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A26951 The life of faith in three parts, the first is a sermon on Heb. 11, 1, formerly preached before His Majesty, and published by his command, with another added for the fuller application : the second is instructions for confirming believers in the Christian faith : the third is directions how to live by faith, or how to exercise it upon all occasions / by Richard Baxter. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1670 (1670) Wing B1301; ESTC R5103 494,148 660

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Nos quoque floruimus sed flos fuit ille caducus Flammaque de stipula nostra brevisque fuit Ov. VERA EFFIGIES RICHARDI BAXTERI MIN IES CH IN OP ET PATA FIDEI SPEI ET CHARITATIS An. 1670. AETAT SUAE 55º Farewell vaine World as thou hast been to me Dust and a Shadow those I leave with thee The vnseen Vitall Substance I committ The Leaves Fruit are dropt for soyle and Seed Heaven's heirs to generate to heale and feed Them also thou wilt flatter and molest But shalt not keep from Everlasting Rest THE LIFE OF FAITH THE Life of Faith In Three PARTS The First is a Sermon on Heb. 11.1 formerly preached before His Majesty and published by his Command with another added for the fuller Application The Second is Instructions for confirming Believers in the Christian Faith The Third is Directions how to live by Faith or how to exercise it upon all occasions By RICHARD BAXTER 2 Cor. 5.7 For we walk by faith not by sight 2 Cor. 4.16 17 18. For which cause we faint not but though our outward man parish yet the inward man is renewed day by day For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory While we look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen For the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Heb. 12.27 By faith he forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King for he endured as seeing him that is invisible LONDON Printed by R. W. for Nevill Simmons at the three Crowns over against Holbern Conduit 1670. To the Worshipfull my much honoured Friend Richard Hampden of Hampden Esquire and the Lady Laetitia his Wife Grace and Peace be multiplied SIR YOur Names stand here in the front of this Treatise on a double account First that the custom of Writers having given me such an advantage I may tell the present and future Ages how much I love and honour your Piety Sobriety Integrity and Moderation in an Age when such Vertues grow into contempt or into lifeless Images and Names And how much I am my self your debter for the manifold expressions of your love and that in an Age when 〈…〉 the superio●●●●culties is ou● of f●shion and towards such as I is grown ● crime Sincerity and 〈◊〉 are things that shall be honourable when Hypocrisie and Malice have done their worst But they are most conspicuous and refulgent in times of ●●rity and when the shame of their contraries se● them off Secondly To signifie my Love and Gratitude by the best 〈◊〉 which I can make which is by tendering to you and to your family the surest Directions for the most noble manly life on earth in order to a blessed life in Heaven Though you have proceeded well you 〈…〉 need of help so great a 〈…〉 for skilfull counsel and 〈…〉 and industrious and unwea●●● 〈…〉 And your hopeful children may 〈…〉 to learn this excellen● Life from these Directions for the love of your prefixed Names And how happy will they b● if they converse with God 〈…〉 are wallowing in the 〈◊〉 of 〈…〉 When the dead hea●ted sinner thinketh not of 〈…〉 be dragg'd out of 〈◊〉 pa●pered corruptible flesh to divinie 〈◊〉 and ●●●with the beginnings of endless 〈◊〉 to the world where they might have found everlasting rest what joy will then be the portion of mortified and patient Believers whos● Treas●●●s and Hearts and Conversati●● in He●ven are now the foretaste of their possession as the Spirit of Christ which causeth this i● the se●● of God and the pledge and earnest of their inheritance If a 〈◊〉 pleasing life in a dark distracted 〈◊〉 world were better than a life with God and Angels methinks yet they that know they cannot have what they 〈◊〉 should make sue of what they may ha●● And they that cannot keep what they 〈◊〉 should learn to 〈◊〉 what 〈◊〉 may keep Wonderfull stupidity ●h●t they 〈…〉 dead bodies 〈…〉 grave is as common a work 〈…〉 children into the world and that this life is but the road to another and that all men are posting on to their 〈…〉 should think no more considerately whither so many thousand souls do go that daily shoot the gulf of death and return no more to the world which one they called their home That men will have no house or home but the ship which carryeth them so swiftly to eternity and spend their time in furnishing a dwelling on such a tempestuous Sea where winds and tide are hasting them to the shore and even to the end are contriving to live where they are daily dying and care for no ●●bitation but on horse-back That almost all men die much wiser than they lived and yet the certain foreknowledge of death will not serve to make them more seasonably and more safely wi●e Wonderful that it should be possible for a man awake to believe that he must shortly be gone from earth and enter into an unchangeable endless life and yet not bend the thoughts of his soul and the labours of his life to secure his true and 〈…〉 Adam hath given sin the 〈…〉 grace and madness the priority to wisdom and our wisdom health and safety must now come after by the way of recovery and cure The first born of lapsed man was a malignant persecuting Cain The first born of believing Abraham was a persecutor of him that was born after the Spirit 1 John 3.12 Gal. 4.29 And the first born of this Isaac himself was a profane Esau that for one morsel sold his birth-right Heb. 12.16 And naturally we are all the off-spring of this profaneness and have not acquaintance enough with God and with healthful holiness and with the everlasting heavenly Glory to make us cordially preferr it before a forbidden cup or morsel or a game at foolery or a filthy lust or before the wind of a gilded fools acclamation and applause or the cap and counterfeit subjection of the multitude But the fortunae non tua turba ut Ov. quos sportula fecit amici ut Juv. who will serve mens lusts and be their servants and humble attendants to damnation are regarded more than the God the Saviour the Sanctifier to whom these perfidious rebels were once devoted That you and yours may live that more wise and delightful life which consisteth in the daily sight of Heaven by a Living Faith which worketh by Love in constant Obedience is the principal end of this publick appellation That what is here written for the use of all may be first and specially useful to you and yours whom I am so much bound to love and honour even to your safe and comfortable life and death and to your future joy and glory which is the great desire of Your obliged Servant RICH. BAXTER Feb. 4. 1669. THE PREFACE Reader 1. IF it offend thee that the Parts of
in spirit can live upon a little and mind the things of the Spirit so much that they are more indifferent to their appetite And custom maketh abstinence and temperance sweet and easie to them For a well-used appetite is like well-taught children not so unmannerly nor craving nor bawling nor troublesome as the gluttons ill-used appetite is It troubles mens minds and taketh up their thoughts and commandeth their estates and devoureth their time and turneth out God and all that is holy and like a thirst in a dropsie it de●oureth all and is satisfied with nothing but encreaseth its self and the disease As if such men did live to eat when the temperate do eat to live 8 Lastly It is the height of this sin when you also cherish the gulosity and excess of others When for the Pride of great house-keeping you cause others to waste Gods creatures and their time and waste your estates to satisfie their luxury and to procure their vain applause Hab. 2.15 Wo to him that giveth his neighbour drink that puttest thy bottle to him and make-est him drunken also This is the Fulness which is forbidden of God Object But is it not said that Christ came eating and drinking and the Pharisees quarrelled with him and his Disciples because they did not fast as John and his Disciples did and they called him a gluttonous person and a wine-bibber a friend of Publicans and sinners Answ 1. John lived in a wilderness upon locusts and wild honey and because Christ lived not such an austere eremetical life the quarrelsome Pharisees did thus calumniate him But Christ never lived in the least excess Mark that part of his life which they thus accused and you will find it such as the sensual will be loth to imitate 2. Christ was by office to converse with Publicans and sinners for their cure And this gave occasion to the calumnies of malice 3. There was a difference of Reasons for John's austerity and Christs But when he the Bridegroom was taken away he foretelleth that his followers should fast 4. Christ fasted forty daies at once and drank water and lived in perfect temperance Imitate him and we will not blame you for excess His example preached poverty in spirit Direct II. Remember the Reasons why fulness and gulosity are so much condemned by God viz. 1. A pampered appetite is unruly and feedeth your concupiscence The flesh is now become our most dangerous enemy and therefore it must be dangerous to pamper it to the strengthening of its lusts When even Paul was put to buffet and tame it and bring it into subjection for fear of proving a cast-away after all his wondrous labours 2. The pleasing of the appetite too much corrupteth the delight and rellish of the soul Delight in God and Heaven and Holiness is the summ and life of true Religion and the delights of sense and fleshly appetite turn away the soul from this and are most mortal enemies to these true delights For they that are after the flesh do mind or savour the things of the flesh and they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit Rom. 8.6 7. And the carnal mind is enmity to God if it cannot be subject to his Law certainly it is unfit to rellish the sweetness of his Love and spiritual mercies 3. And the Thoughts themselves are corrupted and perverted by it They that should be thinking and caring how to please God are thinking and caring for their bellies Even when all their powers should be employed on God in meditation or in prayer their thoughts will be going after their fleshly appetite as Ezekiels hearers were after their covetousness 33.31 And as some of Christs hearers were after the loaves 4. The use of pleasing the fleshly appetite doth make men need riches which is a misery and a snare Such must needs have their desires satisfied and therefore cannot live on a little And therefore if they have riches their flesh devoureth almost all and they have little to spare for any charitable uses And if they have none they are tempted to steal or get it by some unlawful means And so it tempteth them to the love of money which is the root of all evil because they love the lust which needeth it 5. And it maketh them utterly unfit for suffering which Christ will have all his followers to expect He that is used to please his appetite will take that for a grievous life which another man will feel no trouble in If a full fed Gentleman or Dives were tyed to fare as the poor labourer doth at the best he would lament his case as if he were undone and would take that for half a martyrdom if it were on a pious pretence which his neighbour would account no suffering but a feast And will God reward men for such self-made sufferings How unfit is he to endure imprisonment banishment and want who hath alwaies used to please his flesh If God cast him into poverty how impatient would he be How plentifully and pleasantly would most poor Country-men think to live if they had but a hundred pounds a year of their own But if he that hath thousands and is used to fulness should be reduced to an hundred how querulous or impatient would he be 6. It maketh the body heavy and unfit for duty both duties of piety and the honest labours of your calling 7. It maketh the body diseased and so more unfit to serve the soul It is to be noted that the excess reproved by Paul at their Love-feasts was punished with sickness and with death And as that punishment had a moral suitableness to their sin so it is not unlike that according to Gods ordinary way of punishing it was also a natural effect of their excess 8. It is a most unsuitable thing to such great sinners as we are who have forfeited all our mercies and are called so loud to penitent humiliation when we should turn to the Lord with all our hearts with fasting weeping and mourning to be then pleasing our fleshly appetites with curiosities and excess is a sin that God once threatned in a terrible sort Isa 22.12 13. Fasting is in such cases a duty of Gods appointment Joel 2.12 Luke 2.37 1 Cor. 7.5 Cornelius his fasting and alms-deeds came up before God Acts 10.30 Daniel was heard upon his fast Dan. 9.3 Christ fasted when he entered solemnly on his work Matth. 4. And some Devils would not be cast out without fasting and prayer And is luxury fit in such a case 9. Lastly Remember what was said before that others are empty while we are full Thousands need all that we can spare And they are members of Christ and of the same body with us And so much as we waste on our appetite or pride so much the less we have to give And he that seeth his Brother in need and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him when he cannot deny superfluities to himself how
and beastly pleasures why should you expect to have them continued or at least why should he not use you as Nebuchadnezzar and take away your reason and turn you into beasts if the life and pleasure of a beast be all that you desire Could not you eat and drink and sleep and play without an intellectual soul Cannot the birds make their nests and breed and feed their young and sit and sing without an intellectual nature Cannot a swine have his ease and meat and lust without reason what should you do with reason for such uses 5. You shew a stupid sensless heart that can live idly and have so much to do and have so many spurrs to rouse you up To live continually in the sight of God to have a soul so ignorant so unbelieving so unholy so unfurnished of faith and love so unready for death so uncertain of salvation nay in such apparent danger of damnation and to be still uncertain of living one day or hour longer and yet to live idly in such a case as if all were well and your work were done and you had no more to fear or care for O what a mad what a dead what a sottish kind of soul is this to see the graves before your eyes to see your neighbours carryed thither to feel the tokens of mortality daily in your selves to be called on and warned to prepare and yet under this to live as if you had nothing to do but to shew your selves in the neatest dress and as a Peacock to spread your plumes for your selves and others to look upon or to pamper a carkass for worms and rottenness O what a deplorable case is this The Lord pitty you and awaken your understandings and bring you to your wits and you will then wonder at your own stupidity 6. Idleness is a sin which is contrary to Gods universal Law The Law which extended to all times and places Adam in innocency was to labour He that had all things prepared for his sustenance by God was yet himself to labour He that was Lord of all the world and was richer than any of our proud ones whosoever was yet to dress and keep the garden Cain was a tiller of land and Abel was a keeper of cattel when they were heirs of all the earth Noah also was Lord of all the world and richer than you and yet he was an Husbandman Abraham Isaac and Jacob were Princes and yet keepers of sheep and cattle It is not a bare permission but a precept of diligence in the fourth Commandment Six daies shalt thou labour and do all that thou hast to do Christ himself did not live idly but before his Ministry they said Mark 6.3 Is not this the Carpenter And afterward how incessantly was he doing good to mens bodies and souls And what laborious lives did his Apostles live See 2 Cor. 6.5 11.23 Acts 18.3 And are you exempt from the universal Law 7. You shew a base and fleshly mind The noblest natures are the most active and the basest the most dead and dull The earth it not baser than the fire in a greater degree than an idle soul is baser than one that is active and spendeth themselves in doing good Methinks your Pride it self should keep you from proclaiming such a dead and earthen disposition 8. Idleness is of the same kind with fornication gluttony drunkenness and other such beastly sins For all is but sinful flesh-pleasing or sensuality The same fleshly nature which draweth them to the one doth draw you to the other and they do but gratifie their flesh in one kind of vice as you do in another And it 's pitty that Idleness should be in so much less disgrace than they And truly if you cannot deny your flesh it's ease I cannot see if the temptation lay as strong that way how you should deny it in any of those lusts so that you s●em to be vertually fornicators gluttons drunkards c. and ready to commit the acts 9. And hereby you strengthen the flesh as it is your enemy for the time to come When you have long used to please it by idleness it will get the victory and must be pleased still And then you are undone for ever if grace do not yet cause you to overcome it For if you live after the flesh you shall die but if by the Spirit you mortifie the deeds of the body you shall live Rom. 8.13 None are freed from condemnation nor are members of Christ but they that walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit Rom. 8.1 For the carnal mind is enmity against God v. 7. 10. Idleness is a sin much aggravated by its continuance A drunkard is not alwaies drunken nor a swearer is not alwaies swearing nor a thief is not alwaies stealing but an idle person is almost alwaies idle whole hours and daies if not weeks and years together O what a continual course of sin do our rich and gentile drones still live in As if they were afraid to do any thing which when death cometh they could comfortably be found doing 11. And O what a time-wasting sin is Idleness O precious time how art thou despised by these drowsie despisers of God and of their souls O what would the despairing souls in Hell give for some of that time which these Bedlams prate away and game and play away and trifle and fool away and sleep and loiter away And what would they give for a little of it themselves upon the same terms when it 's gone and when wishing is too late 12. Idleness is a self-contradicting sin None are so much afraid of dying as the idle and I do not blame them if they knew all and yet none more cast away their lives They die voluntarily continually He that loseth the use and benefit of life doth lose his life it self For what is it good for but as a means to its ends What difference between a man asleep and dead but only that one is more in expectation of usefulness when he awaketh It is a pittiful sight to a man in his wits to see the Bedlam world afraid of dying and trembling at every sign of death and in the mean time setting as little by their lives as if they were worth no more than to spend at cards or dice or stage-playes or dressings or feastings or ludicrous complements 13. You teach your servants that life which yet you will not endure in them For why should they be more careful and diligent in the work which you command them than you in the work which God commandeth you Are you the better Masters or will you find them better work or will you pay them better wages I know God needeth not your service as you do theirs But he commandeth it for other ends though he need it not And should any be more careful● to please you that are but worms and dust than you should be to please your Maker If an idle
thoughts of dying that methinks you should quietly resign it to the grave which hath been so long calling for it Especially considering what it hath done by the temptations of a vitiated appetite and sense against your souls into how many sins it hath drawn you and what grief and shame it hath procured you and what assurance and heavenly pleasures it hath hindered and how many repentings and purposes and promises it hath frustrated or undone Methinks we should conceive that we have long enough dwelt in such an habitation Direct 4. Foresee by Faith the resurrection of the body when it shall be raised a spiritual body unto Glory and shall be no more an enemy to the soul Direct 5. Renew your familiarity with the blessed ones above Remember that the great Army of God the souls of the just from Adam till now are all got safe through this Red Sea and are triumphing in Heaven already and that it is but a few straglers in the end of the world that are left behind And which part then should you desire to be with And remember how ready those Angels which rejoyced at your conversion are to be your Convoy unto Christ Luke 16.23 Direct 6. But especially think with greatest confidence and delight that Jesus your Head is entred into the Heavens before you and is making intercession for you and is preparing you a place and loveth your company and will not lose it You shall find him ready to receive your souls and present them spotless unto God as the fruit of his mediation He will have you be with him to behold his glory and none shall take you out of his hands Let his Love therefore draw up your desires and stablish your hearts in confidence and rest Direct 7. Remember that all that are living must come after you and how quickly their turn will come and would you wish to be exempt from death alone which the whole world below must needs submit to Direct 8. Think still of the Resurrection of Christ your Head that you may see that death is a conquered thing and what a pledge you have of a life to come Direct 9. Dwell still in the believing fore thoughts of the blessedness of the life to which you go as it is your personal perfection and the perfect Love and fruition of God with his perfect joyous praise Remember still what it is to see and know the Lord and all things else in him which are fit for us to know And labour to revive your Love to God and then you revive your desires and preparations Direct 10. Give up your selves wholly to the Will of God and think how much better it is for upright Souls to be in Gods hand than in your own The Will of God is the first and last the Original and End of all the creatures Besides the Will of Infinite Goodness there is no final Rest for humane souls But mans will is the Alpha and Omega the beginning or first efficient and the ultimate end of all obliquity and sin Be bold then and thankful in your approach to God remembring how much more safe and comfortable it is to be for life and death at Gods disposal than our own B●sides these read the Directions against the fear of death in my Book of Self-denyal and what is said in my Saints Rest and other the Treatises before mentioned CHAP. XXVIII How by Faith to look aright to the Coming of Jesus Christ in Glory BEcause I have said so much of this also in my Saints Rest and in many other Treatises I will now pass it over with these brief Directions Direct 1. Delude not your souls nor corrupt your faith and hope by placing Christs Kingdom in things too low or that are utterly uncertain Think not so carnally of the second coming of Christ as the Jews did of the first who looked for an earthly Kingdom and despised the spiritual and heavenly And make not the unknown time or other circumstances of his coming to be to you as the certain and necessary things lest you do as many of those called Millenaries or Fifth-Monarchy men among us who have turned the doctrine of Christian hope into an outragious fury to bring Christ down before his time and to make themselves Rulers in the world that they might presently reign under the name of the Reign of Christ and have by seditious rebellious railing at Christs Ministers and hating those that are not of their mind done much to promote the Kingdom of Satan while they cryed up nothing but the Kingdom of Christ Direct 2. Do all that you can in this day of grace to promote Christs present Kingdom in the world and that will prove your best preparation for his glorious coming To that end labour with all your might to set up Life and Light and Love abhorring Hypocrisie Ignorance and Vncharitableness turn not Religion into a ceremony carkass or dead Imagery or Form Nor yet into Darkness Errour or a humane wandering distracting maze Nor into selfish proud censorious faction Build not Christs Kingdom as the Devil would do by hypocritical dead shews or by putting out his Lights or by schism division hatred and strife Read James 3. Direct 3. Yet leave not out of your faith and hope any certain part of Christs glorious Kingdom We know that we shall for ever be with the Lord and in the presence of the Father in heavenly glory and withall that we shall be in the New Jerusalem and that there shall be a new Heaven and a new Earth in which shall dwell righteousness and that we shall judge the Angels and the world And if we know not the circumstances of all these parts let not therefore any of them be denyed 1 Thes 4.11 2 Cor. 5.1 3 8. Rev. 20. 22. 2 Pet. 3.13 Direct 4. Think what a day of Glory it will be to Jesus Christ Matth. 25.31 O how different from his state of humiliation He will not come again to be despised spit on buffeted blasphemed and crucified Pilate and Herod must be arraigned at his bar it is the marriage-day of the Lamb a day appointed for his glory Rev. 21 22. Direct 5. Think what a day of honour it will be to God the Father how his Truth will be vindicated his Love and Justice gloriously demonstrated Matth. 25. 2 Thes 1.8 9. Direct 6. Think what a day it will be to all the children of God to see their Lord when he purposely cometh to be admired and glorified in them 2 Thes 1.11 12. To see him in whom they have believed whom they loved and longed for 2 Pet. 3.11 12 13. 1 Pet. 1.8 To see him who is their dearest Head and Lord who will justifie them before all the world and sentence them to life eternal To see the day in which they must receive the end of all their faith and hope their prayers labours and patience to the full 1 Pet. 1.8 9. Rev. 2 3.
