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

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praiest unto him Why God will not answer thee according to thy prayer for it is but lip-service but according to the Idol that is in thy heart Ezek. 14. In stead of pardoning thy sinnes he will give thee more liberty to gratifie thy lusts God will answer thee but it shall be with a curse rather than with a blessing Sinne it is filthiness in the sight of God Ezek. 36. I will pour clean water upon you and purge you from all your filthinessess Saith God remove this abominable thing out of my sight which I hate As it is spoken in reference to Idolatry so it may be applied to all manner of sinnes Remove this abominable thing to wit sinne either in generall Jer. 44.4 or this particular sinne out of my sight Rebellion is as the sinne of witchcraft 1 Sam. 15.23 He that sinneth hurteth his own soul Every sinne properly is a destruction to the soul Isa 59 2. Your finnes have separated between you and your God and he hath hid his face and will not hear 2 Cor. 6.15 Sin it defaceth the beauty of the soul It is a fretting leprosie which only the blood of Christ can purge away The deluge which drowned so many sinners was not able to wash away the least sinne Sin it is the greatest evil because it is worse than the devil for it made him to be so 'T is worse than hell that is but opposite to the good of the creature this of the Creator And if the greatness of the malady may be judged by the cost and difficulty of the cure it will easily appear that no evil is so great as this because nothing could serve for the remedy of it but the infinite precious blood of Jesus Christ 'T is so great an evil that there can be no greater punishment of i● than by it self When God would deal with man as a most desperate enemy he gives him up to sin There can be no worse Epithete for it than it self When the Apostle would speak the worst of it as he could he cals it by his own name Rom. 7.13 Sinfull sin Dr. Wilkins in his Discourse concerning the gift of prayer it is a leprosie which infects the whole man it is that which makes the inhabitants of the earth to stink and be corrupt in the nostrils of God It is that which is the greatest evil because it is opposite to the greatest good God blessed for ever and brings the greatest evil upon creatures the privation of Gods glorious presence for ever 1 Cor. 6.9 Neither fornicators nor Idolaters nor adulterers nor effeminate nor abusers of themselves with mankinde nor thieves nor covetous nor drunkards nor reyilers nor extortioners shall inherit the Kingdom of heaven The Morallist defines sin after this manner Vitium est quod à mediocritate deflectit vel in excessu vel in defectu Actuall sin according to the Schoolmen is thus defined Peccaium actuale est actus indebito modo circumstantionatus the circumstances are these Quis quid ubi quibus auxiliis cur quomodo quando But the Word of God cals sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sin is the transgression of the Law Every deviation from the perfect Law of God in the least punctillo of it though but in a thought in a word or in one particular action it is a sin Regula est judex sui obliqui And the Law of God it not only shews what is good what is right and what is just but what is evil what is unjust because it shews us all our obliquities and defects from it 5. None can teach us to understand the Word of God but the Spirit of God The Word of God it remains alwaies the same and it is a clear and a plain way in it self Till the Spirit removes the scales from our eyes such scales as fell from Pauls eyes we cannot understand the minde of the Spirit We may prove the Word of God to be the Word of God by reason for unless we go by reason we shall never be able to convince an Infidell or a Pagan that the Seriptures are the Word of God But to make a man understand it is the work of the Spirit What is the reason that having been so much verst in the word we remain so ignorant of the minde of the Spirit Why it is because thou art void of the Spirits teachings The word it is not written upon thy heart by the finger of God but as fast as it comes in at one car it goes out at another and the devil comes and steals the word out of thy heart I tell thee thou maiest have the whole Word of God by heart and yet farre to seek in the right knowledge of it Scriptura omnibus accessibilitis paucissimis penetrabilis Aug. Act. 8. We reade the story of Philio and of the Eunuch The Eunuch was reading a place of Isaias He was led as a sheep to the slaughter and as a lamb before the shearer opened he not his mouth Philip comes to him and said Vnderstandest thou what thou readest said the Eunuch again How can I except some man guide me Then Philip expounded the place unto him But what set Philip a work to go to the Eunuch The Spirit said unto Philip Go near and joyn thy self to his Chariot So I may say to a poor man when he reads the Word of God Understandest thou what thou readest Dost thou know the minde of the Spirit in that place and he may answer me How should I unless the Spirit teacheth me or some body whom the Spirit sets a work for that end Beleeve it ☜ When sensual men that have not the Spirit let them be never so book-learned or head-learned otherwise speak of the things of God they speak as some Geographers write of other Countries who never were there themselves to see the situation or the sertility of them they travell by other mens eyes and see with other mens light and what they write for the most part of it they take up on trust and record and have but an opinionative knowledg of them if I may so speak and mix many errors with little of truth So Learned men void of the Spirit the greatest part of their knowledge they have upon trust and upon the record of men like Augustine who as he before his conversion said I beleeve so because the Church said so so they beleeve so because the fathers of old said so or because such and such persons whom they esteem say so not considering the light of the Spirit which is greater than the light of reason or any other light whatsoever But the spiritual man speaks experimentally what he se●● by the light of the Spirit within him Every spiritual man can say and only he can say so I know what I speak I beleeved therefore have have I spoken My record is true because I have the record of the Spirit What I have heard seen and felt
the Spirit how couragious was he in the work of the Lord he that formerly was mad with fury against the Church of God how strongly doth he row the other way As soon as ever Ananias had said Brother Saul receive thy sight Act. 9. his eyes were opened and his heart enlarged in the knowledge of God he presently goes about his Masters business to win souls over by the evidence of the Spirit to the obedience of the word Yea he was ready not only to be bound for the Lord Jesus ☞ but to suffer for him A spiritual man he chooseth and pitcheth upon mature and serious deliberation with himself being helped by the light of the Spirits teachings I say he chooseth God for his God and Christ for his Christ and the Spirit for his Spirit and the Word for his rule and Gods Commandments for his delight An implicit faith Many Christians have but an implicit faith for what they believe some believe the Word of God because they were taught so and so were instructed by education others believe so because it is the generall opinion of most men others because this way seems the best to their corrupt naturall reason others there are because such a man said so because they are perhaps engaged to him in Church-society when they have no ground in their own consciences why they close with this rather than with that The devil will have a shrewd combate with this mans faith in the hour of temptation when he shall come to die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 efflagitavit The devil hath desired to winnow thee as he did Peters faith He will try thee of what mettall thou art made whether thou art dross or silver he will sift thee throughly and if thou art found wanting as I am sure thou wilt be found for this faith hath no foundation thou shalt be cast forth as chaff out of Christs floor to be burned for ever What is the reason that we drive on so slowly for heaven why it is because of the unsetledness of our spirits We do not walk by fixed principles Go to this point whether the Word be the Word of God were you never under the buffetings of Satan for a while concerning this thing hardly any but some times or other have been under such a cloud of temptation If you were really fixed upon this principle that the Scripture is the Word of God reading what judgments attends sinners in their evil courses and what happiness follows the Saints there could not be such a general spirit of prophanness amongst men as there is and that little care to walk exactly according to the preciseness of the Gospel The Spirit quiets our mindes concerning this doubt by discovering unto us the majesty purity and perfection of it A spiritual man can say I know whom I have believed 2 Tim. 1.12 I know what I speak I know that God is true and that there is no unrighteousness in him God is in me of a truth Besides have we not Atheisticall thoughts of God like that fool Psal 14.1 who said in his heart there was no God denying the providence of God When we see the wicked men of the world prosper and we our selves counted the offscouring of it are we not ready to say like David 1 Sam. 27.1 I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul or that we shall fall of everlasting happiness God hath cast us off for ever calling the servants of God liars who speak unto us in the name of the Lord and to distrust the word of promise Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor forsake thee where there are five negatives for the confirmation of it I will never never never never never leave thee nor forsake thee Psal 73. Now as David when he went into the Sanctuary of God he was better principle'd and understood their latter end that God had set them in slippery places that they might fall and not rise again So if we would wait till the Spirit comes down upon our hearts we should have all these carnall reasonings and these fleshly doubts removed and we should be setled in the truths of God When a man is taught by the Spirit he doth not stand to reason with flesh and blood shall I do this or shall I do that shall I choose heaven or shall I choose hell shall I choose sinne or shall I choose grace shall I choose God or shall I choose Baal he doth not stand reasoning the case Shall I be religious or shall I not Shall I trust all upon Gods bare promise or shall I close with the pleasures of sin which are really present but he presently renouncing all those carnall reasonings which arise from flesh and blood presently sets upon the work of the Lord knowing that his labour shall not be in vain in the Lord. So did Paul Gal. 1. 15 16. When the Lord had endued him with his Spirit sutable for his calling whereunto he was called he stood not to reason with flesh and blood but presently sets upon his great Masters business Jesus Christ The great danger there is in consulting with flesh and blood This consulting with flesh and blood hinders many a poor soul from a through closing with Jesus Christ Flesh will say Do not close with Jesus Christ do not serve God you had better take a certainty for an uncertainty and those present enjoyments here and live merrily In consulting with flesh and blood you consult with the enemy of Jesus Christ of the Gospel of his grace and with an enemy to your own souls Be sure the flesh will decide the controversle on the devils part against Jesus Christ Now the Spirit of God determines the matter on Christs part against the devil teaching thee the insufficiency of all the creatures to make thee happy and the true happiness only resides in God putting thee into the way wherein God is to be found and preserving thee in the same that at length thou maist reap everlasting life Seventhly The teachings of the Spirit are consonant to the Word they agree with the Word of God As the minde of the Spirit in one place of Scripture agrees with the minde of the Spirit in another and there is a sweet harmony in the Word of God So the teachings of the Spirit upon our hearts they also are correspondent with the word Saith Paul to the Galatians Gal. 1.8 If an Angel from heaven should deliver any other doctrine unto you than what you have received let him be accursed And the Apostle by a resumption or ingemination repeats it again If any man teach any other Gospel unto you than what you have received let him be accursed ● 11 12. And why My Doctrine is not of flesh nor of the will of man but of God Note this well ☜ As if the Apostle had said My word which I have delivered unto you being the Word of God
