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A35955 Therapeutica sacra shewing briefly the method of healing the diseases of the conscience, concerning regeneration / written first in Latine by David Dickson ; and thereafter translated by him. Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1664 (1664) Wing D1408; ESTC R24294 376,326 551

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his yoke upon them are troubled with doubtings whether they be of the number of true believers whether they have rightly come unto Christ whether they have been well accepted of him and for their doubting they can give no other reason save this I cannot be quiet nor rest in assurance that I am in the state of grace if they be interrogat what they think of the evident signs of their regeneration which have been and are to be seen in their conversation since they began in earnest to seek the face of God in Christ They will possibly not altogether deny Gods work in them but yet dare not lean weight upon these signs because they do find these signs also brought in question whether they have been or are kindly and sincere mean time they are about to do that which is acceptable to God in the course of their calling albeit with more heavinesse and lesse alacrity then b●cometh persons reconciled to God in Christ. 2. This disease will be found complicat and made up of moe mistakes and errors then one and therefore is to be the more narrowly considered because it is no small hinderance of a comfortable christian conversation which God doth allow on his children for in the party troubled with unquietnesse we presuppone I● there is a serious sense of sin and purpose to do better 2. An unfained embracing of the covenant of grace and reconciliation in Christ J●sus And 3. an honest though weak endeavour to bring forth the fruits of new obedience and yet notwithstanding the person is not quiet but walketh heavily and is discouraged by reason of his uncertainty whether he be in the state of grace or not yea he is cast down and disquieted because he is disquieted and cannot get a reasonable answer from his conscience when he asketh of it why are thou cast down and disquieted within me 3. The mistakes and errors whence this dissatisfaction and unquietnesse doth flow are many but we shall condescend upon eight or nine only The first error and cause of unquietnesse is or may be this that the party afflicted albeit he have the habits of saving grace in him and doth by Gods grace put forth these habits in actual exercise yet he doth not reflect upon nor turn his eye to observe the operations of Gods holy Spirit in himself nor the acts of saving grace which the holy Spirit hath made him put forth of which if he take not notice they are to him for the time as if they were not and so no wonder he be disquiet while he perceiveth not in himself that which might make him quiet For example when the sense of sin is raised up in a mans spirit by the holy Ghost if he do not observe that this is one of the operations of the holy Spirit convincing the world of sin or if he do not turn back his eye on this operation and upon his own act stirred up thereby to subscribe the sentence of the law against himself no wonder that he doubt of his conversion till he see the foot-steps of God the converter of him from the love and approbation of sin unto the hatred of it and when he is ●l●d to Christ the only Redeemer from sin and misery and hath laid hold on him according to the covenant of grace offered in him if he do not look back on this operation of God drawing him to Christ and upon his own act of coming unto Christ by the draught of Gods Spirit what wonder he do not reckon himself among believers albeit he be in Gods account one of that number And when the holy Spirit hath kindled in him not only a purpose of new obedience but also a begun endeavour to live holily justly and soberly if he do not observe and acknowledge these operations of Gods Spirit making him to bring forth these acts what wonder that this mistake and inconsideration do open a door to disquietnesse and doubting whether he be in the state of grace or not 4. For removing this cause of disquietnesse the afflicted person must beware that he passe not sentence of Gods dispensation towards him according to the tentations and suggestions of Sathan nor yet according to the opinion which his Pastor or friend may have of him judging somewhat uncharitably of him upon sinister suspicions neither let him stand to the suspicions of his own incredulous heart but let him consider what the Word of the Lord hath said of the person in whom these three grace● do concur to wit 1. the sense of sin and inability to help our selves 2. flying unto Christ for relief from sin and misery and 3. some measure of upright purpose and endeavour to serve God in new obedience for of such saith the Apostle Phil. 3. 3 We are the Circumcision or true Israelits who have no confidence in the flesh but rejoyce in Iesus Christ and worship God in the spirit Let him therefore esteem the discovery of his sinfull and wretched estate in himself to be the very fruit of the eye-salve and work of the Spirit bestowed on him by Christ and let him esteem his hearty consent given to the covenant of grace and reconciliation to be the undoubted act of saving faith For hearty consent to the offer of grace in Jesus Christ presuppones first that the person sees no standing for him by the law or covenant of works but is beaten from all confidence in himself and made to believe and subscribe the righteous sentence of the law against himself to the praise of Gods truth and justice Secondly it imports the mans believing the testimony which God hath given of Christ Jesus to wit that God hath made a gift of life eternall to the soul that hungereth and thristeth for righteousnesse and that this life is in his Son yea it imports the mans receiving and embracing of Christ offered in the Gospel Thirdly it importeth that the consenter to the covenant of grace as he hath renounced confidence in his own works So he hath given up himself to God to live by the grace of Jesus Christ unto eternall life Now if the afflicted shall reflect upon these two operations of the holy Ghost making him humble in the sense of sin heartily to receive Christ Jesus for his relief and withall do observe an unfained purpose and begun endeavour to live more holily and fruitfully by the grace and furniture of Christ howsoever he labour under many infirmities not only is he undoubtedly a new creature but also by observing the foresaid evidence thereof may conclude that God hath begun a good work of grace in him and so shall this first cause of disquietnesse be removed 5. Another cause of disquietnesse is or may be this if the afflicted after examination of the work of grace in himself being convinced of his blessed estate and confirmed by present sense of Gods love shed abroad in his heart do not hold fast his estimation of Gods work in himself longer
SOme true converts are found who having for a time injoyed p●eace of conscience have called their conversion in question by occasion of hearing or reading some sermon of some zealous Preacher pressing the marks of true and sincere conversion and making self-denyall and loving of God for himself the main marks of conversion and without circumspect and wise difference put by him betwixt legall perfection and evangelical sincerity pressing self-denyal and the loving of God abstractly further then any Saint doth attain unto in this life Whereupon some tender souls do fall in question with themselves whether they be among the true and sincere converts because they know that our Lord requireth self-denyall in every person who will follow him and doth condemn them all for unbelievers who seek glory of men and not the glory which is of God And because the Preacher possibly hath made the loving of God for his benefits to be too too mercenary and hath pressed without respect to benefits that God must be loved for himself therefore the weak convert beginneth to be troubled as if he were not a true convert at all saying what shall I think of my self and of my following of Christ seing I feel so little of self-denyall in me seing I have loved Christ for my own good and many a time in my best actions I have sought the commendation of men in my heart and I have been ill pleased when I did not obtain it 2. For solving of this doubt we grant that every man who will follow Christ is bound to deny himself And true it is there is nothing more difficile then to forsake our own carnall wisdom and estimation of our own worth works and abilities how small ●oever Neither is there any more dangerous evil then in the discharge of Christian duties to seek or accept our own glory and the applause of men for he that in this point doth foster his natural corruption certainly doth not in so far favour these things which are Gods but serveth his own flesh Therefore because the reliques of this and all other sin do remain in the regenerat the Lord by variety of exercises setteth his children daily to learn this lesson over and over for mortifying their corrupt lusts It is their duty therefore when any spark of this evil of self-seeking doth appear to cast themselves down humbly at Christs feet and confesse the sin lest some spark of wrath break forth upon them from the Lord. For the end of this exercise yea and the reason of the Lords not removing fully in-dwelling sin is to humble us and send us to Christ least if he should otherwayes deal with us we should grow proud and not make such use as becometh us of Gods free grace and Christs righteousnesse imputed to the believer mean time we must not yield to Sathans tentation coloured with pretense of Scripture as if Christ had discharged us to seek any good from him to our selves or to love him for the good which he hath purchased to us and which he from time to time bestoweth on us for when Christ requireth of us to deny our selves he requireth indeed the renounciation of our own carnall and corrupt lusts and confidence in our own wisdom worth and works But he doth not require of us to renounce the sanctified love of our own well-being or the seeking our sanctification consolation and salvation in him alone for the love of God and of his glory is the main end of all our desires and the seeking that God would glorifie his own grace and truth in his promises to us by sanctifying comforting and saving us is a subordinat mean unto Gods glory yea the more we seek our righteousnesse consolation and salvation in God through Christ the more we glorifie God and do say in substance of God that he is the fountain of all felicity and that he is good and faithfull to grant all good things to such as believe in him and do seek grace for grace from him 3. It is true that we should love God above all things and love him more then our selves and love him though he should slay us but it is true also that the more we love him for any cause the more we esteem of him the more we magnifie and glorifie him and what is love to and seeking of God but the acknowledgement of our own emptinesse and his all-sufficiency and what is our seeking communion with him but a refounding of our selves into the fountain whence we have our being that he may be glorified in our being and fully well-being And so our spiritual love of God for himself and for the goodnesse which is let forth in doing good to us is not mercenary love but is the acknowledgement of his perfections and of his grace to us to whom he will be our God in Christ even all in all to us in him As for seeking of mens applause whensoever whether upon receiving of any benefit or discharge of any duty the corrupt lust of vain glory doth mix it self which cannot but obscure and hinder the shining of his glory which should be aimed at in all things by us incontinent upon the first motion of this our sinfull corruption perceived let out sin be humbly acknowledged and confessed unto God the searcher of the heart and let supplication in our spirit be made unto him to pardon our sin and mortifie the bitter root of this and all other evils in us CHAP. XIX Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert whether he be indeed converted arising from this that he knoweth no child of God so hardly exercised as he is SOme converts are who by the light of the Law of God are brought to the acknowledgment of their sin and misery and by the doctrine of the Gospel are brought to seek their relief in Christ and have taken on his yoke and submitted themselves to his discipline and yet fall in question whether they be converted because they do find such inequality in their conversation and such changes in their condition and variety of tentations as they can find no example of the like in Scripture and where it pleaseth them to be free with their Pastor or confident Christian friend do fall out in questions if ever they have read in Scripture any like unto them in such and such particulars as they please to condescend upon and if their Pastor or Christian friend shall give them some example in the Scripture of Gods children so exercised they are ready to find such differences between the case of the godly in Scripture and their case as they cannot receive satisfaction And if possibly it be told them that their ca●e is not singular but such as hath befallen sundry of their Christian acquaintance in this present age yet they cannot receive satisfaction for all this but still do insist that their case is not like to any of the godly Whereupon they foster the suspicion of their not
and for drawing him to Christ to be his refuge in his worst condition CHAP. XXVIII Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert concerning his regeneration because he findeth the power of the body of death in the pollution of the imaginations of his heart vigorous and powerfull THere are some true converts who albeit they be cleansed from the pollutions that are in the world and have their conversation blamelesse and without giving scandall unto them they live among yet frequently are troubled with doubting of their state in grace because they feel in themselves such a power of in-bred corruption of their hearts as can hardly consist as they conceive with regeneration and saving saith because Iames chap. 3. ver 11. maketh the question thus doth a fountain send forth at the same pl●ce sweet water and bitter c. unto the end of the Chapter This doubt the afflicted wrestles with and saith with himself what shall I think of my self whose heart is so polluted that it casteth forth continually dirt and mire how shall I reckon my self among the Saints how shall I incrude my self among the justified who find so little evidence of the work of sanctification in me For faith should purifie the heart from this pollution whereof I do justly complain 2. For solving of this doubt many things are already spoken which serve for the curing of this case and comforting the afflicted in this condition but because one and the same doubt doth diversely present it self now in one shape then in another and doth vex the afflicted in sundry wayes we shall answer this doubt proposed as it is set down First therefore let the afflicted examine himself whether he may with some measure of honesty say with the Psalmist Ps. 66. 18. I do not regard iniquity-in my heart I do not so delight in sin but that sin is still my affliction and my daily grief Secondly let him examine himself whether the power of corruption doth break forth in words and deeds or not or if it do burst out in some passionat fits whether he doth open the sluce and give it way or whether he sets himself to oppose the out-breaking of sin and is humbled for what doth break forth Thirdly let him examine whether he flyeth to Christ to wash him and help him against the power of sin or not If after examination he can in any measure of honesty joyn with the Apostle in his lamentation and recourse unto Christ for delivery Rom. 7. 24 25. he may be assured he is in the state of grace For there is a vast difference between a mans being sold unto sin by his native corruption captivating him and a mans setting of himself unto sin as a voluntary servant of sin for a renewed man may be in sundry cases a captive to sin and is a fighter against sin But a man selling himself to sin is a slave voluntarily suffering sin to reign in his mortall body Let the afflicted therefore comfort himself because in him there is a perpetual conflict between the flesh and the spirit between his native inclination to sin and the new creature or inclination to holinesse Neither let him by mis-understood Scripture formerly cited vex himself for his faith is indeed upon the work and the way of purifying his heart first because he doth flye to the bloud of Christ which cleanseth him from all sin in respect of remission granted Secondly there is a constant endeavour to be more and more holy and to draw vertue by faith from Christ to bring forth good fruits well-pleasing unto God Thirdly he is about to mortifie his lusts by the Spirit of Christ and to purge out the leaven of all filthinesse of flesh and spirit albeit he cannot purge it out all at once or wholly in in this life And fourthly because albeit his doubting of his estate in grace be not allowable yet it doth bear witnesse that the remainder of pollution in him is his grief affliction and vexation So also that other Scripture Iames 3. 11. which faith that out of the same fountain proceedeth not salt water and sweet is not to be understood so as if no rotten speech could possibly proceed out of the mouth of a regenerat man at any time for Iames doth witnesse that in many things we sin all in thought word and deed But the meaning is that he that bridleth not his tongue his religion is vain and nothing but a presumptuous boasting of that wich is not reall and in truth and that it is inconsistent with regeneration that out of a mans mouth pretending to blesse God cursing of men who are made after the similitude of God should flow forth as waters flow forth from a running fountain without controlment CHAP. XXIX Shewing how to quench the fiery darts of Sathan and resist his sinfull suggestions whether of shorter endurance or of longer continuance SOmetime on a sudain Sathan casteth a fiery dart of tentation unto some sin as his messenger seeking to prepare the lodging for him which tentation he doth so furiously presse as if he would not be refused or could not be resisted and possibly may so bear-in his tentation as the convert may be afraid that Sathan shall prevail finding himself as it were over-powered and unable to bear out in such a case as the Apostle had experience of 2 Cor. 12 7 8 9. who found himself as it were buffeted and abused by the messenger of Sathan and unable of himself to resist him The remedy whereof is that the afflicted with the Apostle be humbled in himself in the sense of his in-born sinfulnesse and inability to overcome tentations 2. That he flye to Christ the captain of militant souldiers and do pray unto him instantly to help to bear out in the conflict and to be rid of the Tempter 3. Let him hold fast the faith of promised grace and wrestle on so long as it shall please God to exercise him so With such a tentation Iob also was exercised which so far prevailed as to make carnall and corrupt nature speak for it The tentation was very fearfull and no lesse then self-murther Iob 7. 13 14 15. When I say my couch shall ease my complaint then thou scarrest me with dreams and terrifiest me with night-visions so that my soul chooseth strangling and death rather then life The remedy whereof is with Iob to flye to the Redeemer and fix faith upon him and to present the tentation unto God by prayer and humble lamentation striving against the suggestion and never to give over relying on God as he did 2. Sometime Sathan when he cannot find instruments to charge the convert with hypocrisie and a course of wickednesse as he found in Iobs tryall by his uncharitable friends he useth immediately to fall a railing against the whole course of the work of grace in the convert and charge him falsely with deep guiltinesse as calumniators use to do in their furious flyting and slandering
