Selected quad for the lemma: soul_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
soul_n body_n call_v death_n 12,105 5 5.7391 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A04187 Iustifying faith, or The faith by which the just do liue A treatise, containing a description of the nature, properties and conditions of Christian faith. With a discouerie of misperswasions, breeding presumption or hypocrisie, and meanes how faith may be planted in vnbeleeuers. By Thomas Iackson B. of Diuinitie and fellow of Corpus Christi Colledge in Oxford.; Commentaries upon the Apostles Creed. Book 4 Jackson, Thomas, 1579-1640. 1615 (1615) STC 14311; ESTC S107483 332,834 388

There are 26 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

but as good to vs in the practise as much better then auoiding the displeasure or gaining the fauours of any earthly powers Secondly That this Assent must be vniforme and a like sincere to euery truth a like strong to euery practise alwaies increasing according to the seuerall degrees of truth or goodnesse apprehended in the obiect or different exigence of times and place wherein wee liue these points are most cleere That Christian faith is more directly oppugned by wilfull neglect or auowed violations of morall or Euangelicall precepts then by bare errors in opinion or such heresie as directly include not blasphemie against the blessed Trinity for the chiefe euill of all others consists in reference to wicked practises whereunto they lead or incline men That the Ministers of the Gospell may deny CHRIST or manifest their ashamednesse of his Gospell as directly by not laying his Lawe as closely to the great Herods of the world as Iohn Baptist did suppose the case be as notorious and as well knowne vnto them as if they had been afraid to confesse him for feare of being put out of the synagogue or ●ayd with those other Iewes wee know that God spake with Mose and gaue authority vnto Magistrates but this man we know not whence he is nor do we care for his Counsells Yet were Iohn Baptists kinde of preaching vsed in many kingdomes though by such as professe the same Religion with the Potentates they should offend with their boldnesse I think it would proue matter of martyrdome in the end That any age since Christian Religion was first propagated hath wanted store of Martyrs is more to be attributed vnto the negligence ignorance and hypocrisie or want of courage in Christs embassadors or appointed Pastors then vnto the sincerity mildnesse or fidelity of the flock especially of the bell-weathers or chiefe ring-leaders Or if Satan had not abated the edge of primitiue zeale and resolution by that dishonorable peace concluded betweene Christianity and Gentilisme after the setling of Gothes and Vandalls in these parts of Christendome had hee not vtterly benummed mankinde by locking vp their spirituall senses in mid-night darkenesse and fettering their soules in superstition since the time he himselfe was let loose Rome Christian had seene more Martyrs euen of such as did not much dissent from her in most opinions held within sixe hundred yeeres of CHRIST in one yeere then Rome heathen at any time had knowen in ten Euen in Churches best reformed it would bee much easier I thinke to finde store of iust matter for Martyrdom than of men fit to make Martyrs And hee that hath liued any long time in these quiet mansions and seates of Muses secure from Mars his broiles or externall violence hath great cause either to magnifie the tender mercies of his gracious God or suspect himselfe for an hypocrite if hee haue not suffered some degrees of Martyrdome But vnto such as haue been exercised therein it bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnesse and ought to encourage rather then daunt them whilest they liue in these Paradises free God bee praysed from boysterous blasts as taint other plants of the same nursery remooued abroad to vse this calme and happy season they enioy for setting their faith and loue aright that they may spread themselues equally to euery point of that compasse by which they are to direct their course in this troublesome sea of vncertainties that their strength in practise and profession may iointly increase without all respect to persons or particular duties saue what ariseth from the excesse of worth in the things themselues belieued or loued or of necessity or speciall occasions of performances that they may further as much as in them lies by word and deed the vnpartiall execution of their blessed Founders statutes of whose beneficence they daily taste albeit oft-times with opposition to them or offence taken by them in whose arbitrement their estimation in the world or a great part of the maintenance prouided for them depends If by framing our resolutions and affections by little and little to march on constantly though but slowly in this vniformity and proportion wee can come at length to repell proffers of Honour whereunto we cannot ascend but by winding and crooked steppes or of gaine not easily gotten but by vnlawfull meanes or to hold fleshly pleasures as deadly poisons to our soules then shall our deaths bee acceptable in the sight of our God and if it be his heauenly wil hereafter to call vs to resistance of iniquitie euen vnto blood wee haue these sure grounds of hope that we shall offer vp our mortall bodies in sacrifice vnto Him the onely true and euerliuing GOD not to the sactious humours of these corrupt times or vaine Idoles or our foolish fancies 9. This vniformity of growth in faith and want of partiality in our zeale I haue affected since I knew what belonged vnto either the rather because as I sincerely professe in the sight of God the first ground of my dislike vnto the chiefe sollicitors of reformation in our Church men whose excellent parts and good labours I then did and euer shall reuerence was the difformity of their zeale for had it been vniforme no question but it had moued them to lay downe their liues for redressing knowne enormities in the Common-weale as much more materiall and more neerely concerning the aduancement of the Gospell then those doubtfull controuersies for so I apprehended them of formalities about which they stroue as death it selfe is more terrible then depriuation The principall authors or abettors of which enormities notwithstanding were imboldened by these encomiasts in whose language euery Cormorant that would countenance their cause was a sanctified person a sonne of God Their partialitie herein towards others may occasion vs to obserue a blast of like temptation naturally rising from like humours which oftentimes ouerthrowes faith where it is well-nigh rightly set and ready to take By nature if not preuented by grace and a watchfull eye ouer our perswasions we seeke to make amends for our delinquency in points whose practise our affections cannot well brooke by a supererogation in some other duties wherein we either naturally delight or can inflict vpon our selues as an easie penance because not much distastfull to our sweet desires nor contrary to our principall resolutions Many gallants of dissolute and debaushed behauiour and sometimes Ministers of life scandalous and obnoxious though neither of there I vse as instances for proofe of my assertion will in their discourses bewray an affected desire of declaiming against errors in generall opinions abstract from vse or reformation of life or some antient heretiques whose heresies might oft-times sleepe with their bodies were they not wakened by loud out-cries against them What is the reason that such men as are most vnfurnished in these subtilities are vsually most forward to entertaine conflicts with the dead or men farre absent They are afraid to looke vpon themselues without
but would seeke to merit their fauour by gratefull offices It was extraordinary in this woman firmly to belieue as shee told the messengers but resting so perswaded a worke of no perfection to make her peace with the Israelites ●ad shee doubted whether their title vnto the land of Canaan had been iust or suspected Gods donation of it vnto Abraham to haue been forged by his successors as Constantines is by the baser Roman cleargy shee might without any iust imputation for want of loue or other good works haue aduentured her life amongst her neighbours in defence of her country Or had she vpon the Israelites misdemeanours distrusted their successe she might at last in worldly policy haue rather hazarded their future displeasure then incurred present danger of death or torture of her Citizens for harbouring spies But whiles she firmly belieues both that the Israelites donation was from God that they would certainly preuaile against her people though her entertainment and concealement of them were acts of kindnesse prudence and humanity yet their omission had been properly not of faith because impulsiuely they were from faith nor could they haue been omitted but through vnbeliefe or distrust vnto Gods promises Worldlings would haue condemned her not for vvant of charitie but for excesse folly rather had shee not done as shee was perswaded By faith then those workes become righteous which without it had been traiterous And if we respect not the cause of our knowledge but the thing knowne faith did perfect the workes the workes only made the perfection of faith knowne to men In this sense it is most true of faith what some misapply to iustification of mens persons workes iustifie and perfect faith not in the nature of the thing but in the sight of man to whom they witnesse the liuelihood and perfection of faith no● as causes but effects and signes of our iustifiattion they are not onely signes but conditions concomitant or precedent In the same sense are these other words of the Apostle to be vnderstood As the body without the spirit is dead so faith vvithout vvorkes is dead also For if a humane bodie want spirit breath or motion we rightly gather it wants life yet are breath and motion rather effects then causes of life But the schoole-men dreaming the holy Ghost had been scholler to Aquinas or some chiefe masters of their profession take the sprit in this place for actus primus as the soule by which wee liue and breath and hence they conceiued that grosse error which the Romanist now makes an article of his beliefe to wit that works animate or at least casually perfect faith as the soule of man doth his bodie And wheras Caluin most acutely and orthodoxally infers that if faith without works or charity bedead it is not properly but equiuocally called faith They reply workes or charitie do not informe faith intrinsecally as the reasonable soule doth man for so it would follow that as he is not a man but a dead trunk which hath no soule so it should not bee true faith but an image or dead picture of faith which wants vvorkes or charitie How then do they perfect faith Extrinsecally as the soule doth the body or other halfe of man which remaines a true body though no true man after the soules departure For application of this distinction they adioine when Saint Iames affirmes faith to be dead without workes he tearmes it dead in such a sense as we say a body is dead by the soules absence and yet remains a true bodie Whence sayth Valentian the sectaries haue furnished vs with an argument against themselues Rather this answere is contrary to Valentians and his fellowes assertions for were his illustration true and pertinent workes or faith should constitute one grace and qualitie as the body and soule make one man which no Papist dare affirme of the habite of faith and charitie being graces in their iudgements specifically distinct And Valentian who stands most vpon the former illustration expresly denies that charity much lesse workes can be any proper forme of faith either intrinsecall as the reasonable soule is of man or extrinsecall as whitenesse is of the body Some perfection notwithstanding Charitie giues to Faith in which respect it may by analogie to true and proper formes bee metaphorically said to informe saith The perfection it giues hee so expresseth that the Latine Reader by his words cited at full in the margine for I will not trouble the text with them may plainly perceiue hee was desirous to say somewhat but he knew not what Arias Montanus who better vnderstood Saint Iames his phrase by the analogie of faith and forme of wholsome doctrine then Valentian did himselfe or this fictitious analogie betwixt Charitie naturall formes interprets the former place in part to our purpose To liue as Philosophers say is to operate and vitall operation proceedeth not from the bodie but from the spirit nor doth ●●e Apostle say workes are the spirit of faith where he speakes only of the appellation or name of life His meaning is that faith without workes is as truely reputed dead as the body without the spirit is rightly sayd as it truely is dead But if wee will not wrest the letter against the Apostles meaning but rather gently apply his words to his intent the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implies onely breath or motion enspired from the soule for workes in their nature are operations and are more fitly compared to breathings or motions then to the substantiall spirit or soule or the faculty whence these flow which last in proportion best answeres to faith Now as the readiest waie to ●et breath in one fallen in a swound or raise one vp out of a dead ●it is to reuiue the spirits by which vitall motions are inspired and managed so the onely way to bring forth liuing workes or fruites of righteousnes is to quicken or strengthen faith which liuely in it selfe and able to performe it proper acts as firmly to apprehend Gods power iustice and mercie will vndoubtedly giue life to all other powers and affections and impell them to their proper functions The Romanist as ignorant as the Iew of this righteousnesse which is by faith preposterously seekes to make vs new men in Christ not by reuiuing faith which is as the animall spirit by whose influence works become vitall but as if one from this principle in nature man is dead vvithout breath and motion should seeke to bring men out of swounds or dead fits by blowing breath into them with a quill or making them moue by deuises so he grosely mistaking that saying of S. Iames as the body without the spirit so faith without workes is dead also hence seekes to raise vp such as die in Adam after the same manner we haue seene them raised which fall downe dead in an anticke first by wagging one arme then another vntill the whole body moue The anticke
was against his brother Abell for they slew him because their owne workes were euill and his good as their fathers had done the Prophets to whom this vngratious seed did seeke to testifie their loue as being now out of sight and no eye-fore to their purposes no way offensiue to their eares because their speeches were not personally directed to them and what might be as fitly applied to others they had the wit not to applie to themselues But whiles vertue and pietie breath in the presence of the vngodly they are still desirous to breake the vessell wherein this treasure lies yet what was the reason or what doth the euent protend to vs that the children should still delight to build stately mansions for their dead bones whose glorious soules the fathers enuied imprisonment in these brittle cabbins of clay vntill the time of Messiahs death vnto whose memory the reliques of that vngratious seed performes no like solemnity giues no signification either of loue to him or sorrow for their fathers sinne but rather openly professe oh had we liued in the daies of our fathers wee would haue beene pertakers with them in that praier His blood bee vpon vs and vpon our children This doubtlesse beares record that Gods wrath according to their wish is come vpon them to the vtmost that the measure of the fathers iniquity and theirs was then fulfilled that vntill Christs death there were meanes left to know those things which were for their peace time for repentance but since they haue resembled the state of the damned in Hell continually blaspheming that holy name which brought saluation to the world Now seeing their conceipted swelling loue vnto his forerunners deceased did in the fulnesse of time wherein it should haue brought forth life prooue but dead and abortiue this should stirre vs vp to a more exquisite examination of our faith to make sure triall whether our loue to Christ whom they slew be not conceiued from the same grounds theirs was vnto the Prophets whom their fathers had slaine least ours also become as fruitles or rather bring forth death in that day wherin Christ shall be manifested againe after which shall be no time for repentance no meanes to amend what is then found amisse 3. Admit our affection to CHRIST IESVS the son of Mary borne in Bethlehem and crucified at Ierusalem by the Iew were more feruent then the Scribes and P●●arises loue to Abraham to Moses and the Prophets our zeale to his Gospell more ardent then theirs to the law such prouocations or allurements as flesh and blood may suggest either to beginne or continue these embracements or our imaginations of them are on our part more in number and more potent First by Nature fashions of the time education we are more prone because more ingenuous then they were to conceiue well of men deceased especially of men whose good fame hath bin propagated to vs with applause though no● of all but of some great or better part of our predecessors The praises giuen to Pompey Caesar by their followers oft times draw yong schollers into faction as the seuerall characters of those two great peeres liues and dispositions suit with the different idaeall notions they haue framed vnto themselues of braue mindes of noble generals or good patriots Amongst Critiques some canuase for one Poet or classique Author some for another as they finde them most commended by writers whose iudgements they best approoue or are most beholden to or as they apprehend their skill in that kind of learning they most affect To make comparison of any liuing with the dead especially in whose works those men haue much laboured would seeme odious and this great affection they beare vnto their writings they would haue apprehended as no meane argument of their owne like skill and iudgement though not blessed with like inuention Many scarce honestly minded themselues will esteeme of their great benefactors as of Saints ready to apologize as is fit for such actions as men in their owne times vnto whom the censure of such matters belonged might iustly haue taxed All these motiues of loue vnto men deceased may in their nature and substance be but carnall and yet all concurre as the vsuall grounds of most mens affection or loue to Christ For whilest we reade the legend of his life we cannot but approoue the peoples verdict of him he hath done all things well nothing idlely nothing vainely nothing rashly much lesse maliciously to the hurt or preiudice of any his deserts towards vs we cannot apprehend by the lowest kinde of hystoricall beliefe as true but we must conceiue them withall as infinitely greater then Abrahams were to the Iewes Abraham did but see the promise a farre off and gaue a copie of the assurance to posterity CHRIST sealeth it with his blood and insta●●s vs in the inheritance bequeathed Moses deliuered Abrahams seed out of Egypt CHRIST vs from the land of darkenesse Moses freed them from the tyrannie of Pharach and from working in the fornace CHRIST vs from the futie of those euerlasting flames for which out soules and bodies had serued for such matter as the bricke was to the other Ioshuah placed them in the land of Canaan CHRIST vs in the heauenly places the benefits already bestowed by him vpon his people are much greater then all theirs that haue gone before Abraham was ignorant of these Iewes Isaac knew them not nor could Moses heare their praiers who is like vnto the Lord our God who dwelleth on high who humbleth himselfe to behold the things that are in heauen and in the earth he that raiseth vp the poore out of the dust and lifteth the needy out of the dunghill that he may set him with Princes euen with the Princes of his people But so il doth the naturall crookednesse of mans corrupted heart and preposterousnesse of his desires paralell with the righteousnesse of his Sauiour that euen the humility wherein the first appeared which chiefely exasperated the proud Iew to contemne and despise him doth eleuate the mindes of many seely and impotent deiected creatures amongst Christians vnto a kinde of carnall glory whereunto otherwise they could hardly aspire For many such as defect of nature want of art good education or fortunes haue made altogether vncapable of comparison with others for wit strēgth of bodie wealth or other endowments in the custome of the present world vsed for measures of mens worth or serving to notifie the degrees of betterhood in any kinde will oft times glory in this comparison that they owe as good soules to God as the best and thinke themselues as great men in our Sauiours bookes as greatest kings because their estate is as his was on earth low and base in the sight of men This their reioycing were not in vaine did they vse the low esteeme that others make of them as an aduantage for more easie descent to true humility and lowly
