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A13547 The parable of the sovver and of the seed Declaring in foure seuerall grounds, among other things: 1. How farre an hypocrite may goe in the way towards heauen, and wherein the sound Christian goeth beyond him. And 2. In the last and best ground, largely discourseth of a good heart, describing it by very many signes of it, digested into a familiar method: which of it selfe is an entire treatise. And also, 3. From the constant fruit of the good ground, iustifieth the doctrine of the perseuerance of saints: oppugneth the fifth article of the late Arminians; and shortly and plainly answereth their most colourable arguments and euasions. By Thomas Taylor, late fellow of Christs Colledge in Cambridge, and preacher of the Word of God, at Reding in Bark-shire. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1621 (1621) STC 23840; ESTC S118185 284,009 494

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against Innouation though after a most vnusuall manner they flocked by multitudes out of all the Cities Obiect But they be but a few poore meane men that flocke to Sermons Answ. 1. Here is Christs word true The poore receiue the Gospell Math. 11.5 2. Neither Christ nor his Word accepteth persons but gladly teacheth and encourageth such II. In that the people came flocking together with zeale and forwardnesse we learne thus much that we ought cheerfully and diligently to come together to heare the Word and bee ready before-hand when Christ is to speake These were present before he began to speake Reasons 1. This was prophecied of Beleeuers Esa. 2.3 Many shall goe vp to the Mountaine of the Lord and shall say Come let vs goe vp Psal. 122.1 I reioyced when they said Let vs goe vp to the house of the Lord. Esa. 60.8 Who are these that fly like a cloud and as Doues to the windowes 2. God lookes not onely that the substance and matter of an action be good but the manner must be sutable Hee cares for no carelesse seruice 3. A good heart findes nothing so sweet as God and his presence and this is promised to true seekers Dauid in many wants desires but one thing and that is to dwell in the house of God all his dayes to see the beauty of his face and Oh how amiable are thy Tabernacles my soule longeth after the liuing God when shall I appeare before him 4. These Iewes perceiuing some temporall good from Christ who filled their bellies healed their bodies raised their dead c. did thus flocke after him sea and land could not separate them But he that findes the sweetnesse of the Sonne of God bringing downe the bread and water of life to eternall life healing all diseases of the soule which no herbe or plaister could doe but one made of his owne heart-blood raising the dead and rotten in their sinnes stinking in the graue to a new and eternall life must needs flocke after him and follow him as cheerfully as euer did this people Vse Let this shame our dulnesse who are so slacke and heauie in the seruice of our God If Christ will waite vpon vs and our leisure wee will sometimes heare him a piece of an houre It is an vnconscionable sin of this place that though you come at length you come not flocking or together as this people nor goe out together Cornelius a great man and his company were ready against the time of Peters comming We are all now here before God saith he to heare the things that are commanded thee of God Not that this attendance is due to the persons of your Ministers but to their worke and office But you cannot say when your Preacher comes We are all here present nay scarce a few of so great a Congregation Take heed if you do any thing for God do it cheerfully doe it freely Let your prayers and praises and obedience waite vpon God in Sion A reuerent heart affected with loue of the things of God will preuent the watches in Gods worship that is no watch shall quicken it but it will bee before-hand And as the two Disciples hauing a desire to see Christ did out-run one another toward the graue and striue who might come first so the true followers of Christ creepe not like snailes to Church or striue not who shall come last in as many slip in in the middle of Sermon some almost at the end most after the beginning but run and striue who shall come formost Oh that the warme affection of our Congregation would affoord vs this cheerfull expectance Now out of the example of our Sauiour Christ who seeing the diligence and confluence of the people tooke occasion by that their thirst and desire to heare the Word to teach them we learne a speciall Christian duty namely to take all occasions of doing good within the compasse of our callings especially where we may receiue or impart the greatest good If the Minister see his people about him ready to heare the Word of God let him imitate his Lord and Master Now he hath a large field and thereby strong hopes not to lose all his seed Now hee hath before him an obiect of pity and compassion What pity to see a flocke without a shepheard to feede and fold them This Christ mourned for Math. 9.36 What pity to see a whole field of corne white for the haruest but rotting on the earth for want of a man to gather it So if the Word of God be to be heard beware of slipping that opportunity Thou canst not absent thy selfe from the Word preached no not once but to thine owne great losse and damage Ioh. 20.24 Thomas was absent from the Disciples when Christ came and shewed himselfe to the rest He was absent but once and perhaps vpon some waighty cause It may be he lurked and kept himselfe close for feare of danger by the malice of the Iewes or it may be he might be prouiding and settling his owne priuate affaires now his Master was apprehended and slaine and taken from him But what-euer the cause was the effect was grieuous for he was not onely depriued of the comfortable presence of his Lord nor only of that grace which the rest met together had and were confirmed in but when his fellow-Disciples were willing to communicate vnto him the grace of their Lords Resurrection he not onely beleeued not their report and made slight of such a cloud of most faithfull and eye-witnesses but resolues not to beleeue them To incredulity he ioynes a wilfulnesse and obstinacy Nay he is so farre from beleeuing them that if Christ himselfe should shew himselfe in person vnto him and would not suffer him to see the prints of the nailes and to put his finger into the prints of his wounds hee would not beleeue So how-euer men make it not a rush-matter to absent themselues from the Word preached once and againe yet be assured thou slippest such an opportunity of thine owne good as perhaps thou shalt neuer haue offered againe If thou absentest thy selfe of negligence thou depriuest thy selfe of some grace and comfort which the presence of the Lord amongst his people maketh offer of If of worldlinesse and to gather a little profit in that time all thy gaine will not counteruaile thy losse But if of wilfulnesse and contempt as many thou not onely thrustest away grace and comfort offered but pullest on thy selfe the wrath of God for contemning his gracious Ordinances and the blessed meanes of thy Saluation We see the occasion of our Sauiours Sermon Now of the kinde of his Doctrine He spake by a Parable A Parable in Scripture signifieth two things 1. Some serious matter and of great moment Psal. 49.4 I will incline mine eare to a Parable and vtter my graue matter vpon my Harpe Thus the graue and wise speeches of Salomon are called the Parables
were enemies to Magistracy to Iudgement-seats to lawfull warres and that Christianity let in all confusion into the world that their Religion was against common sense and cut the sinewes of all humane society and it was not fit they should liue whose calumnies Athanasius and Cyrill answered But all these were as winde when God takes him in hand none nor all of these carry any waight in his owne conscience but he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that fought against God and as Basill speakes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a resister of Christ. Vse 2. If carelesse Hearers be the worst Hearers then beware of carelesse and negligent hearing without attention affection or vnderstanding The Apostle Iames chap. 1. vers 23. describes many of our Hearers to be like a man that lookes his naturall face in a glasse but goes away and forgets immediately what a one hee was The Word is Gods looking-glasse held before men in the Ministery this lets them see their faces their blemishes and spots but they like fooles looke vpon the glasse to see themselues onely not to reforme any thing Others fitly compare many of our Hearers to Idols that haue eyes and see not eares and heare not for they want the seeing eye and the hearing eare no more profiting than the very Images on the walls as vnmoueable by the promises or terrours of God as the pillars in the Church as senslesse as the seats they sit on meere Idols haue their bodies present not their soules neither is the breath of the Spirit in thē Let such be requested to consider a little these ensuing Motiues 1. What a great deceiuing of mens selues this is Iam. 1.22 Be ye doers of the Word and not hearers onely deceiuing your owne selues What delusion is it to thinke it enough to see a Sermon or bee at a Sermon without attending or marking any matter deliuered or to heare words but no more conceiue the sence and meaning then children that are brought in their laps Thou deceiuest thy selfe in a vaine perswasion that thou doest an acceptable seruice when indeed thou further enthrallest thy selfe to Satan and procurest a more iust and fearefull condemnation 2. It is a marke of a Disciple of Christ to vnderstand the Word Luk. 8.10 To you it is giuen to vnderstand the mysteries of the Kingdome to others in Parables Call thy selfe a Christian while thou wilt thou art indeed no Disciple that attendest not the Word but a stranger to the Word a stranger to the life of God through the ignorance that is in thee Ephes. 4.18 3. It is one of the seuerest plagues to heare and not vnderstand Mat. 13.15 For the Lord vsually giues vp such 1. To strong delusions in matter of doctrine and iudgement to receiue any thing but truth 2. Thes. 2.10 2. To vile affections and outragious lusts in conuersation Rom. 1.26 3. To a iust damnation for receiuing the grace of God in vaine and for neglecting so great saluation Heb. 2.3 4. Consider wee what it is wee are called vnto namely to heare and vnderstand as our Sauiour exhorts Mat. 15.10 Vnderstand what is the good and acceptable will of God Rom. 12.2 Else all our and your labour is lost as Nehem. 8.8 It had been in vaine for Nehemiah to reade in the Booke of the Law distinctly and giue the sence vnlesse he make the people vnderstand the reading Obiect 1. But I am a simple man and want that capacity that other men haue I am not booke-learned but I meane well and haue a good heart and I hope God will accept my good meaning Answ. 1. This is certaine that without vnderstanding the minde is not good Prou. 19.2 God accounts not the man or minde good that cares not to vnderstand his Word 2. Simplicity giues no dispensation to be the worst Hearer or destitute of desire after knowledge And remember one thing that if thou be too simple in some good measure to know and vnderstand the Word of God thou art too simple to get to heauen the God of light cannot accept an ignorant and blind meaning for a good minde and meaning 3. See whether thou beest not more heedlesse than simple and so thy simplicity bee wilfull None so blinde as he that will not see Doest thou shut thine eyes and then say thou canst not see or stop thine eares and say thou canst not heare with vnderstanding Doest thou indeed attend as thou wouldst to thy learned Counsell when thy free-hold is called into question 4. Try thy selfe whether thy conceit faile thee not more in the things of God than in the matters of the world Perhaps thou shalt finde thy wit quicke and nimble enough at a good and safe bargaine Thou hast reach enough to fetch in the profits of the world art subtill enough to circumuent thy brother and wise enough to doe euill Now must thou blame thy selfe for want of attention and affection not for want of capacity 5. Suppose thou be very simple behold God hath giuen his Word to the end that simple men might vnderstand Psal. 119.13 And if thou beest not booke-learned lo hee hath giuen store of learned men and teachers and appointed them to teach thee and the more simple thou art the more art thou bound to follow the meanes and not to flatter thy selfe in thy negligence Obiect 2. But I haue an ill memory and cannot bring things away as many men can Answ. This is the common plea of our common Gospellers they are most carelesse Hearers without all attention and all is presently forgotten and then they accuse God for giuing them an ill memory But 1. Consider O Man how thou doest affect that thou hearest Many come to heare because they dare not open their Shops Others because they haue nothing else to doe will goe to Church with their neighbours but haue no affection to that heauenly businesse And now I say thou wouldest remember if thou affectedst the Word Thy memory is sure enough at a Play In any worldly matter thou canst carry away and repeate long discourses from poynt to poynt onely here is a short memory because of short affection 2. Consider how thou bendest thy wits and attendest to that which thou sayest thou canst not remember Doest thou not thinke these are matters not so neerely concerning thee to know Worldly matters which concerne thy calling thou canst remember for thou thinkest them neerly belonging vnto thee and art content to bee taken vp wholly in them 3. How dost thou attend Thou sittest downe sometimes hearest sometimes sleepest sometimes talkest sometimes readest and now while thou doest euery thing but the one thing necessary doest thou complaine of an ill memory No it is an ill heart and disposition a sure note of a carnall man who yet thinkes himselfe sure to be saued 4. How doest thou prepare thy ground Doest thou pray to God to open thine eyes that thou maiest see the mysteries of his Law Thou
true pleasure a carnall minde is capable of and they themselues who most enioy worldly pleasures can sometimes conceiue their owne ioy to be onely in the face and not in the heart and that their laughter is like to madnesse from the teeth outward and not so inward as it seemes And seeing such pleasures as delight the carnall appetite are seldome compassed without sinne what true ioy can be there where in the heart is fixed a sting of sinne which marreth all the sport Or if the delight be sinfull the conscience that smarts not for it in inioying it is the worse benummed and seared and farre from true ioy or pleasure though outward delights tickle him neuer so much He laughs as a man in paine being tickled but his vexation within is neuer the lesse 3. As there is little content in earthly pleasures so is there lesse stability or continuance the time is short 1. Cor. 7.29 One well saith of pleasures that they come like Oxen slow and heauily but goe away as Post-horses all on the spurre and stay not How long doth the pleasure of most delicate drinke stay beyond the swallowing or of the most sweet musike beyond the hearing or the most odoriferous smels longer than the flowre is held to the nose Spend whole dayes and nights in merry sports Playes pastimes doth the delight last longer than the present fruition And then leauing vs empty doe they not recompence men with some sorrow and griefe that they seeme now robbed either of their pleasures or of their time spent in and for them How truly are pleasure and sorrow called twinnes no sooner is one borne but the other holds his heele Yea the fairest and sweetest earthly pleasure is as hardly found without some molestation as a Rose without his thorne Make the world thy Paradise and thy belly thy god thy Paradise shall cast thee out shortly and thy god which thou seruest shall pay thee the wages of thy seruice and then thou shalt see it was but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pleasure for a season Heb. 11.25 like Ionas his Gourd soone worme-eaten and withered 4. Consider the danger of inioying worldly pleasures which is foure-fold First a voluptuous life is a walking vpon snares and ginnes which the wisest and most oculate man hardly auoids without being taken Alasse how vaine is the pleasure of birds feeding about the snare y t immediatly shall bring them into the Fowlers bag How vaine is y e sport of fishes playing with a deadly bait So dangerous and vnsafe is it to addict our selues to these alluring baits of worldly pleasures Now goe a while into your owne hearts and see whether in those worldly pleasures you haue most swallowed you haue not sometimes smarted if not so whether if there bee any smart in sinne you had not cause by them Be not like the horse or mule Psal. 32.8 yet the poore beast hauing once falne into a hole will not fall into the same hole againe if he see it and poore silly birds will auoid the same nets and ginnes which had beset them A second danger is the slaying of the soule by the pampering of the body 1. Tim. 5.6 Delicate widowes are dead while they liue there is no way to reconcile the seeming contradiction but to say that the delicate liuing of these widowes depriued their soules of the life grace Spirit of God and so being dead in sin in soule were vtterly vnprofitable vnmoueable in duties of grace heauenly life This fearfull estate the following of pleasures brought them into A third danger is the losse and refusall of heauenly ioyes and pleasures For God is not so prodigall of his best blessings as to bestow them where himselfe shall be sure to haue least thankes for them or themselues are vnder-valued Shall Esau haue the birth-right that preferres pottage before it And shall hee haue heauenly treasures and lasting ioyes committed to him and thrust vpon him that prefers euery trifling vanity and base pleasure before them A carnall man is a naturall foole he had rather haue a piece of painted glasse than a Diamond and would a wise man bestow a precious Pearle on such a foole No let him haue his choyce and enuy it not to him but pitty him that with Esops Cocke contemnes a Pearle and scrapes after a Barly corne The misery of this man is to be delighted with his misery A fourth danger is the indissoluble connexion of pleasure and iudgement to them that are louers of pleasures more than of God or their duty If thou wilt eate the forbidden fruit and reach foorth thy hand beyond Gods allowance to please thy senses in the day thou so doest thou shalt dye the death If the Pastor will take his ease and faile in his paines the blood of his people shal be required at his hands If the young man will take his pleasure and walke in the sight of his owne eyes he must remember that for all this he must come to Iudgement Luk. 16.25 The Parable bids the rich man remember Thou hadst thy pleasure here and Lazarus paine now therfore thou must be tormented and he comforted And woe to you that laugh now for ye shall weepe and mourne Chap. 6.25 Nay not onely are these two tyed fast together as with an Adamant chaine but euery dramme of this sweet pleasure shall be recompensed with a Talent of sorrow and griefe As he that by a moments delight in meate and drinke hath surcharged his stomake and surfetted himselfe must recompence halfe an houres pleasure with some moneths of deadly paine 5. Consider the difference betweene godly and wicked men One hath lusts and pleasures the other serues lusts and pleasures Pleasures will be knocking at the godly mans doore and he somtimes lets them in but he takes not thought to accomplish them as the other doth Rom. 13. vlt. They that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the lusts and affections Gal. 5.24 The one holds his pleasures and lusts against the Word as wee haue heard the other takes the Word the two-edged sword the sacrificing knife of our lusts the pruning knife of our pleasures and applies to himselfe 1. The precepts which command to cast downe euery thing that is exalted against God 2. Cor. 10.4 and to possesse our vessels in holinesse and honour and not in the lust of concupiscence which is directly contrary thereto 1. Thes. 4.4 2. The threatnings which tell vs If we walke after the flesh wee shall dye Rom. 8.13 3. The promises which are all made to them that cleanse themselues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit whereof voluptuousnesse is one and to such as grow vnto full holinesse in the feare of God 2. Cor. 7.1 4. The examples of Scripture as 1. Cor. 10.6 that we should not lust after things euill as they lusted with whom God was not pleased 6. Consider the examples of holy men which will plainly