strengthened and set forward to glorifie God in Christ in necessar duties As for the maner and measure to be keeped in the use of things lawfull prudence must be asked of God who will direct us in this as in other Christian duties CHAP. XVI Concerning the converts suspicion that his softness of heart is nothing but a natural disposition to weep upon any occasion VVHen the Lord hath taken away from the sinner a heart of stone and hath given unto him a heart of flesh so that he dar not any more harden himself against the threatnings of Gods Word but doth tremble at the hearing thereof as speaketh Isaiah 66. 2. and in his prayer doth pour forth his heart ordinarily with tears he may as experience hath taught fall in a suspicion of this ordinar or frequent melting of heart as if it were nothing else but a childish or woman-like temper of body and spirit and no evidence of contrition for spiritual causes which the Scripture requireth and commendeth in the penitent 2. In this case there is danger on either hand if the convert be not wary and circumspect in this condition for on the one hand he is in hazard of making light account of the work of God who hath taken from him the heart of stone and given him an heart of flesh On the other hand he is in hazard of laying too much weight on his tears if once he be satisfied about the suspicion he hath of his own tears and made clear that they were proofs and evidences of his sincerity in his prayers to God That there is a danger on either hand experience hath taught for some sincere converts having entertained the suspicion that their tears in prayer proceeded from the soft temper of their natural complexion disposition of spirit have resisted their inclination to mourn and striven against letting forth of tears so far that they have become so dry for a long time and have prayed more perfunctoriously then before that when just causes of grief and tears were given unto them they were not able to bring forth one tear for easing of their grieved heart On the other hand experience hath taught that some looking upon the expressions of the Saints in Scripture concerning their tears have laid so much weight upon their tears as they have numbered in a manner all the drops of their eyes and from the lesse or more quantity of them made reckoning of their own better or worse condition and of Gods acceptation of their prayers lesse or more 3. This tendernesse of heart and easinesse to be moved unto tears for spiritual motives is a rare gift Few they are who with sense of the body of death and original sin bearing them down do lament their natural sinfulnesse in their best condition with Paul Rom. 7. 24. Few shall be found so affectionat to the glory of God and salvation of peoples souls as to pour out tears both in secret and openly for promoving thereof as the Apostle did Act. 20. 19 21. and 2 Cor. 2. 4. Few like Timothy whose heart was so tender that the Apostle could not but observe his tears and remember them 2 Tim. 1. 4. Yet we doubt not that from age to age sundry be who by the grace of God have this constantly melting heart according to the measure of Gods free donation some with tears some without tears And therefore if there be found in such mourners an honest endeavour to walk circumspectly let not the suspicion that their tendernesse is but natural weaknesse of spirit or bodily complexion be entertained Only let the giver of the grace of a tender heart be relyed upon and not their tears as if they were any more then witnesses of their honest affection in spiritual exercises for such prayers may prove sincere and acceptable to God both when they cannot mourn and also when their heart seemeth withered hard and dry CHAP. XVII Concerning the converts suspicion that all his devotion is but lip-labour which is not joyned with a tender and melting heart and with Gods sensible approbation AS some are suspicious of their condition because of their ordinar tendernesse and melting of heart So other some are suspicious of their condition because they find not their heart tender and soft in their devotion All converts do agree in this that God must be worshiped in spirit and truth and that it is not acceptable worship to God if a man draw near him with his lips when his heart is far from him whereupon every convert when he is mindfull of his duty goeth about to worship God with understanding and inward affection of heart to confesse sin deprecat wrath ask of God things necessar interceed for others give thanks to God for his benefits and praise him for his works and working so as his affections may be conform to his expressions and the conscience may approve both his words and his hearty affections and God may with his peace and consolation approve the worshiper But some converts are who albeit in sincerity they worship God yet they count all their devotion to be but lip-labour except they find their affections wakened up and their heart tender and some vigour of spiritual life in their exercises and the sense of Gods approbation of their worship by giving sense of his peace and consolation to them in their worship Hence oft-times doth suspicion arise without just ground that they are deserted of God that he is displeased with them and this suspicion being entertained doth send forth complaints and bringeth on coldrifenesse in prayer and discouragement 2. This unjust suspicion of the grace of prayer the Lord doth oft-times chastise by with-drawing peace and comfort and order in prayer and of words also that he who complained that his devotion was but lip-labour because he sound not such measure of affection as he would have had nor that consolation which he wished to have shall find himself in worse taking after his complaining then he was in at first when he began to suspect his condition It is true that confusion of mind and want of words to expresse the case wherein he is may fall on a convert by reason of afflictions and manifold temptations and yet he may be free from this suspicion of Gods affection and acceptation of his person and prayers as the Apostle doth teach us Rom. 8. 26. Likewayes the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered But when this cutting short of the gift of prayer in any measure doth follow after suspicion of Gods respect and good will toward the complaining and discouraged convert it is a fatherly chastisement from God threatning the convert with a greater measure of desertion and heavier temptation except he repent his folly and return to God whom by his suspicion and misbelief he hath offended 3. For remedy of
Whereupon when they reflect they are so far from humbling themselves and making right use thereof that their indignation at themselves and their fretting is increased so much the more as the cause of their impatiency was so small as common reason found in heathens hath overcome and therefore should have been more easily digested by Christians This mis-carriage useth oft-times to be past-by without any fruit further then to acknowledge their infirmity 2. But the true cure of this evil is in discovery and removal of the causes thereof which are three 1. Carnal confidence of the convert in his own strength as able to overcome lesser troubles 2. Neglect of duty toward God in his rencounter with smaller provocations of passion for men in great troubles and weighty crosses use to flye unto God by prayer to help them to bear the same but when they meet with lesser crosses they oppose their own strength unto them and puts not up the mater to God and so their infirmity is manifested 3. Gods wise correcting his child for miskening of him in lightest maters 3. Therefore let the convert afflicted in this case acknowledge his failing and be humbled at the sight of his passionat infirmity and blesse God for bearing down by his rod carnal self-confidence 2. Let him learn of David Ps. 141. 3. not to trust in his own strength in any thing but depend on God for setting a watch before his mouth and keeping the door of his lips and mainly for keeping his heart from inclining to any evil thing 3. Let him make more use both of Christs open fountain for washing away sin and uncleannesse and of his assistance to mortifie the deeds of corrupt nature by his Spirit for otherwayes the convert may look to be oftener foyled in this kind and oftener to be corrected for not watching over his passions CHAP. XXV Concerning the converts mistaking his case for want of such a submission unto Gods exercising of him as be would have SOme true converts sometime esteem themselves guilty of rebellion against God because they cannot submit themselves in bodily or spiritual chastisements unto Gods dispensation as they would The pretended reasons of their hard sentence against themselves are three 1. because they find in themselves fretting and murmuring against the Lords dealing with them 2. They find themselves far from humbling themselves under the mighty hand of God 3. Because they find in themselves still unquietnesse after they set themselves to submit which endeavour to submit they conceive should have brought forth quietnesse of mind if it had been real and sincere submission indeed And these thought● when they have weight make way for many suggestions of Sathan and do draw on more and more unquietnesse and guiltinesse withall For remedy whereof 1. let it be considered that in this exercise a difference must be put between Gods part the flesh or corrupt natures part the new creatures part and Sathans part As for Gods part by his chastisements and exercising of his child he brings to light the perversenesse of corrupt nature in his child to humble him and drive him to Christ. The part of flesh or corrupt nature is alwayes to strive against the work of grace and the new creature and it cannot be submissive unto God Gal. 5. 7. but must be mortified Rom. 8. 7. The part of the new creature is not to consent to the fretting and murmuring of the flesh but to oppose it to yield unto Gods dispensation and to be grieved for the power of corrupt nature and therefore not the new creature but corrupt nature should be condemned Sathans part is still to take advantage of every hard exercise and to suggest wrong thoughts of God and his work in the child of God Secondly let a difference be made between the con●lict of corrupt nature against the work of grace and the victory of the corrupt nature for corrupt nature may fight and not prevail but be keeped from reigning in a man how much soever it rage Thirdly let a difference be made between the victory of corrupt nature in some conflicts and its victory in the war for corrupt nature may prevail in sundry conflicts and yet loss its labour in the close of the war wherein grace is made perfectly victorious through Christ in hope whereof the child of God must renew the combat against nature and not faint Fourthly let a difference be put between submission of mind and quietnesse in mind Submission may be sincere when pain of body maketh the convert to cry when affliction maketh him a man of sorrow and grief yea when corrupt nature doth fret and murmur provided that the convert control and condemn his corrupt nature and suffer it not to break forth in words of impatiency but prayeth to God to help him to bear the burthen and endure his exercise with patience Fifthly let a difference be put between the sinfulnesse of corrupt nature and the trouble which doth stir it up and the sorrow which the convert hath in the observation of both for the sin is the work of the flesh and Sathan the trouble and affliction is the work of God the sorrow for sin felt is the work of Gods Spirit also and the sorrow for pain loss shame or any sort of trouble is moderat and sanctified when the convert offereth himself willing to endure it so long as God shall be pleased to continue it Last of all let it be considered that a wrestled-for submission pleaseeth God no lesse then a victorious submission doth please the convert because in wrestling against corrupt nature the convert testif●eth his will to please God his glorifying of Gods wisdom justice power and love how ever the Lord deal with him After which wrestling the Lord doth give submission victorious and quietnesse with it CHAP. XXVI Concerning the converts mistaking of his condition because of tentations GOds children oft-times are not only heavy and grieved because of tentations which the Apostle 1 Pet. 1. 6. presupposeth to be ordinary and in some respects needfull but also fall in a mistaking of their condition as if it were altogether evil and displeasant unto God because they perceive themselves many wayes polluted in their conflict with them Which pollutions albeit they cannot be denyed to be pollutions and should not be excused or extenuat yet should not darken or obscure the grace of God in a convert striving against tentations and lamenting his pollutions contracted by occasion of them 2. These tentations that they may be the more clearly discovered we shall divide them in three sorts 1. some of them are directly from God in a wise and holy manner for tryall and exercise of faith hope charity and other graces and do not in any way tempt men to sin 2. Some are from the flesh and the world alluring or inducing men to sin which two we joyn together because concupiscence or the flesh or corrupt nature joyneth it self with the world and
object requireth a supernaturall power of the understanding and will to take it up and rightly conceive of it But of this supernaturall faculty the unrenewed man is destitute and in respect of spirituall discerning he is dead that he cannot discern spirituall things spiritually 4. As for the second proposition anent a mans regeneration the Lord that He may break the carnall confidence of the person whom He is to convert first sheweth him his duty by the doctrine of the law and covenant of works making him to see the same by the powerfull illumination of the holy Spirit and so taketh away all pretext of ignorance Secondly He sheweth him his guiltinesse and deserved damnation wherein he is involved and so taken away all conceit and imagination of his innocency Thirdly He doth convince him of his utter inability to satisfie the law or to deliver himself from the curse thereof either by way of action and obedience or by way of suffering and paying of the penalty of the violat law of God And so overturneth all confidence in himself or in his own works Whence followeth the elect mans desperation to be delivered by himself because he seeth himself a sinner and that all hope of justification by his own deeds or sufferings is cut off Now that this is the work of the holy Spirit is plain Ioh. 16. 8. When the comforter the spirit of truth shall come He shall convince the world of sin c. And in this condition sundry of Gods dear children for a time are keeped under the bonds of the law under the spirit of bondage and sad conviction 5. As for the third proposition the Lord after He hath laid the sin of His elect child who is to be converted to his charge by the doctrine of the law first openeth up a light unto him in the doctrine of the Gospel and lets him see that his absolution from sin and his salvation is possible and may be had by flying unto Christ the Redeemer Secondly the Lord drawing near hand the humbled self-condemned soul deals with him by way of morall swasion sweetly inviting him in the preaching of the Gospel to receive the Redeemer Christ Jesus the eternall Son of God manifested in the flesh that by receiving of Him as He is offered in the Evangel for remission of sin renovation of life and eternall salvation he may close the Covenant of grace and reconciliation with God Thirdly because the fall of Adam hath bereft man of all spirituall and supernaturall power till he be supernaturally quickned and converted by the omnipotent power of Gods grace Therefore the Lord s●peraddeth unto morall swasion effectuall operation and formeth in the soul a spirituall faculty and ability for doing what is pleasant unto God and tendeth to save himself according to the will of God This infusion of a new life sometime is called the forming of the new creature sometime regeneration sometime rising from the dead and vivification or quickning of the man sometime saving grace and the life of God and the seed of God having in it the principle of all saving graces and habits which are brought forth afterward to acts and exercise Mean time true it is that all men because of their inborn corruption have an inclination and bent disposition to resist the holy Ghost But when the Lord will actually convert the man He overcometh and taketh away actuall resistance and doth so break the power of naturall rebellion that it doth not for ever after reign in him for if God did not take away actuall resistance of the man in his conversion no conversion should certainly follow and God should be disappointed of His purpose to convert the man even when He hath put forth His almighty power to work conversion But God doth so wisely and powerfully stir up this new infused life of grace and setteth it so on work that the understanding and judgement like a counsellour and the Will like a commanding Emperour and the active power of the new infused faculty as an officer do all bestir themselves to bring forth supernaturall operations Whence it cometh to passe that the new creature beginneth to look kindly on Christ the Redeemer and to desire to be united unto Him and doth streatch forth it self to embrace Him heartily for obtaining in Him righteousnesse and salvation as He is offered in the Gospel And so he casts himself over on Christ with full purpose never to shed from Him but by faith to draw out of Him grace for grace till he be perfected And here the man that was meerly passive in his quickning and regeneration beginneth presently to be active in his conversion and following conversation for God giveth to him to will and to do of His good pleasure And he having obtained by Gods effectuall operation to will and to do doth formally will and do the good which is done 6. As to the fourth proposition when the power of God is put forth invincibly for the converting of a soul that invincible working is so far from destroying the naturall liberty of the will that it doth indeed preserve it and sets it right on the right object and doth perfect it For as when God openeth the eyes of a mans understanding that he doth behold the wonders of His law when hee removeth the naturall blindnesse of the mind and maketh a man see that the Gospel is the wisdom and power of God unto salvation which sometime he counted to bee meer foolishnesse he doth no wayes destroy the mans judgement or understanding but doth correct help heal and perfect it So when the holy Spirit doth powerfully and effectually move and turn the Will of the man to embrace the sweet and saving offers of Christs grace in the Gospel and maketh him deliberatly choose this blessed way of salvation and to renounce all confidence in his own or any others worth or works He doth not destroy but perfect the liberty of the Will and raiseth it up from death and its damnable inclination and maketh it most joyfully and most freely to make choice of this pearl of price and blesse it self in its choice for ever Therefore let no man complain of wrong done to mans free-will when God stops its way to hell wisely powerfully graciously and sweetly moveth it to choose the way of life But rather let men beware to take the glory of actuall conversion of men from God and either give it wholly to their idoll of free-will or make it sharer of the glory of regeneration with God which glory God will not give to another but reserve wholly to Himself for all men in the point and moment of regeneration are like unto Lazarus in the grave to whom God by commanding him to arise gave life and power to arise out of the grave where he lay dead and rotting 7. As to the fifth proposition We must distinguish the work of regeneration from the preparation and disposition of the man to be regenerat
