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A74688 Vox Dei & hominis. God's call from heaven ecchoed [sic] by mans answer from earth. Or a survey of effectual calling. In the [brace] explication of its nature. Distribution of it into its parts. Illustration of it by its properties. Confirmation of it by reasons. Application of it by uses. Being the substance of several sermons delivered to the people of Heveningham, in Suffolk. / By J. Votier, minister of the gospel.; Vox Dei et hominis Votier, J. (James), b. 1622. 1658 (1658) Wing V709; Thomason E1756_1; ESTC R209691 204,151 359

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the housholders hiring of labourers into his vineyard some Matth. 20. were called at the ninth others at the tenth and eleventh now had they died in the fourth fifth sixth c. hour of the day what had become of them then and so the theefe Luke 23. 42 43. upon the crosse that was converted had he suffred or been cut off before where had been his repentance it is true Gods determination cannot be frustrated but his decree fixeth as the end so the means and amongst means time as well as other things are the object of his purpose many had they died had never lived to grace many live that they may not die for sin many get up from the bed of sicknesse that they may attain the health of their souls many are delivered from the brinck of the grave that they may be brought into the bosome of God many sicknesses would prove mortal to the body but that God intends to be merciful to the soul the Lord delivers from going downward to the earth because he intends to draw them upwards to heaven and bids death to hold his hand because he hath purposed to have the heart He saith return ye children of men that Psal 90. 3. ye may be renewed as the children of God He many times spares the life that he may save the soul and gives more years that he may give more grace he preserves from drowning by water from burning by fire from distruction by a fall from death by a blow that he may principle them with piety furnish them with faith restore them by repentance grant them all grace and crown them with glory Reader if thou beest a Saint thy experience can bear witnesse to these words had not the Lord caused thy sun to stand still in the firmament and kept it from going down at noon hadst not thou gone down unto the pit and been swallowed up of hell and been as those that had been dead and damned long ago hadst thou died of thy dropsie been consumed with thy cough been fired with thy feaver hadst thou been mar'd with thy maim hadst thou sunk under thy sicknesse perished by the pox and fallen under the fury of any of thy distempers and casualties which thou hadst and didst meet with before thy conversion what dost thou think had been thy conclusion If thy disease had destroyed thee in thy natural condition shouldst ever have attained to a spiritual constitution hadst died a sinner on earth thou couldst never have been a Saint in heaven but the time of thy change was not then but since and God in mercy added to thy years that he might add thee to his Church Thou mayest take up the Psalmists words with a Psal 124. 1 2 3. little alteration If it had not been the Lord who was on my side when sicknesse and dangers rose up against me they had swallowed me up quick and left me as the object of deserved wrath but blessed be the Lord who hath not given me as a prey to their teeth blessed be the Lord that hath let me live to the day of grace the month of mercy the year of Jubilee that mine eyes might see the salvation Luke 2. 30. of the Lord. The Lord lengthned Simeon's time that he might see Christ in the flesh and thine that thou mightest see him in the spirit As for you that are not Saints who though you can say these things are so notionly yet not experimentally I pray that your particular experience may plainly prove and make it good that your life may be prolonged your days prorogued and the thred thereof be spun out and that the event may declare the end and the issue demonstrate the intention of the Lord to be the changing of your heart the altering of your nature and the sanctifying of you throughout in soul and body 6. By giving good acquaintance First the S. 7 Lord acquainteth with his people and by this means with himself an associate sometimes proves a guide to good they light by providence upon the knowledge of some good man or woman and by some means or other come to have society and intimacy with them Amicus animae custos dicitur who by their gracious words cordial counsels loving admonitions gentle reproofs win upon them and allure their hearts to God conversing Amicus vitae medicamentum is sometimes a means of converting He that walketh with wise men shall be wise Prov. 13. 20. A friend for the body may prove a favour to the soul civil acquaintance may be of spiritual advantage and from communion with Saints some come to have communion with the sanctifier How sweetly did the Lord bring about the acquaintance of Ruth and Naomi c. first the Lord sends a famine among the people but it proved a feast of fat things to Ruth then by that means drives Elimelech Naomi and their two sons into the land of Moab of those that were strangers to God these two sons marry there the wife of one of them is Ruth thus she comes acquainted with that family the men die only the mother and daughters in law survive that still here is religious acquaintance which was blessed to her Naomi was Naomi to her Ruth 1. that is beautiful comely or greatly moving as the word signifieth and so far wrought with Ruth that she would be of the religion of her mother in law and liked the God and People of Israel better than those of her own Ruth 1. ●6 Country Sometimes a chamber-fellow an intimate a neighbour a companion one whom Bonus sic malo connectitur ut aut pares redditur aut cito ab invicem separentur we journey or work or often have occasion to meet with that is godly may be a means of our good as bad companions are very pestiferous so good ones are very profitable graceless acquaintance draw others with themselves to hell and gracious acquaintance help to draw others with themselves to heaven good company may be a means of life and bad of death a good man studieth for the good of those he converseth with he prays Psal 119. 36. for their peace sorrows for their sins labours for their life cares for their cure perswades them to piety and seeks their eternal salvation Had not the Lord given thee such a friend he had never given thee so much faith had he not brought thee into such a mans society he had never brought thee into his own Sanctuary The goodnesse of thy company helped forward the goodnesse of thy conscience godly neighbours are accounted a grievous burden when they should rather be accepted as a great blessing they are looked upon as foes for speaking the truth when they should be loved as friends for touching the quick They are the best and onely company what ever the world thinks of them who are unworthy of them they are not the troublers of Israel but seek peace as
spread throughout the whole Man Soul and Body inwards and outwards It is the bringing them out of nature from a Dungeon to a Court from Egypt to Canaan from sin to Sanctity from gracelessenesse to graciousness from the Suburbs of Hell to the City of God The Soul is now led by the Spirits hand from self from natural sinful moral Religious self to Christ who is all in all unto it Now obeying the call of the Spirit who leads it in clean wayes it walkes strictly before the Soul was in the Field of sin now in the Garden of grace before in the common Road of ungodlinesse now in the private walk of Piety before it was Lawlesse now it walks by Rule and Line And what is the end of all this Is it not Peace here and Peace hereafter Blessedness Ps 119. 1. in possession blessedness in reversion Happiness and Holiness are Confederates are Twins But more than this it tends to Gods glory Doth not Paul Doxologize praise give thanks for this Col. 1. 12. Gods glory is the great Matth. 5. 16. high end of grace and blessed God who hast happily Married these things and art pleased that thy glory should stand in conjunction with the good of goodlesse Creatures Thus have I descanted upon this blessed Work an Embleme whereof in a good measure you have in the Parable of the prodigal Son CHAP. IV. III. The parts of this calling And they are two 1. Tendring Or 1. Reaching out 2. Taking Or 2. Receiving in 1. THere is a tender or offer of Christ and S. 1 grace God lifts up his Son upon the pole of the Gospel Isai 55. 1. Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the Waters and he that hath no Money come come ye buy and eat Christ comes and woos and invite's to himself John 1. 11. He came unto his own and his own received him not When he was on Earth he made as gracious Offers as could be John 7. 37. Jesus stood and cryed because he would have all hear and what was the matter why even this If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink Would it not melt a stony heart to take notice of such an Invitation Neither is Christ silent since he went to Heaven Revel 22. 17. And let him that is a thirst come and whosoever will let him take the Water of life freely These Words were spoken to John by Christ since he left Earth Is not this able to dissolve a Rock Doth Pro v. 9. 3 not Wisedom dayly send forth her Maidens to call in Souls God comes to Souls with Christ grace Holiness a new heart and saith what doest want what wouldest thou have doest blush at the thoughts of thy condition I have that will fit thee there is nothing can help thee but Christ and grace here they are I pray thee take them Here is all in my Son accept of him and say not nay to embrace my Offer is my desire your duty it will much please me and pleasure you to take my tender how many Motives in Scripture doth God use to force this his precious kindnesse upon us Is not the Gospel for this very end to invite call allure yet the Preaching of the Law is Ames 1. lib. Med. 26. c. 12. 12. Thes Rom. 7. 7. useful thereunto and ordinarily precedes and goes before that so people seeing the worst of themselves may the better apprehend the worth of Christ and knowing their own poverty may the better know the price of Christ that understanding the nature of sin they may be brought out of conceit with themselves and be willing to be made gracious then doth the white of grace most appear when the black of sin is set by it and the excellency and need of goodnesse when we see the danger of our own badnesse a sence of distresse put 's on to fighing for deliverance and what Saints experience almost tells them not that conviction is Mid-wife to conversion 2. There is taking or receiving The former S. 2 was Gods Act this latter is the Soules Conversio ad bonum non homini sed Deo adscribenda Aust Ep. Phil. 2. 13. Bov. 1. 24. yet not so the Soules but that it is beholding to God for it It hath not such propriety in it but that it depends upon Gods efficiency It is he that worketh in us both to will and to do of his good pleasure God hath reached out his hands in offering and now the Soul reacheth out it's hands to accept The Soul now giveth consent and no longer saith nay now Christ and the Soul are made one and of his fulnesse doth it receive John 1. 16. grace for grace Now it drinks an hearty draught of the Waters of Life now it opens the door of it's heart and let 's in Christ and grace who have stood knocking there a great while and bids them welcome with a kisse of hearty and sincere Love John 1. 12. As many as received him Now the Soul receiveth Christ now the womb of it's heart is not capacious enough to receive now it 's stomack is come down and fall's to feed heartily upon Spiritual viands the bread of life John 6. 56. He that eateth my Flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him Now it admires the gracious condescensions of the Lord and blames it self for being stubborn so long Now it is willing to open it's mouth wide yea that it's heart be opened that it may be Psa 81. 10. filled with good things It hearkeneth inwardly as well as outwardly The Lord hath opened it's ear and it is not rebellious now it yeelds stoopes submits to and closeth with God in his grace it answeres Gods call and saith Lord thy Face will I seek Ps 27. 8. and subscribes for God Isai 44. 5. CHAP. V. IV. What is done in this effectual calling or what parts are wrought upon THe whole Man is altered but principally these two Cardinal parts or faculties which are as King and Queen to the rest 1. The wit Or 1. The Head 2. The will Or 2. The Heart 1. The Head is changed before it was an S. 1 Head of Brasse now an Head of Gold before it was night now it is day with it now the bright morning Star appeareth in the Horizon Revel 2. 28. of the Soul The ruddy morning is come and the Sun putteth forth his head Ephes 5. 8. Ye were sometimes darknesse but now are ye Light in the Lord. So dark is the Soul while in the Womb of nature that it is darknesse it self in the abstract a greater darknesse than that which God sent as a sore Judgement upon the Egyptians for that was felt but sinful Souls Exod. 10. 21. feel not nor perceive this darknesse Ephes 4. 18. Their understanding is darkned and there is ignorance and blindnesse in them but now God makes a Window in the Soul and let 's in enlightening beames
a loud voice As our Saviour saith in another case this kind goeth not out but by fasting and prayer Matth. 17. 21. the like may we say of sins riveted by custome and time they may be loosed but with much a do the Ice of a months freezing may be broken as well as the Ice of a nights freezing though with more knocks Many shifts and evasions do people find for themselves by continuance of time whereby they keep sin in and grace out by use sin groweth strong sense of sin weak and their hearts little affected with the word being like the people that dwell by the water falls of Nilus who regard not the great noise thereof whereas it is troublesome to strangers so they being accustomed to the sound of the word little regard it 3. Necessity of service Therefore doth S. 5 God use to convert mostly in the spring for all that are sanctified in conversion are to serve him in their conversation Those that are called are called not to loyter but to labour not to be truantly but trusty not to play in the open field of the world but to ply his work in the walled vineyard of his Church not to sit with folded hands in our bosomes but to run the way of his commandments Much there is for a Christian to do for God for himself for his relations for his neighbours for Gods praise for his own and others peace for the illustration of Gods glory for the salvation of his own and others Ars longa vita brevis souls and the time of people upon earth at longest is but short at most is but little and if they begin not betimes what can they do a long journey from earth to heaven we had need take the morning and set out by Sun a great deal of business to do and it must be done in the day of this life we had need then be stirring very early the good housholder which may well be an emblem of Gods calling sinners is said to go out early in the morning to hire labourers into his vineyard Matth. 20. 1. As the whole man so the whole time doth the Lord require as our spirits soul and body so our youth middle and old age death often comes sooner than old age and if nothing be done before nothing can be done after Much work and many works hath a Christian to do There is the fostering of faith the renewing repentance subduing of sin conquering corruption guarding his grace fearing his falling watching his walking studying the Scriptures perusing the promises conversing with converts admonishing acquaintance defying the Divel growing in grace and in all glorifying his God and as the Apostle saith in another case 2 Cor. 2. 