treateth whereby we destroy so farre as is in vs and plucke him from Christ but if hee be a true Beleeuer the mighty hand of God vpholds him perhaps not from falling but from falling away 2. Christ is said to dye for a man two wayes 1. Improperly and generally for the whole visible Church for whom his death is sufficient 2. Properly truly and specially for the faithfull and Elect to whom it is effectually applyed in the vertue and merit of it Many of the former may bee destroyed none of the latter 3. Members of Christ are so two wayes 1. In the iudgement of charity and of the Church all outward members of the Church are to be reputed redeemed and iustified till by their Apostasie they declare themselues hypocrites for whom Christ neuer dyed 2. In the iudgement of certainty he dyed not for all and euery one Now the weaknesse of the argument appeares euidently That because some fall away for whom Christs death is sufficient therefore they may to whom it is effectuall or because some who in the iudgement of charity onely are redeemed fall away therefore such as are certainly redeemed by his death may 2. Pet. 1.9 We reade of one who was washed but forgets he was purged from his old sinnes Answ. There is a twofold washing One outward by the water of Baptisme by externall profession and outward reformation as Simon Magus The other inward true and reall by the blood of Christ applyed by the Spirit and faith by meanes of the Word and by the waters of sanctification And accordingly there is a twofold purging one reall and existent the other in opinion profession and iudgement of ones selfe and others The former being truly washed cannot forget their purgation as the latter may One drop of that water springeth vp to eternall life But it is no good argument Some professing cleannesse and purity fall away therefore such as are cleane indeed some washed with outward water therefore such as are baptized with the holy Ghost and fire Heb. 6.4 and 10.26 Some that are inlightened and taste of the good Word of God and are partakers of the holy Ghost and are sanctified by the blood of the Couenant fall away and cannot bee renewed by repentance Therfore Elect persons may fall away finally Answ. 1. In generall None of all these phrases implyeth true Regeneration Besides the Apostle speakes of hypocrites and such as sinne against the holy Ghost not of any true Beleeuer 2. In speciall and to the particulars Some that are inlightened fall away But this is of knowledge in iudgement not in affection of knowledge in the braine not in the heart of bare illumination without thorow-renouation or reformation of science without conscience experience practice What a great measure of knowledge had Demas Iudas and Iulian attained by which they seemed to haue cleane escaped such as are wrapped in errour And yet they were againe intangled in errour the greatest errour being to know and not to doe Now what argument is this It is possible for some truly inlightened to fall away therefore for some truly regenerate They taste the heauenly gift and the good Word of God and yet fall away Answ. By tasting may be vnderstood two things 1. An approbation in iudgement seeing in some measure the excellency of the gift Ioh. 4. but this in generall not in speciall in others not in himselfe as Balaam and Agrippa 2. An inclination in the affection rauished with that excellency as the bad ground receiued the seed with ioy and hearing and seeing the happinesse of the Saints wish and desire to partake of it if by wishing they could winne it but deale as hard Chapmen who see a commodity and their owne need of it and prize and cheapen it but will not giue so much as it must cost them and so goe away without it Balaam wished to dye the death but would not liue the life of the righteous And the young man in the Gospell was loth to sell all and so went away without saluation Whereas a sound Beleeuer will sell all with the Disciples and account all but losse or dung with Paul and exchange the treasures of Egypt with the Crosse of Christ as Moses Thus the hypocrite onely tastes the gift and feedeth not but the Elect feed on the Bread of life and drinke of the water of the Well of life vnto life eternall Now this is no good argument because some that taste doe fall away therfore so may he that feedeth on Christ. They that are partakers of the holy Ghost and sanctified by the blood of the Couenant fall quite away Hypocrites are sanctified by the blood of the Couenant 1. in respect of profession not of the power of holinesse 2. in respect of externall communion with the members of the Church in the Word and Sacraments not of inward society or sanctification 3. in respect of the application of the blood of the Couenant not by the Spirit but by the meanes but diuersly from that to the Elect To the Beleeuer truly by faith and to his saluation To the hypocrite in outward shew and appearance in opinion in the iudgement of charity onely and to his greater condemnation 1. Cor. 11.27 They are also partakers of the holy Ghost that is excellent gifts of the holy Ghost as 1. the spirit of feare howling for sinne and sorrow wishing the sins had neuer been committed as in Cain and Iudas but alwayes want the Spirit of loue 2. Externall reformation in great measure as Herod did many things but kept one Herodias 3. Feruent zeale for the Lord as in Iehu 2. King 10.16 but for a start at the beginning and for the sinnes of others not the owne 4. Holy motions with which the Spirit inspires them and often purposes and promises to follow them as Saul had many But 1. they neuer haue any but common gifts not the speciall gifts of faith charity true repentance proper and peculiar to the Elect 2. Though they haue the gifts of the sanctifying Spirit yet not the gifts of Sanctification 3. They neuer come to be sanctified throughout in body and soule and spirit 1. Thes. 5.23 nor to be throughly changed into the Image of God 2. Cor. 3.18 Now this is a weake argument Because some hauing the gifts of the sanctifying Spirit fall quite away therefore some also that haue the gift of sanctification They that taste of the powers of the life to come fall away This tasting also is incident to hypocrites and standeth in two things 1. Thoughts and meditations of the life to come 2. A powerfull working and forcing of the heart to looke somewhat that way and to doe something seeking to enter Yet they shall neuer enter 1. Because they onely taste not digest these meditations to follow them home 2. Because if they performe any thing they doe it not purely not for Gods glory but themselues not for loue of God but selfe-loue Gods glory and seruice
tandem aspiremus Non excedam epistolae modum nec indiget prudentia vestra monitione nostra Accipite quaeso libellum hunc eo quo venit in manus vestras animo amico scilicet candido Vtinam in eo omnia essent adeò ex voto composita vt nulla ex parte doctorum iudicia reformidem Praeiudicia non moror omnes indignitates tacito moerore paratior deuorare quàm vt Ecclesiae pro mensu modulo meo non prosim Non vno gradu incedunt omnes boni sed vna via si non cursum eundem eundem tamen cum optimis portum tenere me confido Dominus Iesus vos nouis Spiritus sui incrementis cumulet pios vestros conatus vbertim benedicat vos benedictionibus augere pergat vt in specula vestra ad finem vsque fructuosè perstetis donec Iustitiae illa Coronain coelis reposita capitibus vestris sit imposita à Iudice illo iusto in die illo Amen Conseruus vester THO. TAYLOR THE PARABLE OF THE SOWER AND OF THE SEED LVKE 8.4 c. 4 Now as much people were gathered together and were come to him out of all Cities ●e spake by a Parable 5 A sower went out to sowe his seede and as he sowed some fell by the way-side and it was troden vnder feet and the fowles of heauen deuoured it vp 6 And some fell on the stones and when it was sprung vp it withered away because it lacked moisture 7 And some fell among thornes and the thornes sprang vp with it and choked it 8 And some fell on good ground and sprang vp and bare fruit an hundreth fold GReat is the similitude betweene the spirituall Manna of Gods Word and that corporall of the Israelites in the wildernesse That refreshed hungry and famished bodies this hungry soules That was small both in substance and shew but great in vertue and power so this seemes weake when it is most powerfull That came from heauen and fell with the dew so this is heauenly and with it commeth the dew of grace That was white as snow and sweet as honey so this is pure and reioyceth the heart That fell euery day and all both good and bad gathered it but not all to the same end so all must daily gather of this Manna Euery one heares the Word but not all alike some it feeds to some it putrifies as Manna that was kept against Gods Commandement That ceased so soone as they came into Canaan so in our heauenly Canaan shall be no gathering by the Word and Sacraments the fruits of the good Land shall feed vs. He that was the true Manna and the Bread from heauen our Lord Iesus in this Parable shewes the nature quality vse and diuers sorts of gathering and gatherers of this little white and sweet seed of Gods Word affoorded to feed and strengthen vs through the barren wildernesse of this world In the words consider 1. A Preface vers 4.2 A Parable 5 6 7 8. In the Preface 1. The Ocasion as much people were gathered c. 2. The kind of Doctrine he spake by a Parable The occasion was the gathering of much people together and comming vnto Christ out of all Cities Christ had powerfully taught them and with authority not as the Scribes He preached a strange Doctrine to them who had been set so fast in the Rudiments of the Law He had wrought many great and potent miracles mightily declaring himselfe the Sonne of God The course of his life was most innocent in himselfe most charitable and helpfull to others Great was the fame of Christ in all the countrey so as people came flocking and thronging vpon him out of all the Cities by sea and by land Multitudes came all in the same action but not with like affection some to see his Person some to heare his Doctrine some to admire his Miracles some perhaps to picke or catch matter of accusation But what euer their intent was our Lord who neuer slipped any opportunity of doing good apprehendeth the Occasion and beginneth to teach them Here something is to bee learned both from the example of this people and of our Lord himselfe By example of the people learne two things I. To prease with diligence to heare the voice of Christ. He is the welbeloued Sonne in whom the Father is well-pleased Math. 3.17 therefore heare him chap. 17.5 Reasons 1. He speaketh the words of life Ioh. 6.66 and without them we abide in death He is the truth and the life chap. 14.6 not the Author onely but the publisher of it 2. Consider the recompence Where Christ seeth multitudes of men ready to heare hee will present himselfe ready to teach as here he saw the willingnesse and diligence of the people out of all Cities and hee spake vnto them 3. It is a sound testimony to the truth in good and holy manner with zeale and delight to heare the Word of God Hee that is of God heareth Gods Word And not to frequent the voice of Christ is to withdraw ones selfe vnto perdition And such though they bee in the Church yet are not of the Church 4. All other seruice and deuotions are lost and vnfruitfull if thou beest not a diligent and reuerent hearer Prou. 28.9 He that turneth his eare from hearing the Law his prayer is abominable 5. Consider the future danger If so many sorts of hearers be condemned as three of foure for want of a right and good manner of hearing how great damnation abides such as will not heare Math. 10.14 If any will not heare your words shake off the dust of your feet against that person Verily I say vnto you it shall be easier for Sodom and Gomorra than for that City or person Act. 3.23 Euery one that will not heare that Prophet shall bee cut off Vse See that ye despise not him who speaketh from heauen for if they escaped not which refused him that spake on earth much more shall wee not escape if wee turne away from him that speaketh from heauen Heb. 12.25 Obiect If Christ would speake from heauen we would come and heare and flocke together as these multitudes did But now we cannot heare Christs voice Answ. Himselfe hath said He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me Math. 10.40 Ioh. 13.20 Malice against the seruant proceeds from malice against the Master and so the Lord accounts it Act. 7.51 52. The holy Ghost is resisted when his messengers are resisted Obiect But we haue other businesse to doe our Trades to follow c. Answ. 1. One thing is necessary godlinesse is the greatest trade and the greatest reuenue 2. This people left their trades and businesses and flocked after Christ. Obiect Then should we incurre slander reproch disgrace Answ. 1. Thy praise shall be of God if thou be a good hearer 2. These feared not the breath of men or the Magistrates censure or sentence as