we haue most reason to reioice in our defects or infirmities seeing the lesse temptations wee haue to glory in wealth strength or wit or whatsoeuer men call their owne the better opportunities we haue to glory in him who is the Lord of life and strength the authour of wealth and onely giuer of these and euery good gift To keepe mirth though actuall and externally occasioned within the bounds of wisdome or mingle much laughter with discretion is a skill whereof many natures are not capable much harder it is to retaine such strong naturall inclination as are the fountaines of our internall and habituall delight the chiefe pillars of our glory and principall rootes of our reioicing within the compasse of natures pollitique Lawes Hence as the Philosopher obserues excellency of beauty of bodily strength of birth or abundant wealth will hardly bee subdued vnto reason With what difficulty then will such glorious prerogatiues of flesh and blood bee drawne to yeeld loiall obedience vnto the humility and simplicity of faith when as that subiection which Aristotle requires in his morall patriot is but a formality in respect of that absolute deiection or prostration which true faith requires ere our soules be capable of it presence the best seruice which our inferiour faculties owe to reason morall or meerely naturall being but as dead and liuelesse in regard of that alacrity in performances wherewith grace expects to be entertained 2. The Epigramatist acutely imputes the stoickes contempt of death vnto the slender appertenances of his poore life in whose losse there could bee no great harme For who would much desire to see himselfe without change of apparell basely clad to lodge in a sordid cabin and goe to a hard bedsted hungry and colde but had he beene a while accustomed to those pleasures of which Rome till that time had neuer scarc●tie and Domitians present Court greatest variety he would haue wished vnlesse the Epigrammatist rashly or vncharitably censure his disposition that his life had beene lengthened as farre beyond the ordinary course of nature as Philoxenus did his wesand might be aboue the vsuall size of other mens Yet howsoeuer it be for the particular the indefinite truth of his coniecture is confirmed by the knowne experiment of Antigonus souldier who after the perfect recouery of his health became as tenderly respectfull as any of his fellow souldiers were of life whereof whilest his body was troubled with such a loathsome disease as made his soule desire to be diuorced from it he had beene so prodigall as made his generall admire his valour It may be both of these were willing to make a vertue of necessitie or if the stoickes resolution were rather out of choice yet it comes short of that true valour which the censurer by light of nature sawe to bee truely commendable and diuinity teaches to be absolutely necessary to a Christian souldier Rebus in angustis facile est contemnere vitam Fortiter ille facit qui miser esse potest A sorry life 's soone set at naught to leaue want is no losse His soule hath marched valiantly that sinks not vnder 's Crosse What the souldier did out of humour or constraint a wise man may doe out of deliberation or choice and without controuersie great is the liberty they gaine of others in good causes that from a serious forecast and view of a better end then these men did apprehend can prize both the present possession and all future hopes of life as low as these did their bodies in their calamities 3. Some critickes willing to shew they were able to espie a fault where there were one indeed haue taxed it as an indecorum in Homer which was none to bring old Chryses into Agamemnons presence neuer daunted with sight of the Grecian armie when as men of his age are vsually timerous And it is no maruell if that courage which springs from heate of blood and makes men aduenturous in boisterous encounters doe coole as the roots of their bodily strength and agility decay Notwithstanding the short remnant of a feeble life is easily ouerswaied with calme and quiet apprehensions of an honourable death wherewith the strong hopes which fresh spirits minis●●●nto yong men of long life are seldome stirred For vnto them the fight of death is alwaies gastly vnlesse it be presented in troubled blood nor can they vsually be drawne to meet it but vpon confidence of victorie or at least of making others die before them Thus vnlesse there be some other defect the lesse way old mē haue to run the farther start they haue of youth for freedom of speech or resolution before such as can put them to death without resistance Hence another Poet bringing in an aged sire more sharply expostulating his co●tryes cause with a Prince of fiercer disposition then Agamemnon as if ●ec had purposely sought to preoccupate all captious or criticall censures expresseth the reason of his boldnesse Vnde ea libertas iuxta illi finis aetas Tota retro saeraeque velit decus addere morti What freedoms this A priuate man to take a Tyrant downe His race being run t' was now fit time the end with praise to crowne Could we out of mature deliberation rest perswaded of what the doctrine of faith deliuers as a truth vndoubted that promotiō comes neither from the East nor from the West that length or shortnesse of life depend not on the course of nature but on his will and pleasure who hath euery member of our bodies written in his booke able to deface all instantly with one dash of his pen that if we spare to speake before others in his cause we may want breath to plead our owne before him How easie would it bee for vs to confesse Christ by professing the truth before the mightiest amongst the sonnes of men when as now our seruile dependance on such as our Christian freedome and resolution might bring in subiecton to the truths they scorne on such as haue not power to hurt our bodies or depriue vs of food and raiment or other necessaries of priuate life but onely to repell vs perhaps from ascending higher then any opportunity of doing good seruice to our Lord and Master calls vs makes vs daylie and howerly ashamed of him and his Gospell which the great ones of this present world confesse in words mightily oppugne in deeds as we doe scandalise the power and vertue of it by our silence Great were the materials of the contentments which Hester enioyed in Ahashuerus Court so were her hopes of hauing them continued or enlarged Mordecays admonition notwithstanding grounded vpon the considerations before mentioned mooued her to hazard all and to aduenture on her gracious Kings extreame displeasure rather then preiudice the cause of Gods people by forbearance of petitioning on their behalfe Many of vndaunted courage in the open field would hardly haue pressed into the kings presence against the Lawe for though the daunger
refined as the transmutation betweene simbolizing natures is easie may well be assumed into the search of the other To instance first in such as our Sauiour proposeth to our imitation Impiger extremos currit mercator ad Indos Per mare pauperiem fugiens per saxa per ignes In hope of gaine to vtmost Indes the marchant hies And from hard need through Seas through fire and flint he flies Could he conceiue of grace as of a iewell inualuable conuerting his toilesome cares for transitory wealth into industrious desires of euerlasting treasure none more fitly qualified for the purchase of it then he If thou criest after knowledg liftest vp thy voice for vnderstanding if thou seekest her as siluer and searchest for her as for hid treasures then shalt thou vnderstand the feare of the Lord and finde the knowledge of God For the Lord giueth wisdome out of his mouth commeth knowledge and vnderstanding But hee shall shew himselfe as vnfit to traffique for this or other spiritua● gifts as Aesops cock to bee a Ieweller that will wrangle for them as for ordinary ware indenting before hand what he shall pay seeking to beate downe their price or so houer when God shall call him as Pharaoh did with Moses Goe and serue the Lord your God but who are they that shall goe will ye goe with your young and olde with your sonnes and your daughters with your sheepe and your cattell Nay let the Lord be so with you as I will let you goe and your children yet this is too much it shall not be so goe now ye that are men and serue the Lord for that was your desire yet after two more plagues sent his minde was a little altered Goe yee serue the Lord onely let your flocks and your heards bee staid but let your little ones also goe with you But Moses his resolute answere shewes what God requires of vs Thou must giue vs also sacrifices and burnt offerings that wee may doe sacrifice vnto the Lord our God Therefore our cattell also shall goe with vs there shall not an hoofe be left for thereof must we take to serue the Lord our God neither doe we know how we shall serue the Lord vntill we come thither Nor doe wee know when God cals vs first out of this world what peculiar seruices may afterwards be enioyned vs as whether to sacrifice our lands our goods our bodies our honour or reputation in testimony of CHRIST and his Gospell For this reason once called we must resolue to forsake Aegypt wherin we haue been brought vp and seeke after the promised land with all our heart with all our soule as well the brutish part as the reasonable with all our faculties and affections intellectuall as well as sensuall otherwise by secret reseruation of speciall desires for other purposes we make our selus liable to Pharaohs plagues or to the iudgements wherewith Ananias and Saphira were ouertaken Now although to abiure our accustomed delights or waine our desires from choicest matter of wonted contentments may see me very distastefull to flesh and blood before triall made yet did we consider that the desires or affections themselues were not to be vtterly extirpated but only transplanted that such as yeelded greatest store of choicest secular were by this transmutation apt to bring forth most pleasant spiritual fruit in gretest plenty it would much animate vs to take the same pains in a better soile The ambitious man wil patiently watch his opportunities to bow crouch giue all significations possible of good respect towards such as may further his suits which he graceth with seemly complement decent behauiour for the present with deep protestation of future endeauours to deserue any fauour that shall bee shewed him Could he but inwardly fit his soule to these outward characters of humility and bow his spirit vnto the almighty powring forth prayers and supplications with vowes of fidelity in his seruice no man more fit then hee to sue for grace the least droppe whereof suffered to sinke into his heart to make representation of these ioyes whereof it is the earnest in that forme in which the scripture sets them forth as vnder the title of a most glorious Kingdom would sublimate his aspiring thoughts once alienated from their wonted obiect into undefatigable deuotion whose gracious respect with God would much better content his soule then any reflexed splendor from the fauourable aspect of earthly Maiesty Our first inclinations vnto loue which is but a distillation or liquefaction of the soule before they become polluted with the dregges of vncleane lusts or other Sacraments of vnhallowed combinations or extracted from these with penitent teares and true contrition are verie transmutable into Christian charity by the infusion of Christs blood once shed in loue to vs but continualle able to season the bitter fountaine of this and other corrupt affections so entrance were made for it thereinto by assiduous and sober meditation of the sorrows that pierced his heart for our redemption and no man more apt to delight more in his loue then hee to whom much mispence of loue hath beene forgiuen If that inbred delight or mirth whose abundance impels all sociable and good natures especially to hunt after obiects or occasions that may stirre vp exhilerant motions if this deligh or mirth were but drawne from those corrupt issues which excesse of wine or strong drinke vsually prouoke as profane or wanton ditties exchange of vnseemely and offensiue iests it might yeild matter for more sacred melody and vent it selfe with greater ioy in Psalms Hymnes and spirituall songs Thus much in my vnderstanding our Apostle supposeth in that exhortation Be not drunke with wine wherein is excesse but fulfilled with the spirit speaking vnto your selues in psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melody vnto the Lord in your hearts And none in my conceipt more likely to beare his part better in the quire of Saints whether in hearty reioicing with such as haue iust cause to ioy or vnfaigned sorrowing with such as mourne then a sweet nature prone to company but preuented by grace before he fall into the sinke of good fellowship or else thoroughly cleanled from the filth hee hath caught by wallowing therein before the staine incorporate in his soule Of this alteration of inclinations naturall into spirituall hereafter or els where more particularly by the assistance of that grace whose infusion alone must worke the sublimation Here I thought good to signifie to the penitent sinner by the way that there is no plant which hath giuen good proofe or signe of fertility in Aegypt but remooued in time is apt to fructifie accordingly in Canaan Now seeing in this first resurrection to newnesse of life our corruptible affections doe not die but only put on incorruption why should it seeme grieuous vnto our Soules to for sake the world and flesh with all their pleasures or
me for euer Doubts againe in other points apprehended and assented vnto though but conditionally or imperfectly yet by the habit of Christian faith are finally resolued into the article of the diuine prouidence which is to most others as vndoubted principles to scientificall conclusions whence faith admits such discourse or resolution as hath been mentioned in the former bookes 10. A speculatiue euidence likewise there is intensiuely as perfect as can be expected in most demonstratiue sciences but infinitely more pleasant though we respect only the transient delight of actuall contemplation and extensiuely no lesse though not for facilitie of its apprehension or number of persons to whom it so appeares yet for the multitude of necessary inferences vpon one and the same subiect all which might appeare most euident to all were not many of vs wilfully blinde slothfull or carelesse and yet discoursiue too because analitical the resolution I meane of Euangelicall testimonies into Propheticall predictions legal types or historical figures of the Messiah as in due place by Gods assistance shall be manifested If anie obiect that this resolution can be euident onely vpon supposition if the Scriptures of the old Testament were from God I must answere him as the Parents of that blinde man did the captious Iewes search them For their Characters rightly taken euidently signifie their vndoubted antiquitie to be greater then any record he can bring of this distinct vicissitude betwixt day and night summer and winter seed time and haruest or other seasons the possibility of whose interruption in times past may from some extraordinary changes within our memory be argued with greater probabilitie then any can possibly be brought why the bookes of holy scripture should be suspected for new and counterfait And the antiquity of the old Testament being euident the admirable consonancie of it with the new and multitude of manifest experiments euery kind fully answerable to their rules better ascertaines the truth of Gods promises contained in them then any induction natural reason can frame to proue either the vicissitude of times or seasons or reuolution of the heauens to haue been since the beginning perpetuall The truth of which conclusion as of many others in Philosophy for which great Artists thinke they haue demonstratiue reasons I professe I much better belieue and more euidently know from Gods couenant to this purpose recorded in sacred writ then from all the writings of Philosophers or any reason they or I can bring or our successors shall be able to finde although after vs they study this point till the foundations of the earth be shaken the elements melt with heat and the heauens be gathered like a scrole Yea further to me it seemes an euident demonstration from the effect that there is such a subtill Polititian as wee call the Diuell which cunningly bewitcheth or blinds the eyes of mens soules or else with golden balls auerts them from looking vnto those heauenly misteries in that they seeme either incredulous or improbable vnto such as can discerne the truth of curious and abstruse conclusions in secular arts 11. Lastly of those Articles which seeme to flesh and blood as is their distinct apprehension euen to Gods children in this life most impossible the possibility is directly euident That they shall actually be accomplished depends vpon resolution of promises made to vs in Scripture into his fidelity that hath promised whereof wee haue euident and full assurance The one ranke of especiall marks wherat these present meditations aime shal be to set forth these seueral euidences in the articles wherto they properly belong as the euidence of possibility in the Articles of creation and the resurrection of our mortall bodies the euidence of speculation in the Articles of the God-head diuine prouidence of Christs incarnation life death passion and resurrection the euidence likewise of internall sense answering to touch or taste in the doctrine of Original sinne and life euerlasting Not that Assent in respect of this obiect can be euident to mortality but that there may be a cleere distinct apprehension of such a disposition as hath been mentioned of body and minde more then naturall inclining our soules with patience to expect the accomplishment of those promises concerning ioyes vnspeakable in the world to come which though neuer formally represented may notwithstanding be fully assented vnto in this life as certainly future from sure experiments of his fidelity and ability that exhibited this present pledge or assurance whether the certaintie of future matters yet vnseene or vndistinctly apprehended can possibly in this life bee as great as the euident certaintie of their present assurances or vvhether delay or long expectation necessarily weaken faith as excesse in length makes bodies of equall strength more easie to be broken then if they were shorter hath a more fit place to be disputed in The euidence of Faith answerable to the euidence of bodily motion or impulsion must be reserued as Artists do difficult problems as an appendix to this worke finished he that is desirous of information in this kinde may finde rules not altogether impertinent to this effect in such as write of the triall of spirits or mysticall Theologie 12. Here some happily will demaund whether this Assent we treate of being of things past present and to come or of things partly seene and partly vnseene bee properly termed faith in respect of all or some of these onely For ought I haue obserued in Scripture or from the common vse of speech the name of faith is giuen to it especially in respect of things past or to come which are vnseen but this I dispute not It sufficeth that the habit of inherent grace whereby wee formally assent vnto all the obiects of Christian faith whether they include a relation vnto times present past or to come is one the same and may in part be defined an Assent vnto supernaturall truths reuealed in Scriptures firme in respect of all directly euident only in respect of some Or if any will exclude euidence from the definition because not incident to those obiects with reference to which this habit originally takes his name let him say it is a firme infallible Assent vnto supernaturall truths already past or hereafter to he manifested grounded vpon an experimentall euidence of others present or vpon a true knowledge of scriptures diuine truth or such points as they teach indefinitely considered without peculiar reference to this or that time 13. From these discussions about the imperfect euidence or certainety of some the inexhaustible capacity of all and the incomprehensiblenesse of the two finall ob●ects of Christian faith life and death euerlasting the one distinctly apprehended in its pledge or assurance the other in its presignifications it may appeare the most natiue property of this Assent thus far differenced is admiration horror Admiration is properly of things rare and excellent knowne in part but not comprehended so as the more we know the more
