and Elders nor for shaming himselfe so publikely but the wrath of God which he had the sense of was intolerable to him Mat. 27. 4 5. And if the wrath of God be so intollerable in this life to the wicked what shall it be in the day of wrath as the day of iudgement is called Rom. 2. 5. Surely the stoutest and most profane sinners that in this life haue made so small account of Gods displeasure and thought they could doe well enough with him and haue gloried so much in Christ Apoc. 6. 15. 17. Euen Kings and Captaines and euery bond man and euery freeman shall cry to the mountaines and rocks fall on vs and hide vs from the presence of him that sits on the throne from the wrath of the Lamb for the great day of his wrath is come and who can stand 2. As ready as the Lord is to forgiue sinne and easie to be intreated yet can he not pardon any but vpon their vnfained repentance It is as possible for a woman to be deliuered of a child in her sleepe as for a man to be deliuered from the guilt and punishment of this sin before he haue vnfainedly repented Christ is called a Prince and a Sauiour to giue repentance vnto Israel and remission of sins Acts 5. 31. He can giue remission of sins to none but such as he hath giuen repentance vnto 3. Though the Lord be so mercifull that vpon repentance he giueth pardon to euery sinner yet such a mans sin may be that the Lord will most seuerely and sharpely correct and scourge him for it euen after he hath repented and obtained mercy and pardon For though when God pardoneth sin he remit not onely the guilt of it but the punishment also yet he chastiseth oft times very sharpely such as he hath pardoned See an excellent experiment of this in Dauid when Nathan had dealt particularly with him he repented and God pardoned his sin 2. Sam. 12. 13. But did he heare no more of his sinne after he had repented yes the outward miseries threatned by the Prophet 2. Sam. 12. 10 11. fell all vpon him for all that And he endured such inward anguish of conscience as put him to such paine as if all his bones had beene broken with it Ps. 51. 8. And in comparison whereof all his outward miseries seemed but as flea-bitings to him And if thou belong vnto him be sure he will deale with thee also after this manner Let no man therefore say howsoeuer I haue liued if I repent I shall neuer be damned and so long I care not For though thou may be sure thou shalt neuer be damned if thou can vnfainedly repent yet mayst thou for al thy repentance fall into many great miseries in this life such as may make thy hart to ake and such as if thou couldest beleeue and thinke vpon thou wouldest be loath to buy thy sweetest sins at so deare a rate The Magistrate thou seest hath many punishments for sin besides death he hath the stockes and the gaole and the whip and the pillorie c. and so hath the Lord. Now come I to the second preseruatiue against this tentation which is the true knowledge of our selues and of that estate we come into when once we fall into such sins for euery vncleane person hath iust cause to feare that when once he hath committed this sin he shall neuer be able to repent of it This I prooue by foure reasons 1. No man is able to repent of himselfe but it is a great and supernaturall grace of God whereby any man is made able to repent 2. Tim. 2. 25 26. In meekenesse instruct those that oppose themselues if God peraduenture will giue them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth And that they may recouer themselues out of the snare of the diuell who are taken captiue by him at his will Obserue in those words 1. This comes of Gods gift onely 2. That euery sinner is in Satans snare out of which it must needs be hard to get out When once a man hath fallen into any sin against his conscience it is naturall for him to go on in it further and further till his heart be hardened in it Eph. 4. 18 19. The Gentiles walke in the vanity of their mind Hauing their vnderstanding darkened being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart who being past feeling haue giuen themselues ouer vnto lasciuiousnesse to worke all vncleannesse with greedinesse It is naturall for sinne to harden the heart and to depriue a man of that sense and trouble he found when he first committed it Heb. 3. 13. Take heed least any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Yea when a man hath once accustomed himselfe to any sinne he cannot leaue it or repent of it though he would no more then the Leopard can change his spots Ier. 13. 23. 2. God hath threatned to punish such as sinne against the light of their hearts presumptuously by withdrawing his grace from them and hardning their hearts Deut. 29. 19 20. He will not spare that man that blesseth himselfe in his heart Because I haue purged thee saith the Lord Ezek. 24. 13. and thou wast not purged thou shalt not be purged from thy filthinesse any more till
Religion all the Iewes did say so For the fifth and last question It is no maruell though she hauing the opportunity of such a Prophet desire to be instructed in this question and resolued in this doubt rather then in any other For 1. Shee might well know by the bookes of Moses that there could be no attonement made betweene God and her nor remission obtained of this hainous sinne that her conscience was now touched with remorse of but by a Sacrifice all things by the law were purged with bloud of a sacrifice and without shedding of bloud there was no remission Heb. 9. 22. 2. She might well know that God would accept of no Sacrifice that was offered to him in any other place then in that one place he had chosen to put his name in Marke how oft this commandement is repeated in one Chapter Deut. 12. 5 6 11 1 17 26 27. Yea she knew that the Lord did account of all Sacrifices that were offered in any other place besides that one place that hee had chosen to put his name there no better then of willfull murder Leuit. 17. 4. Hauing thus opened the meaning of the Text let vs now come to the instruction that the Holy Ghost intendeth to teach vs in this Verse First then in that this woman is not affraid of Christ when she had found him to be a Prophet that had searched and troubled her conscience but desires further speech with him and seekes to haue her conscience healed by that very hand that had wounded it We learne That he that hath grace will not be affraid of or shunne that ministrie in which he hath felt the power of God rebuking and iudging him ransaking and troubling his conscience for sinne but of all others will desire it most See the proofe of this in all sorts of Iohn's hearers He had preached the Law Luke 3. 7. to 9. yea Luke 1. 17. in the spirit and power of Elias Yet see Luke 3. 10. 12. 14. How all sorts seeke to him and depend vpon him See this also in such as heard Peter when by his ministry they had beene pricked in their hearts with a effectuall sight and sense of their sins and of the wrath of God due to them for the same they run to him for comfort rather then to any other man and saith vnto him and the rest of the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we doe Acts 2. 37. This will better appeare by comparing it with the contrary Vngodly men cannot endure such teachers as doe with any power reprooue sinne and preach the Law as we may see in the example of Ahab who for this cause could not endure Micaiah 1. King 22. 8. And of Felix who when Pauls doctrine made his heart to tremble by putting him in minde effectually and in a powerfull manner of the chiefe sinnes he had beene most giuen vnto and of the dreadfull iudgement he must come to for them would heare him no more Act. 24. 26. But so will not they as we haue heard that haue truth of grace in them 1. The sense of sinne and trouble of conscience which Gods Spirit worketh in the Elect is euer mixed with hope of mercy and sense of Gods loue which keepes them from flying from God or dispairing in his mercy Psalme 2. 11. Euen in trembling they haue some ioy He is called the comforter euen when he rebukes vs for sinne Iohn 16. 8 9. when he makes them mourne for their sinne as for their owne childe yet he makes them supplicate and seeke to God Zach. 12. 10. You shall see this in Peter he was deepely touched with remorse for sinne Marke 14. 75. Yet was hee of all the Apostles the forwardest in seeking to Christ though Iohn did out-run him and gat to the Sepulcher before him yet went he first into the Sepulcher to see that there that might confirme him in the faith of the Resurrection of Christ Ioh. 20. 6 7. 2. The experience he hath that God worketh with such a Minister must needs cause the childe of God to reuerence and like him and to expect a blessing from him rather then from another That is said to be the cause of the reuerence which the vnbelieuer did shew to the Prophets when hee was rebuked and iudged of them 1. Corinthians 14. 25. This makes them to acknowledge them and reuerence them as able Ministers of the New Testament not of the letter onely but of the spirit and power of God 2. Cor. 3. 6. 3. He knoweth the Lords manner hath beene to heale his seruants by the very hand by which he hath wounded them The Prophet Gad was the man by whom the Lord sent such a heauy message to Dauid 1. Chron. 21. 10. 15. And he was also the man by whom the Lord gaue him comfort verse 18. Esay was the man by whom the Lord sent such a message to Ezechia as made him weepe soare Esay 38. 3. and Esay was the man by whom God gaue him comfort Esay 38. 4. to 8. 1. This Doctrine serues for a Touch-stone whereby euery one may try whether he haue any grace or be still a carnall man dead in his sinnes For by the iudgement thou hast to discerne of true preaching and of the Minister which is most to be affected thou mayest know thine owne state If grace be in thy heart thou wilt affect that ministry the most not that delighteth or tickleth the eare no nor that which onely brings thee to knowledge but that wherein thou feelest the spirit and power of God working vpon thy heart rebuking thee for sinne wounding thy conscience and giuing thee no rest till it haue reformed thy heart This Paul speakes of his owne Ministry 1. Cor. 2. 4. My preaching saith he stood not in the inticing speech of mans wisedome but in plaine euidence of the Spirit and of power and makes this a note of an able and sufficient Minister 2. Cor. 3. 6. And of the Corinthians he saith that they were carnall men because they affected such a Ministry as had fine words but no power in it 1. Cor. 3. 4. For though he nameth himselfe and Apollos there he doth it but figuratiuely as he saith 1. Cor. 4. 6. But the men they affected were not Paul nor Apollos but their owne vaine-glorious teachers whom he describeth I will come and know not the speech of these men that are puffed vp but the power For the Kingdome of God is not in word but in power saith hee 1. Cor. 4. 19 20. Then the hearer that hath grace when he comes to a Sermon comes not to heare man but God not to heare what a man can say or to iudge what gifts the Preacher hath but to heare what the Spirit speaketh to the Church Apoc. 2. 7. He comes with that mind that Dauid did Psalme 85. 8. I will heare what God the Lord will speake 2. This Doctrine serues for reproofe and to discouer the