the most we will not deny it to be aetas aurea in the Poets sense Aurea nunc vere sunt secula plurimus auro Vaenit honos auro conciliatur amor This prevalency of things seen against thing unseen is the Idolatry of the world the subversion of nature the perversion of our faculties and actions making the soul a drudge to flesh and God to be used as a servant to the world It destroyeth Piety Justice and Charity It turneth JVS by perversion into VIS or by reversion into SVI No wonder then if it be the ruine of societies when Gens sine justitiâ sine remige navis in undâ It can possess even Demosthenes with a Squinancy if there be but an Harpalus to bring him the infection It can make a Judicature to be as Plutarch called that of Rome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impiorum regionem contrary to Cicero's description of Sulpitius who was magis justitiae quam juris consultus ad facilitatem aequitatemque omnia contulit nec maluit litium actiones constituere quam controversias tollere In a word if you live by sense and not by Faith on things present and not on things unseen you go backward you stand on your heads and turn your heels against Heaven you cause the beast to ride the man and by turning all things upside down will turn your selves into confusion 2. Consider that it is the unseen things that are only Great and Necessary that are worthy of a man and answer the excellency of our nature and the ends of our lives and all our mercies All other things are inconsiderable toyes except as they are dignified by their relation to these Whether a man step into eternity from a Palace or a Prison a Lordship or a Lazarus state is little to be regarded All men in the world whose designs and business take up with any thing short of Heaven are in the main of one condition and are but in several degrees and forms in the School of folly If the intendment of your lives fall short of God it matters not much what it is you seek as to any great difference If lesser children play for pins and bigger boyes for points and pence and aged children for lands and money for titles of honour and command What difference is there between these in point of wisdom and felicity but that the little ones have more innocent delights and at a cheaper rate than the aged have without the vexatious cares and dangers that attend more grave and serious dotage As Holiness to the Lord is written upon all that is faithfully referred to his Will and Glory so Vanity and Sin is written upon all that is but made provision for the flesh and hath no higher end than Self To go to Hell with greater stir and attendance and repute with greater pomp and pleasure than the poor is a poor consolation a pitiful felicity 3. Faith is the wisdom of the soul and unbelief and sensuality are its blindness folly and brutishness How short is the knowledge of the wisest unbelievers They know not much of what is past and less they would know if Historians were not of more credit with them than the Word of God But alas how little do they know of what is to come sense tells them where they are and what they are now doing but it tells them not where they shall be to morrow But Faith can tell a true Believer what will be when this world is ended and where he shall live to all eternity and what he shall be d●ing what thoughts he shall be thinking what affections shall be the temper and employment of his soul what he shall see and feel and enjoy and with what company he shall converse for ever If the pretenders to Astrological prediction could but foretel the changes of mens lives and the time and manner of their deaths what resort would be to them and how wise would they be esteemed but what is all this to the infallible predictions of the All-knowing God that hath given us a prospect into another world and shewed us what will be for ever more certainly than you know what a day may bring forth So necessary is fore-knowledge in the common affairs of men that without it the actions of the world would be but mad tumultuary confusion What would you think of that mans understanding or how would you value the imployments of his life that lookt no further in all his actions than the present hour and saw no more than the things in hand What would you call him that so spends the day as one that knoweth not there will be any night and so past the night as one that looked not for that day that knew not in the Spring there would be an Harvest or in the Summer that there would be any Winter or in Youth that there would be Age or Death The silly brutes that have no fore-knowledge are furnished with an instinct that supplieth the want of it and also have the help of mans fore-knowledge or else their kind would be soon extinct The Bees labour in Summer as if they foresaw the Winters need And can that man be wise that foreseeth not his everlasting state Indeed he that knoweth not what is to come hath no true knowledge of what is present For the worth and use of present things is only in their respect to things eternal And there is no means where there is no end What wisdom then remains in Unbelievers when all their lives 〈◊〉 mis-imployed because they know not the end of life and when all their actions are utterly debased by the baseness of 〈◊〉 brutish ends to which they serve and are referred 〈◊〉 is truly wise or honourable that is done for small and 〈◊〉 things To draw a curious picture of a shadow or elegantly write the history of a dream may be an ingenuous kind of foolery but the end will not allow it the name of Wisdom And such are all the actions of the world though called Heroick Valiant and Honourable that aim at transitory trifles and tend not to the everlasting end A bird can neatly build her nest but is not therefore counted Wise How contrary is the judgement of the world to Christs When the same description that he giveth of a fool is it that worldlings give of a wise and happy man Luke 12.20 21. One that layeth up riches for himself and is not rich towards God Will you perswade us that the man is wise that can climb a little higher than his neighbours that he may have the greater fall That is attended in his way to Hell with greater pomp and state than others That can sin more Syllogistically and Rhetorically than the vulgar and more prudently and gravely run into damnation and can learnedly defend his madness and prove that he is safe at the brink of Hell Would you perswade us that he is wise that contradicts the God and Rule of
done But that which unavoidably must be seen should be foreseen But the unseen world is not thus mutable Eternal life is begun in the Believer The Church is built on Christ the Reck and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it Fix here and you shall never be removed 4. Hence followeth another difference The mutable creature doth impart a disgraceful mutability to the soul that chuseth it It disappointeth and deceiveth And therefore the ungodly are of one mind to day and another to morrow In health they are all for pleasure and commodity and honour and at death they cry out on it as deceitful Vanity In health they cannot abide this strictness this meditating and seeking and preparing for the life to come but at death or judgement they will all be of another mind Then O that they had been so wise as to know their time and O that they h●d lived as holily as the best They are now the bold opposers and reproachers of an holy life But then they would be glad it had been their own They would eat their words and will be down in the mouth and stand to never a word they say when sight and sense and judgement shall convince them But things unchangeable do fix the soul P●e●y is no matter for Repentance Doth the Believer speak against sin and sinners and for an holy sober righteous life He will do so to the last Death and Judgement shall not change his mind in this but much confirm it And therefore he perseveres through sufferings to death Rom. 8.35 36 37. For this cause we faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding eternal weight of glory While we look not at the things that are seen but at the things which are not seen For the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal 2 Cor. 4.16 17. 6. Lastly let this move you to live by a foreseeing Faith that it is of necessity to your salvation Believing Heaven must prepare you for it before you can enjoy it Believing Hell is necess●ry to prevent it Mark 16.16 John 3.18 36. The just shall live by Faith but if any man draw back or be lifted up the Lord will have no pleasure in him Heb. 10.38 H●b 2.4 Take heed that there be not in any of you an evil heart of unbelief to depart from the living God Heb. 3.12 And be not of them that draw back to perdition but of them that believe to the saving of the soul Heb. 10.39 It is God that saith They shall all be damned that believed not the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness 2 Thes 2.10 11 12. May I now in the conclusion more particularly exhort you 1. That you will live upon things foreseen 2. That you will promote this life of faith in others according to your several capacities Princes and Nobles live not alwaies You are not the Rulers of the unmoveable Kingdom but of a boat that is in an hasty stream or a ship under sail that will speed both Pilot and Passengers to the shore Dixi estis Dii at moriemini ut homines It was not the least or worst of Kings that said I am a stranger vpon earth Psal 119.19 Vermis sum non homo I am a worm and no man Psal 32.6 You are the greater worms and we the little ones but we must all say with Job ch 17.13 14. The grave is our house and we must make our beds in darkness Corruption is our Father and the Worm our Mother and our Sister The inexorable Leveller is ready at your backs to convince you by unresistible argument that dust you are and to dust you shall return Heaven should be as desirable and Hell as terrible to you as to others No man will fear you after death much less will Christ be afraid to judge you Luke 19.27 As the Kingdoms and glory of the world were contemned by him in the hour of his temptation so are they inconsiderable to procure his approbation Trust not therefore to uncertain riches Value them but as they will prove at last As you stand on higher ground than others it is meet that you should see further The greater are your advantages the wiser and better you should be and therefore should better perceive the difference between things temporal and eternal It is alwaies dark where these glow-worms shine and a rotten post doth seem a fire Your difficulties also should excite you You must go as through a Needles eye to Heaven To live as in Heaven in a crowd of business and stream of temptations from the confluence of all worldly things is so hard that few such come to Heaven Withdraw your selves therefore to the frequent serious fore-thoughts of eternity and live by faith Had time allowed it I should have come down to some particular instances As 1. Let the things unseen be still at hand to answer every temptation and shame and repel each motion to sin 2. Let them be still at hand to quicken us to duty when backwardness and coldness doth surprize us What shall we do any thing coldly for eternity 3. Let it resolve you what company to delight in and what society to be of even those with whom you must dwell for ever What side soever is uppermost on earth you may foresee which side shall reign for ever 4. Let the things invisible be your daily solace and the satisfaction of your souls Are you slandered by men Faith tells you it is enough that Christ will justifie you O happy day when he will bring forth our righteousness as the light and set all strait which all the false histories or slanderous tongues or pens in all the world made crooked Are you frowned on or contemned by men Is it not enough that you shall everlastingly be honoured by the Lord Are you wronged oppressed or trodden on by pride or malice Is not Heaven enough to make you reparation and eternity long enough for your joyes O pray for your malicious enemies lest they suffer more than you can wish them 2. Lastly I should have become on the behalf of Christ a petitioner to you for protection and encouragement to the heirs of the invisible world For them that preach and them that live this life of faith not for the honours and riches of the world but for leave and countenance to work in the Vineyard and peaceably travel through the world as strangers and live in the Communion of Saints as they believe But though it be for the beloved of the Lord the apple of his eye the people that are sure to prevail and raign with Christ for ever whose prayers can do more for the greatest Princes than you can do for them whose joy is hastened by that which is intended for their sorrow I shall now lay
have leave to be awake and to be in our wi●s to be Christians to be men to be creatures that have life and sense forgive us that we believe the living God that we cannot laugh at Heaven and Hell nor jest at the threatned wrath of the Almighty If these things must make us the object of the worlds reproach and malice let me rather be a reproached man than an honoured beast and a hated Christian than a beloved Infidel and rather let me live in the midst of malice and contempt than pass through honour unto shame through mirth to misery and a sensless to a feeling death Hate us when we are in Heaven and see who will be the sufferer by it If ever we should begin to nod and relapse towards your hypocritical formality and sensless indifferency our lively sight of the world invisible by a serious faith would presently awake us and force us confidently to conclude AVT SANCTVS AVT BRVTVS There is practically and predominantly no Mean He 'l prove a BRVIT that is not a SAINT CHAP. III. HAving done with this general conviction and exhortation to unbelieving Hypocrites I proceed to acquaint Believers with their Duty in several particulars 1. Worship God as Believers serve him with reverence and godly fear for our God is a consuming fire Heb. 12.28 29. A seeing faith if well excited would kindle love desire fear and all praying graces No man prayes well that doth not well know what he prayes for When it comes to seeing all men can cry loud and pray when praying will do no good They will not then speak sleepily or by rote Fides intuendo amorem recipit amorem sus●●tat Cor flagrans amore desideria gemitus orationes spirat Faith is the burning-glass which beholding God receiveth the beams of his communicated love and inflameth the heart with love to him again which mounteth up by groans and prayers till it reach its original and love for ever rest in love 2. Desire and use the creature as Believers Interpret all things as they receive their meaning from the things unseen understand them in no other sense It 's only God and the life to come that can tell you what 's good or bad for you in the world And therefore the ungodly that cannot go to Heaven for counsel are carryed about by meer deceits Take heed what you love and take heed of that you love God is very jealous of our love He sheds abroad his own love in our hearts that our hearts may be fruitful in love to him which is his chief delight By love he commandeth love that we may suitably move toward him and center in him He communicateth so much for the procuring of a little that we should endeavour to give him all that little and shed none of it inordinately upon the creature by the way Nothing is great or greatly to be admired while the great God is in sight And it is unsuitable for little things to have great affections and for low matters to have a high esteem It is the corruption and folly of the mind and the delusion of the affections to exalt a Shrub above a Cedar and magnifie a Mole-hill above a Mountain to embrace a shadow or spectrum of felicity which vanisheth into Nothing when you bring in the light The creature is nihil nullipotens Nothing should have no interest in us and be able to do Nothing with us as to the motions that are under the dominion of the will God is All and Almighty And he that is All should have All and command All And the Omnipotent should do All things with us by his Interest in Morals as he will do by his force in Naturals I deny not but we may love a friend One soul in two bodies will have one mind and will and love But as it is not the body of my friend that I love or converse with principally but the soul and therefore should have no mind of the case the corps the empty nest if the bird were flown so is it not the person but Christ in him or that of God which appeareth on him that must be the principal object of our love The man is mutable and must be loved as Plato did commend his friend to Dionysius Haec tibi scribo de homine viz. animante naturâ mutabili and therefore must be loved with a reserve But God is unchangeable and must be absolutely and unchangeably loved That life is best that 's likest Heaven There God will be All and yet even there it will be no dishonour or displeasure to the Deity that the glorified humanity of Christ and the New Jerusalem and our holy society are loved more dearly than we can love any creature here on earth So here God taketh not that affection as stoln from him that 's given to his servants for his sake but accepts it as sent to him by them Let the creature have it so God have it finally in and by the creature and then it is not so properly the creature that hath it as God If you chuse and love your friends for God you will use them for God not flattering them or desiring to be flattered by them but to kindle in each other the holy flame which will aspire and mount and know no bounds till it reach the boundless element of love You will not value them as friends qui omnia dicta facta vestra laudant sed qui errata delicta amice reprehendunt Not them that call you good but them that would make you better And you will let them know as Phocian did Antipater that they can never use you amici● adulatoribus as friends and flatterers that differ as a wife and a harlot It 's hard to love the imperfect creature without mistakes and inordinacy in our love And therefore usually where we love most we sin most and our sin finds us out and then we suffer most and too much affection is the forerunner of much affliction which will be much prevented if Faith might be the guide of Love and Humane Love might be made Divine and all to be referred to the things unseen and animated by them Love where you can never love too much where you are sure to have no disappointments where there is no unkindness to ecclipse or interrupt where the only errour is that God hath not all and the only grief that we love no more Especially in the midst of your entising pleasures or entising employments and profits in the world foresee the end do all in Faith which telleth you The time is short it remaineth therefore that both they that have wives be as though they had none and they that weep as though they wept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not and they that buy as though they possessed not and they that use this world as through they used it not or not abusing it for the fashion of this
soul He cuts out the heart with a Hae sedes livoris erant jam pascua vermis you next tread on his interred corps that 's honoured but with a Hic jacet Here lyeth the body of such a one And if he have the honour to be magnified by fame or history it 's a fool-trap to ensnare the living but easeth not the soul in Hell And shall we envy men such a happiness as this what if they be able to command mens lives and to hurt those that they hate for a little while Is this a matter of honour or of delight A Pestilence is more honourable if destroying be an honour The Devil is more powerful if God permit him to do men hurt than the greatest Tyrant in the world And yet I hope you envy not his happiness nor are ambitious to partake of it If Witches were not kin to Devils they would never sell their souls for a power to do hurt And how little do tyrannical worldlings consider that under a mask of Government and Honour they do the same Let the world then rejoyce while we lament and weep Our sorrow shall be speedily turned into joy and our joy shall no man ●hen take from us Joh. 16.20 22. Envy not a dying man ●he happiness of a feather-bed or a merry dream You think ●t hard in them to deny you the liberties and comforts of this ●●fe though you look for Heaven And will you be more cruel than the ungodly Will you envy the trifling commodities or delights of earth to those that are like to have no more but to lye in Hell when the sport is ended It is unreasonable impatience that cannot endure to see them in silks and gallantry a few daies that must be so extreamly miserable for ever Your crums and leavings and overplus is their All. And will you grudge them this much In this you are unlike your heavenly Father that doth good to the just and unjust would you change cases with them would you change the fruit of your adversity for the fruit of their prosperity Affliction maketh you somewhat more calm and wise and sober and cautelous and considerate and preventeth as well as cureth sin Prosperity makes them through their abuse inconsiderate rash insensible foolish proud unperswadable And the turning away of the simple slayeth them and the prosperity of fools destroyeth them Prov. 1.32 It 's long since Lazarus's sores were healed and his wants relieved and long since Dives feast was ended O let me rather be afflicted than rejected and be a door-keeper in the house of God than dwell in the tents of wickedness and rather be under the rod than turned out of doors Look with a serious Faith upon Eternity and then make a great matter of enjoyments or sufferings here if you can Great joyes and sorrows forbid men to complain of the biting of a Flea Thunder-claps drown a whispering voice O what unbelief our impatiency and disquietness in sufferings do discover Is this living by faith and conversing in another world and taking God for All and the world for Nothing What! make such a do of p●verty imprisonment injuries disgrace with Heaven and Hell before our eyes The Lord vouchsafe me that condition in which I shall be nearest to himself and have most communion with Heaven be it what it will be for the things of earth These are the desires to which I 'le stand To thank God for the fruit of past afflictions as the most necessary mercies of our lives as some of us have daily cause and at the same time to be impatient under present afflictions or inordinately afraid of those to come is an irrational as well as unbelieving incongruity Are we derided slandered abused by the ungodly If we repine that we have enemies and must fight we repine that we are Christs souldires and that is that we are Christians Quomodo potest imperator militum suorum virtutem probare nisi habuerit hostem saith Lactantius Enemies of God do not use to fight professedly against himself but against his souldiers Non qui contra ipsum Deum pugnent sed contra milites ejus inquit idem If the remnants of goodness had not been a derision among the Heathens themselves in the more sober sort a Heathen would not have said Nondum faelix es si non te turba deriferit si beatus vis esse cogita hoc primum contemnere ab aliis contemni Sen. Thou art not yet happy if the rabble deride thee not If thou wilt be blessed learn first to contemn this and to be contemned of others No body will deride or persecute us in Heaven 5. Improve your talents and opportunities in your callings as Believers especially you that are Governours God is the original and end of Government The highest are but his ministers Rom. 13.6 This world is but the way unto another Things seen are for things unseen And Government is to order them to that end Especially by terrifying evil doers and by promoting holiness in the earth The Moral as well as the Natural motion of inferiour agents must proceed from the influence of the superiour The spring and the end of every action truly good are out of fight Where these are not discerned or are ignorantly or maliciously opposed the action is vitiated and tendeth to confusion and ruine God is the end of all holy actions and carnal self is the end of sin If God and self are infinitely distinct you may easily see that the actions material●y the same that are intended to such distant ends must needs be very distant Nothing but saving Faith and Holiness can conquer selfishness in the lowest of the people But where the flesh hath more plentiful provision and self is accommodated with the fullest contents of honour and pleasure that the world affords how difficult a work then is self-denyal And the reign of the flesh is contrary to the reign of Christ Where the flesh and visible things bear sway the enemy of Christ bears sway The carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to his Law nor can be Rom. 8.7 And how Christs enemies will receive his Laws and use his Messengers and regard his waies and servants the most of the world have experience to their cost The interest of the flesh being contrary to Christs interest the competition maintaineth a continual conflict The Word of God doth seem to be against them The faithful Ministers that would save them from their sins do seem to wrong them and deal too boldly with them Were it an Elijah he would be called The troubler of Israel and met with an Hast thou found me O mine enemy No measure of prudence knowledge piety innocency meekness or self-denyal will serve to appease the wrath and displeasure of this carnal enmity If it would the Apostles had escaped it or at least it would not have fallen so furiously upon Christ h●mself Nay these are the oyl that