include affections concomitant is a rule so often inculcated by best expositors of sacred writ that to be curious in recapitulation of seuerall instances would seeme but truantly pains to such as are conuersant in their writings Yet because we write not so much for theirs as for others vse to omit them altogether we may not And seeing remembrance is but an act of knowledge reiterated or a second agitation of the mind towards that point whereat it had arriued before wee shall more fully conceiue what it is to know if we first know what it is to remember And that in the language of Canaan is so to be affected with matters called to minde as the nature of them doth require Some things of beliefe and credence vndoubted because related in Scriptures are in themselues of such little vse or consequence to our saluation that barely to remember them sufficeth to be in heart affected with them is not required Thus Iacobs making his sonne a party coloured coate will amongst other stories present it selfe to their memory that haue read through the booke of Genesis But whom doth the remembrance hereof ought affect vnlesse perhaps such little children as are desirous their Parents should follow this example But not to be touched with the affliction of Ioseph or old Iacobs sorrow when his dearlings spangled coat was presented vnto his aged eyes all besprinkled with blood would argue hard heartednesse in an old father of so young and louely a child For christian soules not to be yet more deepely touched with solemne remembrance of their Sauiours agonie his barbarous vsage at his arraignement his ignominious and cruel death were to staine themselues with guilt of that blood which must wash them from all their other sinnes Nor doth the perfect remembrance of what the head hath suffered affect the members with sympathy onely of his sorrow but quell and crucifie all carnall lust and concupiscences that fight against the spirit as in that article is to be declared The heathen it seemes suspected Christian sacraments had been instituted as bonds of dangerous combinations or conspiracies in mischiefe but Plinies exemption of them from that imputation may instruct vs what vse the ancient made in remembring CHRISTS death and passion For thereby they solemnely renewed the league of baptisme and setled their former resolutions not to commit theft or adultery not to falsifie their words or any way defraud their neighbours 3. The true force of this speech to remember whilest applied to matters of morality the Psalmist excellently expresseth in the hundred thirty seauenth Psalme Such as had brought desolation and woe vpon their natiue country exacted mirth of them and his country-men in their captiuity To these their demands of the pleasant songs of Syon he answereth with indignation How shall we sing the Lords song in a strange land If I forget thee ● Ierusalem let my right hand forget her cunning Ierusalem we must consider was at this time in her widow-hood forsaken of the Lord her husband and depriued of all her dearest children Sion her head sometimes decked with maiestie and honour was now couered with dust and ashes as with a mourning vail● and for her sonnes to haue consorted with the idolatrous Babylonians in their riotous mirth had been more then to forget Her whom they could not rightly remember but with sorrow Whence in the next place heads If I remember not thee ô Ierusalem let my tongue cleaue to the roofe of my mouth which words imply as much as this imprecation Let this be the last song I euer shall sing the last words I euer shall speake If I be iocound either in heart or speech whilest thou art sad Thus to prefer sorrow and griefe for her misery before all the ioy and pleasance Babylon could affoord him was truly to remember the ruines of Ierusalem By the same dialect whiles he beseecheth his God to remember Edom he implicitely wished as ill to it as he expresly did to Babylon such de●olations vpon the Cities and inhabitants therof as the Babylonians by the Edomites instigatiō had brought vpon Ierusalem that the whole land might be wasted with misery that the enemy might take the children from their mothers breasts and dash their braines against the stones So when Artaxerxes thought it strange to see Nehemiah as who would not to see a Courtier not sicke and yet sad when his soueraigne Lord looked cheerfully vpon him the good man replies Let the king liue for euer as if he had said God grant he neuer know cause of sorrow but why should not my countenance be sad when the city place of the sepul●her's of my fathers lieth waste and the gates therof are consumed with fire so deeply did there cogitatiō of what he had not seene but only heard sink into this true Patria●kes heart So likewise that praier of his Remember them ô my God that defile the Priest ho●d and breake the couenant of the Priesthood and of Leu● includes a desire that God should plague them according to their deserts And he else where vpon like occasion expresseth My God remember thou Tobiah and Sanballat according vnto those their works and Noadiah the Prophetesse also and the rest of the Prophets that would haue put me in feare But when he desires God to remember himselfe hee supposeth this remembrance should bring a gracious reward of his good service as ●● interprets himselfe Remember me ô my God concerning this and wipe not out the good deeds that I haue done for the house of my God and for the offices thereof The like vse of this phrase wee haue in common speech for when wee promise to remember a good turne done vs we imply not a bare recognition onelie of what this or that man hath done for vs vpon this or that day but a like hearty affection toward him and a readinesse to requite his kindnesse whensoeuer occasion shall be offered So when we threaten to remember our enemies or such as wrong vs euery man knowes the meaning of this speech to be as much as if we had promised to be euen with them or to doe them as shrewd a turne as they haue done vs. But this is a remembrance which amongst Christians should be forgotten yet as well the phrase it selfe as the practice of it may serue to notifie the right vse of the like in Scripture Then we are truly said to remember Gods Commaundements when our hearts are as firmely set on their practice as the naturall or vnregenerate mans is vpon requitall of iniuries offered In this sence saith God himself remember thou keepe holy the Sabba●th day as if not to fanctifie it were to forget it and the Apostle remember such as are i● bonds not as scoffers doe to whom their misery is oft-times matter of mirth but as if you were in bonds with them So currantly did like speeches goe for as much as we haue set down in
vnderstand that it is not liuely and perfect such as indeed it should be He meanes they denie it not to be numerically the same without workes and with them as the body in his conceipt is one and the same without the soule and with it And it is a manner of speech in his obseruation vsuall to account that which is imperfect in any kinde not to bee true in the same kinde As for example wee vse to say ioy or griefe imperfect or little is no true ioy or griefe although it be some ioy or griefe Who vseth to say so but dunces or who but haeretickes would denie the least degree of spirituall ioy to be true ioy the least sting of conscience to be true griefe Things little in any kinde actually compared with others incomparably greater we vse to reckon as none so we might say the ioy of the godly in this life is as none in respect of that which shall be reuealed But yet the least measure of our internall ioy truely denominates vs ioyfull if we speake absolutely as the Fathers doe when they denie faith without workes to bee true faith For they denie withall that it then denominates as truely faithfull or belieuers as is euident from that obseruation of Gregory vpon those wordes of our Sauiour He that shall belieue and be baptized shall be saued It is likely euery one of you will say within himselfe I haue beleeued therefore I shall be saued He speakes the truth if he haue faith with workes For that is true faith which in manners or deedes contradicts not what it thus professeth in wordes Hence it is that Paul saith of certaine false beleeuers They confesse they know God but denie him by their workes Hence saith Iohn He that saies he beleeues God and keepes not his commandements is a liar This should teach vs to acknowledge the truth of faith in examination of our life For then we are truely faithfull or belieuers when we fulfull in deed what we promised in word For in the day of baptisme wee promised vtterly to forsake all workes and pomps of the old enemy Therefore let euery one of you turne the eies of his minde vnto the former examination and if after baptisme he haue kept his promise made before then let him reioice being thus assured that he is faithfull He ads with all that he which knowes to bewaile his offences past shal haue them couered in the day of iudgement 2. This last testimony will direct the reader to gather the like in other Fathers from their expositions of those passages wherein mention is made of that faith whereunto our Sauiour ascribes eternall life or his Apostles righteousnesse The euidence of which places is in it selfe to such as weigh the circumstances co 〈…〉 nt and praecedent or compare one place with another so forsible that it oft times extorts confessions from pontifician expositors against the most receiued Tenents of their Church first hatched by the schoolemen which neuer saw the light of heauen but through the darke painted glasses of the Cels wherein they were imprisoned and hence imagine our Sauiours forme of doctrine to be of the same hew with midnight Dunsery or grossest ignorance of sacred dialects One vpon these wordes of the Prophet The worke of righteousnesse shall bee peace and the effects of righteousnes quietnes and assurance for euer saith that faith whereto S. Paul ascribeth righteousnes includes all these branches to commit our selues and all our waies vnto God as to a most louing father to whom we haue plight our faith whom we accept for our God sincerely promising to obey him and obserue his lawes He thinks withall that the Apostle did borrow this speech Being iustified by faith wee haue peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ from the former place of the Prophet Yet this Commentator stiffely denies iustification by such faith alone how inconsequently to this obseruation shall hereafter be examined It well fits our present purpose that the righteousnesse herespoken of by the Prophet is included in Saint Pauls faith 3. Another vpon those wordes of the same Apostle The Gospell of Christ is the power of God vnto saluation counsels vs to learne the right signification of this tearme to belieue as it is vsed in Saint Paules disputes from other places of Scripture especially from that speech of our Sauiour Hee that belieueth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall slow riuers of liuing water The scripture saith this iudicious pontifician expositor whereto our Sauiour had respect is in the sixteenth Chapter of the second of Chronicles Th●●●ies of the Lord behold the whole earth and giue strength to such as belieue on him with a perfect heart Now they belieue with a perfect heart which doe not onely giue credence to what the Scripture saith or is otherwise reuealed from aboue but further addresse all the faculties of their soules to doe what faith requires or praescribes And in this sence doth Saint Paul vse this word belieue as if it were to be moued at the hearing of the vvord and to embrace vvhat is said vvith an entire adhaerence of the soule Very fitly to this purpose doth our English translation in the booke of common praier render that place of the Psalmist whose spirit cleaueth not stedfastly vnto God Which the vulgar latine seeking to expresse the hebrew word by word hath rudely expressed non est creditus cum Deo spiritus eius 4. Two places of Scripture onely there be with whose difficultie or obscurity the Iesuite or other of the Trent Councels vassailes hope to extinguish the light and euidence of all the rest so pregnant for vs. The first is that of Saint Paul though I speake vvith the tongues of men and Angels and haue not charity I am become as sounding brasse or as a tinckling cymball He that supposeth all faith may be without charity saith Valentian excepteth none But our writers reply That the faith by which miracles of what kind soeuer are wrought is here onely mentioned and such faith though neuer so entire and perfect may be as in these Corinthians it was without true loue The truth of which answeare most probable from the circumstances of the place as it needs perhaps no further confirmation so for the fuller illustration of it impertinent it will not be for the reader to obserue that of all the Churches which Saint Paul had planted of all he wrote vnto or vouchsafed any mention this of Corinth did most abound in all those extraordinary gifts of the spirit which might set forth the glory of Christ and his gospell before heathen and vnregenerate men especially such as these Corinthians by nature and education weere earnestly addicted to humane arts and sciences wherewith that City at this time flourished most for which reason the Lord in his wisdome would haue the messengers of his truth vnto that place rich in all kind
should make loue to our meate the soule or forme of a perfect taste For meate wholsome and pleasant we cannot perfectly relish but we must loue it howbeit we liue not by louing it but by tasting eating and digesting it No more can we rightly belieue Christs death and passion but we must loue him and his members yet liue wee not by louing them but by tasting Gods loue and fauour to vs or as I need not be afraid to speake by eating Christs flesh and drinking his blood For though by faith one and the same wee Assent vnto euery article in our creed yet this faith doth not iustifie but as it respects Christs bodie giuen for our sinnes or as it cleaues vnto Gods mercies manifested in that eternall sacrifice alwaies breathing out life to men renot neing all trust and confidence euen in such graces as wee haue receiued from him All this notwithstanding if we compare loue and faith together as parts of that righteousnesse which is in vs not considering the necessary dependance Loue hath of Faith in nature to loue is more then to belieue because it necessarily includes beliefe so is it more to loue our meate then to taste it because loue supposeth taste howbeit in respect of life to taste our meate is of more vse then to loue it So is it more to moue then to liue for all vicall motion includes in it acts of life yet is not motion simply better then life or the sensitiue sacultie whence it proceeds because it wholly depends on them not they on it 9. The second principall place of Scripture they vsually alleage doth vtterly discredit themselues but breeds no difficulty to vs in this present argument for that the faith whereof Saint Iames speakes doth differ as much from that whereto S. Paul ascribeth righteousnesse as a liue man doth from a dead or a body endued with life and motion from a statue or painted image no heathen artist that could but vnderstand the very tearmes of their seeming contradictory propositions would deny albeit some Romish writers of no meane ranke haue been giuen ouer vnto such Iewish blindnesse as to abuse Saint Iames authority not onely to hold iustification by workes as well as faith wherto his words incline as the thing it self in his sence though not in that construction they make of it is most true but to perswade the ignorant that such faith as S. Paul commends may be without works or christian loue But their folly herein will worke shame in such of their successors as shall comment vpon these two Apostles writings as in some of their predecessors it hath done if they consider that those very workes without which faith in Saint Iames construction sufficeth not vnto saluation are expresly comprehended in that faith wherby S. Paul tels vs the Iust do liue Was not Abraham our father iustified through vvorks when he offered his son Isaac vpon the altar he meant no more nor was more pertinentto his intended conclusion then if he had thus spoken If Abraham had sayd as they did whose empty faith he disapproues I haue faith but had not proued his sayings true by his deedes or readinesse to offer vp his onely Sonne vvhen God commaunded him for actually hee did not offer him he had not been iustified before God Why because he had not belieued in such sort as Saint Paul meant when he sayth by faith Abraham offered vp Isaac when he was tried But it may bee this faith was informed perfected or instigated to this act by loue of whom not of Isaac for that was the maine obstacle to worke distrust the chiefe antagonist of his faith Not of Sarah or any other friends or neighbours all which doubtlesse had disswaded him had he acquainted them with his purpose Was it then the loue of God Him indeed he loued aboue all because he firmely belieued his mercy and louing kindnesse towards him but this loue supposed it vvas his Assent vnto Gods omnipotent power which as the Apostle expresly tels vs moued him to this act For hee considered that God was able to raise him from the dead from whence also hee receiued him in a figure This consideration or inducement was a worke yet a proper act of faith no way of loue But loue perhappes did make it meritorious The loue indeede wherewith God loued him made his working faith acceptable in his sight but that it was strength of faith not the quality of loue which God imputed vnto him for righteousnesse the same Apostle for doubtlesse the same hand it was which penned the eleuenth to the Hebr●es and the fowrth vnto the Romans puts it out of doubt beeing not weake in faith he considered not his body now dead vvhen he was now a hundred yeere old neither yet the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe He staggered not at the promise of God through vnbeliefe but vvas strong in faith giuing glory to God And being fully perswaded that what he had promised he vvas also able to performe And therefore it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse One and the same faith it was and standing at the same bent vnlesse by continuance of like triall increased in strength which wrought in him a readines●● of minde to sactifice his onely sonne in hope of a ioyfull resurrection and to expect his birth from the dead wombe of Sarah The obiect likewise whereto his Assent did adhere was one and the same his fidelitie which had promised on which faithfully still relying it was impossible his other faculties or affections should not subscribe to whatsoeuer his Assent of faith should enioine them and that remaining in wonted strength it could not but bring forth perfect loue and good works which may be sayd in such a sense to perfect it as we are sayd to blesse God that is to declare his blessednesse For as Gods loue to vs was most apparent in offering his onely Sonne So Abrahams loue to God was best manifested by sacrificing his sonne Isaac vvhom he loued yet he sacrificed him by faith wherefore his loue did result from firme Assent to Gods couenant and mercie made to mankinde in him in the faithfull acceptance whereof and full acquiescence therein his righteousnesse as in due place shall be shewed did consist 10. This comment vpon the Apostles words concerning Abrahams workes giues vs the true meaning of the like concerning Rahab Likewise also was not Rahab the harlot iustified by vvorkes vvhen she recei●ed the messengers and had sent them out another way If she had said vnto these messengers only thus I belieue the God of heauen earth hath giuen you this whole land for a possession yet I dare not shew you any kindnesse in this city her belief had bin as dead as a body without breath or motion But what man or woman liuing is there of common sense which once firmly perswaded that God in iustice had giuen his natiue country vnto forreine people whom he loued
which doth not in heart approoue the workes Christ commaunds though who in particular are so who otherwise affected they leaue for him that onely knowes the hearts of all to iudge 12. How gricuously would subscription to this decree haue gone against Saint Cyprians conscience who accompted it a solaecisme worthy of indignation to call him a Christian that was afraid least the fountaine of his liberality his patrimonie should be exhausted by continuall refreshing his naked hungry and thirsty brethren vnto whom our bowels of compassion should neuer be shut seeing in feeding them we feast the Lord who will not take so much as a cup of cold water at our hands but with purpose euen in this life to requite it and blesse the residue as Elias did the poore widowes meale and oile which had shewed no lesse hospitality in such extreme scarcity of prouision then that other in the Gospell did her liberalitie by casting a mite into the treasury with such as doubted whether our Sauiours promise did assure them of like blessings so they would be as bountifully minded as this poore woman was the zealous father thus expostulates a whence should this incredulous thought proceed whence is this impious and sacrilegious meditation what doth a faithlesse breast in the house of faith what shall he that belieues not Christ be enstiled a Christian The name of Pharisee better befits thee for when the Lord disputed of almes and aduised vs to gaine friends with charitable expences of earthly treasures the Scripture addes All these things heard the Pharisees which were couetous and they mocked him So consonant were these collections to his orthodoxall conceipt of faith that they whose workes goe in his name consort with him in like passages as they do in that maine ground of religion the nature of faith A Christian he is not truly called saith the author of the twelue abuses that is not conformable to Christ in conuersation And hee that left vs the learned and religious treatise of twofold martyrdome vniuersally auoucheth whosoeuer saith with his mouth I beleeue in one God and serues couetuousnesse lust or luxury lies to himselfe contradicts himselfe in this profession And is it possible for any without beliefe in one God truely to beleeue in Christ or to be truely called a Christian without beliefe in Christ That the former bolt was shot by blind men which could not see where it would light it further perswades me in that it can hit none more fully then it doth Gregory the greate sometimes Pope both in the fall and at the rebound For he makes correspondency betweene profession and conuersation the true property of faith And least any sophister should except this might agree not to all true faith though to such alone or to true liue faith not to faith onely dead as to be seene in arts is proper to men yet not to all but to the learned onely he expresly tearmes such as deny in deeds what they confesse in words false belieuers yet as the belieuer is such is his faith the one being false the other cannot possibly be true Nor would Saint Gregory haue thought it any slaunder to denie false belieuers the title of true Christians Or haue we the warrant of Fathers only to secure vs from the former curse albeit we teach not indefinitely that a man without liuely faith is no Christian Doth not the Scripture say the same yes All are not Israell that are called Israell but such as doe the workes of Abraham they are the children of Abraham For hee is not a Iew which is one outwardly in the flesh but he is a Iew which is one inwardly a Confessor in deeds not meerely in name one circumcised in heart for circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God Is the Gospell more indulgent to hypocrisie then the Law Is it so much more addicted to the letter which killeth then to the spirit of life that a faith as dead as Iewish ceremonies should be more effectuall to make a Christian then outward circumcision to make a Iew Or what doth the Councell meane by a Christian a dead man or one aliue in Christ one in whom Christ is not yet fully fashioned but ready to conceiue life This had beene more tollerable But one they meane which had life and hath lost it one as improperly tearmed a member of Christ as the body called a Man after the spirit is departed from it 13 Of these and many like inconueniences which no man though of the acutest wit and most audacious vnderstanding liuing durst in an indifferent auditory maintaine against any ordinary Artist that had the leasure for to stretch them had the Trent Fathers beene aware happily they would haue beene more sparing in their curses But this strange aduantage Romish Prelates haue of ours and all the world besides that be they in matters of learning and religion neuer so blinde or out of their blindnesse so bold as to runne headlong against the Analogie of faith all rules of Philosophy morall or naturall Grammar or whatsoeuer else can be named yet shall they neuer want store of excellent wits but mercenary consciences which like some people of the old world Aethiopians or Aegiptians I now remember not but more deuout and apt to supererogate will be content to put out not the right eye of nature onely but that other of art least the rarity of the spectacle might make then superiours seeme either monstrous or deformed What artist is there with vs who to be araied in scarlet to haue retinue fare reuenewes and whatsoeuer else correspondent or befitting a Cardinals state would but for some few houres aduenture to haue his face so deepely died with shame as needes it must be though armed with all the furniture of Art and Nature if in an audience not kept vnder by tyrannicall and seruile awe either for speaking what he thinkes or thinking ought becomes a free man in Christ he should mainetaine such base shuffling apologies as Valentian and Bellarmine haue made for the former illiterate decree which sought to couer one absurdity in speech with * two impious ouersights in religion but as probable The Apology before alleaged was That faith might be true though dead as a body though depriued of life is a true body a carkasse rather no body organicall or apt to be informed in the sensitiue soule though really present No more doth this faith whereof they speake containe life or grace potentially in it both must be created a new ere the party in whom it is found be a true member of Christs mysticall body For such is the nature of that faith which the Romane Catholike makes the ground of his best hopes that a Friers hood though vnlined would doe his bodie more good in his sickenesse then it can doe his soule at the houre of
