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A96858 Gnōston tou Theou, k[a]i gnōston tou Christou, or, That which may be knovvn of God by the book of nature; and the excellent knowledge of Jesus Christ by the Book of Scripture. Delivered at St Mary's in Oxford, by Edward Wood M.A. late proctor of the University and fellow of Merton Coll. Oxon. Published since his death by his brother A.W. M.A. Wood, Edward, 1626 or 7-1655.; Wood, Anthony à, 1632-1695. 1656 (1656) Wing W3387; Thomason E1648_1; ESTC R204118 76,854 234

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taken away Repentance and the Spirit of regeneration doth remove all obstacles and dispell all clouds which doe otherwise overcast the understandings of naturall men there are many things contained in Scripture there is History which in generall though not in each particular circumstance may easily be understood of an enlightned Christian there are Prophesyes which are either fulfilled or yet remain unaccomplished the former may be known by applications of their events the latter we may assure our selves will be fulfilled in their appointed time there are commands of God which being a declaration of his will are plainely set down and are as plainely understood for a Christian knoweth the mind of Christ and the will of his Father there are also Promises which being made only to Gods Children are by them only rightly apprehended for unto Abraham and his seed were the Promises Gal. 3. 16. There are lastly threatnings which being denounced against sinne are truely feared of those alone who make conscience of sinning as a strange language doth seem very uncouth and ridiculous unto such as have no experience of it whereas on the contrary it is most acceptable and delightfull to such as understand it in like manner the language of the Scriptures however they may seem strange and unreasonable to such as are not acquainted with God and his holy Word yet to a Regenerate Child of God and such an one as rightly understands them they are had in great esteeme yea and are more precious to them then the hony or the hony-combe now we delight only in such things which we understand for Knowledge according to Aristotle is the rest of the Soule a man may pore and reade all day in a Booke yet if he understandeth not 't will minister little comfort or pleasure to him and therefore the Scriptures being so great a delight unto the Godly for saith David My delight is in thy Law and my study therein day and night it will follow that they doe easily understand the meaning of them but may some one say doth not David pray also unto God to give him understanding that he may learne his Commandements how are they then so easily to be understood of an Elect Child of God wee answer that in this place Ps 119. 73. the Prophet doth not speake of an outward understanding of the Scriptures for who doubteth but that a Grammaticall and Historicall knowledge he had of them but he prayeth for an inward assurance comfort from them which ought continually to be the prayers of every one who intends to benefit by the reading of them besides this availeth nothing for we do not say that the Scriptures are plaine unto any without Gods opening their eyes and revealing unto them the mysteryes of his Kingdome farther a man may say that if the Scriptures are thus plaine as you will have them what need you then take all this paines in expounding of them to what purpose are so many Commentators and Interpreters of them We answer that though the Doctrine of Faith be plainely set down yet other things there be in the Scripture which may by reason of our ignorance stand in need of a Commentary which also may be farther usefull for the more largely opening of the Scripture which a new beginner cannot doe himself thus the Elements of Euclide are very plaine perspicuous in themselves though notwithstanding for the benefit of young beginners they are farther illustrated and demonstrated by those that write on him thus you see then that the Scriptures are plain and perspicuous unto a Regenerate Child of God though unto wicked Unregenerate men of the world they may appeare otherwise not through any defect of light in themselves but through the muddinesse and darkenesse of their own minds As unto diseased and ill affected eyes all things even the brightest will appeare of the same yellow colour that they at present are affected with But here I had almost forgotten to put you in mind of this caution viz. That though all things necessary unto Salvation are plainely delivered in Scriptures yet that they were not so plainely held forth unto the Faithfull under the old Testament us now they are unto them under the New for we must know that the Promises under the Law were either Clouded and Mufled up in Types and Figures or else couched and implyed only in Symbolicall figurative expressions for the Prophets of old did seldome speake but in figures Moses his face did shine indeed but then there was a vaile over it and so Christ was represented indeed under the Old Testament but through a cloud and mist hence the Apostle saith that the mystery of the Gospell was kept secret since the world began but now 't is made manifest that is compare the times of the Old Testament with these of the New the Gospell then will seeme quite to have been hid in comparison of what it is now for so we must understand the words it being the manner of the Scriptures when they compare two things together to expresse the lesse negatively a knowledge of Christ without doubt the ancient Jewes had for otherwise to what purpose would it be said Joh. 8. 