16. Who is sufficient for these things so may we in this What time is sufficient for these things Besides in youth there is bodily strength for the task of duties for the body as well as the soul is to be and do for God and spiritual services take a tincture from the bodies temper Though the spirit be willing yet the lesse will be done if the flesh be weak fervent prayer frequent meditation of God his works his word of it self its ways its wants solemn fastings whether publike or private much reading often hearing self examining for which and many more is requisite the vigor of the souls powers the vivasity Meus sanein corpore sano of the bodies parts which in age do age lurk and languish grow feeble and faint the former whereof are evacuated in regard of spirits the latter enervated in regard of strength CHAP. XI X. The means whereby the Lord doth effectually call IN the next place we are to speak of those ways and means which the Lord maketh use of for the calling home wandring creatures lost sheep to himself and they are either of a lower or of an higher form Of the lower form 1. Works Of the lower form 2. Word Of the higher form The Spirit 1. By works The Lord many times makes common works and ordinary providences S. 1 to be especial instruments of grace All things are in Gods hands and those things that are of an inferiour nature can he so blesse and dispose that thereby they shall be suited for the attaining of highest ends Now those providences which the Lord hath used this way and countenanceth in reference to this work are these seven following which carry Scripture authority at their backs 1. By providing yoke-fellows the Lord S. 2 makes temporal marriages sometimes means of spiritual and in this regard it may be well said that matches are made in heaven when for heaven marrying proves to many a making to all eternity sometimes a man when he hath prevailed with a woman afterwards woes and wins her for Christ and many a woman that takes her husband much with her person takes him more with her piety How doth the wisedom and goodnesse of God much appear in this he brings those together that were most unthought of most unlikely he bringeth those together that were farthest distant from each other thus he makes grace out of nature as it were and a spiritual union to grow upon a fleshly conjunction by means of making one flesh he sometimes makes one spirit and doth not the Apostle use this as a reason why he would have the Corinthians not to leave but to shew love to their unbelieving yoke-fellows For what knowest thou O wife whether thou shalt save thy husband or how knowest thou O man whether thou shalt save thy wife 1 Cor. 7. 16. And doth not Peter counsel wives to be in subjection to their own husbands and to what end is it Why That if any obey not the word they also may without the word be wonne by the conversation of the wives 1 Pet. 3. 1. Many an one may say to their yoke fellows in some sort as David 1 Sam. 25. 32 c. to Abigail Blessed be the Lord God of Israel which gave me such an Husband such a Wife and blessed be thy advice my dear heart and blessed be thou which hast told me of my sin admonished me of my State and so hast kept me from Iniquity for in very deed had it not been for thee under the Lord I had perished in my transgressions though there may be carnal love and a peaceable life between yoke-fellows yet no well-bottomed affection if there be not mutual care for each others Eternal welfare They should seek by exhortation and conversation by counsels and commerce by prayer by pattern to bring each other into the bosome of Christ within the bounds of the Covenant The Apostle condemnes and blames the weaknesse of the Galatians That having begun in the Spirit sought to be made perfect by the Flesh We may congratulate and blesse the Gal. 3. 3. wisedom of God that causeth that which is begun in the Flesh to end in the Spirit Sometime a good Husband makes a good Wife and
a great harvest of Saints Heaven is the desire of many when hell is their desert most desire the Saints paradise when but few care for the Saints piety many who prosecute their sinful lusts will yet earnestly petition for eternal life and would fain be triumphant that care not for being militant he is no right souldier that would wear the crown but is loth to fight to win the field desires of heaven are Non impetrat a deo bonum quod poscit qui ejus legi non obedit in vain unless there be duty on earth He that loatheth grace may yet long for glory yet such desires pass for current coyn with the unskilful multitude and having such desires they think that all is well with them 6. To take delight in and to be taken with the S. 21 preaching of the word is not grace there are that love preaching and yet care not for practice there are those who never were effectually called that yet may account a Minister in his work as one that sings a pleasant song they are content to hear the word of Ezek. 33 32. God but care not for the work of grace the word may please their fancy and yet not prevail with them for faith they may delight to hear the sound and never desire to understand the sense they may countenance the minister Quaerit anima verbum eui consentiat ad correctionem Mark 6. 20. and not consent to his message Such an one was Herod who feared John Baptist and observed him and when he heard him he did many things and heard him gladly and yet lived in his sins He heard the word but he did not hold it Many are taken with the parts and gifts of a Minister and it is that string that sounds sweetliest in their ear they may hear to fill their table-books and never fill the tables of their heart they may love to walk in the dew and soft showres of heavenly doctrine and yet provide that it shall not wet them to the skin one may delight to wait upon the best means and yet continue in their bad manners to be taken with the word and not taken by the word is not true conversion the word may sound sweetly aloft in the ear and never settle savingly below in the heart it may be musick to your sense and not meat to your soul 7. One may desire the prayers of God's S. 22 people and yet not be a Saint the prayers of the godly may be craved and yet their profession may be carped at Wicked men may beg their requests for the renewing of trouble but not for the removing of their temper they may desire an interest in their supplications and yet never imitate them in their sanctification Wretched Pharaoh desired righteous Moses to pray for him Intreat the Lord that there be no more mighty thundrings c. Exod. 9. 28. Moses was a great man in his books I 'le warrant and yet he was glad to make use of Moses beads Open enemies to godliness may yet be willing to have the help of the godly there needs no grace to make one desirous to have the Saints pass Thus it was with Simon Magus also who desired Peter c. to pray to the Lord for him that none of those things which they had spoken might come upon him Acts 8. 24. Those may crave the prayers of others that never had grace to pray for themselves others prayers and to desire the benefit of them is good but it is not grace 8. Nay even a wicked man may so far S. 23 deny himself as to justifie God in his punishing dispensations one may confess God's justice and yet continue in an unjust estate the heart that hath no grace may accuse it self and excuse the Almighty may lay the blame at its own door and vindicate the Lord's dealings Impunitum non debet esse peccatum and acknowledge its sufferings just because it hath been a sinner and yet never accept of the Spirit 's motions and calls to grace And thus did wicked Pharaoh even acknowledge that punishment did not come till it was sent for The Lord is righteous and I Exod. 9. 27. and my people are wicked Now doth he as it were lie at God's foot who yet had an heart that would flie in God's face one may say they have deserved all that is come upon them and yet never sincerely desire the spirit of grace to come unto them one may say they are wicked in their ways worthy of wrath and yet never open to the Lord nor obey his laws many do thus stoop when they are in the snare and fetters who never knew what it was to be swayed by the soveraignty of grace 9. Yet further may a wicked man go There S. 24 may be an outward solemn mourning and yet no inward saving melting the eyes may open their flood-gates and yet the heart not weep carnation-tears one may afflict themselves on fast days and yet not affect a fast from sin Ahab had not true grace and yet 1 Kings 21. 29. he could grant thus much such was his humiliation that the eye of heaven took notice of it one may lie in sackcloth and yet have sin lodge in the heart there may be a bowing down the head and yet no breaking of the Quando sic poenites ut tibi amarum sapiat in animâ quod ante dulce fuit in vitâ jam tum bene ingemiscis ad Deum heart the outward man may be afflicted for sin and yet the inward stand affected to sin there may be solemnity in mourning and yet no sanctity in the mind one may spend themselves with fasting praying and weeping and not speed the work of grace in their souls the body may be brought down by such means and the soul not benefited nor builded up there may be an heavy countenance and yet no heavenly compliance 10. In the next place there may be a promising S. 25 of amendment and yet grace may never ripen in the heart there may be heat and sap enough to bring forth blossomes but no fruit Thus did Pharaoh and I will let you Exod. 9. 28. go and ye shall stay no longer Here were good words but no good works saying and doing are two things There is a fair tree that hath Natural Histor L. Veruulam double blossomes but bringeth forth no fruit many are free to promise but fast when they come to pay they are trees full of leaves but no apples they will say what God would have and yet do as themselves list like the son in the Gospel that said I go Sir but went Matth. 21 31. not They are very forward for subscription but as backward when it comes to action one may be a Christian in tongue and not in truth 11. There may be amendment in some S. 26 things and yet no grace There may be a partial and yet no perfect
Vox Dei hominis GOD'S CALL FROM HEAVEN ECCHOED By Mans answer from Earth Or A Survey of EFFECTUAL CALLING In the Explication of its nature Distribution of it into its parts Illustration of it by its properties Confirmation of it by reasons Application of it by Vses Being the substance of several Sermons delivered to the people of Heveningham in Suffolk By J. Votier Minister of the Gospel When thou saidst Seek yea my face my heart said unto thee thy face Lord will I seek Psal 27. 8. LONDON Printed by T. C. for Nathanael Webb and William Grantham at the Bear in Paul's Church-yard neer the little North door of Pauls 1658. To his beloved people the inhabitants of Heveningham Suff. Christian Friends THese Sermons coming abroad into the world I thought meet to command them to visit and salute you where they first drew their breath They have formerly been preached to your ears they are now presented to your eyes the Lord print them upon your hearts I take it to be my duty though I be the lowermost of the ushers in Christ's School yet according to the measure of my talent to try all conclusions for the weal of your souls and how would mine heart be enlarged with thanks to the Lord if my poor endeavours might be crowned with succes and though these things have been communicated to you formerly yet because we are slow to receive and retain divine truths to write the same things that I have spoken to me shall not be grievous and to you I hope the Lord will make it safe Nay though my service for your souls in any kind were doubled yea treble yet should I abundantly rejoyce in the labour of the hardest tasks if thereby through the assistance of the Almighty I might see Satans forts taken and forces routed and sin marching out of your hearts and lives with bag and baggage and the Lord Jesus with the blessed train of his spirit's graces enthroned and set up in the midst of you To which end Iearnestly desire that the Lord would be pleased to bless this all my other labours that you would be pleased to accept of my counsel as in the Book so in this Epistle And that 1. More generally 2. More particularly with respect to the ensuing Treatise 1. More generally 1. Take heed of error and heresie They are reckoned in Scripture amongst the works of the flesh They are the secret underminers of that which is good notwithstanding their well-complexioned face 2. Get knowledge Ignorance is the root of iniquity In times of light to live in darkness is most sad 3. Do not imprison but improve your knowledge To him that knoweth to do good and doth it not to him it is sin with a witness Jam. 4. 17. Knowledge without grace is but like a jewel in a swines snout or a pearl in a toads head 4. Keep close to the Ordinances Keep up in your hearts a love to them Come once to slight and turn your back upon them and you put the reins into the Divels hands 5. Love sound and soulsearching preaching never distaste it it is best for your souls it is wholesome though not toothsome 6. Be much in examination of your selves weigh your selves in God's scales will you know every thing and be ignorant only of the state of your souls 7. Content not your selves with a form but look afte the power of godliness the name without the nature of a Christian will little avail you forget not what I have taught you from Matth. 7. 21. 8. Take heed of the world and the cares thereof Do not so fasten your thoughts to earth as to be strangers to heaven Be not so careful of your bodies as to be careless of your souls 9. Look to your families let Christ come in there Train up your children and servants religiously let your houses be as so many Churches Neglect here is the corrupted spring that sends forth puddle-streams into Ecclesiastical and Civil societies without the service of God your houses will be but the Divels shops 10. In your places discountenance sin and profaness encourage goodness Improve your power estate age c. for Christ's glory 11. Maintain love towards each other follow peace and holiness Love is an excellent grace 12. Be very careful to sanctifie the Lord's Sabbaths publikely and privately They are God's dole days be not unwilling to wait at the posts of his gates for his alms 2. More particularly with respect to the ensuing Treatise 1. Look upon this little piece as an help to bring to remembrance what hath formerly been taught you 2. Take the counsel therein as from your Minister Friend and Lover who earnestly desires your eternal salvation 3. Read it not out of novelty but conscience 4. Pray over it and for me that I may be the better enabled to discharge my duty in watching over your souls 5. Compare it with the Scriptures and so far as it harmonizeth with them embrace it I shall here put a period and conclude not ceasing to be mindful of you at the throne of grace and to make mention of you in my prayers who am Yours in the service of your souls J. V. To his respected Friends the inhabitants of Margarets of Ilkets-hal in Suff. My first Love LOve is strong That providence which brought me amongst you makes me love you that love time and absence have not obliterated but still like the Laurel it retains its greenness I served a full apprentiship with you in the Ministry of the Gospel wherein my design and desire was the conversion of your souls These papers I send after my former pains with you to second what I then taught you The Spirit as principal bless both the one and the other to you I called you often in the name of Christ to come to Christ and I hope it was not wholly without effect on some My love constrains me to call again in this ensuing Treatise which while you are reading I hope I shall be praying that God would prosper it to you Be convinced of the danger of a natural condition I have often touched on this string if it have jarred to you I wish the Lord would so temper your spirits that now it may be melodious I pray that he that succenturiates and is come in my room may reap the harvest of my seed-time and if what was sown and came up then but thin may grow up now to full ears of corn it shall through grace be a cordial to my spirit Love and cherish that light which burns among you Take heed of the infection of error Be diligent hearers and not only so but also dutiful practicers of the Word The Lord prevail with you and effectually call you unto himself that predestination from eternity may be manifested by your timely acceptance of Christ This is and shall be the prayer of Your unfeigned Lover J. V. From my house in Heveningham Feb. 4. 1657 8. To