sinful world and flesh linger not now as unwilling to depart repent not of thy choice when all that the world can do for thee is past repent not of thy warfare when thou hast got the victory nor of thy voyage when thou art past the storms and waves and ready to land at the haven of felicity Thus Faith may sing our Nunc dimittis when the flesh is lothest to be dissolved But we must live by faith if we would thus die by faith Such a death doth not use to be the period of a fleshly worldly life nor of a careless dull and negligent life Nature which brought us into the world without our forecast or care will turn us out of the world without it But it will not give us a joyful passage nor bring us to a better world without it It costeth worldlings no small care to die in an honourable or plentiful estate that they may fall from an higher place than others and may have something to make death more grievous and unwelcome to them and may have a greater account to make at Judgement and that their passage to Heaven may be as a Camels through a Needle And may a believing joyful death be expected without the preparations of exercise and experience in a believing life Nature is so much afraid of dying and an incorporated soul is so incarcerated in sense and so hardly riseth to serious and satisfying apprehensions of the unseen world that even true Believers do find it a work of no small difficulty to desire to depart and be with Christ and to die in the joyful hopes of faith A little abatement of the terrours of death a little supporting hope and peace is all that the greater part of them attain instead of the fervent desires and triumphant joyes which the lively belief of endless glory should produce O therefore make it the work of your lives of all your lives your greatest work your constant work to live by faith that the faith which hath first conquered all the rest of your enemies may be able also to overcome the last and may do your last work well when it hath done the rest CHAP. I. Directions how to live by Faith And first how to strengthen Faith And secondly the natural Truths presupposed to be considered THe Directions which I shall give you as helps to live by Faith are of two ranks 1. Such as tend to the strengthening of your Faith 2. Such as tell you how to use it The first is the greatest part of our task for no man can use that faith which he hath not nor can use more of it than he hath And the commonest reason why we use but little is because we have but little to use But on this subject supposing it most weighty I have written many Treatises already The second part of the Saints Rest The Unreasonableness of Infidelity And last of all The Reasons of the Christian Religion Besides others which handle it on the by And somewhat is said in the beginning of this discourse But yet because in so great a matter I am more afraid of doing too little than too much I will here give you an Index of some of the chief Helps to be close together before you for your memories to be the constant fuel of your Faith In the work of Faith it is first needful that you get all the prerequisite Helps of Natural Light and be well acquainted with their Order and Evidence and their Vsefulness to befriend the supernatural revelations For it is supposed that we are men before we are Christians We were created before we were redeemed And we must know that there is a God before we can know that we have offended him or that we need a Saviour to reconcile us to him And we must know that we have reasonable souls before we can know that sin hath corrupted them or that grace must sanctifie them And we must know that whatso●ver God saith is true before we can believe that the Scripture is true as being his revelation Faith is an act of Reason and Believing is a kind of knowing even a knowing by the testim●ny of him whom we believe because we have sufficient reason to believe him 2. And next we must be well acquainted with the evidence of supernatural Truth which presupposeth the foresaid Natural Verities I shall set both b●fore you briefly in their order 1. Think well ●f the nature of your souls of their faculties or p●wers their excellency and their proper use And then you will find that you are not meer brutes who know not their Creat●ur nor live no● by a Law nor think not of another world nor ●●ar any ●●fferings after death But that you have reas●n free-will and executive power to kn●w your Maker and to live by ●ule a●d to hope for a Reward in another life and to fear a p●n●shme●t hereafter And that as no wise Artificer maketh any thing in vain so God is m●ch less to be thought to hav● given you such souls and faculties in vain 2. Co●sid●r next how all the world declareth to you that there is a G●d wh● is infinite●y p●werful wise and good And tha● it is not possible that all things which we see should have no cause or that the derived Power and Wisdom and Goodnes● of the creature should not proceed from that which is more excellent in the first and total cause Or that God should give more than he had to give 3. Consider nex● in wh●t Relation such a creature must needs stand to such a Creatour If he made us of N●●hing 〈◊〉 is not p●ssible but that he must be 〈◊〉 Owner and w● a●d all things absolutely his Own And if he be our Maker and Owner and be infinitely powerful wise and good and we be Reasonable-free-agents made to be guided by Laws or Moral Means unto our end it is not possible but that we should stand related to him as subjects to their rightful Governour And if he be our Creatour Owner and Ruler and also infinitely Good and the grand Benefactor of the world and if the nature of our souls be to Love Good as Good it cannot be possible that he should not be our End who is our Creatour and that we should not be related to him as to the Chiefest Good both originally as our Benefactor and finally as our End 4. And then it is easie for you next to see what duty you owe to that God to whom you are thus related That if you are absolutely his Own you should willingly be at his absolute dispose And i● he b● your Soveraign Ruler you should labour most diligently to know his Laws and absolutely to obey them And if he be infinitely Good and your Benefactor and your End you are absolutely bound to Love him most devotedly and to place your own felicity in his Love All this is so evidently the duty of man to God by nature that nothing but madness can deny
done the settling of your faith when once you have found out the soundest evidences and are able to answer all Objections For you must grow still in the fuller discerning and digesting the same evidences which you have discerned For you may hold them so loosely that they may be easily wrested from you And you may see them with so clear and full a knowledge as shall stablish your mind against all ordinary causes of mutation It is one kind or degree rather of knowledge of the same things which the Pupil and another which the Doctor hath I am sure the knowledge which I have now of the evidences of the Christian Verity is much different from what I had thirty years ago when perhaps I could say neer as much as now and used the same Arguments 17. Consider well the great contentions of Philosophers and the great uncertainty of most of those Nations to which the Infidels would reduce our faith or which they would make the test by which to try it They judge Christianity uncertain because it agreeth not with their uncertainties or certain errours 18. Enslave not your Reason to the objects of sense While we are in the body our souls are so imprisoned in flesh and have so much to do with worldly things that most men by averseness and disuse can hardly at all employ their minds about any higher things than sensitive nor go any further than sense conduceth them He that will not use his soul to contemplate things invisible will be as unfit for believing as a Lady is to travel a thousand miles on foot who never went out of her doors but in a Sedan or Coach 19. Where your want of learning or exercise or light doth cause any difficulties which you cannot overcome go to the more wise and experienced Believers and Pastors of the Church to be your helpers For it is their office to be both the preservers and expounders of the sacred Doctrine and to be the helpers of the peoples faith The Priests lips should preserve knowledge and they should seek the Law at his mouth for he is the messenger of the Lord of Hosts Mal. 2.7 20. Lastly Faithfully practise with Love and alacrity what you do believe lest God in justice leave you to disbelieve that which you would not love and practise So much to direct you in the method of your endeavours for the getting and strengthening of faith CHAP. III. The Evidences of Faith THese things in the Order of your enquiry being presupposed proceed to the consideration of the Evidences themselves which fully prove the Christian Verity And here omitting the preparatory considerations recited at large in my Reasons of the Christian Religion I shall only set before you the grand Evidence it self with a brief recital of some of those means which bring it down to our notice in these times The great infallible witness of CHRIST is the SPIRIT of GOD or the Holy Ghost Or that divine operation of the Holy Spirit which infallibly proveth the attestation of God himself as interesting him in it as the principal cause As we know the Coin of a Prince by his image and superscription and know his acts by his publick proper Seal And as we know that God is the Creatour of the world by the Seal of his likeness which is upon it Or as we know the Father of a child when he is so like him as no other could beget So know we Christ and Christianity to be of God by his unimitable image or impression The Power Wisdom and Goodness of God are the essentialities which we call the Nature of God These in their proper form and transcendent perfection are incommunicable But when they produce an effect on the creature which for the resemblance may analogically be called by the same names the names are logically communicable though the thing it self which is the Divine Essence or Perfections be still incommunicable But when they only produce effects more heterogeneal or equivocal then we call those effects only the footsteps or demonstrations of their cause So GOD whose Power Wisdom and Goodness in it self is incommunicable hath produced intellectual natures which are so like him that their likeness is called his Image and analogically yet equivocally the created faculties of their Power Intellect and Will are called by such names as we are fain for want of other words to apply to God the things signified being transcendently and unexpressibly in God but the words first used of and applied to the creature But the same God hath so demonstrated his Power and Wisdom and Goodness in the Creation of the material or corporeal parts of the world that they are the ●estigia and infallible proofs of his causation and perfections being such as no other cause without him can produce but yet not so properly called his Image as to his Wisdom and Goodness but only of his Power But no wise man who seeth this world can doubt whether a God of perfect Power Wisdom and Goodness was the maker of it Even so the person and doctrine of Christ or the Christian Religion objectively considered hath so much of the Image and so much of the demonstrative impressions of the Nature of God as may fully assure us that he himself is the approving cause And as the Sun hath a double Light Lux Lumen its essential Light in it self and it s emitted beams or communicated Light so the Spirit and Image of God by which Christ and Christianity are demonstrated are partly that which is essential constitutive and inherent and partly that which is sent and communicated from him to others In the person of Christ there is the most excellent Image of God 1. Wonderful Power by which he wrought miracles and commanded Sea and Land Men and Devils and raised the dead and raised himself and is now the glorious Lord of all things 2. Wonderful Wisdom by which he formed his Laws and Kingdom and by which he knew the hearts of men and prophecied of things to come 3. Most wonderful Love and Goodness by which he healed all diseases and by which he saved miserable souls and procured our happiness at so dear a rate But as the essential Light of the Sun is too glorious to be well observed by us but the emitted Light is it which doth affect our eyes and is the immediate object of our sight at least that we can best endure and use so the Essential Perfections of Jesus Christ are not so immediately and ordinarily fit for our observation and use as the lesser communicated beams which he sent forth And these are either such as were the immediate effects of the Spirit in Christ himself or his personal operations or else the effects of his Spirit in others And that is either such as went before him or such as were present with him or such as followed after him Even as the emitted Light of the Sun is either that which is next to its
godliness is profitable to all things having the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Tim. 4.7 8. 6.6 16. And the future perfect Goodness may invite us to present imperfect Goodness the Promises of the Gospel do second the Precepts with the strongest motives in the world so that everlasting blessedness and joy is made the reward of temporal sincerity in faith love and obedience And if Heaven it self be not a reward sufficient to invite men to be good there is none sufficient 17. Yea the penalties and severities of the Christian Religion do shew the Goodness of it When God doth therefore threaten Hell to save men from it and to draw them up to the obedience of the Gospel Threatned evil of punishment is but to keep them from the evil of sin and to make men better And he that will testifie his hatred of sinful evil to the highest doth shew himself the greatest enemy of it and the greatest lover of good and he that setteth the sharpest hedge before us and the terrible warnings to keep us from damnation doth shew himself most willing to save us 18. So good is Christianity that it turneth all our afflictions unto good It assureth us that they are sent as needful medicine however merited by our sin And it directeth us how to bear them easily and to make them sweet and safe and profitable and to turn them to our increase of holiness and to the furtherance of our greatest good Heb. 1 to 13. Rom. 8.18 2 Cor. 4.16 17 18. 19. It also stablisheth a perpetual office even the sacred Ministry for the fuller and surer communication of all this good forementioned In which observe these particulars which shew the greatness of this benefit 1. The persons called to it must by Christs appointment be the wisest and best of men that can be had 2. The number of them is to be suited to the number of the people so that none may be without the benefit 3. Their work is to declare all this forementioned Goodness and Love of God to man and to offer them all this grace and mercy and to teach them to be holy and happy and to set before them the everlasting joyes 4. The manner of their doing it must be with humility as the servants of all with tender love as Fathers of the flock with wisdom and skill lest their work be frustrate with the greatest importunity even compelling them to come in as men that are loth to take any denyal and with patient enduring all oppositions as those that had rather suffer any thing than the peoples souls shall be unhealed and be damned and they must conrinue to the end as those that will never give up a soul as desperate and lost while there is any hope And all this must be seconded with their own example of holiness temperance and love Acts 20. 2 Tim. 2.24 25. Matth. 22.8 9. 20. So good is our Religion that nothing but doing good is the work in which it doth employ us Besides all the good of piety and self-preservation it requireth us to live in love to others and to do all the good in the world that we are able Ephes 2.10 Mat. 5.16 6.1 2 c. Titus 2.14 Gal. 6.7 8 9. Good works must be our study and our life Our work and our delight Even our enemies we must love and do good to Mat. 5.44 Rom. 12.19 20 21. And sure that doctrine is good which is purposely to employ men in doing good to all 21. So good is Christianity that it favoureth not any one sin but is the greatest condemner of them all It is all for knowledge against hurtful ignorance it is all for humility against all pride for self-denyal against all injurious selfishness for spirituality and the dominion of true Reason against sensuality and the dominion of the flesh for heavenliness against a worldly mind for sincerity and simplicity against all hypocrisie and deceit for love against malice for unity and peace against divisions and contentions for justice and lenity in superiours and obedience and patience in inferiours for faithfulness in all relations Its precepts extend to secret as well as open practices to the desires and thoughts as well as to the words and deeds It alloweth not a thought or word or action which is ungodly intemperate rebellious injurious unchaste or covetous or uncharitable Mat. 5. 22. All the troublesome part of our Religion is but our warfare against evil against sin and the temptations which would make us sinful And it must needs be good if all the conflicting part of it be only against evil Gal. 5.17 21 23. Rom. 6. 7. 8.1 7 8 9 10 13. 23. It teacheth us the only way to live in the greatest and most constant joy If we attain not this it is because we follow not its precepts If endless joy foreseen and all the foresaid mercies in the way are not matter for continual delight there is no greater to be thought on Rejoycing alwaies in the Lord even in our sharpest persecutions is a great part of Religious duty Phil. 3.1 4.4 Psal 33.1 Zech. 10.7 Mat. 5.11 12. Deut. 12.12 18. 24. It overcometh both the danger and the fear of death and that must be good which conquereth so great an evil and maketh the day of the ungodly's fears and utter misery to be the day of our desire and felicity Rom. 6.23 1 Cor. 15.55 Col. 3.1 4. Phil. 3.21 25. It obligeth all the Rulers of the world to use all their power to do good against all sin within their reach and to make their subjects happy both in body and in soul Rom. 13.3 4 5 6. 26. It appointeth Churches to be Societies of Saints that holiness and goodness combined may be strong and honourable 1 Cor. 1.1 2.1 1. Heb. 3.13 1 Thes 5.12 13. That holy Assemblies employed in the holy love and praises of God might be a representation of the heavenly Jerusalem Col. 2.5 27. It doth make the Love and Vnion of all the Saints to be so strict that the mercies and joyes of every member might extend to all All the corporal and spiritual blessings of all the Christians yea and persons in the world are mine as to my comfort as long as I can love them as my self If it would please me to be rich or honourable or learned my self it must please me also to have them so whom I love as my self And when millions have so much matter for my joy how joyfully should I then live And though I am obliged also to sorrow with them it is with such a sorrow only as shall not hinder any seasonable joy 1 Cor. 12. 28. In these societies every member is bound to contribute his help to the benefit of each other so that I have as many obliged to do me good as there be Christians in the world at least according to their several opportunities
these things and to expound all these Solemnities Laws and Ceremonies to them so that the frame of Church and State and Families was a preservative hereof 5. But to pass by all the rest in the Old Testament the Incarnation of Christ was such a work of Omnipotent Love as ca●not by us be comprehended That God should be united to humanity in person that humanity should thus be advanced into union with the Deity and Man be set above the Angels that a Virgin should conceive that men from the East should be led thither to worship an Infant by the conduct of a Star which Caesarius thinketh was one of those Angels or Spirits which are called a flame of fire Psal 104.4 That Angels from Heaven should declare his nativity to the Shepherds and celebrate it with their praises that John Baptist should be so called to be his forerunner and Elizabeth Zachary Simeon and Anna should so prophesie of him That the Spirit should be seen descending on him at his Baptism and the voice be heard from Heaven which owned him that he should fast forty daies and nights and that he should be transfigured before his three Disciples on the Mount and Moses and Elias seen with him in that glory and the voice from Heaven again bear witness to him These and many such like were the attestations of Divine Omnipotency to the truth of Christ 6. To these may be next joyned the whole course of miracles performed by Christ in healing the sick and raising the dead and in many other miraculous acts which are most of the substance of the Gospel-history and which I have recited together in my Reasons of the Christian Religion see Heb. 2.2 3 4. 7. And to these may be added the Power which was given over all the creatures to Christ our Mediatour All power in Heaven and Earth was given him Joh. 17.2 13.3 Mat. 28.19 Rom. 14.9 Ephes 1.22 23. He was made Head over all things to the Church and all principalities and powers were put under him And this was not barely asserted by him but demonstrated He shewed his power over the Devils in casting them out and his power over Angels by their attendance and his power of life and death by raising the dead and his power over all diseases by healing them and his power over the winds and waters by appeasing them and his power over our food and natures by turning water into wine and by feeding many thousands miraculously yea and his power over them into whose hands he was resolved to yield himself by restraining them till his hour was come and by making them all fall to the ground at his name and his power over Sun and Heaven and Earth by the darkening of the Sun and the trembling of the Earth and the rending of the Rocks and of the Vail of the Temple Mat. 27.45 51. And his power over the dead by the rising of the bodies of many Mat. 27.52 And his power over the Saints in Heaven by the attendance of Moses and Elias and his power to forgive sins by taking away the penal maladies and his power to change hearts and save souls by causing his Disciples to leave all and follow him at a word and Zacheus to receive him and believe and the thief on the cross to be converted and to enter that day into Paradise 8. And his own Resurrection is an undoubted attestation of Divine Omnipotency If God gave him such a victory over death and raised him to life when men had killed him and rolled a stone upon his Sepulchre and sealed and guarded it there needeth no further evidence of the Power of God impressing and attesting the Christian Religion than that which ascertaineth to us the truth of Christs Resurrection For he was declared to be the Son of God by POWER by resurrection from the dead Rom. 1.4 9. And his bodily appearance to his congregated Disciples when the doors were shut his miracle at their fishing his walking on the Sea his vanishing out of their sight Luke 24. when he had discoursed with the two Disciples his opening their hearts to understand his Word c. do all shew this part of Gods Image on our Religion even his Power 10. And so doth his bodily ascending into Heaven before the face of his Disciples Acts 1. 11. But especially the sending down the Holy Ghost upon his Disciples according as he promised To cause them that were before so low in knowledge to be suddenly inspired with languages and with the full understanding of his own will and with unanimity and concord herein this made his Disciples the living monuments and effects of his own Omnipotency Acts 2. 12. And accordingly all the miracles which they did by this power recorded partly in the Acts of the Apostles or rather the Acts of Paul by Luke who was his companion which you may there read and no doubt but other Apostles in their measures did the like as Paul though they are not recorded for they had all the same Promise and Spirit This is another impression of POWER 13. Whereto must be added the great and wonderful gifts of communicating the same Spirit or doing that upon which God would give it to those converted Believers on whom they laid their hands which Simon Magus would fain have bought with money Acts 8. To enable them to speak with tongues to heal diseases to prophesie c. as they themselves had done which is a great attestation of Omnipotency 14. And the lamentable destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans foretold by Christ was an attestation of Gods POWER in the revenge or punishment of their unbelief and putting Christ to death 15. And so was the great fortitude and constancy of Believers who underwent all persecutions so joyfully as they did for the sake of Christ which was the effect of the corroborating Power of the Almighty 16. And so was the Power which the Apostles had to execute present judgements upon the enemies of the Gospel as Elimas and Simon Magus and on the abusers of Religion as Ananias and Saphyra and on many whom they excommunicated and delivered up to Satan 17. The same evidence is found in Christs Legislation as an universal Soveraign making Laws for heart and life for all the world Taking down the Laws of the Jewish Polity and Ceremonies which God by Moses had for a time set up Commanding his Ministers to proclaim his Laws to all the world and Princes and people to obey them And by these Laws conferring on Believers no less than forgiveness and salvation and binding over the impenitent to everlasting punishment 18. But the great and continued impress of Gods Power is that which together with his Wisdom and Love is made and shewed in the conve●sion of mens souls to God by Christ You may here first consider the numbers which were suddenly converted by the preaching of the Apostles at the first And in how little time there were Churches planted