them I leaue to the better experienced and more eloquent Pastors only of this I would admonish them that seeing the diseases are grieuous and the Patients strong it is not a milde and gentle medicine can worke their cure Much better they endured the smart of our reproofes though vnpleasant for the present then that they themselues when it shall come into their mindes to compare their resolutions and practices with their professions either made in Baptisme or renued vpon receiuing the Sacrament of Christs body and blood should out of the anguish of their soule and griefe of conscience take vp more bitter complaints then Iob or Ieremy euer vttered euen to detst the memory of that day wherein it was said a soule is added to the Church to curse the hands that brought them to this sacred lauer or lippes which there did promise or vow on their behalfe to wish hot scalding oile had beene powred vpon their heads insteed of the water wherewith they were besprinckled or that their foreheads had beene branded with some stigmaticall marke when signed they were with the Crosse in token they should neuer be ashamed to fight vnder Christs banner from whose tents notwithstanding their consciences witnesse they haue beene continuall fugitiues Doubtlesse the water which putteth away the filth of the flesh and is powred on vs as a pledge of Gods speciall fauour vnlesse by it the conscience which makes request to God be purified from these and the like dead workes of heathenisme will be a sore witnesse against vs Christians and solicit our deliuerance ouer to the euerlasting flame wherein the hypocrite and the periured shall aboue others be alwaies melted neuer purified 11. But if any man shall in this life purge himself from these he shal be a vessell vnto honor fit for euery good worke And God forbid we should take either any of these last mentioned or fowler practices for sure markes or signes of reprobation into which estate men are not drawne so much by multitude of sinnes past as by resolution to continue in them still which oft-times might be broken off and sauing Faith ingraffed in it place did not the Physicions of mens soules or others in charity bound to attend their brethren in their sicknesse giue them for dead or past recouery before their time In many appointed ouer seers of others well reformed in life and conuersation themselues there is a branch of Ethnicke incredulity or distrust of Gods prouidence vnder whole shelter the former weeds growe and prosper in inferiours For whether from a positiue error in opinion that whatsoeuer comes not to passe it was Gods will it should not come to passe we gather it is not his pleasure things long amisse shold be amended or that the christian world should grow better then it hath bin but rather worse worse or whether from a want of consideration or apprehension of his peculiar assistance promised to such as are gathered together in his sonnes name or perhaps by both meanes so it vsually comes to passe that good motions for reformation of whatsoeuer is amisse are no sooner proposed but the wiser or better experienced in the world men are or would be thought the readier they are to except that the same or like hath beene before attempted by men of farre greater place wisdome and experience and for vs to seeke the establishment of what they vpon better opportunity haue giuen for lost and desperate were to disparage their sufficiencie and arrogate too much to our owne Duties very acceptable vnto God and most necessary for time and place I haue knowne altogether neglected vpon like suggestions when as the voices of such as out of this politike humour did dash the motion without any trouble losse aad danger in the world vnto themselues without any contradiction or disturbance of other suffragants might with the generall applause of all indifferently affected and the best contentment of the greater part to be reformed haue fully ratified what was proposed Thus partly from a willingnesse to conforme our selues vnto the world partly from a perswasion that it is sufficient to reforme our selues not necessary to seeke the reformation of others we canuase secretly for the Prince of darkenesse and strengthen the faction of the world and flesh seeking as it were a maior part to disanull the Apostles Canon as out of date in our daies Greater is hee that is in vs then he that is in the world But had our predecessors beene daunted with such politike surmises or suspitions Christianitie had neuer preuailed against Heathenisme whose obiections against it were the selfe same our worldly wise men now bring against all attempts of reformation and because they are of the world the world ●eareth them and being Professors in shew deceiue manie honestly minded 12. Finally let the Christian Magistrates and Ministers pretend what other cause they list from their ignorance of Gods mercie and goodnes and want of faith it is for the most part that the people are so bad Neither haue that confidence in their God they ought but from an opinion in it selfe most true that God in these daies vsually workes by ordinary meanes or second causes we come to relie more on the appearances we see in them then on his fidelity and truth that is inuisible Were wee but as well acquainted with the fundamentall points of our profession as other professors are with theirs we mighted escrie it was the politician that foolishly dreames hee can mould states in his braine and Paracelcus-like giue life immortall to humane bodies polliticke which still spoiles the fashion of the Christian world by taking vpon him to be a grand Physician where he should be but Gods Apothecary or to be architect or chiefe plotter of those edifices wherein he should be but a labourer or handworker continually expecting the direction and instruction of that Maister builder which laid the foundation in Sion We our selues often know the matter or staffe whereon as also the tooles wherewith we see Artificers worke yet cannot learne their skill or cunning but should be ill fauouredly serued if wee tooke vpon vs to make those vtensiles our selues which they doe for vs. Thus albeit the instruments or inferiour agents God vseth to effect his will bee conspicuous and apparent his wisdome notwithstanding in their disposall or contriuance is incomprehensible to flesh and blood and it is a madnesse to thinke the like secondary meanes should alwaies produce the same effects But did the present dressers of Christs vineyard first sincerely renouncing their owne as firmely assent to the wisdome of God as the first planters did vnto his power in producing miracles they might see though not so quickely yet as certainely fruits of their faith not properly miraculous but to the wisdome of the world vntill the euent did work the truth altogether as strange and incredulous as the others did This part of the world wherein we liue with others adioining should in
like suppositions If we should be vrged by the Turke or Iewe to deny him wee would sooner die the death he did then doe it or were he present in person to exhort vs to such dueties as his messengers enioine vs we should sure be as forward as any man liuing to doe them these or the like imaginations do but foretoken our need of that apologie and argueth our inclination to vse it though alas it cannot steede any in that day of tryall Lord when saw we thee naked or anhungred in the Pulpit or preaching in our streetes deterring vs from euill and exhorting vs vnto good if not to relieue our brothers wants be to suffer him to starue then questionlesse to dispise his messengers is to despise him to reuile them is to reuile him and he that wil not belieue them neither would he haue belieued him more then the Iewes did 6. For conclusion because this point may come elsewhere to be handled at large if respectiue or according to our seuerall vocations we be generally either as proude or as couetous as ambitious or vaine glorious in our prerogatiues as mercilesse or iealous of disparagement in our places or as impatient of iust though sharpe reproofe as these Iewes were we would haue beene altogether both as prone to take and as earnest in prosecuting any offence taken at our Sauiours doctrine person life or manner of preaching as his most malicious enemies were and are as lyable to their plagues for God iudgeth not as man iudgeth by the actuall euent but by the internall habit or constitution of the heart Nor did our Sauiors presence his conuersation or other cyrcumstances make but onely manifest the malicious enmitie of the Iew against all goodnesse to the world and their odiousnesse in the sight of God and man should teach vs to be more carefull to auoide the inward disease then the euent or outbarsting which cannot bee so apparant in vs vntill Christ appeare againe in person Or if it be as backward in performance of those positiue dueties exacted by him of his Disciples as were the ordinary or lesse harmefull sort of vnbelieuing Iewes we may not expect any better hire or reward then they had but rather a greater portion with the hypocrite for our profession of loue and loialty to him For as we may giue perfect proofe to God of our malice or spite against Christ onely by our internall corrupt desires without any positiue outward act so can we make no proofe of true loue towards him either vnto God or our selues but our deedes albeit euen in doing his commandements we are apt to deceiue our selues and without due examination to admit false witnesses of our owne sincerity amischiefe in the next place to be preuented CHAP. IIII. That the fruites of righteousnesse if but of one or few kindes argue the stocke whence they spring to be either imperfect or vnsound of the danger that may come by partiality in the practise of precepts alike diuine or from difformitie of zeale that our Assent to generalities ofttimes appeares greater to our selues then indeede it is from our pronenesse or eager desires to transgresse in some particulars 1. NOthing more naturall to our affections when they abound or swell then to seeke obiects whereon to bestow themselues and after the fashion of the world to make choise of the fairest from whole beauty they vsually receiue strength and vigor For this cause as in the last discourse was obserued that good affection which men of disposition candide and ingenuous alwaies beare vnto the memorable vertues of men deceased or farre absent well deseruing of the world or them administring no occasion of dislike doth presently seeke vpon the first sight of his legend to fasten it selfe vpon our Sauiour in whom nothing truely admirable or praise worthy but is ideally absolute and perfect And strange it is not if in practicall perswasions that error steale on most which hath ouertaken many inretired speculations that the obiect qualifies the desire as indeede it doth but not alwaies not when the will out-starts the vnderstanding or reason For where the affection or passion is violent and vnrelenting we presently belieue what we eagerly desire From the concurrence of these three decliuities or facile descents into error we often mistake carnall loue for spirituall and beliefe meerely naturall or scarce worth the title of hystoricall for supernaturall because set perhaps strongly on obiects spirituall or supernatural The remedie is to let reason worke first and take the true portrature of that spirituall beautie whereto it directs our desires or affections Nor doe faith and loue truly Christian arise from euery reference or extremission of our faculties or apprehensions vnto CHRIST but from an intromission of his image or shape into our soules The right esteeme or ponderation of his vertues and perfections must inspire our hearts with resolution and zeale to imitate him in his goodnesse to be faithfull doers not hearers onely of his precepts and that not of some one or few but of all Seeing loue as hath been obserued is the necessary consequent of liuely faith and faith it selfe a firme and constant Assent vnto diuine reuelations without indulgence or dispensation it is a sure argument the one neuer kindly takes vnlesse it equally spread it selfe as the Sun doth his beames or centers their lines to euery obiect within the sphere of diuine truth that the other neuer kindls aright vnlesse it vniformly enflame euery faculty of our soules with desire of executing that part of Gods seruice whereto it is ordained or with a delight of such practises as the Scripture proposeth to our imitation in the Law the Prophets or Euangelicall history of our Sauiours life and death 2. Not obseruing this vniformity the partiall practise of duties in themselues very necessary helpe to thrust vs headlong into the former error For the earnest prosecution of our natural desires lighting in with our feeble Assent vnto some particular diuine truths or slender liking of some duties commaunded sutable to them makes vs attribute the delight or loue we beare to the internall obiect of our corrupt desires vnto the truth or precept diuine as by the like error many looking vpon the Sunne in a foggy morning imagine that rednesse to be in the bodie of this glorious starre which is in the vapour directly lying betwixt their eyes and it Howbeit this groundlesse conceit we hence entertaine of our Assent or loue vnto any obiect of Faith increaseth the strength of our carnall desires or delights naturall and that inordinately increased in respect of some one or fewe points vrterly disenables vs for prosecuting others oft-times more necessary and much better And as els●where I haue obserued that which casts men into the fore-mentioned Iewish disease of ouerreckoning themselues in their ●●compts of faith and loialty towards God and his anointed is the sufferance of their imaginations to run too much or too long on some
brother abideth in death vnlesse out of this loue as iointly respecting our brethren we lay downe our liues in loue or testimony of the truth we doe not rightly confesse CHRIST nor die in faith for whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer And as he addeth hereby perceiue we the loue of God because he laid downe his life for vs. but whereby shall we perceiue our loue to him if we doe as we ought and we ought as it followeth to lay downe our liues for the brethren Not onely to redeeme many of them if that were possible from a bodily death by dying for them but rather to encourage euery one by our examples to embrace the truth and confesse CHRIST before men whether by life or death whether by profession of truth or practise of workes commanded as occasion shall be offered He that requires vs to lay downe our liues for their soules will looke we should distribute our goods to relieue their bodies otherwise to die for them is no true testimony of our loue to CHRIST for who so hath this worlds goods and seeth his brother hath neede and shutteth vp his bowels of compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in him Againe though we feede the poore with all our goods and yet haue not this loue to lay downe our liues for the brethren it profiteth nothing and though we giue our bodies to be burned for them and haue not this other part of loue to feede them or those attributes of it in the same place expressed by the Apostle as long sufferance kindnesse without enuie without boasting without pride without disdaine without exaction of our owne with placide affections neither prouoking nor easie to be prouoked but reioscing in truth and detesting iniquity with viformity of faith hope and conscience it profiteth nothing For as hath beene obserued before consideration of what CHRIST hath done for vs must bring foorth in vs the same minde that was in him a minde to doe his fathers will in euery point alike sincerely but with greater intentions or alacritie as the occasions or exigence of seasons shall require Sometimes we may more faithfully confesse his name by standing for some branch of truth no generall point of saluation in opposition to men of contrary mindes with whom we liue whose proiects tending to the dishonour of Gods name and preiudice of his dearest children we may hinder then by professing all the articles of true religion vpon the enemies racke or witnessing some principall truth before the fagot 7. Besides the obhomination of the causes they maintaine great presumptions or rather strong euidences there be many of their corrupt mindes whom the Romish Church in latter yeares sets footh for Martyres to the world First the Diuifications ascribed vnto them as their enrolements in the catalogue of former Saints inuocations adorations of their reliques and the like would haue mooued most heathen Romanes or Egyptians to haue aduentured on greater dangers or indignities then they are put to for one of their foolish Gods an ape a serpent or a crocodile Yet these men not inconsequently I must confesse vnto their magicall conceipt of faith and holinesse imagined by them in dead workes thinke their blood shed in the Catholique cause shall wipe away their actuall sinnes as clearely as the water of baptisme by their doctrine doth originall And as that sweete relator of his fruitefull obseruations in matters of religion hath ascertained vs that Italians are vsually imboldned to sinne because they must haue matter to confesse so men of great place and authority in this land would not suffer vs retired students to be ignorant that some seminary priests haue purpoposely giuen the raines to fleshly lusts vpon confidence the executioners knife should worke a perfect circumcision or the fire purifie their polluted members at the day of execution Or in case they neuer felt the seuere stroake of iustice yet their constant resolution to suffer and daily expectation of being called vnto this fiery triall should serue as a cloake to couer those impuri●es which the purity of CHRISTS blood shed vpon the Crosse such is the abhomination of their hypocrisie without perfect inherent righteousnesse cannot hide So farre too many of them are from sobriety meeknes and humility those other qualifications required by Saint Cyprian in true Martyres that the gift of impudence scurrility and disdaine serues no home-bred malefactors halfe so well in the time of their durance or whilest they are brought before the face of authority or arraigned at the barre of iustice as it doth them as if they would giue vs to vnderstand that the marke of the beast spoken of by S. Iohn had some such especiall vertue as these characters traiterous Gowry brought out of Italy which stopped his blood from running out after his body was runne through as this doth theirs from appearing in their foreheads for onely to blush they are ashamed euen whilest they pierce through their owne soules and pollute their country aire with hideous forraine blasphemies but in re mala animo s●vtare bono i●uat a good face put vpon a bad matter ofttimes auaileth much yet with men not with God vnto whose mercy I leaue such as affect to bee Pseudo-martyres beseeching him of his infinite goodnesse to alighten their hearts that they may see at length the abhominable filth of that Idole to which so many parents in this land are desirous to sacrifice their dearest children and these men their very soules But oh Lord stop the infection that it spread not from the dead vnto the liuing 8. But leauing this huge lake two no small sinckes of hypocrisie I haue espied from whose noysomenesse many otherwise well affected scarce are free but into which Lord let not my soule descend for their eu●cation is into the bottomelesse pit The one an opinion there can bee no fit matter of martyrdome in a state authorising the free profession of that religion which amongst many we like best and left to our selues would make choise of The other which in part feeds this is a perswasion that meere errors in doctrine or opinion are more pernitious then affected indulgence to lewd practises or continuance in sinfull courses or open breaches of Gods commandements These are teliques of Romish sorcery which puts an abstract sanctity in the mathematicall forme or superficial draught of orthodoxal doctrine as it is in the braine though deuoide of true holinesse in life and conuersation or good affection in the heart and hence accompteth heresie that is euery opinion different from the tenents or contrary to the practises of their Church a sinne more deadly then any other and which in their iudgement doth vtterly depriue vs of such faith as they maintaine though that no better if not worse then diuels But if we recall what hath been hitherto discussed First That Christian faith is an Assent vnto diuine reuelations not only as true in themselues