fruit of the spirit While they speak of perfection and living without sin in this life Phil. 3.13 14. they cry down the Apostle Paul who thought himself not prefect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Metaphor drawn from those who run in a race who when they approach the Goale press forward with all their might their Arms and Leggs to touch it but still prest on to the mark of the price of the high calling of Jesus Christ As long as we are of the Laodicean temper and think our selves rich and wanting nothing we are never like to come to Christ to buy raiment of him and to have that spiritual eye-salve whereby we may discerne the things of God but when we are like Christ meek and lowly then we shall finde rest unto our souls God deals with men as he finds them Psal 18. With the froward thou wilt shew thy self froward Mat. 11.29 and with the upright thou wilt shew thy self upright Many times Gods people are of crabbed and knotty spirits that God for the present is as it were at a stand what he should do with them O Ephraim what shall I do unto thee Hos 6.4 O Judah what shall I do unto thee Now as the Carpenter plains the peece of wood so the Lord plains their hearts mountains shall be turned into valleys and the Lords way shall be made straight before him and of rugged spirits they shall become smooth and the froward spirits become meek and quiet that the Lord Jesus by his spirit might be pourtrayed in their hearts as the peece of wood when it is plained and made smooth is apt to receive any form whatsoever the Carpenter pleaseth so our hearts when they are once softned by the Spirit and smoothed by the planer of affliction God can mould them and fashion them as he pleaseth A meek spirit is of a docible disposition ready to receive and most apt to retain most thankfull for what he hath and ever mindfull of its own unworthiness Now here for to prevent mistaking I should shew the nature of meekness to wit what this meekness is Severall kindes of meekness but I shall only shew the severall kindes of meekness which are four 1. A naturall meekness arising out of the constitution of a mans body 2. A morall meekness arising from good precepts instructions and examples 3. A stoicall meekness which is a sameness of spirit upon all occasions this is rather a stupidity then a meekness 4. An artificiall meekness which is when men can restrain their passions though their heart is as full of envy as it can hold Such was Esans meekness to Jacob. 5. A true meekness A true meekness what it is which is a spirituall frame of heart whereby a man gives no provocation and is ready to receive any and whereby a man moderates subordinates and governs all his anger to the glory of God and to the good of others Meekness is passions jaylor True meekness is not alwaies the same but when Gods glory is blasphemed or any waies diminished then it turns to zeal and an holy anger Exod. 32.20 21 22. Moses the meekest man upon the earth when he saw the idolatry of the Israelites he broke forth into an holy anger being grieved in his spirit for the dishonour done to God 6. If thou hast the Spirits teachings upon thy heart thou art one that fearest God Psal 25. What man is he that feareth the Lord Tiberius Gaesar thought no man fit to receive his secrets and yet the Lord vouchsafeth the godly his own secrets None but Noblemen Lords and Dukes might be made partakers of State-secrets the godly are heavenly Lords and Nobles and the privy States men of heavens Court Such honour have all the Saints to know the things of God him shall he teach in the way that he shall choose The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant Mal. 4.2 Vnto you that fear my name shall the sun of righteousness arise with healing in his wings The fear of God it puts a bridle to our lusts and corrupt affections which choak the things of God As an unruly horse may be curb'd with a bit and a bridle so the fear of God it is as it were a bit and a bridle to curb the extravagancy and the breaking forth of sinne The fear of the Lord is to depart from evil As a brick wall keepeth in the waters from overflowing the ground and banks from breaking in upon the meadows so the fear of God puts a stop to the breaking forth of many a sin which otherwise we should commit Now when the strength and the power and the dominion of sinne is taken away the Spirit comes in with more freedom into the soul When Joseph was tempted by his Mistress unto uncleanness he having the fear of God before his eyes refused her with this saying How shall I do this great wickedness and sinne against my God! Gen. 39.40 41. Because of this he is clapt up by a false slander of his Mistress into prison But the Lord was with Joseph in prison and shewed him mercy And Joseph because he feared God had the spirit of revelation given him that he could interpret dreams He expounded the chief Butlers and Bakers dream and Pharaohs dream And the Lord honoured him in the sight of Pharaoh and all his servants By humility and the fear of the Lord come riches Pro. 22.4 honour and life Daniel because he feared God Dan. 9.24 and would not consent to worship other gods the Lord revealed unto him the expiration of the seventy years captivity which was at hand And Noah because he feared God Heb. 11.7 an hundred and twenty years before the overflowing deluge came had this secret committed unto him that God did intend to drown the world for that deluge of sinne which was then in it By faith Noah being Warned of God being moved with fear prepared an Ark for the saving of his house and thereby condemned the ungodly World The salvation of the Lord is nigh them that fear him that glory may dwell in our Land The fear of Gods glorious Majesty and unquestionable authority puts the soul into a fit capacity to be taught by the Spirit As long as a man is presumptuous self-confident and thinks himself somewhat when he is nothing there is no place for any doctrine of Jesus Christ God usually puts men into great fears and terrours and then raiseth them up before he communicates himself unto them Jer. 3.33 I will put my fear before them and write my law in their hearts Severall kindes of fear There is a fourfold fear 1. A naturall fear which in it self is not sinfull because God hath put this affection of fear into our hearts So Christ feared to die 2. A servile or a slavish fear when men fear God not for his goodness but only for his justice
the Lord know the heart but by our actions and by the temperament of our body and by the exorbitancy of our affections and unruly passions he doth conjecture the bent and the frame of our spirits and accordingly suit his various temptations which is more deceitfull than any thing else yea so deceitfull that we our selves cannot know the depths of it For if our hearts condemn us God is greater than our hearts and knoweth all things Now if we cannot know the things which are in another mans heart much less are we able to know the secrets of Gods breast but by the Spirit of God The Spirit is the great interpreter of Gods minde the great revealer of Gods secrets the great unfolder of the mysteries of heaven that knoweth all the counsels and decrees past between the Father and the Son from all eternity Quest. But some may say How came you by the Spirit whence is it that you have the Spirit The Apostle by way of anticipation saith in the words of my Text We have received the Spirit the Spirit is given unto us And so having done with the Context and having shewed the connexion of the words I am come to the subject matter of my ensuing Discourse We have not received the spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things which are freely given unto us of God In the words you have 1. Something implyed 2. Something expressed The thing implied is That only those who have the teachings of the Spirit can know the things of God In the words expressed you have these parts 1. The spirit of the world put in opposition to the Spirit of God implied in this particle But We have not received the spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God 2. The end for which the Spirit of God is given or received by the faithfull to wit that they may know the things of God 3. The manner how God gives his things to wit Freely That we may know the things which are freely given unto us of God More particularly First We have the Subjects in which or the Patients in which the Spirit of God is expressed in the particle We We have not received the spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God We the Apostles and Disciples of Christ together with all the faithfull of Jesus Christ Only the Saints have this priviledge to enjoy the Spirit Saith Christ I will send you the Comforter even the Spirit which the world knoweth not John 14.16 17. and I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever even the Spirit of truth which the world cannot receive because it seeeth him not neither knoweth him but ye know him for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you O sweet and heavenly place full of marrow and fatness to the godly but full of terrour to the wicked Art thou a childe of God the Spirit of God dwels with thee and shall be in thee Pray observe the words he not only dwels with a Saint and as it were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How the Spirit is in a beleever an assistant unto him but the Spirit of God is in a Saint And as Christ and a beleever is as it were all one so the Spirit of Christ and a beleever is said to be as it were all one See what a near and unexpressible union there is between God and a gracious soul Joh. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostom I in them and they in me that they may be one even as we are one We shall have a likeness and a resemblance of that union which is between God the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ficut nou nota aequalitatis sed fimilitudinis ut variis locis Scripturae ostendere poffimus and Christ though not the same for substance The Spirit not only dwels but hath its in-being in every Saint And as we cannot see our own souls because they are of a spirituall nature and so not subject to any of the outward senses but we know we have a soul by the immediate operations of it We know we have a rationall soul because we understand and are able to inferre one thing out of another Anima infert unum ex hoc hoc ex alto Angclus unum post hoc one thing after another The Spirit of God dwelleth not in the Saints essentially more than in other creatures yet the faithfull have a speciall right to the essence of Gods Spirit and he dwelleth in them by way of speciall efficacy Downam An immortall soul because incorporeall and not subject to change as considered in it self but only in respect of divine power A sensitive soul because we walk eat drink and do the actions of living creatures so we cannot see the Spirit of God within us but we know we have the Spirit because it quickens it comforts it upholds it sanctifies us and stirres us up to our spirituall duty He that hath Christ hath the Spirit of Christ every Saint of God hath Christ and therefore he hath the Spirit of Christ As faith unites us to Christ on our part so the Spirit unites us to Christ on his part If any man hath not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 The world is void of the Spirit because they cannot receive it As they cannot receive Christ so they cannot receive the Spirit Christ makes his abode in no soul but an empty soul Ps 107.9 Luk. ● 53 He filleth the hungry with good things but the rich he sends empty away A full stomack loathes the honey-comb and a carnall soull filled with the pleasures of sinne and with the satisfying of fleshly lusts hates the sweetness and the rich treasures of grace and mercy which are in Jesus Christ The Spirit of Christ loves to dwell in an empty soul Now the world is full of an impure spirit and while this spirit keeps the room of the heart there is no place for the Spirit of Christ O that this worldly spirit were dispossessed and cast out this unclean filthy abominable spirit that the holy Spirit of God might enter in Our hearts must not only be swept but washed before the Spirit of God will enter in You reade Matth. 12.44 that when the house was but only swept the evil spirit returned again with seven other spirits worse than before but when our hearts are once washt the Spirit of God will presently enter Ier. 4.14 Wash thy heart from filthiness O Jerusalem how long shall thy vain thoughts lodge within thee Iam. 1.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wicked men may sweep their hearts from that superfluity of naughtiness Saint James speaks of and may remove the excrescencies and the open breakings forth of sinne they may lop the boughs and as it were pare the nails all which is but a