Psal 139.14 Direct 15. But let the chief study of Faith for the knowledge of God be of the face of Jesus Christ and the most wonderful mystery of his Incarnation and our Redemption For God is no where else so fully manifested to man in that Goodness Love and Mercy which it most concerneth us to know and the knowledge of which will be most healing and sanctifying to the soul But of this I must speak more in the chapter next following Direct 16. Let Faith make use of every mercy not only to acknowledge God therein but to have a pleasant taste and rellish of his Love For thus it is that they are all sanctified to Believers and this is the holy use of mercies Remember that as in order to Vnderstanding your eyes and ears are but the passages or inlets to your minds and if sights and sounds went no further than the senses you would be no better if not worse than beasts So also in order to Affection the taste and sense of sweetness or any other pleasure is to pass by the sense unto the heart and what should it do there but affect the heart with the Love and Goodness of the giver A beast tasteth as much of the sensitive sweetness of his food and ease as you do But it is the Believer who heartily saith How good is the Author and end of all this mercy whence is it that this cometh and whether d●th it tend I love the Lord because he hath heard the voice of my supplication Psal 116.1 O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness Psal 145.15 16. The eyes of all things wait on thee thou givest them their meat in due season Thou openest thy hand and satisfiest the desires of every living thing He leaveth not himself without witness in that he doth good and giveth us Rain from Heaven and fruitful seasons filling our hearts with food and gladness Acts 14.17 The near conjunction of soul and body and the near relation of God and his mercies do tell us plainly that every pleasure which toucheth the sense should touch the heart and reach unto the soul it self and that as the creature is fitted to the sense and God is suitable to the soul so the creature should be but Gods servant to knock and cause us to open the door to himself and the way of his communication and accession to the heart Therefore so great a judgement is threatned against the Israelites in their prosperity if they did not serve God with j●yfulness and gladness of heart for the abundance of all things Deut. 28.47 And therefore the daies in which men were to rejoyce in God with the greatest love and thankfulness were appointed to be daies of feasting that the pleasure of the bodily senses might promote the spiritual pleasure and gratitude of the mind 2 Chron. 19.21 29.30 Neh. 8.17 12.27 Esth 9 17 18 19. Numb 10.10 Direct 17. Let Faith feel Gods displeasure in every chastisement and judgement For we must be equally careful that we despise them not and that we faint not under them Heb. 12.5 They that pretend that it is the work of faith to see nothing in any affliction but the love and benefit do but set one act of faith against another For the same word which telleth us that it shall turn to a true believers good doth tell us that it is of it self a natural evil and that as the good is from Gods Love so the evil is from our sins and his displeasure and that he would give us the good without the evil if man were without sin He therefore that believeth not that it is a castigatory punishment for sin is an unbeliever as well as he that believeth not the promise of the benefit Rom. 5.12 14 16 17 18. 1 Cor. 11.30 32. Jer. 5.25 Micah 1.5 Amos 3.2 Yea this opinion directly frustrateth the first end and use of all chastisements which is to further mens Repentance for the evil of sin by the sense of the evil of punishment and the notice of Gods displeasure manifested thereby And next to make us warnings to others that they incur not the same correction and displeasure as we have done For he that saith there is no penalty or evil in the suffering nor no displeasure of God exprest thereby doth contradict all this But as it is a great benefit which we are to reap by our corrections even the furtherance of our Repentance and amendment so it is a great work of faith to perceive the bitterness of sin and the displeasure of God in these corrections of which more anon Direct 18. Faith must hear the voice of God in all his Word and in all the counsel which by any one he shall send us When sense taketh notice of nothing but a book or of none but a man faith must perceive the mind and message of God Not only in Preachers 2 Cor. 5.19 20. 1 Thes 2.13 Titus 2.5 Heb. 13.7 but also in the mouth of wicked enemies when it is indeed the will of God which they reveal And so David heard the curse of Shimei speaking to him the rebukes of God for his sin in the matter of V●iah 2 Sam. 16.10 11. And Paul rejoyced that Christ was preached by men of envy and strife who did it to add affliction to his bonds Phil. 1.18 Moses perceived the will of God in the counsel of Jethro even in as great a matter as the governing and judging of the people Exod. 18.19 The counsel of the ancients which Rehoboam forsook was the counsel of God which be rejected 1 King 12.8 David blessed God for the counsel of a woman Abigail Whoever be the Messenger a Believer should be acquainted with the voice of God and know the true significations of his will The true sheep of Christ do know his voice and follow him because they are acquainted with his Word and though the Preacher be himself of a sinful life he can distinguish betwixt God and the Preacher and will not say it is not the Word of God because it cometh from a wicked mouth For he hath read Psal 50.16 where God saith to the wicked What hast thou to do to take my Covenant in thy mouth seeing thou hatest instruction and hast cast my words behind thee But he never read to the godly saith God Why didst thou hear a wicked Preacher He hath read The Scribes and Pharisees fit in Moses chair hear them but do not as they do But he never read Hear none that live not according to their doctrine An unbeliever will not know Christs Word if a Judas be the Preacher of it but a Believer can read the commission of Judas or at least can understand whose counsel he delivereth and though he would be loth to chuse a Judas or to prefer him before a holy man yet if workers of iniquity do preach in Christs Name he leaveth it to Christ to say at Judgement I know you not Mat.
thou doubt And you cannot say that this is only a hinderance in the applying act and not in the direct and principal act of faith For Luke 24.21 we find some Disciples at this pass But we trusted that it had been he who should have redeemed Israel And v. 25 26. Christ saith to them O fools and slow of heart to believe all that the Prophets have spoken ought not Christ to have suffered these things and to enter into his Glory Luke 24.11 The words of them who told the Apostles that Christ was risen seemed but as tales to them and they believed them not And v. 41. While they believed not for joy and wondered c. 3. Nay a weak faith may have such a swouning fit as to fail extraordinarily in an hour of temptation so far as to deny Christ or shrink from him in this fear so did Peter and not only he but all the Disciples forsook him and fled Matth. 26 56. But yet he that according to the habituated state of his soul hath so much Faith and Love as will cause him to venture life and all upon the trust which he hath to the promises of the Gospel hath a true and saving fai●h And here I desire all doubting Christians to lay by the common mistake in the trying of their faith or trust in Christ and to go hereafter upon surer grounds Many say I cannot believe or trust Christ for salvation for I am full of doubts and fears and troubles and surely this is not trusting God Ans 1. The question is not whether you trust him perfectly so as to have no fears no troubles no doubts but whether you trust him sincerely so far as to venture all upon him in his way If you can venture all on him and let go all to follow him your faith is true and saving This would abundantly comfort many fearful troubled Christians if they did but understand it well For many of them that thus fear would as soon as any forsake all for Christ and let go all carnal pleasures and worldly things or any wilful sin whatsoever rather than forsake him and would not take to any other portion and felicity than God nor any other way than Christ and the Spirit of holiness for all the temptations in the world And yet they fear because they fear and doubt more because they doubt Doubting soul let this resolve thee suppose Christ and his way were like a Pilot with his Ship at Sea Many more promise to convey thee safely and many perswade thee not to venture but stay at Land But if thou hast so much trust as that thou wilt go and put thy self and all that thou hast into this Ship and forsake all other though thou go trembling all the way and be afraid of every storm and tempest and gulf yet thou hast true faith though it be weak If thy faith will but keep thee in the Ship with Christ that thou neither turn back again to the flesh and world nor yet take another Ship and Pilot as Mahometanes and those without the Church undoubtedly Christ will bring thee safe to Land though thy fear and distrust be still thy sin For the hypocrites case is alwaies some of these 1. Some of them will only trust God in some smaller matter wherein their happiness consisteth not As a man will trust one with some trifle which he doth not much regard whom yet he thinks so ill of that he cannot trust him in a matter of weight 2. Some of them will trust God for the saving of their souls and the life to come or rather presume on him while they call it trusting him but they will not trust him with their bodies their wealth and honours and fleshly pleasures or their lives These they are resolved to shift for and secure themselves as well as they can For they know that for the world to come they must be at Gods disposal and they have no way of their own to shift out of his hands whether there be such a life or no they know not but if there be they will cast their souls upon Gods mercy when they have kept the world as long as they can and have had all that it can do for them But they will not lose their present part for such uncertain hopes as they account them 3. Some of them will trust him only in pretence and name while it is the creature which they trust indeed Because they have learned to say that God is the disposer of all and only to be trusted and all creatures are but used by his will therefore they think that when they trust the creature it is but in subordination to God though indeed they trust not God at all 4. Some of them will trust God and the creature joyntly and as they serve God and Mammon and think to make sure of the prosperity of the body and the salvation of the soul without losing either of them so they trust in both conjunctly to make up their felicity Some think when they read Christs words Mark 10.24 How hard is it for them that trust in Riches to enter into the Kingdom of God that they are safe enough if that be all the danger for they do not trust in their riches though they love them He is a mad man they say that will put his trust in them And yet Christ intimateth it as the true reason why few that have riches can be saved because there is few that have riches who do not trust in them You know that riches will not save your souls you know that they will not save you from the gr●ve you know that they will not cure your diseases nor ease your pains And therefore you do not trust to riches either to keep you from sickness or from dying or from Hell But yet you think that riches may help you to live in pleasure and in reputation with the world and in plenty of all things and to have your will as long as health and life will last and this you take to be the chiefest happiness which a man can make sure of And for this you trust them The fool in Luke 12.19 who said Soul take thy ease eat drink and be merry thou hast enough laid up for many years did not trust his riches to make him immortal nor to save his soul But he trusted in them as a provision which might suffice for many years that he might eat drink and be merry and take his ease and this he loved better and preferred before any pleasures or happiness which he hoped for in another world And thus it is that all worldly hypocrites do trust in riches Yea the poorest do trust in their little poor provisions in this world as seeming to them surer and therefore better than any which they can expect hereafter This is the way of trusting in uncertain riches viz. to be their surest happiness instead of trusting in the living God 1
be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my self to him Prov. 8.17 I love them that love me John 14.15 If ye love me keep my Commandments and I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever John 16.27 The Father himself loveth you because ye have loved me and believed 17. Promises to them that love the godly and that are merciful and do the works of love John 13.35 By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples if ye have love one to another Gal. 5.6 13 22. In Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but faith which worketh by love By love serve one another for all the Law is fulfilled in one word in this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self The fruit of the Spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness Against such there is no Law Heb. 6.10 God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love 1 John 3.14 We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren 18. My little children l●t us not love in word nor tongue but in deed and in truth And hereby we know that we are of the truth and shall assure our hearts before him 1 John 4.7 Beloved let us love one another for love is of God and every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God v. 16. God is Love and he that dwelleth in Love dwelleth in God and God in him v. 12. If we love one another God dwelleth in us and his love is perfected in us 2 Cor. 9.7 God loveth a chearful giver v. 6. He that soweth bountifully shall reap bountifully Mat. 5.7 Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy Matth. 10.41 42. He that receiveth a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receive a Prophets reward and he that receiveth a righteous man in the name of a righteous man shall receive a righteous mans reward And whosoever shall give to drink to one of these little ones a cup of cold water only in the name of a Disciple verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his reward Matth. 25.34 40 46. Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom Verily I say unto you in as much as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren ye have done it unto me The righteous shall go into life eternal Heb. 13.16 But to do good and to communicate forget not for with such sacrifices God is well pleased Phil. 4.17 I desire fruit which may abound to your account 2 Cor. 9.9 As it is written He hath dispersed abroad he hath given to the poor his righteousness remaineth for ever 18. Promises to the poor and needy Christians Matth. 6.30 32 33. If God so clothe the grass of the field which to day is and to morrow is cast into the Oven 〈◊〉 he not much more clothe 〈◊〉 O ye of little faith Your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things But seek ye first the Kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things shall be added to you Heb. 13.5 Let your conversations be without covetousness and be content with such things as ye have for he hath said I will never fail thee nor forsake thee James 2.5 Hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in faith and heirs of the Kingdom Psal 34.10 They that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing Psal 23.1 The Lord is my Shepherd I shall not want Psal 4.19 My God shall supply all your need Phil. 4.11 12 13 I have learned in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content I know both how to be abased and I know how to abound every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry both to abound and to suffer need Psal 9.18 The needy shall not alway be forgotten the expectation of the poor shall not perish for ever 19. Promises to the oppressed and wronged Christian Psal 12.5 6 7. For the oppression of the poor and for the sighing of the needy now will I arise saith the Lord I will set him in safety from him that puffeth at him Thou shalt keep them O Lord thou shalt preserve them from this generation for ever Psal 35.10 All my bones shall say Lord who is like unto thee which deliverest the poor from him that is too strong for him yea the poor and the needy from him that spoileth him Psal 40.17 But I am poor and needy yet the Lord thinketh on me thou art my helper and deliverer Psal 42.2 4 12 13. He shall judge thy people with righteousness and thy poor with judgement He shall judge the poor of the people he shall save the children of the needy and shall break in pieces the oppressor For he shall deliver the needy when he cryeth the poor also and him that hath no helper He shall spare the poor and needy and shall save the souls of the needy He shall redeem their souls from deceit and violence and precious ●●all their blood be in his sight Psal 113.7 He raiseth up the poor out of the dust and lifteth the needy out of the dunghill See Isa 25.3 4 5. 14.30 Zech. 9.8 Isa 51.13 Eccles 5.8 If thou seest the oppression of the poor and violent perverting of judgement and justice in a Province marvel not at the matter for he that is higher than the highest regardeth and there be higher than they 20. Promises to the persecuted who suffer for righteousness Matth. 5.10 11 12. Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness sake for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and say all manner of evil against you falsly for my sake Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in Heaven for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you Matth. 10.28 29 30 31 32. Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul Are not two Sparrows sold for a farthing and one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father But the very hairs of your head are all numbered Fear you not therefore ye are of more value than many Sparrows Whosoever shall confess me before men him will I confess also before my Father which is in Heaven v. 39. He that loseth his life for my sake shall find it Matth. 19.29 And every one that hath forsaken houses or brethren or sisters or father or mother or wife or children or lands for my Names sake shall receive an hundred-fold and shall inherit everlasting life 2 Thes 1.4 5 6. Your patience and faith in all your persecutions and tribulations which ye suffer is a manifest token of the righteous judgement of God that ye may be counted worthy of the Kingdom of God for which ye
the Attributes of God are the seal which must make his Image on us so the apprehension of his presence setteth them on and keepeth our faculties awake Direct 13. Be sure that Faith make Gods acceptance your full reward and set you above the opinion of man Not in self-conceitedness and pride of your self-sufficiency to set light by the judgment of other men That is a heinous sin of it self and doubled when it is done upon pretence of living upon God alone But that really you live so much to God alone as that all men seem as nothing to you and their opinion of you as a blast of wind in regard of any felicity of your own which might be placed in their love or praise Though as a means to Gods service and their own good you must please all men to their edification and become all things to all men to win them to God Gal. 1.10 11. Rom. 15.1 2. Prov. 11.30 1 Cor. 9.22 10.33 yea and study to please your Governours as your duty Titus 2.9 But as man-pleasing is the Hypocrites work and wages so must the pleasing of God be ours though all the world should be displeased Matth. 6.1 2 3 5 6 c. 2 Tim. 2.4 1 Cor. 7.32 1 Thes 4.1 2 Cor. 5.8 9. 1 Thes 2.4 1 John 3.22 Direct 14. Let the constant work of Faith be to take you off the life of sense by mortifying all the concupiscence of the flesh and over-powering all the objects of sense The neerness of things sensible and the violence and unreasonableness of the senses and appetite do necessitate Faith to be a conflicting grace It s use is to illuminate elevate and corroborate Reason and help it to maintain its authority and government The life of a Believer is but a conquering warfare between Faith and Sense and between things unseen and the things that are seen Therefore it is said that they th●● are in the flesh cannot please God because the flesh b●ing the predominant principle in them they most savour and mind the things of the flesh and therefore they can do more with them than the things of the Spirit can do when both are set before them Rom. 8.5 6 7 8. Direct 15. Let Faith set the example first of Christ and next of his holiest servants still before you He that purposely lived among men in fl●sh a life of holiness and patience and contempt of the world to be a pattern or example to us doth expect that it be the daily work of Faith to imitate him and therefore that we have this Copy still before our eyes It will help us when we are sluggish and sit down in low and common things to see more noble things before us It will help us when we are in doubt of the way of our duty and when we are apt to favour our corruptions It will guide our minds and quicken our desires with a holy ambition and covetousness to be more holy It will serve us to answer all that the world or flesh can say from the contrary examples of sinning men If any tell us what great men or learned men think or say or do against Religion and for a sinful life it is enough if Faith do but tell us presently what Christ and his Apostles and Saints and Martyrs have thought and said and done to the contrary Mat. 11.28 29. 1 Pet. 2.21 John 13.15 Phil. 3.17 2 Thes 3.9 1 Tim. 4.12 Ephes 5.1 Heb. 6.12 1 Thes 1.6 2.14 Direct 16. Let your Faith set all graces on work in their proper order and proportion and carry on the work of holiness and obedience in harmony and not set one part against another nor look at one while you forget or neglect another Every grace and duty is to be a help to all the rest And the want or neglect of any one is a hinderance to all As the want of one wheel or smaller particle in a clock or watch will make all stand still or go out of order The new creature consisteth of all due parts as the body doth of all its members The soul is as a musical instrument which must neither want one string nor have one out of tune nor neglected without spoiling all the melody A fragment of the most excellent work or one member of the comliest body cut off is not beautiful The beauty of a holy soul and life is not only in the quality of each grace and duty but much in the proportion feature and harmony of all Therefore every part hath its proper armour Ephes 6.11 12 13 14. And the whole armour of God must be put on Because all fulness dwelleth in Christ we are compleat in him as being sufficient to communicate every grace Epaphras laboured alwaies fervently in prayers for the Colossians that they might stand perfect and compleat in all the Will of God Col. 4.12 James 1.4 Let patience have her perfect work that ye may be perfect and entire wanting nothing We oft comfort our selves that though we want the perfection of degrees yet we have the perfection of parts or of integrity But many are fain to prove this only by inferring that he that hath one grace hath all but as to the discerning and orderly use of all they are yet to seek CHAP. XI Of the Order of Graces and Duties BEcause I find not this insisted on in any Writers for the peoples instruction as it ought I will not pass over so needful a point without some further advertisement about it I will therefore shew you 1. What is the compleatness and the harmony to be desired 2. What are our contrary defects and distempers 3. What are the causes of them and what must be the cure 4. Some useful Inferences hence arising I. He that will be compleat and entire must have all these Graces and Duties following 1. A solid and clear understanding of all the great the needful and practical matters of the sacred Scriptures 2 Tim. 3.16 And if he have the understanding of the Scripture languages and the customs of those times and other such helps his understanding of the Scripture will be the more compleat Acts 26.3 If he have not he must make use of other mens 2. A settled well grounded Belief of all Gods supernatural Revelations as well as the knowledge of natural verities 3. Experience to make this knowledge and belief to be satisfactory powerful and firm Especially the experience of the Spirits effectual operations in our selves by the means of this word Rom. 5.4 8.9 Gal. 4.6 4. The historical knowledge of the Scripture matters of fact and how God in all ages since Scripture times hath fulfilled his Word both promises and threatnings and what Christ and Satan Grace and Sin have been doing in the world Therefore the Scripture is written so much by way of history and therefore the Jews were so often charged to tell the history of Gods works to their children 1 Cor. 10.1 2 6 7