whereby he is made more capable of regeneration to be wrought in him for the materiall disposition of him fitting him for regeneration is neither a part nor a degree of regeneration for albeit the Lord be not bound to these preparatory dispositions yet He will have man bound to make use of these externall means which may prepare him because by the use of externall means such as are hearing of the word Catechising and conference c. a man may be brought more near unto regeneration as Christ doth teach us by His speech to that Pharisee who was instructed in the law and answered discreedy unto Christ Thou art not far saith He from the kingdom of God Mark 12. 24. This preparatory disposition in order unto regeneration is like unto the drying of timber to make it sooner take fire when it is casten into it For dryness in the timber is neither a part nor a degree of kindling or inflammation of it But only a preparation of the timber to receive inflammation when the fire shall be set to it or it put in the fire possibly a long time after In these preparatory exercises then no man will deny that the naturall man unrenewed hath a naturall power to go and hear a Sermon preached to read the Scripture to be informed by Catechising and conference of Religion and regeneration whereof God when He pleaseth may make use in regeneration of the man Wherefore whosoever in the preaching of the Gospel are charged and commanded to repent to believe in Christ or turn unto God they are commanded also to use all these externall means whereby they may be informed of the duty required and of the means leading thereunto in the exercise of which externall means they may meet with sundry common operations and effects of Gods Spirit before they be regenerat or converted whereof the use may be sound not only in but also after conversion And if any man shall refuse slight or neglect to follow these preparatory exercises which may prepare him for conversion he is inexcusable before God and man and guilty of rejecting of the offer of reconciliation yea guilty of resisting of the holy Ghost of which sin and guiltynesse the holy martyr Stephen chargeth the misbelieving Jews Acts 7. 51. 8. As for the regenerat man he it is who in the acknowledgement of his sinfulnesse and deserved misery and of his utter inability to help himself doth cast away all confidence in his own parts and possible righteousnesse of his own works and fleeth to Christ offered in the Gospel that in Christ alone he may have true wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption and doth with full purpose of heart consecrat himself and endeavour in the strength of Christ to serve God acceptably all the dayes of his life For the ground of this description we have the words of the Apostle Philip. 3. 3. Where putting a difference between the true people of God and the counterfit he saith We are the circumcision who worship God in the spirit and rejoyce in Iesus Christ and have no confidence in the flesh In which description of the regenerat man the Apostle first points forth unto us three speciall operations of the Spirit of regeneration then three duties of the man regenerat The first operation of the Spirit of God the only circumciser of the heart is the humbling of the man in the sense of his sin by the doctrine of the law and cutting off all his confidence in his own worth wit free-will and strength to help himself So that the man hath no confidence in the flesh The second operation is the infusion of saving faith making the man humbled to close with Christ in the Covenant of reconciliation and to rest upon Him as the only and sufficient remedy of sin and misery so that Christ becometh to him the ground of rejoycing and gloriation The third operation is the upstirring and enabling of the believer in Christ to endeavour new obedience and to worship God in the spirit As for the three duties of the man regenerat The first is to follow the leading of the Spirit in the poynt of more and more humbling of himself before God in the sense of his own insufficiency and ●shewing of all leaning on his own parts gifts works or sufferings or any thing else beside Christ He must have no confidence in the flesh The second duty is to grow in the estimation of Christs righteousnesse and fulnesse of all graces to be letten forth to the believer imploying Him by faith and comforting himself in Christ against all difficulties troubles and temptations He must rejoyce in Iesus Christ. The third duty is to endeavour communion-keeping with God in the course of new obedience in all cases worshiping and serving God in sincerity of heart he must be a worshiper of God As to the last thing holden forth in the Apostles words which is the undoubted mark and evidence of the man regenerat and circumcised in heart it standeth in the constant endeavour to grow in these three duties joyntly so as each of them may advance another for many failings and short-comings will be found in our new obedience and worshiping of God in the spirit but let these failings be made use of to extinguish and abolish all confidence in our own parts and righteousnesse that our dayly failings may humble us and cut us off from all confidence in the flesh But let not these failings so discourage us as to hinder us to put confidence in Christ but by the contrair the lesse ground of confidence we find in our selves let us raise so much higher the estimation of remission of sin and imputation of Christs righteousnesse and stir up our selves by faith to draw more strength and ability out of Christ for enabling us to walk more holily and righteously before God and having fled to Christ and comforted our selves in him let us not turn his grace into wantonnesse but the more we believe the grace of Jesus Christ let us strive in his strength so much the more to glorifie God in new obedience And in the circle of these three duties let us wind our selves up stairs toward heaven for God hath promised that such as wait on the Lord shall renew their strength they shall mount up with wings as Eagles they shall run and not be weary they shall walk and not faint Isaiah 40. 31. In the conjunction of these three duties the evidence of regeneration is found If there be not a sincere endeavour after all these three duties the evidence of regeneration is by so much darkned and short for probation for it is not sufficient to prove a man regenerat that he is driven from all confidence in his own righteousnesse and filled with the sense of sin and deserved wrath because a man that hath no more then that may perish in this miserable condition as we see in Iudas the traitour whose conscience was burdened with the sense of
comparing the words of Ieremiah and the commentary thereupon by the Apostle For Ieremiah saith that they did transgress the Covenant albeit God did shew himself a husband unto these un-believing Fathers that is they changed the covenant of Grace in a covenant of Works of their own framing and transgressed that Covenant also And the Apostle saith they did not continue in that covenant because they changed it to themselves in a covenant of Works according to which Covenant God did deal with them for in stead of being a husband to them he exacted of them the penalty of the broken covenant of Works and Lorded it over them and did not regard them Heb. 8. 6. For they sought after the righteousness of works and not to have righteousness by faith and therefore did he despise them and dealt with them after the tenor of the covenant of Works And it is observable that the words of Ieremiah do comprehend the Apostles meaning for the words may bear both that God was a husband unto them to wit in making a covenant of Grace with them and that he dealt with them as a Lord over them by exacting of them the penalty of the broken covenant of Works and of the rejected covenant of Grace As ●o the covenant of Grace the Apostle speaketh of it in express termes first by Gods promising that he would make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and Iudah Secondly by his setting better promises before them then these were which were made to the Fathers in the wilderness Thirdly by his giving no other cause of bestowing so great blessings on them but his own good-will and pleasure Fourthly by his requiring no other condition of them but saith that they who feel in themselves the want and need of the promised blessings and are convinced of their own unworthiness might give credit unto God that maketh the promise and so embrace the promises and apply them to their own use As to the external dispensation of the Covenant it is certain first that it was common to all that were externally called to all the members of the visible Church for the covenant made in the wilderness with the elect Fathers and reprobat with the believers and un-believers with those that rejected the covenant of Grace and the offer of Righteousness by faith and with those who looked through the vail afar off to Christ coming and were saved was one and the same 2. It is certain that the external form of the covenant of Grace was more obscure and vailed over by the types and figures of the levitical ceremonies before Christ came but after his coming it was propounded in clearer and better promises 3. A day is set to wit the fulness of time when these shadows and typical figures should be abolished and the grace of God should be set before his people to be looked upon with open face 4. And yet the grace of God was not so hid and obscurely propounded to the Church before Christs coming as it could not be taken up by the children of God for in the midst of the shadows and dark typs the star-light of gracious promises did shine and the doctrine of the new Covenant was in substance holden forth by the Prophets and one instance thereof doth appear in this place of Ieremiah As to the internal covenant of Grace first these things which are promised in that Covenant do declare in what state God doth find men whom he doth convert and draw into covenant with himself for when the Lord taketh in hand that he will write his law in their heart that he will teach them himself to know him by the teaching of his Word and Spirit and that he will forgive their sins he pre-supposeth that lawless rebellion did reign in them with blindness of mind and hardness of heart and that the Elect by nature are without law without God without faith before he reform them according to the Articles or tenor of the covenant of Redemption 2. Albeit by nature the law be written in mens hearts as to the knowledge of sundry moral duties and so far as is sufficient to make them inexcusable for their contraveening these sparks of light Rom. 1. ●0 and 2 14. 15. Yet the writing of the law here promised is spiritual and super-natural inlightning their minds by the light of Gods Spirit and renewing their heart and in effect the thing promised is actual conversion of them 3. And seing conversion is here promised by Christ the Testator absolutely he hath taken in hand absolutely to effectuat it for it is not said I will put my law in their heart if they please to suffer me but determinatly I will put my law I will write my law in their heart and inward parts that is I will make them willing who were averse and obedient to my law who were rebellious 4. Christ the Testator doth in all this not satisfie himself by promising the illumination of the mind and the inclining of the heart for a time but promiseth also to make a solid and permanent work of it by making them persevere which is imported in the words I will put and I will write it for to write it is as much as to fix and ingrave it that it may remain 5. The chief head of the Covenant and which in substance doth contain all blessings is set down in these words I will be their God and they shall be my people for by this promise right is granted unto the true heartconvert and confederat first unto God himself then unto all his benefits whereof he hath need in order to righteousness and eternal life for they whose God the Lord is they do live and shall live for ever as Christ saith God is not the God of the dead but of the living Matth. 22. 32. And all particular promises what are they else but explications of this great and first promise and applications thereof to his childrens cases in particular Gifts of the Spirit are promised here and induements whereof disciples have need whereof pilgrims going home to that heavenly city have need yea the Spirit himself is promised to them who is to remain with them to the end of their life as a directer and leader They shall all know me saith the Lord that is as Christ doth interpret it They shall be all taught of God Joh. 6. 45. 7. The Lord sheweth here that he will deal with men in their regeneration and reconciliation as with reasonable creatures by preserving and not destroying them in their simple naturals by maintaining and not over-turning the liberty of their free-will I will make a Covenant saith he with the house of Judah Now a Covenant is a free and voluntar Contract 8. He sheweth that he is Lord and Over-ruler of mans will who can turn it about as he pleaseth and that he is not hindred nor impeded to execute and bring to passe whatsoever he hath purposed to do by the
and bring the believer fled unto him on upon his way till he put him in full possession of fredom from all sin and misery But yet this felicity is brought about not all at once but peece and peece and not without conflict with the enemies of our salvation and not without use of the meanes appointed of God Wherefore let the afflicted be exhorted to take courage unto him as becometh a souldier of Christ and let him go on in the wayes of the Lord in hope and patience being assured that whatsoever God hath promised he will surely perform in that maner measure order and time and by his own appointed means as he hath set down in his holy Scriptures 6. The third practical error of the afflicted in the foresaid case is that he doth not judge rightly of his own faith nor of the fruits thereof for of his own faith he judgeth no otherwayes than of the faith of another man whileas there is a diverse way to judge of my own faith then of another mans faith for because I cannot reach to the internal acts of the soul of another man therefore I must judge only by the outward effects according to the rule that Iames giveth chap. 2. ver 10. Shew me thy faith without thy works and I will shew thee my faith by my works Yet of my own faith I may judge not only by the external effects of it which in the first closing with Christ are not yet observable possibly but also by the internal act of faith which the holy Spirit who knows the heart doth reveal unto me by making me not only heartily to embrace Christ offered in the Gospel and love him but also can make me reflect and turn back mine eye upon his own gift and grace in me according to that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 12. we have received the Spirit of God that we might know the things freely given to us of God Again the afflicted doth not judge rightly of his own fruits of faith according as the truth is and as the Lord in his Word doth judge he should distinguish between the sincerity of the work and the perfection of it a work may be done uprightly and yet be imperfect he should distinguish what is Gods part in the work from that which is wrong and corrupt flowing from the remainder of sin in him These things he doth confound and doth so fix his eyes upon the defects and imperfection of his work that he seeth nothing but what is wrong when it is his duty both to observe what is wrong that he may be humbled and cast away all confidence in his work and to observe also what is good and right in his work proceeding from the grace of God in him and so praise and thank God for it in Christ who will not quench the smoaking flax Isa. 42. 3. 7. For remedy therefore of this error let the afflicted first look upon the acts of his faith both internal and external both on the elicit acts of faith and the imperat acts as they are called in the Schools and let him judge of both according to what is right and equitable that whatsoever be the measure of new obedience it may be differenced from the mixture of infirmity defects or corruption And let him not judge of his work according to the suggestions and calumnies of Sathan who alwayes condemneth so far as he can what is good in Gods children or if he cannot condemn it doth labour to have it abused Secondly let the afflicted observe the due order both in doing his duties and in judging thereof for of necessity he must first put forth an act of faith and love on Christ before he can passe judgment on it and let him first do the work commanded to the believer and then passe sentence that he may be strengthened to do moe duties and so to present them to God to be washen accepted and amended in his following service Thirdly let him carefully look unto the end which he should propose to himself in judging of his acts of faith and obedience for the end of judging our selves and our works should be to confirm our faith in Christ when we find any thing done according to the rule and to ●lye to Christ for pardon and grace if we conceive all is wrong after we have examined maters 6. The fourth practical error is that the afflicted first suffereth his faith to be wounded and weakened by Sathans tentation and then to be drawn forth to the field to give a proof of the strength of his faith in some difficile duty before the wound of faith be bound up or healed for it is a great disadvantage to enter the lists with Sathan about the fruits of faith whether they be sincere or not when faith is wounded yea fainteth and is brought in question whether it be true faith or not Now this is a special stratageme and wile of Sathan by whatsoever mean he can to hurt the faith of Gods children that he may by that marr communion-keeping with God and cut off if he can the conduit whereby the power of Christ is conveyed to the believer for making him give acceptable obedience unto God And certainly it is no lesse difficile when faith is wrested and for a time out of joynt to set about acceptable service then it is to make a man to set upon his work when his armes are out of joynt Therefore for remedy of this error let the afflicted so soon as he findeth his ●aith wounded incontinent set himself down before God humbly and acknowledge his foolishnesse want of watching unworthinesse and inability either to know how he hath grieved Gods Spirit and made open a door for the Tempter to fall in upon him or to repent the sins which he knoweth might have provoked God so to exercise him and next let him look unto God in Christ reconcileing the world to himself and lay hold on the hornes of the altar on the throne of grace for strengthening his faith that he may find help for the present need and thereafter also to walk more wisely for this is the counsell which Christ doth give to the corrupt Church of Sardis Revel 3. 2. Strengthen the thing which remaineth and is ready to die Thus may the afflicted recover strength of faith and ability to resist Sathan and furniture for bringing forth unquestionable fruits of faith CHAP. VIII Wherein the regenerat mans doubt whether he be in the state of grace arising from his unquietnesse of spirit is answered THis case is incident to many dear children of God and may befall Champions in time of sad affliction as we see in the Prophet Ps. 42. 11. and 43. 5. why art thou cast down O my soul and why art thou disquieted within me But even in time of outward prosperity or when no great affliction bodily lyeth on many who in the sense of their sinfulnesse have fled to Jesus Christ and have taken