Predestination 2. Vocation The Doctrine which naturally arises from these words and which I shall lay and set as the Foundation and Pillar of the ensuing discourse is this Those whom God hath predestinated Doc. to Life and Glory them he doth call S. 3 whom he had in his heart from Eternity them he brings to his hand in time whom he appointed to Salvation them he calls to Sanctification whom he Elected in Christ those he brings to Christ This is plain from other passages of Scripture as the 28. Verse preceding Who are the called according to his purpose First he purposeth concerning them then he proposeth to them and prevaileth with them 2 Pet. 1. 10. Give diligence to make your calling and Election sure There calling and Election like a loving pair go hand in hand and if calling make Election sure then it is sure that the Elect shall be called 1 Pet. 1. 2. Elect according to the fore-knowledge of God through Sanctification of the Spirit or rather ad Sanctificationem to Sanctification of the Spirit Est Bez. in loc enim hic Electionis finis for this is the end of Election though not all the end and if so then the Elect and predestinated shall be called for Gods Intention cannot be recalled The Method I propose for prosecuting this point and the order I shall observe in Anatomizing this Doctrine is this 1. I shall shew the kinds of calling 2. The nature of it or what it is 3. The parts of it 4. What is done in it 5. What graces especially first put forth themselves 6. The degrees or steps whereby it ariseth to perfection and is compleated 7. The concomitants effects and consequents 8. The parties whom God doth call 9. The time when 10. By what means 11. A few objections shall be answered 12. A few plain and familiar reasons given in 13. The use and application of the whole CHAP. II. 1. Of the kinds of calling 1. GOd is said to call men three wayes 1. By their particular names as Adam where art thou God called out of Heaven and said Abraham Abraham Gen. 22. 11. 2. To some special service and businesse as when he called Abraham to go into a strange Countrey 3. To some general Estate and condition and that is two-fold 1. Lesse general and common but to some as Paul called to be an Apostle and others Ministers 2. More general and common to all Christians Rom. 1. 7. called to be Saints And this also is two-fold 1. Uneffectual when they are not the better for their calling Many are called but few are chosen Matth. 20. 2. Effectual when the call of God takes effect upon their hearts and they obey it so that God may say as the Centurion Matth. 8. 9. I say unto this Soul Come and it cometh Now the calling that is meant here is that which is more general and effectual which you may conceive Simil. by this familiar resemblance I see a Traveller out of his way and in Jeopardy thereby I call to him Friend you are undone if you go on in that way and many dangers you will meet with all Come this way take my Counsel I will set you right Now if this man onely give the hearing and go on my calling is uneffectual But if he follow my directions then it is effectual and to purpose and the effect thereof is his going right safeguard and peace we are all like Sheep that Ps 119. 76. go a stray and silly Travellers that have lost our way God call's oh poor Soul whither art thou wandring Thou drawest back to perdition thy feet go down to death thy steps take hold on Hell Turn to the right hand take my Christ for thy Pilot a new heart for thy biasse hearken to me and depart not from the Words of my mouth if the Soul go on this call is uneffectual if it hearken and obey them then it is effectual and the Soul finds the effect thereof to it's welfare CHAP. III. II. What this calling is IT is a Work and the first special Work of Defin. Gods Spirit by the Ministery of the Word whereby a man or woman is brought out of an Estate of nature into an Estate of grace out of self to Christ and of vassals of sin are made Vessels of the God of Sion to walk strictly with him in the course of their lives to the peace of their Soules to the praise of the glory of his grace Col. 1. 11 12. Which hath made us meet to be partakers of the Inheritance of the Saints in light who hath delivered us from the power of darknesse and hath translated us into the Kingdom of his dear Son Where I suppose darknesse is not onely meant of ignorance which is one part of a natural Estate but also of sin in general which is sometimes called by the name of 1 John 1. 5 6. darkness wherewith as with a thick Cloud the whole Man is envelopped wrapped 1 Pet. 2. 4 5. To whom coming as unto a living Stone ye also as lively Stones are built up a Spiritual House an Holy Priesthood to offer up Spiritual Sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ So likewise the 1. of James Verse 18. I shall a little unfold this rich hanging that you may have a more full view of it It is a Work not a Notion chimera fancy or conceit but a real Work It is the first Work upon the Soul Predestination Electio est amor ordinativus non collativus is without this within Predestination is in the heart of God this is Gods coming into the heart of Man that did ordain this doth order Sanctification for some distinguish it from Assemb Confes effectual calling though others do not and perseverance c. are after this before this marcheth in the Head of the Heavenly Troop and blessed Train of Gods Works upon the Soule It is a special Work not a common which the reprobate may have it is a distinguishing through Work not such a work as a Man may have and yet come short of the glory because short of the grace of God and be left many miles on this side the Region of happinesse it is not onely a saving but a truely Sanctifying Work as some distinguish and so Sanctifying as indeed saving not onely in that mean and potentially but in the end and actually It is the Work of Gods Spirit the posterity of the Holy-Ghost 3 John 6. 8. It is the blowing or breathing of the Spirit the Child of Heaven all the meanes in the World cannot make a Saint without the influence of the Spirit yet that works by the Word that is the Instrument in the hand of the Spirit for the new moulding of sinful hearts The Spirit and the Word go together the Spirit primarily the Word secondarily the one as Master the other as Servant And these Work not upon a part but the whole This Work is diffusive and
Oh that this bread of life were mine How fit were these things for me and how suitable to my condition 7. Application The next Step that the Soul S. 8 takes as led by the hand of the Spirit is to the bosome of Jesus Christ It casteth it self by relying Faith upon the Son of God Now doth the Soul conclude like the Leprous Men in 2 Kings c. 7. begin that if it stand upon it's own bottom it must needs perish it 's destruction then is without the least uncertainty If it go to Christ it is sure it cannot hinder it self it may further it's self and therefore resolutely throwes it self at his door grasps him hangs about him and will not let him go and saith with Job Job 13. 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him And with the Woman of Canaan will not be beaten off from him Now the Soul goeth to the Horns of the Altar and there will it hold It runs to Christ makes him it 's Asylum it 's strong Tower of safety and Christi vulnera civitates refugii takes Sanctuary in his Wounds which are it's Cities of refuge to keep it from the fury of the Law It hath been hunted and worried and now runneth to this burrow for shelter It saith to Christ as Ruth to her Mother in Law Ruth 1. 16 17. Intreat me not to leave thee for whither thou goest O Jesus I will go where thou lodgest I will lodge thy God shall be my God yea and nothing no not death it self shall part thee and me Here it leans and stayes it self even upon the merits righteousnesse perfect obedience sufferings death Resurrection of an Almighty and most gracious Saviour and Redeemer And this is the first direct Act of Faith and that which is true justifying and saving Faith And this proceeds from the Work of God upon the Soul in the Implantation of grace whereof we spake before 8. Humiliation The next degree I conceive S. 9 is a mourning frame of Spirit differing from that which we called the fourth Step to wit Lamentation for that was legal but there is a Gospel repentance and sorrow which is the Fruit and Companion of Faith which though it may eye wrath and misery yet not those alone but now mourneth from Faith from a sight of Christ and I also conceive yet with submission to better Judgements for I desire to remember the Apostles Rule 1 Corinth 14. 32. The Spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets I say I conceive that this Gospel repentance hath two parts or degrees The first being the concomitant of the first and direct Act of Fath viz. Faith of adherence of which we spake in the last head and the second of the second and reflex Act of Faith viz. the Faith of evidence Ames lib. 1. Med. 26. cap. 31. Thes before it mourned and repented from sence and that did precede justifying Faith now from Faith and this follows justifying Faith Now the Soul ingenuously comes to the knee of Christ cryeth Peccavi and makes it's moan and this repentance is very pleasing to the Lord. Ps 51. 17. A broken Heart thou wilt not despise This is that Godly sorrow which the Apostle speaketh of 2 Cor. 7. 10. This sorrow divideth between the Heart and it's sin That now a Man or Woman give up themselves to God in Holy engagements which though it go along with repentance and be part of it yet for distinction sake we will look upon it by it self and it shall make the ninth Step. 9. Resolution Now it giveth up it self in S. 10 Soul and Body to the Lord The Head and Heart as Commanders being wrought upon all the rest Faculties and parts as common Souldiers will follow it saith now as David Psal 119. 106. I have sworn and I will performe it that I wil keep thy righteous Judgments Friends and dear Relations if ever the Lord bring your Hearts to this which I earnestly desire and long for you will then enter into a solemn covenant with the Lord against your sins and wickednesse you will lie low at the feet of God and say with Saul Act. 9. 6. Lord what 1 Kings 20. 7. wilt thou have me to do You will deny God nothing now as he said in another case neither Wife nor Husband nor Children nor gold nor Silver all that is dear to you shall be parted with for his sake You will now no longer make provision for the Flesh to fulfil the lusts thereof Now Holy purposes and resolutions do abound in the Soul It saith to the Lord as Justine to Tiberius Si tu vis ego volo si non vis nolo So saith the Soul Lord I am thy Clay and thy Wax I have been hitherto stiffe-necked stubborn disobedient but now do with me what thou wilt I desire purpose through thy grace to be wholy at thy Command and dispose Now through the grace of Jesus Christ it shall not be with me as it hath been but I will set my self against every known evil and way of sin I will be most careful to please and most fearful to displease for this sorrow worketh carefulnesse Now I desire to yeeld my members Servants to Righteousnesse 1 Cor. 7. 11. Rom. 6. 19. unto Holinesse Upon all the roomes I mean Powers of the Soul and upon all the parts of the Body there is written For God for 1 Cor. 6. 19 20. Christ for Grace I will not be mine own saith the Soul but God shall be mine owner O precious workings O blessed resolutions Say and hold the Lord helpe thee to hold what thou sayest 10. Manifestation In the next place God S. 11 let 's the Soul read so far in it's evidence that it can apprehend its sins are Pardoned and sheweth so much of his Face that it perceives a Fathers countenance and hath some guesse at the thoughts of his Heart The Dove-like Spirit brings an Olive Branch of Peace in it's Mouth and perswades the Soul of Gods favour Isai 40. 1 2. Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith your God speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her Iniquity is pardoned Now it hears a sweet warbling melodious voice from Mount Gerizim the Mount of blessing saying Blessed are the Poor in Spirit for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven Blessed are they that mourn for Mat. 5. 3 4 6. they shall be comforted Blessed are they which hunger and thirst after Righteousnesse for they shall be filled This gentle aire sweetly fans and cooles the Soul Now Christ hath bidden the winds and waves be still there is a sweet calme Now frownes are turned into smiles a funeral day into a festival The Soul can with comfort say as Hezekiah did Isai 38. 17. For Peace I had great bitternesse but thou hast in Love to my Soul delivered it from the pit of corruption for thou hast cast all my
good Heart when they have a bad hand a right inside though a wrong outside to be fair within though foul without to have great Faith in the inward Man though grosse faults in the outward Man but grace cannot be hid it will discover it's self if fire be within heat will be without if the Heart live the Pulse will beat These are the Steps of the Jacobs Ladder whereby God descendeth into the Heart from the height of Predestination and causeth the Heart to ascend to himself from the depth of a natural and sinful condition and most blessed are the Soules that by the hand of grace are led thus far towards glory But I would not Soules should be troubled if their capacities cannot apprehend these workings in themselves in this order that is laid down but if they can find them in their own Hearts in truth though they cannot discern this order let them blesse God who hath thus blessed them with Spiritual blessings Nor do I lay down these things peremptorily as if there could not be a better and righter disposing them by transposition addition or subtraction but onely I humbly conceive according to that measure of light the Lord hath vouchsafed me who am lesse than the least of all his mercies that the will of God in his word the way of God in his works I mean of effectual calling and experience of precious Saints and chosen Vessels will own and say Amen to these things and now O blessed Spirit come down into the Hearts of the Readers of these lines and work these things in the Hearts of such of them as are strangers from the Covenants of promise CHAP. VIII VII The Concomitants Effects Consequences of Effectual calling 1. LIfe The first thing that followeth upon S. 1 Effectual calling is Life thereby a Man or Woman is made alive Spiritually This my Luke 15. 24. Son was dead but is now alive saith the Father of the Prodigal how excellent and desirable is natural life to us so that we are loth to part with it as one said when his Physitian brought him the message of death Oh let me live though it be but the life of a Toad under a Sill If the life of nature be so sweet how much sweeter then is the life of grace natural inspirations have their expirations but Spiritual breath can never be totally stopped the Earthly life may be terminated but the Spiritual cannot a life of vegetation which Plants have is something a life of sence which Beasts have is more a life of reason which Men have transcendeth the other but a life of grace which Saints have transcends them all A living Dog Eccles 9. 