Spirit moved upon the waters i. e. as a Hen lieth upon her brood cherishing it and giving it heat so did the Spirit of God lie upon that Chaos fomenting and cherishing it Psal 33.6 By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made and all the host of them by the breath of his mouth 3. Adoration and worship is given to the Spirit Quod si Spiritus non esset persoua distincta sed tantum Dei virtus utique non possit in invocatione distinctae illius fieri mentio cum per particulam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aequalitèr distinctè persouae conjunguntur Si non esset Deus non esset adorandus which is only proper to God We are said to be baptized in the Name of the Father Sonne and of the holy Ghost And St Paul in his Epistles frequently The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Amen 2 Cor. 13.14 Fifthly We have the end for which the Spirit is given i. e. That we might know the things which are freely given unto us of God Without the Spirit we are in the dark and we know not whither we go But of this hereafter Sixthly We have the adjunct or circumstance put to the things which are given unto us of God to wit that they are given freely That we might know the things which are freely given unto us of God How God is said to give us the things of salvation freely God gives and he gives freely liberally and bountifully and expects nothing at our hands but a thankfull heart The things of God are given freely upon a double account 1. In opposition to merit 2. In opposition to compulsion and unwillingness God gives freely in opposition to merit We deserve nothing at Gods hands but hell and destruction We merit hell but we merit nothing else Rom. 6.23 Primarily eternall death is meant there as appears by the Antithesis between life and death 1 Cor. 4.7 The wages of sinne is death i.e. all manner of death the death of afflictions temporal death eternall death but the gift of God is eternall life through Jesus Christ our Lord. Our common mercies as life health peace liberty friends food for our bodies and the like are all from free-grace What hast thou that thou hast not received and that thou hast not received freely If our common mercies be of free-grace for every step we step is a step of mercy the breath we breathe forth is Gods breath and not our own if he taketh away our breath we perish how much more are spiritual things of free-grace which are more eminently called the things of God It is of Gods abundant grace and goodness that by his Spirit we might know our election of God ☜ God might have elected us unto everlasting life and we never have known it untill we should have enjoyed it We might have been left in despair and under a cloud of temptation all our daies had not God freely given unto us the earnest of his Spirit The Gospel or the glad tidings of peace and reconciliation through Jesus Christ is of free grace therefore it is called the Gospel of his grace Act. 14.3 So likewise Jesus Christ is a most signall fruit and effect of Gods free grace and love to mankinde Joh. 3 16. God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Sonne c. Salvation by Jesus Christ it is of free-grace Eph. 2.5 By grace ye are saved All of grace and nothing of debt All from Gods love and nothing that is in us Gods good pleasure and his free-grace is the impulsive cause of all our mercies and that we are acquainted with those mysteries which were hid from all eternity Erigu me gratia divina sed terret me indignitas mea atqui si dignus essem jam non esset gratia sed merces si ex operibus utique non ex gratia gratia cuim non est gratia ullo modo nisi sit gratuita omni modo oie Gethardus untill these last ages Ascribe all to free grace and account thy self less than the least of all Gods mercies and unworthy of any smile or any favour from Gods hands So likewise God gives freely in opposition to compulsion or unwillingness say the Schoolmen Gods will is the cause of all things Eph. 1.11 Who worketh all things according to the counsell of his own will Nothing moves God to do good to poor sinners but the riches of his grace in Jesus Christ Remember this thou poor drooping soul that complainest by reason of the burden of thy sinnes and thinkest that the multitude of thy sinnes do exceed the greatness of Gods mercies As the most righteous man that ever lived could merit nothing at Gods hands or move God to bestow any thing upon him upon his own account so neither can the greatest sinner that ever lived hinder God or his sinnes put a stop in Gods way that he cannot shew him mercy in Jesus Christ if God be pleased to shew him mercy God sheweth mercy because he will shew mercy Rom. 9.15 Exod. 33.19 God is gracious because he will be gracious As all thy prayers tears duties fastings watchings can prevail nothing with God but upon the account of Jesus Christ so neither can thy unkindness thy unprofitableness thy sinfulness thy disingenuous and foolish carriage with the great God of heaven and earth keep God from shewing thee mercy God hath his therefores of mercy in himself and not in the creature Ezek. 30.18 Therefore will the Lord wait that he may have mercy upon you and therefore will he be exalted that he may have compassion upon you It is a strange therefore that hath no dependance upon the words foregoing but upon Gods infinite mercy God shews mercy because he delights in mercy God gives us heaven because he delights to magnifie his glory upon all the vessels of mercy And when we by our prayers at the Throne of grace obtain good things at the hand of God we do not change God but only those things which God had decreed from all eternity to give us upon the condition of our asking though not for our asking we receive in time when we beg them at Gods hands Ob. How can the things of salvation as Justification Adoption c. be freely given unto us of God Baxter in his excellent Book called the Saints Everlasting Rest seeing Christ Jesus hath purchased them for us Ans 1. The purchase of Christ doth not clash with the freeness of the things of God to us They were dear to Christ but free to us If the Father freely gives the Sonne and the Sonne freely paies the debt and if God freely accepts that way of payment when he might have required all which Christ hath done at our hands and if the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost do freely offer those things
which Christ hath purchased for us upon a cordiall acceptation of them and receiving of them by the hand of faith then the purchase of Christ doth not hinder but that the things of eternity may be free to us 2. There are some things which Christ cannot properly be said to purchase for us but God out of the abundance of his mercy added as it were an over-plus to the death and sufferings of Jesus Christ Heaven and eternall glory and the beatificall vision is not strictly said to be purchased by Christ but it is a redundancy of the Fathers love The immediate effect of Christs death is Justification a redeeming us from the curse of the Law and from the wrath of God which was due to our sinnes The more remote and consequentiall effect is heaven and eternall glory Having explained the words I come now to raise some Observations from them From the matter implied That the teachings of the Spirit are absolutely necessary to know the things of God Observe this Note That none can know the things of God but those who have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts From the words expressed observe 1. That worldly men or the men of this world are led by a worldly spirit 2. That the spirit of the world is altogether opposite to the Spirit of God 3. That all that are the people of God have or shall receive the Spirit of God 4. That the end why they receive the Spirit is that they may know the things of God 5. That all things are given to us freely of God The Observation which is the subject of my ensuing discourse is drawn from the thing implied which is this That none can know the things of God but those that have the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts In the handling this Observation I shall shew First The various acceptation of the word Spirit and that here is meant the Spirit of God Secondly What are the teachings of the Spirit 1. By way of premonition that it is a very hard thing to know them 2. Positively according to the Scripture phrase what they be Here briefly I shall distinguish between the motions impressions and flashes of the Spirit and the teachings of the Spirit Thirdly How the Spirit teacheth to wit 1. By enlightning our understandings 2. By taking away that enmity which is upon our wils against the things of God Fourthly Shew what more peculiar things the Spirit teacheth Fifthly What manner of teachings they are Sixthly Prove the conclusion That none can know the things of God but they that have the Spirits teachings Seventhly Make application 1. By way of Information to shew that the greatest part of Christians are void of the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts 2. By way of Exhortation to stirre you up to seek after the teachings of the Spirit and this Exhortation is pressed home upon a threefold account And a threefold cord is not easily broken 1. From the excellency of the Spirits teachings and of that light which comes thereby above all other teachings and above all other knowledge whatsoever 2. Because if the Spirit teacheth thee it is an evident sign thou art the friend of God 3. If the Spirit teacheth thee it is a sign thou art instated into the Covenant of grace Eighthly I shall give severall signes whereby we may know we are taught of the Spirit Ninthly Shew how we may distinguish between the more extraordinary teachings of the Spirit upon our hearts which are peculiar to more eminent Saints and other teachings Tenthly Shew the times wherein the Spirits teachings are most manifest 1. In times of affliction 2. Near the time of death Eleventhly Answer some doubts and questions arising from the Spirits teachings Twelfthly Shew that it is the duty of every one to walk up to the light which he hath received The various acceptations of the word Spirit in Scripture I. The Spirit is put in opposition to the body Luke 24.39 A spirit hath not flesh and bones c. so the gross foul of a beast is called a spirit The spirit of a man goeth upward Eccl. 3.21 and the spirit of a beast goeth downward II. It is applied to any tenuious nimble or subtile substance So the winde may be called a Spirit Job 4. A spirit passed before my face i.e. a nimble substance resembling the gliding motion of a spirit So we commonly say the spirits of wines because of the refinedness of them III. Any strong impetous or violent inclination Burroughs upon this place in his Comment upon Hosea or full purpose to do a thing may be called a spirit Hosea 4. 12. The spirit of whoredoms hath caused them to erre i. e. a strong inclination and full bent of will to go a whoring from God hath caused them to erre IV. For the heart of man wherein listh the affections in opposition to the will and the understanding and the memory according to the intellectuall part of it 1 Thes 5.23 I pray God that your whole soul spirit and body may be kept blameless till the coming of Jeses Christ By the soul is meant the understanding and the will and by the spirit the heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherein lieth the affections Rem 1 9. God whom I serve with my spirit Luke 8.55 You know not of what spirit ye are of i. e. of what affections Though some have another interpretation of it as you may see hereafter V. It is taken Quo plus materiae co plus potentiae quo plus formae co plus actus Quo plus potentiae viz. passivae co plus corruptibilitatis quo plus actus co plus substantia ●ic Philosophi aiuns 1. For strength and courage 2. For incorruptibility Isa 31.3 Their horses are flesh and not spirit i.e. subject to corruption and not abiding weak and not strong What is weaker than flesh all flesh is as grass What is stronger than a spirit spirits are of vast strength and operation What is more corruptible than flesh the word flesh notes corruption What is more abiding than a spirit a spirit is of a durable nature in respect of it self though God can suddenly destroy it Luke 1.17 It is said of Jesus Christ that he shall come in the Spirit and in the power of Elias i. e. in the courage strength and power of Elias The Scripture usually puts one word for the further explanation of the other VI. It is taken for the soul of man Luke 23.40 Father into thy hands I commit my spirit Zech. 13.1 The Lord formeth the spirit of man i.e. the soul of man so saith Stephen Act. 7.59 Lord Jesus receive my spirit VII For life Isa 57.16 I will not contend for ever neither will I be allwaies wroth for the spirit would fail before me i.e. the life and the souls which I have made When God comes to contend with sinners for their sins there is no standing before him
Sermon pass if you can hear it let not your souls be famished for want of nourishment As you would not be said to murder your bodies so do not you murder your precious souls Many do quench the Spirit when they do not know it Some will hear a consciencious Minister a long while and highly commend him as most of our profane Esau's do but when once this Minister shall touch their beloved sinnes they presently fall off and hear him no more Mar. 6.20 Herod heard John gladly for a time and reformed many things but when once he touched his Herodias and toucht the apple of his eye he presently distates him and cuts off his head What a sad thing is it that men should shift off such an impression and wipe off the sweet and heavenly dew If you will not wait at the pool you are never like to have the Spirit descend upon you and if you will not mark the time of the Spirits coming down and comply with the Spirit at such a time you are never like to have any feeling effect wrought upon your souls Have a care therefore of withdrawing the Spirits fuell 2. When men cast their lusts in the Spirits face and damp the breathings of the Spirit by their lusts then they may be said to quench the Spirit As water quencheth fire so lusts they quench the Spirit Lust is the great quench coal of the Spirits motions As mud and filth doth damp up the course of the water so every lust doth dam up the course of the Spirit Yea every particular sinne which is committed with a high hand to the reproach of godliness and to the dishonour of God quencheth the Spirit for a time When David had committed those two great evils murder and adultery in the matter of Vriah upon the commission of these sinnes God withdraws his Spirit and the comfortable presence of his countenance Hence he complains of brokenness of bones and of wounds in his soul Psal 5.8 My wounds stink and are corrupt because of my foolishness And he prayeth God to uphold him with his free Spirit ver 12. Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free spirit As the water free-zeth when the sun goeth down so your spiries wilk freeze when the spirit goes away from you What do you think will become of you when the Spirit departs from you You are in a dull lumpish condition you cannot pray nor hear the word nor do any spirituall duty with that rejoycing and freeness of spirit and alacrity of minde as formerly you did you are left in a sottish condition for a time Your spirits will be as heavy as lead very unapt and contrary to the service of God and if those sparks of grace which God hath put into your hearts did not inable you to do somewhat more than those who never knew what the saving work of the Spirit meant you would as wicked men do when the Spirit leaves them never seek to God for his Spirit any more As lusts choak the Word so they choak the Spirit Whence is it that many Christians do complain of the Spirits absence and of the departure of God from them as Saul did 1 Sam. 28.15 Wo is me for God is departed from me Why As Saul by his disobedience and rebellion caused God to depart from him so you by your disobedience and resisting of his motions have caused the Spirit to depart from you Search your hearts diligently and see whether there be not some abominable thing which the Spirit would pluck forth of thy heart Is there not a hankering after thy old beloved lusts Hast thou not an itching after past delights when thou wert in the flesh The Spirit doth not all its work upon a soul at the first work of conversion but still afterwards is imployed to purge out every abominable thing out of thy heart a child of God after conversion may fall into the same sinnes he committed before conversion yea the very same beloved sins the venomous humour is not throughly purged out in conversion and the Spirit by its good will would not leave a hoof or any root of bitterness in the heart but because we are in the body of this flesh we must grow by degrees and make progress daily Search I beseech you and examine your hearts whether there be not some lust the Spirit would give a deaths wound to and throughly mortifie and extinguish and you will not yield to the Spirit that you may be mortified I beseech you Christians to set about it The Spirit will never be quiet and let you alone if you belong to God till this root of hemlock and wormwood be rooted out i. e. whensoever it comes to thy soul the controversie shall be about thy lust whether thou wilt yet leave it or no whether thou wilt be throughly purged from thy old lees whether you would have this body of flesh throughly crucified It will never come with its comforting presence till thou closest with the Spirit in this great work Examine your hearts I beleeve if the business were throughly fifted there is some lust at the bottom some filth that lies below which keeps out the Spirit from coming into thy heart Sic ut fumus apes fater columbot sic Spiritum sanctum expellit grave oleus peccatum Basilius As smoke driveth away bees and an ill sent the doves so a noysom lust driveth away the Spirit As loth as thou art to go into a dungeon full of toads and serpents and venomous creatures so loth yea more loth is the Spirit to come into thy heart if there be a lust or an abominable thing at the bottom Yea I say the Spirit cannot come into thy heart while thy lust standeth out against him There is an opposition in respect of the things themselves What communion hath light with darkness God with Belial the pure Spirit with thy filthy lust The Spirit may come and knock long enough and Christ may knock long enough and to no purpose if thou art not willing that the Spirit should accomplish the work upon thy heart I beseech you examine your hearts in this matter Note this well A man may live a Professor all his daies and be as conscientious in the waies of God ☞ as any Christian in the world and think himself as fair for heaven as the best and yet at last perish for some unknown lust in his heart which if he had examined and found out it might have been mortified and his soul saved in the day of the Lord Jesus Besides consider you have not the influences of the Spirit at command The Spirit will not blow upon thy heart when thou wouldest have it but when it lifteth The Spirit comes down but upon certain times and those times are uncertain to thee how therefore doth it behoove thee Christian to take the Spirits time and to joyn with the work of
are by nature like the Egytians in the Land of darkness but when the Spirit hath opened our eyes we are in the Land of Goshen in the Land of light Ephes 1.17 18. That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory might give unto you the Spirit of Wisdom and revelation through the acknowledging of him that the eyes of your understanding may be enlightened that ye may know what the hope is of his calling and what the riches of his glorious inheritance in the Saints 2. By taking away that enmity that is in our wils against the things of God We hate the things of God by nature Now the Spirit shews the excellency the beauty the luster the pleasantness the profit that is in God It removes those hard thoughts and evil surmises in our hearts concerning God and the waies of his worship It shews us that godliness is profitable for all things both for the things of this life and of that which is to come Pro. 3.17 That the waies of wisdom are waies of pleasantness and all her paths are peace Pro. 22.4 That by humility and the fear of the Lord are riches honour and life That there is nothing lost in serving God and that it is the greatest slavery to do the devils service That it is better to work out the peaceable fruit of righteousness though with much labour and sorrow in the world than to live in sin though with the greatest worldly prosperity imaginable That it is better to undergo a light affliction here which is but for a moment than to undergo an eternall weight of torment hereafter and to lose an eternall weight of glory for if thou canst not endure a short affliction here how wilt thou endure the fire of hell Rom. 2. It shews us that to him that worketh righteousness is peace honour and life but tribulation anguish and sorrow follows every soul that doth evil both to Jew and Gentile The Spirit carries us up on the heavenly mount of contemplation and shews us the riches of Gods house and the treasures of the new Jerusalem saying all these things will I give thee if thou wilt worship God in sincerity and truth It perswades us of the evil of sinne of the necessity we have of Jesus Christ of the beauties of holiness of the wrath of God that hangs over sinners and that there is nothing but the thred of life which how soon it may be cut God knows which keeps them from burning in everlasting fire It shews the willingness that is in Jesus Christ to receive poor repenting sinners Him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out It sets before us the freeness of the promise Is 55. Ho every one that thirsteth let him come and drink of the waters of life freely Our buying is but receiving Buy wine and milk without money and without price That God the Father and Jesus Christ is more willing to receive us than we are to come unto him that God waits to be gracious Isa 30.18 as the Prophet Isaiah speaks that Gods mercy rejoyceth against judgement and that there is nothing but our unwillingness which hinders the marriage union betwixt Christ and our souls It shews us that the multitude of our sinnes cannot hinder the effect of Gods mercies Isa 55.8 9. for Gods thoughts are not as our thoughts nor his waies as our waies that the Lord is willing to heal our backslidings Hos 14.4 and to love us freely for his Name sake that Gods bowels yern over us when he sees us wallowing in our blood Ezek. 16. that if God were not more mercifull to us than we are to our selves we had perished long ago in our sinnes and that if God sees any thoughts of returning in us if we would but set our faces Zion ward Jer. 19.5 if we did but feel after the Lord Act. 17.27 if he did but see us afarre off in a repenting frame of spirit smiting upon our thighes Ier. 31. as Ephraim did as the father did the returning prodigall he would meet us in the way and fall upon our necks and kiss us yea he would bemoan us as God did repenting Ephraim Is Ephraim my beloved sonne Hos 11.8 is he not a pleasant childe my repentings are kindled together and my bowels are turned within me Saith God I desire not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turn from his wicked waies and live Lam. 3.33 God afflicts not willingly nor grieves the children of men If we perish it is not Gods fault but our own because we are so cruell unto our selves Formerly poor creatures could not endure to think of God Psal 10.4 God is not in all a wicked mans thoughts his waies are alwaies grievous The thoughts of God are troublesom thoughts unto him his infinite justice exceeding greatness his impartiall dealing with sinners when he comes to plead with them for their sins Saith God I will not at all acquit the wicked these are afflicting thoughts to a wicked man Why because he thinks that because God is his enemy all these his attributes shall be imployed to his everlasting ruine It is said likewise of the Gentiles Rom. 1. that they liked not to retain God in their knowledge But when the Spirit comes it makes the thoughts of God pretious then the soul can say as David did Ps 94.19 In the multitude of my thoughts thy comforts delight my soul that is in the multitude of my distracting dividing worldly perplexing thoughts the comforts that flow in upon the meditation of thy goodness and of that propriety which I have in thee that thou art my portion my God my rock that is higher than I to which I may continually resort this doth comfort my spirit The naturall man he counts Christ and the Word and the conscientious Minister who deals plainly and powerfully with him his greatest enemies He cannot endure to see his beloved sinne reproved to hear of his Dallilah to hear of hell of the wrath of God and of the day of judgement no it is as bad as death to him to hear of these things He cannot bear it that Christ must be his Lord the Spirit his teacher the Word his rule and Gods glory his end that he must become a new convert and that he must leave behinde him his old companions his old desires his old customs his old principles his old ends and his laws and that he must become another man altogether new all old things must be done away and all things must become new Heb. 12. Now the Spirit teacheth Iohn 3. that without holiness he shall never see the face of God That unless he be born again he shall never enter into the Kingdom of heaven That if any man be in Christ he is a new creature 2 Cor. 5.17 That it is impossible to enter into the new Jerusalem with an
demonstrativus notans ipsum verbum fieri carnem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indefinite sumitur fine ullo articulo inde notans eum accepisse totam nostram naturam and that he was not formed in the womb of the Virgin Mary but that he passed through the womb of the Virgin as water passeth through a Conduit And dwelt amongst us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greek Had his Tabernacle among us There are many other duties which only the Spirit teacheth as justification by faith alone the doctrine of the resurrection of the immortality of the soul of the happiness of the Saints in heaven and of the future torments of the wicked in hell The Schoolmen with their fine-spun distinctions and criticall questions do rather darken the minde of the Spirit in these waies than adde any further light unto them Their teachings are like the way of a serpent upon a stone very slippery and uncertain 4. The evil nature of finne The Spirit alone hath shewed unto us the evil nature of sinne It condemns an evil look a malitious thought Mat. 5. He that looks upon a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart Eph. 5.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 urbanitas apud Spiritum est vitium upud Aristoteleus est virtus 1 Thess 5. He that h●ttih his brother in his heart is a murderer It condemns jesting and evil speaking It is to be observed that that very word which Aristotle cals a vertue the Spirit of God terms a vice Jesting with Aristotle is a vertue with the Spirit of God it is a vice We are commanded to abstain from all appearance of evil To hate the very garments spotted with the flesh To resist the first motions and allurements to sinne Rom 7. I had not known sinne but by the Law for I had not known lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not covet Unless the Word of God had told us and the Spirit of God had set down this for a certain truth that these motions to sin are sin we should never have known it or beleeved it These first motions were never counted for sinnes by any of the Heathen Philosophers or by the more refined wits of the Schoolmen only the Spirit hath pricked them down for sinnes That they are sinnes ☜ appears by this because they tempt a man to sinne If concupiscence were not a sinne it would never tempt a man to sinne for nothing bringeth forth sin formally but sinne Lust when it conceiveth it bringeth forth sin and sin when it conceiveth it bringeth forth death Ob. The wages of sin is death now if lust were a sinne it would bring forth death how then is it said that luft when it conceiveth bringeth forth sin and sin when it conceiveth bringeth forth death Resp St James in this place distinguisheth the severall sorts of sinnes There are some sinnes consummated and finished and those bring forth death but it followeth not that other sinnes bring not forth death but that they do not bring forth death to the same degree as those sinnes do for there are diversities of torments in hell and the best place in hell is very lamentable As he that cals his brother fool is worthy of hell fire Raca i.e. a fellow of no worth from the word Rik ovacuare yet it will not follow that he that cals his brother Raca is unworthy of it but that he is not worthy of it in the same degree and measure Lust it bringeth forth death but not to the same degree that sin consummated doth God judgeth the secrets of mens hearts that secret wickedness which is within us and reproves it and makes it manifest to our consciences Rom 2.16 In the day when God shall judge the secrets of mens hearts according to my Gospel It is only the Spirit that condemneth heart-wickedness So saith Peter to Simon Magus Pray to God that the thought of thy heart might be forgiven thee The Laws of man do not reach to the conscience to heart wickedness to the secret inward abominations to which God and thy own conscience are conscious to Only the Law of the Spirit doth reprove this heart wickedness The Spirit of God it condemns hypocrisie when men will seem religious and would be counted true Christians though their hearts runne whoring after their base lusts When like a man at Oars they will row one way and look another Pretend for God and for Gods cause when their design is to carry on the interest of the flesh and of the devil When they will worship God and speak him fair to his face and give him a parcell of good words in a few formall words and in an externall lip-service when malice and covetousness and carnall lusts are in their hearts Matth. 