vnderstand for so Beza translateth the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and proues both out of the Syriake and out of the opposition of this ground to the next which receiues the Word with ioy that it were more conueniently read and translated which attend not than vnderstand not Vse 1. Lectio haec saith Gregory non indiget expositione sed admonitione Christ hath expounded this to our hand and therefore this needs not an Interpreter so much as a Practiser Thus then I proceed If the worst ground of all heareth the Word and those Hearers which shall be deepest in damnation are Hearers of the Word what shall then become of them that will not heare What haruest can they expect who will suffer no seed to be sowne in their fields Or what earth is that that is let lie vnsteared and vnsowne but some barren Common or some dry Heath and Wildernesse which brings nothing but thornes and briers whose end is to be burned What shall we say to our Popish Recusants who runne from the Church and stop their eares against the Word as if Religion and deuotion stood onely in flying the Scriptures the rule of all Religion Were they here present to heare mee I would tell them 1. That if they were of God they would heare his Word but as Christ said to the Iewes Yee are not of God because ye heare not his Word 2. If they were the sheepe of Christ they would heare his voice Ioh. 10.27 But Christs marke is worne off and they beare the marke of Antichrist 3. Were they of Christs kindred and acquaintance they would heare his Word Luk. 8.20 My mother and brethren are they which heare the Word of God and keepe it 4. Were they not wedded to that Man of sinne they would not so sinne against their owne soules Prou. 8.35 Hee that sinnes against me saith Wisedome hates his owne soule and all that hate me loue death 5. Were they heires of blessing they would not runne from the blessing of them that are Hearers of the Word and doers of it and so wrap themselues in that curse Act. 3.23 It shall be that euery person who will not heare that Prophet shall be destroyed from his people 6. Were their Religion of God they would not thrust away his Word with both hands contrary to the man of God Psalm 119.48 who lifted vp both his hands to the Word of God as if hee would pull it to him with both hands Were their Religion any other but a mystery of darknesse it would brooke the light which whosoeuer feareth or flyeth hee is an euill doer Were it any other but an heape or packe of Idolatry it would abide the triall of the Word But Dagon must downe before the Arke Euery contrary flies and expels the contrary Gods Word is the breath of Christs mouth which must blast wither the kingdome of Antichrist and therefore all the kingdome of Antichrist hates and shunnes it as the theefe the gallowes set vp for his execution Againe what shall we say to the despisers of Gods Word Many there are who make light account of a Sermon they had rather heare an Enterlude than a Sermon A game at Maw or Irish is as good an employment They can passe a day and a night at these sports with farre lesse tediousnesse than one houre at a Sermon To these I say 1. You shall bee arraigned at Christs Barre for despising the Lord Iesus himselfe Luk. 10.16 He that despiseth you despiseth me 2. You shall be cast and condemned to the most wofull damnation that euer befell the most notorious sinners in the world Beleeue not me but ●esus Christ himselfe Math. 10.14 15. He that shal not heare the words of his messengers it shall be easier for Sodom and Gomorrah in that day of Iudgement than for that man Oh woe worth thee that thou art a despiser Christ hath read the sentence of thy damnation already and vnlesse thou repent hee hath with strong asseueration adiudged thee to an heauier load of curses than shall be laid on Sodom and Gomorrah those filthy sinners which were burnt with fire and brimstone for their crying sinnes See the greatnesse of thy sinne in this grieuous punishment and if thou wilt not be deeper in hell than filthy Sodomites beware of despising the Word Heb. 12.25 Obiect If I escape so long I shall care the lesse Answ. No but for the present thou art as a condemned man bound and hampred with the plagues of God and especially that great plague that thou seest them not Deut. 28.15 If thou wilt not heare my voice then cursed shalt thou be in the City and in the field in the fruit of thy body and of thy ground in thy comming in and thy going out These and more than these awaite thee in euery corner Againe Gods curse is vpon thy soule euidently thou diddest neuer taste of the Kings Supper thou neuer knewest the felicity of Gods people thou art a leading with a guard of diuels to thine execution hast thine eyes couered as with a napkin of errour and ignorance as a felon ready to be turned off and thinkest thou thy selfe in good case all this while Lastly what may wee say to Persecutors of the Word and the Preachers of it such as would if they could with a sword slay those that seeke to saue them Like the Hearers at Nazareth who would kill Christ himselfe Luk. 4.28 Eliah shall bee counted a troubler of the State Daniel shall be watched and accused in the matter of his God Amos shall bee accused to the King as one whose words the whole Land is not able to beare 1. What need wee say more than they proclaime against themselues For who be they that stand against the Gospell and Preachers of it but Swearers Libertines Gamesters Drunkards Ruffians Couetous Adulterous and in their whole courses enemies to Righteousnesse that they must needs bee good men and deare to God that are encountred with such aduersaries 2. That Word which thou persecutest and wouldest driue out of thy conscience or wilt not heare the same shall pursue thee and follow thee as an Hue and Cry and thou shalt heare it and condemne thy selfe because thou couldest not endure it should condemne thy sinnes 3. The time comes wherein if thou timely repent not thou shalt see and say thou tookest the wrong end of the staffe and didst kicke against hard prickes and thy conscience shall conuince thee that what thou didst against Christs seruants and Gospell whatsoeuer thy pretence now be thou didst it against Christ himselfe who will pay thee home with thy owne coyne Iulian that cursed Apostate finding himselfe at last too weake cryed out Vicisti Galilaee vicisti Christ was far enough out of his reach he persecuted his seruants and Professors but his conscience now tels him it was against Christ who is too strong for him Writing against Christians he alleaged many things that they
highes him to these places at this time because he knowes now being at so good an exercise men least feare him and thinke him farthest off but indeed now he is neerest for he knows that then is the time for an enemie to work his greatest stratageme when hee findes his aduersary most secure and least expecting it Therefore our text saith Whensoeuer a man that is any man heareth then comes Satan he is busie with euery one but so as thou maist not conceiue him so busie with others as that he will passe ouer thee Vse Take notice hereby of his diligence and vigilancy who is not onely busie and stirring in euill and wicked actions to thrust them forward but euen in the best actions which if he cannot hinder he will corrupt and depraue if it may be Most will confesse being detected of some euill action Oh it was the diuell who was busie with me he ow'd me a spight but few discerne how busie and spightfull hee is in good actions to hinder God of so much glory and the godly of much comfort in such actions as he cannot hinder 3. How commeth Satan to take away the Word Answ. The Word shewes that Satan is not alwaies present nor alwaies tempting Not because he wants will but because God suffers him not alwaies But hovvsoeuer he vvill sure be vvith vs in the hearing of the Word aboue all other times And so he comes sometimes inwardly sometimes outwardly Inwardly 1. In many rouing by-thoughts which filling the phantasie turne the minde quite from the businesse in hand Hee casts into the minde some thoughts of profit some of pleasure or some vaine and idle cogitations that runne vp and downe the minde and all to draw the heart away from the Word Now is the diuell come and hath catcht the Word from thee A iust recompence of him that in Gods seruice will not giue God his heart and mind the diuell must haue them 2. In drowsinesse sleepe and heauinesse which steale away the minde from attention A fearefull snare of the diuell in which hee hath taken many who scarce sit downe to heare but presently are cast on a dead sleepe and we may as well speake to dead men or the pillars they sit by as to them and say as the Apostle doth in another abuse in the Church of Corinth Haue ye not houses to eate and drinke in so Haue ye not beds at home to sleepe in See you not how the diuell hath cast you into a nap lest you should heare and beleeue and be saued or that you haue taken some graines too many of that hellish opium which makes you sleepe vnto death Obiect But doe you thinke the diuell casts me asleepe I am heauy by nature and cannot helpe it and I sleepe not long Answ. If thou wert at some other exercise as a Play or a game at Cards or Tables or perhaps in thy Counting house thou couldst wake well enough or not be halfe so heauy or if thou wert in the Kings presence to receiue a charge from his mouth though thou wert very heauy naturally Assure thy selfe therfore that Satan adds his weight and workes with thy corruption And it is not the sleepe of thy body he intends but the sleepe of thy minde and of thy soule vnto death 3. He comes in many inward suggestions which stirre vp naturall corruption against the Word that if it must be heard it may not be beleeued as 1. It is but a man that speakes a simple ordinary weake and poore man and if he speake well I can speake well too saith one 2. Thou knowest as much as thou needest and what can hee teach me which I know not Am not I as able to iudge what is fit as he Nay I doubt not but I am as good as all the Sermons in the world can make me Now the diuell is come apparantly for Gods Spirit euer lets a man see his ignorance his nothing 3. What good is gotten by all this preaching My father liued honestly without it And what care many of our Noble men and men of great account for it And if I goe to Seruice and obey the Kings law and doe as my neighbours do and as my forefathers did what need more precisenesse Here now the diuell is come For no suggestion of Gods Spirit can extenuate the Word of God 4. But this man saith Ahab neuer speakes good to me I would heare any man but this Micah 1. King 22.8 But here the diuell is come he that set foure hundred false prophets to deceiue Ahab would haue him heare any beleeue any but Micah lest he should be saued If thy heart were vpright the words of God would be good vnto thee But thou hast a path-way of lusts and thou wilt walke to the end of them thou must sweare and blaspheme must drinke and swagger must prophane the Sabbath must be an Vsurer must vse deceit in trading lyes in selling must scorne zeale and grace and runne in the excesses of sinne after the fashion of the world and the diuell within tels thee Why maist thou not who shall hinder thee 5. But I know many good Preachers and good men of another minde of another practice and though this man be earnest against it they would not doe thus if it were so bad Heere the diuell is come who out of the opposition of corrupt Teachers and Libertine doctrines which he by them broached would falsifie the truth in thy minde dealing as a cunning Fisher who by one fish will catch another that hee may feed vpon both And hee would bring thee from a straite rule to a crooked example Thus the diuell comes inwardly Outwardly hee comes three wayes 1. By drawing the senses to outward obiects as the eye on this or that person or obiect to diuert the minde from the one thing necessary which we must watch against and as Christs Hearers fixe our eyes vpon our Teacher which greatly helpeth attention 2. By the euill counsell of carnall Politicians You are a man whose conuersation will be obserued you are rich you haue an Office you haue respect If you should be led away by Sermons you will be noted for a Puritane and a fauourer of such as will make little for your credit But heere the diuell is come in one of his children Act. 13.7 Sergius Paulus called Paul and Barnabas to him and desired to heare the Word of God but Elymas sought to turne the Deputy from the faith Paul spyed the diuell now come and said O full of all subtilty and mischiefe the child of the diuell and enemy of all righteousnes that ceasest not to peruert the straite waies of God! 3. By scoffes and reproches of wretched men who scorne the Word and wayes of God What will you beleeue all that he saith Nay wee must not let him make fooles of vs What hath hee to doe with such and such poynts our gouernment our callings Let him meddle
world are intangled againe therein as the dogge returning to his vomite and the Swine washed to her wallowing in the myre How many haue wee obserued so strict in their course that they could endure no sinne no nor the appearance of euill in themselues or others They seemed to hate the very garment spotted by the flesh Now they see many of the same things to bee more indifferent in which men may be more nice then wife Nay they are growne so strong as their stomacks like Ostriches can digest Othes Playes profane and wanton speeches in themselues and others Euery one sees them withering apace but themselues see it not Lastly how many out of their loue to Religion were formerly much and often in deare and costly duties for God for his Gospell and Saints as the Galatians who would part with their eyes to doe Paul good But now they can slinke away except the dutie be cheape and easie If good countenance to Religion or good words which are good cheape will serue the turne that they will affoord no more 4. Men wither in respect of meanes which should preserue their gifts and greenenesse Some haue made conscience of the Word preached and tasted the sweetnesse of it so as nothing could hinder them from hearing all the Sermons they could come at But now the man is nothing so sharpe set euery straw is a Lion in his way hee hath not so much leisure as he had or he hath a greater charge Whereas indeed hee onely hath not the same thirst and desire after Grace in the meanes of it but rather as an vnthankefull Israelite loathes the sweete Manna which at first was so precious Others were wont to pray much and often and that with such earnestnesse as if they had been right Israelites who were resolued to wrestle it out with God but now much of that labour is remitted the hand growes so heauie and so ready to fall downe that Aaron and Hur haue much adoe to support them Some were once diligent in instructing their families in reading the Scriptures with them in carefull watching ouer their behauior as if they had meant to haue gone thorow with Ioshua his resolution But now more then halfe the allowance of the family is taken away Thus as a man in decay casts off some of his traine and sets himselfe at a lower rate So hee that is withering in grace sets downe himselfe in iudgement affection practice and diligence in the meanes And this is the first generall thing proposed The second is the danger of such withering which we shall clearely see in foure particulars 1. In respect of God they are most hatefull seeing they can finde nothing more worthy forsaking then the good way and esteeme euery thing better worth keeping then Gods image and graces Therefore he stileth them Dogges and Swine 2. Pet. 2.20 and most vncleane beasts which his soule hateth as in whom his Spirit ceaseth to worke by illumination sanctification consolation and giueth way to the diuell 2. In respect of the Church they bring scandall to the weake and the scorne of the wicked vpon themselues and all Professors They wound the hearts of Gods children who in them are made vile to the World They open wicked mouthes to speake euill of the way of God Lastly they confirme and harden many in their libertine and loose courses 3. In respect of the sinne it selfe none more dangerous For first relapses wee say are farre more dangerous then first diseases Secondly Satan returning comes with seuen more wicked spirits then himselfe and so hee is for euer held vnder the power of Satan Thirdly this sinne is commonly punished with other sinnes which is Gods most fearefull stroke to which hee seldome giues vp his owne Fourthly it is in the degrees of the sinne against the holy Ghost and easily brings a man into that estate that there may bee left no sacrifice for his sinne 4. In respect of the iudgement that awaites and ouertakes this sinne First the house not founded on a rocke must fall and the fall is great and irreparable Matth. 7.37 Secondly the iudgement is certaine as which is already in part inflicted The talent is already taken away and nothing remaines but casting the vnprofitable seruant into hell-fire Matthew chap. 25. vers 28. The third generall thing proposed is Notes of a man withering in Grace And these are sixe 1. A resting in a common and generall hope of a good estate without desire or indeuour to seeke markes of certainty or speciall assurance in himselfe As a foolish Trades-man hopes his estate is good enough and beares his Creditors in hand it is so but hee is loth to cast vp his bookes or come to a particular view of it No surer argument of a man decaying 2. An opinion of sufficiency that hee hath Grace enough Hee will seeke no more because hee pleaseth himselfe in his present measure and hee that careth not to increase his stocke wastes of the principall And not to goe forward is to goe backward Therefore alwaies displease thy selfe in the measure of Grace alreadie receiued saith Augustine 3. A comparing of a mans selfe with those that are of lower and inferiour graces or meanes Our Fathers say some were saued with lesse adoe they heard but few Sermons and knew not what the precise fashion meant But what saith our Sauiour Luk. 12.48 Where men commit more more is expected Others come to Church as others doe and liue ciuilly and soberly yea haue as much knowledge as such and such of their ranke and they hope as much conscience too and are not very ambitious to steppe before others in this course But for the patternes of Scripture and the example of Saints registred for our imitation they thinke concernes not them because they cannot be Saints Here is a marke of a man withering and growing worse and worse who will not be drawne beyond them that are but a step beyond the worst because hee scornes the best examples as too singular 4. A shunning or slighting of Gods ordinances a willing excommunicating himselfe from the Assemblies when he list That mans strength is abating who fals from his meales Hee must eate that must liue And the plant that would not wither must draw moisture dayly Or if vsing publike meanes diligently hee neglect priuate hee is on the withering hand We cannot haue our ruinous hearts stand vpright further then we dayly repaire them The Word and Prayer dayly vsed are soueraigne meanes to heale dayly infirmities A sound Beleeuer whose leafe shall not wither is a tree standing by riuers of water 5. Secret sinnes ordinarily committed not bewailed not reformed and the same of such as men count small sinnes lesser oathes idle speeches rouing thoughts lashing out against Professors of Religion expense of time in excessiue gaming company keeping with naughtie and scornefull persons idlenesse in the calling or in the Sabbath If