CHRIST as we doe but terminated his beliefe vnto the generall mercie and prouidence of God whereof the great mystery of the incarnation was the principall branch and CHRIST IESVS in the fulnesse of time exhibited in our flesh the visible fruit of life which that other IESVS did but hope for as yet in the roote not distinctly knowing it nor the vertue of it but ready actually to embrace it and feed vpon it whensoeuer it should be brought forth For as much as I haue obserued out of this speech is implied in the exegeticall repetition of it He that belieueth the Lord taketh h●ed to the Commaundements and hee that trusteth in him shall not be hurt there shall no euill happen vnto him that feareth the Lord but in temptation euen againe he will deliuer him 3. That wee may practice what is commaunded and yet not keepe the commandement Saint Iames hath put out of all question If yee fulfill the r●iall Law according to the Scripture thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe ye doe well But if ye haue respect to persons ye commit sinne and are conuinced of the Law as transgressors For whosoeuer shall keepe the whole Law and yet offend in one point is guilty of all This fulfilling of the Law or keeping of the commaundements which as Solomon saith is the whole man or the whole duty whereunto man was ordained the complete and perfect Christian vertue consists of two parts a bodie and a soule The bodie is the doing of what the written Law commaunds whether by acts positiue or inhibitiue the soule is the reason or internall law of the minde which impels seuerall faculties to such acts or workes For to speake properly and scholastickely all performance of good workes commaunded or forbearance of things forbidden spring not immediately out of faith as the truncke out of the roote the branches out of the truncke or the fruit out of the branches But as the fruits of righteousnesse are of seuerall kindes and qualities so haue they seuerall faculties or affections for their proper stockes out of which they grow The auoidance of adultery fornication or whatsoeuer pollutions of the flesh with the fruites of holines contrary to these vices spring immediately from the vertues of temperance and chastity Abstinence from murder with the acts of mercy opposite to the seuerall branches thereof flourish out of the affection or vertue of humanity courtesie gentlenesse or the like So haue the acts of the affirmatiue precept contained in that negatiue thou shalt not steale as of euery other Commaundement whether positiue or inhibitiue a peculiar habite or inclination out of which they bud yet as all motion is inspired from the head albeit we goe vpon our feete or moue our hands or other member to defend our selues or serue the necessities of nature So although we are truely said to walke in Gods waies to fight his battailes or doe him seruice when we vse any facultie or affection to his glory yet is our firme assent vnto his good will and pleasure reuealed vnto vs by the doctrine ●f faith as the animall faculty which impels vs to these exercises Hence as we gather the body is dead if it want spirit or motion so as Saint Iames implies the image of God and his goodnesse or to vse another Apostles words the forme or fashion of CHRIST IESVS in vs is without life vnlesse our faith and assent vnto them haue this soueraigne commaund to impell and moue euery faculty to execute that part of Gods will whereto by the doctrine of faith it is designed And yet as the exercise of outward members increaseth internall vigor and strength and refresheth the spirits by which we moue so doe the acts of euery faculty vertue or affection righly imploied perfect faith not by communication or imputation of their perfection to it as the Romanist out of his doting loue to his faithlesse charitie dreames but by stirring vp exercising or intending its owne naturall vigor or perfection Vnlesse euery practique facultie receiue this influence from liuely faith or from the image of God or Christ which it frameth in our mindes and proposeth as a visible patterne for ou● imitation in all our workes thoughts and resolutions d●cimur vt neruis al●enis mobile lignum we may be operatiue as puppets are nimble in outward shew but our seeming workes of charity or best other we can pretend will be as a pish and counterfeit as their motions neither in their kinde truely vitall But as puppets are mooued wholly at his direction and bent that extends or slackes the strings whereon they dance so are our soules carried hither and thither as the diuell the world and flesh or our owne foolish affections ●osse them vsually excessiue where they should be sparing and there most sparing where they should exceed This difformity was most apparent in their workes whose reformation Saint Iames seekes for destitute of all good workes most of them were not but onely of vniformity in working They had learned to giue honour not verball but reall where honour was due duty and good respect to whom such offices belonged The rich and men of better place and fashion they did friendly and louingly entertaine which was a worke in it nature good and commendable but their abundant kindnesse towards equals or superiours became as a wen to intercept that nutriment which should haue descended to other inferiour members of CHRISTS body and by these outward exercises of magnificence their internall bowels of compassion become colde towards their poore brethren whom principally they should haue warmed and refreshed Yet such defects or difformities in their actions these halfe Christians halfe gentiles true hypocrites hoped to couer with the mantle of faith whose nature vse and properties they quite mistooke That they were not without workes the world might witnesse and no question but these enterteinments were intended as feasts of charity and with purpose to winne the fauour of the great ones with whom they liued to their profession in which respect their kindnesses might well seeme vnto themselues exercises of religion as the like doe to many of the best sort amongst vs when there is any ground of hope for gaining furtherance and countenance to good purposes as indeed with such references they are if done in fath but that this difformity in these mens workes did proceed from a precedent defect in faith is manifestly implied in that the Apostle seekes their reformation by reducing them to such an vniformity in working as can proceed onely from such true and liuely faith as hath beene described For the rectifying of faith it selfe he expresseth vnto them the exemplary forme or patterne first of the imitable perfection of the godhead then of that which is in CHRIST of both which as hath beene obserued true faith in the minde is the liue operatiue image and must imprint the like character vpon inferior faculties or affections ere their
should be idle but so he is not saith Bellarmine First because he alwayes ministers strength and grace by which wee doe good works Secondly hee purgeth our daily and lighter sinnes and his blood cleanseth vs from all sinnes Or if through transgression of the law we fall away from our state of righteousnes he neuer thelesse is stil the propitiation for our sins and reconciles vs not only seuen times but seuēty times seuen times to his father if conuerted by his grace we addresse our selues to serious repentance Therfore we make not CHRIST an idle mediatour in saying the Law may be fulfilled but our aduersaries truly make his benefits vneffectuall when they teach that the excellency of his obedience could not effect that the iustification which is by the Law should bee fulfilled in vs. Whatsoeuer he thought it was safest for him to professe as hee hath written because the Trent Fathers for conclusion of that session accurse all that should say their resolutions in this point did rather disparage then set foorth the excellencie of CHRISTS sacrifice or the true woorth of his merits But the more mercifull Bellarmine makes his God the readier to forgiue our frequent trespasses the greater stil is their former mockery seeing euery time they repeat that petition they implicitely yet necessarily include the appurtenances Lord make vs such as wee shall not need of thy forgiuenesse The excesse of diuine Maiesty in respect of princely dignity presupposed their mockery of God in suing for restauration of grace after relapses into mortall sinne may for the quality be resembled by imagination of some great fauourite in the Court after many bountifull rewards for little or no seruice falling to rob or steale and lastly crauing pardon in these or like tearmes I haue grieuously offended against your Crowne and dignity but by your wonted grace I beseech you bestow as good preferment on me as before I had and amends shall quickly bee made for all the wrongs I haue done vnto my fellow subiects you shall not finde matter of death in me againe so long as your bounty towards me lasts that I shall not commit some petty sinnes of wantonnesse quarrelling drinking swearing I hope your highnesse will not expect for these are not against your Law but besides it The insolency of this imagination in a malefactour could an earthly Prince knowe the heart whence it issued would make his former offence in it self and course of common iustice meritorious of death altogether vncapable of mercy otherwise easie to haue beene obtained And is it either lesse exclusiue from Gods fauour or more prouocatiue of his seuerity to beg such grace at his hands as shall wipe out all former reckonings where with he could charge vs or hauing promised sincere obedience to the Law to elude the Lawgiuer with that distinction without which Bellarmine thinkes our Writers arguments to proue the fulfilling of the Law impossible can hardly be answered They saith he which grant as Vega doth veniall sinnes to be against the Law are enforced to hold that to keepe the Law is onely possible in as much as onely the greater part of it may bee kept whence the denomination is indefinitely attributed to the whole But what can they say to that of Iames. Hee that keepeth the whole Law and offendeth in one point is guilty of all The solide answere therefore in his iudgement is that veniall sinnes without which we doe not liue are not sinnes simply but imperfectly and in a sort neither are they against the Law but besides the Law Such as first did apply this distinction to that purpose for which the moderne Romanist now misuseth it might perhaps be in part excused by the barbarousnesse of the times wherein they liued and their ignorance in Scriptures But wee haue cause to feare that Bellarmines generall skill and knowledge in them vvas punished by GOD vvith particular grosse and palpable ignorance or blindnesse rather in thinking this qui●ke of wit should glue together such Oracles of the Apostles as without it would mightily iarre and start asunder As that of Iames late cited He that offends in one mortally is guilty of all and this other In many things we al offend 1. venially or these two of S. Iohn He that is borne of God sinneth not If we say we haue no sin we deceiue our selues So doubtlesse they do and mightily mistake both these great Apostles meaning that thinke any in this should be so righteous as not to stand in neede of Gods fauour for absolution from sins committed against his Law but of their meaning in the Chapter following 9. These discussions may informe the Reader that Bellarmines conclusion of this controuersie wherein hee may seeme vnto the vnobseruant to attribute somewhat to Gods mercies in the businesse of iustification after grace infused was but like the first inuitation of an Italian onely for fashion sake For if his authority could haue moued any of his profession after fulnesse of grace to haue tasted the louing kindnesse of the Lord he could not be ignorant that the Trent Councell had shut the doore vpon them It is the safest way saith he * to put our whole trust in Gods mercies VVhy so because there is no trust or confidence to be put in our owne good workes or fruits of grace No rather because it is more easie to grow proud of our deeds then to be assured of our sincerity in doing them But if neither safe it be to trust in them nor by his doctrine to any purpose without them to trust in Gods mercies hee hath left his Romane Catholikes in a miserable case VVhat is it then they can hope or desire Gods mercies should doe for them To remit their sinnes How By not imputing them this is all they can condemne in vs. VVhat then to set heauen open vnto them without remission of sinnes or iustification This is more then can be laid to any heritickes charge none euer liued but granted iustification to bee a necessary gate through which all that haue sinned must enter into heauen It remaines then the onely ground of all hope or trust a Romanist can haue of any good from Gods mercies must be his precedent perswasion or beliefe of absolute and perfect righteousnesse either now inhabiting his soule or hereafter to be obtayned That is hee must trust God one time or other will be so mercifull to him as he shall not stand in neede of his mercie at the houre of death 10. He that wold clearly conuince the Romish church or her childrē of a capitall crime vsually obiected by our writers shold begin w th the vertual intentiō of the priest by rigid positions of their late writers most necessarily required to the effectual working of the Sacraments for that euidently breedeth doubt whervnto if we adioyne this absolute necessity of compleat habitual grace inherent for remission of sins it openly condemnes the Trent Councell it selfe for nursing
was no sinne in him had they beene of God they might haue knowne him to be his sonne For hee that is of God heareth Gods word but they therefore heard them not because they were not of God In this saith Saint Iohn the children of God are manifest and the children of the diuell whosoeuer doth not righteousnesse is not of God neither he that loueth not his brother As this phrase to doe righteousnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 euidently imports not the bare acts but habituall practice of righteousnesse so needes must the like phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to commit sinne include an habituall practice or trade of sinne and yet to commit sinne and to sinne are vsed promiscuously as tearmes altogether equiualent in this chapter by Saint Iohn Our former conclusion therefore is most firme that the difference supposed by the same Apostle in these two places If wee say that we haue no sinne we deceiue cur selues and whosoeuer abideth in him sinneth not consists not in the act or obiect of sinne but in the habit or affection of him that sinneth The same answere fully reconciles the like speeches of Saint Iames. He that offends in one to wit habitually or indulgently is guilty of all and yet in many things we all offend actually not habitually or out of infirmity not with delight But euery offence whether actuall or habituall whether of infirmity or of purpose is directly against the Law or will of the Lawgiuer for neuer was woman I thinke so wilfull or pettish as to bee offended vnlesse her will were thwarted or contradicted onely cases altogether omitted which can haue no place in God or matters in their nature meerely indifferent can truely be said to be besides the Law or his minde that made it 7. But perhaps that passage of scripture which first instructed and since confirmed me in the truth hitherto deliuered will giue best satisfaction to the Reader Concerning that exclamation of Saint Paul O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death some make question but no learned Diuine I thinke will demaund whether Dauid vttered that complaint of himselfe or of some other Who can vnderstand his errors cleanse me from my secret sinnes yet was he then borne of God for vnto him the statutes of the Lord were right euen the ioy of his heart the commaundements pare and delightfull vnto his eyes his feare able to cleanse the heart his iudgements true and righteous altogether all more to be desired then gold yea then much fine gold so liuely and quicke was the apprehension of his faith and yet vniformely enclined to practice For by the commaund ements he was warned to* beware of sinne and in keeping them he found great reward But was he enabled exactly to fulfill the perfection of the Law which had conuerted his soule or did he euer hope to attaine to such perfection as the Romanist must ere he can haue any hope of life to be altogether without any sinne deserning death No this is the height of his desire Keepe backe thy seruant from presumptuous sinnes let them not haue dominion ouer me then shall I be vpright and I shall be innocent from much transgression or as the Gospell expounds his meaning from the raigne of sinne But freed there from did he not stand in need of Gods fauour or mercy for remitting the seattered forces or vanquished reliques of the host of sinne Rather thus qualified he had sure hope his praiers for mercy should be heard yet through the mediation of the Messiah that was to come For so he concludes Let the wordes of my mouth or as the inter line ary well expresseth the propheticall dialect Then shall the words of my mouth being thus freed from the raigne of sinne and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in thy sight O Lord my Rocke and my Redeemer Thus did he of whom CHRIST according to the flesh was to come after his conuersion vnto God and long continuance in the state of habituall grace expect redemption not by infusion of inherent righteousnesse in so full measure as should make him immediately and formally iust in the sight of God but by fauourable acceptance of his praiers directed not to the throne of iustice but to the Lord his Rocke and Redeemer That such qualification as here he speakes of is a necessary condition of praiers made in faith that praiers so made whether for priuate or publike good are neuer reiected by God is elsewhere partly and shall God willing more at large bee shewed The like qualification for effectuall praiers another Psalmist hath expressed If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not heare me But verily God hath heard me he hath attended to the voice of my praier In the perpetuity of praiers or meditations thus conceiued or vttered by hearts free from the raigne of sinne or guilt of indulgence to secret vnlawfull desires haue we without dissention doubtlesse from these Prophets and holy men of God placed the permanencie of iustification actuall or vertuall which are the fruites or Crowne of iustification radicall or fundamentall the onely right vse and end of all grace inherent For though faith or grace at their first infusion may assure vs our sinnes are remitted yet may we not take these or other pledges of Gods loue and fauour as a full discharge or finall acquittance of all reckonings betwixt Him and vs but rather as a stocke bestowed vpon vs to beginne the new world with for which with the increase we must still thinke our selues accomprable Though it be a truth not vnquestionable that a man once actually iustified or truely sanctified cannot finally vse Gods graces amisse yet is it very doubtfull whether one may not either abuse or not vse such gifts of God as rightly vsed or imploied to his glory might haue beene means infallible of iustification But this is a rule as vnquestionable as true that were it possible for a man to vse any extraordinary measure of inhaerent grace amisse he were to be called to a strict accompt as well for all his former sinnes as this abuse of his talent The irresiagable consequence of which vnquestionable truth is this doctrine we now maintaine The immediate qualification for remission of sinnes is not the habit or inherence but the right vse of grace or perseuerance in praiers conceiued by that faith which vnites vs vnto CHRIST If this vertuall in tention or resolution either by contrary acts or meere negligence be remitted our sinnes past whether committed before the infusion of grace or after recouer their wonted strength according to the degrees of this remission and their seuerall waight vntill we repaire our slackenesse by feruent zeale and intensiue deuotion iointly incline the minde to distrust of Gods present fauour or our sure estate in grace 8. What we haue set downe more at large