11. Exod. 12.29 Deut. 26.22 Josh 4.6 21 22. 22 24 27. Therefore the writing of Church-history is the duty of all ages because Gods Works are to be known as well as his Word And as it is your forefathers duty to write it it is the childrens duty to learn it or else the writing it would be vain He that knoweth not what state the Church and world is in and hath been in in former ages and what God hath been doing in the world and how errour and sin have been resisting him and with what success doth want much to the compleating of his knowledge 5. And he must have prudence to discern particular cases and to consider of all circumstances and to compare things with things that he may discern his duty and the seasons and manner of it and may know among inconsistent seeming duties which is to be preferred and when and what circumstances or accidents do make any thing a duty which else would be no duty or a sin and what accidents make that a sin which without them would be a duty This is the knowledge which must make a Christian entire or compleat 2. And in his Will there must be 1. A full resignation and submission to the Will of God his Owner and a full subjection and obedience to the Will of God his Governour yielding readily and constantly and resolut●ly to the commands of God as the Scholar obeyeth his Master and as the second wheel in the clock is moved by the first And a close adhering to God as his chief Good by a Thankful Reception of his Benefits and a desirous seeking to enjoy and glorifie him and please his Will In a word loving him as God and taking our chiefest complacency in pleasing him in loving him and being loved of him 2. And in the same will there must be a well regulated Love to all Gods works according as he is manifested or glorified in them To the humanity of our Redeemer to the glory of Heaven as it is a created thing to the blessed Angels and perfected spirits of the just to the Scripture to the Church on earth to the Saints the Pastors the Rulers the holy Ordinances to all mankind even to our enemies to our selves our souls our bodies our relations our estates and mercies of every rank 3. And herewithall must be a hatred of every sin in our selves and others Of former sin and present corruption with a penitential displicence and grief and of possible sin with a vigilancy and resistance to avoid it 3. And in the Affections there must be a vivacity and sober fervency answering to all these motions of the Will in Love Delight Desire Hope Hatred Sorrow Aversation and Anger the complexion of all which is godly Zeal 4. In the vital and executive Power of the soul there must be a holy activity promptitude and fortitude to be up and doing and to set the sluggish faculties on work and to bring all knowledge and volitions into practice and to assault and conquer enemies and difficulties There must be the Spirit of Power though I know that word did chiefly then denote the Spirit of Miracles yet not only and of Love and of a sound mind 5. In the outward members there must be by use a habit of ready obedient execution of the souls commands As in the tongue a readiness to pray and praise God and declare his Word and edifie others and so in the rest 6. In the senses and appetite there must by use be a habit of yielding obedience to Reason that the senses do not rebel and rage and bear down the commands of the mind and will 7. Lastly In the Imagination there must be a clearness or purity from filthiness malice covetousness pride and vanity and there must be the impressions of things that are good and useful and a ready obedience to the superiour faculties that it may be the instrument of holiness and not the shop of temptations and sin nor a wild unruly disordered thing And the harmony of all these must be as well observed as the matter As 1. There must be a just Order among them every duty must keep its proper place and season 2. There must be a just proportion and degree some graces must not wither whilst others alone are cherished nor some duties take up all our heart and time whilst others are almost laid by 3. There must be a just activity and exercise of every grace 4. And a just conjunction and respect to one another that every one be used so as to be a help to all the rest I. The Order 1. Of Intellectual graces and duties must be this 1. In order of Time the things which are sensible are known before the things which are beyond our sight and other senses 2. Beyond these the first thing known both for certainly and for excellency is that there is a God 3. This God is to be known as one Being in his three Essential Principles Vital Power Intellect and Will 4. And these as in their Essential Perfections Omnipotency Wisdom and Goodness or Love 5. And also in his perfections called Modal and Negative c. as Immensity Eternity Independancy Immutability c. 6. God must be next known in his Three Personalities as the Father the Word or Son and the Spirit 7. And these in their three Causalities efficient dirigent and final 8. And in their three great works Creation Redemption Sanctification or Perfection producing Nature Grace and Glory or our Persons Medicine and Health 9. And God who created the world is thereupon to be known in his Relations to it as our Creator in Unity and as our Owner Ruler and Chief Good efficient dirigent and final in a Trinity of Relations You must know how the Infinite Vital Power of the Father created all things by the Infinite Wisdom of the Word or Son and by the Infinite Goodness and Love of the holy Spirit As the Son redeemed us as the eternal Wisdom and Word Incarnate sent by the eternal Vital-Power of the Father to reveal and communicate the eternal Love in the Holy Ghost And as the Holy Ghost doth sanctifie and perfect us as proceeding and sent from the Power of the Father and the Wisdom of the Son to shed abroad the Love of God upon our hearts c. 10. Next to the knowledge of God as Creator is to be considered the World which he created and especially the Intectellual Creatures Angels or heavenly Spirits and Men. Man is to be known in his person or constitution first and afterward in his appointed course and in his end and perfection 11. In his constitution is to be considered 1. His Being or essential parts 2. His Rectitude or Qualities 3. His Relations 1. To his Creatour And 2. To his fellow-creatures 12. His essential parts are his soul and body His soul is to be known in the Vnity of its Essence and Trinity of essential faculties which is its natural
is above Gods nor can bind us against him but it is all received from him and subordinate to him 51. No Humane Power can bind us to the destruction of the society which it governeth because the publick or common good is the end of Government 52. The Laws of Kings and the Commands of Parents Masters and Pastors in cases where they have true Authority do bind the soul primarily as well as the body secondarily But not as the primary but the secondary bond It is a wonderful and pittiful thing to read Divines upon this point Whether the Laws of men do bind the conscience what work they have made as in the dark when the case is so very plain and easie some are peremptory that they do not bind conscience and some that they do and some calling their adversaries the Idolizers of men and others again insinuating that they we guilty of treason against Kings who do gainsay them when surely they cannot differ if they would 1. The very phrase of their question is non-sense or very unfit Conscience is but a mans knowledge or judgment of himself as he is obliged to his duty and the effects and consequently of the obligations which lie upon him It is a strange question whether I am bound in knowledge of my self But it were a reasonable question whether I be bound to know or whether I know that I am bound It is the whole man and most eminently the Will which is bound by Laws or any Moral Obligations The man is bound But if by conscience they mean the soul it is a ridiculous question For no bonds can lie upon the body immediately but Cords or Iron or such like materials The soul is the first obliged or else the man is not morally obliged at all If the sense of the question be whether it be a Divine or a Religious obligation which mens commands do lay upon us The answer is easie 1. That Man is not God and therefore as humane it is not Divine 2. That Mans Government is Gods institution and Men are Gods Officers and therefore the obligation is Religious and Instrumentally or Mediately Divine Either mens Laws and Commands do bind us or not If not they are no Laws nor authoritative Acts If they do bind either it is primarily by an authority originally in themselves that made them and then they are all gods And then there is no God Or else it is by derived authority If so God must be the Original or still the Original must be God And then is the high way any plainer than the true answer of this question viz. That Princes Parents c. have a governing or Law-giving power from God in subordination to him and that they are his Officers in governing And that all those Laws which he hath authorized them to make do bind the soul that is the man immediately as humane and instrumentally or mediately as Divine or as the bonds of God As my Covenant bind my self to conscience if you will so speak rather than that they bind my conscience so do men a Laws also bind me You may as well ask whether the writing of my pen be its action or mine and be an animate or inanimate act which is soon resolved 53. To conclude these Rules as the just impress of the Spirit and Image of God upon the soul is Divine Life Light and Love communicated from God by Jesus Christ by the holy Spirit to work in us and by us for God in the soul and in the world and by Christ to bring us up at last to the sight and fruition of God himself so this Trinity of Divine principles must be inseparably used in all our internal and external duties towards God or men and all that we do must be the work of Power and of Love and of Wisdom or a sound mind 2 Tim. 1.7 II. Having been so large in opening the Order of our Duties I must be briefer than our case requireth in telling you our Disorders or contrary disease O what a humbling sight it would be if good Christians did but see the pittiful con●●sions of their minds and lives They find little melody in their Religion because there is little harmony in their apprehensions affections or conversations If the displacing one wheel or pin in a clock will so much frustrate the effect it is a wonder that our tongues or lives do ever go true which are moved by such disordered parts within that were it not that the Spirit of grace doth keep an order where it is essential to our Religion between the End and the Means c. we should be but like the parts of a watch pulled in pieces and put up together in a bag But such is Gods mercy that the body may live when many smaller veins are obstructed so that the Master vessels be kept clear I. There are so few Christians that have a true method of Faith or Divinity in their understandings even in the great points which they know disorderly that it is no wonder if there be lamentable defectiveness and deformity in those inward and outward duties which should be harmoniously performed by the light of this harmonious truth And no Divine in the world can give you a perfect Scheme of Divinity in all the parts but he is the wisest that cometh neerest to it Abundance of Schemes and Tables you may see and all pretending to exactness But every one palpably defective and confused even those of the highest pretenders that ever I have seen And one errour or disorder usually introduceth in such a Scheme a confusion in all that followeth as dependant on it Some confound Gods Attributes themselves nay who doth not They confound the Three great Essential Principles with all the Attributes by similitude called Modal and Negative and they use to name over Gods Attributes like as they put their money or chess-men into a bag without any method at all Some confound Gods Primary Attributes of Being with his Relations which are subsequent to his Works and with his Relation-Attributes Some confound his several Relations to man among themselves and more do confound his Works as they flow from these various Relations The great works of the Creator Redeemer and Sanctifier and their several designs significations and effects are opened obscurely and in much confusion The Legislative Will of God de debi●● institutive which is it that Damascene Chrysostome and the School-men mean by his Antecedent will if they speak properly which ever goeth before mans actions duties or sins or as the Fathers called them merits or demerits is confounded by many with the acts of his Judgment and Execution called his consequent Will because it ever presupposeth mens precedent actions Or his works as Law-giver Judge and Executioner are oft confounded And so are the Orders of his Precepts Promises and penal Threats and the Conditions of his Promises and the order of his Precepts among themselves and of his Promises
to the proud to take them down and make them stoop The rich answereth roughly but the poor useth intreaties Prov. 18.23 So much of the Marks of Pride Direct III. Overlook not the odiousness and peril of Pride I will name you now but a few of its aggravations because I have more largely mentioned them elsewhere 1. It is the most direct opposition to God to set up our selves as Idols in his place and seek for some of his honour to our selves 2. It is the first born of the Devil and an imitation of him whom God in nature hath taught us to take for the greatest enemy of him and us and the most odious of all the creatures of God 3. It is madness to fall by that same sin which we know was the overthrow of our first Parents and of the world 4. And it is sottish impudency in such as we who know that our bodies are going into rottenness and dust and think in what a place and plight we must there lie and that those daies of darkness will be many And who know that our souls are defiled with sin and if we have any saving knowledge and grace it is small and mixt with abundance of ignorance and corruption and the nature of it is contrary to Pride 5. It is contrary to the design of redeeming grace which is to save the humble contrite soul 6. It betrayeth men to a multitude of other sins as vanity of mind loss of time neglect of duty striving for preferment quarrelling with others upon matters of reputation or precedency c 7. And it is a sin that God is specially engaged against and the surest way to dejection and self frustration 1 Pet. 5.5 James 4 6. Isa 2.12 Prov. 15.22 16.5 21.4 Psal 138 6. 31.23 Job 40.11 12. Luke 14.11 18.14 II. After these three general Directions I shall briefly name a few particular ones Direct 1. Remember continually what you are and what you were what your bodies are and will be and what your souls are by the pollution of sin and how close it still adhereth to you and from how great a misery Christ redeemed you He neither knoweth his body nor his soul his sin or misery nor Christ nor grace who is a servant unto Pride Direct 2 Remember the continual presence of the most holy dreadful God And can Pride lift up the head before him Direct 3 Look to the example of a humbled Saviour and learn of God incarnate to be lowly Matth. 11.29 From his birth to his ascension you may read the strangest Lecture of Lowliness that ever was delivered to the haughty world Direct 4. Turn all your desires to the glorifying of God remembring that you were not made for your own glory but for his Direct 5. Think much of the heavenly Glory and it will cloud all the vain-glory of the world Direct 6. Think what it is that is your honour among the Angels in Heaven and what is most approved and honoured by God himself and therein place your honour and not in the conceits of foolish men Direct 7. Lastly Make use of humbling occasions to exercise your self-denyal and lowliness of mind I commend not to you the pious folly of those Popish Saints who are magnified by them for making themselves purposely ridiculous to exercise their humility as by going through the streets with their breeches on their heads and other such fooleries For God will give you humbling occasions enough when he seeth good But when he doth it be sure that you improve them to the abasing of your selves and use your selves to be above the esteem of man and to bear contempt when it 's cast upon you as Christ did for your sakes though not to draw it foolishly or wilfully upon your selves He that hath but once born the contempt of men is much better able to b●ar it afterwards than he that never underwent it but thinketh that he hath an entire reputation to preserve And he that is more sollicitous of his duty and most indifferent in point of honour doth usually best secure his honour by such neglect and alwaies best undergo dishonour CHAP. XVI How to scape the sin of Fulness or Luxury by Faith THE second sin of Sodom and fruit of abusrd Prosperity is Fulness of Bread Ezek. 16 49 Concerning which having also handled it elsewhere more at large I shall now briefly give you these general Directions first and then a few that are more particular Direct I. Understand well what sinful Fulness It is sinful when it hath any one of these ill conditions 1. When you eat or drink more in quantity than is consistent with the due preservation of your health or so much as hurteth your health or reason For the use of food is to fit us for our duty and therefore that which disableth and unfiteth us is too much But here both the present and future must be considered 2. When you have no higher end in eating and drinking than the pleasing of your appetite Be it little or much it is to be judged of according to its end A beast hath no other end because he hath no reason and so properly hath no end at all But we are bound to eat and drink to the glory of God and to do all to further us in his service 1 Cor. 10.31 The appetite may be pleased in order to a higher end that is 1. So far as it is a true directer what is for our health and will be best digested 2. So far as by moderate and seasonable exhilaration it fitteth us by cheerful alacrity for our duty and therefore it hath been good mens use to have holy feasts as well as holy fasts But the appetite must be restrained and denyed 1. When it is against health And 2. When it hindereth from duty Or 3. When it would be the ultimate end of our repast and there is no higher reason for it than the appetites delight It is not said that the Sensualist in Luke 16. did eat too much but that he fared sumptuously every day and that he had his good things here that is that he lived to the pleasing of his flesh It is not said of him in Luke 12.19 20. that he ate or drank too much but that he said Soul take thy ease eat drink and be merry that is that he preferred the pleasing of his appetite or flesh before the everlasting pleasures The sin of the Israelites was that they were weary of eating Manna only so many years and desired flesh only to please their appetite and therefore is is said that they asked meat for their lust Psal 78.18 that is to gratifie their flesh or sense And the terrible threatnings thundered out by James against the rich are on such accounts James 5.4 5. Ye have lived in pleasure on earth and been wanton ye have nourished your hearts as in a day of slaughter And we are commanded to make no provision for the flesh