also must bee made with the mouth and practice in the life This is the fruit by which wee know the roots of faith though vnder ground So much for sound roots to stand by The third thing for continuance in fruits is sound moysture First that of compunction or humiliation Not a scratch of the heart as with a pin but a thorow breaking of it with the hammer of the Law and piercing it as with a sword And good reason for 1. The deeper the Well the purer the water and the more plentifull so in deepe sorrow for sinne whereas a slight sorrow a sigh and away is like an hasty raine a little moystening the top but soone dryed away 2. Deepe sorrow stickes by the soule and keepes it soft and supple and in a continuall fitnesse for the practice of piety whereas a slight sorrow leaues it as dry as hard and as barren as before 3. The water of true repentance is like a Spring-water that runs continually not in publike onely but in the priuate closet the Fountaine issues still and euery godly man mournes apart This get vnto thee 1. To be a note of godlinesse A godly man shall still finde his heart a continuall fountaine of sinne and therefore cannot but with Ieremie wish his head a fountaine of teares 2. If thou wouldest lay vp grace safe lay it in a broken heart a broken and humble heart will endure the brunt where an vnmortified and proud professor will start backe at the mention of trouble One vseth this comparison Lay an egge or a chesnut whole in the fire when the fire begins to seaze on him he flies and leapes backe but breake them or cracke them before they abide the fire till they be dressed The same may be said of an heart not soundly broken nor subdued by sound humiliation Now for thy sound humbling behold the issue of thy corruption euer running and let the issues of godly griefe runne as fast as often The second sort of moysture is that of vnction or sound regeneration the graces whereof are compared in Scripture to water or moysture Ioh. 4.10 A springing or liuing Water which is neuer dryed vp but is euer in motion and liueth in the issues of it A godly man whose leafe must not fade must be planted by the riuers of this water Psal. 1.3 And as it is water of life still mouing so it quickens the dead soule with new life and brings the Christian at last to euerlasting life In his belly riuers of waters doe flow to life euerlasting Quest. How may I know I haue this sound moysture Answ. By the sound effects of it 1. Sound ablution It washeth the soule from the foule spots and issues of sinne 1. Cor. 6.11 Ye are washed and sanctified by the Spirit of our God 2. Sound refrigeration or refreshing two wayes First cooling and allaying the scorching heate of raging and accusing consciences as a sweet showre the parching heat of the Sunne in the drought of Summer in which seasons the Lord calls the weary and thirsty traueller Math. 11.28 Secondly by quenching all vnnaturall thirst One drop of this water quenched all the thirst of the world in Zacheus all the thirst of pride and malice against the Saints in Paul all the thirst of wantonnesse and foule sinnes in Mary Magdalene Of Matthew drinking it it was said Qui prius rapi●●at aliena postmodùm contempsit propria The Horse-leach became a Pellican 3. Sound nutrition or nourishment in grace As the water is to the fruits and Willow trees to preserue in them life and greennesse so is the water of grace a continuall torrent preseruing the life of grace so as the leafe shall not fall nor wither away Hence it is called milke for strength and wine for cheerfulnesse and comfort But how can a rush grow without myre or grasse without water 4. Continuall growth and fruitfulnesse Vallies are most fruitfull because moysture stands on them Egypt because of the riuer Nilus and trees by the water bring forth fruits in due season Psal. 1.3 Examine thy selfe If thou findest fructification of faith in the workes of faith and piety and perseuerance in grace in all estates thy moysture is sound and indeficient Quest. What meanes may I vse to attaine this sound moysture Answ. 1. Thou must be transplanted out of the dry and barren heath and wildernesse of this world and become a member of the Church For these waters runne from vnder the Sanctuary The fountaine is opened to the house of Iudah Ierusalem which were types of the Church This moysture is as wee heard sometime called milke feeding the babes of Christ that hang on the brests of the Church and sometimes wine Come buy wine and milke saith our Sauiour Esa. 55.1 which is onely to bee had in Gods Vineyard not in the Waste or Forrest of the world 2. Thou shalt not want moysture if thou want not thirst and desire The woman at the Well Ioh. 4. wanted this Water because shee had no knowledge of it or desire after it But the promise is no sooner to thirst than bee refreshed and satisfied Math. 5.6 3. Thou must haue right to the Fountaine of liuing Water which is Christ himselfe in whom dwelleth all fulnesse and of his fulnesse thou must receiue grace for grace Members can want no life or sence so long as the head is liuing neither can riuers be empty if the fountaine be not dry He that drinks of this Water shall neuer thirst more 4. Thou must prouide a Bucket to draw from this Fountaine The Well is deepe thou must therefore prouide the Bucket of faith which drawes vertue daily from Christ. The poore woman that came behind Christ because her faith durst not looke him in the face yet sucked from him vertue and grace sufficient for her cure 5. Prouide a cleane vessell to put this water in euen the vessell of a purified and regenerate heart emptied first from all dregs and filthinesse both of flesh and spirit and washed cleane by the Spirit of sanctification So much of the inward causes of vnfruitfulnesse in this second ground both positiue and priuatiue Now to the outward But in time of tentation goe away Vers. 13. and when the Sunne arose were parched Assoone as tribulation or persecution comes because of the Word by and by he is offended Math. 13.6 21. Heere are two things to be considered 1. That persecution comes because of the Word 2. When it comes a number of forward and zealous Professors fall quite away For the former Persecution properly is a part of the Churches affliction because of the Word In which description wee haue it distinguished from other afflictions and sufferings 1. In the kinde 2. In the subiect 3. In the causes For these are not common troubles with other men in the World which attend common nature or common occasions as sicknesse pouerty paine reproach or common
in the fire so these in the hearing but shortly after lose all the efficacy of the Word and become hardened as before Others stirred vp by the power of the Word to some good duty formerly neglected now grow to some resolution that no Lion in the way shall hinder them and purpose a man would thinke and themselues doe so vnfainedly a great change in themselues but shortly after proue like the sonne in the parable Math. 21.30 whom his father commanding to goe worke in the Vineyard he promised and likely he purposed he would but some other motion preuailing went not So wee haue many hearers many times in good moods but corruption of nature not subdued nor mastred which is not alwayes stirring alike watcheth the fittest time to resist the Word so as present purposes are seldome or neuer followed to practice and future performances Vse 2. Looke well to thy hearing for after-times that with knowledge thou mayest ioyne obedience and by the Word grow in grace as thou doest in dayes Content not thy selfe to heare with a soft heart or with a ioyfull heart if it bee hollow and rimie to let it slip Consider for motiues heereunto 1. That as God hath made our blood a carryer and conueyer of life thorow all the body so his Word to carry spirit and life thorow all the soule And lesse dangerous it is to breake a veine to let out all the blood and life of the body than to admit a clift in our soules that the doctrine of life and saluation should run out 2. The world casts nothing vpon him that is a waster and spend-thrift nor can hee be ruler of much that is not a faithfull keeper and sauer of little If thou sauest not that thou hearest nor layest it vp thou shalt neuer bee a rich man in knowledge faith comfort or experience 3. Nature teacheth to saue somewhat against a rainy day Consider what dayes thou hast to passe if prosperous if aduerse if sicke if sound if tentations on the right or left hand if life or death if whatsoeuer thou art naked without the Word without strength counsell comfort 4. A godly man will be a Christian at home as well as at Church and as Dauid walke vprightly in the middest of his house Meanes to heare for afterward 1. Be abundantly couetous to lay vp a good store for thy selfe against time to come Enlarge thy affections insatiably to gather all thou mayest This is a gracious and commendable couetousnesse 2. Esteeme it aboue all keeping more worth than much fine gold Psalm 119.127 Account it thine heritage and the ioy of thy heart vers 111. 3. Let it be in thy heart first treasure it there A man reserues his barne for his crop of wheat or other corne Wilt thou fill thy barne and garner with chaffe and stubble or wilt thou in stead of gold or pearles pester thy best cofer with drosse and pibbles which are heauie and cumbersome but of no price or value 4. Binde it on thy fingers Prou. 7.3 as a Ring that is euer in sight Practice is the best keeper of the Word The thornes sprang vp and choked it Now we are to intreat of the failing of the seed in this ground wherein because there is but little difference from the withering we spake of in the former grounds but that it proceedeth from other causes wee will therefore inquire into those causes as they are particularly and in order set downe in the 14. verse Cares Riches Pleasures These are described as the speciall thornes which choke the seed of the Word Whence note in generall what it is that lets vs from heauen not only the pursuit of vnlawful things but the abuse of lawfull It is not whoredome adultery theft murther Sabbath-breaking and the like that heere are said to choke the seede and hinder our haruest but the abuse of lawfull profits pleasures cares and desires Math. 24.38 As in the dayes of Noah they did eate and drinke and marry and giue in marriage vntill the day that Noah entred into the Arke c. What was it a sinne to eate to drinke to marry were these the things for which they were destroyed No but the abuse of these things they were so wholly in these as they securely cast off all admonitions and all prediction of iudgements these became thornes and choked all counsell and all the preaching of Noah and so their destruction was sudden not because it was not foretold but it was not beleeued or regarded Luk. 14.16 What was more lawfull than to buy a Farme and a yoke of Oxen or to marry a Wife But yet these shall neuer taste of the Supper not because they did these things but because they were so inordinate and intent on them that they refused the call to the Kings Supper And these three sorts of inuited ghests refusing the Kings gracious inuitation doe notably resemble and expresse these three sorts of thornes choking the Word the Farme noteth riches Oxen the cares of life and the Wife voluptuous liuing All which or any of them hinder men from the heauenly banquet So 1. Cor. 10.7 The people sate downe to eate and drinke and rose vp to play Reason 1. Sinnes in lawfull things are both more ordinary and lesse sensible both for the auoyding and preuenting as also for the recouery and repentance from them What a number of naturall and indifferent actions doth euery man goe ouer euery day into which creepe a number of sinnes because men take themselues free to doe as they list in them and onely content themselues in their liberty vnto the thing vnwilling to heare of any of Gods restraints or impositions in the manner or fruition of that liberty This poynt is very vsefull and therefore wee will giue some instances to shew how men doe infinitely abuse their lawfull liberties with the great hazard of their soules 1. In eating and drinking which is not onely lawfull but necessary Yet heere Christians offend exceedingly many wayes 1. When they eate not their owne bread 2. Thes. 3.12 2. When they eate without feare Iude 12. not before the Lord. 3. When they corrupt themselues in the creatures losing sobriety modesty chastity health and reason as the drunkard drownes his soule senses body and all 4. When they neuer taste the sweetnesse of God in the creatures more than beasts nor sanctifie themselues after feasting as Iob his sonnes 5. When they waste the creatures not remembring the afflictions of Ioseph Amos 6.6 2. What is more necessary than apparell decently to couer nakednesse to fence the body from iniury of weather and to put vs in minde of sinne But what a number of sinnes doe men and women put on with their apparell 1. For the matter which is not skinnes as Adams but stately and costly 2. For the manner while they take liberty to disguise themselues in strange attire and monstrous fashions shewing no other
hidden man of the heart but lightnesse vanity wantonnesse and slauishnesse to euery new-fangled fashion for which the Lord threatned to visit the Kings children Zeph. 1.8 3. For the measure while they passe all bounds of sobriety and waste more on their backes most prodigally than would clothe a number of the poore seruants of Iesus Christ And all out of this conceit that they may weare what they list and how they list not considering that the Lord hath tyed them as straitly to the rules of piety sobriety and charity in the wearing as to the necessity of wearing it selfe besides the waste of time and thoughts c. which should bee better occupyed 3. What is more lawfull yea more necessary than recreation But how doe men out of the lawfull liberty that God hath allowed them breake out most vnlawfully and most insensibly 1. In respect of the matter when with the foole Prou. 26.18 they make a pastime of sinne as of Dice condemned by the Lawes of the Land and Cards and lasciuious Dancing Playes Enterludes and all merriments wherein is no praise vertue or good report 2. In respect of the manner when they turne their vocation into a recreation when they powre out their hearts vnto pleasure as louers of pleasure more than of God when they waste their time and ingrosse it for sports to the hinderance of better duties in the publike and priuate calling when the publike or priuate duties of Gods holy Sabbaths are interrupted or omitted when to the dishonour of God his sacred Name by Othes and cursings is blasphemed or his holy Word iested vpon or his faithfull seruants the Preachers and Professors of Religion are reuiled reproched by Playes songs or scornes Lastly when other men are hurt by sports games as by winning their money to their impouerishment and hinderance or a mans owne estate as Salomon saith He that loueth pastime shall be a poore man both in grace and goods Yet what Gamester of a thousand sees himselfe tumbling in these sinnes Or where is one of a thousand that will be reclaimed from them 4. What is more lawfull and necessary than Marriage for the comfort of man for the continuance of the world and the Church by an holy seed But how many make vp a great heape of sinne by the abuse of this holy Ordinance Some conceit they may marry where they list the sonnes of God to the daughters of men not remembring the Apostles Canon alwayes in the Lord but ioyne with Infidels and enemies to Religion as Salomon to the turning away of his heart from the Lord. Others vse it rather to stirre vp naturall corruptions than to beate them downe Some rather to helpe one another to hell than to heauen or in earth while the Husband loseth his authority by vnthriftinesse bitternesse or lightnesse and the Wife shakes off his authority by sullennesse and contempt both of his person and commandements Others sinne against it more directly as when the Husband leaues the Wife of his youth to imbrace the bosome of a stranger or the Wife forsakes the guide of her youth and loues a stranger better Thus was the sinne of Dauid heightened that hauing wiues of his owne he must needs haue Vriahs also 2. Sam. 12. For this is to sin against the remedie 5. How lawfull is it and necessary to imploy a mans selfe in his calling But besides that many liue in vnlawfull callings or in none where is the man that sanctifies the particular passages of it by the Word and prayer Where is hee that retaines an heauenly minde in following his earthly businesse How many sticke not to gather Manna on the Sabbath day which shall rot betweene their teeth How many all the weeke long gather goods and driue their Trades with as many Othes lyes and glozings almost as words How many turne their Trades into Crafts getting as much by craft deceit and iniustice as by faire and lawfull following of their calling Where is the man that chokes not his generall calling with his speciall and incrocheth all the time of the weeke that scarce any can be allotted to the seruice of God either in Gods House or his owne How is it that men thrust themselues as busi-bodies into other mens matters and faile in their owne 6. What is more lawfull or necessary than to prouide for a mans owne Is not hee that prouideth not for his household worse than an Infidell 1. Tim. 5.8 But hence how doe numbers confound Christian and carking care not seeking first the Kingdome of God for themselues and theirs but becomming Drudges to the world and to their children prouiding no otherwise for them than the beasts for their young ones present food and harbour forgetting the words of the Apostle Ephes. 6.4 Bring them vp in the nurture and instruction of the Lord As if a Christian who takes care of the body and baser part of such as belong to him can forget or neglect the soule which is the farre more noble part of man Or as if he which performes it to his family which the very Law of Nature calls for at his hands should vtterly forget that which Gods Word euery where chargeth him withall 7. What is more sweet and necessary vpon earth than company and society with men whence the Philosopher calls man A sociable creature as the beasts be not But how many mischiefes creepe into the life and sinnes into the soule by the abuse euen of lawfull society as when men chuse or fall into swearing drinking or idle company when they runne promiscuously into all companies and fall to such exercises as they finde as Peter in Caiaphas his Hall when hee should haue been better employed or when they frequent societies where God and Christ is not but Satan and his Agents and a whole troupe of tentations And what hurt comes by mens communication which naturally is profane vnsauory vncharitable Besides euen good men in bad companies acquit not Gods glory nor themselues as they ought and in good company either doe not or receiue not the good they should This is the first reason 2. In things lawfull men are most secure and thinke themselues safest and there Satan is most where he is least suspected As the Serpent lyeth in the greenest grasse so Satan lyeth in ambush against vs in our most lawfull liberties As he laid his traine against our Sauiour Christ himselfe in the matter of meate and drinke when he was hungry so also against vs chiefly in things wherein God hath giuen vs allowance Wherein was it that Satan ouercame Lot was it first Incest with his two daughters No that was hainous but first hee foyled him in that which was lawfull he first abused himselfe in wine and then his daughters in Incest 3. Whereas our nature spider-like turnes our best and sweetest things to poyson Satan to our corruption adds his waight putting vs forward to abuse good