was exactly figured in the sacrifices of the Law daily offered euen for such as by the Law were cleane and obserued Gods commaundements with as great constancy and deuotion as any now liuing doe This might instruct vs that our persons become not immediately capable of diuine presence or approbation by infusion of habituall grace or freedome from the tyrannie of sinne these are the internall characters of our royall Priesthoood whose function is continually to offer vp the sweete incense of prayers from hearts in part thus purified by faith For by such sacrifices are wee made actuall partakers of that eternall sacrifice whose vertue and efficacy remaines yesterday to day the same for euer It being so perfect and all sufficient could not be offered more then once but through the vertue of it the offrings of our Priesthood must be continually presented vnto our God Nor can we so often lift vp our hearts towards heauen but the voice of CHRISTS blood neuer ceasing to speake better things then that of Abels still ioines with our praiers and distinctly articulates our imperfect sighs or mutterings alwaies crying father forgiue them father receiue them to thy mercy seeing they are content to bee partakers of my sufferings and seeke to bee finally healed onely by my wounds As the Apostle teacheth vs that there is giuen no other name vnder heauen besides CHRIST whereby we may be saued so was it foretold by the Prophet that this saluation must be by calling vpon his name not by mediation of grace or other fruites of the spirit obtained by inuocation but by inuocation of it in truth and spirit seeing his spirit was poured out vpon all flesh to this end that all should call vpon his name and by so calling be saued This though vsually expressed in other tearmes is the opinion of orthodoxall antiquity in this point and if my coniecture faile me not the dreaming fancies of a daily propitiatory sacrifice in the Masse was first occasioned from dunsticall or drowsy apprehensions of the primitiue dialect wherein as all the●● speeches of the auncient are full of life Christs body and blood are said to be often offered not in scholastique propriety of speech but in a rhetoricall figuratiue or exhortatory sense because our daily sacrifices become acceptable to God throught it because the benefits of it are as effectually applied vnto vs by our faithfull representations of it as if it were daily offered in our sight The error of moderne Romanists hence occasioned is the same with that of the old Heathens which dreamed of as many Gods as they had seuerall blessings from the Authour of all goodnesse who is but one The Prebendes of Colen notwithstanding haue made a declaration of the third sacrifice in their masse much what to our purpose so much of it as I haue here set downe needes little correction in fauourable construction Howsoeuer it sutes verie well with their forecited opinion concerning iustification How farre dissonant or consonant that is vnto the truth I leaue it to the Readers censure As for the Iesuites resolution of the same controuersie by the Trent Councels determination it is but a further document of his Magicall faith and that hee finally vseth the grace of God but as a charme or Amulet able to expell death by the ful measure of it onely worne or carried about not by actuall operation or right vse But what marueill if hee openly renounce CHRIST for his Mediatour in the principall act of redemption when as he hath chosen the Pope for the Lord his Rocke and Redemer euen for that Rocke whereon that Church against which the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile must be founded CHAP. IX That firmely to belieue Gods mercies in CHRIST is the hardest point of seruice in christian warfare That our confidence in them can be no greater than our fidelitie in practise of his Commaundements That meditation vpon CHRISTS last appearance is the surest method for grounding true confidence in him 1. LEast the end of this discourse should misse the end and scope wherto the whole was purposely directed I must intreate the Christian Reader to pardon my feare and iealousie which from the reasons mentioned in the first chapter of this section too well experienced in the temper of this present age is alwaies great least disputation against Romish heresie cast vs into a relapse of that naturall carelesnesse or hypocrisie whereof all more or lesse haue participated But for whose auoidance hereafter if thine heart be affected as mine now is and I wish it alwaies may continue let this meditation neuer slip out of thy memory That seeing the last and principall end of all graces bestowed vpon vs in this life is rightly to belieue in CHRIST this cannot bee as the drowsie worldling dreames the easiest but rather the most difficult point of Christianity The true reason why vnto many not otherwise misaffected it seems not such is because in this time of his absence from earth our imaginary loue of his goodnesse wanting direct opposition of any strong desire or resolution to manifest the leuitie or vanity of it fancieth a like affection in him towards vs. And seeing loue is not suspicious but where it is perfect excludes all feare the very conceipt of great mutuall loue betwixt CHRIST and vs not interrupted expels all conceit of feare or diffidence Hence wee vsually rest perswaded our assent vnto Gods mercies in Him is more strong then vnto most other obiects of Faith when as indeed these being the highest it would appeare to bee in respect of them the weakest had it as many daily temptations to encounter it as wee finde in practices of other duties whose habituall performance is the necessary subordinate meane to support it All the difficulties we daily struggle vvith are but straglers of that maine armie with whose entire ioint force we are to haue the last conflict about this very point which vntill the hower of death or other extraordinary time of triall is seldome directly or earnestly assaulted But then whatsoeuer breach of Gods commaundements loue either to the world or flesh hath wrought in our soules will affoord Sathan aduantage and opportunitie for more facile oppugnation of our confidence For as euerie least sinne in it owne nature deserueth death so doth the consciousnesse of it more or lesse impell the minde to distrust of life Yet euen the greatest will be content in these dayes of peace and securitie to sleepe with vs and lie quiet in hope to preuent vs in the waking and with the ioint force of lesser to surprise the soule or gaine the start or first sway of the spirit an aduantage much preiudiciall to strength otherwise more then equall Much harder it is to retract a bodie after actuall motion begun then to restraine propensions or inclinations from bursting out into actuall motions Our often yeelding vpon fore● warning of their assaultes in manie pettie temptations or
in performing these duties than hitherto they haue giuen proofe of may iustly feare as not altogether without the reach of possible danger for euen the righteous hardly shall be saued Altogether so bad I know none but may haue hope to escape so they will not wilfully neglect repentance or somnolently put off the euill day The gate of life as it is straite so is it continually open and wide enough to receiue all so euery one would watch his speciall opportunities or attend Gods particular callings and all of vs cast off that but then of sinne and superfluous cares wherewith vvee are laden and encumbred fewer I am certaine passe through it than it is capable of some because they striue not at all to enter in but carelesly expect God without any endeuours of their owne should drawe them through it others because they striue amisse presuming they are able to presse in by their owne strength with a little helpe of diuine attraction or some small courtesie of the spirit to stirre them vp or giue some notice when the dore were open or God at best leasure to admit them Betwixt these two erroneous extreames there is a golden meane for whose inuention wee are in the next place briefly to admonish ⸪ SECTION 3. Of the right plantation of Faith WEre it absolutely true without restraint that consultation is onely of matters which are in our power or may by our care and industrie be procured the verie title of this discourse might iustly seeme to proclaime our inconsideratenesse in vndertaking these paines altogether bootlesse in respect of men seeing faith is a gift altogether free no way procurable by their endeuors if not presumptuous in as much as it is planted by the holy Ghost and what neede hath he of our methodicall discourse or direction These and the like obiections may well bee thought to haue grounds inexpugnable in the Protestants doctrine which wholly ascribes as wel the Wil as the Deed to the operation of Gods spirit Vnto what purpose then can it be to direct men how to worke in matters wherein they do not worke at all Some countenance the same suggestions may haue from a distinction common to the Romish and reformed Churches of Faith infused and acquired For vnlesse the faith for whose right plantation wee rather seeke then giue direction may by method bee acquired to what vse can methodicall direction serue Those reasons notwithstanding perswade vs rather to say little then nothing at all in this argument vntill the difficulties about free will or mans abilitie wherewith it is linked be discussed The maine obiection if it could iustly preiudice any mans labours addressed to the same ende to which these present are might haue hindred his most that gaue vs the rule of life wheron it is grounded It is God that worketh in vs both the will and the deede But why should this deterre vs from working in matters of our saluation rather it ought to encourage all to worke some as Artificers and Directors others as labourers but both as the Apostle wils them with feare and trembling Euen of saith infuted Paul was a planter and Apollos was a waterer though God alone did giue increase CHAP. I. That Christian Faith although immediately infused by God without anie cooperation of man doth not exclude but rather more necessarily require precedent humane endeuours for the attaining of it 1. THat faith is the sole gift of God wholly infused not partly acquired by vs should rather excite then any way abate our indeuours for attaining it would we conceiue or speake of those heauenly misteries according to the language of the holy Ghost which wrot them not out of the schoole-phrase of Aristotle or Aquinas both oft-times alike full of solecisines in diuinity It is a perswasion will easily intrude it selfe into mindes apt to entertaine philosophicall rules that the power of God seeing it is infinite and if wee may so speake vncapable of resistance should introduce forms or qualities into subiects in an instant without preuiall alteration or disposition which indeed would be most true did God worke after the manner of naturall agents alwaies according to the vtmost of his power But as the Apostle tells vs hee doth all things according to the counsell of his owne vvill which is fully commensureable to his power and doth modifie it in working Some things then he createth in an instant not because his power is infinite and admits no impediment but because his wil is it should so work others though as immediately created by him are accomplished by little and little after many interpositions or delaies not that either his will or power can be crossed but that his pleasure is to haue them so wrought Such is the creation of true liuely faith in our soules For who is hee liuing that can assigne mee the very instant yea the set hower day weeke or moneth wherein his regeneration was fully wrought As life spirituall is better then temporall so for the most part it is longer in conceiuing Nor doth regeneration consist onely in the first infusion of grace or seede immortall but also in the rooting or taking of it both are the immediate workes of God both in Scripture phrase essentiall branches of creation 2. Notwithstanding if wholly both bee his sole workes the former difficulty still remaines and may bee increased by a position of Protestants in it selfe most true but too much vnlesse more watily pressed or more skilfully applied then a man shall vsually finde it For what is more often inculcated in popular Sermons or in that controuersie about free-will then that man is altogether as dead to spirituall life as Laza●us was to life naturall till the same power of God raise him vp But vvhat hence followes that God before the infusion of grace requires no actions or operations at our hands more then CHRIST did of Lazarus before he restored his soule vnto him then let such as are destitute of the robes of righteousnesse cloath themselues with the image of death and spend their liues in a perpetuall slumber or get themselues downe into the graue vntill God crie vnto them by his powerfull voice as CHRIST did to Lazarus come forth or awake thou that sleepest for CHRIST is now made thine euerlasting light I maruell not if vulgar auditors make such inferences to countenance their sloath and negligences when as many vnpartiall schollers can hardly conceiue what other can be made of many zealous Pastors doctrine wresting the meaning of the Spirit by too much wringing the lettet or misapplying the former proportion betwixt such as are naturally and spiritually dead whose ●earmes if set aright stand thus As God required no vitall motion or operation of such as his Sonne did raise from naturall death so dooth hee require no operation or assent spirituall before he infuse the life of grace But in as much as we enioy the benefit of life naturall or meerly
morall some passiue capacities are equired in vs wherewith they whom CHRIST raised were not qualified whiles naturally dead nor were they capable of renouation in life spirituall but by reassuming life naturall with it properties Nor doth it imply any shewe of contradiction that the actuall endeuours of life naturall or meerely morall in vs or the qualification resulting from them should be as meerely passiue in respect of life truely spirituall as the state of death or vtter depriuation of all sense or motion in such as CHRIST raised vp was in regard of life naturall The proportion then will holde best thus As CHRIST infused not humane life into trees stocks stones but into bodies passiuely organized and figured for the fit habitation of the humane soule so neither doth hee ordinarily bestow supernaturall grace on euerie one that hath a reasonable soule but on such only as are passiuely prepared for it Wherein this preparation consists or what our endeauours can adde vnto it is the point now in question partly to be disputed in this present more fully in discourses following To the assertion last mentioned this obseruation well sutes that in the first workes of creation the omnipotent power did obserue the orderly progresse afterwards appointed vnto nature and proceeded not per saltum but first created a common masse out of which he made the heauen and earth not trees plants or liuing creatures immediately For though these receiued life from their maker after another manner then indiuiduals of the same kinde now do yet the earth and sea affoorded their matter and substance meerly passiue Man he made of the earth but first as is probable externally figured or proportioned the woman likewise was his immediate workmanship but had her bodily or passiue beginning from the man Thus euen the most immediate workes of God presuppose ordinarily such a sub-ordination of passiue capacities as is vsually seene in matters producible by humane labour wit or industrie 3 That grace then is not generated or educed out of the soule but properly created in it ought not in any congruitie of reason to exclude all actiue though but humane endeuours precedent for the better attainment of it Nor haue I euer read of any Protestant or Papist which held mariage as either vnnecessarie or superfluous for the propagation of mankinde albeit the most and best Diuines in both religions be of opinion that the reasonable soule is not generated but immediatly created by God And notwithstanding the supposed truth of this opinion vnlesse the parents of our bodies had been as carefull for our bringing foorth as bruite beasts are ouer their broode few of vs this day liuing had euer enioied the light Now for the auoiding of Pelagianisme or iust imputation of popery in this point it is enough to disclaime all such dispositions preparations or endeauours as actually cooperate or concurre to the production of faith as temperate carriage or behauiour doe for producing the habit of temperance or naturall qualities of moisture heate and cold doe in the education of formes meerely naturall or constitution of bodies totally generable So shall he neuer be able to acquit himselfe from the error of the Stoicks or Manichees that accounts it indifferent what workes we doe or how we demeane our selues before regeneration For as God creates not the reasonable soule in euery matter so doth he not create grace in euery soule And as this inference is good vnlesse the Fathers of our bodies had beene before vs God had not created vs these soules in whose creation our fathers had no finger so likewise in this vnlesse before our regeneration we so demeane our selues as God in his word prescribes he ordinarly creates not grace in vs to whose creation neuerthelesse our best endeauours conferre no more then our parents doe to the creation of our soules or the redd earth did to the making of Adam This fully remoues the former difficulty which seemed to dull our endeauors and from this instance of the reasonable soules creation I would rather commend this meditation to the Reader As greater care is to be had of a woman with children of Queenes and Princely mothers especially then of bruite beasts great with yong albeit the fruit of their wombes be the more immediate worke or blessing of God so should our care and industry for conceiuing faith euen in that it is the sole gift of God be much greater then we vse for the attainement of whatsoeuer can by meanes naturall or ordinary be immediately atchieued CHAP. II. That circumspect following the rules of Scripture is more auaileable for attaining of true faith then the practice of morall precepts for producing morall habits That there may be naturall perswasions of spirituall truths and morall desires of spirituall good both right in their kinde though nothing worth in themselues but only capable of better because not hypocriticall 1. IN that it hath pleased the spirit to write so much for mens directions in the way of life yet not so much to instruct the faithfull what they should doe after their regeneration fully wrought as the vnregenerate what he should doe that it might bee wrought in him to conceiue it but as doubtfull whether his sacred rules were not more sufficient effectuall and complete for attaining true and liuely faith then any Philosophicall methods for planting morall vertues were to derogate as much from Gods wisdome as he should doe from his power that maintained man without direction or assistance supernaturall might worke out his owne saluation Yet shall he much wrong both himselfe and me that stretcheth this similitude further then thus As he that duely obserues philosophicall praecepts of morality shall certainely produce morall habits and become truely iust and honest by often practising acts of iustice temperance and sobriety so he that circumspectly followes rules giuen by the spirit of God for attaining faith shall haue it more assuredly produced in him euen because it is not produced by him but by his God who is more able to create new hearts in vs then the naturall or vnregenerate man to worke any morall reformation in himselfe or others All that is required of vs is onely to submit our knowledge to our Creators wisdome our naturall desires to his most holy will our weake abilities to his omnipotent power But is it not a worke of the spirit to be thus perswaded or resolued 2. That the naturall man should rightly perceiue the things of the spirit of God implies as euident a contradiction as to say a blind man should be able to see things visible For as things in themselues most visible cannot be seene without the visiue faculty so is it impossible matters spirituall should otherwise then spiritually be discerned Notwithstanding I scarce haue knowne any man so blind but might easily haue beene perswaded that he could not see or induced hartily to wish he were as other men are though in what state they were or what pleasures
that they obtained not what they desired was because they sought it amisse yet not spiritually amisse for spiritually they could not seeke it but amisse in their kinde For it is a point to bee considered that as there is a naturall desire of spirituall good so there may be and vsually is a resolution naturall or only morall to vndertake the course prescribed for attaining that qualification which is ordinarily required ere faith be infused or grace created This resolution without transgressing the limits of it owne kinde may admit many degrees as well in the feruency of the attempt as in the constancie of the pursuit As the spirituall good wee assent vnto is apprehended though but morally or confusedly as infinitely greater then any temporarie pleasure or commodity so the resolution to suffer all the grieuances wherewith the expectance of it can bee charged though but morall must euery way farre exceede all purposes of like nature all springing from the same vnsanctifyed roote that are set on obiects of another ranke otherwise all that professe they seeke make or as the Apostle sayth of the Iewes iudge themselues vnworthy of eternall life 2. Vnto what tolerance would not that flagrant speech of Cato when hee was to conduct the reliques of Pompeius forces through the scorched sands of Libia haue almost impelled anie resolute Souldier that should haue seene so graue a Senator act so hard and meane a part as he professed to make choice of Vnto farre greater certainely then we Christians in these daies either conceiue as necessarie or would resolue to aduenture vpon for attaining vnto Gods rest O quibus vna salus placuit mea castra secatis Ind●mita ceruice mori componite mentes Ad magnum virtutis opus summosque labores Vadimus in campos steriles exustaque mundi Qua nimius Titan rarae in fontibus vndae Siccaque letiferis squalent serpentibus arua Durum iter ad leges patriaeque ruentis amorem Per mediam Libyen veniant atque inuia tentent Si quibus in nullo positum est euadere voto Si quibus ire sat est neque enim mihi fallere quenquā Est animus tectoque metu perducere vulgus Ii mihi sunt comites quos ipsa pericula ducent Qui me teste pati vel que tristissima pulchrum Romanumque putant at qui sponsore salutis Miles eget capiturque animae dulcedine vadat Ad dominum meliore via dum primus arenas Ingrediar primusque gradus in puluere ponam Mecalor aethereus feriat mihi plena veneno Occurrat serpens fatoque pericula vestra Praetentate meo sitiat quicunque bibentem Viderit aut vmbras nemorum quicunque petentem Astuet aut equitem peditum praecedere turmas Deficiat si quo fuerit discrimine notum Dux an miles eam serpens sitis ardor arenae Dulcia virtuti gaudet patientia duris Laetius est quoties magno sibi constat honestum Sola potest Libye turbam praestare malorum Vt deceat fugisse viros Sweet mates whose wished end of life is death deuoid of thral Addresse your minds to seruice heard but valor doth you call We enter now on sterill plaines where Titans raies do sting Where too much heat makes water scant euen in the verie Spring On coasts where Bacchus nere was set nor Ceres euer sowne On drie fields destitute of grasse with Serpents ouer-growne A wofull waie but to their lawes and ruined countries loue Through mids of Lybia let them march and way-lesse wandrings prooue As many as haue no minde to scape but safety set at nought Content for pay to take their paines nor came't ere in my thought With guile to traine the simple on by couering present dread The fittest mates for me they are whom dangers seen shall lead Who to haue me spectator parts most tragicke wilaffect As Souldier-like and Romane worth my campe hee must reiect That hostage for his safety craues or life accounteth sweet Let such goe chuse some safer way his master for to meet Whilest I first foote it in the dust and tread you paths in sand Let heate from heauen mee first assaile let Serpents ' gainst me band Full charg'd with venome t is all one resolued I am to die That ye your danger by my fates more safely may foretrie Let him crie out I am a thirst that me shall spie to drinke Or him complaine of sultring heate to shade that sees mee shrinke Let him lie downe and rest himselfe that first shall see me ride Or take my place by any ods if ere it be descried Whether I as vulgar souldier march of generall to the rest This Serpent sands and scorching heate content true valour best From hardnesse patience reapeth ioy that honour is most worth Which dearest costs and breeds most paine whilest t is in bringing forth No land but Lybia could affoord such store of toile and paine That euen your flight through it may th'fame of hardy Souldiers gaine 3 The resolution although vnto the worldly wise or secular gallant it may seeme truly noble yet rightly examined will proue but turbulent or humorous because his patience to endure such hardnesse were it as great as hee himselfe o● perhaps the Poet for him makes profession of was but equall to his impatience of ciuill ●e●uitude his light regard of venimous Serpents but answerable to his seare of being beholden to Caesars curtesie And what maruell if one or more impotent desires hauing gotten absolute commaund ouer the soule do impell it to such difficulties as none f●ce from the like tyrannie of affections would aduenture on To haue esteemed captiuity of bodie where was no remedie a lighter burden then such misery as he now voluntarily exposed himselfe and others vnto had bin a better document of true liberty Thus enabled to brook euerie condition of life which disesteem could lay vpon him had beene entirely to possesse his soule with patience which is the best inheritance whereunto mortality can be entitled whereas now he did but striue to cast out one potent enemy by arming a band of insolent incorrigible slaues against him More heroicall yea most diuine was the generositie of our Sauiours mind that being heire of all things Lord and maker of all mankinde could entertaine seruitude contempt and scorne of baser enemies with greater peace and quietnes then Cato did his free censorship that he could suffer grieuances not of one or few kinds whereunto peculiar desires of pleasing himself in the auoidance of some much abhorred euils or in the assequ●tion of any higher prized good might impell or sway his minde but that hee could with such constancy determine in no kind to please himselfe resoluiug to fulfill what the Prophet had sayd The reproches of them that reproched thee fell on mee Nothing distastfull to flesh and bloud whereof the meanest of Gods seruants had tasted which he swallowed not Now hee being our patterne and guide to be found in him or like