they do meet possibly with sad calamities which they did not foresee nor fear and being yoked in conflict with more fearfull tentations then ever before which they find themselves unable to overcome they seem to themselves to have just cause to call in question all the former work of grace in themselves and to doubt of their regeneration and of their reconciliation with God Of this sort some who lived in great wealth and outward prosperity do fall in so deep poverty that they are neither able to sustain themselves nor their families but are forced to live on the private charity of others or openly to beg Other some do fall in heavy sicknesses yea in uncouth diseases which but rarely do befall any which seem to be evidences of the wrath of God Other some do fall in horrible tentations and are troubled with blasphemous suggestions against God and the holy Scripture and the way of the Saints which as fiery darts do stick fast unto them and disquiet them continually Other some are tempted unto hainous sins and to such wickednesse against themselves or others as nature doth abhor to which acts of wickednesse they find themselves so powerfully solisted as they fear God hath decreed to give them over and that they shall be overcome with the tentations some after one way some after another way by one sort or other of vexation are tossed so as they suspect God is pursuing them in wrath and dealing with them otherwayes then with any of his children Whereupon oft-times they break forth in sad complaints and misbelieving suspicions saying if God loved me he would not deal thus and thus with me if I were a true convert and reconciled with God he would not thus pursue me my case is not the case of the children of God for any thing I know and other such like regrates and lamentations are uttered by them 2. For solving this doubt we neither esteem such exercises and tentations proper to the regenerat man or a token of regeneration neither do we deny that such exercises may befall true converts for all sorts of afflictions and calamities are common to the good and evil to the godly and the wicked so that by those troubles and miseries neither the love or hatred of God can be certainly concluded but thus much may be said in reason if these calamities do befall a man while he is walking in his own sinfull wayes then are they undoubtedly to be interpret as evidences of Gods wrath at least fatherly anger against the afflicted and to be esteemed as forewarnings of more and more heavy calamities to come upon him yea and finall perdition also if he do not repent 3. In which case the afflicted shall do well to humble himself before God and give a good construction of Gods purpose in sending on him such calamities in regard when he might forthwith have destroyed the sinner he hath sent forth these sad afflictions to waken his conscience and to warn him to flye from the wrath to come least he perish utterly 4. He shall do well also to consider with himself and to acknowledge that such a bitter potion was necessary in so deadly and desperat-like disease as his soul was lying into for what should the Lord do unto those who despise the worth of their own souls and of eternal life and do seek their felicity in vain and perishing pleasure profit and honour what shall he do with those whom he will not suffer to perish with this evil world but break their Idols in pieces and put themselves to grief who vex his holy Spirit Wherefore let the afflicted read his sin in the rod wherewith he is beaten if he be deprived of temporal goods or earthly comforts which he hath abused to the hazard of his own soul let God have the glory of his justice and mercy also in that he by cutting off earthly things from him is sending him to seek things spiritual and everlasting in heaven where Christ is at the right hand of the Father Col. 3. 2. If he be vexed with tentations unto blasphemies and such horrid fearfull sins which even nature doth abhor let him consider that misbelief of threatenings and promises are no lesse in effect than real asserting of blasphemies and that entertaining of sinfull lusts which fight against his soul is in effect a defiling and destroying of his own soul by which afflictions and tentations if the afflicted take not warning and repent he may justly fear these calamities and tormenting tentations are but the beginnings of sorrows But if these calamities and fearfull tentations befall a man walking in the wayes of God who is a believer in Christ who hath casten his anchor within the vail and studieth in any measure of uprightnesse to please God let not such a man be afraid for God is not pursuing him in wrath as Sathan his adversary suggesteth but as a most wise and loving father is trying and training his faith and bringing forth the evidence of grace bestowed upon him to the praise of his own name shaming of Sathan and edifying all beholders of this man● exercise Wherefore let the afflicted comfort himself in the Lord and be strong in the faith of holy Scripture which is granted to the Church for upholding of believers in patience and hope of the promised reward for even Iob the holiest man on earth in his generation was both sudainly surprized with a multitude of concurring calamities and also deprived of all consolation from God and man for a season for at once he was spoiled of all his goods deprived of all his children tempted by his wife to dispair despised by his servants judged to be a hypocrit by his most intire godly friends stricken by Sathan with an unusuall plague of botch-biles and how far the Lord did hide all comfort for a time the history of his complaints make evident Yea our blessed Lord Jesus Christ hath sanctified in his own person the hardest exercises of this sort which his children can fall into for albeit he could not be defiled with sin yet he was tempted of Sathan unto most abominable sins in special he was tempted to cast himself down from the pinacle of the Temple which was to kill himself he was tempted to fall down and worship the devil which O how horrible blasphemy is it yea for a time power was given to Sathan albeit not to hurt Christ yet to carry his body from one place to another as we read in Matth. 4. and therefore let this be for consolation to such of Gods children as are vexed with vile and blasphemous tentations and solistations to abominable sins Heb. 2. 18. for in that our Lord himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted 4. But if the afflicted insist and say he is so put to it by Sathans tentations to commit sin against his light and is ready to succumb because he neither hath strength in himself to
being converted 2. This ground of judging of mens conversion by the maner of Gods exercising of them so as other converted Saints have been exercised before them and of judging the man to be unregenerat who is otherwayes exercised then they know any convert to have been exercised did deceive the friends of Iob who in Iobs face avowed this their error Iob 5. 1. Call now say they if their be any that will answer thee and unto which of the Saints wilt thou turn that is name any example of any upright man who hath been dealt with by God as thou art and what Saint or holy man can thou name to whom thou can compare thy self and say such a man hath suffered such things as I do This doubt doth arise from this error and mistake the afflicted doth without ground suppose that expresse examples of every particular case of the Saints is set down in Scripture It is true there are examples of many cases which may befall the godly but it is not to be expected that we sh●ll find examples of every particular exercise of mind wherein the Saints may fall For as the Evangehst saith if all particulars were written the world could not hold or make use thereof It is sufficient that the Scripture hath set down rules whereun●o the Saints should labour to conform themselves and that it hath opened up the causes and remedies of all spiritual diseases and hath given so many examples as may clear the rule It is also a mistake to make the experience of the most exercised souldier a rule for every Saints exercises or to think that any man can know the variety of cases which befall the Saints for there are many whose cases are not revealed to any but laid open unto God only by prayer and are helped by faith in Christ. 3. Wherefore the afflicted must walk by rules set down in Scripture whether he find the practices thereof in Scripture or not Now this is the rule that whatsoever evil condition we fall into whatsoever tentation whatsoever pollution hath defiled our consciences we must humble our selves before God and flye unto Christ for remission of the guil●inesse for washing away the filthinesse thereof for breaking down the power of corruption and pulling out the roots thereof withall praising and thanking Christ who hath discovered unto us these evils and hath made them our affliction and not suffered them to break forth to the scandal of others And whatsoever calamity or temporal misery we shall fall into the Scripture hath given order unto us humbly to submit our selves to Gods dispensation and to make a good construction of Gods love and wisdom in exercising us so for by this rule Iob did walk defending his faith in Christ his living and loving Redeemer against Sathans temptations and his friends uncharitable wrangling disputations when the question was about his state whether he had ever been converted or not whether he was a wicked hypocrit or not and by so doing he over-came the temptation whereof we are now speaking And let not the afflicted lay it for a ground that by his hearing of the exercise of another like unto his condition he can be cured because no example of the exercise of another can be found so quadrant unto his condition as he could thereby take satisfaction For as in comparing of mens faces one with another such is the incomprehensible variety of the riches of Gods wisdom in framing them some difference and dissimilitude will be found betwixt face and face So in comparing of the cases of the Saints none of them can be found in all things so like one to another but some dissimilitude shall be found between them Wherefore the afflicted shall do well in every condition to draw near God and pour out his heart before him at all times for God is a refuge for us in all cases Ps. 62. 8. CHAP. XX. Wherein is solved the converts doubt whether he be converted because he doth not find in himself the infallible marks of regeneration SOme true converts sometime are in suspense doubting whether they be indeed converted because they do not discern in themselves the unquestionable evidences of their conversion and albeit they have the undoubted marks of regeneration to wit the daily conviction and acknowledgement of their sins and do flye daily by faith unto Jesus Christ and are endeavouring in some measure of sincerity to bring forth the fruits of new obedience with respect to all the Commandments concerning love to God and the brethren yet they dar not defend the sincerity of these evidences because of the discerned imperfection thereof for when they do compare these marks of the new creature with the rule they find much halting and short-coming therein In special they find their sense of sin to be but weak their faith in Christ to be weak and their failings and short-comings in the love of God and their neighbours to be many So that they scarcely dar allow these begun saving graces the name of saving graces And among other defects they reckon their not feeling of the spirit of Adoption whereof the Apostle speaketh to the converted Galatians Gal. 4. 6. Because ye are Sons saith he God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father And Ephes. 1. 13. In whom after you believed ye were sealed with the holy Spirit of promise Which Spirit of promise and of adoption sealing believers they conceived was known and discerned in the Apostles time by every believers feeling in himself 2. For solving of this doubt something is spoken before concerning the imperfect fruits of faith the budddings and blossoming whereof are not despised by Christ Cant. 2. 13. and 6. 12. But that this doubt may be more fully answered let us take up the causes thereof 1. one cause is or may be this that the afflicted albeit together with the endeavour to lead a blamelesse life he be indued with the grace of prayer and looketh on God as his father yet he doth not take up this work of God in him to be the work of the Spirit of Christ illuminating his mind about duties framing his will and affections unto new obedience stirring him up to prayer and helping him in prayer but in the earnest desire he hath to find the operations of the Spirit in a larger measure of evidence he doth not mark the present operation but doth slight it as nothing or doth not esteem of it as becometh and so in his advertance raiseth and fostereth doubts in himself which do keep his faith in chains for removing of which cause let the afflicted observe the operation of the Spirit of Christ in the meanest degree for the confirmation of his own faith and comfort and thanksgiving unto God as narrowly as he doth observe in himself the first motions of sin and stirrings of corruption for his own humiliation and exercise of repentance for wrong judgment under pretext of humility doth
himself SOme true converts judging their state by some false rule do not only torment themselves but also so far as in them lyeth by pronouncing false sentences of their own state go about to extinguish the spunk of piety which is in them The false rule whereby they do judge themselves is strengthened by a groundlesse perswasion that it is a true and sure rule and ordinarily when they think or speak of it they prefix no reason for it but some confident asseveration such as without doubt it is most certain and I am perswaded of it and such like If I were regenerat and truly converted without doubt I should be in a better disposition then I am I should love the Lord more fervently I should understand the mysteries of Gods Word more clearly I should not be so little affected with the sense of Gods benefits bestowed on me I should not go so lightly under the conviction of so many sins against God as I feel in me I should be more diligent in the work of the Lord in my calling I should walk more humbly and circumspectly in all my conversation and such like many expressions The same course doth the afflicted follow in his examination of the operations of the holy Spirit and of every Christian vertue in himself without doubt saith he if this were truly as a Christian vertue in me there would not be such a disposition as I find in me my condition should be such and such as became a new creature which because I do not find in me I have just reason to call in question my conversion And here is a port opened for Sathan to enter at and to throw all his fiery darts at the miserable soul of the weak convert whence many complaints do break forth and thanksgiving for mercies received and for the time injoyed is broken off and ceaseth And partly through diffidence partly through murmuring the Spirit of the Lord is provoked to wrath 2. We grant that this is a dangerous evil not only to the person afflicted but also to such as are familiarly acquainted with his condition because this disease readily doth infect others as it came to passe in the camp of Israel where the murmuring of some set the body of the army on a mutiny against God for one that is weak in the faith when he heareth such complaints in the mouth of one whom he judgeth to be holier then himself incontinent he falleth on complaining of his own state saying that he hath more weighty reason to suspect the soundnesse of his conversion then the person hath whom he hath heard suspecting his being in the state of grace 3. Wherefore let the afflicted before he shall vent his suspicion of his state examine the rule whereby he hath passed sentence on himself whether he can make it good from the Scripture for it is not sufficient to say without doubt and I am perswaded it is true except it can be confirmed by the infallible warrant of Gods Word and let his friend who shall hear his complaint expresly require a reason of his confidence that such a rule is clear from Scripture and that the application thereof is made righteously Which if he cannot prove otherwayes then Sathan doth enforce his tentations that is either without Scripture or by abusing Scripture contrary to the intent thereof let him acknowledge his readinesse to misbelieve and disobey the Word of the Lord and to hearken to Sathans tentations to the weakening of his own faith and hindering of his cheerfull obedience to the Lords commands and because such question-making of being in the state of grace is oft-times very inconsideratly uttered even before them who do not allow the complainers misconstruction of his state or if they should allow it and say to the complainer that they believed that suspicion of his state were very just it should grieve the complainer more then the doubt it self Therefore let the afflicted neither hearken to the suspicion nor vent it when it is strongly suggested but let him humble himself before Christ because of these defects and wants of such evidences of saving grace as he would have and in the sense of these wants let him cleave close to Christ for covering his nakednesse and earnestly endeavour by faith in Christ to be made more and more conform to the examplar of holinesse holden forth in the Scripture CHAP. XXIV Wherein is solved the converts doubt of his own conversion because he hath found the deceitfulnesse of his own heart and dare not trust it any more SOme sincere converts who uprightly do serve Christ and adhere unto him by faith when they consider the doctrine of the deceitfulnesse of the heart of man and how many are deceived by trusting to the testimony of their own heart concerning their regeneration and justification do begin to call in question all the work of their own conversion and do fear least they be found in the number of the finer sort of hypocrits who deceive both themselves and others having nothing in them but a civil life and form of religion without the power of godlinesse and do sleep to death in security of which sort our Lord Jesus forewarneth that not only privat persons but also many preachers shall be found Mat. 7. 22. of whom we may suppone that they were not conscious of open and grosse wickednesse but were of a blamelesse carriage before the world professing the Christian faith and teaching others to believe in Christ and doubted nothing but Christ should judge of them as reall Saints to whom for all that Christ shall one day say depart from me ye workers of iniquity I never knew you It is certain that such men have been deceived by their own heart which when the afflicted doth consider he standeth astonished and trembleth for fear saying with himself what shall I think of my former opinion of my blessd state I fear my heart hath deceived me as others of greater gifts and better life have been deceived by their own heart 2. This is a doubt which hath need to be solved but neither this nor any other doubt can be solidly and effectually solved by any mean except the holy Spirit give a blessing to the means for it is certain that there are many who being religiously educat and free from grosse vices do not repent of their sins are not touched with the sense of their original sin and corrupt lusts but without taking any burden on their consciences for these do passe by their time well pleased with their own estate Some also there are who having fallen in grosse and scandalous sins do find for some time remorse of conscience for these grosse sins but for their other sins beside those and for their in-born corruptions are not carefull thinking it sufficient if thereafter they do not fall in such grosse faults The first sort of men do deceive themselves thinking they have little to repent of● in regard they are