23. How many woes hath Christ denounc'd against hypocrites Wo to you Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites Externall worship is sufficient in mans sight but God requireth the heart and the whole heart Matth. 22.37 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart with all thy soul with all thy might and with all thy strength Hypocrisie is no sinne in the worlds account but a criminall fault a crimson sinne in the sight of God Dost thou think to mock God and to put him off with shadows in stead of substance with thy formality in stead of sincerity Gal. 5. Be not deceived do not deceive your selves and think to put off God with any thing the heart of man is full of deceit deceitfull above all things and desperately wicked Why be not deceived why I will tell you for what a man soweth that shall he reap if ye sow chaff you shall reap chaff if you sow wheat you shall reap wheat Hypocrisie is an epidemicall sinne in this professing age Consider against this sinne Cor secundum Auagramma est Camera omnipotentis Regis The heart is the seat of the great King of heaven and earth the King of Kings and Lord of Lords God hath two places wherein he most especially is resident the highest heaven and the lowest heart In heaven he is by his glorious presence In an humble heart by his gracious presence 1. That all thy endeavours will be utterly lost unless thou hast an upright heart if thou praiest never so much if thy heart be not perfect with thy God all thy prayers will do thee no good As good not at all as never a whit the better 2. Consider that God judgeth a man and esteemeth of him according as his heart is if that be sincere thou art a sincere Christian but if that be rotten thou art unsavory in the sight of God 3. God answereth a man according to what is in his heart not according to what is in his lips when he praieth to him Thou art a drunkard or a whoremonger or a covetous wretch or an extortioner c. and thou comest as Gods people do and sittest before him and
tell thee God hath sent the Spirit of his Son crying in our hearts Abba father The Spirit of God witnesseth with our spirits that we are the children of God Fourthly The Spirits teachings are irresistible teachings Acts 6.10 And they were not able to resist the wisdom and the Spirit by which Stephen spake i. e. the writings of God upon Stephens heart or the teachings of the Spirit were so evident upon him that they could not withstand him or oppose what he said When the Spirit comes it shall convince the world of sinne of judgement and of righteousness It shall convince if it doth not convert It shall either drive thee besides thy self ☜ and make thee despair of salvation or to go out of thy self and to trust in Jesus Christ There is no opposing the Spirit when he comes with the prevailings of grace upon thy heart It is said of Christ that he spake as one that had anthority Mat. 7.29 and not as the Scribes Why because he spake by the Spirit My words saith he they are spirit and they are life Joh. 6.63 Let there be never so much opposition in the heart never so much prevalency of sinne let the soul be kept never so fast bound and setter'd with the vanities of the world with the devices of Satan and with the deceitfulness of sinne Yea supposing thou wert fast asleep in the midnight of earnall security yet if the Spirit comes and joggs as the Angel did Peter we shall presently awake Act. 12.7 and the prison doors shall be open and our fetters shall be knockt off and we shall be set at liberty It is our misery that when God comes to deal with his Spirit for our souls good the Spirit doth not finde us sitting still and quiet and out of the way to heaven but posting with all speed in a quite contrary way as fast as we can to hell We do not only by nature not love God but we hate God and preferre sinne and the devil before him Now when the Spirit comes supposing we are at the very brink of hell just dropping in yet if we hear the voice of the Spirit that voice which Isaiah speaks of Isa 30.12 a voice behind thee saying This is the way walk in it we shall return and be as fire-brands pluckt out of the fire The Spirit when it comes to write the things of God upon our hearts it doth not finde our souls a rasa tabula a meer blank wherein there is nothing written but the rudiments of the world of the flesh and of sinne are naturally written upon them the devil is engravened and pourtrayed all abroad upon the heart of a wicked man Now the finger of God can presently blot out this writing and unteach us whatsoever the flesh the devil and the world hath taught us and write his own characters as it were with the juyce of an onyon never to be blotted out again Joh. 5.25 It is said in the Gospel of John the dead shall hear the voice of the Sonne of God and live that is those that are dead in sinnes and trespasses that are spiritually dead that have no spirituall life that do not relish the things of God that cannot move one foot towards heaven when the Spirit cals which is meant by the voice of Christ like those dry bones which the Prophet Ezekiel speaks of they shall arise and walk and live the life of faith Ezek. 36.27 I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my waies to do them When the Spirit teacheth Isa 32.4 the heart of the rash shall understand knowledge and the tongue of the stammerers shall be ready to speak plainly No naturall impediment no indisposition can hinder the effects of the Spirit Fifthly They are arbitrary teachings As the winde bloweth where it listeth Joh. 3.8 so is every one that is born of the Spirit The Spirit teacheth when it listeth and where it listeth The Spirit is a free agent bound to none and whatsoever he doth Matth. 11.25 he doth it freely I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things frem the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes even so Father for so it seemeth good in thy sight By the same Spirit is given severall gists but all these worketh that one and the self same Spirit 1 Cor. 12.11 dividing to every man severally as he will The Spirit of God out of a family perhaps it teacheth the Master and leaveth the servant in darkness the childe and leaves the father in darkness And as Christ said in the Gospel of Matthew Matth. 24.41 there shall be two a grinding in the mill the one shall be taken and the other left so say I in the same seat at the same time there be many a hearing of the word together and the Spirit may come and teach one and leave all the rest in darkness What a mercy is it therefore to thee whosoever thou art to thee I say that art so highly honoured as to have the Spirit to be thy teacher that the Lord should open thine eyes to see the ugly nature of sinne and the excellency that is in Jesus Christ Why might'st thou not have been one of the ignorant prophane world one that never knewest experimentally and savingly what it is to beleeve in Jesus Christ what it is to sit down at Christs table and to eat of the feast of fat things which he hath prepared for thee Why maist thou not have lived under the dispensations of the old Law when the Patriarchs had but the glimmerings of the Spirit but that thou shouldst live under the Gospel And why under the Gospel shouldst thou have a more plentifull measure of the Spirit than others but because it is the Spirits pleasure it should be so Even so Father for so it seemeth good in thy sight As Christ said to his Apostles though in another sense Mat. 13.16 17. Blessed are the eyes which see the things which you see and the ears which hear the things which you hear so I may say to you that live under the teachings of the Spirit in these Gospel-times Blessed are the eyes which see the things which you see and the ears which hear the things which you hear And as Christ said to the woman that came to him saying Luke 11.27 Blessed is the womb which bare thee and the paps which gave thee suck Nay saith Christ rather blessed are they which hear the Word of God and do it So say I Blessed are they that hear the voice of the Spirit speaking in their hearts and walk up to this voice of the Spirit Sixthly They are determinating fixing and quieting teachings They fix the soul in the waies of God They resolve all the doubts and carnall reasonings which are in our hearts and quite stop the mouth of flesh and blood When Paul had received
many of them and speak not soberly enough of the great mystery of the Trinity bringing in Philosophicall reasons whereas these mysteries should rather be adored than searched after They distinguish were God disting uisheth not being full of vain Philosophy and needless doctrines Weems that seeing they might not see who are called men of corrupt mindes reprobate concerning the faith 2 Tim. 3.8 But by the naturall man is understood every man whatsoever that is not taught and inlightened by the Spirit As fleshly is opposed to spirituall so animall or naturall is opposed to spirituall So that whosoever he be let him have the highest perfections of nature or morality or common endowments he is an ignoramus in the things of God if he be void of the Spirit Wicked men they count spirituall things foolishness As the wisdom of the world is foolishness with God so the wisdom of God is foolishness with the world 1 Cor. 1.25 Though the foolishness of God is wiser than men and the weakness of God is stronger than men So we reade of the foolishness of preaching in the 21 verse of the same Chapter Wicked men count preaching of the Word of God foolishness and Religion but a toy a bable and as a bug-bear to keep us in awe they cannot savour or relish any spirituall thing Besides saies the Apostle they are spiritually discerned Now wicked men who are void of the Spirit they have not that Spirit of discerning which other men have As a man who hath a vitious humour in his eye whatsoever he looks upon it is represented under that humour as if a man hath the Jaundis in his eyes all things are presented to his sight under a yellow colour So wicked men because they are sensuall and have not the Spirit as Jude speaks they look upon all things with a carnall eye and so are not able to discern aright Many times naturall men they judge of things according to their bulk and quantity they judge of the goodness of a prayer by the length of it of faith by a meer casting of themselves at all adventures upon Jesus Christ for salvation never seeing whether their hearts are purified by faith or no Indeed the wicked that have learning may perceive and know those things of the Spirit but they know them in a carnall manner not in a spirituall manner and howbeit they may reform their outward courses and cut off many acts of sin and like grace somewhat in their hearts thus farre and farther may a carnall man go being but changed not renewed Now they cannot spiritually discern grace for in regard of spirituall discerning they are in the dark even as the eyes if they would see without light the eye-sight and the goodness and the excellency of the ball will not avail to make them see so the wicked even the learned'st of them all they cannot see grace because they have not the Spirit of discerning light their learning their wit and all their good parts cannot suffice to descry the things of God as they are seen by the godly They seeing see not and hearing they might hear and not understand This knowledge of the things of God this spirituall knowledge it is called the Unction of the holy Ghost 1 John 2.20 You have an Unction from the holy One and you know all things It is called eye-salve Rev. 3.18 It is called the opening of the eyes Psal 119.18 Open thou mine eyes that I may behold the wondrous things in thy Law It is called the lightning of the eyes Psal 13.3 Lighten my eyes It is called seeing Isa 29.18 And the eyes of the blinde shall see out of darkness Mr. Feuner in his mystery of saving grace or joyned with a true love unto him They mistake common grace for speciall grace and rest satisfied with the common graces of the Spirit never minding whether they have that prevailing degree of grace to love God and Jesus Christ above all things They are ready to think themselves the children of God because they prosper in the world and have not crosses as other men because they are quiet in respect of sinne and have no trouble of conscience upon their hearts as other men have They are apt to conclude that God loves them and delights in them because they have sometimes more than ordinary raptures of Spirit and are sometimes stirred up to prayer and the like because they have more head-knowledge than many other honest-hearted Christians have All these false conclusions come from corrupt flesh because they are not inlightened by the Spirit of God John 2.11 He that walketh in the dark knoweth not whither