Sonne will reueale him Matth. 11. 27. And the meanes whereby Christ reuealeth and makes his Father knowne vnto vs is the Word Iohn 17. 6. I haue declared thy name to the men that thou gauest mee out of the world verse 8. For I haue giuen vnto them the Word which thou gauest mee 2. For the second branch Whatsoeuer is not done of faith that is vpon a perswasion wee please God in it is sinne Rom. 4. 23. Now faith is grounded vpon the Word And how can a man be perswaded he pleaseth God in that seruice hee doth to him vnlesse he haue his Word for it For if we follow our owne good intent while we thinke we please God we may most highly offend him the Iewes when they killed the Apostles thought they did God good seruice Ioh. 16. 2. and so did Paul when he was exceedingly mad against the faithfull and compelled them to blaspheme Acts 26. 11. and he saith that this was then the height of his zeale he persecuted the Church Phil. 3. 6. The First Vse of this Doctrine is to teach vs 1. To esteeme this a singular prerogatiue that the Lord hath not suffered vs to walke in our own wayes Acts 14. 16. But to be thankefull that we haue the Word and to make our vse of it This was the chiefe preferment of the Iew aboue the Samaritan and all others Romanes 3. 1 2. If any want this the god that they serue is not the true god but an Idoll and fancie of their owne 2. Chron. 15. 3. They worship they know not what whereas wee haue a comfortable assurance that the worship wee doe pleaseth God 2. If therefore thou desire to serue and please God let this bee thy first care to liue vnder a good Ministry and to get knowledge Israel was without the true God while it was without a teaching Priest and without the Law 2. Chron. 15. 3. all the deuotion that ignorant people vse is but the Sacrifice of fooles till they be ready to heare and willing to be instructed that way Eccles. 5. 1. Therefore also the Lord complaineth Hos. 4. 6. that there is an ignorant Priest that cannot instruct them the people perish for want of knowledge 3. Count it thy wisedome to cleaue so precisely to the Word as in the maters of Gods seruice not to doe any thing which thou canst not finde warranted by the Word Psal. 119. 31. I haue cleaued to thy testimonies O Lord confound me not 4. Conceiue no otherwise of God then he hath reuealed himselfe in his Word Now if we apply this to our selues wee shall finde that the most of our people are in no better case then the Samaritans were who worshipped they knew not what 1. Indeed we haue the whole Word of God and so had not they But is our case euer the better for that No surely it is so much the worse they wanted it we haue it and contemne it We count it no prerogatiue to haue it wee make no benefit of it wee reade it not wee seeke not the knowledge of it we care not what Ministrie wee liue vnder we count it no benefit to liue vnder an able Ministrie Heb. 2. verse 3. How shall we escape if we neglect so great saluation 2. Though they doe ioyne with Gods people in his true worship yet doe they it not vpon this ground that they know by the Word God will be thus serued But the rule they follow is either first the commandem●…nt of men as it is said of the Pharisees Matth. 15. 9. or secondly the custome of the place where they liue as we read the Samaritans of old did 2. Kings 17. 40. or thirdly their owne good meaning contrary to that commandement seeke not after your owne heart Numb 15. verse 39. The second Vse is to iustifie our Religion against the Papists For it is euident wee may truely say to them as our Sauiour doth heere Yee worship that which yee know not wee worship that which wee know 1. It is not possible they should haue any assurance that they please God in that seruice they doe vnto him how confident soeuer they seeme to be because they doe not worship God according to his Word 2. While they thinke they worship God they worship the diuell Of them certainely that is spoken Apoc. 9. 20. And the remnant of men which were not killed by these plagues repented not of the workes of their hands that they 〈◊〉 not worship diuells and Idols of gold and siluer and of brasse and of st●…ne and of wood which neither can see nor beare nor goe For if the Israelites in Aarons and Ieroboams time were truely said to worship diuells when they worshipped the true God vnder the similitude of a molten Image then is their worshipping of Images no better then Idolatry and worshipping of diuells notwithstanding that they say that they neither worship the Image it selfe nor any false god in or by it The worshipping of the Virgin Mary as well as the worshipping of Venu●… or any of the heathen gods the kneeling before the picture of God the Father or Christ crucified as well as the kneeling before Baal is a worshipping of diuells Lecture the fiue and thirtieth December 12. 1609. IN this Verse as we haue heard three things offer themselues to our 〈◊〉 1. The fault he findeth with the Samaritans worship Yee worship that wh●…h y●…e know not 2. The commendation he giues to the Iewes worship wee worship that wee know 3. The reason whereby he iustifieth this commendation hee giues to the Iewes For saluation is of the Iewes It followeth now that we proceed to the two last points contained in these words Wee worship that we know for saluation is of the Iewes In which words for the helpe of our memory and vnderstanding three things are to be obserued 1. That Christ prof sieth of himselfe that he worshipped God 2. That he worshipped God as the Iewes did 3. That he affirmeth saluation is of the Iewes Then the first Doctrine that we haue here to learne is this That our Sauiour himselfe though he were the Sonne of God did vse when he was here on earth to serue and worship God 1. He was wont diligently to frequent the place of publike prayer Luke 4. 16. Hee went into th●… Synagogue on the Sabbath day as his custome was 2. Hee was wont to vse prayer in his owne family Luke 9. 18. As hee was alone praying his Disciples were with him 3. He was wont alwayes at his meales to giue thankes and pray to God for his blessing vpon the creatures and that not onely when he was to worke a miracle Matth 14. 19. Hee 〈◊〉 vp to heauen and blessed the food that was prepared that is gaue thankes and prayed but ordinarily Luke 24. 30. As hee sate at table hee tooke the bread and gaue thankes 4. Besides all these kinds of prayer he was wont to pray in secret
his fatherly affection and loue in Christ more fully and cleerely to vs then hee had done to his Church vnder the Law Gal. 4. 3. 4 5. We when we were children were in bondage vnder the elements of the world But when the fulnesse of the time was come God sent forth his Sonne made of a woman made vnder the Law To redeeme them that were vnder the Law that wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes From hence then we haue this Doctrine to learne That No man can worship God aright till he know God to be his Father the better a man is perswaded and assured of Gods fatherly loue to him in Christ the better seruice he shall doe vnto him Therefore our Sauiour teaching vs to pray bids vs say Our Father Matth. 6. 9. As if he should say presume not to aske any petition of God till thou canst so conceiue and be perswaded of him And the Apostle tells vs it is the spirit of adoption that makes vs able to pray and makes this the voice of the spirit of prayer it cryes Abba O Father Rom. 8. 15. Yea he makes it an impossible thing for any man to pray aright without this assurance Rom. 10. 14 How shall they call on him in whom they haue not beleeued The reason of it is first because till we know God is our Father and Ioueth vs in Christ we cannot be assured that he will accept vs. When we know he is our Father in Christ it makes vs goe to him with boldnesse and confidence in Christ we haue boldnesse and accesse with confidence through faith in him Eph. 3. 12. I will arise and go to my father saith the Prodigall Luke 15. 18. and will say vnto him father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee Though he had sinned so outragiously yet the consideration of this that it was his father he was to go vnto gaue him boldnesse It giues vs assurance that not withstanding our infirmities he will accept vs I will spare him and deale gently and indulgently with him saith the Lord Mal. 3. 17. as a man spareth his son that serueth him When the Prodigall was yet a great way off his father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his necke and kissed him Luke 15. 20. And nothing graceth our prayers more with God then this confidence and boldnes Let vs come boldly to the throne of grace that we may obtaine mercy and finde grace to helpe in time of need saith the Apostle Heb. 4. 