things and lawfull because this both hinders God of his glory in the meanes of our good and our selues in the end for which God alloweth them God hath giuen vs all our lawfull liberties as helpes to heauen we vs them as hinderances His grace puts them into our hands as staues to support vs in our way and wearinesse we by the abuse make them burthens and clogs to cast vs backe Hee allowes vs them as spurres to prouoke vs to cheerfulnes in his seruice we peruert them and they become as thornes to choke vs and hinder vs in his seruice Well knowes Satan that the best things abused become euill to him that so vseth them Christ himselfe shall be a Rocke of offence The Word if it kill not vices it killeth soules And the Sacraments are ranke poyson to the vnworthy receiuer He cares not how many gifts of nature no nor of grace a man hath so as out of them arise pride ambition enuie c. which are as a Canker consuming them And much lesse cares he how many gifts of Fortune as they call them that is wealth and honour a man hath so as they make him swell with disdaine or vainly confident in his wealth or secure in his course or licentious in the bold committing of sin Let wealth flow in as waters from a full fountaine so they drowne the soule in perdition Thus Gods glory is impaired which he expects for his goodnesse and mans sinne inlarged which hath made himselfe so miserable by so great mercy Vse 1. To let many a man see his sinne and errour who neuer suspects hurt and danger in such lawfull things as riches and pleasures and cares of the world They wonder they should bee thornes who neuer felt the pricking but haue tasted much sweetnesse in them and in nothing more But our Sauiour well knew the nature of them through the malice and infirmity of men abusing them Hee well saw that no thornes doe so choke the seed as these the Word and that many who found such sweetnesse in them haue falne short of saluation by them If thou haddest neuer eaten forbidden fruit nor fed vpon stolne bread the abuse of lawfull and allowed profits and pleasures will keepe thee out of heauen The Farme lawfully gotten but vnlawfully affected may make thee neuer to taste of the Supper And the hauing and inioying the wife thou hast married may make thee say flatly I cannot come Thinkest thou the diuell hath no baits but in his hellish tentations Yes his baytes lye euery where If thou beest a rich man hee hath deceitfulnesse of riches If a poore man he hath the cares of this life If any other thing affect thee he hath lusts of other things to make thee fall short of saluation Say not with thy selfe I am no adulterer no murtherer no theefe and therefore am in a good way to saluation vnlesse also thou hast watched Satan and carried thy selfe cleere and faire in thy calling in thy wealth marriage recreation company meate drinke and apparell Neither say I thanke God I am no Recusant I come to Church I heare good Sermons and if any could tell me a better way to heauen I would surely take it But bewaile thy abuse of lawfull liberties Here were many that heard Christ himselfe and yet were damned for nourishing at the same time these thornes that choked all Neither say I am a Professor of the Gospell and am zealous against sinne euery where and loue them that feare God For when Professors reuolt to the world and giue themselues to an vniustifiable liberty in following the profits and pleasures of this life they shall see grace thriue as corne among thornes which as they eate the seede so our hearts and liues are eaten vp with the cares and delights of this life Vse 2. If such lawfull things as these proue sharp and piercing thornes what sharpnesse must we imagine in vnlawfull What an euill thing and bitter is it to venture vpon sinne expressely prohibited to reach out the hand for bread of deceit to drinke in with greedinesse stolne waters and with delight to feede vpon forbidden fruit What is this but to walke vpon snares and thornes which will sting the conscience and wound the soule to certaine and speedy death Luk. 17.28 As in the dayes of Lot they ate and dranke bought and sold planted and built c. Heere one askes why our Sauiour makes no mention nor chargeth the Sodomites with those far greater sinnes of which we reade in the story Gen. 19. as the contempt of the Word their violence against Lot their horrible and crying sinne of Sodomie but onely those which seeme light or no sinnes in comparison And the answere is that wee might conceiue what a fearfull plague belonged to such fearefull enormious courses when as euen lawfull things and such as without which life cannot bee maintained immoderately vsed were punished with fire and brimstone Thinke it too much to offend in thy lawfull liberties although thou venture not vpon vnlawfull For if he that offends in the former cannot but breake thorow a thorne hedge not without pricking and tearing himselfe How much more shall hee wound himselfe that dares venture ouer that sharpe hedge of curses wherwith God hath mounded hedged his Law Oh that bold sinners shamelesse harlots debosht drunkards blasphemous swearers and profane Sabbath-breakers would thinke on this Vse 3. Learne we to moderate our lawfull and naturall desires as wherein so many snares doe lye Desire no outward fauours without inward grace to vse them without which Gods mercy proues but thy iudgement And for thy better direction in the right vse of lawfull things take these Rules 1. Consider that lawfull liberty vsed to the full is exceeding dangerous and restraint is necessary Hee that will take all the liberty he may will sometimes take that he may not Hence it was that the Iewes in punishing malefactors were wont to giue but 39. blowes whereas they might giue forty 2. Cor. 11.24 Of the Iewes fiue times receiued I forty stripes saue one Let this be thy care also to cut thy selfe somewhat short euen in that which is lawfull for the more flesh is pampered the more is the Spirit weakened and foyled 2. Consider the Author of all thy liberties that while thou hast the sweetnesse and comfort of them hee may haue the glory of them of whom and by whom and for whom are all things by Iesus Christ Rom. 11. vlt. 3. With the vse of naturall things labour to ioyne a spirituall vse and so while we cherish our bodies with them we shall also refresh our soules As for example In the vse of meate and drinke stirre wee vp our selues to labour for the bread and water of life In putting on our clothes labour to put on Christ as a garment In marriage see thou meditate much and often on that sweet contract betweene Christ and the soule and so in the rest This
Lord is neere to all that call vpon him to all that call vpon him faithfully Therefore hold his presence in thine eye who is with his in sixe troubles and in seuen A child vnder his fathers eye wing cannot be neglected 4. Walke religiously and holily bee such a one as ouer whom his care extends Bee a fearer of God for no good thing shall be wanting to him that feares the Lord Psal. 34.9 10. The Lord is neere to fulfill the desire of them that feare him So Tertullian obserues that there was more in the blessing of Iacob then of Esau a profane man namely the dew of heauen as well as the fatnesse of the earth and first that then this Genes 27.28 39. 5. Looke vpon all examples of the Saints in former ages and see if at length they lost by casting their care on God see and say if God did forget them for euer but if they graued his feare in their hearts hee hath grauen them on the palmes of his hands Esa. 49.16 I haue graued thee on the palmes of my hands and what is a more present helpe than the hand of a man All thy walles are euer in my sight God doth euer behold the defences and meanes of protecting them who cast their care vpon him Goe along with me to Mount Moriah and consider the businesse of Abraham which would haue rent asunder any worldly heart with worldly cares But casting the whole care of it vpon the Lord the very name of the place tells thee Iehouah prouidebit God will prouide he will be seene in the Mount if not afore yet then at furthest 4. The last meanes to be rid of earthly cares is to change them into better For the heart will be caring for something And because the defect in necessary duties makes a man abound in vnnecessary therefore let vs take vp such lawfull and warrantable cares as may consume and eate vp the other The Scripture commending many vnto vs I will note some 1. Seeke the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and then other things shall bee cast vpon you The way to obtaine earthly things is to bee lesse carefull and distracted for them and more carefull and diligent for heauenly Esa. 1.18 If ye consent and obey ye shall eate the good things of the Land If a great Prince be in chase of a Kingdom will he spend his thoughts on a Copy-hold 2. Be carefull about our sinnes both to get pardon of them and get out of the power and bondage of them 2. Cor. 7.11 For this thing that ye have been godly sorry what great care hath it wrought in you what clearing of yourselues c This is a thoughtfull consultation as in the Conuerts being pricked for their sinnes Act. 2.37 What shall we doe to be saued A care to mortifie the sinne remaining A care to preuent sinne to come and a carefull watch against the first motions of sinne A care to keepe on our weapons and to hold the sword of the Spirit in our hands to cut off the heads of tentation 3. Vse great care about thy soule Prou. 4.23 Keepe thy heart with all diligence as a City besieged is continually watched day and night Ciuill honesty makes many carefull that murther adultery and grosse filthinesse breake not forth of their bodies and hands but Religion hath speciall care to keepe these out of the heart as well as the life And as Nature doth instinct a care for prouiding bodily food and necessaries so Grace quickeneth the care for the food and refreshings of the soule in good meanes ordained for that purpose 4. A speciall care must be taken to walke awfully before God Mic. 6.8 He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord requireth at thy hands euen to humble thy selfe and walke with thy God A care to obserue and doe all that is written in the Booke of the Law of Moses not to turne therefrom either to the right hand or to the left Iosh. 23.6 A care of euery good worke both of the generall and speciall calling both for watching and apprehending all occasions of good that are offered and of cheerfull doing all duties which are laid in our power and to doe them in such manner as God requires with sincerity of heart and to doe them to those ends which beseeme vprightnesse Gods glory mans edification our owne discharge and to doe them to the end with constancy and perseuerance 5. A care must be had to keepe the vnity of the Spirit in the bond of peace Ephes. 4.3 In one word Let thy cares be for God for thy soule for thy neighbour All other things either hate or care not for And the deceitfulnesse of riches The second sort of thornes which the Parable mentioneth are riches to which the Text ascribes two qualities both preiudiciall to the Word and saluation 1. They are choking thornes 2. They are deceiuing thornes Of both which I may say with Gregory Quis mihi crederet si spinas diuitias interpretari vellem cùm illae pugnant istae delectent Who would beleeue mee if I should interpret these thornes to bee riches seeing thornes doe pricke and vexe a man but riches delight a man Yet our Sauiour Christ who is the eternall Wisedome of his Father giues vs this interpretation and that most aptly 1. Wealth is spina pungens pricking thornes full of molestation For as thornes pierce mens bodies so they that will be rich pierce themselues thorow with many sorrowes 1. Tim. 6.10 And as a man walking vpon thornes is prickt on euery side so is a man greedy of gaine before him is cogitatio comparandi round about him labor augendi behinde him timor amittendi dolor relinquendi periculum iudicandi The crauing thoughts of getting the labour and toyle of increasing the feare of losing the sorrow in forsaking the danger of reckoning pricke him on euery side 2. Wealth is spina vulnerans cruentans it woundeth and fetcheth blood riches would the soule and bring many bloody sinnes vpon it Ahab brings the blood of Naboth vpon his soule and family for Naboths Vineyard And Iudas brought the blood of Iesus Christ vpon his owne soule for euer for thirtie pieces of siluer 3. Wealth is spina spolians a worldling in seeking his wealth loseth his soule as Shimei seeking his seruant lost his life And what doth it profit a man to winne the world and lose his soule Nay the godly sometimes are spoyled by wealth for as the sheepe loseth her wooll among thornes so euen good men lose not their soules as the former but many graces by meanes of riches 4. Wealth is spina suffocans choking the Word and choking grace in the heart as thornes doe the seede cast into the ground Doctr. There is great danger in riches to choke a mans Religion and disappoynt his soule of saluation For as thornes are to a ground sowne so are
totall in all parts here is a new Creature 2. Cor. 5.17 as the old nature is a Leprosie spred ouer all parts This Creation is a renouation of the whole soule and man which for this worke absolutely depends on the Creator as euery creature doth And then God createth a good and honest heart 1. When the holy Ghost creates in the soule sauing faith by which a man is vnited as a member of Christ to the Head and applyeth to himselfe Christs righteousnesse For thus Faith is said to purifie the heart Act. 15.9 2. When the same Spirit inwardly mortifieth all corruptions in the soule minde will and affections and putteth in stead of them holy desires and good motions and renueth in the heart daily the Image of God which is the goodnesse and honesty of it Thirdly there must be the grace of heauenly Influence and Irrigation No ground can be good which hath not a fauourable aspect from the heauens so as both the shine of the Sunne and the showres and dewes of heauen may cherish and water it So our hearts are made good when the heauens answere the earth Hos. 2.21 that is 1. When Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse darteth the beames of his grace and fauour daily vpon our hearts to inlighten them with sauing knowledge and to warme and cherish them with influence of grace without whom wee can doe nothing nor haue any life in vs. 2. When the ground of our hearts is daily mollified and moystened by a three-fold moysture First of the blood of Christ daily sprinkled and applyed to the conscience For as the blood of beasts applyed to the roots of trees makes them more fruitfull so the blood of this Immaculate Lambe sprinkled on the roots of our hearts makes vs fruitfull Christians Secondly by the moysture of the Word of grace which as the raine from the clouds is euery way beneficiall to the ground of our hearts to mollifie them and keep them in fitnesse vnto fruitfulnes Ier. 31.33 God makes our hearts good by writing his Law therein Thirdly by the moysture of the Spirit of grace whose worke alone it is to apply y e two former namely the vertue of Christs blood and the power of the Word to the conscience for the clensing of the hart By which worke of his the heart of a dead and barren heart becomes more fruitfull than euer Egypt did by the inundation of Nilus But because all this grace of Action is imperfect in this life therefore that our hearts may become truly good and honest there needs also the grace of Acceptation The best ground is good but in part and No man can say his heart is cleane but much euill and guile will cleaue vnto it Yet where God hath begun a good worke and beholds a constant purpose of good resoluing against all sinne and to please him in all things he is pleased to behold onely the worke of his owne finger and to see vs onely in our Head in whom he beholds vs all faire and good imputing his goodnesse to vs and couering our remainders of euill in him Thus hee esteemed Nathaniel in whom great weaknesse appeared a true Israelite in whom was no guile Ioh. 1.47 that is none raigning none imputed And so hee esteemes vs also according to that we are comming vnto and shall attaine not by that we haue attained These are the Meanes whereby our hearts become good Now of the Markes whereby they may be knowne so to be And here because the heart of man is deceitfull aboue all things and euery one challengeth to himselfe a good heart which yet is giuen but to a few scarce a fourth part and a better gift is not giuen by God to the sonnes of men therefore wee will insist the longer to anatomize a good heart and discouer the seuerall passages and signes of it which in euery thing will discouer it selfe one way or other Turne it any way you will it is good and honest These Markes because they are many wee will in generall reduce them to seuen heads and consider this good heart 1. In respect of God 2. Christ 3. The Spirit of God 4. The Ordinances of God 5. It selfe 6. Good duties 7. Sinne and euill I. In respect of God it hath fiue excellent properties First it desires neerer vnion with God daily and all things shall set it neerer vnto God For it knowes that euery thing is so much the more good as it approcheth vnto the chiefe Good Dauids heart was a good heart and herein the goodnesse of it bewrayed it selfe Psalm 73.28 It is good for me to draw neere vnto God Whereas an euill heart flyes from God and keepes aloofe from him euen when it drawes neerest him in his worship Esa. 29.13 Secondly if it seeke God it will seeke him with the whole heart Psal. 119.10 which is a sound conformity of the inward and outward man directed in the seruice of God according to the truth of his Word And because it is hearty hee will vphold the worship of God and seeke him at all times morning and euening on weeke-dayes as well as on the Sabbaths out of Lent as deuoutly as in Lent not only when he is sicke but when he is well In all places in his owne house as well as in Gods House like Moses who was the same in Pharaohs Court as among Gods afflicted people In all companies a good heart is euer like it selfe and stands to God with whomsoeuer it conuerseth Paul is a good Confessor and Christian not only among the Disciples but euen those that count Religion heresie Act. 24.14 Nay it seeketh and serueth God alone if it can get no company as Ioshua c. 24.15 Whereas a bad heart doubleth with God and diuides it selfe betweene God and Mammon It can pretend seruice to Christ and blanch with Antichrist as those Samaritans that feared the god of the countrey because of the Lions and the God of the nations 2. King 17.33 It cannot pray at all times Iob. 27.7 but in affliction diligently Hos. 5.15 nor in all places neuer so kindly as when it stumbles into a Church as the Samaritans thought God would onely be worshipped in the mountaine It can frame and sort it selfe to all companies entertaine all practices either of Protestants or Papists please the most profane speake for and against good men and good things as the occasion serues Thirdly a good heart will onely and wholly stand to Gods approbation in that it doth or doth not Thus farre it lookes to men 1. To walke innocently and cut off occasion of scandall 2. To please his neighbour in that which is good Rom. 15.2 3. To acquit himselfe if hee may come to a iust Apologie and to the faces of accusers say as 1. Samuel 12.3 Behold I am here this day whose Oxe or whose Asse haue I taken c. But it lookes not to please man principally the first care