a notable defection from aiming at the measure felt in his first love at his conversion for we speak not here of daily distempers which the convert doth mark and mourn for and is about to have healed by bringing his wounds unto Christ to be cured in the exercise of faith and repentance daily The second is the not observing of this decay of love or the mans ignorance of his duty to entertain communion with Christ in the sense of his daily sins wants and wounds for the removing and curing whereof Christ is to be loved daily no lesse then at the man his first conversion The third is the mans being well pleased with this condition so long as his conversation is blamelesse whereof we have an instance in the condition of the Ephesians Rev. 2. whose labour in the work of the Lord zeal against hypocrits patience in troubles for Christs cause is commended by Christ. But he reproveth them first because they had left their first love and did not only come short of the measure of their first love but did not lay to heart this sin did not repent it or take course to have that measure recovered thou hast left or laid down thy first love that is 1. thou hast remitted and come short of that measure of love which formerly thou had 2. Thou hast not been displeased with thy self in this thy defection 3. Thou hast laid aside the care of recovering the measure of thy former love This condition is very dangerous as is manifest in the experience of the Galatians who falling from their first love did cast themselves open to superstitions and errours and in danger to be cut off from Christ by their defection from the faith of the Gospel once received The reasons for which we say this defection in love is dangerous are three the first is this the greatest measure of love to Christ and rejoycing in him is lesse then his excellency and merit at our hands doth deserve If therefore we shall slide from our duty in aiming to hold up this measure of love to him which we have once attained and cease to grow therein because his new mercies are daily letten forth upon us from day to day in effect we judge our first love hath been too too vehement and so Christ is lightly esteemed of as if he were not still to be loved withall our mind heart and strength The next reason is this when love to Christ to his Ordinances and sanctified ones beginneth to relent and cool incontinent the external exercises of religion and righteousnesse begin to fall short of this principle of love and to go on more and more slowly and so peece and peece to decay for as when a tree is smitten in the root it may retain for a time green leaves but after a time it withers and neither ●eareth ripe fruits nor leaves So also in the exercise of plety and righteousnesse if love toward God our Redeemer and delection in his service and obedience inwardly be diminished it may readily come to passe that the very outward works yea and the profession of duties due to Christ be taken away also and this is the judgment wherewith Christ doth threaten Ephesus I will come upon thee and remove thy candlestick out of his place except thou repent Rev. 2. 5. The third reason is because Christ who is altogether lovely and love it self the very Son of the Fathers love is a jealous God and cannot long indure not to be met with love from them to whom he hath manifested his love Therefore he doth make hast to correct this slighting of his love and to manifest his wrath against these that lye still well pleased with themselves under this condition I will come unto thee quickly saith he and remove thy candlestick Rev. 2. 5. 2. That the conscience of the true convert who is lying in this condition or is declining from his former measure of love may discharge its duty more easily and solidly it is needfull that the man being convinced of his fault first consider how reasonable it is that he should return to his first love or formerly felt measure of it for the forgivenesse of his manifold sins wherein he lay before his conversion for the translating of him from darknesse to the glorious light of Christs Kingdom should never be forgotten the proof which he hath gotten by his conversion that Christ hath loved him and given himself for him should be alwayes called to minde with hearty affection the great need of Christ wherein he standeth for renewed pardon of sins for furnishing him with his Spirit to mortifie the deeds of the flesh and to bring forth more ripe and abundant fruits of new obedience should bind him to abide and grow in his love Secondly let him consider how usefull and profitable unto us is fresh green and growing love unto him for love to him makes us frequently to think of him frequently with delight to speak of him to seek after more and more near-communion with him to have our conversation with him in heaven where he sits at the right hand of the Father and to live in heaven where our love is more then where we sojourn in this world Love makes us love what he loveth and hate what he hateth love sharpens our desires after God in Christ kindles and inlarges our affection toward him as the beginning of the 63. Psalm doth make evident And if the Lord shall seem to with-draw himself love makes the true convert follow hard after him Ps. 63. 8. Love makes ●old to encounter all difficulties and troubles which may meet 〈◊〉 in the course of following after him much water cannot quench love in Gods service love keeps a man 〈…〉 strong and stout against his enemies in 〈…〉 patient in profession sincere in pursuing duties 〈…〉 all conditions submissive and after evidencing of his affection with the Psalmist Ps. 116. 12. to ●ay with the same Psalmist What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits toward me Ps. 116. 12. Thirdly 〈…〉 convert who is begun to cool in his love to Christ 〈◊〉 to remembrance what a felicity he felt when he entertained love to Christ when the loving kindnesse of the Lord was better to him then his life and sin was more formidable then death when Gods Commandments were not grievous but the joy of his heart when Gods Word seasoned and sanctified his bitterest afflictions Fourthly let him consider at what a losse he is of many spiritual comforts whereof he hath deprived himself and in how many sins of omission at least he hath fallen since his declining from his first love and what miseries he hath drawn upon his own spirit at least if not also temporal chastisements joyned therewith and after comparison of his condition when his love was servent with his present condition since his fall from his sometime-measure of love let him humble himself before Christ and flye in unto his rich
let the convert thus mistaken after his experience felt that he hath been carnally confident not be discouraged as if his confidence which he seemed to have placed on God were altogether vain and in no degree spiritual but let him first be humbled before God and submit himself to the Lords rod let him acknowledge the wisdom justice and mercy of God who hath removed this prop of carnal confidence and reduced him from going astray to depend more on God then he hath done 2. Let him strengthen his faith in Christ according to the renor of the covenant of Grace and that so much the more as he finds his own unrighteousnesse in following and relying on creature-comforts to have been great 3. Let him set his affections upon things spiritual which are above the earth and to be found in Jesus Christ who is at the right hand of the Father Col. 3. 1. 23. and to loose his estimation and affection from these things that are on earth 4. Because this sicknesse is not well observed except in the time of adversity let the afflicted person approv● himself in the point of sincerity of adherence unto God by his trusting in God now when he wanteth means and creature-comforts as Iob did who in this condition blessed God for the giving of the benefits and blessed God at the removing of them from him Iob. 1. 21. For by so doing he shall learn both to have and want and in every condition to be content as the Apostle was taught Phil 4. 12. and this is for the first sort of carnal confidence The other sort of carnal confidence is that which too much leaneth to some apparent measure of the operation and fruits of the holy Spirit observed by the convert in himself and this sicknesse may be taken up and perceived chiefly by comparison of the converts stronger confidence of the love of God toward him so long as he can find evidenc● signes of his regeneration and work of the holy Spirit 〈◊〉 himself with ●is weaker confidence of the love of God toward him under the cloud of descrtion or under some powerfull temptation when these evident signes of his conversion are darkened or do not appear so clearly unto himself as they did 〈◊〉 In which case his confidence is greatly weakned and his faith not a little shaken with doubting In both the one and the other condition the c●venant of Grace standeth fixed and the promises of the Gospel remain the same and the convert still adhereth to the covenant and claimeth interest in Christ more or lesse confident Whence cometh then this difference between his former confidence which was strong and his weaker confidence now in the change of his case being brought low Certainly it proceedeth from the smiting of the pillar whereupon his former confidence was too much fixed for whensoever the mist is cleared up and he findeth the livelynesse of the work of grace in himself his confidence convalesceth and returns to it 's former strength as it seemeth to him and when his graces are darkened he falleth in a languishing weaknesse of faith This sicknesse is so frequently incident to the Saints that few shall be found who are not again and again overtaken in it for how few are they who are not much more confident when they find a heart freely poured forth in prayer when they injoy the peace of God in their heart when the love of God is shed abroad in their heart when they find the consolations of the holy Spirit when they observe the ●ruits of the holy Spirit in themselves when the candle of the Lord shineth in their soul and the tokens of Gods savour toward them are manifest and on the other hand when they find their spiritual condition changed when darknesse falleth on their spirit when they find themselves unfit for worship and unable to do service but most of all when they perceive tokens of fatherly wrath against them super-added unto the foresaid evils in this case who is he that beside the inevitable perturbation of mind incident to those who are strongest in faith doth not find a diminution of his former confidence and a conflict with temptations fears doubts and difficulties which diminution and abating of his confidence in his tryals and inward exercises doth evidently prove that in his best condition he hath laid too much weight upon on the mutable disposition of his soul and hath not so stucken to the Word of Gods grace through Jesus as became him 2. That this sicknesse may be the more easily cleared and cured it is expedient to answer some questions which being discussed may inform and edifie the afflicted Question 1. THe first question which the afflicted may propound is this Seing the signes of Gods favour manifested in the bestowing and continuing of common benefits and gifts outward and inward do certainly serve to confirm a mans faith in God is it not very reasonable to say that the signes of Gods wrath manifested in the removing of those benefits do certainly serve to debilitat and weaken a mans faith Ans. 1. Signs of Gods favour and signs of Gods wrath are not inconsistent because God can carry love and favour to a man and be angry at him also for the present ill disposition wherein he is for love and fatherly wrath are not opposit and inconsistent but love and hatred are inconsistent 2. Let it be granted that any signes whatsoever of Gods favour may be made use of by the convert for strengthening of his faith yet it must not be granted that the taking away of those signes of favour should be made use of for weakening of a mans faith For many things may encourage a man to do his duty which being removed must not discourage him or justly hinder him to do his duty 3. There is a great difference between the man who never found any other sign of Gods favour beside prosperity in common benefits and the man who beside common benefits hath felt a work of grace upon his spirit bringing him unto the sense of sin and chasing him to Christ and making him to take on his yoke The first sort of men can neither from the having nor wanting or removal of common benefits conclude eh is loved or hated for so are we taught Eccles. 9. 1 2 No man knoweth either love or hatred by all that is before him all things come alike to all c. But a man of this sort hath reason to judge that the sending on him adversity and wakening of him out of a fl●shly and deadly security doth speak more of Gods favour to him then his prosperity did And this other sort of men who have felt a work of special grace on their hearts may make use both of their prosperity and adversity for confirmation of their faith 4. Put case that a convert chased unto Christ in the sense of his sin and resolved to bear Christs yoke upon him shall find common benefits taken back
licentious libertine is not compelled at all to sin but to say and do that which is right and to hearken to the Word of God rather then to his own erring conscience for the scandalous sectary schismatick or heretick lyeth in a twofold sin the one is in his spirit believing and embracing an error the other in his external words and deeds corrupting the minds and maners of Gods people If after conference and disputation the sin of his misled mind cannot be taken away yet the correcting of him by Church-censures and civil punishment may restrain and bind him up from troubling and infecting others with his leaven and ill example and so his sinning externally is cut off and he made in so far to cease from evil wherein he doth not sin in so far because sin is not every transgression of the ditement of the conscience simply but the transgression of the law and ditement of the conscience speaking according to the law is a sin It is true indeed that whosoever doth judge the ditement of his conscience to be the Law of God and yet doth the contrary must by interpretation of his deed be holden guilty of sin because he who by fear or hope can be moved to do contrary to the ditement of his erring conscience in effect doth professe he may be moved by hope or fear to do contrary to the ditement of his conscience well informed Mean time it is expedient not only for the good of the society of Gods people but also for the good of the erroneous person himself that he be curbed and hindered by these that have lawfull power from doing yet more harm and restrained from following the course of sin and filling up the full measure of sinning which he was about to do CHAP. X. Of such as do please themselves in a condition not pleasing God because they conceive they can pray well under any condition SUndry there are who think their souls to be in a good case and condition when they can pray much and that with freedom of spirit when possibly they do not watch over their hearts nor wayes as becometh them This sicknesse even converts are subject unto sundry times but it may be most clearly seen in those who put a sort of worth and merit in effect upon their religious exercises as we may see in many Israelits in Isaias time chap 58. They did reckon themselves among them that did seek God daily who delighted in his wayes and did approach unto him ver 2. yet because God did not grant their petitions they fell on chiding him ver 3. Wherefore have we fasted say they and thou seest not wherefore have we afflicted our souls and thou takest no knowledge The history also of Korah Dathan and Abiram is notour wherein we see what esteem Korah and his complices had of their own holinesse and of their accesse to God in their prayers that they durst hazard and lay their lives in pawn that God should make them as welcom when they came with their cenferes to pray before him as Aaron and Moses yea and more welcome then they Such a sort of deceit is that whereby some fanaticks enthusiasts and hereticks do foster themselves in their own folly and imagine they are no small men in Gods account because they find a sort of eloquence in their prayers which they conceive God would not give unto them except he were well pleased with their persons prayers and wayes and that the true convert also is subject to this sicknesse appeareth by this that Moses in charity judged many who countenanced the conspiracy to be godly persons otherwayes and therefore exhorted them to forsake the unhappy society of these wicked men And sure it is that sundry of the sons of Korah did repent and flye from the company of the obstinat transgressors for it is clear that all the sons of Korah did not perish Numb 26. 11. and frequent mention is made of the posterity of Korah in the Chronicles and Psalms But we need not insist much here seing experience teacheth that many go on confidently in maintaining schisme and error perswading themselves of the goodnesse of their course and condition because their prayers do flow according to their wish from day to day And many are who if they find fredom in prayer for any particular concerning themselves or others do assure themselves that it shall come to passe which they pray for And if their spirits be straitned in praying for sp●●itual and promised graces they fear they shall not be satisfied in the particular they pray for For remedy of this self-deceit men must know that it is one thing to pray much and another thing to be heard and their prayers and persons accepted The Jews are told by the Prophet Isaiah chap. 1. 15. that albeit they put up many petitions the Lord will not hear them because their hands were full of blood 2. Carnal affection may easily creep in and stir up a fervency of prayer Iam. 4. 3. you ask and obtain not because you ask amiss that you may bestow what you pray for upon your lusts 3. Saints may pray earnestly for that which God is not minded to grant unto them as Samuel prayed for Saul that he might be continued King 1 Sam 16. 1. And David may pray for the life of Bathshebas child and not prevail 4. On the other hand prayers put up from a straitened heart in a sad condition may prove no lesse pleasing unto God then when the supplicant doth find most inlargement of spirit and fredom of prayer How oft did the P●almist cry out of the deeps when his spirit was overwhelmed within him when darknesse and the cords of death did straiten him as Ps. 61. 1. is holden forth And the Apostle Rom. 8. giveth us to understand that the spirit of the convert may be so straitened by afflictions bodily and spiritual that they are not able to set their words in order before God yea nor have clear notions of their necessities and desires but in stead of an oration do sigh and groan unto God Wherefore if a man shall in the sense of his sins and wants have his daily recourse unto Christ and be carefull to bring forth the fruits of the spirit praying for what is promised with submission to God what measure and at what time he pleaseth to give he may be sure his person and prayers are acceptable as we are taught 1 Ioh. 5. 14 15. This is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us and if we know that he heareth us whatsoever we ask we know that we have the petitions that we desired of him CHAP. XI Of the converts esteeming the peace of God to be but a carnal security VVE have brought forth some examples of the first sort of the conscience erring by esteeming an evil condition to be a good condition Now let us look upon some