4. is better than a dead Lion A Flie because it hath life is more excellent than the glorious and shining body of the Sun when good old Jacob heard news of his Joseph it was a comforting cordial to him and reviving of his Spirits It is enough Joseph my Son is yet alive So Gen. 45. 28. saith a gracious Heart The Lines are fallen to me in pleasant places I have a goodly Heritage I am alive through the quickening grace of Ephes 2. 1. God pleasures sin world vanity away be gone it is enough I have enough Oh blessed be the Lord that hath redeemed me from the grave I was alive once in thought I am alive now in truth I was alive to my own seeming I am alive to my Souls saving sin lived and I was dead sin is dead and I am alive there is joy at Mans coming into the world sorrow at his going out so delightful is life so dolorous are the thoughts of death those that are effectually called are born never to die and how can they be but alive who come to Christ who is life it self as he is the true light to enlighten so the true life to enliven the Soul if the touch of dead Elisha's bones could make 2 Kings 13. 21. alive how much more then the touch of a living Christ All Saints are as the Children of light so of life Christ said Ye will not come unto me that ye might have life John 5. 40. Then those that come to him have life from him He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life John 3. 36. He hath that life begun which shall be ever God hath breathed the breath of life into such they then must needs be living Souls Such live a noble Heavenly compleat raised life we may say of such as David Lord thou hast made them little lower than the Angels and hast crowned them with glory and honour Psal 8. 5. Natures life is not Non est res magna vivere Sen. to be compared with this The voice of Christ is quickening for he saith the houre is coming and now is when the dead shal hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live Christ hath called and caused thee to hear and thou doest live to be in the Land of the Spiritually living is no small matter 2. Liberty All that are effectually called S. 2 have this effect of their calling that they are set at liberty Liberty is that we all crave liberty is that which onely Saints have It is every ones Prayer onely the Saints priviledge not a liberty to sin do I speak of but a liberty from sin not a liberty from good but to good Conscientia libera inquantum liberata à peccato such onely have the true liberty of conscience which many misse of while they muse on it to do what we would is not Freedom but servitude to do what God would is the Freedom that belongs to the Citizens of the Heavenly corporation the City of God the Church of God a natural Man is a Vassal a Slave to the tyranny of his lusts and sin but a Saint is free from sin from the penalty and from the power of it from it 's Domination though not it's Inhabitation free from it in affection Med. Ames lib. 1. cap. 27. Thes 21. v. though not in Action free from Hell also though not from the desert yet from the death of Hell free from the Law in regard of justification though not in regard of sanctification free from the condemnation though not from the commination of the Law and can it be otherwise with them who are in Christ he makes all his Free-men Free-women If the Son shall make you free ye shall be free indeed John 8. 36. This Freedom is of an excellent nature one told a certain people once that if they knew what a Jewel liberty were they would not part with it for all the Riches of Persia what a Pearl then is this liberty Now may a Man or Woman say as they in Psal 124. 7. Our Soul is escaped as a Bird out of the snare of the Fowlers the snare is broken and we are escaped How glad is a converted Man or Woman with Joseph that they are out
Soul is praying repenting hearing reading believing speaking good doing good to it self to others to body and soul advising and Prov. 13. 20. 2 Pet. 1. 10. Phil. 2. 12. counselling it's charge it's Friends It walketh with the wise is giving all diligence to make its calling and Election sure is working out its Salvation with fear and trembling is watching against evil to good and seeking opportunities Phil. 1. 27. of glorifying God Labouring to have its conversation as becometh the Gospel endeavouring to walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing being fruitful in every good work and having Col. 1. 10. named the name of the Lord striveth to depart from Iniquity This is a most choice Fruit of effectual calling to be Holy and gracious in ones wayes and carriages it is such a Priviledge that but few in the world do attain unto viz. to have on the cleane linnen of the Saints to have Holinesse written even upon the Horses 1 Pet. 1. 15. Bridles to be Holy in all manner of conversation as he is who hath called them A converted Soul rejoyceth much at this and is very glad of it to find a tincture of Holinesse on all it's wayes that the clear waters of Sanctity should run through the Channel of his thoughts words deeds and that all his actions through the help of the Spirit are enamelled with Piety 8. Afflictions or Persecutions And is it S. 8 you will say a comfort a Priviledge to be afflicted to be persecuted yea when for Christs sake a good conscience and the Gospels sake it is a great honour sinners account nothing worse and it so imbitters Godlinesse grace and conversion to them that they spit out with detestation though sometimes in their mouths by verbal resolutions but Saints have so great an esteem of suffering for Christ that they put it in their armes yea glory to bear it as their Crest And they departed from the presence of the Councel rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for his name Acts 5. 41. Is it not the great Commendation of Moses that he esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches than the Treasures in Egypt Heb. 11. 26. Till effectual calling none will suffer rightly for Christ after effectual calling some suffer more some lesse and every Saint though not drawn out yet is habitually disposed to sufferings How did the Martyrs go to the flames as to their Bed and made their torments matter of true Triumph and the crosse their Crown The French Martyr when he saw the Rope about his Fellows neck desires to be dubbed a Knight of that Noble Order and Babylas would be buried with his Chain accounting it most dear and what saith blessed Pauls From henceforth let no man trouble me for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus It is true Thieves and vile Persons suffer c. But there is a great deal of difference between the sufferings of the one and other These are brands of impiety those are badges of honour these are for unrighteousnesse those for righteousnesse sake these make infamous those famous these are a curse those but a crosse and such as is a blessing for so saith wisedom it self Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousnesse sake for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven Blessed are ye when men shall revile and persecute you and for my sake Rejoyce and be exceeding glad Matth. 5. 10 11 12. This is a Paradox yet Orthodox the name of trouble scareth a great many but there is no reason for it if you account it an happinesse to do Christs will you must needs account it an Addition of happinesse to suffer for so doing shall a Souldier glory in his wounds received in a just War and shall not a true Christian glory in what he undergoes for Christ Wounds Scarres nick-names spoilings for Christ sake are honourable glorious praise-worthy matters of great dignity and renown 9. Perseverance Those that are effectually S. 9 called shall persevere and hold out to the end they shall never finally and totally fall away they may fall away for a time but not for ever in part but not in whole Though they fall yet they shall rise again Their Apostasy gives way to an Anastasy and their declination to a resurrection they may have the fall of the Leaf but not of the Root of the Act but not of the Habit They may loose grace ex parte sui but not ex parte Dei in regard of their own weakness but not in regard of Gods power because they are kept by the power of God through Faith unto Salvation 1 Pet. 1. 5. They are espoused to perseverance which is Perseverantia est filia summi Regis called the Daughter of the Great King grace and their hearts shall never be divorced the knot of love between them is tied so fast by the hand of Heaven The Gates of Hell shall never be able to prevail against them they are a Rock in the midst of the Sea which stands immoveable notwithstanding the rage of winds and waves They are Eternal like their Father a parte post they have begun Incassùm bonum agitur si ante vitae terminum deseratur Vid. Bez. in loc and they shall hold out to the end of their race I pray God saith the Apostle that your whole Spirit and Soul and Body that is the powers of your Soul reason and affection and the parts of your body be preserved blamelesse unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Thes 5. 23. They are like the Laurel or the Bayes Tree whose Leaves are alwayes green not onely in the Summer of youth but also in the Winter of old age They shall still bring forth Fruit in old age they shall be fat and flourishing Psal 92. 14. And therefore they shall carry away the bayes and the Crown from others The Heavenly fire that is kindled in them shall never go out those Wells that God hath digged in them shall never be stopt by the Philistins those flowers of grace he hath planted in their hearts shall never be spoiled or rooted up by the subtle Fox of corruption within nor the wild Boar of temptation without Their grace may be sick but it shall never die it may lurke but shall never be lost it may fade but shall never fall They shall never desert their colours nor forsake the Captain of their Salvation Deare Friends and Reader who ever you are you will never endure the shock of assaults if you have not a principle of true grace within If you be not rooted in Christ by Faith in effectual calling every little puffe will blow you down If you put the action of your hand and not the affection and resolution of your heart to the Plough you will soon look back and so become unfit for the Kingdom of God you may have a form of Godlinesse and an outside profession and well complexioned face
a good Wife makes a good Husband not but that suitable matches are best I think as for parentage portion proportion so for piety and that as I conceive the Apostle meanes marrying not onely with one that is a Christian but also with one that is Christs 1 Cor. 7. 39. where he speakes of marrying in the Lord yet when they are unequally yoked and pared they are to pray and endeavour for an Extract of vertue from a Contract of necessity some of you that read this unworthy piece may have found providency improving your match to your Soules advantage and you that are married and have a Godly yoke-fellow ear their precepts eye their practice listen to their counsels learn their good customes mind their sayings mark their goings observe their works obey their words Husbands and Wives do not forward each other to Hell but further each other to Heaven Let not your hands be imbrued in each others Soules blood but let your hearts be set for each others Eternal good and strive by your prayers single and sociated that ye may be heires together of the grace of life Some out of fancy and vanity have endeavoured to maintain that a woman hath no Soul but both men and women have immortal Soules and that ye shall know to your cost and woe or cure and neal The Lord grant the latter 2. By granting good education Grace in S. 3 age many times hath it's foundation in the training of youth Train up a Child in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart Prov. 22. 6. from it Good Parents good Tutours good Masters good Guardians good Hosts with whom Children boord are a great mercy and many thank God for the time that ever they saw the faces of and had to do with such Did not Abraham Gen. 18. 19. read Divinity Lectures to his Family and did there not grow upon the stalk of his Instructions watered with the Dew of Heavenly grace Fruits of as eminent obedience to the Father of the Flesh and the Father of Spirits as ever was when Isaac was willing to offer his Gen. 22. throat to the Sacrificing knife Was not Isaac's Faith great as well as Abraham's the Sons as well as the Fathers Was not Isaac's life as dear to him as Abraham's Son to him and was he not coheir with his Father to the promises Was not Monica a fervent beads-woman and humble suppliant at the throne of grace for her Son Austin and was not the successe sweet A woman much in prayers and much in teares she was for him and without doubt Motherly-preachings went along with her prayers and teachings did accompany her teares and had she not the desire of her Soul Seeds of Instruction and teaching cast upon the heads of young ones under our charge may through the mostnings and irrigations of the Spirit sink into the heart take root and bring forth a great crop and large increase of saving knowledge and grace if not for the present yet for the future if not in the time that now is yet in the time that is to come even when Parents are dead and rotten Children while very young are to be learned the word of God though they know not the work of God experience sheweth that it is not in vain nor void Did not Timothy's being instructed in his Childhood in all pobability by his Grand-mother as well as Mother for Parents remote are many times as much conversant with and indulgent to their mediate Children as their immediate Parents and her indulgency was rectified by grace to seek his good in the best things Help to make him a Faithful man and a fervent Preacher 2 Tim. 1. 5. 3. 15. Nay were there not twins in the womb of Lois her care And was not the effect of it double She taught her Daughter Eunice and she learned of her Mother to teach her Son Timothy How careful were the Heathens that Children might have education morally good and shall Christians sit in the same forme with them Now how many Christians by name may sit at their feet and be taught more of their duty from them than yet they have learned to practice Plutarch wrote a little 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 treatise of this on purpose Plato would have Nurses speak no foolish words to their little ones least such breath should infect them and such bad aire have influence upon them yet who regards this work or considers that from the neglect thereof as from a root of bitternesse springs that general Prophanenesse that is in the Christian world Master Baxter Third part cap. 12. S. 11. c. speaks very well of this in his Saints everlasting rest which is a very choice Book The Gentry teach their Children to follow pleasure the commonalty their Children to follow profit and young ones are ready to follow old ones This their way is their folly yet their posterity approve their sayings Selah It is to be noted Psal 49. 13. The very Heathens condemn this and yet Christians mend it not Crates the Philosopher said that if possibly he might he would willingly mount to the highest place of the City and there cry aloud in this manner What mean you my Masters and whither run you headlong carking and caring all that ever you can to gather goods and rake riches together as you do whiles in the mean time you make little or no reckoning at all of your Plut. Children unto whom you are to leave all your riches and do not most care more for the wealth of their Childrens outward man than for the health of their inward man such as one saith are like those that have great regard Ibid. to their Shoo but take no heed to their Face Some are headlesse and cannot others are heartlesse and will not By Generation men are temporal Fathers by education they come to be Spiritual Fathers and though it In anima sit extraduce be a question whether the Soul and Body come both one way or no yet it is out of doubt many times that the grace of the Soul may come from the Parents I mean yet Parents counsel teaching and tutouring may be Instrumental in the hand of the supream efficient thereunto Did not Hannah get her Samuel by praying And may we think that he that was brought in by earnest supplication was not brought up by early education That he 1 Sam. 10. 27. whom she took paines for before she had him she did not takes pains with when she had him That for whom she petitioned him she did not principle If you that read this can say by experience it is so blesse God for your Friends if not begg of God to make them your Friends Oh that Parents would bring up their Children in the nurture of the Lord and Children obey them in the Lord. 3. By procuring services By this means also S. 4 doth the Lord many times