vpon such occasions or prouocations the stomach will come in time to prescribe or pleade a custome and plenty of foode though first sought for necessity or encreasing of ability is afterwards necessarily desired though to the ouercharging or disenabling of nature To be enamoured with the sight of money is more naturall to young choughes then children vnto whom notwithstanding once comen to yeares of discretion and left to their owne care or prouision the vse of this mettall as the world hath now decreed is very necessary for supplies of life in euerie kinde and mens desires to have it for this end often multiplied or reiterated ●et ouer the soule to loue it selfe for it selfe as too much familiarity or frequent conuersation with creatures not so amiable entice men otherwise fit watches for more comely personages to follie and vnlawfull lust And this is the mischiefe of mischiefes that the fruition of money or coine being permanent the inordinate inclination to it still increaseth with the acquisition of it though lawfull This the Heathen had obserued as an axiome almost without exception amongst those that knew not God a Crescit amor nummi quantum ipsa pecunia crescit Our loue to pelfe doth alwaies grow as fast as pelfe it selfe doth flow And from notice of the danger whereto increase of wealth expose mens soules the Psalmist thought that admonition necessarie If riches encrease set not thy heart vpon them Euery vice is a kinde of madnesse in respect of that vniformity which accompanies faith and Christian sobrietie yet many vices there be very foule in the act which leaue a sting behind them and by scourging the minde procure dilucida interualla wherein the doctrine of life may be clearely represented and make some impression vpon their soule But such is not the nature of auarice or ambition of men polluted with which diseases what one in another case hath said is most true Qui nunquam delirat semper erit fatuus as they bewray no spice of frantickenesse in the actuall prosecution of what they entend so they remaine perpetuall idiotes in continuing their sinister choice 3. It would bee a matter very difficult to finde a man in this age in whom the word of God as farre as the eye of mans obseruation can pierce had taken better roote or more vniformely branched it selfe into euery commaundement of the Law then in that rich man or as Saint Luke entitles him that ruler which came running yet not forgetfull of good respect vnto our Sauiour for kneeling he tenders this petition Good Master what shall I doe that I may possesse eternall life That as well the appellation as his desire was sinccre and not pretended is manifested by our Sauiours loue which was neuer set on outward feature or externall complement but on internall integrity and ingenuitie His profession of obseruing all the commaundements from his youth had his owne heart beene a competent iudge of his demeanor was not hypocriticall but true for such had his care and resolution beene But he that was greater then his heart perceiued some thornes or weedes already taken which would o●ertop the good seed sowen in it and keepe down his thoughts from growing vp to heauen whereunto our Sauiour would haue exalted him could ye haue suffered the extirpation of these weedes One thing is yet lacking to thee goe and sell all that thou hast and giue to the poore and thou shalt haue treasures in heauen and come follow me taking vp thy crosse But he was sad at this saying and went away sorrowfull What was the reason his heart was with his treasure and care of keeping it or secret delight in inioying it being crept into the same roome did sucke away that vertue and influence wherby the word sowen should haue receiued strength and increase alienating part of his soule from God whom he was to loue with all his soule with all his heart and all his strength The reason of his heauy and sorrowfull departure as it is expressed by two Euangelists was not any vnsatiable desire of riches or vnconscionable meanes to get them his chiefe fault was that he was maruellous rich or as S. Marke saith that he had great possessions For to haue these but in competent measure and not to trust in them is a more extraordinary blessing of God then their greatest abundance though gotten without extortion fraud or coosenage Nor is it the deceitfull and fraudulent meanes commonly vsed in gathering wealth but the deceitfulnesse of it howsoeuer gathered which choakes the word and makes the heart wherein it is sowen vnfruitfull If wee rightly obserue the bounds or limits whereby the seuerall parts of this parable are distinguished and their peculiar disposition whom our Sauiour represents vnto vs by thorny ground his phrase doth intimate that the very presence of riches and large possessions though neuer sought for though scarce expected will inchant mindes otherwise free and liberall with a secret delight in their fruition and a desire to retaine if not to encrease them and so by degrees vnobseruable breed such distempers in the soule as will be ready to bring forth death ere they can be discouered as bad humours oft times gather in strong bodies neuer descried but by some straine causing them to settle or make head against nature on a suddaine without due obseruance of our temperature whether naturall customarie or accidentall right choice of seasonable exercise and moderation of cares in our studies or businesses such grieuous maladies as were now mentioned may grow ripe when wee least thinke albeit we had Phisitians more skilfull then Hypocrates Galen or Celsus to appoint the set times of all our r●p●sts ●o approoue as well the qualitie as quantity of what we eat or drinke or to ouersee vs sleeping or waking perpetually directing vs from the right vse of other meanes ordained for preseruation of life and health More secret by much and more insensible is the gathering of this spirituall disease for whose auoidance we now aduise euen in men that make great conscience by what meanes they encrease their wealth and will not aduenture on any bargaine though neuer so good without particular warrant from the word of life or some peculiar prescriptions from the learned Phisitians of their soules Nor is there any meanes to preuent the danger saue onely by continuall exercise of good workes almes and other deedes of charitie by prudent carefulnesse to improoue their substance gotten as farre as may be to Gods glory and oft times by voluntarie abstinence from lawfull gaine which by their forbearance might befall the poore brethren For a rich man to know how well he loues his riches that is to discouer the instant danger of his disease is otherwise impossible vnlesse he were put to such a plunge as this young man was vrged to forsake them vtterly all at once which hee doubtlesse that vseth not such charitable exercises as are here mentioned would
of ill report is danted with shadowes and made to fly the field for feare of being lashed with absent tongues And no maruell when as the reprochfull censure of the multitude or of men on whose voice and sentence it mosts depends though bequeathed by our Sauiour as an especiall blessing descending by inheritance to his chosen from their fathers the true Prophets is apprehended by the ambitious or popular minded as the most grieuous curse that can be fall them Blessed are ye saith our Sauiour when men hate you and when they separate you and reuile you and put out your name as euill for the Sonne of mans sake Reioice ye in that day and be glad for behold your reward is great in heauen for after this manner their fathers did to the Prophets On the contrary what he denounced as a woe is made chiefe matter of their ioy that affect an vniuersall esteeme of honest discreet men Woe be to you when all men speake well of you for so did their Fathers to the false Prophets Thus much of this poisonous weed whose fertile growth in the Cleargie seemes to bee prouoked by couetousnesse in the Laitie For the more conscionable Patrons be and the more worldly or troublesome Parishioners be the more vnsatiable are many Ministers desires of dignities or pluralities as if they sought to beate their aduersaries at their owne weapons to outweary the minor sort insuites of law to outuie the greater in secular pompe or brauery Manie other branches there be of voluptuous life through whose deceitfulnesse the word of life is secretly choakt or stifled in mindes otherwise well affected and by good husbandry apt to fructifie but their particular discussion I must referre to the Readers priuate meditations contenting my selfe only to touch the generalitie 6. The course of a Christians life may most fitly be compared to a nauigation his body is as the barke the humane soule the owner and the spirit of God the Pilot. As there is no sea-faring man that can be secured of continuall calme but must resolue as to meet with stormes and with rough or growneseas so to redeeme himselfe and his passengers from their rage sometimes with losse of fraughtage sometimes of tackling or in desperate extremities of the vessell with her burthen so is there no Christian that can expect or may desire a generall exemption from temptations but must be contentto preuent the shipwracke of faith and conscience one while with losse of goods or other appertinences of mortall life otherwhiles with losse of some bodily part for if either hand or foote shall offend vs it must be cut off rather then Christ should be forsaken sometimes with loosing all feasts of friendship or dependance for he that loues father or mother brother or sister kith or l●in superiour or inferiour more then Christ is not worthy of him sometimes with dissolution of body and soule for whosoeuer will saue his life when Christs cause shall demaund the aduenture of it shall loose it and he that will loose it shall saue it Now where the fraughtage or furniture of life is pretious as if our fare be delicate our other pleasures or contentments in their kinde rare and delectable our alliance or acquaintance choice and amiable our reuenues ample or authority great the flesh once tempted to forsake these for preseruing conscience vpright and confessing Christ is ready to wrangle with the spirit as a greedy or iealous owner would doe with a skilfull Pilot aduising in atempest to lessen the danger by lightening the ship If the commodities bee grosse or base the owner perhaps can bee well content to haue some part cast ouerboord but it costly and deere or such as his heart is much set vpon he had rather adventure to perish with them vnder hatches then to see them cast into the sea for to part from them is death Some Christians when blasts of temptation arise rather then they will breake with their deare friends and acquaintance doe finally sinke with them as ships are sometimes cast away through the owners vnwillingnesse to cut the cables or loose the anchors some when stormes of persecution beginne to rage rather then they will hazard losse of body lands or goods in Truths defence drowne both body and soule in perdition Seeing the wisest of vs as we are by nature or left to our owne directions are more cunning Merchants then Marriners and for the most part as ignorant of the voiages we vndertake as skilfull in the commodities we traffique for the best resolution for our safety would be to load our selues with no greater quantity of riches honour or other nutriment of voluptuous life then shall be appointed vs by the peculiar instruction of Gods spirit which best knowes the true burthen of those brittle barkes how well or ill they are able to abide rough seas or such stormes as he alone foresees are likely to assault vs. And seeing we are all by profession lastly bound for a City which is aboue whose commodities cannot be purchased with gold or siluer or pretious stones much lesse may we trucke for them with our vncleane worldly pleasures or delightes which may not be so much as admitted within the wals or gates our wi●est resolution in the second place is to accoūt euē the choisest cōmodities that sea or land or this inferior world can affoord but as trash or luggage seruing onely for ballance in the passage so shall we be ready to part with it when anie tempest shall arise and if extremity vrge vs like Saint Paul and his company to saue our soules with losse of the barke that beares vs and of all the whole burthen besides 7. But this aduise may seeme like their philosophicall fancie who would perswade vs that splendent mettall which is enstamped with Caesars image and superscription and furnisheth vs with all things necessary were but a piece of purified clay or earth and water close compacted Shall we whom none makes reckoning of bring downe the price of these things which men in authoritie and the common consent of nations would haue raised vnto the skies Shall we belieue our selues before our betters that bodily pleasures great preferment or other contentments which almost all accompt worthy of their daily and best emploiment are nothing worth Sure the Heathen thought this very argument no better Nugae non si quid turbida Roma Elcuet accedas examenveimprobum in illa Castiges trutina nec te quaesiuer is extra Deeme not all naught vnsteedy Rome accompteth light Her seales are false and cannot way mens worth aright But naught without can him that 's well within affright Let vs aske counsell of our owne hearts and they will better enforme vs then ten thousand by-standers that liue but by heare-say and see onelie others outsides not what is within themselues Though we haue riches and all other materials of worldly solace in greatest abundance yet our liues consist
makes the body a sitte shop or receptacle for the humane soule which comes afterwards to exercise all her functions and operations in so doth the spirit vsually preorganize the heart for liuely and diuine faith to work the workes of God in it aright But as these workes are wrought immediately by faith though principally by the spirit which infuseth it so likewise is the heart organized by such morall or imperfect faith as they sometimes that had afterwards sinne against the holy Ghost but by it as the spirits instrument vsually preexistent to the faith which neuer failes or vnto the life of grace VVhatsoeuer may bee rightly ascribed vnto the man already regenerate in production of true fruits of the spirit as much I thinke we may giue without offence to our endeauours in framing this passiue capacity or disposition In the former after our regeneration wee are by consent of most diuines coworkers with the spirit of God albeit the works be of a supernatural quaility and so whatsoeuer we are we may without inconuenience be thought in the other it being of a nature as far inferior to the former works as the grace wherby it is wrought is to the spirit of sanctification But in what sense wee are said to cooperate with God by Gods assistance in it proper place where notwithstanding any captious or preiudicate surmise of this assertion it shall be made cleare that I giue as little to mans abilities in eyther worke as he that in reformed Churches giues the least But to our present purpose 2 The meere naturall man whether Infidell or carelesse liuer the excesse of his indocility supposed is so affected to the word of faith as a Barbatian that neither knows letter of booke nor other nurture is to ingenuous arts or liberall scienences Such as submit themselues to sacred discipline and heare the VVord preached with intention though but morrally sincere to profit by it are in this like little children or nouices in good literature that as these abstaine from sport or play for feare of chiding or whipping and follow their bookes sometimes onely for like motiues sometimes for shame least their equals should outstrippe them sometimes in hope of commendation or other childish reward so hee that is not yet but desires to bee regenerated eschews what Gods Lawe forbids but with difficulty and reluctance oft times for feare of ecclesiastique or humane censure sometimes vpon suspition rather then religious dread of plagues from Heauen hee addresseth himselfe likewise to the practise of affirmatiue precepts but vncheerefully and with distraction moued thereto either because he would not be vnlike those men whose vprightnes his conscience cannot but cōmend or from som surmise rather then sure hope of diuine reward for so doing neuer from vniforme and sincere delight in the good it selfe enioyned or in the fountaine of goodnesse whence the iniunction was deriued Yet thus to be held in compasse and as it were bound to good outward abearance much auailes for bringing vs to our right mindes or for our recouery from hereditary madnesse from which our soules in some measure freed still take some tincture from the goodnesse of the obiects whereunto they are applyed and this restraint of desires or interposed abstinence from lusts of the flesh yeild opportunities or fit seasons for heauenly medicines to worke vpon vs which otherwise would proue but as good phisicke to full stomacks leauing no more impression of their sweetnesse in our mindes then wholsome foode doth in distempered or infected pallates The temper of the heart once seasoned with habituall grace is in respect of the word of faith like to a minde come to maturity in choicer learning and reaping fruits more sweet then hony or the pleasantest grape from seedes as bitter as the birch or willow so as now no bodilie paine or griefe not gout or stone or other disease can withdraw him from those studies vnto which smart of the rod in his yonger daies could hardly driue him To enforce or allure him to them vpon any other respects then onely for their natiue sweetnesse were as superfluous and impertinent as to threaten an ambitious man with honour or hiring a miser to fill his bagges with gold The fruits precedent and subsequent to true faith are in shape or outward forme as often heretofore hath been implyed the same but different in their taste or relish as also in their manner of production To abstaine from wrongs personall or reall from all pollution of the flesh to abiure ambitious proiects to mislike reuengefull wanton or couetous thoughts are fruits that may vniformely spring from that honesty and goodnesse of heart vsually precedent as we suppose to the internall renouation of the minde but must bee enforced as it were by art or externall culture The contrary positiue practises which ●esemble the workes of true sanctity notwithstanding all outward helps or enforcements of discipline good example or the like are seldome brought foorth without such testinesse or morosity as wee see in children breeding teeth whereas true faith alwaies brings forth her fruit with ioy Abstinence from euill to the minde once purified by it is as a perpetuall pleasant banquet to mortifie all bodily members more sweet then life accompanied with perfect health or then the liuelihood of youth the choicest pleasures the world or flesh can proffer though lawfull or freed from the sting of conscience seeme but as dregges to be able to represse them or intir●ly to enjoy our soules without them is the pure quintesence of that delight or ioy which others take in them But this is a peace which is not vsually gotten without long warre and many combats ●o thus composed we are in actuall league with Go● full conquerors ouer sinne and Sathan In the conflicts that procure it or rather are precedent to the procurement of it the flesh I take it hath not alwaies the sanctifying spirit for it antagonist these are sorrowes which vsually goe before the conception of true faith of which likewise such as are actuall participants doe not alwaies fight the good fight of faith but euen these sometimes whiles this generall sleeepes as they that haue not as yet taken anie earnest or prest money of him alwaies before regeneration offer battaile to the world diuell and flesh out of such resolutions to renounce them as haue beene obserued to be right in their kinde and suggested by the spirit as only assistant not as inhabitant in the heart But howsoeuer our finall victory ouer the flesh cannot be gotten but by the spirit dwelling in vs yet to entertaine these skirmishes or conflicts though out of resolutions not inherently spirituall is to verie good purpose For seeeing we cannot assigne the very mathematicall point how far reason directed by scripture or ecclesiastike discipline or externally guided by the spirit but not yet quickned by sanctifying grace or faith apt to iustifie can reach nor know the very instant wherein such grace or faith