sealed with the spirit of promise Ephes. 1. 11. As it is not sufficient to prove that wholsom water given to a feaver-sick person is not a wholsom drink because the cooling refreshment by it endureth but a short while So it is not sufficient to prove that consolation and joy given to a sorrowfull sinner seeking favour through Christ is not solid and true joy because it stayeth but a short while It is sufficient that it hath stayed so long as was needfull for after the word of promise was believed the joy was sent to ease the afflicted souls present grief and to give him earnest that full and lasting joy should be given in due time unto him When the messenger hath done his commission let him return to his master As the sheet let down in the vision from heaven to Peter after it had served for Peters instruction it was taken up to heaven again Act. 10. The Spouse in the Canticle knew by experience that her spiritual joyes would not last long and therefore chargeth the daughters of Ierusalem that they waken not her beloved till he pleased 5. Another objection is this If my joy had been solid saith the afflicted it should have brought forth better fruits then it hath done but joy spiritual as I then called it did degenerat into a carnal security and I was not the more holy by it To which objection the answer may be this the blame of this is not to be laid on spiritual joy but upon the abuse of this mercy by ingratitude for this gracious blink of felt favour negligence in the use of means to entertain this sense by sleepinesse of conscience and other sins and namely the laying too much weight upon this sense and not fixing the heart by so much more upon the word of promise when felt consolation may be withdrawn is a just cause for spiritual joy is not given to any to build upon its continuance but to make the convert hold the confirmed word of promise so much the faster when for the exercise of faith comfortable feelings are withdrawn The spouse in the Canticle after a feast of this kind falleth a sleep and giveth slight entertaining to the Bridegroom when called upon by his word for which she is chastised by his withdrawing of his comfortable presence Cant. 5. 1 2 3. c. But let us put the case that the felt joy of the spirit were not abused yet is it not unusual for God to withdraw consolation and to send trouble and anguish on the soul of his dear child to try his faith and train him on to hold the word of his grace in the hardest condition he can be into as he did exercise Iob and Ieremie the Prophet Ier. 20. and the Psalmist Ps. 77. In which condition to suspect that the consolation and joy of the spirit speaking to the heart by his word is not his gracious operation or is a delusion cannot but exceedingly grieve the Lord and give him cause to chastise this suspicion with desertion 6. But how may I know saith the afflicted that my joy was solid and was indeed the gracious operation of the holy Spirit For answer 1. If this joy was given to him when or after he was lamenting his sins and fearing wrath deserved and flying unto Christ offered in the Gospel he hath reason to reckon that joy to be such as the Word of the Gospel doth promise and approve 2. If during the time of his sweet feeling of peace and joy through Christ he found his faith in God and love to Christ confirmed and strengthned if the Word of the Gospel was in more estimation with him if his heart was inlarged to blesse praise and thank God for manifesting himself in Christ reconciled if the purpose of following after holinesse was renewed in him he hath no reason to suspect his joy and comfort 3. If after the removing of this sweet feeling he is going on in the study of holinesse believing in Christ how heavy in heart soever he may be by affliction and tentation he may be assured his sometime felt joy of the Lords Spirit was solid and his present suspicion thereof to be an evidence of his infirmity and of a tentation from Sathan This was the way how the Psalmist wrestled out of his sad condition Ps. 77. CHAP. XIV Of the converts suspecting that his zeal for God and against the sins of others hath been fleshly severity and imprudent temerity IT cometh to passe that they who love God sincerely and cannot endure the out-breakings of the wicked do sometimes transgresse the bounds of moderat zeal and being overtaken in some miscarriage for which being rebuked by their friends or by them in power censured or civilly chastised do in stead of moderating their zeal in time coming grow more slack and remisse in their zeal suspecting themselves inclined to unreasonable severity and rashnesse and ready to be esteemed haters of mens persons by those among whom they live as in some by-gone experience they have already felt And upon this occasion the tentation of Sathan falleth on tending to extinguish the fervency of true zeal required in all true converts And here there is danger lest true zeal grow cold and the convert become luke-warm both in curbing sin in others under his charge and in pursuing duties in his own person In which sicknesse he may be the better pleased with himself by so much as his friends and others do commend him for his moderation and prudence as they shall call it 2. As to the remedy of this evil there is no doubt but that may befall true zeal which is common to other vertues of which there is none so perfect but some in-lake or excesse may be observed in them And therefore as it is without reason to go back from pursuing duty in the exercise of other vertues because imperfections therein are remarkable from time to time So is it without reason to grow luke-warm in zeal which may render a man loathsome unto Christ Rev. 2. 3. Wherefore let the convert take heed what the Lords Word doth require of him in his calling and labour to discharge his duty towards others so as he may be found both zealous and prudent that in the expressions of his zeal against sin meeknesse and love to the offender may be manifested 2. To this intent let the convert carefully take heed to entertain these three properties of commendable zeal which are 1. The fear of God 2. Humility of heart 3. The love of his neighbour for the fear of God will not suffer the convert to depart from his commandments Humility of heart will make the man modest in his expressions and the love of his neighbour will make him mix meeknesse and compassion toward sinners with his zeal against offences This is the right seasoning of zeal which the Apostle calleth the zeal of God according to knowledge CHAP. XV. Of the converts suspecting his aiming at circumspect
Prison and Stocks pinching and pressing the bound sinner and the part of the Burrio scourging and tormenting him But the Conscience after examination finding the man either innocent and free of the crime or forgiven and reconciled to God by Christ after repentance and faith embracing the Redeemer it doth the part of an honest Friend carefully comforting the innocent or penitent and the part of an Advocat excusing and defending the man against all challenges and the part of Witnesses compurgatours and the part of the Iudge absolving and the part of the Rewarder And so much concerning the nature and use of Conscience as may suffice our purpose CHAP. II. Of Cases of Conscience in general A Case of Conscience taken in a large sense comprehends every accident which any way affects or qualifieth the Conscience And in this sense the perswasion and certainty which the Conscience may have the soundness health and strength of the Conscience may be called Cases and good Cases of the Conscience So also any effect which the Conscience doth work on the soul such as are peace of conscience comfort and joy in the heart may be called Cases of the Conscience also But the Cases whereof we are to treat are the ill Cases of the Conscience whereby it is fallen from the soundness and streightness it should have which we call by the name of wounds diseases and sickness of the Conscience whereunto that we may descend to speak more orderly a twofold difference is to be observed 2. First we must put difference between a healthy and a sick Conscience A healthy Conscience is that which after examination of our wayes according to the rule of Gods Word doth justly absolve us and speaketh peace to us toward God Of such a conscience it is said by Solomon A sound heart is the life of the flesh Prov. 14. 30. by the heart he meaneth the conscience which ordinarly in Scripture is called the heart And he saith the sound conscience is the life of the flesh because the body is so much in better case that the conscience be at peace toward God And this blessing is allowed upon every believer in Christ in his orderly walking 2 Tim. 1. 7. God hath not given us the spirit of fear but of power of love and of a sound mind A Conscience in this disposition needeth not medicine but spiritual nourishment and exercise in all Christian-duties A sick Conscience we call that which either is senseless of its own evils and dangers it is in and sitteth down securely and resteth without a warrand Or which is justly wounded and labours under the sense of its pain or which is unquiet upon mistakes and ignorance of making use of the true remedy of such a sick Conscience we are to speak if possible by Gods blessing a word in season may be spoken to waken a secure conscience or to refresh the weary soul that being recovered from its malady it may be able to feed upon the bread and water of life and work the works of God in the strength of Christ. 3. Secondly we must put difference between a troubled Soul and a troubled Conscience for the Soul is more largely taken then the Conscience The Soul comprehendeth all the powers and faculties of the man but the Conscience as we speak of it is only one faculty of the mind judging of the mans moral ill or well-being and so all cases of the Conscience are cases of the Soul but all the cases of the Soul are not cases of the Conscience For the Soul may be troubled while the Conscience is not troubled at all yea a man may have a commendable trouble in his soul when he seeth God dishonoured or His Church in hazard whereby his conscience is so far from being troubled that such a holy trouble strengthens his conscience in his address to God as is in many places of the Psalms to be seen Again a mans mind may be troubled by sundry natural or civil motives while the conscience is allowably quiet as in losses of things temporal fears pains or unexpected inconveniencies occurring yea there may be passions and perturbations of the mind in persons that are not capable for the time of the exercise of Conscience as may be seen in young infants and in the elder sort in fits of feaver melancholy and phrensie and yet further it is possible that passions perturbations and troubles of soul may be found without any disease of the Conscience because our Lord Jesus in the dayes of his humiliation was a man acquainted with sorrows but was not obnoxious to sin or any self-challenging for he knew no sin in himself He had trouble in his soul but could not have trouble of conscience Iob 12. 27. Now is my soul troubled and what shall I say ●ather save me from this hour but for this cause came I unto this hour Of the cases of the Soul we speak not here but of the sinfull diseases of the Conscience 4. There is also a third difference to be observed between common cases of Conscience and these that specially concern Regeneration Common cases comprehend all these questions and doubts wherein the Conscience is seeking light and resolution about the rule of faith and maners that it may better inform it self about the sense of Scripture and about the application thereof in the point of direction in faith and practice These common cases are of as large extent as the bulk of Divinity as large as the Doctrine held forth in Scripture concerning faith and maners for there is not any one article of faith or duty prescribed as a point of piety or righteousness about which questions may not be moved and cases propounded wherein the Conscience may seek satisfaction Of this hudge great tree we take but only one branch to speak of so far as maketh for our purpose concerning Regeneration CHAP. III. Of Regeneration what it is and the regenerat man who he is WE speak not here of the regeneration of elect infants dying in their infancy God hath His own way of dealing with them but of the regeneration of those who are capable of being outwardly called by the ministry of the Word which we may thus describe Regeneration being one in effect with effectual caling is the work of Gods invincible power and meer grace wherein by His Spirit accompanying His Word He quickeneth a redeemed person lying dead in his sins and reneweth him in his mind will and all the powers of his soul convinceing him savingly of sin righteousness and judgment and making him heartily to embrace Christ and Salvation and to consecrat himself to the service of God in Christ all the dayes of his life 2. The main thing we must take heed to in this work is to give to God intirely the glory of His Grace and Power and Wisdom so that the glory of mans regeneration be neither given to man nor man made sharer of the glory with God but God may have
the whole glory of His free grace because out of His own good-will not for any thing at all foreseen in man He lets forth his speciall love on the redeemed in a time acceptable And the glory of His Almighty power because by His omnipotent and invincible working He makes the man dead in sins to live opens his eyes to take up savingly the things of God takes away the heart of stone and makes him a new creature to will and to do His holy will And the glory of His Wisdom who dealeth so with His creature as He doth not destroy but perfect the naturall power of the mans will making the man regenerat most freely deliberatly and heartily to embrace Christ and to consecrat himself to Gods service The reason why we urge this is because Satan by corrupting the doctrine of regeneration and perswading men that they are able of themselves by the common and the naturall strength of their own free-will without the speciall and effectuall grace of God both to convert themselves and others also doth foster the native pride of men hindreth them from emptying and humbling themselves before God keepeth them from self-denyall doth mar the regeneration of them that are deluded with this errour and obscureth what he can the shyning of the glory of Gods grace power and wisdom in the conversion of men for whatsoever praise proud men let go toward God for making mens conversion possible yet they give the whole glory of actuall conversion to the man himself which Christ ascribeth to God only and leaveth no more for man to glory in his spirituall regeneration then he hath to glory in his own naturall generation Ioh. 3. 5. 6. 7. 8. And the same doth the Apostle teach Ephes. 2. 8. 9. 10. and Philip. ● 13. It is God saith hee which worketh in you both to will and to do of His own good pleasure And therefore it is the duty of all Christs disciples but chiefly their duty who are consecrat to God to preach up the glory of Gods free grace omnipotent power and unsearchable wisdom to live in the sense of their own emptinesse and to depend upon the furnitour of grace for grace out of Christs fulnesse and zealously to oppose the proud errour of mans naturall ability for converting himself as they love to see and find the effectuall blessing of the Ministery of the Gospel and themselves accepted for true disciples at the day of their meeting with Christ the Judge at His second coming 3. For opening up of regeneration these five propositions must be hol●en The first is this the naturall man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of god for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2. 14. The second is this it is the Spirit of God which convinceth man of sin of true righteousnesse and of judgement Ioh. 16. 9. 10. 11. The third is this in regeneration conversion and quickning of a sinner God by his invincible power createth and infuseth a new life and principles thereof Psal. 110. 3. Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power and Ioh. 5. 21. and 6. 63. The fourth is this the invincible grace of God working regeneration and a mans conversion doth not destroy the freedom of mans will but makes it truely free and perfects it Ier. 31. 