agreeable to his mind and body Some are strong and some are weak some are of quick wits and some are dull All should be designed to that which they are fittest for 8. Every one should chuse that calling if he be fit for it in which he may be most serviceable to God for the doing of the greatest good in the world and not that in which he may have most ease or wealth or honour God and the publick good must be our chiefest ends in the choice 9. And in the labours of our calling the getting of riches must never be our principal end But we must labour to do the most publick good and to please God by living in obedience to his commands 10. Yet every man must desire the success of his labour and the blessing of God on it and may continue his work as best tendeth to success And though we may not labour to be rich Prov. 23.4 as our principal end yet we must not be formal in our callings nor think that God is delighted in our meer toil to see men fill a bottomless vessel but we must endeavour after the most successful way and pray for a just prosperity of our labours and when God doth prosper us with wealth we must take it thankfully though with fear and use it to his service and do all the good with it that we can 1 Cor. 16.2 Lay by as God hath prospered every man Ephes 4.28 Let him work with his hands the thing that is good that he may have to give to him that needeth James 1.9 Let the brother of low degree rejoyce in that he is exalted 11. The lowness of a mans calling or baseness of his employment will not allow him to be negligent or weary of it or uncomfortable in it Seeing God must be obeyed in the lowest services as well as in the highest and will reward men according to their faithful labour and not according to the dignity of their place And indeed no service should be accounted low and base which is sincerely done for so great and high a Master and hath the promise of so glorious a reward Col. 3.23 24. 12. The greater and more excellent any mans work and calling is his idleness and neligence is the greater sin It is bad in a Plow-man or any day-labourer but it is far worse in a Minister of the Gospel or a Magistrate Because they wrong many and that in the greatest things and violate the greatest trust from God Christ biddeth us pray the Lord of the harvest to send forth Labourers into his harvest Luke 10.27 and not proud covetous idle drones that would have honour only for their wealth and titles And he saith that the Labourer is worthy of his hire but not the loiterer Among the Elders that rule the Church it is especially the labourers in the word and doctrine that are worthy of double honour Dr. Hammond noteth on 1 Thes 5.12 that the Bishops whom they are required to know and honour were those that laboured among them and were over them in the Lord and admonished them and that it was for their works sake that they were to esteem them very highly in love The highest title that ever was put on Pastors was to be Labourers together with God 1 Cor. 3.9 And the calling of Magistrates also requireth no small diligence Jethro perswadeth Moses to take helpers not that he might himself be idle but lest he should wear away himself with doing more than he could undergo Exod. 18.18 So the calling of a Schoolmaster and of Parents and Masters of families who have rational souls to instruct and govern requireth a special diligence And negligence in such is a greater sin than in him that neglecteth sheep or horses So also it is a great sin in a Physician because he doth neglect mens lives and in a Lawyer when by sloth he destroyeth mens estates The greatness of the trust must greaten mens care 13. He that hath hired his labour to another as a Servant a Lawyer a Physician is guilty of a thievish fraud if he give him not that which he hath paid for Owe nothing to any man but love Rom. 13. Hired labour is a debt that must be paid 14. Religious duties will not excuse idleness nor negligence in our callings but oblige us to it the more nor will any bodily calling excuse us from Religious duties but both must take their place in their seasons and due proportions Q●est 1. But what if a man can live without labour may not be forbear who needeth it not Answ No because he is nevertheless a subject of God who doth command it and a member of the Common-wealth which needeth it Quest 2. What if I were not brought up to labour am I bound to use it Answ Yes you must yet learn to do your duty and repent and ask pardon for living so long in sinful idleness What if you had not been brought up to pray or to read or to any needful trade or ornament of life What if your Parents had never taught you to speak Is it not your duty therefore to learn it when you are at age rather than not at all Qu. 3. But what if I find that it hurteth my body to labour may I not forbear Answ If it so hurt you that you are unable to do it there is no remedy Necessity hath no Law Or if one sort of labour hurt you when you can take up another in which you may be as serviceable to the Common-wealth you may chuse that to which your strength is suitable But if you think that every sudden pain or weariness is a sufficient excuse or that some real hurt will warrant you in an idle life you may as well think that your servant and your Horse or Oxe may cease all their labour for you when they are weary or that your candle should not burn nor your knife be used in cutting because that use consumeth them Quest 4. What if I find that worldly business doth hinder me in the service of God I cannot pray or read or meditate so much Answ The labours of your callings are part of the service of God He hath set you both to do and you must do both that is both spiritual and corporal work And to quarrel with either is to quarrel against God who hath appointed them Quest 5. But is it not worldliness when we follow worldly business without any need Answ 1. Yes if you do it only from the love of the world and with a worldly mind But not when you do it in obedience to God and with a heavenly mind 2. He cannot be said to have no need who hath a body that needeth it or liveth in Common-wealth that needeth it and is a subject to God who commandeth it Quest 6. But what if I find by constant experince that my soul is more worldly after worldly business and more cold and alienated from God Answ What if you should
his body is a little weary his mind is so too and suffereth the weariness of the body to prevail Because the flesh is King within them Nay a slothful mind doth oft begin and they are weary to look upon their work or to think of it before it hath wearyed the body at all And what they do they do unwillingly because they are in love with idleness Mal. 1.13 But the lowly and laborious are in love with diligence and work and therefore though they cannot avoid the wearyness of the body their willing minds will carry on the body as far as it can well go The diligent woman worketh willingly with her hands her candle goeth not out by night c. Prov. 31.13 c. Servants must do service with good will as to the Lord Ephes 6.7 If Ministers preach and labour willingly they have a reward 1 Cor. 9.17 But not if they are only driven on by necessity and the fear of woe 1 Pet. 5.2 What shall we do willingly if not our duties He that sineth willingly and serveth God and followeth his labour unwilingly shall be rewarded according to his will 6. The idle Sodomite doth love and chuse that kind of life which is easiest and hath least work to be done This is the chief provision by which he fulfilleth his fleshly lust An idle servant thinketh that the best place in which he shall have most ease and fulness An idle Parent will cast all the burden of his childrens teaching upon the Schoolmaster and the Pastor An idle Minister thinketh himself best where he may have no more labour than what tendeth to his publick applause and when he hath the most wealth and honour and least to do he taketh that to be the flourishing prosperity of the Church And indeed if our calling were like the souldiers to kill men and not liker the Surgeons to cure them we might think it is the best time when we have least employment But the faithful servant will be most thankful for that state of life in which he doth most good And as he taketh doing good to be the surest way of getting and receiving so he taketh the good of another as his own and anothers necessity is his necessity He knoweth that he is best who is likest unto God and that is he that is the most abundant in love and doing good Like the Sun that never resteth from moving or giving light and heat The running spring is pure when the standing water is muddy and corrupt The cessation of motion quickly mortifieth the blood He that said as to works of charity Be not weary of well doing for in due time you shall reap if you faint not Gal. 6.9 hath said so too as to our bodily labour in our common callings in the world 2 Thes 3.13 I know that a servant may be glad of a place where he is not oppressed with unreasonable labour and where he hath competent time for the learning of Gods Word And a poor man may be glad when he is freed from necessity of doing that which is to his hurt But otherwise no man but a fleshly bruit will wish or contrive for a life of idleness Object Is it not said Blessed are the dead for they rest from their labours Rev. 14.13 Ans True but mark that their works follow them And what are the works which follow you And note that it is not work or duty that they shall rest from For they rest not crying Holy Holy Holy Lord God Almighty c. But it is only their labours that is the painful sort of work and suffering proper to this sinful life The blessed indeed are freed in Heaven from this because they were not freed 〈◊〉 it on earth as the ungodly and slothful servant are 7. Lastly Idleness is seen by the work that is undone Pro. 24.30 The sluggards Vineyard is overgrown with weeds If your souls be unrenewed and your assurance of salvation and evidences yet to get and few the better for you in the world and you are yet unready for death and judgment you give too full a proof of idleness The diligent woman Prov. 31.16 c. could shew her labours in her treasures her Vineyard the cloathing and provisions of her family c. shew yours by the good which you have done in the world and by the preparation of your souls for a better world Let every man prove his own work that he may have rejoycing in himself alone and not in another Gal. 6.3 4. What case are your children in Are they taught or untaught What case is your soul in your fruit must judge you III. The mischiefs of this Sodomitical Idleness and the reasons against it are briefly these 1. It is contrary to the active nature of mans soul which in activity exceedeth the fire it self It is as natural for a soul to be active as for a stone or clod of earth to lie still And this active nature animateth the passive body to move it and use it in it's proper work And should this heavenly fire be imprisoned in the body which it should command and move Psal 104.23 Man goeth forth to his work and to his labour till the evening 2. It is contrary to the common course of nature Doth the Sun shine for you as well as for others or doth it not Doth all the frame of nature continue in its course the air the waters the summer and winter for you as well as for others or not If not then you take not your selves beholden to God for them And if you have no use for the Sun and other creatures you have no use for life for by them you live But if yea then what is it that they serve you for Did God ever frame you so glorious a retinuue to attend you only to sleep and laugh and play and to be idle what is all this for no higher an end or rather do you not by your idleness forfeit life and all these helps and maintainers of your lives 3. It is an unthankful reproach and blasphemy against the God of Nature yea and against the Lord your Redeemer to think that the wise Almighty God did make so noble a thing as a soul and place it in so curious an engine as the body where spirits and blood and heart and lungs are never idle but in constant motion and that he hath appointed us so glorious a retinue as aforesaid and all this to do nothing with or worse than nothing To sleep and rise and dress your selves and talk and eat and drink to tell men only that you are not dead lest they should mistake and bury you alive what is it but to put a scorn on your Creator and Redeemer to live as if he had created and redeemed you for no better and nobler ends than these 4. You do as it were pray for death or provoke God to take away your lives For if they be good for nothing else but idleness
life be best why do you blame it in your servants If it be not why do you live such lives your selves 14. By Idleness you shew that when you do labour it is but for your carnal selves and that it is not God whom you serve in your daily callings He that will labour when he is poor and feeleth the necessity of it and will give over all and live idly and playfully when he is rich doth shew that he laboureth not in obedience to God or else he would continue it but meerly to supply his bodily wants You have your reward then from your selves and you cannot in reason expect any from God But true Believers have another rule by which they live Col. 3.23 24. Whatsoever ye do do it heartily as to the Lord and not to men knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance for ye serve the Lord Christ 15. Idleness is a forfeiture of your protection and of your daily bread God is not bound to keep you to play and loiter and do nothing You have not a plenary right to your meat if you live in wilful idleness I shewed you Gods Commands before Gods Promise of prosperity is Thou shalt eat the labour of thy hands Psal 128.2 And if many in England that have most should eat no other than the labour of their hands it would cure their fulness The diligent woman Prov. 31.27 doth not eat the bread of idleness And Paul maketh it a Church-Canon 2 Thes 3.6.10 12 and commandeth and exhorteth us in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ that all work with quietness and eat their own bread and that the Church withdraw themselves from every Brother that walketh disorderly and that if any would not work neither should be eat 16. The idle rob themselves and others You rob your selves of the fruit of your own labours and you rob your Masters or your Families or whomsoever you should labour for Prov. 18.9 He that is slothful in his work is Brother to him that is a great waster Prov. 21.25 The desire of the slothful killeth him because his hands refuse to labour that is 1. The sluggishness of the wisher famisheth him And 2. The hunger or desire tormenteth him when he hath not the thing desired Eccles 10.18 By much sloth the building decayeth and by idleness of the bands the house droppeth through Prov. 19.15 Slothfulness casteth into a deep sleep and an idle soul shall suffer hunger And he that provideth not for his own kindred and relations but especially for those of his family hath denyed the Faith and is worse than an Infidel 1 Tim. 5.8 Hath no one need of you hath no one hired you hath no one any right to your labours that you are so long idle If none have need of you what do you in the world 17. The idle are drones and burdens of the Common-wealth And the best ordered Governments have made Laws against them as they did against other pernicious crimes 2 Thes 3.8 Paul laboured day and night that he might not be chargeable to any And you think because you have enough that other men must labour for you but you may live idly without any blame You live then upon the labours of others but who liveth upon yours Yea I have known some lazy persons that because they are professors of zeal in Religion or because they are Ministers or Scholars live idly in their callings and take their ease and think that all others that have riches are bound to maintain them like the Popish begging Fryers and they say He is covetous that cher●sheth not them in idleness and he that giveth not to them doth them wrong when Paul commandeth that they should not eat And when we ask them how they live they say Vpon the providence of God And when the tenderness of people causeth them to contribute to relieve these drones they hypocritically admire the providence of God who provideth for them and live in idleness and call it living upon providence 18. Idleness depriveth you of the great delight of doing good There is no such pleasure in this world as is found in succesful doing good No man knoweth it but he that tryeth it and that without any conceits of merit in commutative Justice To do good in Magistracy for the piety peace and safety of the people to do good as Ministers for the saving of souls to do good as Parents to educate a holy seed to do good as Physicians to save mens lives c. It is a pleasure exceeding all voluptuousness And this the idle wilfully reject 19. You lose all the reward of well doing at the last and fall under the doom of the unprofitable servant Mat. 25. who must be cast into outer darkness You must answer for all the talents of time and health and strength and parts to him who will judge all according to what they have done in the body And where shall the idle then appear 20. Idleness will destroy your health and lives Nothing but fulness which is its companion doth bring so many thousands unseasonably to the grave And do you neither love your souls nor your lives Are you only for your present ease 21. Idleness breedeth melancholy and corrupteth the fantasie and mind and so unfitteth you for all that is good Therefore the Idle that will do no good are fain to devise some vanity to do some game or play or dress or complement c. or else they would grow addle-brained and a shame and burden to themselves The constant labours of a lawful calling is one of the best cures of melancholy in the world if it be done with willingness success and pleasure 22. Lastly Idleness is the Nursery of a world of vices It is the field of temptation where Satan soweth his tares while men are sleeping When they are idle they are at leisure for lustful thoughts for wanton dalliance for idle talk for needless sports and playes and visits for gaming and riotous feasting drinking and excess for pride and an hundred vain curiosities Yea for contentions and mischievous designs Needless and sinful things must be done when necessary duties are laid by And if they are poor idleness prepareth them to murmure and be discontent and fallout and contend with one another to defraud others and to steal These and more are the natural fruits of Idleness But here I must annex two Cautions 1. That none make this a pretence for a worldly mind and life nor think that Religion is a fruit of Idleness nor say as Pharaoh did of the Israelites when they would go sacrifice to God Ye are idle Exod. 5.17 It is Idleness that maketh most men ungodly They are convinced that it is better to meditate on Gods Word and call upon his Name and give all diligence to make our calling and election sure But they are idle and say There is a Lion in the way what a weariness is it we shall never
Stand in awe and sin not Offer the sacrifices of righteousness Psal 51.17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit Matth. 9.13 12.7 Learn what this meaneth I will have mercy and not sacrifice Eccles 5.1 Keep thy foot when thou goest to the house of God and be more ready to hear than to offer the sacrifice of fools for they know not that they do evil All this telleth us that fools and hypocrites while they disobey Gods Law do think to make up all with sacrifice or to appease God with offering him something that is excellent But the acceptable Worshipper cometh to God as a penitent a learner resolving to obey as a Receiver of mercy and not a meriter Direct 2. Over-value not therefore the manner of your own Worship and over-vilifie not other mens of a different mode And make not men believe that God is of your childish humour and valueth or vilifieth words and orders and forms and ceremonies as much as self-conceited people do If one man hear another pray only from the habits of his mind and present desires he reproacheth him as a rash presumptuous speaker that talketh that to God which he never fore-considered As if a beggar did rashly ask an alms or a corrected child or a malefactor did inconsiderately beg for pardon unless they learn first the words by rote or as if all mens converse and the words of Judges on the Bench were all rash or the counsel of a Physician to his Patient because they use not books and forms or set not down their words long before And if another man hear a form of prayer especially if it be read out of a Book and especially if it have any disorder or defect he sticketh not to revise it and call it false Worship and mans Inventions and perhaps Idolatry and to fly from it and make the world believe that it is an odious thing which God abhorreth And why so Are your words so much more excellent than the words of others Or doth the Book or Press or Pen make them odious to God Or are all words ba● which are resolved on before-hand Is the Lords Prayer and the Psalms all odious because they are book-forms Or doth the command of other men make God hate them Let Parents take heed then of commanding their children prescribed words Nay rather let them take heed lest they omit such prescripts Or is it the disorder or defects that makes them odious Such are not to be justified indeed where-ever we find them But woe to us all if God will not pardon disorders and defects and accept the prayers that are guilty of them Many a time I have heard such forms of prayers whose disorders and defects I have much lamented and done my part to have cured and yet I durst not so reproach them as to say God will not accept and hear them Or that it is unlawful to joyn in communion with them And many a time I have heard as sad disorder in extemporate prayers sometimes by wrong methods or no method at all sometimes by vain repetitions sometimes by omitting the chiefest parts of prayer and sometimes in the whole strein by turning a prayer into a Sermon to the hearers or a meer talk or narrative to God that had little of a prayer in it save very good matter and honest zeal And though this prayer was more disorderly than the forms which perhaps in that prayer were accused of disorder yet durst I not run away from this neither nor say it is so bad that God will not hear it nor good men should have no comunion in it It is easie but abominable to fall in love with our own and to vilifie that which is against our opinion and to think that God is of our mind and is as fond of our mode and way as we are and as exceptious against the way or words of other men as childish pievish Christians are Look on your Book and read or learn your prayer in words saith one or else God will not hear you Look off your Book and read not or learn not the words saith another or God will not hear you But oh lamentable that both of them tremble not thus to abuse God and add unto his Word and to prophesie or speak falsly against their brethren in his Name nor to reproach the prayers which Christ presenteth from his servants to the Father and which notwithstanding their defects are his delight Direct 3. Offer God nothing as worship which is contrary to the perfection of his Nature as far as you can avoid it And yet feign not that to be contrary to his nature which he commandeth For then it is certain that you misunderstand either his nature or command Direct 4. Never come to the Father but by the Son and dream not of any immediate access of a sinner unto God but wholly trust in Christs mediation Receive the Fathers will from Christ your Teacher and his commands from Christ your King and all his mercies from Christ your Head and the Treasury of the Church and your continual Intercessor with God in Heaven And put all your prayers praises duties alms into his hand that through him alone they may be accepted of God Direct 5. Understand well how far the Scripture is a particular Rule as to the substance of Gods Worship and how far it is only a general Rule as to the circumstances that so you may neither offer God a Worship which he will not accept nor yet reject or oppose all those circumstances as unlawful which are warranted by his general commands Of which I have said enough elsewhere Direct 6. Look first and most to the exercise of inward grace and to the spiritual part of Worship for God will be worshiped in spirit and in truth and hateth the Hypocrite who offereth him a carkass or empty shell and ceremony and pomp or length of words instead of substance and draweth neer him with the lips without the heart And yet in the second place look carefully also to your words and order and outward behaviour of the body For God must be honoured with soul and body And order and reverend solemnity is both a help to the affections of the soul and a fit expression of them Never forget that hypocritical dead formality and ignorant self-conceited fanatical extravagancies are the two extreams by which the Devil hath laboured in all ages to turn Christs Worship against him and to destroy the Church and Religion by such false Religiousness The poor Popish Formalists on one side mortifie Religion and turn it into a carkass and a comely Image that hath any thing save life And the Fanaticks on the other side do call all the enormities of their proud and blustering fancies by the name of spiritual devotion and do their worst to make Christianity to seem a ridiculous fancy to the world Escape both these extreams as ever you will escape the dishonouring of God the dividing and