56. Your Father Abraham rejoyced to see my day he sow it was glad that they dranck of that Spirituall Rock that followed them and that rock was Christ 1 Cor. 10. 4. to what purpose also would those Promises Prophesys of Christ be unles they had had some knowledg of him a knowledg then they had of him that 's certain but then this was only a confused implicite knowledg of him not a distinct particular explicite one as now we know in general that great will be the Glory that shall be revealed upon us in Heaven both in body and soule but yet we cannot define certainely what kind of Glory it will be untill this Mortall shall have put on Immortallity this Corruption that Incorruption so likewise the Patriarchs of old knew and believed in a Christ to come but then they did not explicitely and distinctly understand his particular Offices his Death and Resurrection and the like for of these the Apostle tels us for a time because the fuller manifestation of these mysteryes was reserved untill the fullnesse of time and the accomplishment of them hence the Apostle saith that the Fathers of Old did not actually receive the Promises but saith he they saw them afarre off and were perswaded of them and embraced them Heb. 11. 13. As therefore a man by the help of a glasse may discover another at three or four miles distance and not be able distinctly and throughly to view him all over so likewise the faithfull in old time thorough the glasse of the Law did know Christs comming but then they saw him afarre off saith the Apostle and therefore he could not circumstantially and cleerly be manifested unto them and so likewise it is in relation unto the knowledge of the Trinity and
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a rest and repose of the soule whereas naturall bodies in their proper places so the soule of man rests contented and satisfied in Christ in whom are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Col. 2. v. 3. There is enough in him to fill the soul up to the brim and to answer all the impatient rovings and agitations of our Spirits after knowledge in him dwelleth all fullnesse fulnesse of Grace to sanctify us fullnesse of righteousnesse to justify us fullnesse of Glory to crown us no naturall object can satisfy the soule because the desires there of being boundlesse infinite it presently digests swallowes up all finite things but now Christ both in his nature and Graces is so commensurate and proportionable an object for the soule that it may eternally feed upon him to full content and satisfaction His mercies infinite his love infinite his Graces are inexhaustible for God hath not given the Spirit by measure and his gifts and graces are compared by the Prophet to a feaest of marrow and fat things Is 25 v. 6. because as these do satisfie the sensuall so those the intellectuall appetite it satisfieth the longing soule and filleth the hungry soule with goodnesse Psal 107. v. 9. wherefore then saith the Prophet Esay 55. v. 2. doe yee spend money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satufyeth not Hearken diligently unto me and eat ye that which is good and let your soule delight it selfe in fatnesse Lastly This is an ever-increasing rising knowledge there is a growth in it 2 Pet. 3. 18. we go from one degree of it to another 'till we become perfect men in our first conversion we are but children and babes in Christ of little understanding and knowledge 'till by prayer temptations experiences often supplyes and returnes of grace we become strong in faith nothing doubting and encrease in wisedome and all spirituall understanding Christ doth not discover himselfe all at once to the Soule but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 peicemeale Heb. 1. 1. and in diverse manners here a little and there a little As in naturall science the minde doth not usually graspe comprehend the whole circumference of a thing together but insensibly by degrees creeps upon truth takes and as I may so speake steales off that veile that hides the nature of it from us thus Christ by degrees irradiates and shines upon the soule and so we may be the more sensible of our former ignorance and more thankfull for our present illumination he never so clearly presents himselfe to any but that the knowledge is still improveable and may receive farther increase for at the best in this world we doe view but in a glasse darkely we are faine to borrow the spectacles of his Word his ordinances and his Sacraments to looke on him our Iusts and corruptions as so many evill vapours hinder us from a full prospect of him yet generally we see him clearer and clearer as these ragges of flesh weare and rot from off us 'till at length when the soule is got lose of this prison of clay it knowes him immediately without the helpe of a glasse now we know him but in part but we shall know him even as also we are known 1 Cor. 13. 