between man and man so between God and man yet how doth the world slight and scoff at them vilifie and revile them contemn and condemn them but as they said to Pilate so I to thee altering the John 29. 12. words If thou do these things thou art not thy souls friend 7. By afflicting their persons This is the S. 8 last providence that I am to speak to the Lord breaks down the body and by that means builds up the soul by launcings he let out the putrefactions by the pruning knife of Nocumenta documenta affliction doth the Lord cut away the overspreading and sarmenting boughs of lust and corruption trials are teaching harms are healing blows are made blessings corrasives turn cordials maledictions benedictions the Lord many times laies on his rod that he may not let out his wrath he puts some into the furnace of affliction and there melts and works out their tin and lead and drosse By this shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged and Isa 87. 9. this is all the fruit to take away his sin Many can say with David It is good for me that I Psal 199. 71. have been afflicted that I might learn thy statutes And with him that said If I had not been undone I had been undone If I had Periissem nisi periissem not lost my sins I had lost my life If I had not lost my goods I had lost my God If my body had not been mar'd my soul had never been made If I had not lost a child I had never found a father If I had not been friendlesse I had always been faithlesse an ounce of adversity is sometimes worth a pound of prosperity a little of sorrow may sometimes go further than a great deal of joy Manasses was more beholding to captivity than his 2 Sam. 33. 11 12 13. crown to the thorns than his throne to his chains of iron than his chains of gold his fetters than his scepter his prison than his pallace he was too high to be a Saint till God unkinged him too stiff to stoop till God threw him out of his regal chair and forced him to fall upon his knees his losse more worth than his gain little did he think that his parting with all should be a means to bring him to a part in Christ and grace the crooked key of troubles and miseries many times opens the door and lets a soul into the chamber of presence the tossing waves lift up the ark of the soul neerer heaven such kind of agues are many times wholesome when affliction shews it teeth and grins poor creatures are perplexed but be patient for the fruit may be very precious the fear sometimes through the blessing and wisedom of God is more than the harm Afflictions are the shepherds dog not to worry in pieces but to work to Gods part not to tear but to turn The Lord is forced as I may say sometimes to deal with sinners as Absalom did with Joab he sent for him once and again by his servants but he 2 Sam. 14. 29 30. came not at last he fires his field of barley and then he comes without further sending The Lord hath some of his elect ones whom he seeth walking in by-paths and crooked ways the Lord giveth a commission to his servants the Ministers and saith go invite and call you soul to come to me and say Return Return O Shulamite but the soul stirs not the Lord sends and calls again yet with the deaf adder he hearkneth not to the voice of the inchanter well saith the Lord if you will Psal 58. 4 5. not come I will fetch you if fair means will not do foul means must Then he hisseth for the flie and the bee of affliction and calls forth armies of trouble and gives them commission to sieze upon and to lay siege to such a man or woman and saith ply them with your cannon shot till you make them yield give up the keys and strike their sail he sends sicknesse to their bodies a consumption to their estate death to their friends shame to their reputation a fire to their house and the like and bids them prey and spoil till they see and acknowledge the hand of the Lord lifted up till they hear Mic. 6. 9. the voice of the rod and who hath appointed it the Lord many times gives strong physick Deus medicus tribulatio medicamentum before the peccant humour will away and winnoweth them much to throw out the chaff thus he bringeth the buds of grace out of the seeds of affliction and ushereth in the Lady grace with salt preambles many times a sorrowful evening may have a joyful morning There may be crying out in the evening for the pangs of affliction and crying out in the morning for the pains of conversion The evening red with the fiery trial the morning gray with grief for sin may produce a fair day of holinesse cloudy and dolorous evenings may have cleer and deliverance-mornings the Lord sometimes bends a soul till he makes it meet again and breaks it till he makes it melt that he may bow them to his gracious will and not burst them by his grievous wrath rather then the Lord will lose a soul that belongs to him he will lash them till he force them into his bosome Thus I have discovered unto you the providences of God whereby he provides for his peoples good Though there may be others yet I think these are the chief may we not now say as David Many O Lord our God are thy wonderful works which thou hast done and thy thoughts which are to us ward Psal 40. 5. Have not his people cause to utter the memory of his great goodnesse and to sing of his righteousnesse Psal 145. 7. Oh oh that we would praise the Lord for his goodnesse and for his wonderful works towards our souls Psal 107. 8. That the Lord should thus variously unexpectedly in all these ways seek the conversion and changing of lost souls may justly cause us to say All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth Psal 25. 10. and with the same Psalmist in another place Thou crownest my years with thy goodnesse and thy paths drop fatnesse into our souls Psal 65. 11. I conclude these things admiring with Paul Rom. 11. 33. O the depth of the riches both of the wisedom and knowledge of God and doxologizing with him 1 Tim. 1. 17. Now unto the King eternal immortal invisible the only wise God be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen 2. By his Word Now we come to the next S. 9 means which the Lord maketh use of for the conversion and calling home of Saints to himself and that is the Word of God That is Jam. 1. 18. Rom. 10. 17 Nemini blanditur veritas the instrument of regeneration It is a word of truth and therefore fit for this work It dealeth impartially
Author of effectual calling Sol. God is the Sole Author and we the subjects that are wrought upon He the Agent and we the Patients our hearts are not in our own hands we are dead and cannot make our selves alive we must erect an Altar with this Inscription To the God 1 Sam. 7. 12. of grace And set up a stone of remembrance with this Motto The Lord hath helped us Grace can be of the off-spring of none but the Eternal Father It is not in any but by the gift and work of God it is a Plant of Gods setting so the Saints may truely say Thou O Lord hast wrought all our works in us Isai 26. 12. His people are the natural and Spiritual workmanship of his hands And of this doth Paul informe his Corinthians when he saith And such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are Sanctified 1 Cor. 6. 11. Ye did not sanctify your selves but ye were sanctified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye did not make your selves Saints but ye were made Saints and as it was with the people so with the Preacher he could give grace neither to them nor himself for their grace and his grace had both one Author and were from God The Lord was active and he and they were passive for so he speaketh of himself But I obtained mercy 1 Tim. 1. 13. The translation runs in the active when the Greek word is of the passive voice neither 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bez. in loc in Latine nor English can one well expresse the original It is as if one should say I was had mercy upon So then it is clear that we have neither hand nor heart in the work of grace But it must be set upon the account of God as the sole efficient Yet thus we must understand it for we are not stockes and stones in the work of conversion 1. We being effectually called can afterwards work by the grace which God hath wrought in us If ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body c. Rom. 8. 13. Here is an Act of mortification of sin but from the might of the Spirit an Act of killing but from enlivening grace when principled then the Soul is to do it's part when animated then it is to Act When it hath it's treasure then it must trade when stocked with life then it must stand out against it's lusts 2. A Soul worketh in the very moment of Perk. Revel 3. 9. conversion as it was with Paul Lord what wilt thou have me to do Acts 9. 6. Paul was now infieri in making and loe the beatings of his Pulse And so it was with good Lydia Whose heart the Lord opened that she attended to the things which were spoken of Paul Acts 16. 14. There we see her in making the Lord opened her heart that was Gods work and she Acteth she attended that is her work by vertue of the former Babes of grace Act in the very birth and whilest the Lord is framing and fashioning them they pant and breath in their new moulding they melt and mourn in Gods striving with them they strive for him in their making they move Yet we must be careful to understand this rightly viz. thus 1. In the order of nature Gods working is Acti agimus before the Soules and the Soules working depends upon it that as the cause this as the caused that as the efficient this as the effected that as the spring this as the stream that as leader this as led that as the parent this as the posterity that as the root this as the fruit 2. What the Soul doth is not the cause or meanes of conversion Conversion is without Nulla praecedit in nobis praeparatio August the spheare of our activity 2. Ob. In the next place it may be queried what the difference is between effectual vocation and sanctification how near they live S. 2 each to other or how far distant they are one 2. Ob. from the other whether neighbours or strangers kindred or aliens Sol. Effectual calling is meant of the first Sol. Assem Ad. Baxter Saints rest pag. 140. work of God upon the soul in implanting grace there and changing the whole man and regeneration and conversion are the same with it as we have said before Sanctification is meant of the increase of that first work and of holinesse in the life and conversation 1 Thessal 4. 3. The first as the rising of the Sun the latter as it 's keeping it's course The path of the just is as the shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day Prov. 4. 18. The one as the infancy and youth the other as the growth and age of grace the one as the principle the other as the practice one as the morning the other as the noon of grace 3. Ob. It may be queried in the next place S. 3 which grace is first Faith or repentance 3. Ob. Faith before repentance or repentance before faith which of these two is the first born and elder Child Sol. This question hath been much tossed Sol. up and down and many saplesse contentions have been about it without solid demonstration of the thing and without spiritual edification of the soul If were better for people to enquire whether they find these graces in themselves than which is first the sincerity of them in reference to truth is more to be sought after than the priority of them in reference to time it were more profitable to question our participation than their precedency yet people had rather deal with Metaphysicks than Morals with notional rather than necessary points and love to rise to the clouds in their askings when they cannot reach the top of a low-built answer However I will in some measure satisfy this question 1. We must know that all habits of grace are infused together the habits are put in to the soul at one time though some may put out themselves by actings before one another A new heart will I give you and a new Spirit will I put within you Ezek. 36. 26 27. Here is a change mentioned which could not be without the infusion of all saving graces together Simul semel and at once They are like twins they receive their being both together though one be brought forth before another This similitude following may make it a little plain a man taketh several sorts of seeds and sowes them in his Garden at one time yet some come up and shew themselves before others some sooner some latter Our hearts are the Garden the habits of grace the seeds all which by the hand of the spirit are sown at one time though in actings some appear before others 2. One things is said to be before another two wayes 1. First in time as that which is to day is before that which is not till to morrow and that which is this houre is before that
after works though some be more absolute others more conditional some primary others secondary yet all are from God He is the Primum mobile the first mover as in nature so in grace as in temporals so in spirituals He is the Creator of this new world in all it's parts 6. The quality of this calling For if the understanding S. 6 and the will especially be wrought upon Then it is the making of a man or woman all new for the will is the Queen and Empresse of the Soul which commands all the rest The will is freed and so are the rest of the faculties of the Soul and members of the Voluntas libera est si Spiritu ducitur quia ubi Spiritus ibi libertas Voluntatis regula 2. humana ratio lex Dei. Acts 26. 18. body the will being ruled by God doth now rule for God the work of grace and effectual calling doth not quarter in any one part of the soul alone but will be billetted in every faculty nor is it contented to challenge the heart for it's throne unlesse it have the whole man for it's Dominions The eye of the mind is the Gate whereat it enters the heart the will is the Chumber of presence but it will not be confined there but sends forth it's influences into all the adjacent rooms Effectual calling is of a diffusive nature every power and part every affection and action gives up it's name to God Except a man be born again c. Saith truth it self John 3. 3. In the natural birth the whole man is born and in the spiritual the whole man is born again And so the Apostle if any man be in Christ he is a new Creature 2 Cor. 5. 17. And addeth Old things are past away behold it is worth the Noting all things are become new No part is excepted as is the will so is all the rest for that is chief Regis ad exemplum totus componitur orbis Though the tongue be tipped yet if the heart be not touched it is not grace If the understanding be enlightened and the soul not lightened of the burden of sin such an one is yet under the power of nature the Lord breaks up this spring in the heart and from thence are the purling streams sent forth through the channels of the faculties and parts of the whole Grace is within and grace is without the internals and the externals too are changed The Kings Daughter is all glorious within her clothing is of wrought gold Psal 45. 