sanctification but if they live endeavour it by all possible care in a wise and godly education Remember that nature and your dedicating them to God do both oblige you to this care for their salvation And that the education of children is one of the greatest duties in the world for the service of Christ and the prosperity of Church and State And the neglect of it not the smallest cause of the ruine of both and of the worlds calamity Many a poor sottish lazy Professor have I known who cry out against ignorant dumb and unfaithful Ministers as guilty of the blood of souls and are so religious as to separate from the Assemblies that have Ministers that are but partly such when as their own children are almost as ignorant as Heathens and they only use them to a few customary formal duties while they think they are enough against forms and turn over the chief care of their instruction to the Schoolmaster And are themselves so ignorant dumb and idle unfaithful and unnatural to their poor childrens souls as that it is a doubt whether in a well-ordered Church they ought not to be denyed communion themselves They so little practise Deut. 11.18 19. 6.7 Ephes 6.4 c. Direct 5. If your children live to the flesh in an ungodly course of life contrary to the Covenant which by you they made they forfeit all the benefits of the Covenant And you can have no assurance by any thing that you can do for them that ever they shall be converted though it is not past hope And if they be converted at age their pardon and adoption will be the effect of Gods Covenant as then it was newly entered with themselves and not as it was made before for them in infancy Direct 6. Y●t because that still while there is life there is hope you ought not by despair or negligence to omit prayer exhortation or any other duty which you can perform in order to their recovery And though now they have wills of their own their salvation is not laid so much upon you as it was in Infancy at their first covenanting with God yet still God will shew his love to his servants in their seed and faithful endeavours are not vain nor hopeless and therefore it is still one of your greatest duties in the world to seek their true recovery to Christ Direct 7. If God make your children a scourge or a heart-breaking to you bear and improve it as becomes Believers That is 1. Repent of your own former sin your own youthfull lusts your disobedience to your Parents your carnal fondness on your children your loving them too much and God too little the evil examples you have given them and your manifold neglect of a prudent seasonable earnest unwearied instructing them in godliness your bearing with their sin and giving them their own wills till they were masterless c Renew your Repentance and you have got some benefit 2. Think how unkindly and unthankfully you have dealt with a gracious Saviour and a heavenly Father 3. Let it take off your affections from all things under the Sun and call them up the more to God For who would love a world where none are to be trusted and where all things are vexatious even the children of your love and bowels Direct 8. If they die impenitently and perish mourn for them but with the moderation of Believers That is 1. Consider that God is more the owner of your children than you are and may do with his own as he list 2. And he is more wise and merciful than you and therefore not to be murmured at as wanting either 3. And it is an unvaluable mercy that your own soul is sanctified and shall be saved 4. And the most godly have had ungodly children before you Adam had a Cain Noah had a Cham Isaac had an Esau David had an Absalom c. 5. And if all the godly that pray for their childrens salvation must be therein gratified all the world would then have been saved For Noah would have prayed for all his children and they for theirs and so to the worlds end Object Oh but my conscience telleth me that it is my own sin which hath had a hand in their undoing Answ Suppose it be so it is certainly a pardonable sin Do you then repent of it or not If you repent as you mourn for your relations so you should rejoyce that God hath forgiven you For repented sin is certainly pardoned to you and pardoned sin to you is as great cause of joy as unpardoned sin in your relations is cause of sorrow Therefore mourn with such moderation and mixed comfort and thanksgiving as becometh one that liveth by faith The affliction indeed is neer and great and heavier than any calamity that could have befallen their bodies and is not to be slighted by an unnatural insensibility But yet you have a God who is better to you than a thousand children and your cross is but as a feather if you set it in the ballance against your blessings even the Love of God and your part in Christ and life eternal CHAP. XXIV How by Faith to order our Affections to publick Societies and the unconverted world Direct 1. TAke heed that you lose not that common Love which you owe to mankind nor that desire of the increase of the Kingdom of Christ which must keep up in you a constant compassion to the unconverted world viz. Idolaters Infidels and ungodly Hypocrites It is pittiful to observe the unchristian senslesness of most zealous Professors of Religion in this point Though God hath purposely put the three publick Petitions first in the Lords Prayer to tell them what they must first and most desire that is the hallowing of his Name and the coming of his Kingdom and the doing of his Will on Earth as it is in Heaven yet they seem not to understand it or to regard it But their thoughts and desires are as selfish and private and narrow as if they knew nothing what the World or the Church is or cared for neither Their mind and talk is all of their own matters for body or soul or of their several Parties and particular Churches or if any extend his care as far as this spot of Land in Brittain and Ireland or some of the Reformed Churches they go further than their companions their selves and their side or party is almost all that most regard Perhaps the poor scattered Jews have a few words in the prayers of some but the miserable case of the vast Nations of the Earth who seem to be forsaken of God is neglected by them Five parts in six of the earth are Heathens and Mahometanes and of the sixth part the Protestants are but about a sixth compared with the poor ignorant Abbassines Armenians Syrians the Greek Churches and the Papists to say nothing what the most of the Protestants themselves are Yet are almost all these put by with
fully shew so also shall the Saints And it is not likely that this is wholly deferred till the resurrection but as they have a Glory before that with Christ and his Angels so they have now their part in this Superintendency before though both will be greater at the Resurrection If any say what use will there be of our superiority after the world is destroyed I answer 1. The Apostle Peter plainly telleth us though some would force his words into the dark that we according to his promise expect a new Heaven and a new Earth in which dwelleth righteousness And the Creation groaneth to be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the Sons of God Rom. 8.21 And the Heavens must contain Christ till the times of Restitution of all things which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy Prophets since the world began Acts 3.21 2. And he that said the Saints shall judge the Angels seemeth so intimate that the Devils with the wicked will be in a state of subjection or servitude to them hereafter Certain it is that Michael and his Angels shall be the conquerours of the Dragon and his Angels Rev. 12.7 9. And that the Serpents head shall be bruised by all the womans seed though chiefly by the Captain of our salvation But this shall now suffice concerning their employment 3. Behold also by Faith what the departed Saints are now enjoying And what is said of their place and work will tell you that They enjoy the fight of their glorified Head Joh. 17.24 They are with him in Paradise and therefore also enjoy the sight of the Glory of God Being absent from the body they are present with the Lord 2 Cor. 5.8 They see not as in a glass as here they did but with open face They enjoy the pleasures of a more perfect knowledge of God and all his wondrous works than this world affords They are happy in their works in the perfect Love and Praises of God and they are filled with the pleasures of his Love to them This is their fruition 4. Let Faith also behold what evils they are delivered from 1. From a heavy drossy body which since the fall hath been an enemy a prison and fetters to the soul and therefore they here groaned to be better cloathed 2 Cor. 5.4 5. Rom. 8.21 2. From the worlds temptations 3. From wicked mens malice and persecutions 4. From sickness pain necessities labours weariness and all the troublesome effects of sin 5. From all troublesome passions desires anger discontent disappointments griefs and cares and fears of evil 6. Specially from the fears of Hell and the doubts of their own sincerity and salvation and from the desertions of God and the terrible sense of his displeasure 7. From the troubles and errours of ignorance and all our natural imperfection 8. From the fears of death which now is more painful than death it self 9. From the suggestions of Satan and his malicious vexing disquieting temptations and from his flattering allurements which are much worse 10. From the company and the tempting or grieving examples of ungodly men 11. From all sin it self and all our moral imperfections and defects 12. And finally from all danger and fear of ever losing the felicity they possess These are the immunities of the blessed 2. When Faith hath seen the Saints in Glory look back and think next what they were lately here on earth that it may help you to compare your state and theirs And here you will see 1. That they were lately in flesh as we now are They had bodies as drossie as vile as frail as burdensome as ours are It cost them as dear not as it doth the sensual but as it doth the temperate person now to keep them up a while for the service to which they were appointed 2. They had pains and sicknesses as we have The souls in Heaven have escaped thither from bodies which have lain as long tormented with the Stone with Stranguries Collicks Gripes Convulsions Consumptions Feavers and other the most tedious painful and lothsome diseases as sober men on earth now feel 3. Satan was as malicious to them as he is to us and to many of them as troublesome he haunted them with as ugly temptations to the greatest sins to unbelief and pride and despair and self-murder and horrid blasphemy as he doth any of us Yea he did so by Christ himself Matth. 4. 4. They met with as many allurements to worldliness sensuality pride and lust in the worlds deceiving baits and flatteries as now we do and were fain to proceed every step towards Heaven by conflict and conquest as we must do 5. They were in as many wants and straits in as poor and low and despised a state as we are now They were tempted to cares and murmurings and discontents through their wants and crosses as well as we 6. They have been in dangers and in fears and many a time at the brink of death before it came and put to cry to God for deliverance in the terrours and anguish of their hearts Their flesh and heart and friends have failed them and all the creatures cast them off 7. They have gone through far greater persecutions for the sake of Christ and righteousness than ever we did So persecuted they the Prophets before you Mat. 5.11 12. Which of the Prophets did not your Fathers kill and persecute even of them for whom their posterity erected Monuments Matth. 23.36 37 38. We have not resisted unto blood as many of them did Heb. 11. The same and greater afflictions which we have undergone were accomplished on our brethren in this world 1 Pet. 5.9 We go through the same conflict as they did Phil. 1.30 We are no more falsly nor odiously slandered in any of our sufferings than they were Mat. 5.11 12. 8. They were men of like passions as we are for so James saith even of Elias that was carryed to Heaven without our kind of death They had their ignorances uncertainties doubts mistakes their dark thoughts of God and that world where they now are Many of them knew as little of it till they saw it as we do now Many a fearful trembling hour many a thought that God had forsaken them and that the day of grace was past have many of them had as well as we 9. Yea they were imperfect in all their graces they had an imperfect faith an imperfect hope an imperfect Love to God and man and many an hour in such groans as ours now are O when shall we be saved from our darkness and unbelief when shall we better love the Lord 10. They had their actual sins also Though none that were regnant after conversion their obedience was imperfect as ours now is Many of their faults and falls are left on record for our warning There is not one humane soul in Heaven besides our Saviours that was not once a sinner They all came thither
by a Redeemer as we must do They had their too great selfishness Phil. 2.21 They had their pusillanimity and fears of men as Peter and the Apostles They had their sinful controversies as Paul and Barnabas and sinful separations in complyance with the censorious as Peter and Barnabas had Gal. 2.16 17. They had their carnal sidings factions and divisions in the Church 1 Cor. 1. 3. Many a time have they been put to groan O wretched man who shall deliver me from this body of death Rom. 7 c. 11. They had as difficult duties to go through as any of us They were put upon as many tears and troubles watchings and travels fastings and self-denyal as the most laborious and suffering Christians now 12. They had as long delayes of the accomplishment of their desires as any of us 13. And lastly they past through death it self as we must do They lay gasping on their beds of langu●shing and death broke in upon every part and they underwent that separation of soul and body as we must do Their flesh was turned to rottenness and dust and laid out of the sight of man in darkness and remaineth to this day as common earth All this the Saints in Heaven have undergone This was their case a while ago who are now in glory And this was not only the case of some few but of thousands and millions and that in the most of these particulars even of all that are gone before us unto blessedness It is not we that are tempted first that are persecuted or afflicted first that have sinned first that must die first but all this host hath broke the Ice and are safely past through this Red Sea and are now triumphing in felicity with their Saviour Direct 3. Let Faith next look back and see by what way these Saints have come to this felicity I mean by what means they did overcome and win the Crown And briefly you will find 1. That they all came to Heaven by the Mediation the Sacrifice the meritorious Righteousness of a Redeemer Jesus Christ either as promised or as incarnate none of them were justified by the works of the Law or the Covenant of Innocency 2. That their common way was by Faith Repentance Love and Obedience Not by works of Righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of Regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost which he shed o● us abundently through Christ Titus 3.5 Even by the triple Image of the Divine perfections Power Love and Wisdom 2 Tim. 1.7 They lived soberly righteously and godly in the world and were zealous of good works looking for the blessed hope which they have attained Titus 2.14 15. Knowing that Repentance towards God and Faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ are the summ of saving doctrine and duty Acts 20.21 And that to fear God and keep his Commandments is the whole duty of man Eccles 12.13 And that the end of the Commandment is Charity out of a pure heart and a good conscience and of faith unfeigned 1 Tim. 1.5 and that Love is the fulfilling of the Law 3. They studied the Word of God or such means of knowing him as God afforded them in order to the attaining and maintaining of these graces Psal 1.2 and sought the Lord with all their hearts while he might be found and called upon him while he was near Isa 55.6 10. And did not presumptuously neglect Gods helps and despise his Word while they trusted for his mercy 4. They lived in a continual conflict against the temptations of the Devil the world and the flesh and in the main did conquer as well as strive They made it their work to mortifie those fleshly lusts which others make it their interest and work to please Gal. 5.17.21 22. 6.14 5. They suffered afflictions and persecutions patiently and being reviled they did not revile They loved their enemies and blest those that curse them and prayed for those that despitefully used and persecuted them Matth. 5.44 45. 1 Cor. 4.11 12 13. 2 Cor. 1.6 7. Heb. 11. They would not accept of deliverance from imprisonment torments and death upon sinning terms 6. They endured to the end and did not fall off and forsake the Covenant of their God Rev. 2. 3. 7. Lastly They did all this by the motive of their hopes of Heaven and by a confidence in the promises of it and in a heavenly mind and conversation as knowing that they did not labour or suffer in vain 1 Cor. 15.58 2 Cor. 4.17 1 Tim. 4.10 Rom. 8.18 Matth. 5.11 2 Thes 1.6 7. Heb. 12.2 This was the way by which the Saints have gone to Heaven the only true successful way Direct 4. Consider next what helps and means God gave them for this work and compare our own with them and see whether ours be not as great 1. We have the same natural capacity as they we are intellectual free agents made for another world and capable of all that they attained There is no difference in our natural faculties 2. We have the same God to shew us mercy 1 Cor. 12.5 There are divers operations but the same God Ephes 4.4 5. There is one God one Lord c. even the Lord over all good to all that call upon him Rom. 10.12 The same mercy which called them and waited on them calleth us even a God who hath no respect of persons but in every Nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousness is accepted of him Acts 10.37 Though he be a free benefactor he is a righteous Judge and he is good to all and the Father of every member of his Son 3. They had the same Saviour as we have the same sacrifice for their sins the same Teacher and the same example the same intercessor with the Father For though there be divers administrations there is the same Lord 1 Cor. 12.5 Ephes 4.4 For other foundation can no man lay than him who is the chief corner stone 1 Cor. 3.11 They all did eat of the same spiritual meat and drank of the same rock as we do which is Christ 1 Cor. 10.3 4. It was the reproach of Christ which Moses in Egypt esteemed better than their treasures Heb. 11.26 The same Physician of souls who hath us in cure did cure all them The same Captain who is conducting us to salvation is he that saved them The same Prince of the Covenant and Lord of life who conquered death and all their enemies hath conquered them for us and is preparing us for life with them They had no greater or better High Priest and Mediator with God than we have 4. They had the same Rule to walk by and the same way to go as all we have Gal. 1.7 8. 6.16 Phil. 3.14 15. The same Gospel and Word of God in the main though under various promulgations and administrations Those before the flood were under the Covenant of the promised seed
sufferers it will cause us to possess our souls in patience and to let it have its perfect work 8. It will much overcome the fears of death It is no small abatement of them that Cicero and such honest Heathens had to think of the thousands of their worthiest Ancestors and that they were to go the common way of all mankind But how much more may it encourage a Believer to think that he is not only to go the way of all the world through the gate of mortality but the way also which all Gods Saints have gone save Henoch and Elias who are now in Heaven Thus died all the Prophets and the holy men of God yea Jesus Christ himself before us that death might be conquered when it seemed to have conquered Heb. 2.14 9. It will do much to raise us from hypocritical reserves and temporizings and from lukewarmness and resting in low degrees When our conversation is with the holy ones above we shall have upon our minds an ambition to attain to their degrees and to do Gods will on Earth as it is done in Heaven It will much encline us to the highest and noblest sort of duty which the spirits of the just made perfect do perform He that converseth only with his own sad tempted sinful heart and with tempted faulty mourning Christians may learn to confess and mourn and weep and pray But he that also converseth with glorified spirits will be so rapt up with their heavenly melody that he will learn and long to love God more fervently to praise him more chearfully and to give him thanks more abundantly for his mercies Heaven-work is learnt by a heavenly mind in the use of a heavenly conversation 10. And to look much at our Brethren that are now in glory will also fill our lives with pleasures and make our Religion our continual joy and will help us to a foretaste of Heaven on Earth For we shall as it were take our selves to be almost with then and their melodies will be our delight and love to them will make their joyes to be our own And though it is the sight of God and our Mediatour by faith which must be our chiefest hope and joy yet while we are here men in flesh yea more when we have laid by flesh and blood the presence of all the blessed spirits and heavenly host will be a great though subordinate part of our heavenly felicity and delight Direct 6. When you have gone thus far consider what obligations lie upon you to converse by Faith with your Brethren in Heaven and to look up frequently to their state and work 1. Your necessary Love to God requireth it For as your Love to him must be shewed by your loving his Image in your Brethren so it requireth you to love them most that are likest God or else you love them not for his likeness And it requireth you to love them most whom God loveth most and that is those that are likest him and nearest him And he that loveth God in his creatures and loveth any one truly for God must love the Angels and perfected Spirits best because they love him best and are nearest him and likest to him and are also most beloved by him 2. The common nature of Love and Humanity requireth it For it requireth us to love that best which is best as is said But the blessed ones in Heaven are better than any here on Earth and therefore should be better loved 3. The nature of our Love to the Saints requireth it For if we love them as Saints and Godly we shall love those most that are most holy and that is the blessed ones above And if we love them most we shall certainly mind them and converse with them by Faith and not be voluntary strangers to them 4. It is part of that heavenly conversation which is commended to us Phil. 3.20 21. When it is said that our conversation is in Heaven it signifieth that our Burgeship is there and our interest and great concerns are there and our dwelling is there and our trading and thriving business is there and for it and our friends and fellow-citizens and those that we daily trade and converse with in love and familiarity are there even as our God and our Head and our Inheritance is there He never knew a heavenly conversation that pretending there to know God alone hath no converse with his holy ones that attend him and doth not live as a member of their society in the City of God that doth not with some delight behold their holiness unity and order c. 5. The honouring of God and our Redeemer doth require it that we daily converse with the Saints in Heaven Because it is in them that God is seen in the greatest glory of his Love and it is in them that the Power and Efficacy and Love of our dear Redeemer most appeareth You judge now of the Father by his Children and of the Physician by his Patients and of the Builder by the House and of the Captain by his Victories And if you see no better children of God than such childish crying feeble froward diseased burdensome ones as we are you will rob him of the chief of this his honour And if you look at none of the Patients of our Saviour but such lame and languid pained groaning diseased half-cured ones as we you will rob him of the glory of his skill and cures And if you look but to such an imperfect broken fabrick as the Church on Earth you will dishonour the Builder And if you look to no other Victories of Christ and his Spirit but what is made in this confused dark and bedlam world you will be tempted to dishonour his conduct and his conquests But if you will look to his Children in Heaven who are perfected in his Love and Likeness and to Christs Patients which are there perfectly cured and to his Building in the heavenly unity and glory and to all his Victories as there compleat then you will give him the glory which is his due Rev. 21. 22. 2 Thes 1.10 11 12. 6. So also you will dishonour Religion and the Church if you converse not with the Saints above For the reasons last given For you will judge of the Church and of Religion by such imperfect things as here you see where men turn Religion to the service of their worldly interests and ends and fight for ambition faction tyranny usurpation and worldly lusts under the sacred names of Religion and the Church and for the pretended Love of Christ and one another do tear the Church into shreds and worry and hunt and devour one another You will be tempted to be Infidels if you do not here converse with the sincere humble holy charitable Christians and look up to Heaven to perfect souls And then you will see a Church that is truly amiable holy unanimous and glorious in perfect Love 7. If you look not up to