16. But without this faith and perswasion that God is our Father we can haue no assurance that any thing we doe in his seruice pleaseth him without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. And the best thing we doe in his seruice without this assurance that we please him in so doing is sinne Rom. 14. 23. Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne Secondly because till a man be per●…waded of Gods loue and fatherly affection towards him in Christ he can neuer serue him of loue nor with a good heart but vpon some by-respects vpon a seruile feare or hope of merit Heb. 10. 22. We can neuer draw neere to God with a true heart till we haue assurance of faith and our hearts sprinkled from an euill conscience No man can truely loue God till he be perswaded by the spirit of Gods loue to him Wee loue God because he loued vs first 1. Iohn 4. 19. true loue comes from a pure heart and a good conscience and faith vnfained 1. Tim. 1. 5. And whatsoeuer seruice we doe to God vnlesse it proceed out of a good heart and from loue to God it cannot please him though a man should giue his body to be burned in Martyrdome yet if that proceed not from his loue to God it would profit him nothing 1. Corinthians 13. 3. For what man would accept of any seruice from him that hee knowes loues him not The Vse of the Doctrine is to exhort vs to get good assurance to our hearts that God is our Father that he beares a fatherly affection to vs aboue all sinnes striue against infidelity Examine your selues whither yee bee in the faith prooue your selues 2. Cor. 13. 5. Many want this assurance and seeke it not many seeme to haue it and haue it not I will giue you foure notes to trie it by 1. God is a Father to no man but in and through Christ Iohn 1. 12. So many as receiued him to them gaue hee power to become the sonnes of God euen to them that beleeue in his name Galathians 4. 5. Hee hath redeemed vs that were vnder the Law that wee might receiue the adoption of sonnes so that vnlesse a man ground his assurance and confidence that God is his Father onely vpon Christ if hee ground it vpon this that God hath made him and preserued him c. his assurance is in vaine 2. He that is perswaded indeed that God is his Father will ●…adly and boldly resort to him in prayer Because yee are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4. 6. They that seldome pray or pray with no willingnesse and cheerefulnesse or pray with no confidence doubtlesse are not perswaded that God is their father 3. He that is perswaded that God is his Father will not murmure against nor be put out of heart by any of Gods corrections but be perswaded of his loue euen in affliction according to that of the Apostle Heb. 12. 7. 9. If yee endure chastening God dealeth with you as with sonnes for what sonne is hee whom the father chasteneth not And Rom. 15. 3. Being iustified by faith wee glory euen in tribulation They that in the time of their peace and prosperity onely are confident in Gods loue but haue no heart no comfort in affliction are not indeed perswaded that God is their Father 4. He that is indeed perswaded that the Lord beareth the affection of a Father vnto him will beare the affection of a childe vnto God will loue him and be carefull to please him fearefull to offend him Mal. 1. 6. If I bee your Father where is mine honour Heb. 10. 22. No drawing neere to God in assurance of faith till wee be sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies also They that haue no care to please God nor feare to offend him doubtlesse are not perswaded that God is their Father Now come we to the principall Doctrine which our Sauiour teacheth vs in this place namely That the onely true worship of God the onely worship that pleaseth God now especially vnder the Gospell is that which is spirituall the worship that is proper to the Gospell the true Christian worship is spirituall For so saith our Sauiour here The houre commeth and now it is that the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and in truth and againe They that worship
the men Come see a man that hath told me all things that euer I did The word therefore implieth that somewhat that is mentioned before was the cause of her so suddaine and hasty departing from Christ and running into the Citie and what was that Surely if we looke backe into the two former verses we shall finde two causes of it 1. Because the Di●…ciples were now come out of the City with meat for him and she thought he would be gone as soone as he had eaten somewhat therefore shee made hast to goe and call her neighbours for feare he should be gone before they could come 2. Because Christ had plainely told her he was the Messias therefore she went her way Why but that should rather haue stayed her still with him and made her desirous of further speech No verily for she did vndoubtedly belieue that he was so indeed as he had said and her heart was so astonished with suddaine ioy and earnest desire to draw her neighbours to him that she could neither speake nor tarry any longer but away shee goeth into the City and telleth her neighbours But why did she leaue her paile behind her Surely though she came to the Well of purpose to fetch water and she had need and vse of water for some worke she had to doe at home yet the ioy she found in the knowledge of Christ and the zealous desire she had to win her neighbours made her carelesse both of the water and of her paile also and forgetfull of the worke she had to doe at home 2. She left it for haste because if she should haue taken it with her and carried it home she could not haue gone with that speed to fetch her neighbours as she thought it was needfull she should doe 3. It is to be obserued that the Euangelist saith when she came into the City she said to these men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as the best translaters reade it to the men of that place that is the neighbours among whom she liued and all of them without difference she sought to draw them all vnto Christ. Hauing thus opened the meaning of this verse let vs now obserue two points in it for our instruction 1. The zeale she had to run and fetch her neighbours 2. The leauing of her paile behind her And first in that the Holy Ghost hath here obserued that this Woman so soone as she knew and beleeued in Christ was so zealous to draw her neighbours to him that for their sakes shee was content to leaue Christ though no doubt she desired much to continue with him and to depriue her selfe of the comfort and benefit she might haue found if she had tarryed longer with him 2. And made such hast to fetch them for feare he should be gone before she could bring them 3. And called them all shee saith to the men one as well as another without speciall respect to any with neglect of others 4. And thus she did being but a woman a poore and simple woman We haue this Doctrine to learne That euery one that truely knoweth Christ and findeth comfort in him will be carefull and ready to draw others to him 1. When they haue found this comfort they cannot choose but speake of it to others their hearts would burst if they should not speake of it Gods grace is like fire in their bones as Ier. 20. 9. They cannot hide it Though Christ had charged the two blind men he cured that they should say nothing of it Matth. 9. 30. Yet when they departed they could not for their liues conceale it 2. That which the Apostle requireth of all that haue receiued the wealth of this world 1. Tim. 6. 19. that euery one will doe that hath receiued the heauenly riches of Gods grace they will doe good with it to others they will be ready to distribute and communicate it to others Paul wished heartily that both Agrippa and all that heard him were altogether such as he was excepting his bonds Act. 26. 29. in this is grace not vnlike to worldly wealth no vsurer is forwarder so soone as money commeth in to put it out againe then euery true belieuer is to put out the grace that he hath receiued hee that had receiued the fiue talents went and traded with them Matth. 25. 16. See this in sundry examples Psal. 51. 13. Dauid saith he would teach Gods Wayes to others they that feared the Lord spake often one to another Mal. 3. 16. So soone as Christ had found Philip Philip went and found out Nathaniel Iohn 1. 45. So soone as Matthew was conuerted he gathered together a great company of Publicans and others to meet at his house Luke 5. 29. The Reasons why it must needs be so are many 1. They know the Lord hath straightly commanded and bound them that no man should content himselfe to know belieue repent but seeke also to cause others to doe it Ezek. 18 32. Cause therefore one another to returne and liue yee Luke 22 32. When thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren 1. Pet. 4. 10. L●…t euery one as hee hath receiued a gift minister the same one vnto another as good disposers 2. The loue they beare to God prouoketh them to doe all they can to enlarge his kingdome Knowing the terror of the Lord we perswade men 2. Cor. 5. 11. verse 14. and the loue of Christ constraineth vs. 3. The loue they beare to their neighbours The first and chiefe worke of faith is loue faith worketh by loue Gal. 5. 6. And there is no loue in him to his neighbour that loueth not his soule Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer sinne vpon him Leuit. 19. 17. Count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother 2. Thess. 3. 15. If the conscience of the Lepers accused them for not acquainting the City that was ready to be famished with the victuals and spoile the Assyrians had left behinde them 2. Kings 7. 9. how much more will it doe that in this case 4. They know it is the best meanes to increase the grace they haue The more they draw to knowledge and faith the more will their owne knowledge and faith increase in them I long to see you that I may impart vnto you some spirituall gift that I may be comforted together with you Rom. 1. 11 12. As the casting forth of your seed bringeth it you backe againe with great increase 2 Cor. 9. 6. Because God knew Abraham would make good vse of that he knew for the instruction of his family therefore he would hide nothing from Abraham Gen. 18. 19. 5. They know no good worke they can doe will haue the like recompence of reward as this the workes of mercy men haue done but to the bodies of others haue oft turned away Gods plagues from them that otherwise would haue fallen on them for their sinnes