he goeth You are all in the dark unless you have the Spirit If the people of the world had the eyes of the children of God they could not but love grace and holiness and Christ and the Word and the Ministers for the beauty and the excellency that is in them Then they would say with David Psal 84. I had rather be a door-keeper in the house of my God than to dwell in the tents of wickedness a thonsand years Psal 42.1 As the hart panteth after the water-brooks so panteth my soul after thee O God when shall I come and appear before God! They would hate sinne for that odious nature and that vileness that is in it but their eyes are vitiated and in stead of the Doves eyes of the spouse of Christ their eyes are bewitched with the things of this world Gal. 3.1 O ye Galatians who hath bewitched you It is a bewitching with the eyes as the Greek word imports It is said of Agar that when she was in the wilderness and the Lad was ready to die for thirst that God opened her eyes and she saw a well of water So though Jesus Christ that fountain which is open to Judah and Jerusalem for sinne and for uncleanness be daily put before our eyes yet if God doth not open our eyes we shall never see it we shall never taste of the waters of life What is the reason that David prayed so often Psal 119. Open thou mine eyes that I may behold the wondrous things of thy Law Teach me thy statutes Make me to understand the way of thy precepts I am thy servant give me understanding that I may know thy precepts Why Because David knew that he could not understand the things of God unless he were taught by the Spirit When the earnall men of the world condemn the children of God for their zeal and constancy in his waies and for their preciseness in living up to the terms of the Gospel they may answer them as one did his fellow in another case for looking upon a picture said his fellow Why dost thou gaze upon it so long O saith he if you did see with my eyes and had that skill to discern as I have you would gaze upon it as long too So if you did see with our light and had that Spirit of
and his greatness Contrary to the Prophet who saith Fear the Lord and his goodness Hos 3.5 When they fear God as a consuming fire but not as a gracious Father When they fear to offend out of a sense of hell and not out of any love they bear to God 3. A filiall fear when men fear to offend God who hath been so gracious a Father unto them who hath done them so much good and shewed them so much mercy When they consider what an ocean of love was shewed unto them by God when they lay wallowing in their blood by pitying them in their condition and shewing them mercy in Jesus Christ The love of God constrains a Saint to an obedience of him And a childe of God hath such ingenuity in him and such a son-like affection to God his Father that he would not willingly grieve him for the whole world 4. A reverentiall fear so the Angels in heaven they are said to fear God because they do him reverence The Saints reverence God Rev. 4.10 casting down their Crowns before him that sitteth upon the Throne That vast disproportion between God and the creature he being the fountain and we the streams who hath his being of himself depending upon none and we continually depending upon him cannot but work a reverence and a godly sear in the hearts of those that love him and embrace him 7. If thou hast the Spirits teachings upon thy spirit upon thy heart thou wilt still desire to have further discoveries of the Spirit upon thy heart Thou wilt much be exercised in all those waies and means the Spirit useth to come down Much in private prayer in that heavenly duty of spirituall meditation much at home with thy self and less gadding abroad in thy desires and affections There was a time when the children of Israel said unto Moses Exod. 20.19 Speak thou unto us and we shall hear let not the Lord speak unto us lest perhaps we die But when was this When the Lord came down upon mount Sinai with thunderings and lightnings to give his Law unto his people But now under the Gospel when the Spirit is poured forth abundantly a childe of God rather cries out with the Prophet Samuel Speak Lord 1 Sam. 3.10 for thy servant heareth Let not Moses or thy servants only instruct me but rather do thou speak my Lord God by thy Spirit in my heart who art the enlightner of all the Prophets for thou alone with them canst perfectly instruct me but they without thee can profit nothing As Mary sate down at Christs feet to hear the gracious words which proceeded from his mouth so thou wilt wait at the Ordinances to have more flowings in of the Spirit upon thee ☜ When a soul shall remember at such a time such a spirituall truth was imparted unto me at such a time and in such a place I was convinced that such a thing was a sinne and by the power of the Spirit overcome to a forsaking of it that such a thing was a duty that I was setled in my mind concerning such a Tenet that I had a fuller assurance of Gods love upon my heart than formerly this will make the soul pant and breath after a more full manifestation of spirituall things As David cries out Psal 42.2 When shall I come and appear before God so thou wilt cry out When will the time be that I shall have another teaching of the Spirit upon my heart Psal 63.2 Lord let me see thy outgoings in the Sanctuary as formerly I have seen Let me hear thy voice O blessed Saviour for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely Teach me thy statutes shew me wisdoms path Instruct me in the way that I should walk in Shew unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free Spirit 8. He that hath the Spirits teachings upon his heart is of a heavenly minde and can perform all duties in a spirituall manner As it is impossible for a man at once to look upwards towards heaven and downwards towards the earth so it is impossible for a Christian with one and the same judgement and affection to look upon earthly and heavenly things He counts the riches and honours and pleasures of the world but as crumbs cast to dogs but as triviall things not worth the mentioning in comparison of the enjoyment of God in Christ He is resolved not to be put off with those common mercies and not to receive his good things in this life but he tramples upon all these things under the Moon as mutable and that pass away having his eye fixt upon that eternall weight of glory in heaven and upon that Crown of bliss and happiness reserved for him A simile As children when they come to be men they put away childish things bowling-stones counters and all other vain and foolish sports and pleasures and become more serious and solid weighing what will become of them and how they may live in the world so when thou art taught of the Spirit thou wilt abandon all former delights when thou wert in the flesh and count the world thy enemy which would have kept thee from Jesus Christ yea the memory of thy vain conversation when thou livedst according to the course of the world will be bitter unto thee and thou wilt count all the things of this world but toys and trifles in comparison of the true and the heavenly riches When a spirituall man hath the things of this life he doth not set his heart upon them he doth not trust in them Mat. 6.33 he looks upon them but as additionals and as a handfull over and above into the bargain of eternall life but his heart is where is treasure is even in heaven In the fulness of all things his heart is empty and in the want of all things he can enjoy all things in Jesus Christ The more the understanding is enlightned to see the excellency of a thing and the necessity of it Whether the will follows the last dictate of the practicall understanding presently the will closeth with it And though in outward things the will doth alwaies follow the last dictate of the practicall understanding for Medea said Video meliora probóque Deteriora sequor Yet the will of a Saint cannot but follow the last dictate of the practicall understanding taught by the Spirit Now the Spirit it puts a new face upon things it takes away the false painted mask which the world and our own corrupt hearts had cast upon those transitory things and that vizard Satan had put upon them and shews us the emptiness the insufficiency the vanity the mutableness the inconstancy and the perishing nature of them that they are weak inconsiderable things which cannot afford the least solid joy and comfort That the pleasures of sin and the world are but as the cracklings of thorns under a pot which blaze for the
present Eccl 7 6. but suddenly are out That all the creatures are but broken cisterns Jer. 2.13 pits which can hold nothing but muddy and defiled comforts Besides the Spirit it teacheth us the fulness of God the sufficiency that is in Jesus Christ the joys that flow in from above and what a mass of glory is treasured up for us if we continue faithfull unto the death Mark 14.25 That the time is at hand when we shall drink the new wine of eternall consolation with Jesus Christ in the Kingdom of heaven hereafter When a man hath a spirit of discerning to discern between the true riches and the fading riches of this world and the Spirit hath enlightned his understanding and he sees the what things are prepared for him hereafter if he love God and keeps his Commandments He is more Saint-like and is as it were a stranger upon earth seeking rest and finding none till he come to his Fathers house and finished his course One that is taught of the Spirit can do all duties in a spirituall manner He can pray in the Spirit sing in the Spirit walk in the Spirit live after the Spirit warre after the Spirit rejoyce in the Spirit and subdue his sinnes by the strength of the Spirit His affections desires aims and intentions are heavenly You may see a spirituall man by his going by his talking by his eating and drinking by his company by his continuall course and progress in his life Watch him narrowly ☞ and you may see somewhat of the Spirit in his common carriage he doth not minde the world he lives as it were a stranger upon earth all his discourse is about his fathers business and of heavenly things He cares not so much what becomes of his body so his soul may prosper All his delight is with the excellent and with those that fear God He is often upon his knees confessing his sins and abhorring himself for his iniquities He is much with God and little with the world and if it stood with Gods good pleasure and the Churches good he could be absent from the body Phil. 1.23 24. that he may be present with the Lord. Self-deniall is the great lesson he is continually a conning sinne is his greatest burthen the world his purgatory Jesus Christ his only joy God his portion and heaven his rest Now I come to shew what are the extraordinary teachings of the Spirit that so we may know the one from the other 1. A man hath then an extraordinary teaching of the Spirit upon his heart when he is certain God will give him the same thing he asked of him in prayer in the very same kinde and manner he asked it of God when he is fully perswaded and verily believes that God will grant him the very same thing which he asked of him It is an extraordinary work of the Spirit upon the heart that must produce such a strong confidence in God that God will give him the very same thing he desires When a soul can say I know that God heareth me alwaies and will hear me in this thing and give me my hearts desire especially when there is no promise in the word made to that particular thing which he praies for As suppose thou hadst a friend sick and thou praiest for his recovery and hast such a strong confidence in God by the Spirit that thou undoubtedly believest that he shall recover such a confidence had Luther when he wrote to Myconius hearing that he was sick that without he should recover so he did according to Luthers prayer So had Elijah when he prayed for rain and Jesus Christ when he did his miracles 2. When a soul hath that Plerophory that full assurance of faith without all doubting then he hath an extraordinary teaching of the Spirit upon his heart When he can say with Job I know that my redeemer liveth Job 19.25 and though worms destroy my body yet I shall see him with these very eyes 2 Tim. 4.7 And with Paul I have fought the good fight of faith I have finished my course hence forth there is laid up for me a Crown of life c. When a soul can say by the full evidence of the Spirit upon his spirit without the least wavering or doubting I know that both in life and death Christ shall be unto me advantage When a soul can merrily and cheerfully rejoyce in the expectation of the glory of God Many precious Saints are without this full assurance till they come to die as that godly Martyr Mr Glover was who was full of fears and doubts till he came to the stake and then out of a sense of Jesus Christ he cries out He is come he is come That is Jesus Christ was come with his extraordinary comforts unto his soul the Spirit of God sealing unto him the pardon of his sinnes and the love of Jesus Christ unto his soul 3. When a soul hath such a spirit of zeal courage and magnanimity in the waies of God that though he were the Butt of the whole world and the laughing-stock of men and Angels for the cause of God and were persecuted on all sides yet he patiently can undergo it for the sake of Christ These are Saints of the first magnitude who have more than ordinary to other Saints flowings in of the Spirit upon their hearts Such were the Apostles Luther Ignatius Athanasius Gregory Nazianzen and the like Tempore Athanasii totus mundus gemuit sub Ario. The Martyr Antipas who is spoken of in the Revelation of St John Rev. 2.13 who dwelt where Satan had his seat and kept himself unspotted amongst that wicked and perverse generation and witnessed to the truth with the loss of his life had an extraordinary measure of the Spirit upon his heart 4. When men have an infallible Spirit so that whatsoever they say is truth and as it were an Oracle from God and when upon all emergencies they have Divine influences from the Spirit of grace then they have the extraordinary teachings of the Spirit When they have an infallible Spirit so only had the Apostles For they being universall messengers of Jesus Christ not tied to one particular place but to plant Churches in severall places and to pen one part of the Word of God which was to be a standing rule to the end of the world they were guided by the infallible Spirit of God so that they could not erre in things which belong to faith and piety Only the Apostles were infallible in their doctrine Popes and generall Councils may erre and have erred grosly from the faith Also when upon all exigencies they have the supplies of the Spirit of God then they have the extraordinary teachings of the Spirit so had the Apostles Luke 12.11 And when they bring you unto the Synagogues and unto Magistrates and Powers take ye no thought how or what thing ye shall answer or what ye shall