is to please God nor to please man by doing any euill nor by leauing vndone any good it is bound to by the calling it will not be afraid to depart from any good purpose or practice for mens displeasure Againe it can set it selfe naked before Gods presence to whom it desires to stand it desires liuing and dying to be acceptable vnto him 2. Cor. 5.9 A true Israelite hath praise enough to bee praised of God and to be a Iew within and can more satisfie it selfe with Gods allowance than a thousand witnesses Further it dares appeale to God and flie to his Tribunall when men accuse it as Dauid Iudge me according to mine innocency and Moses when Israel would not heare turned to the Lord saying I haue not taken so much as an Asse from them nor hurt any of them Numb 16.15 Lastly if men will condemne him timerously vnheard vnconuinced if all his wary carriage cannot obtaine a right iudgement and sentence then out of sence of innocency and goodnesse of conscience hee can contemne such vniust iudgement and fearelesly expect the Iudgement of God who will make his innocency shine as the light as Dauid against his scoffing and slaunderous Michol 2. Sam. 6.22 It was before the Lord and Paul against the carnall Corinthians 1. Cor. 4.3 I care little to be iudged of any man A good heart cares not for mans allowance if God allow him This is comfort for the seruants of God whether publike or priuate that the testimony of their conscience makes them care no more for the obloquie of profane men than the barking of dogges A little they may be moued sometimes more than needs but much they care not But an euill heart cannot abide the presence of God but flies as Adam and sets him out of sight It dreades the Iudgement of God and trembles like Felix It lookes asquint and dares not stand in a good cause for feare of men as Ioh. 12.43 Many beleeued but durst not confesse for they loued the praise of men And if it cannot be approued of God it is content with Saul to be honoured before the people Fourthly a good heart resteth and reioyceth in God as in the best and onely portion Psalm 73.25 Whom haue I in Heauen but thee or whom in Earth in comparison of thee It holds all other things as moouables vsing them as not vsing them and is onely comfortable that it wants not him in whom is no want It knowes the Lord hath designed his portion and maintaines him out of his owne fulnesse as out of his portion both for his spirituall and temporall estate Hence his ioy in his presence is the greatest and so is his sorrow in his absence stepping aside and clouding his presence now the good heart mournes after him and thirsts for his presence as the Hart for water And as the losse of the whole world is nothing to this so the whole world cannot make it vp nothing but God himselfe satisfieth it And seeing God hath made himselfe his portion he is carefull to make himselfe Gods portion by entring couenant with him as the Israelites Deut. 32.10 But an euill heart affects God in his gifts more than himselfe Professing him the best Benefactor and thanking him for all indeed it mindeth earthly things And his portion is in this life or else hath none Fifthly a good heart aymes at the glory of God in all things In all his parts 1. Corinth 6.20 in his body because it is his and in his spirit because he is a Spirit In all his actions whether naturall as eating drinking 1. Cor. 10.31 or spirituall the parts of his worship He will cleaue to the Word to know and obey it in prayer giues him the glory of hearing and so in confession Iosh. 7.19 and in praises Psalm 50.23 and in beleeuing Rom. 4.20 and a reuerent vse of his Name and Sabbath Yea he will glorifie God what-euer it cost him nothing is so deare to him as to lay it in the scoales with Gods glory And if there be an opportunity he will shew it euen in difficult commandements as Abraham and dangerous as Daniel and costly as Zacheus Whereas an euill heart maketh shewes of glorifying God in spirituall actions but not in naturall or in his actions not in spirit neither God nor his Word get any of his thoughts As for duties of difficulty danger or cost it casts them quite off as Saul and the young man Thus a good heart behaues it selfe toward God II. In respect of Christ it hath fiue other excellent qualities First it preferreth Christ before a thousand worlds All other things all aduantages whatsoeuer are but losse and dung in comparison of Christ Phil. 3.8 The Church esteemes her Welbeloued the chiefe of ten thousand Cant. 5.10 Why what seeth she in Christ aboue other what is thy Well-beloued aboue other well-beloueds Answ. She seeth in him such purity of nature such power of merit such perfection of loue such freedome in promises and such truth in performances as nothing in the World can so affect her Shee seeth him euery way more beautifull then the sonnes of men Psalm 45.3 therefore she sels all for the Pearle as the Disciples left all to follow Christ. But can an euill heart espy such beauty in Christ or can it thus affect him Is not a Pigge better to a Gadaren or a messe of pottage to a profane Esau Who almost preferres not the riches of the world aboue the riches of Christ Nay Christ and his profession are generally esteemed the greatest losse Secondly a good heart reioyceth more in Christ and his loue than in all worldly ioyes Cant. 1.3 We will reioyce and be glad in thee thy loue is better than wine And Dauid will make the Lord his song all the day long Quest. Why what cause of ioy is there in Christ Answ. 1. A good heart seeth in Christ a full redemption from wrath and pardon of sinne therefore reioyceth in God his Sauiour as Mary Luk. 1.46 Esa. 61.10 I will greatly reioyce in the Lord saith the Church for he hath clothed me with garments of saluation 2. It seeth in Christ Gods fauour returned a new couenant and league of friendship made with God himselfe of an heire of wrath made an adopted sonne an heire of God and co-heire with Iesus Christ. 3. It seeth by Christ the Spirit put into his soule sealing vp Gods loue chasing away ignorāce being the Spirit of light working faith and kindling the prayer of faith sending it boldly to the Throne of grace and making it cry Abba Father with assurance that we can but aske and haue and that we are not so ready to knocke as he to open It feeles the vertue of Christs death killing corruptiō and perfecting his sanctification 4. It sees in Christ a blessed future estate of glory prepared for it selfe in which he shall behold the face of God in Heauen and
in body become like the glorious body of Iesus Christ when all fruites of sinne shall bee absent and no part of blessednesse wanting vnto it But can an euill or carnall heart thus reioyce which hath no part in Christ no portion among the sonnes of God no spirit but that which ruleth in the world no portion but on earth No their ioy is lower than so in their wisdome wealth strength in their Wiues Children cattell in honour pleasure lusts and sinnes The stranger enters not into this ioy Prou. 14.10 Thirdly a good heart seeing that Christ hath giuen himselfe wholly to it giues it selfe wholly to him For by vertue of the mutuall couenant made betweene Christ and the beleeuing heart and the spirituall contract and marriage Christ the true and louing husband of his Church giues himselfe and all his substance to the faithfull soule And she being allured by his louing and faithfull promises giues her selfe wholly to him in duty and affection Cant. 6.2 My welbeloued is mine and I am his He is mine not in common graces or generall fauours but in speciall and sauing graces by an inward and secret presence by a most neere and vndiuided coniunction For two persons to say they are man and wife onely because of some common fauours passed He did me a good turne gaue me such a gift c. is absurd It is the chamber and bed-presence secret and inward company that is a signe of marriage So say Christ is thine not by common fauours but when hee meets the soule with sweet refreshings and comes and lodgeth in thee by the faith of thy heart And I am his His Spouse and wife and haue giuen my whole selfe vnto him for heerein I see all my happinesse placed He communicates his nature to me euen the Diuine nature 2. Pet. 1.4 and changeth mine he makes his wife glorious Ephes. 5.27 Moses marryeth an Ethiopian and cannot change her colour But he makes me of a sinner a Saint of a Saint in earth a Saint in heauen He aduanceth my estate euery way hee being rich I cannot bee poore he communicates with me all his goods his righteousnesse his life his glory are all mine And he euer commiserates my estate as a louing husband doth his wiues in all my troubles he is troubled And therefore well said I I am his But an euill heart contracts it selfe to the world to the seruice of lusts as Ephraim followes after many louers Hos. 2.5 committing spirituall harlotry with all base suters and estranged from Christ. And Christ not being thine thou canst not say thou art his Fourthly a good heart prepares a roome in it for Christ to dwell in It knowes that in spirituall contract cohabitation is most necessary Ephes. 3.17 that Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith It knowes that Christ will dwell there not onely as a Master in his house ruling preseruing prouiding but as a Lord in his Temple It knowes that a common man will not dwell in an hog-sty much lesse will the holy Lord in any but an holy place It knowes also that Christ hath prepared for it a sweet roome in heauen And therefore it will fit it selfe as a sweet lodging for Christ still repairing the ruines and proceeding to full sanctification still beating out more lights because the light abides not darke corners sweeping out daily with the besome of mortification all lusts both of heart and life and watering the chamber with teares of repentance It receiues nothing in that may offend him or grieue his Spirit And as the Lords Temple perfumes it daily with the morning and euening sacrifices of Prayer and Praise Finally it trimmes and decks it selfe with graces that Christ may take delight to dwell and content himselfe there But an euill heart cares not where Christ lodgeth so he lodge not in it in the mouth or hand he may Neither cares it how nasty it lye it is alwayes sweet enough for the diuell and lusts and lookes for no better ghests like a Tauerne dore open to all ghests Fifthly a good heart conformes it selfe to Christ and will walke as he gaue example For it knowes the Scripture hath set him out not as a Redeemer only but as a patterne of good life and imitation And that there is almost no Christian duty vnto which we are not vrged by his example as humility Phil. 2.5 patience 1. Pet. 2.21 loue of the brethren Eph. 5.2 forgiuenesse of others Ephes. 4.32 fidelity in our function Heb. 3.1 2. beneficence to poore Saints 2. Cor. 8.9 and obedience both actiue and passiue Heb. 12.2 and constancy in profession 1. Tim. 6.13 Hence it is that as a seruant it striues to doe as his Lord according to his Lords own precept Ioh. 13.15 Whereas a bad heart will haue Christ a Sauiour not a samplar takes what benefit it can by his death but neuer lookes to his life to tread in his steps and protesteth he beleeues in Christ and he is his Lord but neuer conformes it selfe to his practice But no direction by the life of Christ no saluation by his death This is the disposition of a good heart toward Christ. III. It lookes vnto the Spirit of God in foure kindes of Notes 1. In respect of spirituall assurance 2. Spirituall worship 3. Spirituall graces 4. Spirituall growth For the first Because this heart is in vnion with Christ it hath the Spirit of Christ working the assurance of his adoption This is the heart into which God sends the Spirit of his Sonne crying Abba Father Gal. 4.6 that is hee assureth vs that wee are actually sonnes by grace who are no sonnes by nature And this assurance is first from the witnesse of the Spirit Rom. 8.16 which is a secret information of Gods loue and fatherly affection and a still voyce from heauen into the heart that God in Christ is become thy God And is euer met with a motion of the soule inspired by the same Spirit stedfastly resting it selfe in the fauour of God now a Father in Iesus Christ. This being witnessed by the Spirit to all Beleeuers we know his testimony is true being a Spirit of truth that cannot lye Ioh. 14.17 and being the searcher of the deepes of God 1. Cor. 2.10 Suppose thou hadst an Angell as Daniel chap. 9.23 and Mary Luk. 1.28 come from heauen to tell thee thou art greatly beloued of God this were a great priuiledge and confirmation But thou hast another manner of messenger than either Angell or Arch-angell speaking not to the eare but to the heart to testifie Gods affection and no child of God is deceiued in this witnesse Secondly this assurance commeth by the first fruits of the Spirit Rom. 8.23 These first fruits are the sweet graces of the Spirit which wee receiue in small measure in comparison an handfull of righteousnesse peace ioy c. But as by the first fruits in the Law the Lord who had giuen them
A contrite and an humble spirit such as Hannahs A woman of a bruised spirit for in such sacrifices God delighteth Because this hath griefe for want of grace and present corruption and a thirsting after God and the Well-springs of grace to which the promise of acceptance is made 2. It must be a ready and cheerfull spirit Exod. 25.2 and 35.5 The Lord will haue none to offer toward the Tabernacle but whose heart was free and whose spirit made him willing Gods Spirit being a free Spirit makes the spirit of a Beleeuer free also Hee loues a cheerfull giuer a free will-offering 2. Cor. 9. 