that he pretends he hath of Gods fauour emboldneth him to sin Ieremie 3. 4 5. Didst thou not still cry to me Thou art my Father c. but thou doest euill euen more and more They are wicked therefore can they haue no true peace there is no peace saith my God to the wicked Esay 57. 21. But on the other side the true assurance that Gods Spirit workes in the faithfull makes them carefull to please God fearefull to offend him Psalme 26. 3. Thy louing kindnesse is before mine eyes therefore haue I walked in thy truth Psal. 119. 166. Lord I haue trusted in thy saluation and haue done all'thy comman dements 1. Iohn 3. 3. Euery one that hath this hope in him purgeth himselfe euen as hee is pure And indeed none can haue any true trust in God but such as feare him Psalme 115. 11. Yee that feare the Lord trust in the Lord. For God vseth not to speake peace to any but to his Saints and such as he doth withall by his grace restraine that they turne not againe vnto folly Ps. 85. 8. The third Vse of the former Doctrine is for the comfort of such as doe vnfainedly feare God and haue sometimes had an vndoubted assurance of their saluation and haue now lost the feeling of it This hath beene the case of many of Gods seruants and may be the case of euery one of vs. You know the Church complaines of this I sought him whom my soule loueth I sought him but I found him not Cant. 3. 1. And how oft doth Dauid complaine That his soule cleaued to the dust Psal. 119. 25. That is melted for heauinesse verse 28. That his spirit was in perplexity and his heart within was amazed Psal. 143. 4. Lord why doest thou reiect my soule and hidest thy face from mee Psal. 88. 14. Hee said in his haste hee was cast out of Gods sight Psal. 31. 22. Yea secondly sometimes he continued in this estate a great while together Psal. 13. 1. How long wilt thou forget me O Lord how long wilt thou hide face from me Psal. 119. 82. Mine eyes faile for thy promise saying When wilt thou comfort me And thirdly he had these fits oftentimes also Psal 88. 16. From my youth I suffer thy terrours Seeing therefore the dearest of Gods children doe oft lose this comfortable assurance and when they haue lost it are so apt to conclude against themselues that they were neuer in the state of grace they neuer had true faith I will therefore giue you fiue Rules for the comfort of such as are thus distressed 1. The first is to search out the speciall sinne that hath depriued thee of this comfort and repent of it This Rule is prescribed why is liuing man sorrowfull Let vs search and trie our waies and turne againe vnto the Lord Lam. 3. 39 40. Thus did Dauid recouer his comfort when I kept silence my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long and I acknowledged my sin vnto thee c. and thou forgauest the iniquity of my sinne Psalme 32. 3 4. 5. 2. To call to minde the grace that in former times thou hast felt in thy selfe whatfaith and feeling and comfort in prayer what care of a good conscience thou art sure thou hast had in thee heretofore for from thence thou mayest boldly conclude That there is grace in thee still though thou canst not now feele it the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 11. 29. This rule Dauid followed when he had lost his feeling of Gods fauour and grace Psal. 77. 5 6. Then I considered the daies of old and the yeares of ancient time I called to my remembrance my songs in the night And 143. 5. Yet doe I remember the time past 3. To search thine owne heart diligently and thou shalt obserue euen when thou art at the worst certaine notes of grace in thee Now there is no Christian but when he is at the worst and hath least feeling of his Faith and of the certainety of his saluation but if he would looke into himselfe he should finde these graces in himselfe 1. That hee yeelds not to his infidelity but striues against it and grieues vnfainedly that he hath lost the assurance of Gods fauour Psalme 77. 2. His soule refused comfort Uerse 3. His spirit was full of anguish Verse 10. And I said this is my death 2. That he desires aboue all things and seekes vnfainedly and earnestly to recouer his feeling of Gods fauour againe Cant. 3. 1 2 3. The Spouse sought her Beloued in her bed verse 1. about in the City by the streets and by the open places verse 2. enquired of the Watchmen for her Beloued verse 3. So saith David of himselfe when his spirit was in perplexity within him Psalme 143. 6. I stretched forth mine hands vnto thee my soule desireth after thee as the thirsty Land 3. That though he haue no feeling of Gods loue to him yet he loues God and desireth to please and honour him is affraid to doe any thing that might offend him Psalme 44. 18 19. Our heart is not turned backe neither haue our steps declined from thy way though thou hast smitten vs downe to the place of Dragons and couered vs with the shadow of death Now if any one of these graces be in thee thou maist be sure thou art aliue As if we discerne in one that by many likelihoods seemeth to be dead that he eyther breatheth or moueth or heareth we are sure there is life in him So is it in this case And euery Christian is bound in the affliction of his conscience to take notice of that grace that is in him as well as of that corruption that is in him that he may be as well thankfull to God for the one as he is humbled for the other 1. Thess 5. 18. In all things giue thankes for this is the will of God in Christ Iesus toward you This rule Dauid followed Psalme 77. 6. I communed with mine owne heart and my spirit searched diligently 4. Vse the benefit of their aduice that can better iudge of thine estate than thou thy selfe for the present canst This rule the Apostle prescribeth Is any sicke among you Let him send for the Elders of the Church and let them pray ouer him And the prayer of faith shall saue the sicke and the Lord shall raise him vp and if hee haue committed sinnes they shall be sorgiuen him Confesse your faults one to another and pray one for another Iames 5. 14 15 16. and this course the Church tooke when by her secret and priuate endeauours in her bed by night she could not finde her beloued she went out into the streets of the City among her godly acquaintance for their helpe and when that would not serue she sought helpe of the watchmen and Ministers of the Church Cant. 3. 2 3. 5. Lastly rest assured that though thou haue for the present lost it yet thou
of the second commandement which concerneth his outward worship I will visit the iniquity of the fathers vpon the children to the third and fourth generation of them that hate me Exod. 20. 5. generally all wickednesse will do it Cursed shall be the fruit of thy body Deut. 18. 18. Thirdly let vs all learne by this what a happy thing it is to haue God for our Father If we that are euill Matth. 7. 11. when our childe asketh vs bread will not giue him a stone if we when he asketh fish will not giue him a serpent if we Mal. 3. 17. doe so spare them if we Esay 49. 15. cannot forget them if we be so apt to receiue our childe how hainously soeuer he hath offended vs vpon his submission how much more will the Lord receiue vs Luke 15. 20. If we shew our affection most when our children are in extremity how much more will the Lord his soule was grieued for the misery of Israel Iudg. 10 16. If we take no pleasure in beating our children how much lesse the Lord he doth not afflict willingly nor grieue the children of men Lam. 3. 33. Lecture the eightie fiue March 19. 1610. IOHN IIII. XLVII NOw it remaineth that wee procede vnto the third and last point which wee obserued in these words namely the benefit that this great man receiued by his affliction Concerning which these three points are to be obserued First it humbled him greatly and abated his pride for as great a man as he was yet he himselfe seeketh helpe for his sonne and 2. he meekely and patiently bare a very sharpe checke that Christ gaue vnto him verse 48 without euer replying or expostulating the matter with him Secondly it did driue him to seeke to Christ yea to seeke earnestly and importunately for helpe Doubtlesse first he had heard much of Christ before this time and did also esteeme him a great Prophet but whether it were for feare of Herod or some other carnall respect he came not vnto him till this affliction did driue him vnto him secondly he had also vsed the benefit of physicke and all other ordinary meanes before and till that he seeth no meanes would preuaile but his sonne grew into extremity and was euen ready to dye he comes not to Christ. Thirdly this affliction became vnto him a meane and occasion of his vnfained conuersion for first it softened his heart and prepared it to beleeue the word of Christ secondly it brought both himselfe and his whole family to the Faith The Doctrine then we haue here to learne is this That affliction is greatly profitable and necessary vnto all the Elect of God Marke that I say vnto the Elect of God for affliction in it selfe is a curse of God and fruit of his wrath due to sinne whether we be afflicted in our bodies or in our mindes or in our children or in our goods or in our good name there is no affliction of what kinde soeuer but it is in it owne nature a curse of God the Lord makes this preface to all the particular euils and afflictions that he threatneth If thou wilt not hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God then all these curses shall come vpon thee and ouertake thee Deut. 28. 