13. Grace Anima est tota in toti tota in qualibet parte is in the head in the feet It is in the thoughts in the eye in the desire of the heart in the endeavour of the hand in the memory and meditation and manners In the hope joy fear love hatred affections of the soul in the reason Tunc demum homo integer sanctificatus est quum nihil cogitabit Spiritus nihil appetet anima nihil exequetur corpus quod cum Dei voluntate non consentiat Bez. in loc will understanding conscience the faculties of the soul In the ear eye foot hand c. part of the body It is in the inclination inwardly in the conversation outwardly It is like the Sun going through the twelve signs of the Zodiack so it moves throughout the whole man And is in all at once at least in disposition though not in action It is like the reasonable soul of which Philosophers say that it is intire in the whole and in every part Grace is in all and in every part as the Apostle prayeth for his Thessal The very God of peace sanctify you wholly and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blamelesse unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ 1. Their understanding and affections the inward part and the body the outward part of man There is sanctification perfect in regard of parts when the meditations of the head the motions of the heart and the actions of the hand are cast into the mould of Gods Law and stand in a sweet and harmonious conformity unto his will The Devil cheateth people by a synecdoche putting a part for the whole Partial grace was never true grace true grace is universal grace and in this sence thou must be an universalist a true Christian like the Arke is Exod. 25. 11. and must be overlaid with pure gold within and without If you are effectually called you are not like Dagon the God of the Philistins half a man and half a fish nor like Nebuchadnezzar's Dan. 2. 31. image though thine head be gold yet if thy feet be clay thou art not of the right make 7. Difficulty of effectual calling Are there S. 7 so many Steps to the top of this building so many parts of this work as we have shewed there are there it is a very great and difficult work and every thing is not enough and sufficient Many may have taken some few Steps but loath to go forward do go backward and are in statu quo in their old condition More Multos remissa conversio in pristinos errores reducit Steps then one or two must be taken to come into Christs bosome more words than one to the making up of a spiritual bargain or match with the Lord many ingredients must go to the making up of this soul saving composition Every grief for sin is not grace every longing is not from life every sigh is not true sorrow slighty convictions are not conversions There may be some loathing of sin and yet no love to God There may be a self-condemnation and yet there may follow no soul-salvation All is not gold that glistereth nor is every shinning stone a Diamond The Child of grace I mean effectual calling is born with all it's limbs as all the powers and parts of a man are to be wrought upon whereof we spake in the last head so calling and grace is wrought and effected by the power of God in all it 's own parts The proud Pharisee thought Luke 18. he had the substance when he had nothing but the shadow he thought he had the body when he had nothing but the bark Pharaoh and Judas had some regret of spirit repentings Exod. 9. 27 28. Matth 27. 3. of soul reformation of their actions but it was not enough faint wishings and lazy wouldings are not from the special grace of the spirit There may be a watery eye a blushing face a blubbered cheek a suspicion of it self a de jection of spirit and yet no true grace Every slight trouble is like Sauls armour that will not fit Man indeed would think that so much were enough but Gods thoughts are not as mans thoughts We read that when the Lord sent Samuel to Jesse his Family to anoint one of 1 Sam. 16. 6 7. his sons Jesse caused all his Sons to passe before Samuel first Eliab
whom Samuel took to be the chosen of the Lord because he was well complexioned and tall statured but the Lord tells him that was none of the man and so the like for Abinadab and Shammah till at last David comes and he it is that the Lord intends to preferre to the Kingdom So souls hear there is a work must passe on them or no glory Now they bring out all before the Lord sorrow for sin confession of sin some endeavours and partial amendment and profession for Christ but it is none of all these It is little David said the Lord a through change that I will own true conversation that I will crown many through ignorance take the Leah of superficial repentance instead of the beautiful Rachel of solid and serious returning They are much mistaken who think the sandy foundation of every sorrow able enough to bear the superstructure of the new Jerusalem They that look upon repentance onely in the community as sorrow and not in the special notion as renovation may run wild and misse their way at first setting out To sorrow for sin and not separate from it to mourn for it and not to get some good mastery over it though the spirits help to lament it and not to loath it is not effectuall calling To have a sense of sin and not a sight of a Saviour To feel the curse and have no faith in Christ is not the change we are speaking of we must distinguish between a carnal rupture a legal despondency of spirit and a true spiritual humiliation and debasement of spirit which centers the soul upon a forsaken God one may take many steps yet if they come not so near as to touch the golden Scepter all is nothing 8. The benignity of God If God be thus S. 8 bountiful to his people here what will he be to them hereafter If those that are Predestinated to life be effectually called now they are on earth what shall be done to them when they come to be possessed of Heaven If he give them effectual calling at this distance cum omnibus pertinentiis with all the appendixes and appurtenances thereof what will he give them when they come into his immediate presence Surely if now they be as walls and doors in his spiritual building then he will build upon them Palaces of silver and Cantic 8. 9. enclose them with boards of Cedar Indeed the comparison is not to be made between here and there now and then If Incomparabiliter superna civitas clara est such things in the way what shall they have when they come to their heavenly Countrey If effectual calling while they be sublunarians then surely an everlasting Crown when they shall be suprasolists If so much while they are in cottages of clay then much more when they come to the place of glory If the first-fruits be an handful headful and heartful what will the crop and harvest be If the earnest amount to thus much what do you think the total sum will be Effectual calling is a glimmering of future glory the dawning of the eternal day and what is the morning to the noon the twilight to the midday splendour It is most true what the Scripture saith that the heart of man cannot conceive what the Lord hath treasured and laid up for his people 1 Cor. 2. 9. and to this purpose speaketh St. John Beloved now we are the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 1 John 3. 2. Now there is near relation then there shall be much assimilation here is mutual love there shall be great likenesse If God here bring them into the suburbs then surely hereafter into the heart of the City If so much now while they are in the valley of tears then much more when they come to the mount of joy If this be done for them while they are in their non-age what then shall be done for them when they come unto a perfect man unto Ephes 4. 13. the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ 9. The excellency of effectual calling Is S. 9 effectual calling such a work and are the effects of it such as we have heard then it is one of the most excellent things in the world next to Christ and Heaven there is no better thing that God gives to his people That makes the Apostle Paul to give thanks to God for it in Colos 1. 12 13 14. Put the best of the things of the world into the scales with it and it will weigh them all down Set them all by this and this will be higher than they by the head and shoulders It is good for the body advantagious to the soul the blessing of both It is good for this life for another life never out of date ever useful Godliness Poenitentia est medicamentum pulveris spes salutis is profitable unto all things having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Tim. 4. 8. There is nothing in the world hath so many commodities as it hath It is health from sickness life from death liberty pardon sonship fellowship perseverance Qui per poenitentiam peccata diluit angelicae felicitatis consors in aeternum erit glory are the virgin-companions that follow effectual calling We may truly say of it that it is more precious than Rubies and the merchandise thereof better than the marchandise of silver and the gain thereof than fine gold Prov. 3. 14. 15. It makes a King of a begger a friend of a foe a righteous one of a rebellious one a godly man of a godless man a saint of a sinner and those that are thus qualified have an excellency above others The righteous is more excellent than his neighbour Prov. 12. 26. He or she that hath this need not care what else they want It is the sottish ignorance that makes the world tread under feet this Jewel There are but few Crowns adorned with this Diamond These waters of Jordan though contemned yet are better than Abana and Pharpar rivers of Damascus 2 Kings 5. 12. Think and think as often as you will yet you will find nothing to match or equal effectual calling many think they have all when their will is fulfilled but they have nothing till their will be changed many say all is well if they have what they would but all is ill till they have what they should To say one is wise rich strong beautiful parted is much but to say one is gracious holy renewed in their affections reformed in their actions is a great deal more Nay further to say one is prudent sober honest moral courteous is something but to say they are godly far surpasseth Nay to rise higher to say one maketh a good shew is religious outvieth the rest yet to say
out their predestination have no true bladder to support them in affliction How can such stand in storms of trouble who know not but that they are the beginnings of eternal woe Will not their head be soon under water who cannot make out to the contrary but that they are the objects of reprobation because they are not the subjects of regeneration These are sinking thoughts you must not look alwayes to sit as a Queen and see no sorrow you must not look that the Sun should alwayes shine warm upon your head that your peace should have no period your summer dayes no date your felicitie no fate No the clouds will gather the Heavens grow black miserie invade you and sorrow seize upon you in one kind or another Oh how it would lessen your trouble quench the flame mitigate the dolour if you could but make out that you were one that did belong to God and that your name were in the book of life It will be sad when the waters rise and you have no Ark to return unto when the storm comes and you have no sheltring place whereas to be in an estate of grace is a great support to a soul when under hatches I am thine save me for Hic murus aheneus esto c. I have sought thy precepts Psal 119. 94. I am thine by predestination I am thine by effectual calling for through grace I seek thy Laws and waies were not these things great staies to his spirit Dionysius said that this benefit he had by the studie of Philosophie that he bore with patience his alterations and changes so this is the benefit that comes by grace that such may bear their sufferings not onely with patience but also with joy yea and may sing in the midst of a prison The ship of the soul being ballasted by grace and effectual calling is preserved from being overturned by tempests of sorrow David was one of God's and in an estate of grace and this he had some knowledge of or else he could not have kept his ground as he did against the thundrings of 2 Sam. 16. 12. Shimei's railing tongue without these things you will be like a wild Bull in a net when you are caught in the toile You will have no patience in nor hardly profit out of your troubles Doth not David once and again put the bottle to his mouth and suck in this cordial in the time of his spiritual swoonings that God Ps 42. 11. Ps 43. 5. was his God The want of these things must needs make the fornace of the fiery trial more hot and burning than otherwise it would be It is doleful for a man or woman to be in such a condition that they may say I want goods and I want grace too I want peace and I want piety I want liberty and I want life I want comfort and I want conversion I want Friends and I want God's favour too when God shall strike you with his rod and you cannot make out but that his blowes are from loathing and not from love that they are from a foe and not from a Friend it will be very dismal if you cannot say these wounds have Mitigat vim doloris considerata aequitas ferientis I received in the house and at the hand of my Friend and these are the chastisements of my Father in mercy and not to misery it will prove a sore shaking to thy spirit a sad aking to thy soul 6. The last bitter Pill is this Such have no S. 7 support in death what will you do when death comes and mowes down the flourishing Flowers of your temporal comforts when this great Philistine stops the Well of your outward consolations Though now you are alive yet you must die Death will find you out and when he comes will not return with a non est inventus We cannot find him And Vix bene moritur qui male vixit can you die comfortably that have not lived graciously Can you end with safety that have not begun with sanctity can you have peace with the grave who have no peace with God can you be willing to be called out of the world by death who were never called in to God by grace you may have strong fancies but you can have no sure Faith If you be not effectually called and have not the true spectacles of faith and repentance whereby you may be enabled to read your own name in Heaven's court-rolls What will ye do in the day of visitation and in the desolation which will come from death to whom will ye flee for help and where will ye leave your glory without Isai 10. 3 4. me ye shall bow down as Prisoners of the grave and fall among the slain by the stroke of death The sting of death is sin saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 15. 56. It is sin that maketh death to bite and leave the venome of his teeth behind him you are yet in your sins death therefore must needs be bitterer to you than gall and wormewood you are yet without grace and cannot make out that you are one of Gods you cannot therefore lay this snake in your bosome with safetie Have not such thoughts sadned thy heart when death's messengers have knocked at the door certainly they have unlesse thou be given up to fearednesse of conscience and stupefaction of Spirit which is worse than the strongest sence of sin and miserie without grace death must needs be the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 King of terrours what is your reason why you are yet loath to die Do you not say it is this Oh if I were fit I should not fear If I had that upon me and in me that Ministers speak of I should be willing to die If I did but know that I did belong to the Lord and that I were one of his chosen it would never trouble me why you can never make out the latter without the former You can have neither actual nor habitual comfort in death without these things you had better never to have been born than thus to die better never to have looked forth of your Mother's womb than thus to look death in the face friends relations accommodations helpes are all too weak twiggs to lay hold on to keep from drowning in this Sea of fear if there be not grace you may send to Ministers to come to you I wish with all mine heart people would send to Ministers to come to them in the time of their health and prosperity and deal with them about the state of their souls but they if they be faithful dare not cannot speak peace to you while you are in your sins for what peace so long as the vilenesses and abominations of thine heart are so many There is no peace saith the Lord to the Isai 48. 22. wicked What comfort can they have in or against death who cannot rightly particularize the promises of eternal life