31. I will make a Covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Iudah and will put My law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts c. The fifth is this albeit a man in the act of Gods quickning and converting of him be passive and in a spirituall sen●e dead in sins and trespasses yet for exercising externall means whereof God maketh use unto his conversion for fitting him and preparing of him for a gracious change such as are hearing of the Word reading of it meditating on it inquiring after the meaning of it c. the naturall man hath a naturall power thereunto as to other externall actions which sufficeth to take away excuse from them who have occasion of using the means and will not use them Matth. 23. 37. For clearing of the first proposition we must remember that the object of actuall regeneration conversion and effectuall calling is the man elected or redeemed by Christ lying in the state of defection from God destitute of originall righteousnesse at enimity with God bently inclined to all evill altogether unfit and impotent yea even spiritually dead to every spirituall good and specially to convert regenerat or quicken himsel● for albeit after the fall of Adam there are some sparks of common reason remaining whereby he may confusedly know that which is called spirituall good acceptable and pleasant unto God and fit to save his soul yet the understanding of the unrenewed man judgeth of that good and of the truth of the Evangell wherein that good is proponed to be meer foolishnesse and doth represent the spirituall object and sets it before the will as a thing uncertain or vain and the will of the unrenewed man after deliberation comparison made of objects some honest some pleasant and some profitable in appearance naturally is inclined to prefer and choose any seeming pleasant or profitable thing whether the object be naturall or civill rather then that which is truly honest and morally good But if it fall out that a spirituall good be well and in fair colours described unto the unrenewed man yet he seeth it not but under the notion of a naturall good and as it is cloathed with the image of some naturall good and profitable for preserving its standing in a naturall being and welfare therein So did the false prophet Balaam look upon the felicity of the righteous in their death when he did separat eternall life from faith and sanctification and did rent asunder the means from the end appointed of God saying Let me dye the death of the righteous and let my last end be like his Numb 23. 10. After this maner the woman of Samaria apprehended the gift and grace of the holy Ghost and saving grace offered to her by Christ Lord saith she Give me of that water that I may not thirst again and may not come again to draw water Joh. 4. 15. So also did the misbeleeving Jews judge of the application of Christs incarnation and suffering for their spirituall feeding Joh. 6. 33. 34. 35. for The naturall man cannot know the things of the Spirit of God because they are spiritually discerned and the naturall man is destitute of the spirit of illumination 1 Cor. 2. 14. And the wisdom of the flesh is enimity to God for it is not subject to the law of God yea it cannot be subject unto it Rom. 8. 7. The power therefore of the naturall or unrenewed man is not fitted for the discerning and loving of a spirituall good because he is altogether naturall and not spirituall For a supernaturall
sin but did not seek mercy and pardon Neither is it sufficient to boast of acquaintance with Christ and professe great respect to him because many do cry Lord Lord who neither renounce their confidence in their own righteousnesse nor worship God in spirit for of such Christ saith Matth. 7. 21. Not every one that saith to Him Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdom of God Neither is it sufficient to pretend the worshiping of God in spirit for all they who think to be justified by their own works do esteem their manner of serving of God true and spirituall service and worship as may be seen in the proud Pharisee glorying before God in his own righteousnesse and acknowledging that God was the giver unto him of the holinesse and righteousnesse which he had Luke 18. 11. I thank Thee O God saith he that I am not like other men extortioners unjust adulterers or even as this publican for of this man Christ saith he returned to his house unjustified that is a man lying still in sin unreconciled Neither is it sufficient to prove a man regenerat to confess sin and by-gone unrighteousnesse and to promise and begin to amend his wayes and future conversation for so much may a Pharisee attain And there are many that professe themselves Christians who think to be justified by the merits of their own and other saints doings and sufferings and do disdainfully scoff and mock at the doctrine of the imputed righteousnesse of Christ how many are they also who think their bygone sins may be washen away and be recompenced by their purpose to amend their life in time to come How many are they who being willingly ignorant of the righteousnesse of God which is of faith in Jesus Christ go about to establish their own righteousnesse as the Jews did Rom. 10. 3. And how few are they who follow the example of the Apostle who carefully served God in spirit and truth but did not lean to his own righteousnesse but sought more and more to be found in Christ not having his own righteousnesse which behoved to be made up of his imperfect obedience of the law but that righteousnesse which is by faith in Jesus Christ Philip. 3. 9. But that man who daily in the sense of his sinfulness and poverty sleeth unto Jesus Christ that he may be justified by His righteousnesse and endeavoureth by faith in Him to bring forth the fruits of new obedience and doth not put confidence in these his works when he hath done them but rejoyceth in Jesus Christ the fountain of holinesse and blessednesse That man I say undoubtedly is regenerat and a new creature for so doth the Apostle describe him Philip. 3. 3. CHAP. IV. Of divine Covenants about the eternall salvation of men and in speciall of the Covenant of redemption shewing that there is such a Covenant and what are the articles thereof BEcause the healing of the sicknesse of the conscience cometh by a right application of divine Covenants about our salvation therefore it is necessary that some measure of the knowledge thereof be opened up 1. A divine covenant we call a contract or paction wherein God is at least the one party contracter Of this sort of covenants about the eternall salvation of men which sort chieflly belong to our purpose there are three The first is the covenant of redemption past between God and Christ God appointed Mediatour before the world was in the council of the Trinity The second is the covenant of works made between God and men in Adam in his integrity indued with all naturall perfections enabling him to keep it so long as it pleased him to stand to the condition The third is the covenant of grace and reconciliation through Christ made between God and believers with their children in Christ. 2. As to the covenant of redemption for clearing the mater we must distinguish the sundry acceptions of the word redemption for 1. Sometime it is taken for the contract and agreement of selling and buying-back to eternall salvation of lost man looked upon as in the state of sin and misery In which sense we are said to be bought by Christ both souls and bodies 1 Cor. 6. 19. 20. Ye are not your own for ye are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are Gods And this may be called redemption by paction and agreed bargain 2. Sometime redemption is taken for the paying of the price agreed upon In which sense Christ is said to have redeemed us by suffering of the punishment due to us and ransoming of us Gal. 3. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us 3. Sometime redemption is taken for the begun application of the benefits purchased in the covenant by the price payed Ephes. 1. 7. In whom we have redemption through His blood even the remission of sins according to the riches of His grace 4. Sometime redemption is taken for the perfect and full possession of all the benefits agreed upon between the Father and Christ His Son the Mediatour In which sense we are said to be sealed with the holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession Ephes. 1. 14. and Ephes. 4. 30. it is said Grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption which is the day of Judgement when Christ shall put us in full possession of all the blessednesse which He purchased by bargain and payment for us In this place we take redemption in the first sense for the covenant past between the Father and Christ His Son designed Mediatour about our redemption 3. When we name the Father as the one party and His Son Christ as the other party in this covenant we do not seclude the Son and holy Spirit from being the party offended but do look upon the Father Son and Spirit one God in three Persons as offended by mans sin and yet all three contented to take satisfaction to divine justice for mans sin in the Person of the Son as designed Mediatour to be incarnat Whereby the Son is both the party offended as God one essentially with the Father and holy Spirit and the party contracter also as God designed Mediatour personally for redeeming man who with consent of the Father and holy Spirit from all eternity willed and purposed in the fulnesse of time to assume the humane nature in personall union with Himself and for the elects sake to become man and to take the cause of the elect in hand to bring them back to the friendship of God and full enjoyment of felicity for evermore When therefore we make the Father the one party and the Son designed mediatour the other party speaking with the Scripture for the more easie uptaking of the Covenant let us look to one God in three Persons having absolute right and soveraign
and full salvation for Isa. 53. 5. with his stripes we are healed now our healing is our full salvation from our sin and misery or our deadly sicknesses And Isa. 53. 10. the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand the pleasure of the Lord is partly our sanctification 1 Thes. 4. 3. partly our salvation and glorification Joh. 6. 39. this is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day And to this purpose powerfully doth his intercession serve from which the Apostle concludes that believers shall be perfectly saved Heb. 7. 25. wherefore he is able also to save to the uttermost them that come to God by him seing he ever liveth to make intercession for them The second proof is from Isa. 59. 20. 21. THe second place is from Isa. 59. 20. 21. where first we have the parties agreeing pointed at the Lord Jehovah saith and of the Redeemer He saith that He shall come to Zion as Redeemer Next we have the kind of agreement between the parties God on the one hand and the Redeemer with the redeemed for whom and in whose name he makes the agreement this is my Covenant with them but first with Christ as the words following do shew Thirdly we have the party redeemed Zion and Iacob that turn from transgression which is the mark of true believers in Christ and of the elect for whom this grace is appointed as Rom. 11. 7. Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for but the election have obtained it and the rest were blinded And Rom. 11. 26. all this Israel shall be saved as it is written Fourthly we have the sort of their delivery which shall be not only by price paying but also by powerfull and effectuall working as the originall imports Rom. 11 26 and Isa. 59. 20. Fifthly the benefits bestowed upon the elect are comprehended under the designation of the redeemed they are to be turned from their iniquity by effectuall conversion by granting them faith in Christ repentance and reconciliation Sixthly it is shewed how these graces shall be brought to passe to wit by application thereof by the word and Spirit of Christ from which sanctification salvation and the perpetuation of all graces unto salvation do flow and follow on them My Spirit that is in thee saith the Lord to the Redeemer incarnat and My word which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed c. These articles of the covenant of Redemption make expresly first against universall Redemption of all and every man because Christ as is shewed before makes his bargain for the elect and leaves the rest in blindness and is a Redeemer of none but of these to whom He is a deliverer actually from whom He turneth away iniquity and ungodlinesse which benefits befall none but the elect and the redeemed Next they make against election for faith and foreseen works because when Christ cometh to call-in the Jews He findes nothing commendable in them but impiety and transgression and defection and whatsoever might provoke Him to reject them they are turned from transgression Thirdly they make against a meer possible and contingent conversion for invincible grace is promised here for the word and the Spirit of Christ shall take up a dwelling in them and not depart from them Fourthly they make against the doctrine of the Aposlasie of the saints and uncertainty of their perseverance because here it is promised to Christ that from the heart and mouth of His seed the word and Spirit of Christ shall never depart The third proof is from Joh. 6. 37. c. THe third place is Ioh. 6. from v. 37. to 45. where first is set down the party contracters in the Covenant of redemption for the Elect are given over into the hand of Christ by the Father All that the Father giveth to me cometh to me v. 37. Secondly upon the Fathers giving of the Elect unto Christ followeth in due time the conversion and saving faith of the redeemed All that the Father giveth me cometh to me saith Christ. Thirdly the redeemed are committed unto Christ as to their leading on preservation and perfecting of their salvation This is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day Fourthly it is agreed by what means the faith of the redeemed shall be formed in them which are the revealed sight of Christ the Son of God in the Word the powerfull drawing of the illuminat soul unto Christ which powerfull draught overcometh all opposition and resistence because it is omnipotent and invincible for no man cometh to Christ but he whom the Father draweth v. 44. and that by making them savingly and in a lively maner see the Son and believe on him v. 40. Hence followeth 1. that it is false Doctrine to teach that there is an universal redemption unto life of all and every man because not all but only some are given and made to come to Christ the rest that are not given come not Secondly it followeth that Election is of meer free grace because men come not unto Christ that they may be given but they are given unto Christ that they may be brought and come unto him Thirdly by this agreement the powerfull conversion of the redeemed and their powerfull preservation unto eternal life is as certain as the power and constancy and obedience of Christ unto the Father is firm and certain This is the will of him that sent me that of what he hath given me I should lose nothing but raise it up at the last day ver 39. The fourth proof is Joh. 10. 14. THe fourth place is Ioh. 10. from v. 14. to v. 30. where we see that the Lord Jesus the true Pastor of Israel before he was incarnat Ps. 23. continueth in that same office now being incarnat and gives his people to understand this when he saith I am the good sheepherd Secondly the care and custody of all the redeemed both converted and unconverted was put upon Christ v. 14. 16. I know my sheep and am known of mine and other sheep I have which are not of this fold them also I must bring in and they shall hear my voice Thirdly the price of their redemption is clearly agreed upon v. 15. As the Father knows me even so know I the Father and I lay down my life for my sheep Fourthly the Father accepts the price and is satisfied and well pleased with it v. 17. 18. Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life that I may take it up again c. Fifthly all the redeemed are infallibly converted but they that are not redeemed are not converted v. 27 My sheep hear my voice and I know them and they follow me
and v. 26. but ye believe not because ye are not of my sheep Sixthly albeit the redeemed and converted shall not want enemies who shall go about to mar their perseverance and salvation yet shall they not prevail v. 28. I give them eternal life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand Hence followeth first that the doctrine of universal redemption of all and every man unto life is false because only the redemption of the elect sheep is agreed upon for whom he layeth down his life v. 15. and the rest are not redeemed nor ordained to life for these he speaks to v. 26. they were not of his sheep but remained unbelievers Secondly it followeth that the election of men is not for faith or works fore-seen but on the contrary faith is ordained to be given unto the redeemed because they are elected and given over unto Christ to convert and save them v 16. other sheep I have and them I must bring in and they shall hear my voice Thirdly it followeth that the conversion of the Elect doth not depend on their will but upon Christs undertaking to make them believe and upon His omnipotency vers 16. other sheep I have and them I must bring in and they shall hear my voice Fourthly it followeth that albeit the redeemed believers be in themselves wirlesse as sheep and weak and ready to be destroyed and compassed about with many enemies as sheep among wolves yet because of the omnipotency of the Father and of the Son that have taken the care and custody of them they shall persevere and it is impossible they should perish or not persevere Ioh. 10. 28. 29. I give them eternall life and they shall never perish and none can take them out of My Fathers band The fifth proof THe fifth place is Psa 40. explicat by the Apostle Heb. 10. 5. 6. 7. where first the Spirit of God expounds the covenant whereof we are speaking and brings in the parties God and Christ as speaking one to another and as it were in our sight and audience repeating the terms thereof The price of Redemption is first spoken of for expiation of sin not to be forgiven without blood without better blood then the blood of beasts Heb. 10. 4. Secondly all satisfactions by men and whatsoever price can be payed by meer man are rejected sacrifice and ob●●tion thou wouldest not vers 5. Thirdly nothing except only the incarnation of the Son the Mediatour His obedience and suffering to the death could satisfie divine Justice But a body hast thou prepared Me vers 5. Fourthly the Mediatour Christ offers Himself pledge and Surety of His own accord and takes the condition then said I lo I come to wit as Surety to pay the ransom and to do thy will Heb. 10. 7. Fifthly Christ the Surety not only condescends upon the price but also upon the persons to be redeemed and their sanctification by which will we are sanctified by the offering of the body of Christ once for all and this price is now actually payed Heb. 10. 10. Sixthly the price being payed the Mediatour goeth about the application of the purchased benefits by His intercession Heb. 10. 12. 