preferrements our friends our kindred or acquaintance when as the realitie of the contentment we tooke in these or whatsoeuer is naturally most deare vnto vs is euen in this life more then fully recompenced yea many times doubled in the sublimation of the desires or inclinations which for substance remaine numerically the same but with gaine of reference to more excellent obiects besides the encrease of their natiue strength and vigor thus inwardly purified and adorned with inherent beautifications That in renouncing all wherewith nature custome or our owne industry had inuested vs there can be no losse but happy change seeing our internall faculties still remaine intire much bettered for the present in themselues as also in their dependance for future hopes our Sauiour most diuinely implies in that promise of comfort Verely I say vnto you there is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but be shall receiue an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions and in the world to come eternall life To speake philosophically as health or right habit of body so much more the welfare of soule and minde euen all the delight or ioy we can truely say is our owne must be from within vs externals may onely helpe to raise or ripen it Now as there can be no want of fire vnlesse to creeples or chimney-corner sluggards whilest the same heate or warmth which it yeelds may bee as good cheape borrowed from the Sunne or better procured from proper motion or agitation of our blood and spirits so can it be no losse to be depriued of friends wealth or honour solong as the flower and quintessence of all the contentments which these could occasion may be more plentifully reaped from the peaceable fruition add free exercises of our owne soules or right emploiments of their best faculties especially from the excitation of Gods gifts in vs whereby we are vnited to CHRIST who is more to euery faithfull soule then was Elkanah vnto Hannah not only much better then many sonnes but one in whom though we had nothing besides wee may by iust title of dominion possesse all things 6. But if wee must affect the former change with all our hearts with all our soules with our whole intention and resolution no man it seemes may intend any other matters secular especially Yes euen such secular businesses as we are said wholy or solely to intend or minde absolutely exclude not all but onely incompatible cogitations of others matters though of like kinde The mutuall compossibilitie of actuall particular cogitations with vertuall continuance of some maine purpose or intention was before exemplified in a man holding on a iourney vpon some waighty businesse yet not alwaies thinking whither or about what hee was going but often occasioning or entertaining ordinary way faring confabulations Our whole delight then not euery particular delectation our habituall finall or principall intention or resolution not euery particular purpose must be set vpon the former purchase Our desires of it should bee as the maine bulcke or truncke out of which first well growen and throughly set other intentions or resolutions may spring as twigges or branches or be engrafted in it without annoyance Such a principality or integrity of intention our Sauiour enioines in that precept First seeke the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all these things which the world principally cares for shall accrew vnto you An experiment of this gratious promise wee haue in Salomon into whose sincere and hearty praiers for true wisdome no intensions or desires of wealth or honor did insinuate or intrude themselues howbeit both wealth and honour though vnaskt did in great abundance attend wisdome once obtained All good things saith the wise man paraphrasing vpon this grant p els where specified in Canonicall Scripture together came to me with her and innumerable riches in her hands And I reioiced in them all because wisdome goeth before them and I knew not that shee was the mother of them Her growth in him though suddaine was very great and able to beare extraordinary fortunes notwithstanding when grieuous blasts of temptations arose the exceeding height of these accessary branches had almost ouerthrowne the stocke wherein they were engrafted This should teach vs alwaies to increase our desires of grace and moderate our delight in transitories howsoeuer continuing so affected as Salomon in his first choice was we may possesse all things in the Lord and the abundance of riches honor or other worldly blessings shall be truely sanctified vnto vs. For not the possession of them or delight in them but their possession or delight with preiudice or interruption of our maine intention or resolution is vnlawfull Ordinarie vinteners haue more wine then most noble men in their cellars so haue apothecaries greater choice of delicates in their shops then can be found in Princes palaces yet are neither vsuallie more pestered then other men of their rancke or meanes with such diseases as excesse of wine or sweet meates engender because to fare deliciously euery day was no part of their intention at their assignement to these trades but rather to encrease their stocke and gaine some perpetuity of Lands or lease for themselues and their posteritie by abstinence and wary dealing with these commodities whereof others either surfet or are too licorish Were the kingdome of grace thus primarily and wholly entended and the practice of meanes ordained for our saluation constantly and fully resolued vpon the increase of Riches honour or other materials of voluptuous life would breed smal preiudice to our faith or calling rather their abundance caused more by Gods meere blessing or disposition of his prouidence then by our sollicitous care or affectation would bring forth a more heroicall contempt of them then their want can nourish and as it vsually comes to passe in like cases quite take away all delight or pleasure in them Vse them with their excrescence men thus affected might yet not as vsurers doe their money for their owne encrease but rathor as a stocke to traffique with for the finall purchase of an enheritance not subiect to such change or chance as the greatest and surest worldly possessions are So our Sauiour aduiseth Sell that ye haue and giue almes prouide your selues bags which wax not old a treasure in the heauens that faileth not where no theefe approacheth neither moth corrupteth For where your treasure is there will your heart be also This last caueat may enforme vs that God requires not alwaies an actuall alienation of our right or interest in his temporall blessings but rather an appropriation of our hearts alienated from them vnto hm who is able to make all grace to abound towards vs that we alwaies hauing all sufficiencie in all things may abound in euerie good
worke For seeing the ministration of this seruice not onely supplieth the necessities of the Saints but also is abundant by the thankesgiuing of many vnto God he that findeth seed vnto the sower will multiply the seed which wee thus sow and encrease the fruites of our beneuolence that it may redound more and more vnto his glory As it is extreme vanity without speciall occasions or pecular necessitie of extraordinary times to giue or make away the roote whence such fruit doth grow so is it a point of spirituall folly or infidelity to imagine the stocke should perish or not prosper by often lopping or that we should forset our hold of what we enioy by due paiment of rent or tribute vnto the Lord and owner CHAP. IX That faith cannot exercise it soueraignety euer our affections or desires vntill it bee seated in the heart with briefe admonitions for bringing it into this throne 1. FRom the former and like parables put foorth by the Author and finisher of our faith wee are taught that faith if perfect must be seated in the heart or fountaine of mans vaine imaginations whence euill thoughts still issue in great abundance vntill it be cleansed by infusion of this purifying grace Most fitly doth that parable of the leauen exemplify aswell the vse of faith as the truth of this obseruation Thus much at least it directly and necessarily implies That our assent vnto the Gospell of the kingdome must bee in such a part as the vertue of it may bee diffused thence vnto the whole masse which it is ordained to sanctifie For it must season our inbred affections alter the tast of euerie appetite qualifie and strengthen our naturall inclinations vnto good Now if wee consult true Philosophy no other member in the body besides the heart can be a fit seat for such absolute commaund But whether it be possible for Assent euery way the same with that which thus renewes the minde and hath such soueraignty ouer all our faculties to lodge els where then in this palace or chiefe mansion of the soule were curiosity to dispute Yet admit the same faith should els where reside it could not exercise the like souerainty as there it doth for euery desire or concupiscence deepely rooted would in temptations ouerbeare it Nor is it the greatnesse of the good proposed if our conceipt of it be but superficiall or our desires of it admitted onely into the confines of our soules that can ouersway such naturall propensions to a farre lesse as spring from the heart or center The reason whereof as of many other assertions in this short treatise shall God willing at large appeare in the article of euerlasting life where iust occasion likewise will bee offered to rescue the heartlesse imaginations of some late diuines more then half yeelded to the authority of Galen though forsaken in that point by the most exquisite moderne professors of the noble science hee taught that the head is the principall member as if Solomon or our Sauiour had spoken more vulgarly then accurately or philosophically when they ascribe this principallity to the heart How bee it the very ground of their arguments suppose this vulgar opinion if so men will haue it to bee an vndoubted truth in nature But referring philosophicall or scholastique disputes of this point or the like to their proper place the Gymnosophists deuice to represent the peace and quiet state of a temporall monarchie by the Monarchs presence in the Metropolis and the disturbance likely to ensue his absence may serue as a vulgar or popular illustration of that soueraignety which faith once seated as hath beene said may exercise ouer euery affection at it pleasure but not so seated shall euer want whilest hee trod the corners or vtmost parts of his buls hide the depression of one did raise an other but standing once still in the middle all lay quiet Thus while our assent vnto precepts diuine floats onely in the braine or keeps residence in the borders or suburbs of the soule it may perhaps suppresse some one or fewe exorbitant passions but the expulsiue or expugnatiue force which in this case it vseth being vnweldy neyther vniforme nor well planted will occasion others as bad to stirre or mutinee Vsually whiles men striue to beate folly or vanitie of youth by the strength of Gods Word not well rooted out of the fancy they let in couetousnesse into the heart oft times seeking to keepe out couetrousnesse popularity ambition or other affection whose helpe faith w●●●●e and unsetled commonly vseth in such expugnations will finde occasion to insinuate themselues or though ●●i●i● not yet well s●●ed were able it selfe alone to root out couetousnesse restraine l●uishnesse or prodigallity or loppe off l●●●riant braunches of ambition yet there is a seceet pride which vsually springs out of these stocks for manie growe inwardly ambitious of their conquest ouer ambition or rather of restraining the out-breakings of this or other vnfruitfull plant Now these inward swellings though in themselues lesse are yet commonly most dangerous beecause they come neere the heart and will neuer bee asswaged vntill true faith bee enthronized there as in the Fort or Castle of the soule where it hath euery affection or desire as it were vndershot or at such commaund as they dare not stirre to it preiudice but by stealth or some secret aduantage eipyed by the flesh vnable to stand out against it For as motion beginning at the Center diffuseth it self equally throughout the whol sphere shaking euery part vnto the circumference and from this aduantage of it originall deades the force of contrary impressions whose impulsiue causes are but equally strong so faith possessed once of the heart hauing it force vnited by close reposall therein commaunds euery affection delight or pleasure of our soules and breakes the impetuousnes of euery inclination or propension contrary to such motion as it suggests seing no hopes can bee equall to the reward which it proposeth to the constant and resolute no feares comparable to the terrors which it represents to the negligent or ●loathfull followers of such courses as it prescribes And the equalitie of hopes and feares euen of the same rancke though set vpon like obiects equally interrested in the principall ●●an●ion of the soule doe equally sway or moue vs either to vndertake any good or eschew any of more euils in themselues equiualent being proposed to our choice Now though God alone giue the victory onely able to make entrance for his graces into the heart wee may not in this respect fore●low the siege vntill he set the gates open He and none but He did place Dauid in the Hill Sion and gaue Gedeon victory ouer the Midia●ites as they hoth well knewe and firmelie beleeued but their beliefe h●●reof did not as Machiauell cal●●●●●tes Christian Religion emasculate their mindes or t●e their handes from vsing such naturall strength and valour as they had their personall endeauours in fight were answearable
death Thus much of true faith and the errors concerning the Nature of it It remaines we intreate of misperswasions concerning the possession or presence of it with the right vse of it and other spirituall graces that attend it SECTION 2. Of immature perswasions concerning mens present estate in grace with the meanes to rectifie or preuent them CHAP. I. The generall heads or springs of hypocriticall perswasions with briefe rules for their preuention 1. HHappy were we whom God hath appointed to sowe good seede in others hearts because not altogether without hope to see some fruits of our labours if this censorious age would permit vs to strike as freely at the rootes of Atheism infidelity or hypocrisy as it is ready to censure Atheists Infidels Hereticks or Hypocrites To me it hath often seemed a question very doubtfull but farre aboue my capacity to determine whether such as reuolt from the orthodoxall Church vpon obseruation of monstrous dissonancy betweene the truthes professed in it and the professors liues or resolutions be in case better or worse then such as embrace true religion vpon no better grounds then they or their confederates oppugne it Thus much the word of God will warrant that the portion of hypocrites shall be the bitterest in the life to come And yet hypocrisie if it be of that stampe which our Sauiour so much condemnes is alwaies moulded in that deepe notice or strong perswasion which men haue of their owne loue and others opposition vnto diuine truthes of their owne diligence and others negligence in performance of sundry duties expresly required by Gods lawe And this is a miserie of miseries peculiar to the hypocrite that whereas the height of others impiety ariseth from their opposing the way of truth and godlinesse this monster the more he detests falsehood and error or the impietie whether of others practises or opinions the more still he increaseth his owne corruption and warres vnwittingly against his owne soule For seeing loue to himselfe indulgence to his deare affections or carnall glorying in prerogatiues perhaps spirituall is the common roote as well of his imaginary loue vnto such points of truth as haue some kinde of coniunction with his humours as of the detestation he beares to others obliquities that in life or profession ill consort with him the oftener he lookes either on their knowne transgressions or his owne precise obseruance of such duties as by nature hee is addicted or otherwise accustomed to by both meanes he more pampers and nourishes that vicious habit whence the forementioned bad fruites did growe And thus at length by vsing the helpe of strong but impure vnruly affections to abandon particular errors he ouerthrowes his owne soule as the ancient inhabitants of this land did their state by vsing the Saxons aide to driue out the Picts 2. After this manner the Iew by nursing a loathsome conceit of Publicanes and open sinners dissolu●nessesse not tyed vnto so much as any solemn acknowledgement of their misdeeds or set forme of repentance tooke a surfet of those outward ceremonies which God had ordained as sauees to sharpen not as foode to satiate his appetite of sauing health Other-whiles fiercely bending his indignation against the idolatrie of the heathen by too much depression or debasement of their folly he sublimated his owne naturall inclination vnto pride and haughtinesse into presumptuous boasting in the purity of that lawe which God had giuen him by Moses Whence in the fulnesse of time sprung an irreconcileable hatred of the long expected Messias desperate contempt of his Gospell and wilful refusall of saluation preached in his name But howsoeuer the deadlinesse of this disease was most conspicuous in the fall of Gods chosen people whom wee may without suspition of slaunder seeing the holy Ghost hath written the obseruatiō safely charge with the infection yet the danger of it amongst all professors of true religion throughout euery age and nation continues the same as hauing a perpetuall cause in nature For whether wee speake of contraries morall or phisicall the enmities of the extreames is alwaies greater then betwixt them and the meane from which they alwaies so much further decline as they more eagerly entend their force each against other The greater strength heate and cold from their vicinity gather whether by mutual irritation or a secret kinde of daring each other to combate or by a stricter vnition of the materiall parts wherein their forces lodge the more both disagree with the luke-warme temper The more likewise the prodigall detests the niggards manners or the niggard his the farther both roaue the one ouer the other short from that marke whereat they aime but which truly liberality only hits And as the mutuall discord of extreames grows greater by the increase of their seueral strengths so the hastie or violent introduction of the one into a subiect capable of both makes waie for the others entertainment and excludes the meane which findes no entrance but where it is vshered by moderation So water too much or too violently heated is more apt to freeze then to retaine the middle temper Young prodigalls we often see turne old niggards seldome liberall vnlesse their education haue been exceeding good their naturall discretion extraordinary or the seeds of vertue in them very strong And what more vsuall then for a niggards feast because not agreeable to his ordinary disposition to smell of waste and prodigalitie Buzzards by naturall constitution through extreamity enforced to take heart and turne againe ouerrunning valour boisterously rush into fury And desperate hotshots once made to feele the smart of their folly become afterwards basely timerous The Cynicke could spurne at his fellow Philosophers pride but so as his scornfull heeles did bewray his preposterously proud ambitious heart 3. Are these obseruations true in workes of nature or morall affections onely and not in perswasions of religion Yes euen in these also for hath not the vntimely heat of indiscreete precisenesse disposed sundry in our daies to freeze the sooner in the dregges of Popery Haue not others mounted so high in groundlesse and presumptuous confidence that their sudden fall hath made them sinke for any helpe man could affoord without recouery into the very suds of melancholy and desperation Others vpon a dislike of their former hot enforced zeale haue changed their wonted confidence into carelesnesse and become open professors of licentiousnesse like the possessed childe in the Gospell falling sometimes into the fire sometimes into the contrary element And experience prooues it so common a thing for young Saints such I meane as affect to be ripe in holinesse ere well growne in ordinary discretion or common honesty to prooue old diuels that the bent of nature vnseasonable or too much curbed in the parents oftentimes burst out in the vnbridled affections of their children 4. The reason of the experiments whether in nature moralities or religion is as perspicuous as they are true For contrarie exstreames alwaies