Matth. 25. 2 Pet. 4.13 Direct 7. Thinks what a day it will be to the shame of sin when it shall be the reproach and terrour of the world and to the Honour of Holiness when faith obedience and love shall be the approved honour of all the Saints And what a day of admirable Justice it will be when all that seems crooked here shall be set strait O the difference that there will then be in the thoughts of sin and holiness in comparison of those that men have of them now Direct 8. Think what a confounding day it will be to the infernal Serpent and all his seed Matth. 25.41 16. When impudent boasters shall then be speechless and all iniquity shall stop her mouth Matth. 25.44 22.12 Psal 107.42 And when Lazarus shall be seen in Abraham's bosome and the enemies of the Saints shall see them advanced as Haman did M●rdecai and rejoycing when the Glory of Christ is revealed 1 Pet. 4.13 When every scorners mouth shall be stopped and all stand guilty before their Judge Rom. 3.4.19 and the wretched unprepared souls must for departing from God be sentenced to depart into misery for ever Matth. 25.41 46. Jude v. 6. Direct 9. And think what a change that day beginneth both with the Saints and with the world What a glory is it that we must immediately possess in body and soul and how we must partake of the Kingdom of our Lord Saints shall be scorned and persecuted no more The threatnings and promises of Christ shall be no more denyed by unbelievers Sin will be no more in honour nor pride and sensuality bear sway The Church will be no more ecclipsed either by its lamentable imperfections and diseased members or by the divisions of sects or the scatterings of the cruel or the slanders of the lying tongue Ephes 5.17 Satan will no more tempt or trouble us Rev. 12.9 Matth. 25.41 Sin and death will be excluded and all the fears and horrours of both For the face of Infinite Love will perfectly and perpetually shine upon us and shine us into perfect perpetual Glory Love and Joy and will feed these and the thankful and pra●seful expressions of them to all eternity Matth. 5.46 2 Cor. 4.17 Rev. 2 3. Direct 10. Lastly Think how neer all this must needs be If the day of the Lord was near in the times of the Apostles it cannot be far off to us If the worlds duration be to six thousand years the time which arrogant presumption most plausibly guesseth at it will be less than 350 years to it Though we know not the time we know it cannot be long And let me conclude with a warning to both sorts of Readers And 1. To the ungodly unprepared sinner Poor soul dost thou believe this dreadful day or not if not why dost thou dissemble by professing it in thy Creed if thou do how 〈◊〉 thou live so merrily or quietly in a careless unprepared state Canst thou possibly forget so great so sure so near a day Alas it will be another kind of meeting than Christ had with sinners upon earth when he came in meekness and humiliation not to judge and condemn the world b●t to be falsly judged and condemned by them John 3.17 12.47 Nor will it be such a meeting as Christ had with thee either by his Ministers that called thee to repent who were men whom thou couldest easily despise or by his Spirit which thou couldest resist and quench or by his afflicting Rod which did but say to thee Go sin no more lest worse befall thee Joh. 5.14 Heb. 12.10 12. 1 Tim. 5.24 Nor as the Judgment of mans Assize which passeth sentence only against a temporal life Luke 12.4 Nor like the treaty of a Judas with his new awakened conscience here O no! It will be a more glorious but more dreadful day It will be the meeting not only of a creature with his Creatour but of a sinner with a just and holy God and of a despiser of grace with the God whom he despised O terrible day to the unbelieving ungodly carnal and impenitent Heb. 10.31 2.3 10.12 Luke 19.27 There must thou appear to receive thy final doom to hear the last word that ever thou must hear from Jesus Christ unless his everlasting wrath be called his Word And O how different will it be from the words which thou wast wont to hear Thou wast wont to hear the calls of grace Mercy did intreat thee to return to God Christ by his Ministers did beseech thee to be reconciled But if thou intreat him for pardon and peace with the loudest cryes it would be all in vain Matth. 7.21 22 23. Prev 1.27 28. Now the voice is Behold the Lamb of God who taketh away the sins of the world John 1.29 But then it will be Behold he cometh with clouds end every eye shall see him and they also which pierced him and all the kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him Rev. 1.7 And behold the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his Saints to execute Judgment up●n all and to convince all that are ungodly among them of all their ungodly deeds which they have ungodly committed and of all their hard speeches which ungodly sinners have spoken against him Jude 14 15. Now he entreateth you to come to him that you may have life John 5 40. But then you will cry to the Mountains to fall upon you and the hills to cover you from his presence Luke 23.30 Rev. 6.16 Now he saith Behold I stand at the door and knock If any man hear my voice and open the door I will come in to him and will sup with him and he with me Rev. 3.20 But when once you hear that midnight cry Behold the Bridegroom cometh go ye forth and meet him then they that are ready shall go in and the door shall be shut against the rest Matth. 25.9 10. The door of mercy shall be shut Your Reprobation will be then made sure Rom. 9.22 2.5 The day of thy visitation is then past Luke 19.41 42. No more offers of Christ and mercy No more intreaties to accept them No more calls to turn and live Min●sters must no more preach and perswade and intreat in vain Friends must no more warn thee and pray for thee All is done already that they can do for thy soul for ever No more strivings of the Spirit with thy conscience and no more patience health or time to be abused upon fleshly lusts and pleasures All these things are past away 1 Cor. 7.31 2 Cor. 4.17 And the door of Hope will be also shut No more hope of a part in Christ No more hope of the success of Sermons of Prayers or of any other means No hopes of pardon of justification of salvation or of any abatement of thy woe Luke 16.25.26 Behold this is the accepted time behold this is the day of salvation 2 Cor. 6.2 Heb. 6.4 5 6 8
Psal 5.4 5. 9.7 James 1.15 By this time methinks you should better know what the use and meaning of the Gospel and Grace and Ministers is and what is the design of Preaching and in what manner it should be done Would you have us silent or talk to you as in jeast while we see such a day as this before us Every true Preacher spaketh to you with Judgment and Eternity in his eye Our work is to prepare you or to help you to prepare to meet the Lord and to be ready for your final sentence O then with what seriousness should we speak and should you bear and should both we and you prepare It 's pitty to see people hear Sermons many years and not so much as know what a Sermon is or what is the use and nature of it If our business were to draw away Disciples after us and to make our selves the admired heads of factions then we would speak those perverse things contrary to the doctrine which you have been taught by which our ends might be carryed on Acts 20.30 Rom. 16.17 Or if our design were to be high and great and rich we would flatter the great ones of the world that we might rule you with violence instead of love Or if we consulted our case we should spare much of this labour and let you silently alone at cheaper rates to the flesh than now we speak to you But O who can be silent who is engaged in this sacred office when he foreseeth what will shortly be the issue of our prevailing or not prevailing with you Now as we love Christ we must feed his sheep and necessity is laid upon us and woe be unto us if we preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 Our preaching Christ is to warn every man and teach every man that we may present every man perfect in Christ Jesus Col. 1.22 And to perswade men as knowing the terrours of the Lord 2 Cor. 9.10 11. Heb. 12.25 29. If it were only that we loved so to hear our selves talk or to be cryed up by many followers we deserved to pay dear indeed for such Preaching But when our Lord loved and pittied souls at the rate of his sufferings and bloody death surely our rates are not above the worth of souls O what a doleful sight is it to us to foresee by faith how loud how earnestly you would knock and cry when the door is shut and hope is gone And what you would then give for one of these daies which you now are a weary of and for a drop of that mercy which now doth beg your entertainment What then remaineth but as ever you believe that day and as ever you care what becometh of your souls and bodies for ever and as ever you would not be charg●d and condemned as final and obstinate refu●ers of mercy and salvation yea and for wronging the Ministers of Christ by making them study and preach in vain That you harden not your hear●s but hear Christs voice to day while it is called to day before the door of grace be shut O cry while crying and begging may do good Meet Christ now as may best prepare you to meet him then Meet him now as the Prodigal met his Father Luke 15. Saying I have sinned and am no more worthy to be called thy Son make me one of thy hired servants Meet God as Abigail met David 1 Sam. 25.32 34. with an offering of peace even Christ apprehended by an obedient faith When she heard from David Except thou hadst hasted and come to meet me all had been destroyed Meet him to enquire of his sacred Oracle what is like to become of thy soul as the King of Syria sent Hazael with a present to Elisha to meet him saying Shall I recover of this disease 2 King 8.8 Or as Paul met with Christ when he humbled and converted him saying Who art thou Lord and what wouldst thou have me do Acts 9. Meet him as the men of Israel and Juda did David their King 2 Sam. 19. striving who should first own and honour him Amos 4.12 Meet God thus n●w when h● ca●●eth you by his Word when he perswadeth you by his M●●●sters when he moveth you by his Spirit when he allureth and obligeth you by his mercies while he driveth you by affliction while he waiteth on you by his patience and by all th●se calleth you to repent to love him and to obey to set your hearts on Heaven if ever you hope it should be your portion Meet him thus now and then you may joyfully meet him in his glory II. And O all you that are true Believers lift up your heads with hope and joy for your final deliverance draweth nigh The world hath but a little while longer to abuse you Satan hath but a little while more to molest you The blinded Sodomites shall not long be groping for your doors You shall not long walk among snares and dangers nor live with enemies nor with troublesome unsuitable friends You have not long to bear the burden of that wearisome body of that seducing flesh of those unruly passions or those disordered thoughts you have not long to groan under the misery of that troubled and doubting conscience that darkened mind those dull affections those remnants of unbelief stupidity and carnality nor to cry out with weariness from day to day O when shall I know God better and love him more Death is coming and quickly after Christ is coming One will begin and the other perfect your full deliverance and put an end to these complaints And remember that though Death hath somewhat in it which to nature is terrible God having made the love of Life to be the pondus or spring of motion to the great engine of the sensitive world yet what is there in the second coming of Christ that should seem unwelcome to you You shall not meet an enemy but a friend your surest and your greatest friend one that hath done more for you than all the world hath done and one that is ready now to do much more and shew his love and friendship to the height One that will be then your surest friend when all the world shall cast you off You go not to be condemned but to be openly justified yea honoured before all the world and sentenced to endless glory You go not to be numbered with the enemies of holiness or with the slothful and unprofitable servants but to be perfectly incorporated into the heavenly society and to see the glorified faces of Henoch Moses and Elias of Peter and John and Paul and Timothy and all the Saints that ever you knew or whose writings you have ever read or whose names you ever heard of millions more You go to be better acquainted with those Angels that rejoyced at your repentance and that ministred for your good and that bore you in their hands and were your continual guard both night and day You go
must have one constant Order of intention which is before opened God must be first intended then Christ then the universal Church in Heaven and Earth c. But in the order of operation and execution there may be a great difference among our duties As God appointeth us to lay out some one way and some another Yet ordinarily as the emitted beams begin from God and dart themselves on the soul of man so the reflected beams begin upon or from our hearts and pass toward God though first beloved and intended by several receptacles before they bring us to the perfect fruition of him 4. Therefore the order of Loving or complacency and the order of doing good or Benevolence is not the same We must Love the universal Church better than our selves But we cannot do them sincere service before we do good to our selves And our neerest Relations must be preferred in acts of Beneficence before many whom we must love more 5. When two goods come together either to be Received or to be Done the greater is ever to be preferred and the chusing or using of the lesser at that time is to be taken for a sin I lately read a denyal of this in a superficial satyre but the thing it self if rightly understood is past all doubt with a rational man For 1. Else good is not to be chosen and done as good if the best be not to be preferred 2. Else almost all wicked omissions might be excused I may be excused for not giving a poor man a sh●lling whatever his necessity be because I give him a farthing No doubt but Dives Luke 16. did good at such a rate as this at least and else a man might be excused from saving a drowning man if he save his horse that while c. A quatenus ad summum valet consequentia in the case of desiring and doing good But then mark the following explications 6. That is not alwaies to be accounted the greatest good which is so only in regard of the matter simply considered But that is the greatest good which is so consideratis considerandis all things considered and set together 7. When God doth peremptorily tye me to one certain duty without any dispensation or liberty of choice that duty at that time is a greater good and duty than many others which may be greater in their time and place A duty materially lesser is formally and by accident materially greater in its proper season Reaping and baking and eating are better than plowing and weeding the Corn as they are neerer to the end But plowing and weeding are better in their season To make pins or points is not materially so good a work as to pray But in its season as then done it is better And he that is of this trade may not be praying when he should be about his trade Not that he is to prefer the matter of it before praying But praying is to keep its time and may be a sin when it is out of time He that would come at midnight to disturb his rest to present his service to his Lord or King would have little thanks for such unseasonable service 8. He that is restrained by a lower calling or any true restraining reasons from doing a good which is materially greater yet doth that which is greatest unto him Ruling and Preaching are materially a greater good than threshing or digging and yet to a man whose gifts and calling restrain him from the former to the latter the latter is the greatest good 9. Good is not to be measured principally by the Will or Benefit of our selves or any creature but by 1. The Will of God in his Laws And 2. By the interest of his pleasedness and glory But secondarily humane interest is the measure of it 10. It followeth not that because the greatest good is ever to be preferred that therefore we must perplex and distract our selves in cases of difficulty when the ballance seemeth equal For either there is a difference or there is none And if any it is discernable or not If there be no difference there is room for taking one but not for chusing one If there be no discernable difference it is all one to us as if there were none at all If it be discernable by a due proportion of enquiry we must labour to know it and chuse accordingly If it be not discernable in such time and by such measure of enquiry as is our duty we must still take it as undiscernable to us If after just search the weakness of our own understandings leave us doubting we must go according to the best understanding which we have and chearfully go on in our duty as well as we can know it remembring that we have a gracious God and Covenant which taketh not advantage of involuntary weaknesses but accepteth their endeavours who sincerely do their best 11. Meer spiritual or mental duties require most labour of the mind but corporal duties such as the labours of our calling must have more labour of the body 12. All corporal duties must be also spiritual by doing them from a spiritual principle to a spiritual end in a spiritual manner But it is not necessary that every spiritual duty be also corporal 13. The duties immediately about God our end are greater than those about any of the means caeteris paribus And yet those that are about lower objects may be greater by accident and in their season As to be saving a mans life is then greater than to be exciting the mind to the acting of Divine Love or Fear But yet it is God the greatest object then which puteth the greatness upon the latter duty both by commanding it and so making it an act more pleasing to him and because that the Love of God is supposed to be the concurring spring of that Love to man which we shew in seeking their preservation 14. Our great duty about God our ultimate end can never be done too much considered in it self and in respect to the soul only we cannot so love God too much And this Love so considered hath no extream Matth. 22.37 15. But yet even this may by accident and in the circumstances be too much As 1. In respect to the bodies weaknesses if a man should so fear God or so love him as that the intenseness of the act did stir the passions so much as to bring him to distraction or to disorder his mind and make it unfit for that or any other duty 2. Or if he should be exciting the Love of God when he should be quenching a fire in the Town or relieving the poor that are ready to perish But neither of these is properly called A loving God too much 16. The duties of the heart are in themselves greater and nobler than the actions of the outward man of themselves abstractedly considered Because the soul is more noble than the body 17. Yet outward duties are frequently yea most frequently
greater than heart duties only because in the outward duty it is to be supposed that both parts concur both soul and body And the operations of both is more than of one alone and also because the nobler ends are attained by both together more than by one only For God is loved and man is benefited by them As when the Sun shineth upon a tree or on the earth it is a more noble effect to have a return of its influences in ripe and pleasant fruits than in a meer sudden reflexion of the heat alone 18. All outward duties must begin at the heart and it must animate them all and they are valued in the sight of God no further than they come from a rectified will even from the Love of God and Goodness However without this they are good works materially in respect to the Receiver He may do good to the Church or Common-wealth or Poor who doth none to himself thereby 19. As the motion is circular from God to man and from man to God again Mercies received and Duties and Love returned so is the motion circular between the heart and the outward man The heart moving the tongue and hand c. and these moving the heart again partly of their own nature and partly by divine reward The Love of God and Goodness produceth holy thoughts and words and actions and these again increase the Love which did produce them Gal. 5.6.13 Heb. 6.10 Heb. 10.24 2 John 6. Jude 21. 20. The Judgment must be well informed before the Will resolve 21. Yet when God hath given us plain instruction it is a sin to cherish causless doubts and scruples 22. And when we see our duty before us it is not every scruple that will excuse us from doing it But when we have more conviction that it is a duty then that it is none or that it is a sin we must do it notwithstanding those mistaking doubts As if in Prayer or Alms-deeds you should scruple the lawfulness of them you ought not to forbear till your scruples be resolved because you so long neglect a duty Else folly might justifie men in ungodliness and disobedience 23. But in things meerly indifferent it is a sin to do them doubtingly because you may be sure it is no sin to forbear them Rom. 14.23 1 Cor. 8.13 14. 24. An erring Judgment intangleth a man in a necessity of sinning till it be reformed whether he act or not according to it Therefore if an erring person ask What am I bound to the true answer is to lay by your errour or reform your Judgment first and then to do accordingly and if he ask an hundred times over But what must I do in case I cannot change my Judgment the same answer must be given him God still bindeth you to change your Judgment and hath given you the necessary means of information and therefore he will not take up with your supposition that you cannot His Law is a fixed Rule which telleth you what you must believe and chuse and do And this Rule will not change though you be blind and say I cannot change my mind Your mind must come to the Rule for the Rule will not come to your perverted mind Say what you will the Law of God will be still the same and will still bind you to believe according to its meaning 25. Yet supposing that a mans errour so entangleth him in a necessity of sinning it is a double sin to prefer a greater sin before a lesser For though no sin is an object of our choice yet the greater sin is the object of our greater hatred and refusal and must be with the greater fear and care avoided 26. An erring Conscience then is never the voice or messenger of God nor are we ever bound to follow it because it is neither our God nor his Law but only our own Judgment which should discern his Law And mis-reading or misunderstanding the Law will not make a bad cause good though it may excuse it from a greater degree of evil 27. The judicious fixing of the Wills Resolutions and especially the increasing of its Love or complacency and delight in good is the chief thing to be done in all our duties as being the heart and life of all Prov. 23.26.12 4.23 7.3 22.17 3.1 2 3. 4.4 21. Deut. 30.6 Psal 37.4 40.8 119.16 35 70 47. 1.2 Isa 58.14 28. The grand motives to duty must ever be before our eyes and set upon our hearts as the poise of all our motions and endeavours As the travelers home and business is deepest in his mind as the cause of every step which he goeth 29. No price imaginable must seem great enough to hire us to commit the least known sin Luke 12.4 14.26 28 33. Mat. 10.39 16.26 30. The second great means next to the right forming of the heart for the avoiding of sin is to get away from the temptations baits and occasions of it And he that hath most grace must take himself to be still in great danger while he is under strong temptations and allurements and when sin is brought to his hands and alluring objects are close to the appetite and senses 31. The keeping clean our Imaginations and commanding our Thoughts is the next great means for the avoiding sin and a polluted fantasie and ungoverned thoughts are the nest where all iniquity is hatched and the instruments that bring it forth into act 32. The governing of the senses is the first means to keep clean the Imagination When Acha● seeth the wedge of gold he desireth it and then he taketh it When men wilfully fill their eyes with the objects which entice them to lust to covetousness to wrath the impression is presently made upon the fantasie and then the Devil hath abundance more power to renew such imaginations a thousand times than if such impressions had been never made And it is a very hard thing to cleanse the fantasie which is once polluted 33. And the next notable means of keeping out all evil Imaginations and curing lust and vanity of mind is constant laborious diligence in a lawful calling which shall allow the mind no leisure for vain and sinful thoughts as the great nourisher of all foul and wicked thoughts is Idleness and Vacancy which inviteth the tempter and giveth him time and opportunity 34. Watchfulness over our selves and thankful accepting the watchfulness fault-findings and reproofs of others is a great part of the safety of our souls Mat. 26.41 25 13. Mark 13.37 Luke 21.36 1 Cor. 16.13 1 Thes 5.6.2 Tim. 4.5 Heb. 12.17 1 Pet. 4.7 35. Affirmative Precepts bind not to all times that is no positive duty is a duty at all times As to preach to pray to speak of God to think of holy things c. it is not alwaies a sin to intermit them 36. All that God commandeth us to do is both a Duty and a Means it