12. The third point is to discover unto you more particularly wherein the excellency of this knowledge consists and t is I suppose 1. In the object and things known 3. In the influences it hath upon the party knowing 1. The things known by this knowledge of Christ are most excellent the nobler the object the nobler the science now in what noble sublime matter this knowledge deales is plaine whether we consider the personall excellenceis of Christ the graces and perfections of his nature the glory beauty and comelinesse of his person which must needs ravish and take up our thoughts though to fasten here and goe no farther is but to admire the glittering of the shew not considering the pearles within to pore upon a picture not regarding the living party it represents Faith as the Spouse in the Canticles seems to be pleased even with the outward draught and comlinesse of a Saviour to see him in glory sittting at Gods right hand but then it eyes him chiefely as a crucifyed Saviour as therefore Paul desires to know nothing but Christ and Him Crucifyed as the only and chiefe concernment to him or whether the Promises of Christ those breasts of consolation at which this knowledge lyes still sucking and delighting it selfe in they are excellent things precious Promises in which the soule can find more comfort then in all the earthly joyes pleasures of this world or lastly whether we consider the mysterys it containes they are admirable mysteryes and without controversy saith the Apostle 1 Tim. 3. v. 16. Great is the mysterie of Godlinesse God was manifest in the flesh justifyed of the Spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles believed on in the world received up into Glory Every trade and profession we say hath a mystery in it something that is which is not known to every one sure I am that a Christians profession is altogeither taken up in a mystery such a mysterie that had the Angells themselves pardon the expression been bound prentice to understand it they had without Gods speciall revelation remain'd altogeither ignorant of it for the 1 of Pet. 1. 12. 't is said the Angells themselves do desire to looke into it even now that this great mystery of our Redemption is made manifest unto the world see 't is so full of admirable inscrutable excellencys that the Angells themselves desire yet to be Pupills unto it and are curious to learne more continually of it 2. The excellency of this knowledge may be discovered in the effects and influences of it which are first to discover God more clearely unto us secondly to discover our selves unto our selves 1. It discovers God more cleerly unto us for Christ is the brightnesse of his Glory and the expresse image of his person Heb. 1. 3. So that looke as we know the Sunne by its light and a naturall father usually by his Sonne who carryes his substantiall image so is God seen in Christ and therefore the Apostle Col. 1. v. 15. saith he is the Image of the invisible God God himselfe he lives in inaccessible light no man can see him and live but it hath pleased him to manifest himselfe in Christ in whom dwels the Godhead bodily whatsoever glory whatsoever wisedome whatsoever power is in God is plainly drawn forth and exprest in Christ he is the essentiall substantiall copy if I may so speake with reverence of his Father in whom alone he is most legibly and clearly to be read the creatures indeed doe in their kind represent God but then a very broken and imperfect copy they are of him so that the Gentiles by falsely spelling and putting
us or entertained by us And thus much briefely for the Authority Perspicuity and Perfection of the Scriptures concerning which I might have spoken far more largely out of the Fathers Common-places Catechists and Polemicall Divines but intending brevity upon this point I thought it more usefull for you and my selfe wholy to examine the aforesaid points by Scripture yet so that I have given you a short glance and view of what they have said too I shall only now shut up all with a use or two of what hath been now and heretofore spoken Hence then 1. We may learne the excellency Vse 1 of holy Scriptures above all other bookes and writings whatsover we usually esteem of writings according to the eminency and worth of their Authors why now all Scripture is given by inspiration of God and therefore we should have them in so much account by how much the nobler the contriver of them is for as David said of Goliah his sword there is none to that 1 Sam. 21. 9. So may we say of the Scriptures there is none to them the word of God is as a two edged sword dividing between the Joynts and the Marrow so that what Aristotle said of the knowledge of the soul that a little of it was better then a great deal of another science We may also say of the knowledge of the holy Scriptures a little knowledge of them will stand us in more steed then all the vaine and perishing knowledge of prophane Writers Could the time and shortnesse of our lives suffer us to swallow up and devoure whole Libraries as bigge as that of Alexandria or this of our own were it possible for us critically to go over and examine all those elaborated pieces of humane invention could we perfectly Anatomize and trace nature in all her secret windings and operations yet all this knowledge in it selfe however it may place us above the clouds in mens opinions may for all that be an occasion for God to hurle us deeper into Hell But behold here a Book that is able to make us wise unto Salvation that directs and points us out a way unto eternall Life yea which raiseth our minds up unto the contemplation of those mysteries which the Angels themselves did desire to peep into a Book that unlocks unto us the very Cabinetand secret Counsells of God himselfe that revealeth and layeth open those mysteries of Godlinesse those hidden things of God which were before from all eternity clasped up in the hosome of the Almighty that gives a landskip as 't were and map of Heavenly Joy that out of darkenesse brings us into marvellous light that maketh us from Children of wrath to become heires of Heaven from slaves freeborne from Divells to become Saints All other bookes either by the teeth of time are worne out of memory or in the ruines of Kingdomes receive their graves but not one jot or tittle of this shall passe away 'till all things be fulfilled It hath been hitherto for some thousand yeares preserved amid'st the hatred of all the world against it the persecutions of Tyrants the