3. It must be a sincere and innocent spirit voyd of guile and hypocrisie voyd of raigning sinne offering his worship not for shew and ostentation not couering deceit and hollownesse with a shew of holinesse For well it knowes that God requires pure hands to be lifted vp euery where and that one sinne suffered in the soule ingrosseth and eateth vp all the inward worship due to God as the seuen leane Kine did eate vp the fat 4. It must be a feruent and zealous spirit not worshipping coldly nor perfunctorily Our tongues naturally are tyed or frozen and cleaue to the roofe of our mouth but the Spirit makes vs speake with new tongues with fiery tongues with heat and feruency in prayer praises and all the parts of Gods worship Thus is God onely and truly worshipped from a good and honest heart which onely is the Temple of the holy Ghost In this Temple the Arke of the soule keepes the Manna the Word of God In this Temple the sweet Incense of praises is daily offered vpon the Altar of a pure heart In this prayers are preferred which are the breathing of the Spirit not onely for vs but in vs crying Abba Father In this the candle of faith euer burneth before God and neuer goeth out In this lastly wee haue the Oracle of God counselling vs and his Mercy-seate couering vs. But an euill heart cannot performe spirituall worship cannot pray or praise or confesse because it wants the Spirit It neuer thinkes it needs helpe to pray or serue God which is the hardest worke of a Christian neuer done without helpe from heauen It can sometimes easily speake of God hardly vnto him or to him can vse many words of prayer but wants the sigh●s and grones excited by the Spirit Any language is readier to it than the language of the Spirit It can content it selfe with the deed done and neuer care for the Mouer or manner whereas no sacrifice did euer please God without fire from heauen kindling it It can performe bodily worship offer a thousand Rammes and ten thousand riuers of Oyle yea and the first borne of his body but cannot offer his heart nor part with his deare sinnes It is vncheerfull and heauie in such parts of Gods seruice because there wants an internall mouer he is driuen from without not drawne or led by the Spirit within and is as a Fish out of his element Prayer and Sermons are too long too many and euery thing too much this way It can pretend zeale and forwardnesse but it is in some superstitious and formall deuotions and in the meane time bee most zealous against the power and sincere practice of true piety In a word Of all the seruice and sacrifice of wicked men Salomon saith Prou. 15.8 It is an abomination to the Lord. For 1. The sacrifice is an vncleane beast and hatefull Tit. 1.15 To the vncleane all is vncleane 2. They lay it not on the Altar that is tender it not in Christs mediation 3. They want fire and feruency zeale and affection to put to it 4. They lay not their hands on the head of the Calfe confessing in the sense of sinne their owne vnworthinesse and guiltinesse How can God accept a seruice wanting these foure things The third sort of Rules concerning the Spirit of God is for Spirituall Graces These in soundnesse are a sure signe of a good heart I will instance in fiue The first is humiliation and sound inward sorrow as there is cause what way soeuer it lookes 1. If it looke to God it sees him infinitely prouoked who yet is great yea infinite in power and iustice therefore falls downe lower and oftner than Iacob before Esau to procure compassion Againe it sees that a broken and contrite heart is a sacrifice of Gods delight Psalm 51.17 It sees Gods eye euer vpon it and hath an awfull sence of his presence It sees the method of the Lord who first smites and then heales who neuer comforts such as neuer mourned nor promised a ioyfull haruest but to a sorrowfull seed-time It sees the Lord ready to dwell in a contrite soule Esa. 57.15 to grace it 1. Pet. 5.5 and to glorifie it for humilitie goes as an Vsher before honour And therfore it humbleth it selfe vnder the mighty hand of God 2. If it looke into it selfe it sees iust cause of humiliation it hath sight of his vnworthinesse sence of temptation a slauish subiection vnder a law of euill and in daily sinnes matter of daily humiliation It sees a gulfe of corruption lie so deepe as it is still in examination of the sinnes and debts and can neuer finde out the broken estate But for those it findeth it confesseth freely and yeelds it selfe into the Creditors hand and beholding his insufficiency to pay and discharge craues pardon and remission as for life and death 3. If it looke on any other thing all increaseth his humiliation It abaseth it selfe vnder all creatures sees no Toad so vile as it selfe is lesse then the least mercy but exalts Christ and his merits aboue all that heart can thinke and thinkes it happy if as a dogge it might gather crummes vnder the Lords Table It is thankfull for small things and content with any thing And the soundnesse of this grace bewrayeth it selfe 1. In that it mournes not so much for offending God a terrible Iudge as a mercifull Father not so much for feare of hell as for loue of God and Heauen 2. There will be smitings of heart for all sins small sinnes as well as great Dauids heart will smite him for cutting Sauls lappe as if he had cut his flesh and for numbring the people as if he had murdred them It will startle at vaine oathes as at periury at adulterous words as actions for secret sinnes as open because all are open to him whom we deale withall yea for faylings in good duties as well as for open and foule euils 3. Seeing tendernesse of heart is a notable meanes to preserue the goodnesse of it the good heart is soone awakened after sinne committed Iosiahs heart melted at hearing the Law read One word of Nathan to Dauid brought him to confession And it is no sooner awakened than humbled and not raised but by serious repentance But is an euill heart thus humble or rather is
peace with God and onely is at rest in the signes and meanes of his reconciliation 2. It hath tranquillity and peace of conscience through sence of sinne not pardoned onely but healed in some measure This peace of conscience is the next thing to heauen and a very heauen vpon earth not when the conscience excuseth that a man hath not sinned but that his sinne being pardoned hee may goe and sinne no more 3. It hath peace with all men so farre as is possible with good men because of Gods Image and with euill because of his Commandement Obiect How can this bee seeing none are more conflicted with inward terrours and tentations or outward crosses and enemies Answ. This is true yet 1. In the world they may haue affliction in Christ peace their felicity is in Christ the Prince and procurer of it Psal. 25.13 Their soule shall dwell at ease if not their bodies 2. This peace is begun but yet imperfect as all graces bee the minde and will subdued to Gods minde and will but in part the flesh subdued to the mind and spirit but in part it can delight inwardly in the Law but seeth another law in his members rebelling against the law of his minde the Image of God we see but in part and cannot loue perfectly 3. This peace may be disturbed and interrupted for a time but the heart is then supported by patience vnder the crosse to the recouery of his peace 4. This peace cannot be abolished but perfected by troubles Your peace saith Christ shall none take from you Marke and consider the good man Psalm 37.37 the end of that man is peace A tree the more it is shaken with windes the better it is settled and rooted and so the trees of righteousnesse Now this peace is the portion onely of the Israel of God To these Christ had promised it namely the refreshing of soules Math. 11.28 To these he hath left it Ioh. 14.27 My peace I leaue with you But there is no peace to a wicked man saith the Lord. 1. None with God but onely a truce He dares liue in a state of enmity with God and bee still out in armes against him as a profest enemie Hee neither feeles nor feares sinne which is not peace but senslesnesse God in heauen proclaimeth peace he refuseth the conditions 2. None with himselfe but sometimes he is a terrour to himselfe that it is death to him to liue in such an estate witnesse Cain or Iudas Or if he be quiet and without accusation yet is hee without comfort which is but a dead sleepe of conscience which shall awake 3. None with others out of a peaceable disposition but being inraged he is fierce and cruell as Lions Esa. 11.6 Or as Ismael whose hand was against euery man and euery mans hand against him Yea he can cry out of Elias as a troubler of peace when it is himselfe and declaime against faction when himselfe is the onely factor The fifth spirituall grace is supplication or the gift of prayer the next to peace is accesse to the Throne of grace Rom. 5.2 For sinne shuts vs out of the presence of God And as Absalom might not come into Dauids presence till atonement was made by Ioab so Iesus Christ hauing made vp our peace with God we being shut out are admitted into presence nay of rebels not onely pardoned but honoured to become the Princes fauorites and familiars nay sons and children Now a good heart knowes 1. That as an Infant new-borne if it cry it is aliue if not it is still-borne so to send out strong cryes to the Throne of grace is a note of Gods Childe and a signe of the new-birth Rom. 8.26 Zech. 12.10 Therefore it comforts it selfe in crying 2. That it is bound by the Morall Law besides the Commandement of Christ and his Apostles to performe continually this part of worship to God namely by the affirmatiue part of the second Commandement which duty euen Adam in innocency free from sinne performed and needed to pray for perseuerance in the grace wherein he stood and else had he not kept the Law But a good heart seeing it selfe seazed on by sinne and the curse of the Law sees much more need in it selfe to performe this duty to the Lord and to it selfe 3. That this grace excellently vpholds the sweet society betweene God and a beleeuing soule For as strangenesse alienates and cooles the affections of friends whereas company and conference kindleth and inflameth them Euen so heerein as Iob saith chap. 22.21 wee acquaint our selues with God and grow into familiarity and fellowship with him He delights in vs while wee acknowledge him a God hearing prayer to whom all flesh must resort And the beleeuing soule hath exceeding comfort in his gracious answeres and supplies who is so ready to heare before we call and esteemes it no small grace that the Lord should not only admit it into his presence but set so easie a condition vpon his promises as for asking we shall obtaine them 4. It knowes that prayer being one of the chiefe Christian sacrifices the Lord will euer returne one token or other of his gracious acceptance For as the Legall sacrifices agreeable to Gods Institution were answered with a speciall signe of Gods approbation of the fire from heauen to consume them So will the Lord some way manifest his delight in these Christian sacrifices which himselfe compares to sweet Incense and Perfume yea to drops of honey dropping from the lips of the Church as from an honey-combe Cant. 4.11 And how can he but returne a comfortable answere on that which is so delightfull vnto him Therefore a good heart is carefull and frequent in this duty But not so much for the doing of it as to doe it well and therefore is carefull 1. for the mouer 2. the matter 3. the manner of his prayers 1. The mouer of prayer is not nature in the godly as it is in the wicked Nature teacheth that what we conceiue to be God is to be prayed vnto and the Heathen could pray to God as a Creator and Gouernour But the mouer in a good heart is the Spirit by which it cryeth Abba Father Rom. 8.15 True prayer is a proper action of the sonnes of God therefore Christ commanded vs in the entrance of prayer to say Our Father And it is the breath of the Spirit of God For he alone can leade vs into the sence of our wants He makes vs see the goodnesse of things that we craue He bends our affections and kindles our sacrifice without whom is no light or heat Let the Spirit remit but a little and the holyest men suppose Peter Iames Iohn shall bee fitter to sleepe than watch or pray in the very houre of tentation Math. 26.38 2. For the matter A good heart moued by the Spirit of supplication is most frequent and earnest 1. For things giuen by God in Christ
in all graces as a child in all parts or a tree in all the branches as 1. In knowledge A childe being ignorant of all things growes first to a confused vnderstanding of things and then to more distinct So the Child of God vtterly ignorant of the things of God comes first to a generall vnderstanding of ●hem and afterward to a more distinct as the blinde man Mark 8.22 haui●g his eyes opened first saw men walke like ●rees and after●ward like themselues so the Beleeuer first sees t●e things of God confusedly but after comes to bee more expert in the Word of righteousnesse more resolued in poynts of doctrine more perswaded and settled in sound iudgement and able to walke by distinct and particular direction 2. In faith Rom. 1.17 Righteousnesse is reuealed from faith to faith that which was a graine of Mustard-seed riseth to a tree that faith which is weake and lowe riseth to a talnesse and fulnesse It growes vp from present things to future Psal. 23. vlt. ascends from the meanes to the promise growes to affiance in Christ as well without meanes as with them yea against meanes Rom. 4.18 wherein Abraham was a father of many beleeuing children Iob can trust when God is killing him as our Lord called God his God when he felt himselfe forsaken 3. In loue both of God and men As for God the more sins are found out and forgiuen the more loue abounds Many sinnes were forgiuen her therefore she loued much Luk. 7.47 The weake loue of the Disciples before Christs death afterward proued strong that they who fled from him could dye with him A little sparke of this Diuine loue growes to a great flame and much water cannot quench it nor flouds drowne it it is stronger than death Cant. 8.6 7. It growes to a great diligence in his seruice to great hatred of what hee hates and great liberality for his sake Againe loue of men growes in a good heart and aboundeth more and more 2. Thes. 1.3 It growes from louing of friends to louing of enemies from couering one or two offences to couer a multitude of sins frō forgiuing small offences to forgiue great offences vpon repentance and that not seuen times but seuenty times seuen times It growes from louing their bodies to louing their soules most dearly and from compassion to the body to mercy toward the soule in helping it out of sin Yea it growes to ouercome euill with goodnesse 4. In patience A child at first can beare but a little burthen so the Child of God but as hee growes stronger he beares more He growes to endure great losses and yet giue glory to God as Iob to beare great and long tentations waiting a good issue to suffer not onely small wrongs but the greatest that euill men can inflict without the least reuenge to endure not only words and scornes and threats and small losses but all kindes of persecution for the Truths sake Math. 5.15 It walkes from strength to strength Psal. 84.7 and growes at last not to thinke much of the fiery triall 1. Pet. 4.12 5. In obedience First in negatiue Commandements It growes in the reformation of former lusts to account the honey-sweet pleasures of sinne as bitter as gall From the hatred of some sinnes it growes not to retaine the loue of any sinne but auoids all that it knowes to be sinne It growes yet further from auoyding euill to auoyd the very appearance of euill and the occasions It growes in the victories against daily sinnes and subdues them as Israel the Canaanites one after another yea and destroyes the body of sinne Rom. 6.5 Nay it growes from dying to sinne to rise out of the graue of sinne and stand vp from the dead Ephes. 5.14 Secondly in affirmatiue Commandements A good heart growes to haue respect to all the Commandements Psalm 119.6 From a small measure to a fulnesse of good workes Act. 9.36 From seruing Mammon to the seruing of God and now doing Gods worke first then the owne Math. 6.33 To doe vprightly not in the land of vprightnesse onely Esa. 26.10 But as Lot euen in Sodom in the Land of wickednesse in discouragements and losses It growes from well-doing to continuance in well-doing and so seeketh glory Rom. 2.7 yea to a resolution not to depart from any thing that the Lord shall command all the dayes of his life Deut. 4.8 9. Lastly it growes from weaknesse and vnskilfulnesse to dexterity and readinesse in the practice of all duties and vertues to the Masters best aduantage as one expert in the trade of godlinesse 6. In heauenly-mindednesse many wayes First a good heart growes daily more sundred and diuorced from the world from eager affecting and pursuing to neglect and contemne the things of it now can buy as not possessing and vse the world as not vsing it 1. Cor. 7.30 And it growes to seeke first the Kingdome of God and then other things yea from desires of the world to desire deliuerance from it Secondly it growes from seeking honour among men to seeke the honour from aboue Ioh. 5.44 and to loue the praise of God more than of men chap. 12.43 Thirdly from speaking of things below to speake of things aboue 1. Ioh. 4.5 Now according to the abundance of a new heart they speake with new tongues in a new language of heauenly Canaan as Christ after his resurrection spake of things belonging to the Kingdome of God Act. 1.3 Fourthly from earthly wisedome to heauenly he was wise in his trade or in a good bargaine now hee growes wise in the matters of God and his Religion a wise Merchant who will purchase the best commodity Hee growes also in wisedome to discerne the season of grace and day of saluation Fifthly from seeking Gods fauour to seeke his presence Psa. 27.8 My heart said I will seeke thy face It is now of the generation of them that seeke the face of God Psalm 24.6 Lastly from seeking his presence in grace to seeke his presence in glory desiring preparing and praying for the appearance of Christ The Bride saith Come and the title of Beleeuers is They loue the appearing of Christ. Thus is a good heart neuer weary of increasing the stocke of grace no more than worldlings of gathering wealth and is carefull to grow from knowledge to affection from affection to action from action to profession from profession to zeale and in all is still heauenly couetous An euill heart may make a little shew but growes not like a body in an Atrophy feedes and eates but prospers not is in a consumption still For 1. it is vnsettled and vngrounded not rooted or stablished in the faith but as children carried away with euery toy so these with euery waue or winde of doctrine any seducer or libertine teacher may take away his Crowne A very easie thing to make him esteeme the Doctrine of godlinesse and the practice of it but