15. And daily experience teacheth vs afflictions are not profitable to all men Pharaoh had afflictions enow but still his heart was harder and harder Of all the afflictions of the Reprobate we may say as our Sauiour speaketh in another case Matth. 24. 8. All these are but the beginnings of sorrowes The losses and afflictions the paines and sorrowes they feele in this life are but as earnests of those vnspeakeable and euerlasting torments that are prepared for them in the life to come This that I speake of therefore that men should receiue so great good by affliction is a priuiledge peculiar to the Elect of God Romanes 8. 28. All things and hee speaketh specially of afflictions worke together for the best to them that loue God euen to them that are called according to his purpose To them all things are sanctified all things are made good euen those things that in themselues are most euill 1. Cor. 3. 21 22. All things are yours whether it be this world or life or death or things present or things to come all are yours and yee are Christs The Crosse of Christ like vnto the Tree that God shewed Moses Exod. 15. 25. hath made affliction which was before as the waters of Mara bitter and unwholesome to be sweet and wholesome to all his people To all such I say affliction is both profitable and necessary For the profit of them you know what Dauid said Hee had afflictions of all kindes and of them all he saith Psal. 119. 71. It is good for me that I haue beene afflicted And the Church Lam. 3. 27. speaketh more generally It is good for a man that he heare the yoke in his youth But I say not onely they are profitable but they are necessary also as necessary as meat and drinke Vnlesse God would see vs perish he must needs afflict vs yea the best man that euer was hath had great need of it to his dying day Psalme 73. 14. Daily haue I beene punished and chastened euery morning Acts 14. 22. We must through many afflictions enter into the Kingdome of God or we can neuer come there That is the reason of that strange and passionate speech the Lord vseth of his people Ier. 9. 7. Behold I will melt them and try them for what should I els do for the Daughter of my People As if he should say I can deuise no way to do them good but by casting them into the fornace of affliction Reasons of this Doctrine I might giue many but I will content my selfe with those few that the Text affordeth me in the example of this Ruler First his affliction as I shewed you did humble him This is the first Reason why it is so profitable and necessary because it humbleth the heart of man and abateth his pride There is no one sinne we know that maketh a man more odious to God or that is a greater barre to our saluation than pride is Prou. 16. 5. All that are proud in heart are abomination to the Lord. Iames 4. 6. The Scripture offereth more grace and therefore saith God resisteth the proud and giueth grace to the humble Neither is there any man high or low rich or poore godly or vngodly but he hath in him that old leauen that Paul speaketh of 1. Cor. 5. 7. which puffeth vp his heart and causeth him to swell and to thinke too well of himselfe All the oppression and cruelty that the Mighty practise vpon their inferiours proceedeth from this roote Psal. 119. 122. Let not the proud oppresse mee and so doth the malice and vnreconcileable heart that is in men Pro. 13. 10. Onely by pride doth man make contention From hence it commeth
voice not for the loudnesse of his voice but for the feruency of his spirit that made him cry so loud Psal. 55. 17. The effectuall seruent prayer of arighteous man auaileth much Iames 5. 16. Lecture the eightie nine Iune 11. 1611. IOHN IIII. XL VIII L. IT followeth now to consider why and for what fault our Sauiour thus rebuketh this Ruler And we shall finde that his sinne that he rebuked him for was his infidelity Except yee see signes and wonders yee will not beleeue As if he should say I can doe thee no good except thou hadst Faith but you neither thou nor thy nation haue any true faith you do not beleeue me to be Christ the Sauiour of the world as the Samaritans of Sychar did nay which is worse you will not beleeue you are obstinate in your infidelity God hath sufficiently by his Word and by the Ministry of Iohn Baptist manifested me to be the Messiah but that will not serue your turne you will not beleeue except you haue miracles to confirme it yea I haue already by many miracles declared my selfe euidently to be the Sonne of God which also you haue heard of but that will not serue your turne neither vnlesse you may see with your own eyes yee will not beleeue Nay you haue at least many of you seene my miracles your selues yet will not that serue neither but vnlesse you may see signes and wonders that is miracles of all sorts many miracles yee will not beleeue So that we haue in this reproofe that our Sauiour giues to this great man foure principall points to be obserued First that the infidelity of the Iewes is the onely sinne that Christ here reproueth in them that alone had power to restraine him from yeelding to this Ruler that helpe that he desired of him when he besought him to come downe and heale his sonne Christ returnes him this answer You beleeue not you haue no faith As if he should say I can doe you no good vnlesse you did beleeue in me Secondly the argument whereby Christ conuinceth the Iewes of infidelity and proues them to haue no true faith which is this because except they might see signes and wonders they could not be lieue Thirdly that Christ aggrauateth the infidelity of the Iewes by their obstinacy in it Except ye see signes and wonders ye will not belieue Fourthly that though this was the sinne not of this Ruler only but of all the Iewes common to him with his whole Nation yet Christ counts that no excuse to his sinne but checks and rebukes him for it neuerthelesse nay he so speakes of it as it may appeare he hated this sinne the more because it was vitium gentis and he dislikes him the more and iudged him the more vnworthy to receiue helpe from him because he and his nation were guilty of this sinne Therefore purposing to check him the more sharply speaking to him alone he speaks in words of the second person plurall Except ye see c. Now of these foure points we will speake in order And first in that Christ speaks here of infidelity as the chiefe sinne of the Iewes as of that that did most prouoke God against them that that did stop the streame of Gods mercy and as it were dis-enable Christ from doing the good that he desired This Doctrine doth arise for our instruction That no sinne offends God so much as infidelity when men will not belieue his Word no sinne is such a barre to all Gods mercies as this See the proofe of this Doctrine both in the examples of wicked men and of Gods deare children For the wicked we haue two famous examples in the Old Testament and two other in the New The first is in the Israelites that perished in the wildernesse Many grieuous sinnes they were guilty of but none prouoked God to wrath so much none were such barres to Gods mercy towards them as their infidelity When the Lord had said he would giue them such abundance of flesh as they should haue enough to eat Num. 11. 18 20. Not one or two dayes or fiue or ten dayes or twenty dayes but for a whole moneth together they said among themselues Can God prepare a table in the wildernesse Can he prepare flesh for his people Psal. 78. 19 20. They did not as it may seeme by the acknowledgement they made Vers. 20. absolutely deny that that God had said as many now adayes will doe but onely made a question and doubt of it but marke what followed Psal. 78 21. Therefore the Lord heard and was angry and the fire was kindled in Iacob and also wrath came vpon Israel Why what was the cause He had told vs before in the beginning of the 21. Verse But because he would haue vs in any case marke this well he repeats it againe in the 22. Uerse because they belieued not in God and trusted not in his helpe And whereas God did sweare vnto their fathers that he would giue the Land of Canaan to them and their seed after them Deut. 1. 8. we shall find that there were but two onely Caleb and Ioshua of all those that came out of the Land of Egypt that entred into it What was the cause Surely they had many sinnes they sinned in Idolatry they sinned in Whoredome and many other wayes but of all other sinnes that that most prouoked God that that barred them out of the promised Land was their Vnbeliefe as the Apostle plainly affirmes Heb. 3. 19. So we see they could not enter in because of Vnbeliefe The other example we haue of this kinde in the Old Testament is of a Prince of Israel a great man vnder Ioram the King of whom we read 2 King 7. when he had heard Elisha whom he knew to be the Lords Prophet and to speake from the mouth of the Lord say in the time of a great famine To morrow this time a measure of fine flowre shall be sold for a sheckle and two measures of barley for a sheckle in the gate of Sa●…aria 2 King 7. 1. The Prince did not absolutely contradict that which the Prophet had said in the Name of the Lord as many now adayes will do but onely doubted of it and made a question of it Though the Lord said he should make windowes in the heauen could this come to passe 2 Kings 7. 2. But marke what followed The Prophet in Gods Name threatned he should see it for the increase of his misery but he should not eat thereof Verse 2. and so indeed it came to passe for he died a strange and base death for the people trode vpon him in the gate and be died Ver. 20. The examples we haue of this kind in the New Testament are two First the men of Nazaret of whom we read that though Christ desired out of the loue he bare to the place of his education to do good among them yet he could do no great works there Mar. 6. 5.