malice and fury of Divells and shall so unto the end of the world continue though wicked men Tyrants and Divels should all combine their joynt forces to extinguish it they may with more successe and easinesse goe about to blot the Sunne out of the Firmament then to take this glorious Light from the Church people of God so that it was not without much reason that a holy Man once said That he had rather all the books beside in the world should be burnt than that one leafe of Gods Word should be destroyed for doubtlesse the least sentence therein comprised is more worth then all the voluminous Ofsprings and workes of mans braine Wherefore 2. This should exhort every one Vse 2 of us to a diligent reading and studying these holy Scriptures search the Scriptures saith our Saviour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word implyes a kind of a ●●nting after them or a narrow and painfull seeking into them as men doe for Gold and Silver and let the word of God dwell in you that is let it be as familiar unto you as he that dwells under the same roofe with you and not only so but dwell in you richly let your minds be as throughly adorned with them as a great mans house is with rich utensills hangings and now let us examine our selves whether we do thus earnestly search after them whether our hearts be thus furnished with them are we not rather like those Canonists of the Church of Rome who some say will confirm their Law text this too taken upon trust from others or like that Bishop mentioned in the booke of Martyrs who thanked God he never knew what was meant by the Old or New Testament doubtlesse there is no greater folly or madnesse in the world if we rightly consider it then to hanker after humane knowledge and to be carelesse of divine understanding greedily to devoure huskes and yet to loath Manna and like those Indians to preferre toyes and baubles before Gold pretious treasure But I need not I hope accuse any here of any such ignorance or neglect all that I desire is a more diligent studying of the word and more conscionable practice of it for reading knowing without practice will but aggravate our damnation however we ought to be stirred up to so necessary a duty as this is especially in such times wherein the meanest sort of people will upbraide our neglect of it amongst many of whom to our shame be it spoken the Bible according to the letter is better known then ever Aristotle was amongst us and will it not then much redound unto our disgrace if the Apron shoud pose the Gown in those things which most concerne them if poore illiterate Mechanicks should in the Doctrine of the Scripture confound a Learned Rabbi My Brethren you cannot be ignorant what prejudices some of the meaner sort of people have against us in this respect and therefore besides the Salvation of our soules which should be the main end of all even politick respects should engage us to double our diligence in studying of the Holy Scriptures for believe me however easy they may seem to some yet the full and clear understanding of them may very well take up our whole care and studyes there are Originalls to be known consulted withall antiquity to be searcht into and discussed severall places to be reconciled various acceptations of words and phrases to be weighed and compared together there are besides these many things without the Scriptures very needfull Grammer to know the propriety of words Rhetorick to understand the severall Tropes and figures contained therein Logick to deduce consequences and artificially to open places of Scripture and all three together properly and distinctly to analyse resolve and open the particular chapters and Bookes thereof which I conceive to be the nearest and most
only know but also confute such errours as are repugnant unto sound Doctrine and the Analogy of Faith the Word of God is called a light Psal 119. 105. and therefore as by light only we know what darkenesse is so by the same word may we understand what is erroneous and false in religion As we say that a right thing is a sufficient judge of its own straitnesse and the crookednesse of another body so that there is an elencticall power as I may so speak in the very Scriptures themselves to stop the mouthes of gainsayers and to quash put to silence the impious opinions and errors of ungodly men 3. 'T is profitable for correction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the reformation that is for an amendment of all things amisse either in life or manners there is not the least deviation from the Law of God either in thought word or deed but it doth espye and correct A man can never sinne soe closely but it will find him out for the Word of God tryeth the reines the heart it is a two edged sword dividing betwixt this joynts the marrow is a discoveres of the thoughts and intents of the heart Heb. 4. 12. As it doth teach what things are right so it doth correct amend what things are out of order 4. 'T is profitable for instruction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instruant Patriarchae etiam errantes The title of the 32. Psalme is a Psalme of instruction the word seemes to me to imply the great profit of the Scriptures even for the instruction of Children and young men so farre was our Apostle from forbidding any of what sort soever the reading of the Scriptures that he makes it one of the main ends and uses of the written Word to instruct all men even unto Children hence it is that v. 15. the Apostle approves in Timothy that from a Child he had read the Scriptures and I am verily perswaded that the Romanists withhold the reading of Scriptures from the people more out of a point of policy then Religion or ground they have for it out of the Word it selfe for it seemes altogether repugnant first to the Commands of God who enjoyned Moses to read the Law before all Israel Men Children and strangers within thy gate without any distinction Deut. 31. 