it selfe to God 3. It hath no care commonly of his grounds of Religion and so runnes 〈…〉 still is wauering and 〈…〉 in what Religion he meanes to 〈…〉 betweene God and Baal and sees no 〈…〉 betweene true Religion and Pope●● 〈…〉 of one trumpet would make them as forward Pap●●●s as now they are Protestants 4. It can pretend Gods glory and Gods ends but intend the owne ends Herod pretends to come and worship Christ but intends to kill him Iezabel can make Religion a pretext for her foulest fact of murdering an Innocent so can Papists finely in ordine ad Deum and to promote the Catholike cause raise Massacres c. 1. Sam. 2.22 Women professing great sanctity by comming to the Temple polluted themselues with wicked Priests It were a sinne to say so of holy Popish Priests and their pure Nunnes 5. It will haue a Religion for fashion or shew but loue it not promote it not no not in their owne families scarce professe it for present reproach or after-claps but zeale and forwardnesse were madnesse as Festus said to Paul and to become an hatefull Puritan They frame not their actions to the rules of Christian Religion but are loose vnsauory earthly in all their courses they will lose nothing for it Christ shall lose the glory of Heauen for them and so farre they like their Religion but they will not lose crummes of earth for his sake 6. An euill heart can make a profession of Religion and scorne the Professors reuile them as a packe of hypocrites But our Sauiour packs such out of his number saying They that are with vs cannot lightly speake euill of vs Mark 9.39 Now of the markes of a good heart in respect of the meanes by which this true Religion is vpheld And first of the Word and Sacraments The equity of carefulnesse in these stands in these reasons 1. Because a good heart cannot heare God himselfe speake nor enioy such neere and immediate fellowship with him as it desires it is most glad to enioy him through the grates of the Word and Sacraments to heare him speake by his Messenger to reade his letters and be enriched with such pledges of his loue which therein he includeth to his sonnes and daughters Thus doth a faithfull Spouse to him absent whom her soule loueth 2. Because these Ordinances proceed from the holy Spirit of God and are meanes appoynted for the sanctification of the Elect a good heart will neuer heare or reade the Scriptures nor speake of them but with great reuerence It dares not profane the sacred Scriptures vsing them vainely or wickedly as in iests playes charmes neither dares it come to the Sacrament without due examination preparation instruction correction or strength and consolation in the course of Christianity 2. Tim. 3.16 3. Because the good heart sees his continuall need it is carefull in the continuall vse of the means of grace It sees hardnesse of heart still stealing on it It discernes spirituall weaknesse and fainting of soule It feeles many conflicts of the flesh against the spirit It is acquainted with the thrusts and temptations of Satan It sees the health of the soule stand in these refreshings and the strength of the heart decaying without them as the body doth without repayre And therefore it still relieues it selfe by the Word Sacraments Prayer and the like Psalm 119.28 My heart melteth for heauinesse raise me vp according to thy Word vers 92. Had it not been for thy Word I had perished in my trouble 4. Because it conceiues God a Spirit and his Ordinances spirituall therefore in performing these it neuer contents it selfe with the outward deed alone but especially aymes at soundnesse and sincerity in the manner of doing Psalm 119.80 Let my heart be vpright in thy statutes All is out of sence and conscience not for shame fashion custome law or vaine ostentation But now in speciall for the Word preached A good heart makes great conscience of it as is great reason 1. Because it sees the Word preached only able to bruise a stony heart to tame melt and cause to tremble a secure heart as Felix Esa. 66.2 that trembleth at my Word Acts 16.24 The Iaylor came trembling and shiuering as hauing a strong Ague in his conscience Also it is of power to open a shut conscience as Dauids by Nathan 2. Because the preaching of the Word reueales the vnsearchable riches of Christ Ephes. 3.8 and brings into acquaintance with him This is the hammer by which Christ standing at the dore of the heart knocks and if any open he comes in and suppes with him Christ not onely inuites him to a feast but feeds him with his owne flesh and blood and he with Christ that is a fruitfull Hearer of the Word entertaines Christ calls him as the Church Cant. 4.16 to a feast in his Garden to eate of his pleasant things Christ is feasted when he tastes the sweet fruits of repentance faith mortification and obedience wrought by the preaching of the Word Nay it makes vs of neere kindred with Christ his father his mother his brethren and sisters Luk. 8.21 3. Because the Word preached brings in the Spirit of God with his sauing graces being the chariot of the Spirit by which hee rides gloriously into the hearts of Beleeuers God who can giue his Spirit without it ordinarily doth not He could haue taught Cornelius without Peters so tedious a iourney but Cornelius must attend Peters Ministery and while Peter was yet speaking the holy Ghost fell on them all Acts 10.44 But see it in speciall sauing graces first illumination is by preaching Acts 8.31 The Eunuch cannot vnderstand without an interpreter he must ioyne himselfe to Philip. Secondly faith comes by hearing Rom. 10.14 and by the foolishnesse of preaching God will saue them that beleeue 1. Cor. 1.21 Neither can actuall faith be without some measure of actuall knowledge Thirdly the feare of God is wrought by preaching Rom. 8.15 the spirit of feare is wrought by the Ministery of the Law shewing sinne distinctly the curse due to it and our owne guiltinesse And by the Gospell is wrought that childlike feare by the spirit of adoption by which now we feare to offend God as before to be offended and reuenged on by him Fourthly peace of conscience and a sweete ioy in God is wrought hereby Psalm 51.8 Let me heare the voyce of gladnesse that the broken bones may reioyce Lastly the Word preached brings in not onely this life of grace but that of glory Act. 11.14 Send for Peter to Ioppa and he shall speake words whereby both thou and thy house shall be saued And therefore is it called the Word of life and saluation In these and other regards a good heart is a conscionable Hearer 1. It prepares it selfe as a fit casket or storehouse to lay the Word in conceiuing it the most precious iewell and richest pearle in all the world
sundry reasons First it considers aright who they be Why who be they Answ. 1. They are spirituall fathers to beget men to God by the preaching of the Gospell 1. Cor. 4.15 These Fathers giue vs a being in Christ being instruments by whom of children of the diuell we are begotten to be new-borne babes in Christ. 2. They are spirituall mothers that trauell in birth of vs till Christ be formed in vs sustaining great paines and sorrowes to bring vs forth to Gods Kingdome Other mothers beare children into a miserable world these into a happy estate 3. They are spirituall nurses to feede preserue and bring forward with much care and tendernesse 1. Thes. 2.7 gentle as a nurse cherisheth her childrē Other nurses are mercenary but these are nurses to their owne children more affectionate toward them 4. They are the spirituall light of the world which without them lyes in spirituall black darknesse and starres shining to others in the light of doctrine and good example in this life and in the life to come shall shine as Starres in glory Dan. 12.3 5. They are Stewards of Gods House Luk. 12.42 to whom are committed the keyes of the Kingdome to open and shut Math. 16.19 6. They are sauiours of men 1. Tim. 4.16 Saue thy selfe and others Obiect Christ onely saues vs. Answ. True by merit and efficacy but none are actually saued to whom this merit is not communicated and applied namely by the Ministery Secondly a good heart considers whence they bee 1. Embassadours sent from God in the stead of Christ 2. Cor. 5.20 called hence by a speciall prerogatiue Men of God not in the old Testament onely but in the New 2. Pet. 1.21 1. Tim. 6.11 2. Tim. 3.17 2. Bearing on them an image of Gods authority commanding in things spirituall binding Kings in chaines forcing the conscience Magistrates haue power to binde and lose mens bodies but the Minister saith Tradatur Satanae Deliuer such a one to Satan and hath power to binde or lose the soules of men and what he doth in earth is ratified in heauen Math. 18.18 3. Not onely from God but in their office and Ministery are called co-workers with God 1. Cor. 3.1 God forgiues sinne properly and they are said to remit sinne God properly saueth and they are said to saue God himselfe communicating his owne worke vnto them and so farre honouring them as he not onely calls the Angels their fellow-seruants but them by the name of Angels Thirdly a good heart considers to what they are appoynted 1. In the stead of Christ to seeke and saue what is lost not the health lost as Physicians nor wealth lost as Lawyers but the lost soule namely by applying the meanes appoynted by Christ Iob 33.14 To deliuer the man that he goe not into the pit not by working the meanes but applying them and pronouncing him absolued 2. They are earthen vessels that carry an heauenly treasure to dispose the secrets of God set ouer men by the Lord and for the Lords businesse beseeching exhorting correcting and instructing by whose Ministery as by Gods owne arme men are drawne out of hell sinne the world to turne to God and beleeue in Iesus Christ Esa. 53.1 Act. 26.18 and whereby being naturally voyd of the Spirit without faith and destitute of grace they attaine the Spirit and faith and other graces And hence they are called Ministers by whom we beleeue 1. Cor. 3.1 and Ministers of the Spirit righteousnesse and grace 2. Cor. 3.6 8 9. 3. They are faithfull shepheards ouer the flocke of Christ to feed his sheepe in greene pastures to call them backe from their wandring and to refresh them with the waters of consolation healing the brused and afflicted soule as hauing a tongue of the learned to speake a word in due season Esa. 50.4 4. They are powerfull intercessors betweene God and vs to speake from God to men whom wee cannot heare in his owne voyce and liue and to speake from men to God as Mediators rising vp in the gap able to lay open their wants to confesse their sins to craue pardon for them to giue thankes in their names of mercies and to offer vp all their spirituall sacrifices to God for them as Samuel professeth 1. Sam. 12.23 God forbid that I should sinne against the Lord in ceasing to pray for you but I will teach you the good and the right way Fourthly a good heart considers that all their word shall be fulfilled and God will see to that for his owne faithfulnesse sake Esa. 44.26 He confirmeth the word of his seruant and performes the counsell of his messengers that their worke shall not bee in vaine nor their word fall to the ground as of Samuel 1. Sam. 3.19 And what is done to them in reiecting or receiuing their persons and doctrine Christ takes as done to himselfe Luk. 10.16 Exod. 16.7 A good heart considering all these things together with the necessity of the Ministery for without vision the people must perish Prou. 29.18 1. Knoweth reuerenceth and honoureth them as the Ministers of Christ 1. Thes. 5.12 Know them that labour among you haue them in double honour for their worke sake whom God hath appoynted Ministers of reconciliation giue testimony how you honour the Word in them as Cornelius gaue reuerence to Peter Act. 10.24 2. It loues affects and receiues them gladly more than fathers of the flesh being fathers of the spirit they being instruments of generation these of Regeneration By them thou art a man by these a new man a Christian man They by a mortall seed begat thee into a wretched world these by immortall seed into an happy estate in a better world How ioyfull was Lydia to receiue Paul Act. 16.15 and the Iaylor ibid Phil. 2.28 Receiue Epaphroditus with all gladnesse and make much of such The Galatians receiued Paul as an Angell yea as Christ himselfe Gal. 4.14 A good heart will esteeme their feet beautifull much more their faces 3. It will seeke the Law at his mouth for he is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts Mal. 2.7 and submit it selfe to the doctrine Heb. 13.17 Obey them that haue the ouersight of you yea in doctrines of selfe-denyall in doctrines vnpleasing to flesh and blood knowing it is not they but the Spirit that speakes in them Math. 10.20 and that without their salt their corruptions would neuer be seasoned therefore it concludes with Naamans seruant that there cannot be an easier commandement than to wash and be cleane and will take warning of iudgements from these Watchmen Eze. 33.4 5. 4. It will euery way be helpfull to them and comfortable First with cheerfull and honorable maintenance will not sticke at trifles yea deare things will be parted with The Galatians would haue pulled out their eyes to doe Paul good It will acknowledge it owes it selfe and his soule for them Philem. 15. and if it reape spirituall
things it will sowe temporall for the labourer is worthy of his hire Secondly with earnest prayers that God would thrust more of them into his worke and double yea treble his Spirit on them he hath sent as Elisha 2. King 2.9 and open to them both a doore of entrance and vtterance as Paul often requireth of his Hearers Psalm 132.9 Let thy Priests bee clothed with righteousnesse Thirdly with comfort in their troubles euen with his owne losse and dammage and danger Good Obadiah with the hazard of his owne life prouided for the safety of the Lords Prophets and with like hazard the Shunamite for the Prophet Elijah Fourthly it will crowne their heads and comfort their hearts by his willing obedience and constancy in the truth when both shall know they runne not in vaine nor their labour shall be lost in the Lord. Now an euill heart because it lothes the liquor it doth also loath the vessell hates the Word and the bringer of it Hence is it that many cursed Chams mocke their fathers till the curse rebound on themselues The very habit of a Minister is enough to procure scorne and contempt though in all other things a man bee free enough These scorners say they reuerence Christ and would not mocke him as the Iewes did but plainly lye for they mocke him in his seruants and so hee takes it and therefore Christ keepes him out of their way and will haue nothing to doe with them For as hee would not come into his owne Countrey Nazaret because they reiected and scorned their owne Prophets so doe thou mocke the Prophets Christ comes not into thine heart seldome doe these scorners returne seldome or neuer escape they the seuerity and iudgement of God there is no remedie when they mocke his Messengers 2. Chron. 36.16 Herod as bad as hee was reuerenced Iohn because he was a good man 2. Hence are those swarmes of haters of Gods Word who in stead of singular loue for their worke sake swell like Toads with poyson and wrath against their Preachers for their worke sake as Ahab I hate Micaiah he neuer prophecyeth good vnto me so when a powerfull Ministery discouers the filthinesse and hypocrisie of a wicked heart crosses his corruptions as a fretting corrosiue to his conscience torments him before the time suffers him not quietly to inioy his sin his Herodias now saith Ahab to Elijah Hast thou found me O mine enemie Now is Paul become an enemie for telling the truth For sinne is so incorporate and become almost themselues that a man cannot be an enemy to their sins but as they thinke to themselues also Now he pryes and watcheth him narrowly and takes hold of his least infirmities if so be by casting some shame on the Preacher he can hide his owne Now he deuiseth against this Ieremie he is a spy-fault a troubler of the State a factious Preacher or as Festus said of Paul Too much learning or singularity makes him mad while hee speakes words of sobriety and wisedome Act. 26.24 25. And this is the double honour wherewith hee loads them Dealing most vnthankfully as Saul who when Dauid was playing with his Harpe to ease his distracted minde cast a speare at him 1. Sam. 18.10 So while the Preacher seekes by playing on the heauenly Harpe to solace and comfort them and to driue euill spirits and lusts from them they cast darts and speares and arrowes of reproches and slanders against them And now the most sauory salt if they can doe withall must bee cast out and trodden vnder foot 3. From this contempt of the Word and Ministers it is that many will not come to heare the Preacher as the deafe Adder refuseth to heare the voyce of the Charmer charme hee neuer so wisely and so shew themselues not to be of God 1. Ioh. 4.6 He that is not of God heareth not vs. Some heare seldome and for shame businesse of greater inportance stayes them and if they chance on occasion to heare any thing that displeaseth them Oh then as Corah said to Moses Ye take too much vpon you Moses and Aaron Numb 16.3 and are like them that contend with the Priest Hos. 4.4 Wherin the Prophet expresseth the outrage of euill in the Iewes This is their subiection to resist the holy Ghost As for the comfort and maintenance of their Preacher further than Law forceth neither conscience nor shame nor example nor perswasion moueth them to maintaine the worship of God But if they can liue of slanderous and scornfull speeches of hatefull and iniurious actions they will not suffer them to want maintenance Thus did Herod returne Iohn euill for good and Demetrius to Paul Obiect Though we heare not some yet we heare some learned and wise men and therfore this is not hatred of the Word Answ. 1. A wicked heart will heare and receiue doctrines and persons so long as hee is pleased and so long the diuell himselfe is good But let him meddle with thine eyes once or deare sins now there is nothing but storming and raging as a diuell incarnate 2. A wicked man may heare a man because he is learned yet learne no good from him And it is hatred of goodnesse that makes him refuse good Sermons vnder pretence they bee not learned he meanes not indeed that all the learning in the world should make him better Obiect Oh but wee loue the Word and if God himselfe or Christ would teach vs wee should say more But what are Ministers more than other men Answ. 1. He that loueth God will not bee wiser than God who hath described his owne meanes but would obey them that haue the ouersight of soules 2. It is false that thou wouldest obey the Lords immediate voyce who wilt not obey this voyce Did not the Lord speak to Cain immediatly to reclaime him from his sinne but did hee repent at the voyce of God himselfe Did not Israel heare Gods owne voyce in giuing the Law with dread and yet did they cease to murmure and rebell against him What was Iudas and the Iewes better for Christs owne voyce No no this is like the Iewes Math. 27.42 Let him come downe from the Crosse and we will beleeue in him Which had he done they would not haue beleeued for did hee not rise from the graue which was more Luk. 16.31 If they will not beleeue Moses and the Prophets neither would they beleeue though one should rise from the dead Therefore we conclude against all pretences that an euill heart hates the Word first and principally and then the Preacher of it V. A good and honest heart hath many Markes in respect of it selfe as the Scriptures ascribe many properties vnto it without which it cannot bee good 1. Newnesse 2. Softnesse 3. Cleannesse 4. Singlenesse 5. Fruitfulnesse 6. Watchfulnes Of these in order The first is newnesse A good heart is euery where called a new heart Ezek. 36.26 A new