ioy vnspeakable and glorious As if he should say You belieue neuerthelesse assuredly in him though you did neuer see him 4 The true belieuer giues credit to the Word not onely in those truths wherein he hath no helpe from sense or reason to confirme him but euen where they are both against him Rom. 4. 18. Abraham against hope of sense and reason belieued vnder hope of Gods Word that he should be the Father of many Nations Let vs now come to the Vse of this Doctrine and we shall find it serueth first for instruction secondly for reproofe thirdly for comfort First for instruction to the Teacher secondly to the Hearer 1 To vs that are teachers sith our Ministry is ordained to bring men to Faith and there is no other means els ordained to that end Rom. 10. 17. and faith is grounded onely vpon the Word that therefore our chiefe care should be to bring good euidence from the Word for euery thing that we teach Mar. 4. 14. The sower soweth the word that is the onely seed of grace 2 Tim. 4. 2. Teach the Word improue rebuke exhort with all long-suffering and Doctrine 2 This serueth for the instruction of the Hearers seeing the excellency and happinesse of a Christian consisteth in his Faith By faith we are iustified in Gods sight and haue peace towards God Rom. 5. 1. By Faith we are sanctified Acts 15. 9. By Faith we stand and perseuere in the state of grace Thou standest by faith Rom. 11. 20. By Faith we quench all the fiery darts of the Deuill Ephes. 6. 16. And this faith is grounded onely vpon the Word of God We are therefore to be exhorted to seek good ground in the Word for that that we hold in Religion and therefore both to acquaint our selues with it in priuate and in frequenting the publike Ministry thereof to heare with iudgement and to mark well how that that is taught vs is grounded vpon the Word Euery Christian should esteem it a singular fauour of God that we may haue his Word in our houses to read on when we will and a foule sin not to make our vse of it This God complaines of as of a foule sin I haue written vnto them the great things of my Law and they were counted as a strange thing that did not belong vnto them that they had nothing to do withall Hos. 8. 12. And the Prophet describing vnto vs the man that shall be saued describes him by this Psal. 1. 2. that his delight is in the Law of God Euery man will grant that there is no hope a man should come to happinesse vnlesse he be such a one as is described Psal. 1. and such a one thou canst not be till thou can delight in Gods Word So likewise when we frequent the Ministry of the word we should learne to heare with iudgement and not so much to regard the zeale or vtterance of our Teachers as to marke well how they ground that that they teach vpon the Word of God Phil. 1. 9. This I pray saith Paul that your loue may abound yet more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement For this those Noble-men of Berea are commended Acts 17. 11 12. They searched the Scriptures daily whether those things were so Therefore many of them belieued The second Vse of this Doctrine is for reproofe and terrour of carnall men He that wants faith it is impossible for him to please God Heb. 11. 6. but the wrath of God abideth on him Iohn 3. 36. And by this Doctrine it is euident the most men want true faith because the faith they seeme to haue is grounded not vpon the Word of God but onely vpon sense they belieue no farther than they see This shall appeare euidently in three Points 1. The faith they haue is grounded not vpon Gods Word but vpon sense Those truths that they see generally receiued and allowed of by men those they are content to hold but those truths that are reiected by men though they haue neuer so good a ground in Gods Word yet they cannot belieue I might instance this in sundry particulars if time would permit Whereas he whose Faith is grounded vpon Gods Word likes neuer the worse of any truth God hath reuealed to him because he seeth it reiected by men but euen as it is in other cases This is the triall of our loue to men Pro. 17. 17. A friend loues at all times and a brother is borne for aduersitie so it is in this It is time for thee Lord to worke for they haue made void thy Law therefore loue I thy commandements aboue gold yea aboue fine gold therefore I esteeme all thy precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate eue ry false way Psal. 119. 126 127 128. He that indeed loues Gods truth will loue it the more because it is reiected by the world 2 The faith they haue in Gods iustice is grounded not vpon the Word of God but vpon sense onely When the heauy hand of God is vpon them in some iudgement they can belieue indeed he is iustly offended with them for their sinnes When they heare the terrible thunder and see the lightening they can tremble before the Lord but so soone as this is past they cast off all feare of God nothing that they heare spoken out of Gods Word against their sinnes can moue them one whit Whereas the true belieuer that grounds his faith vpon Gods Word hath the feare of God in him at all times Blessed is the man that feareth alway Pro. 28. 14. and is much more assured of Gods iustice and hatred against sinne by that that he hath learned out of Gods Word than by any thing he can see or feele They tremble at the word Esa. 66. 2. So Noah being warned of God concerning things not seene though himselfe was expresly exempted from the iudgement yet was moued with feare Heb. 11. 7. For this the Nineuites are commended Ionah 3. 4 5. By the preaching of Ionab they were brought to that feare and humiliation though they saw not nor felt any thing that might cause them to feare 3 The Faith that the carnall man hath in Christ and perswasion of Gods mercy is not grounded vpon the Word but vpon sense onely he is indeed oft very confident of Gods fauour both for the present and for the time to come he saith to his soule Eat thy bread with ioy and drinke thy wine with a merrie heart for God now accepteth thy works Eccles. 9. 7. But what is the ground of his assurance He saith he sees Gods loue and feeles it daily The iudgements of God are farre aboue out of his sight Psal. 10. 5. But alas this will be found a false ground Eccles. 9. 2. No man knowes either loue or hatred of that that is before them Whereas the child of God is assured of Gods fauour for the present and the time to come by that which he heares and
reads in the Word though he see or feele little to perswade him to it yet he hath the promise Godlinesse hath the promise both of this life and of the life to come this is a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation for therefore we labour and suffer reproch because vpon this ground we trust in the liuing God c. 1 Timothie 4. 8 9 10. And this promise is of great force and account with him Hauing these promises let vs cleanse our selues 2 Corinth 7. 1. The third Vse of the Doctrine is for comfort to the godly that know they feare God vnfainedly and yet are often perplexed because all sensible tokens of his fauour both inward and outward are taken from them First in thy outward affliction and distresse acquaint thy selfe well with Gods promises made vnto thee namely such as that they that seeke the Lord shall not want any good thing Psalme 34. 10. Secondly assure thy selfe God with-holds from thee the sensible performance of them to prooue whether thou canst belieue though thou see not To humble thee and to proue thee and to know what was in thy heart whether thou wouldst keepe his commandements or no Deut. 8. 2. Thirdly giue thou glory to God in belieuing and say as Iob 13. 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him And all will be well assuredly If thou canst belieue all things are possible to him that belieueth Mark 9. 23. In the affliction of thy mind and losse of the feeling of Gods fauour first acquaint thy selfe with the promises Whom Christ euer loued he loues to the end Ioh. 13. 2. The gifts and callings of God such gifts and graces of God as do accompany an effectuall calling are without repentance Rom. 11. 29. He hath said I will neuer faile thee nor forsake thee Heb. 13. 5. Secondly rest assured God doth this for thy profit he alwayes chasteneth vs for our profit that we might be partakers of his holinesse Heb. 12. 10. Thirdly consider not too much of nor reason too much with thy temptation Abraham considered not thought not much vpon nor reasoned with or obiected against the promise of God his owne body now dead when he was about an hundred yeare old neither yet the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe Rom. 4. 19. Fourthly though thou feele nothing yet say with Dauid Psal. 56. 