say For the holy Ghost shall teach you in the same hour what ye ought to say Whether the Saints in the Primitive times who suffered for the Gospel or the Martyrs in Queen Maries daies had not these influences of the Spirit upon their sad exigencies when they were brought before their cruell persecutors to answer for themselves is beyond all controversie Certainly silly men and women I mean in respect of any deep knowledge could never on a sudden express their mindes so excellently concerning the things of God had they not more than ordinary at such a time the teachings of the Spirit upon their hearts witness that woman of Exeter mentioned in the Book of Martyrs with many others The times wherein the Spirits teachings are most manifest 1. In times of affliction thou art most of all sensible of the teachings of the Spirit upon thy heart In themselves they manifest nothing to the soul but the displeasure of an angry Judge intending to destroy them but the Spirit concurring along with them and shewing us the minde and will of God they are precious cordials and purgations for the sinne of our souls If afflictions could make us hearken to the voice of God and savingly instruct us and teach us those things which concern our everlasting peace why do not many wicked wretches who live under the scourge of the Almighty all their daies who have one wave of affliction after another upon them learn obedience by the rod and understand the minde and intent of God Afflictions in themselves are neither good nor evil but accordingly as they are improved by us through the help of the Spirit according to the will of God Now although the Spirit hath written the things of God long before upon our hearts yet the manifestation of those things most of all is apparent to us when God doth instruct us by his rod together with his Spirit that those graces which for a long time were not discerned by us being pressed down by affliction may send forth a precious smell in the nostrils of our God and to the sense of others We learn by afflictions 1. To see those things which we never perceived to be in us before to wit the actings of divine grace in us supporting us and carrying us along chearfully through this valley of Baca and the actings of our spirit towards God again in way of filiall affection and son-like obedience under his hand being taught by the Spirit what the mind of God is concerning them As no man knoweth the vileness of his heart till God is pleased to let Satan have his liberty to tempt him and his own hearts lusts to draw him aside So none can know the prevailings of grace upon his own heart and the efficacy of divine teachings and the triall and experience of those things which are written upon his heart till God shall bring him under the fiery triall The Spirit hath taught us that all trust and confidence is to be reposed in God alone because God alone is able to deliver us and that we may thereby be quit and set free from all those distracting fears which do molest us Psal 37.5 Commit thy waies unto the Lord that thy thoughts may be established Now our confidence in God is then most of all exercised when all other props and staies do fail us and we cast our selves under the arms of Almighty God We know not our own strength against the temptations of sinne and Satan that we are fortified with the whole armour of God Ephes 6. to wit the shield of faith the helmet of hope the breast-plate of righteousness the sword of the Spirit the Spirit of prayer and supplication the inward support and aid of the Spirit of God and the continuall prayers of Jesus Christ interceding for us at the right hand of his Father that our graces fail not in the hour of tribulation till God shall smite us with his rod. By afflictions the teachings of the Spirit of God upon our hearts are most known to others Rev. 14.12 Here we may reade the patience of the Saints the sincerity of their hearts the power of divine grace and the sweetness of the comforts of the Spirit upon their hearts when we see them cheerfully willingly and joyfully submitting themselves to the good pleasure of God 2. By afflictions we are more and more acquainted with the evil nature of sinne which hath brought such afflictions upon us with the holiness of God which cannot away with sinne and sinners and with the exact justice of God against it in so severely punishing of it with the benefit that comes by seeking Gods face and by walking up to the light which God hath put within us 3. The Spirit of God is very active upon the hearts of believers at such a time in rooting out the remainders of originall corruption and in the exciting of those things which he hath put within them 2. Near the time of death Sweet have been the discoveries of Gods Spirit upon the hearts of his children when they have been near the time of their dissolution for these reasons 1. Because near such a time Satan and all our spirituall enemies will muster up all their assaults to weaken a believers faith hope and confidence in God especially when the believer hath been a hainous sinner formerly and after his conversion hath fallen into some gross sinne to the wounding of his own conscience and to the quenching of the blessed Spirit for a time though the sin is done away by the blood of Jesus Christ and the pardon of it sealed by the testimony of the Spirit yet the devil will be pudling in this old sore and perswading him to the contrary telling him that his conversion was never reall because since he hath fallen so foully in the flesh The devil tempted Christ when he was near the time of his suffering to drive him from his hope and confidence in God his Father Saith Christ The Prince of this world cometh and hath nothing in me Joh. 14.30 Christ was perfectly holy so that no temptation could take hold of him to overcome him ☞ or to taint him with the least sinne But we poor creatures when the devil comes to tempt us have something in us we have a great deal of unbelief abiding in us we have a body of sinne and of death and hereupon our bullwarks would easily fall our confidence in God would easily give place to unbelief were not the Spirit of God which is in us stronger than him who by way of eminency is in the world 1 Joh. 4.4 to wit the devil Now God on the other side fils a believer with continuall fresh and renewed supplies of his Spirit and with new experiences of his love unto him bringing unto his remembrance all former loving kindnesses past between God and his soul what a great work was wrought upon him in the work of conversion what various dispensations of
Gods providence he hath undergone and all to the benefit of his precious soul what heavenly Soliloquies have been between God and his soul in private Prayer and heavenly Meditations what reiterated conquests he hath had over his domineering lusts and what spiritual wisdome to discern the sleights of the Devil How often he hath had the witness of the spirit upon his heart though for a season the spirit hath withdrawn its testimony What groans and sighs and daily complaints under the sense of the burden of his sins What change hath been wrought upon him considering his vain conversation while he was in the flesh what experimental truths both Theoretical and Practical for the establishment of his soul in grace have been imparted unto him and what future hopes of glory he hath enkindled in his brest by the operation of the spirit that so his faith and hope might be in God alone at the hour of death 2. To express those fears which are within us arising from that original corruption and from that unbelief which is in the best of Gods servants which do most of all shew themselves at such a time A believers fears are commonly more then his hopes when the hopes of a wicked man and of a presumptuous sinner overcome all his fears Fear it is a distracting passion filling the minde with a multitude of trembling amazing astonishing tumultuating perplexing thoughts that a true childe of God many times is in great doubts when he comes to dye but yet the spirit of God will bring in at such a time such sweet experiences of Gods love to his soul of what God hath done for him that though he may not have the full assurance of faith which is without any doubting at all yet he shall have sufficient motives and encouragements to keep him as from sinking and despair and upon firme grounds to repose himself in God for salvation upon the account of Jesus Christ Perfect love casteth out all slavish fear and when once the soul is well grounded in this principle that God loved him in Christ before the foundation of the world of which love he hath had some foretasts thereof by the earnest of his spirit in his heart there is no ground left for despair but for a firme belief that God is his and he is Gods God keepeth his strongest arguments to oppose the greatest conflicts Now I come to answer those doubts which arise from the Spirits teachings on the hearts of Believers 1. Quest How may we distinguish between the teachings of the spirit and that common Illumination spoken of in in the sixth of the Hebrews 4. verse which persons being so enlightned may fall away finally to the perdition of their immortal souls 1. Common illumination never descends to particulars but remaines onely in generals A carnal man may know what faith is what repentance is what humiliation is what self-denial is what sincerity is what new obedience is He may know all those things in a general way but he can never come to particulars by way of propriety unto himself He cannot say I believe I repent I am truely humbled for my sins I have learned the lesson of self-denial I am sincere I am obedient to the will of God but the light of the spirit within makes a Christian to say experimentally feelingly out of that abundance of comfort which he hath by reason of the experience of those things upon his soul that Christ is mine and I am his I have given glory to God by believing I have worked the works of God I have had the spirit of God leading me into the Land of uprightness Rom. 4.20 I have that heavenly fire of love enkindled in my brest by the divine sparks of light from heaven Psal 143.10 which will burn for ever still ascending to be united unto God in heaven The valley of Baca is turned into a valley of vision though not the immediate fruition The teachings of the spirit do make a Christian go to particulars because what the spirit teacheth if it be a habit or a qualification connatural to the soul as spiritual the spirit worketh the same quality in it The spirit teacheth us to believe and the spirit worketh faith in us for faith it is the gift of God 2. Common Illumination produceth but a common faith which is rather presumption then true faith a common love which is rather lukwarmness then the ardent love which is a fruit of the spirit a common joy which is rather like a flash of lightning then that Meridian joy of the Saints of Jesus Christ a common humiliation which is rather an Ahabs humiliation a legal conviction upon the soul by the terror of the Law then any true genuine sorrow for the displeasure done to God by their sins a common hope which is rather self conceitedness and vain confidence then that lively hope which purifies the soul a common well-wishing to leave their sins then a setled determinate resolution to forsake them and to turn to the Lord God with all their hearts As a mans knowledge is so is his faith so is his love so is his obedience Now this knowledge which ariseth from common illumination it never savingly works upon the heart to an hearty obedience of the things known it is never joyned with true Grace but that knowledge which comes from the teachings of the spirit works a true faith in the soul and is ever accompained with all the saving effects of the blessed spirit The Apostle joyns Grace and Knowledge both together Grow in Grace and in the Knowledge of Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 3.18 For where there is a sanctified knowledge there is true and saving Grace 3. Common Illumination never makes a man serious in the service of God to serve him constantly let his condition be what it will but as his joys and his outward comforts are so are his services unto God as when the Mood the Fit takes them then they will seem Religious like the Lunaticks which are mad only at the full of the Moon when any profit or honour or any advantage goeth along with the serving of God or when nothing is offered which may displease their carnal minds then who but they in an outward profession for the serving of God but the teachings of the spirit make a Christian resolute in the ways of God like Noah that his whole life shall be nothing else but a continual walking with his God A true Christian let his outward state and condition be what it will yet he will be sure not to forget his God his Maker his Preserver his All in All in whom are all things and in whom he enjoyes all things but like Zachary and Elizabeth as far as he can he will walk in all the commandements of the Lord blamelesly 4. Common Illumination it breeds not the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit whereby a man upon good and solid grounds may truely believe that he