12. And who bids us search the Scriptures Joh. 5. 39 and who commands that the Word of God should dwell in us richly and abundantly Had not laymen and ordinary people soules to be saved as well as the greater Cardinalls and Priests there were some reason that these precious things should not be cast unto such doggs these Jewells to such Swine but they expecting life from the same Christ as greater Schollars why should they not with them have the same meanes to obtaine it if the command of God lye thus indefinitely upon all men why should they be debarred from obeying that command Secondly 't is repugnant to the very designe of God in revealing his will in the Holy Scriptures for whatsoever things were written a foretime were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15. 4. why was the word written but that we might have hope and shall not a lay-man have hope of Salvation will you exclude the common people from the hope of Heaven if not why then shall they not have this hope through patience and comfort of the Scriptures againe Ephes 6. 12. 17. the Apostle there shewing how that we wrestle not against flesh and blood but against principalites and powers c. bids them therefore take to themselves the Helmet of Salvation the Sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God and now ought not poore ignorant soules thus to wrestle thus to fight against powers against the rulers of the darknesse of this world against Spirituall wickednesse in high places why then shall they not have this comfort Why should they not be armed with that sword of the Spirit the Word of God When a Prince setteth forth a Proclamation 't is penned in a language that all his Subjects may understand it and doubtlesse 't is the intent and end of God in proclaiming his Will and Word unto mankind that all his People should read and understand what wonderous things he there revealeth for their Salvation for otherwise what a vaine unprofitable thing would it be to kindle a light meerly to put it under a bushell to bestow a rich treasure upon us for so the Word is called to be hid and clasped in a box to give us a rule whereunto we should square our lives even his Holy Word only that it should be shut up and cabineted in an unknown language it is in my judgement the highest piece of injustice in the Church of Rome thus to deprive the people of the bread of life and instead thereof to obtrude upon them their own hypocriticall leaven their fopperyes and traditions to obstruct and seale up the fountaine and then to feed them with the muddy streames of their own inventions yea indeed to damne mens souls meerly out of a divelish kind of policy to secure their own state and interest but say they there is no such necessity certainly for the common peoples reading the Scriptures when as in the times of the old Testament there were many Believers as Job his friends who yet living not among the Jews to whō then only were committed the Oracles of God were destitute of the holy Scriptures we answer that as for Job his friends they lived by computation of the best divines before the Law and the written Word whereas had they lived after it they had been bound to have the Scripture after it was delivered besides what if it be granted that some believers there were under the Old Testament who de facto had not the Scriptures must it therefore now de jure be true that the commonalty ought not to have them under the Old Testament perhaps God might by vision or some other extraordinary way reveale his will unto some of the Gentiles as unto Job others before their Conversion which ways being not now to be expected reason it is that all People should now fetch their knowledge of God from the Scriptures Againe they object that Paul writ not his Epistle unto the Romans in Latine which was their vulgar tongue but in Greek therefore to put the Scriptures in a vulgar tongue is not needfull we answer that the reason of this was that those sacred monuments of Paul being to instruct all people besides the Romans the Spirit thought it most convenient to write it in such a language which might most universally be understood now that the greek was then most known unto all Nations appeares not only out of prophane Authors but also out of the Scriptures themselves as from Rom. 1. 16. and other places where the Apostle under the name of Greeke comprehends all
from nature to set him a worke in the pursuit of it that there should be three persons in the Essence that the second of these persons God the Sonne should be made man and be degraded to the forme of a servant be borne of a virgin dye and in death get a victory over death and the like are such riddles to a naturall man that he cannot possibly receive them as the Apostle expresseth it 1 Cor. 2. 