be better than you are and yet for all this you are the same man and woman It hath convinced you of Christ's readinesse to espouse you and yet you have not been willing to give your sins a Bill of divorcement and to put them away it hath made conscience its deputy your bosome Friend that knows you well and should have great interest in you Conscientia est cordis scientia and hath set it on work to speak to and to deal with you but all will not do The spirit hath visited you every day upon this account and hath spoken to you enticing words and intreated you not to be so unruly like an Heifer unaccustomed to the yoke and hath said come soul hearken to the voice of God obey the call of Christ you do not know how much it may be for your good why will you not be gracious and holy Do you not know that to be Godly is to be Godlike The great God that can grind you to powder the good God that can save your soul calls upon you invites you and will you say nay The spirit hath opened the Lord's love Letters and read them to you and descanted upon them but you regard not To sin against such shinings of the spirit is no small matter affronts offered to the spirit will sit heavy upon the soul when time shall be Hath the Dove come and have not you Spiritus Jesus spiritus bonus Sanctus rectus c. Isai 63. 10. opened the window to let it in Hath the holy good pure spirit of Jesus Christ thus parlyed with you and do you stand out against its sweet assaults This is to vex and rebel against the spirit which is a great provocation to the Lord and aggravation of thy sin whereby thou doest incurre his displeasure procure thy destruction 5. The Longitude of your life The thred S. 14 of your life hath been spun out to a great length you have lived many a year in the world you have lived to see your glasse run and turned up again when others have died before their glasse hath been half run The day of your life hath been not a Winter's but a Summer's day You have followed many of your relations and acquaintance to the grave who have been younger than you but you live still The Lord hath made you a long lease and it is not yet expired He hath cut down some assoon as they have budded and blossomed but he letteth you stand still He hath stopped the breath of some soon after he hath given it them but thy breath is still in thy nostrils Thy radical heat is not put out thy radical moisture is not yet dried up He hath caused thy Sun to stand still in the Firmament and hath kept it from going down at noon day he hath lengthened thy time from the spring of youth to the autumne of ripe and mature years And yet thou hast brought forth no clusters of Grapes no ripe fruit It was the aggravation of Jezebel's sin that the Lord gave her space to repent of her fornication and she repented not Revel 2. 21. It is sad that thy Virtutes faciunt dies bones dayes have been great but not good that thy dayes have been many and thy grace but mean Thou hast through the Lord's clemency renewed thy youth as the Eagle but though the Lord hath been calling thy heart is not renewed The Lord hath added years to thy daies as he did to Hezekiah but thou hast 2 Kings 20. 6. not yet added sanctity to thy civility nor piety in the power to thy profession in the forme Thou art well stricken in years but thou hast never yet fully stricken a Covenant with the Lord. Thou art entred a great way into the scores but wouldest never yet enter cordially into the School of Christ The Lord hath cut off many in their sins while they have been acting unrighteousnesse as the drunkard that said he should never die yet fell down a pair of staires presently and died while you have escaped and your life hath been given you for a prey and yet all this while you have gotten no grace You have seen of the fruit of your body it may be to the third generation and yet the Lord hath seen no fruits of grace from your soul you have been fruitful according to the flesh but barren according to the spirit You have lived so long as to have an hoary head but not so long as to have an holy heart Hath the Lord lengthened out your daies to a longer date than the daies of many of your stock and Family and yet are you without grace Are you ancient in years and yet have not come in to the ancient of dayes Is invaluable time of no value with you Is it nothing think you to live thirty fourty fifty Nihil pretiosius tempore heu nil hodiè eo vilius invenitur nay sixty yea almost four-score years without a change without conversion after so many callings The Lord giveth you time to turn in and will not you turn in time The Lord deferres as doomes-day so death's-day out of long suffering because he is not willing that thou shouldest perish but that thou shouldest 2 Pet. 3. 9 come to repentance Hast thou stood all this while in the Lord's orchard and is not the time of Figs yet with thee What will Christ say when he comes finds nothing but leaves on thee at these years Age and years aggravate Mark 11. 13 14. failings of infirmity because such should have more discretion much more then the fault of impenitency because they should have had true contrition It is not because others are worse then you that while they after a little time have withered in the grave you for a long time have walked on the Earth but it is that you might be better then they It is not because you shall not die to nature but it is because he would have you live to grace and yet are you dead while living no life nor love to this day Ah poor soul is it not a very great evil that the Lord hath been laying siege to thine heart these thirty fourty fifty years or more and yet thou hast stood up and stouted it out against him that thou hast so long been called by him and yet thy deaf vile heart hath not hearkned to him nor closed with him length of time overcomes many things but thou hast been little Nihil est quod longinquitas temporis efficere non possit the better for thy long time There hath been an extension of thy daies but no intension of thy desires a lengthening of thy season but no loathing of thy sins 6. The latitude of your comforts Your S. 15 daies have had breadth as well as length Your daies have been fair not foul clear not cloudy delightful with Sun-shine not darkned with sadnesse some have had a continued but not a
When I have a convenient Acts 24. 25. season I will call for thee but know thou that delays are destructive as one hath said Who love delays and their time for to slack Live by the losse and shall no sorrows lack To defer in this case is to deny to procrastinate is but to prevaricate He that refuseth to hearken now it is to be feared he will hearken never When Saul would have asked counsel by his prolonging he was prevented 1 Sam. 14. 18 19. future intentions are great hindrances to present actions and those that account of doing much in the time that shall be do nothing in the time that is You know the Proverb which saith Make hay while the Sun shines and strike while the Iron is hot and what Solomon saith in his Proverbs Boast not thy self of to morrow for thou knowest not what a day Prov. 27. ● may bring forth The present time only is ours It may be hereafter the Sun may not shine nor the Spirit blow the fire to morrow may be worse then to day many have thought Deteriot posterior dies to get loose from sin in futurity and so have lost their souls to eternity many there are who have sinfully deferred conversion and thereby have been sadly defeated of their expectation many have thought to get goodness in their age and have been cut off for badnesse in their youth God's calls are in the present tense and so should your conversion be if you do not turn timely you will hardly turn truly It is one of Satan's policies to make you drive off this work which in effect is no other then to drive away the worker viz. the Holy Ghost and one of his fallacies to suggest to you that so the work be done all is well and that it may be as well done hereafter as for the present whereas the Scripture saith the contrary To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts Heb. 3. 7 8. 4. Worldly prosecutions They have so S. 25 much to do to follow the pleasures and profits of this life that they forget the path to a better they have so many irons in the fire that they neglect their souls their game and their gain so take them up that there is no room for the babe of grace in the Inn of their hearts the voice of the world so sounds in their ears that they cannot hear the voice of the word they are so bowed down with terrestrial conversations that they cannot look Discit● in hoc mundo supra m●ndum esse upward with heavenly contemplations these flowers they will have though they venture their souls in the gathering of them the choise of their affections that chief of their time is so laid out this way that there is nothing left to be spent in industrious endeavours after conversion and effectual calling It may be said of most as Christ said to Martha they Luke 11. 41 42. are careful and troubled about many things that they forget that one thing that is needful They are like Duke D' Alva who when the King his Master asked him if he had seen the Eclipse answered he had so much to do on earth that he had no leisure to look up to heaven so much do they converse with the creature that they know not how to convert to the Creator And so they can but furnish the body it matters not with them though they forget their souls they stoop to take up these golden apples and in the mean time lose the prize of grace they are loth to come out of the warm Sun-shine into God's blessing there is such a croud of worldly thoughts and intentions about the heart that grace canot get neer the door with its motions they followthese things with such speed that when they should look after grace alas their spirits are spent It is just that they should go away without the pearl who spend their time in getting pebbles and that they should be deprived of the directing spirit who devote themselves to the Fallax est hic mundus deceiving world for when your out-side thrives upon its treacherous bounty you will but starve at heart for want of grace yet this is the course and custome of people to lose treasures for looking after trifles and to put Luke 14. 18 19. off Christ's call with their oxen and their farms Christ calleth them in the Ministry of the word to grace to sanctity to an upright walking to the renovation of their souls they desire to be excused however a while they would fain have a little more delight fain reach to such an estate fain dispatch such a businesse they cannot yet tend to such things people are so buried in sensual things that they know not how to look after a spiritual life These things so swallow up their affections that better things can find no acceptance with them These do so monopolize and ingrosse their time and thoughts that the Spirit 's motions can find no entertainment with them Ah vain man are pleasure and profit such darlings that your soul and grace are the lesse dear to you Will not you repent it when it is too late Lysimachus yielded up his Army and whole power into the enemies hands for a little water to quench his and their thirst and when he had so done then cried out What have I lost for a little drink It will be sad when thou shalt be forced to complain another day and say What have I lost my God for gold my soul for sin piety for profit grace for gain wisedom for wealth goodnesse for greatnesse Do but remember what Christ saith What will it profit a man if Mat. 16. 26 he gain the whole world and lose his own soul Hast not thou been so taken up with hunting and hawking so ingaged to sports and recreations In voluptatis regno non potest virtus consistere so addicted to carnal delights that thou hast not been free to the Spirit 's tenders Thou hast followed after these things so far and so fast that thou art got out of the Spirit 's call It is strange that the world should be such a Jewel in your eyes that it must be had though with the losse of a Jesus It is much that you should run an eternal adventure for a temporal advantage God I am sure made you not for this end that you should be a servant and vassal to these things yet thou art all for treasuring up goods but carest not for treasuring up grace such as resolve and endeavour to be rich in body will hardly be rich in soul so long as thou art wedded to the world thou wilt hardly be willing to repent We cannot serve two masters we cannot Matth. 6. 24. serve God and Mammon And if the love of the world be within the love of God and grace 1 Joh. 2. 15. must needs be without If upon
these things you bestow your time you will hardly to better bend your mind Two works especially of divers and contrary natures cannot be followed to purpose and if calling be not effectual it is not of proof 5. Want of attention People set not themselves S 26 to mind what is spoken and without heart-minding there is little likelihood of heart-mending They do not hide that seed in the furrows of their heart which is sown by the Ministers hand The not heeding the word is a great cause of not having the work The word not pondered in the mind is unlike to be a means of purifying the man many think Verba Dei quae aure percipitis mente retinete it enough to give it the hearing though they refuse it entertainment Hearing without heeding will bring little good to the soul People many times give as little regard to the truth as to a tale The word is the means of effectual calling if that be not minded it is like to have little effect upon a man or woman The word is to be heard with both ears when people hear they do not hear as if it were for their life they consider not the reality of what is spoken nor the special reference it hath to them They are not careful that nothing fall to the ground of that which falleth from heaven It is said of Lydia that she heard Act. 16. 14. and attended to the things which were spoken of Paul The way to acquaintance with the Spirit 's work is attendance to the Spirit 's word But people when they hear things of concernment look upon them as customary many things of weight and worth are propounded to them which they slightly run over and do not ruminate this is the great cause of their spiritual uncleannesse because they chew not the cud There must be attention without avocation conscionable careful hearers reach to something when others sive-like let out as much and as oft as let in People are told of their condition which did they consider they would look after a restitution They hear the nature of sin the news of a Saviour of the quality of grace the necessity of Christ which were they more often in their serious meditation there were some more hopes of their spiritual mutation We see Christ so intent upon his work that the had not liberty to eat bread and every Christian Mark 3. 20 21. should be a follower of Christ I have read of one Nicias a Painter who was so earnest Plutarch in his work of painting that he forgat his meals and would ask his servants whether he had dined or no. But alas in things of an higher yea an incomparable nature people have only their bodies present while their souls are absent They do not gather up nor call in their spirits and affections and center Hoc age them upon the business in hand and to this purpose doth the Lord complain of his people under Ezekiel's Ministry that they did afford Ezek. 33. 