last day in glory power and majesty we shall stand in need of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper for the confirmation of our faith and to remember the death and sufferings of our blessed Saviour till he shall come to judgement Prayer also is a standing duty required of all Christians while they are on this side heaven that thereby their faith and hope in God might be exercised We are commanded to pray continually that is to let no time wherein this duty is required of us 1 Thess 5. 4. Because a Believer stands in need of continual food and nourishment that the tent of the word and the Bread and Wine Sacramentally so understood should be continually put in his mouth whilst he is under age in respect of that perfection and ripeness he shall attain unto when this mortal life shall be swallowed up in glory that his soul might be nourish'd up unto everlasting life Likewise here bebelow we stand in need of many things strength of grace to overcome sin patience under adversity the arm of God to support us under all our weaknesses heavenly comforts daily supplies of the spirit of grace renewed arts of Divine assistance continually bread for our bodies food for our souls therefore we ought to make our requests by prayer unto God daily for all temporal and spiritual blessings Obj. When we have the greater light what need have we of the lesser when we have the Sun-light what need have we of the Star-light when we have the light of the spirit what need have we of the light of the word when we have that which supplieth all our wants what need we pray what need have we of the Sacraments the spirit can supply all our wants without the use of the means 4. In respect of our selves the light of the spirit is to be preferred before the light of the word but seeing that the light of the word is subordinate to the light of the spirit and that the light of the word and the light of the spirit do not differ in respect of the subject matter but onely in respect of manifestation and the spirit enlightens in and by the word therefore the light of the spirit doth not take away the use of the light of the word besides the comparison doth not hold because the collation between the light of the Sun and Stars and the light of the word and of the spirit halts and is imperfect The spirit enlightens our minds in and by the word but the Sun shines of its self and not in and by the Stars The spirit likewise though it can supply all our wants without the use of means yet it never ordinarily doth without the use of the means God gives his spirit onely to those that pray for it and when we have the spirit we are still to desire God that his spirit may exert his power upon us and act in us and by us that we may not onely have the spirit but feel the operations of the spirit upon our hearts God knows what we want before we pray and can give us them without our asking but God will have us pray that thereby we might acknowledge his power his goodness his mercy and the like and that thereby our faith and patience might be made manifest If upon the account of the indwelling of the spirit in the hearts of the godly they should forbear to pray I would know of those who say so why the Spirit of God is termed the spirit of prayer and supplication as in the prophecy of Zachariah Zech. 12.10 but onely because it stirs up in us good desires and holy affections and puts words into our mouths acceptable words whereby our petitions may be accepted of God Let them likewise answer the portion of Scripture if they can in the sixth of the Ephesians 18. Praying alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the spirit and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all Saints 5. If we should onely hearken to the voice of the spirit and to the spirits teachings in our hearts there would be no certainty of the true Religion when there can be no Character given by which the spirit of Christ might be distinguished from our owne proper spirit as from the spirit the divel which sometimes transforms himself into an Angel of light That is the pretences of a mans own spirit or of the divel in the hearts of others may seem so true and real to a man himself as if they were doctrines taught by the blessed Spirit Now how should we try the spirits whether they be of God or no but by the word of God Obj. It is a true signe of Divine instinct when of that which we believe or do we are perswaded of and rooted in without any ambiguity or doubting Ans This is a false sign for the Turks and Infidels are as much obstinated and setled in their own doctrines Traditions yea more setled then most of those Christians who pretend so much to the spirit Q. But some may say though we grant you that the teachings of the spirit do not in themselves make us to be above the Ordinances of God and the meanes of Grace yet may we not then when we come to be perfect Christians high-grown Saints and have lived under the teachings of the Spirit along while may we not then cast off the use of the Word the Sacraments and Prayer and only depend upon the Spirit for his supply I answer No. 1. Because the best grown Christians in this life are not above the teachings of the word but ought to minde the light of the Word as well as the light of the Spirit Rom. 1.14 I am debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians both to the wise and to the unwise Heb. 5.14 But strong meat belongeth to them that are of age Strong meat the Word and Sacraments which through long custom have their wils exercised to discern both good and evil 1 John 2.13 I write unto you fathers because ye have known him that is from the beginning c. 1 Pet. 1.1 The Apostle Peter writes to the elect ones and to those who are born again as appears by the fourteenth verse of the same Chapter 1 Cor. 10.15 I speak as unto them which have understanding Phil. 3.15 Let us therefore as many as be perfect be thus minded 1 Cor. 11.26 Eph. 4.12 13. He gave some Apostles some Prophets c. Till we all meet together in the unity of the faith and the acknowledgement of the Son of God unto a perfect man and unto the measure of the fulness of the stature of Christ which fulness shall not be till after this life as appears by that place 1 Cor. 13.9 10.11 For we know in part and we prophesie in part but when that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shall be abolished 2. Because the highest grown Christians in this life are
of the Son of God and art thereby become guilty of the death of Jesus Christ and of thy own eternal condemnation Walk up to this precious light seek not to put out the candle of the Gospel lest God in wrath for thy idleness thy unprofitableness thy stubbornness come and put it out himself But walk in the light as long as thou hast the light repent of thy sins repent from thy sins leave thy sins which have crucified Christ which have been nails and spears in thy Saviours side and as thou art willing to be saved by him so likewise be thou governed by him that Christ might be thy Lord as well as thy Saviour lest otherwise by the hardness and impenitency of thy heart thou treasurest up to thy self wrath against the day of wrath and the righteous revelation of the judgement of God by despising the riches of Gods Grace revealed unto thee in the Gospel of his Son R m 1.2 3 4. 5. To the light of the conviction of Gods spirit walk up to the light of the spirit convincing thee of thy sins The spirits conviction is the spirits setting home upon the conscience some sin by undeniable arguments A description of the spirits conviction and by an evident demonstration derived from the Word of God whereby the sinner may know that he is guilty of the same sin together with some dreadful place of Scripture holding forth the terrible judgement of God upon those who commit such a sin that thereby he might be drawn to a loathing and to a forsaking of it Sad is their condition who have such a conviction upon their hearts and do not comply with the conviction for the forsaking of their sins That think by merry company by worldly employments by long continuance to shake off this conviction from their spirits Better had it been for thee that thou hadst never been born then that thou shouldst live all thy days in the commission of any known sin or in the omission of any known duty that spirit convincing thee of thy sins Motives against this sin 1. Motives to close with the spirits conviction That in not complying with the spirits conviction thou opposest the spirit in its first werk tending to thy conversion upon thy soul The spirit convinceth before it converteth the spirit of bondage must go before the spirit of adoption The thundering and terrible voice of the Law before the sweet and the still voice of the Gospel the Arrows of the Almighty within thee make way for the sweet oyle of consolation in resisting the spirits interest in this work thou opposest thy own salvation 2. In opposing the light of the spirit by way of conviction upon thy soul thou wilt bring by little and little such a brawniness upon thy conscience such a hardness upon thy heart such a deadness upon thy affections such a customariness in sinning such an indisposition and averseness upon thy soul to any good thing that the meats of grace which should have been for the food of thy soul shall b●thy poyson every Ordinance unprofitable and thou shalt be a burden to the earth an abominable creature in the eyes of God the spirits quench-coal an utter enemy to all goodness and when thou comest to dye Magormishabib a terror and an astonishment unto thy self another Francis Spira another Judas another Saul when thou comest to lye upon thy death deb 3. This not walking up to the light of conviction will be an unconceiveable torment and vexation of spirit unto thee in the flames of hell fire When thou shalt have nothing to do else but to consider how foolishly how vainly thou didst spend this transitoty life in fulfilling the lusts of the flesh and besides which will be the greatest misery when thou shalt with anguish of spirit and with gnashing of teeth consider that if thou hadst closed with such a spiritual truth committed unto thee in a Sermon perhaps the Minister beseeching thee inviteing exhorting thee perswading thee with tears in his eyes to leave thy beloved sins and to embrace Jesus Christ under the penalty of eternal condemnation and hadst complyed with the conviction of the spirit at such a time upon thy heart thou hadst escaped this place of torment All convictions impressions motions of the spirit which the damned souls have had in this life all powerful Sermons all opportunity for the advantages of their souls all good counsels exhortations beseechings of friends relations acquaintance all that progress which they have made in Christianity and that if they had gone but one step farther they might have obtained heaven if they had not loved this present world too much and with the young man in the Gospel loved their possessions above Christ they might have been while now they are in extream misery and when above all this the consideration of the spirits conviction how that they were convinced in their own consciences by the act of the spirit setting home this sin I say when all these means of grace advantage and precious opportunityes with superadded convictions shall be upon their spirits as then they shall be in a most eminent matter their affections being quickened and raised to the full vigor of them God is the immediate inflicter of the souls punishment in hell their memories strengthened their understandings enlarged and all their vain hopes and confidence ruined to their exceeding grief and misery they will weigh heavier then the sand of the Sea and did not infinite power support them under this unconceiveable torment as well as infinite justice inflict this torment by way of vengeance and in full fury upon them the damned spirits could not subsist one moment What language do you think you should hear supposing you were at hells gate Such as this O wretch that I am what a foolish silly wretch was I that I did neglect so great salvation that I did shift off the spirit striving and pleading with me from time to time convincing me of my sins saying to morrow and next day I will begin a new lesson I will redeem the time I will bethink me of eternity but this morrow never yet came till now it is too late time being swallowed up in this Ocean of eternity O what a sluggard was I to shift off the blessed spirit with such fond foolish and frivolous excuses to make every thing an objection and a doubt to keep me off from an obedience to the truth What a mad fellow was I to create fears where no fear was and to think that Gods wayes were full of bitterness and that pleasure of sin exceeding sweet to make offence and stumble at a crucified Christ to believe the divel to hearken to flesh and blood and to follow the course of this present evil world O that I had those opportunities and those precious means for the good of my soul again afforded me how would I live How would I walk up to that light which God hath