15. neither can he in his most extravagant and roving apprehensions fasten or light upon them which makes me thinke that Trismegistus and Plato had been peeping into the books of Moses when they speak so emphatically of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea and the Spirit of God as they are quoted by Lud. Vives Morney in their bookes de veritate Religionis so that the meer historiall knowledge of Christ doth originally arise from revelation how much more then doth the true saving knowledge of him descend immediately from the Spirit of God enlightning our understandings to see him opening our hearts to embrace him and guiding us into all truth 't is not our poring upon a body of Divinity our running over the Schoolemen and spending our oyle and labour in the bare speculation of these truths that bring us to a saving knowledge of Christ but we must be all taught of God and waite upon the blessed influences of his Spirit with an humble soule with prayers and teares and fasting and weeping and mourning for our ignorance that God would come from above into us and instruct us in the excellent knowledge of him who indeed to them that perish is foolishnesse but to them that are called the wisedome of God and the power of God 2 This is the alone saving knowledge that is this is life eternall that they might know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent Ioh. 17. 3. There is no other name given under Heaven by whom we can be saved and he is the way the truth and the life and the door by whom alone we have entrance into Heaven how can we enter into life but by the way by the doore how can we see the Father but by the Sonne who reveales him So that to assigne Salvation to such as never so much as dream't of Christ is a presumption not justifiable by Scripture or reason I cannot conceive how the dimme snuffe of naturall light should be sufficient to guide a man to Heaven 'T is only that light of the world as the Evangelist saith that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Sunne of the soule as the Father stiles him that shewes us the way to eternall happinesse since without faith in him 't is impossible to please God and all the best righteousnesses of naturall men are but menstruous raggs splendid abominations A corrupt tree cannot bring forth good fruit neither doe we gather grapes of thornes we may in charity hope we cannot out of the Scripture conclude that any are saved without the knowledge of Christ neither the Jewes simply by their Law nor the Gentiles by their Phylosophy could ever reach Heaven Though Clemens Alexandrinus and many of the Schoolmen Zuinglius seem to teach the contrary perhaps more out of charity to soe many poore soules that otherwise they thought must inevitably perish then any solid grounds they had from Scripture for it and seriously who could without trembling think of the sad condition of those poor wretches that the revealed Word of God concludes them under were it not for this that God ha's unsearcheable wayes to save those that we most despair of that the insinite mercifull creator can by meanes altogether unknown to us display his Sonne even to those that sit in darkenesse and the regions of death But to hasten 3. This knowledge of Christ is a pleasant knowledge All knowledge as the Phylosopher notes carries a secret content and pleasure along with it and therefore videre speculari quaerimus ut gaudeamus As delightfull colours are unto the eye so is truth unto the understanding a comfortable refreshing thing now the knowledge of Christ must be pleasant in its very first dawning to a benighted soule for the entrance of it giveth light and understanding to the simple Ps 119. v. 130. must not the approach of light be needs be pleasant to those under the poles after halfe a years darknesse or unto such as are borne blind or have been kept in a dungeon all their dayes before and can the Sun of Righteousnesse think ye be otherwise when he riseth in a poore soule that hath laid thirty forty perhaps fifty yeares togeither in blindnesse and ignorance O how comfortable a thing will it then be unto him to see himselfe translated out of darkenesse into marvellous light to find the eyes of his understanding opened the veile taken off and his sinnes pardoned which were as a thick cloud to hinder him from the sight of his Saviour all the wayes of wisedome are wayes of pleasantnesse and her paths peace Prov. 3. 17. What more pleasant then light why Christ is the true light Joh. 1. what more delightsome to the tast then hony His statutes are sweeter then the hony or hony-combe Psal 19. what more taketh us then ease and rest his very yoake is easie and his burden light Mat. 11. 't is ignorance of Christ that makes his wayes seem unpleasant to us for no man ever tooke any pleasure in that which he understands not hence those inward loathings of his Word those risings and heart-burnings against the simplicity of the Gospell in prophane persons these are people of no understanding they never knew what belonged to the inward comforts and refreshments of the Spirit what delight there is in keeping Gods Law what pleasure 't is for a thirsty soule to drink of the water of life for a hungry soule to feed upon Manna and the bread that came down from Heaven they know what comfort there is in the kisses of his mouth in his love that is better then wine in his abode and supping with you and therefore no wonder that all their delight is to dowze themselves in carnall pleasures to eate and drinke and rise up to play that they are so averse from dutyes so sad and heavy in spirituall performances that they so much loath his Word his people his Embassadours his gracious motions and invitations the truth of all is this they know not Christ and therefore they have no pleasure in him 4. This knowledge is a satisfying knowledge other knowledge is like some sance which when you receive into you begets a fresh and new appetite the knowledge of the one thing doth set the teeth on edge as here and makes us thirst after more whereas Christ is an object fitted and suited to the most vast and boundlesse desires of the soule and therefore what the Phylospher said of naturall knowledge we may more properly say of divine that 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