31. a personal appearance but did not accord to a spiritual attendance that they did hear the word but did not heart it for their heart was truanting abroad after their covetousness while they tasked their bodies to an outward correspondency People give no diligent heed and hence it is that they have no dutiful hearts Quid vobis plus esse videtur verbum Dei aut corpus Christi Non minus est reus qui verbū Dei negligenter audiverit quam ille qui corpus Christi in terrā negligentia sua cadere permisit They hear only for fashion and not to be fashioned by the word otherwise they would hear not only with their heads but also with their hearts The words of the Lord are no common words no ordinary sayings that they should be so much slighted It is a great offence to God and a great obstacle to our souls good not carefully to mind what is propounded for it is delivered to us and to our use and by this means it becomes uselesse This hath been the marring of many an ones soul because they have minded the word no more hearing more for complement than for conversion for custome than for conscience If thou go on in this negligent carelesse way of hearing wherein thou art thou art not like to be converted without attention and intention of mind there is like to be no retention of memory and without both no likelihood of contrition for thy sins The word not heeded will little help thee it argueth a fatal darknesse of peoples spirits that they should fancy health from the hearing of the word when they are not watchful in waiting upon it It sheweth that delusions prevail far upon them that they can think to be saved by that which they do not savour to be savingly converted by that which they do not seriously consider If ever you would have sin let out you must see that the word be let in 6. Others conversation This is a great S. 27 hinderance to the work of effectual calling People see others neglect it and not look after it and they do so too it is too usual to follow the examples of the most and not the best Presidents are usually prevalent we are more Plus valent exempla quam praecepta Perkins Rev. 3. 4. ready to follow the ways of man than the word of God It is a foul sin saith one that keeps many from Religion and brings them to destruction when they will live after the manner of the world They see their superiours confident though they be not converted They see them footing it in the fair way of formal profession and they judge it presumption for themselves which are as inferiours to step before them and get into the strict path of fervent piety It is judged of the world a piece of incivility and want of breeding to desire or endeavour to be better then our betters our rich and wise neighbours say people have not this work upon them which Ministers so speak of and yet they are men and women of some worth They have understanding and know what they do and we hope we shall not do amisse if we tread in their steps This is a great block in the way at which many so stumble that they tumble into hell Children follow their Parents Servants their Masters the Cottager the Courtier the Tenant his Landlord the Peasant the Prince and most do write after the Copies Vivitur exemplo that their superiours set them Many are ready to say as the Samaritan woman Art thou greater then our father Jacob And did not Joh. 4. 12. the Pharisees object this to the officers that seemed to have some good inclination to Christ Have any of the rulers or the Pharisees Joh. 7. 48. believed on him But it is not safe to sail by their compasse which is not right set nor to follow them who know not the way
so great a work and they are these four following The 1. Hastinesse of death 2. Horrour of forsaking 3. Hardnesse of your heart 4. Hazard of your soul The Lord work these pills into form with his own hand and blesse them to a powerful and profitable operation 1. The hastinesse of death You know not S. 30 how soon you may die and your Sun may set you have no lease of your life nor with Joshua are you like to prevail that your Sun may stand still in its firmament at your pleasure If God with the sword of his justice cut the thread of your life asunder you fall so low that no lift can help you you are ruin'd beyond recovery What if you had that message which Hezekiah had 2 Kings 20. beginning such a message will come you know Tuus ultimus dies abesse non potest longe adhuc te praepara qualis enim exieris de hac vita talis redderis illi vitae not how soon and your house is not set in order your accounts not cast up you are not in an estate of grace what then will become of you When nature's life is done you can never have a spiritual life if you had it not before what though you be well at present yet you may soon be sick nay you may die without sicknesse Death may lay an ambushment and surprise you before you are aware Though it be fair weather for the present yet you know not how soon it may overcast Death is an eclipse that hapneth in a cloudy as well as in a clear day and when death hath done his work though you should seek your own repentance with tears as Esau did his fathers yet it were in vain It had Heb. 12. 17. been better you had never lived than to die in a dead sinful condition If your grave-change come before your grace-change woe be to thee soul what if this night your soul should be required of you what would be your doom when you had never throughly inquired after the Lord If you die in your sins you are damned for your sins if you lose your life you lose your soul too if your soul and body part without a part in Christ and in grace God and you must part to all eternity and many have died suddenly and why not you many betimes and why not you some die young and melt as snow before the mid-day-Sun God hath no where told you that you shall live till you are old when your time is once gone it shall never return Is there such uncertainty of the time of death and no certainty of the truth of grace you may die this week this day this hour and if not effectually called the misery of your condition is inexpressible The Lord pull your feet out of this snare Oh my dear friends if you die not effectually called there is no help nor hope for you All the balm in Gilead will not cure your wound It may be death is at your door ready to fieze on you He hath his commission and warrant it may be and is Cito pede praeterit aetas coming towards you as fast as he can oh if you be not changed Hast thou not looked after this work Hast thou forgotten to seek for a new heart then destruction fiezeth upon you like an armed man Death stays for none when he comes you must away though never such a sinner though never so unfit 2. The Horror of forsaking Consider in S. 31 the next place what a dreadful thing it is to be forsaken of God and to have the Almighty depart from our souls What if your day of grace should be over and gone it is more then you know but it may be so Though your Transivit dies salutis nemo recogitat natural Sun be not set yet if the Sun of righteousnesse be gone down in thine Horizon woe be unto thee Though God in his common dealings be neer thee yet if in his spiritual dispensations he be at a distance I may say with the Prophet Woe unto thee when God shall thus depart from thee Spiritual derelictions Hos 9. 12. can have no other end then sore destruction such as are left of the Lord must needs be lost in themselves when the day of grace is at an end a man or woman is never like to see good day more God's departures are doleful and dreadful our times as in natural so in spiritual things are in the Lord's hands Divines say there is a time set for the conversion of souls which when it is once gone and past their condition is desperate and such words have their warrant from the Word for the Spirit counselleth to seek the Lord while he may be found and to call upon Isa 55. 6. him while he is neer There is a time of God's appropinquation and after that nothing but alienation there is a time of God's presence and after that he absents himself And to this purpose speaks truth it self Jesus Christ to Jerusalem If thou hadst known at lest in this thy day the things that belong to thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes And they Luke 19. 42 44. shall not leave in thee one stone upon another because thou knewest not the time of thy visitation There was a nick of time wherein all might have been salved and made whole but that being past there was no remedy And thus did the Lord threaten his people of old Because I have purged thee and thou wast not Ezek. 24. 13. purged thou shalt not be purged from thy filthiness any more till I have caused my fury to rest upon thee I have purged thee that is I have called upon thee to be purged and have Verbo praecepi te mundari Jun. in loc afforded means thereto which you refused and therefore are rejected If your day of grace be done you are undone though you should live never so many years more in this world for graces day and natures day are not always of an equal length What if God should say of you as he did of the old world my spirit shall not always nay it shall no longer Gen. 6. 3. strive with this man this woman When God gives his spirit a commission to visit with its motions a man or woman he limits a time and saith if by such a time they come not in let them alone if by such a time they come not over to me give them over to themselves when the glasse is out and the last sands are run speak no more to them strive no more with them It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands but much more fearful thus to fall out of the hands of the living God If God should passe that doom upon you which we find Rev. 22. 11. He that is unjust let him be unjust still and he which is filthy let him be filthy still it would
lusteth against the spirit and the spirit lusteth Gal. 5. 17. against the flesh and these contrary the one to the other even as fire and water heat and cold They swell at and look big one upon another there being an irreconcileable antipathy between them They are like enemies keeping garrison within a little one of another who are continually alaruming and beating up each others quarters As it is said in 1 Sam. 14. 52. That there was sore war against the Philistins all the days of Saul So it may be said in this case there is sore war against sin all the days of grace after that once comes to king it in the soul These will struggle in the womb As she said The Philistins are upon thee Sampson so may be it said here sin is upon thee grace and grace is upon thee sin grace is no coward but will at sin again and again and hunt it out of every corner for sin will lift up his hand and be treacherously acting now grace cannot bear this 1. Ob. But some may say there is a combat S. 55 and fight with sin even in a natural man how then can this be a sign of effectual calling Sol. The conflict in such is between the will and understanding The war is between natural conscience commonly enlightened and the affections and desires of the soul They would embrace this and the other object which Video meliora proboque deteriora sequor the understanding judgeth not meet and hence comes the broil as she in the Poet said I see that which is good yet settle upon that which is bad 2. Ob. Yet further some will say how shall I S. 56 know the one from the other namely that combat which is in the godly from that which is in the S. 57 ungodly Quando timore poenae non amore justitiae fit bonum nondum bene fit bonum Sol. There are these marks whereby it may be known whether thou fight under Christ's banner or no. 1. In the wicked this combat proceeds from servile fear as an horse will strive against his sluggishness and mend his pace for fear of the spur or whip and not out of respect to his master so do the wicked So it was with the Colonists that the King of Assyria sent to inhabite Samaria the fear of the Lions made 2 Kings 17. 25 32. them amend their manners they were driven not drawn to their partial outward reformation In God's people this opposing sin is from a filial fear and springs from a child-like awe of and respect to their father though they see no rod in his hand They fear this glorious and fearful name The Lord our God they fear Deut. 28. 58. him because he is their God as well as because he is the Lord. The constellations of God's attributes viz. justice power infiniteness wisdom patience love hath an influence upon them to work in them a well tempered fear which furnisheth and fortifieth their spirits to the resisting their spiritual enemies 2. This strife in the wicked is usually against S. 58 gross sins as Judas repented him after a sort of his treachery notorious sins make their consciences to startle when they will not so much as move a finger against lesser sins and such as are of common and dayly infirmities at the noise of forraign invasions and strange sins it may be they will cry Arm arm but for all domestick and home-bred divisions they can sleep securely though the enemy beset their house round about It may be they bid some defiance to such sins as march in the head of the troop but as for meaner sins that bring up the rear they hold a confederacy and league with them but as for the godly soul it fighteth against a common souldier as well as a chief commander 3. They go on in their practice of wickedness S. 59 notwithstanding they may strike a blow Qui pectus suum tundit se non corrigit peccata solidat non tollit but soon cry quarter and make peace they make a flourishing offer but no furious onset though their conscience may kick at sin yet they will try to swallow it they do not overcome but are overcome they and their sins may seemingly be foes but they are suddenly friends again but so it is not with one that is effectually called he dares not have any league with his enemy he and his sins have such a fewd that they part the doing or not doing a 1 John 3. 9 10. sin is the badge whereby the one are known from the other and though a godly man may be foiled in his wrestling yet he doth not so fall as not to recover and though he may be cast by a sin yet he doth not continue in it 4. The wicked seek the repression only and S. 60 not the confusion the curbing and not the killing the restraining not the ruining the taming not the taking away their sins and lusts If they can but keep them from running abroad in the action they will give them good entertainment at home in the disposition An horse may be restrained by the curb and yet have a mind to be flinging and flying out A water-course may be stayed by a bank and yet have a propensity to run over even so it is with the wicked in reference to sin they lop the branch but never look after the root so they can but quench and damp the fire for the present they care for no more but the godly seek the mortification and plucking of sin up by the roots they seek not only to cut off the hand but also to kill the heart of sin Mortifie therefore your members that are on earth is the Apostle's counsel Col. 3. 5. The wicked snuff the candle the godly extinguish and put it out a godly soul vows the death and destruction of its sins and would have the heart blood of them will give them no quarter 2. Impartial prosecution The soul that is S. 61 effectually called is impartial towards sin it doth not prize some and part with others it hath not a confederacy with some because advantagious and a combat with others because abominable it doth not favour this because attended by profit nor frown on that because allied to poverty it doth not savour one sin because more sweet nor disrellish another because more sowr it is sufficient it is sin it matters not with them what it can say for it self though constitution and custome gain and glory profit and pleasure delight and dignity should stand up as advocates and plead in the behalf of such and such a sin yet its ears would be deaf to their insinuating oratory though it were the signet on its right hand yet it would cast it away though it were their dear darling minion sin yet it would thrust it out of doors As Jephthah said in another case Whatsoever cometh 1 Sam. 14. 39. first out of