10. In God will I praise his word in the Lord will I praise his word Lecture the ninetie one Iune 25. IOHN IIII. XLVIII IT remaines now that we proceed to the two last points obserued in this Verse The first thing then that we are now to obserue is this That our Sauiour chargeth the Iewes with obstinacy and aggrauates their infidelity by their wilfulnesse Ye will not belieue saith he And this ye shall find oft charged vpon them and made the chiefe cause of their reiection Iohn 5. 40. But ye will not come to me that ye might haue life And 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Deuill and the lusts of your father you will doe Matth. 23. 37. How oft would I haue gathered you together as an Hen gathereth her chickens vnder her wings but ye would not Rom. 11. 25. Obstinacy is come to Israel vntill the fulnesse of the Gentiles be come in They had had all good meanes to perswade them to belieue in Christ the Scriptures did beare witnesse vnto him and so did the Shepheards and Simeon and Anna and Iohn the Baptist and the miracles that Christ himselfe had wrought therefore it must needs be wilfulnesse and obstinacy in them that they did not belieue From hence then this Doctrine ariseth That this greatly aggrauateth euery sinne in the sight of God when it is committed with wilfulnesse and obstinacy When men sinne not of simple ignorance but God hauing giuen them the ordinary meanes of knowledge and faith and reformation of life they stand out against the meanes and will not be reclaimed Obserue the proofe and demonstration of this Doctrine in all the wayes whereby the wrath of God is reuealed from heauen and ye shall euer find he hates the man that sinnes wilfully against the meanes aboue all other First in the euerlasting punishment and torments of Hell Though Turkes and Pagans that neuer sinned wilfully against the meanes of grace shall be damned and therefore it is said Mar. 16. 16. He that belieueth not not he that will not belieue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be damned And 2 Thes. 1. 8 In flaming fire rendring vengeance on them that do not know God And Rom. 2. 12. As many as haue sinned without the Law shall perish also without the Law yet shall there be certainly in those euerlasting torments the least measure whereof shall be such as no heart of man is able to conceiue and because the least shall be vnconceaueably extreame and euerlasting it passeth mans reason to imagine how there should be any degrees in it great odds and difference And the Lord who is infinite in wisdome and iustice and power hath appointed farre more grieuous and fearefull torments in that Lake for them that haue sinned wilfully and obstinately against the means than for any other sinner This is plaine by that speech of our Sauiour Matth. 10. 15. of euery City that refuseth the Word Truly I say vnto you it shall be easier for them in the land of Sodom and Gomorrah in the day of iudgement than for that City And of Capernaum that did not refuse to heare but did wilfully refuse to belieue and obey the truth which they heard Matth. 11. 24. I say vnto you it shall be easier for the Land of Sodom in the day of iudgement than for thee And that of the Apostle Rom. 2. 8 9. Indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish shall be vpon the soule of euery man that doth euill of the Iew first and also of the Grecian And why of the Iew first or chiefly Because as I haue shewed you obstinacy is come vpon Israel their obstinacy against the meanes of grace which they had aboue the Grecian is the cause of it 2. In those corporall and temporall plagues that God is wont to bring vpon men in this life God shewes this also euidently in those he inflicteth vpon wicked men in their bodies and goods and good name in their children and posterity For first though God in this life shew wonderfull patience in bearing with sinners yet some he cannot forbeare till the life to come but Iames 1. 15. sinne when it is finished bringeth forth death And the thing that makes vp the measure and perfection of sinne is this when men grow obstinate in sinne and will not be reclaimed Thus saith Daniel to Belthasar of the King his Father Dan. 5. 20. When his heart was puffed vp and his mind was hardened in pride he was deposed from his Kingly Throne and his heart was made like the beasts And this is so certaine a signe that some iudgement or
Lord saith Gen. 18. 20. The cry of Sodome and Gomorrah is great and their sinne exceeding grieuous But what made the cry of their sinne so great Looke Gen. 19. 4. and yee shall finde it was this The men of Sodom compassed Lots house from the young euen to the old all the people euen from all quarters they were all corrupted with that beastly filthynesse they did all burne with that lust The third example is that of the captiuity in Babylon before it fell out when the causes of it are laid downe by the Prophets nothing is so much stood vpon as this that all sorts and conditions of Gods people had corrupted themselues See this in Ier. 5. 7. How should I spare thee for this And verse 9. Shall not I visit for these things saith the Lord shall not my soule be auenged on such a Nation as this Why What was the cause verse 7. They assemble themselues by companies in Harlots houses And verse 8. Euery man neighed after his neighbours wife Adultery was growne to be the sin not of a few but of all sorts See this also the children gather the wood and the fathers kindle the fire and the women knead the dough to make cakes to the Queene of heauen c. Ier. 7. 18. 20. A conspiracie is found among the men of Iuda and the inhabitants of Ierusalem the house of Israel and the house of Iuda haue broken my Couenant therefore behold I will bring euill vpon them c. Ier. 11. 9 11. The like complaint we shall finde Ezek. 22. 6. Behold the Princes of Israel euery one in thee was ready to his power to shed bloud And verse 11. Euery one hath committed abomination with his neighbours wife and euery one hath wickedly defiled his daughter in law and in thee hath euery one forced his owne sister euen his fathers daughter And after the captiuity was come you shall see it was imputed to this chiefly Dan. 9. 11. Yea all Israel haue transgressed thy Law and haue turned backe and haue not heard thy voice therefore the curse is poured vpon vs. In all these examples we see that whiles sinne kept it selfe within any bounds the Lord did forbeare to bring these common and generall calamities vpon men but when like a floud it ouerflowed the bankes and ran ouer all then could God forbeare no longer The first Vse of this Doctrine is for Reproofe most men count this a sufficient excuse and defence for any thing they hold or for any thing they do that they are not alone they hold as most men doe and doe as most men do they make the example of men the rule of their conscience First the good things they doe they do vpon no other ground but because it is the custome they hold this Religion to be the truth they keepe the Sabbath they come to Church only vpon this ground All men do so euen the wisest men we know thei Faith stands in the wisedome of men as the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 2. 5. Secondly let all the Preachers in the world speake neuer so much against some sinnes as the resting vpon a dumbe Ministry the superstitious obseruations of many Popish customes giuing and answering of challenges following the newest fashions the immodesty of women in their apparrell and attire yet will they not be perswaded that these are sinnes onely because they are so generall and in fashion euery where In this point our people are like those we reade of Ier. 44. 17. We will burne incense to the Queene of heauen And why so We haue done so both we and our fathers our Kings and our Princes in the Cities of Iudah and in the streets of Ierusalem Thirdly let vs out of Gods Word neuer so clearely proue the necessity of sundry duties as to haue prayer in our families c. yet can they not be perswaded to it And why I pray you who doth so a few precise fooles whom euery body derides Iohn 7. 48 49. Doe any of the Rulers and Pharises beleene in him but this people that know not the Law are cursed Fourthly in such things as they know to be sinnes as swearing whoredome drunkennesse c. they blesse and secure and quiet their consciences by this that they are not alone Ezek. 16. 54. Thou hast comforted them of Sodome saith God to the Iewes And who is not in some degree or other guilty of this corruption I will therefore giue you some remedies against it out of Gods Word 1. Consider that we haue iust cause to suspect that that way which the most men take is not the right way that if we doe as the most doe surely we doe not well Matth. 7. 13 14. It is the broad way that leadeth to destruction and many there be that goe in thereat but the gate is strait and the way narrow that leadeth vnto life and few there bee that finde it The most haue euer swarued from the right way yea euen the most of them that haue professed the true Religion many are called but few are chosen Matth. 22. 14. Christs true flock hath euer beene a little flocke Luke 12. 32. Therefore Christ hath a strange speech Luke 6. 26. Woe be to you when all men speake well of you 2. If we do swerue from the right way and sinne against God it will not auaile vs to haue all the men in the world on our minde or to take our part they cannot pleade for vs. 1. Sam. 2. 25. If a man sinne against the Lord who will pleade for him Those which by their example or otherwise haue drawne vs to sin will be farre enough from pitying or speaking a word for vs when God shall call vs to iudgement What comfort can the companions of wicked men yeeld to them when they are on their death-bed Surely as much as the Priests and Elders did to Iudas when they had drawne him to betray his Master when he in the anguish of his soule cryed to them Mat. 27. 4. I haue sinned in betraying the innocent bloud They say What is that to vs see thou to it But say they were willing to take our part alas they can do vs no good when God shall call vs vnto an account they cannot shrowd vs from Gods wrath Earthly Princes are faine oft to spare malefactors because they are too strong and haue many to ioyne with them as Dauid did Ioab 2. Sam. 3. 39. But the Lord will not doe so Pro. 11. 21. Though hand ioyne in hand the wicked shall not goe vnpunished What is the example of the whole world to stand against God It 's as easie for him to destroy a whole world of men as one man behold the nations are as the drop of a bucket and are counted as the small dust of the ballance behold he taketh vp the iles as a very little thing All nations before him are as nothing and they are counted to him lesse then nothing and vanity Esay
5. I haue heard of thee by the hearing of the eare but now mine eye seeth thee See in particular how this obseruation of Gods worke confirmes our faith in the truth First in the truth of Gods Word generally Psal. 119. 140. Thy Word is proued most pure and thy seruant loueth it Secondly in the truth of Gods promises made to his people see how the faithfull are confirmed in them by the experience of Gods dealing with other of his seruants Psal. 22. 4. Our Fathers trusted in thee they trusted and thou didst deliuer them and 34. 5. They shall looke vnto him and run to him and their faces shall not be ashamed Why what should make them so confident in Gods mercies vers 6. This poore man cryed and the Lord heard him and saued him out of all his troubles But specially the experience a man hath had in himselfe of the performance of Gods promises will maruellously confirme him Rom. 5 4. Experience bringeth forth hope in this case especially See this in Dauid Psal. 4. 1. Heare me when I call O God of my righteousnesse thou hast set me at liberty when I was in distresse haue mercy vpon me and hearken to my prayer See this also in Salomon who hast kept with thy seruant Dauid my father that thou promisedst him thou spakest also with thy mouth and hast fulfilled it with thy hand as it is this day Therefore now Lord God of Israel keepe with thy seruant Dauid my father that thou promisedst him saying There shall not faile thee a man in my sight to sit on the throne of Israel And now ô God of Israel let thy word I pray thee be verified which thou spakest to thy seruant Dauid my father 1. King 8. ●…4 -26 Another notable example we haue for this in Iacob Gen. 32. 9. Thou saidst vnto me remoue into thy Country and to thy kindred and I will do thee good there is Gods word and promise Then followeth the experience he had already of the performance of this promise verse 10. I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies which thou hast shewed vnto thy seruant for with my staffe came I ouer this Iordan and now haue I gotten two bands Then followes the confirmation he receiued in his faith by this experience vers 11. I pray thee deliuer me from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esan Thirdly and lastly this is of great force to confirme our faith in the truth of Gods threats against sin Psal. 58. 10. The righteous shall reioyce when he seeth the vengeance and why so vers 11. and men shall say verily there is a reward for the righteous doubtlesse there is a God that iudgeth the earth Esa. 26 9. Seeing thy iudgements are in the earth the inhabitants of the world shall learne righteousnesse The Vse of this Doctrine is two-fold according to the two branches of the doctrine It serueth to exhort and perswade vs all that we would seeke to increase our knowledge and faith by conferring questioning and reasoning among our selues of the Word of God This is a singular meanes ordained of God to confirme vs by this we might learne much we know not and this would helpe our memory and affections and we depriue our selues of a great benefit by the neglect of it See a Commandement of God for it Ier. 23. 25. Thus shall yee say euery one to his neighbour and euery one to his brother what hath the Lord answered and what hath he spoken There is a Commandement for one priuate Christian to question and reason with another of the Word of God and Mal. 〈◊〉 7. there 's a Commandement for the people to moue their doubts and questions to the Minister they shall seeke the law at his mouth See an experiment of the fruit of it Luk. 24. in the Disciples that went to Emaus they conferred and moued their doubts one to another vers 14. and then vers 15. It came to passe as they communed together and reasoned that Iesus himselfe drew neare and went with them and verse 27. he expounded in the Scriptures vnto them and verse 45. he opened the vnderstandings of all those that were gathered together Yea see the fruit euen of that conference and reasoning that a father shall vse with his children or a master with his seruants or one neighbour with another as they walke or ride together Deut. 6. 7. Thou shalt whet or sharpen them to thy children when thou tarriest in thy house and when thou walkest by the way Christians when they haue any doubts in the matters of their faith and religion should enquire and seeke to be resolued Ier. 6. 16. They shall stand in the waies and enquire for the old way When in reading or hearing of the Word they meet with doubts they should not lightly passe them ouer but enquire How is this to be vnderstood how may this be proued We haue a notable example for this of them that read the Word Act. 8. 34. I pray thee of whom speaketh the Prophets this of himselfe or of some other man and for them that heare the Word in the Disciples of our Sauiour who whensoeuer they had heard him teach ought that they did not vnderstand were wont first to conferre and reason among themselues about it and then if that would not serue to go to their teacher Iohn 16. 17 19. Mar. 4. 10. and 7. 17. and 10. 10 11. Christians should be asking of them that are able to teach them the meaning and reason of that they see done in the administration of the Sacraments Exod. 12. 26. It is said that children should aske their fathers concerning the Passeouer What seruice is this you keepe and Ioshua 4. 6. What meane you by these stones and Deut. 6. 20. What meane these ordinances and testimonies and lawes which the Lord our God hath commanded you What is then the true cause why this duty is so much neglected that Christians when they meet neuer conferre or reason of good things nay when they come in company with such as are able to teach them they neuer moue any question of religion to them but their talke is only of worldly and vaine things Surely it is because they haue no doubts no need to learne or be confirmed in the truth And why haue we no doubts when the Eunuch and Disciples had so many Surely our hearts are profane and regard not what we heare or reade like those Iob 21. 14. who say to God Depart from vs for we desire not the knowledge of thy waies Now to conclude this Vse I will giue you some few cautions and rules to direct you in conferring and reasoning of Gods Word 1. Your questions must be of such points as are profitable not curious of such things as God hath not reuealed or vaine of such things as you know no vse of charge them not to giue heede to fables and endlesse genealogies which minister questions rather then