13. this man after he had offered one sacrifice for sin for ever sat down on the right hand of God from henceforth expecting till his enemies be made his footstool Hence followeth first that there is no universall Redemption of all and every man unto life because by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. therefore they were never redeemed who are never sanctified and only they are perfected who are redeemed Secondly it followeth that not for any thing in man neither fore-seen faith or works are men elected and redeemed because all is rejected that meer man can do that the meer grace of God may appear in Christs undertaking for men of His own accord Sacrifice and oblation thou wouldest not then said I behold● I come Heb. 10. 5. 7. Thirdly by Christs death purchase is made of the infallible conversion and sanctification of the redeemed and of their perseverance unto perfection By one offering of Christ He hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. and therefore the redeemed cannot but be converted cannot but be sanctified cannot but persevere unto perfection and that for ever Heb. 10 12 13 14. The use of this article is first that all these who hear the Gospel and have in any sort embraced it should in the acknowledgement of their naturall corruption and perverse wickednesse humble themselves before God and pray for and expect grace according to the promises offered in the Gospel Secondly that they who are already sensible of their sins and ill deservings may not run away or be discouraged but so much the rather fl●e to Christ in whom relief from sin and misery is promised to such Thirdly that they who have fixed their eye on the Son resolving to cleave unto him should acknowledge the powerfull draught of Gods almighty hand who hath caused them to come to Christ and should upon the begun work of grace conceive lively hope of salvation and study to purifie their souls in this hope Fourthly that they who find the instability and inconstancy of their own free-will and have experience of their own heart deceiving them frequently after they have ingaged themselves by promises and vows to take bett●r heed to their wayes should not cast away their confidence in Christ because of their own infirmity but that they should lean lesse to their own strength and lay hold on Christs power fidelity and constancy so much the more for to help the weak at such a dead lift The Apostle looking to Christs engagement in the covenant for those who in any measure of sincerity adhere unto him hath said 1 Cor. 1. 8. 9. Christ shall confirm you unto the end that ye may be blamelesse in the day of our Lord Iesus Christ. God is faithfull by whom ye are called unto the fellowship of his Son Iesus Christ our Lord. Fifthly let us not take the guiding of our own free-will but let so many as are fled to Christ give him the glory of the incli●ing of our heart to his testimonies and to his obedience in any measure and know that every spirituall motion floweth from his purchase and application of what is bestowed on us And when we find his hand withdrawing and our heart inclining to what is not right let us run to him to right it in hope to be helped by his grace to fight against whatsoever adversary of our salvation The fourth article AS to the fourth article of the covenant of Redemption it concerneth the means and maner how the elect shall be called forth from the perishing world and be effectually called and turned unto God so as the world among whom the elect do live shall not have cause of stumbling justly for he hath taken
life of necessity must acknowledge himself a man in himself unrighteous and a lost man and that he cometh to Christ to be justified and sanctified and saved by him and so to persevere in this course unto life eternall Of the tearms whereupon this Covenant is offered and pressed in Scripture THe terms of the covenant are diversly propounded in Scripture Exod. 19. 5. the Lord propounds it thus if ye will obey my voice indeed and keep my covenant then ye shall be a peculiar people unto me c. In these words the condition required of those that are already entered in covenant is most eminent for this people was in covenant from the time of Abrahams covenanting and was admitted to the Sacraments before their coming forth of Egypt and therefore the conditions previous to their entering in covenant and required for closing the bargain are not so much insisted on at this time This condition the people do accept and give answer to God by Moses vers 8. all that the Lord hath spoken we will do Another form and expression is used Acts 16. 31. Paul and Silas say to the Jailour now anxious how to be saved believe in the Lord and thou shalt be saved thou and all thy house The Jailour accepts of the condition and he is baptized and all his house vers 33. The condition of his person taking with guiltinesse and granting his lost condition is spoken of vers 37. the condition of the covenant therefore is propounded in the next room and is accepted where-upon baptism is administered unto him Psal. 27. 8. In other words the same condition is propounded the Lord craveth faith seeking communion on with God for the condition seek ye my face the Psalmist accepteth the condition and answereth Thy Face O Lord will I seek Isa. 45. 22. Christ requires faith in these he calleth and upon that condition promiseth salvation Look unto 〈◊〉 all ye ends of the earth and be ye saved the answer of the believer is set down vers 24. Surely shall one say in the Lord have I righteousnesse and strength Likewise the way of making this covenant is set forth by Christ offering himself a Saviour on the one part and the believers receiving Christ on the other part Ioh. 1. 11 12. as many as received him to them he gave power to become the sons of God even to them that believe on his Name And 2 Cor. 5. 19 20. upon this only condition of consenting to reconciliation offered he summeth up most shortly and clearly the covenant-making We are ambassadours for Christ as if God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be reconciled to God There remaineth no more for making of the covenant but that the hearer do honestly answer thus the offer and condition pleaseth me well I consent to be reconciled Now he who consenteth to be reconciled 1. Granteth his naturall enimity 2. Accepteth Christ the Mediatour Redeemer Reconciler offered to him by God whose fulnesse is in Christ And 3. obliedgeth himself to entertain this friendship all his life after Last of all the making of the covenant is sometime pressed to be received and followed under the form of a precept 1. Ioh. 3. 23. this is his command that ye believe in the Name of His Son Iesus Christ and love one another as he hath commanded us In which words the condition or estate of the person who is called to believe and enter in covenant is presupposed for it is imported that he must acknowledge nor only that he is a miserable sinner and unable to relieve himself but also that he is naturally averse from the way of seeking righteousnesse by faith in Christ and hath need that the soveraign power of God draw him to Christ. Secondly the condition of the making of covenant is propounded which is to believe in Jesu Christ. In the third room the con●ition require● of him that is entered in covenant by believing 〈◊〉 Christ is that we love one another as he hath commanded us This offered and commanded condition of the covenant of grace some by the grace of God do accept and engage to perform and do perform sincerely albeit weakly other some trusting in their own strength engage unto the obedience of faith and with their mouth professe they are sinners and do believe in Christ and that they will submit themselves to his Government drawing near to him with their lips when their hearts are far from him and such mens faith changeth not their old disposition and way of living but it suffereth them to serve their belly or mammon or vain glory and such other idols yet because the Church are not judges of the secrets of the heart they must receive into Church-fellowship all who confesse themselves to be sinners and professe they do accept the offer of Christs grace and promise subjection to his ordinances Obj. But how can the Church receive men in Church-fellowship who are destitute of lively faith Ans. The Church is not judge of the heart or of the secrets thereof because it cannot see faith in it self but must look to the profession of faith and to the fruits thereof in the own order and time the Church is witnesse to their engagement but not judges of their sincerity 2. The covenant of grace doth not exclude the most vile sinners if they acknowledge their sinfulnesse and do solemnly consent unto the condition of the covenant because according to this covenant nothing is bestowed on the covenanter of merit but of grace only which the Church knoweth God can give and sometimes doth give unto counterfit confederats making them sincere in his own time and that by the means of the ordinances made use of in the visible Church 3. It is one thing to be a confederat Christian in the letter externally in the sight of men another thing to be a covenanter in the spirit inwardly in respect of the heart and inward man Rom. 2. 28. and albeit the externall covenant doth not bring on righteousnesse and life except a man be also a covenanter inwardly in his heart in the sense of sin and imperfection making daily u●e of Christ yet it is certain that outward covenanting is an ordinary and blessed mean unto many to beget and foster faith and help forth the fruits thereof 4. It may and should suffice us that God in the first framing of a nationall Church did admit and commanded Moses to admit all the Israelites in covenant of whom very few were converted or reconciled to God in their spirit and this was not hid from Moses or from the truly godly in the camp of Israel as is plainly shewen to us Deut. 28. 29. where God bears witnesse against the people that their heart was not according to their profession and engagement and Moses speaketh out this truth in all the peoples audience while he is renewing the covenant with them notwithstanding they were unregenerat Deut. 29. Obj. But some will insist
and tell us that the visible Church is a society of Saints or regenerat persons and that they who live in the visible Church must be visible Saints whole li●e at least doth not contradict their profession and such as by the judgement of charity we must esteem regenerat Ans. Christs visible Church is the company of them that are called out of the world unto him the company of them that are consecrat to God and engaged by solemn covenant to follow the course of holinesse By ●●lling they are Saints albeit many of them may be ●ound polluted in their maners thus doth God Himself reach us to judge Psal. 50. 5. Gather unto me my saints saith He and who are these These who have made a co●●nant with me by sacrifice Now of these many did not worship God in spirit but placed all their religion in ceremonies and went about by their outward sacrifices to pacifie God and to expiat their sins as is plain vers 7. 8. others of these called saints consecrat unto God and joyned with him in a visible covenant were very wicked who no wayes behaved themselves as became covenanters with God and who therefore were to be excluded from the benefit of the covenant except they repented for they hated true holinesse and did cast the commands behind their back vers 16. were thieves and adulterers slanderers and calumniatours of their brethren vers 18 19. and yet for all this the Lord doth not exclude them out of the visible Church but doth in a fatherly maner reprove them that they might repent and not perish 2. There is no question whether all in the visible Church ought to be both in open conversation and in heart holy and that they shall certainly be damned and perish that are not such but the question is here about the duty of the Governours of the Church and of the godly in it whether they should exclude from Church-membership all who are not regenerat at least so to be esteemed in the judgement of charity or whether all are to be holden for Church-members and keeped within the Church who are in covenant with God and sealed with the seal thereof to the intent that by doctrine and censures of the Church so far as may be by means they may be regenerat and being regenerat be helped on in the way of holinesse 3. There is a difference to be put betwixt the precepts concerning the personall sanctification of every man in himself and the precepts given for the governing of others and keeping holy society with the called saints renewed or unrenewed in the visible Church so far as Gods word giveth light and order for it is commanded to me and thee that we pursue peace and holiness without which none shall see the face of God but it is not commanded to me or thee that we should keep no Church-fellowship in God's ordinances except with the regenerat It is not commanded to the Governours of the Church that they must examine every person concerning their regeneration neither are they forbidden to ad●●t any into the society of the Church save these whom they esteem regenerat But they are commanded to bring in to the Church all that oblige themselves to be Christs disciples with their children and by the means appointed of God in doctrine and censures of the Church to promove their sanctification and salvation for so many doth Christs commission to the Pastors of the Church import Math. 28. 19 20. 4. Regeneration is not the just measure whereby to square the dimensions and extent of the visible Church but confederation and obsignation of the Covenant by baptisme For the Church is Christs visible kingdom whose visible subjects are all they who solemnly are ingaged to subject themselves to his doctrine and government and therefore the Church visible is not to be defined the company of the regenerat but the company of the confederat with God and called unto holiness among whom Christ tells us there are few elect and so fewer regenerat and therefore the Church of Christ is compared to a barn-floor whereinto is gathered both the chaff and the wheat both they that have faith and they that profess faith out of whom Christ doth gather his own Elect and redeemed ones Obj. But at least in gathering of a Church out of the world respect must be had that the consenting of the covenanter be serious and how can the consent be serious where the heart is not sincere where the person is not regenerat Such a mans consent to the covenant as is without saving faith is but fained counterfeit hypocritical and such a consent as may hinder the mans regeneration and do nothing but provoke Gods wrath against the man and the receivers or admitters of him also Ans. Serious is sometime opposed to sport or play and so a mater may be serious which is in earnest gone about and is not openly histrionical And sometime serious is opposed to the intention of fraud and deceit and so that may be called serious which is done without a purpose to deceive or beguile the party But when the consenter to ingage in covenant speaketh as he thinketh albeit possibly his own heart deceive him his consent to the condition of the covenant may justly be called serious because he intends to deal in earnest as in a weighty business And such was the consent of the people of Israel unto the covenant made with God Exod. 19. Likewise counterfeit and hypocritical is sometime called so in opposition to that which is reall true and spiritual And so all consent to the covenant of Grace which doth not proceed from the spirit of Regeneration is but fained faith and indeed is not saving faith yet it may be serious and morally honest like Israels Exod. 14. 20. and so sufficient to make a covenant and to tye an obligation on the man to such duties as may lead to salvation Again fained connterfeit hypocritical is called that which a man purposely doth fain making shew of that which he knows not to be being conscious to his own wickedness and such a fained consent we grant doth provoke God against such a person but the Church is not judge of this so long as they know not of this gross hypocrisie We hold then that there may be and usually fall forth such a morall consent unto the covenant of Grace without saving faith which may be called a serious really honest consent as to the agreement of the mind and mouth of the covenanter such as is found in ordinary civil contracts between one man and another and must be acknowledged to be an external Church-covenanting with God and with the rest of the members of the Church and so the consent in respect to the making a covenant is not fained neither is it displeasing unto God in the own kind albeit it be not sufficient or acceptable to God unto the persons salvation For so much doth God himself testifie Deut. 5. speaking
any man the Lord hath given no certain mark as long as they live except that malicious and wilfull rejecting and opposing of known Christ Jesus to the intent that none should dare to exclude either themselves or others from repentance and hope of mercy so long as the day of Gods long-suffering and patience doth last This is collected from this that God doth not make mention of the reprobation of these misbelieving fathers while they are living but now long after they are dead and this mention making of them is in general only and not by nameing them particularly 17. Albeit in the dispensation of the covenant of grace for application of saving mercies the mater be so wisely carryed by God that both the decree and covenant of Redemption is keeped closs as to particular names and yet it is effectually made out in the applying of grace to individuall persons as the agreement is made between God and Christ Mediatour yet the covenant of Redemption is made this far clear that it did not passe for the conversion and salvation of all and every man by this evidence that not so much as the offer of the covenant of grace and reconciliation shall be made to all and every nation far l●sse to all and every singular person but that the people and nation of Israel and Iudah is chosen out of all people and nations in the world comprehending such others as should be called unto their society and the fellowship of the olive tree among them as Psal. 147. 19 20. holdeth forth And in this place the whole elect under the Gospel are taken up under the name of this one nation 18. That the decree of election of some may both be keeped up as to particular nomination and yet have certain execution and be performed the Lord taketh up all his confederats whether in the letter or spirit also under the same common name This is gathered from this that the misbelieving Israelits that perished in the desart with whom God made a covenant and they did break it are designed under the common name of fathers and are taken up in that covenant under the name of spouse Ier. 31. 32. and the elect posterity are taken up under the common name of the house of Israel and Iudah 19. Such as the covenanters are in regard of their inward estate such is the covenant wherein they really are or such is the covenant in relation to their persons Unto the reprobat who do change for their part the covenant of grace into the covenant of works the covenant of grace becometh in effect the covenant of works and is rendered void to them as the Apostle doth threaten the Galatians Gal. 5. 4. and as did befall the pharisaicall fathers who are here declared as instances but the covenant of grace unto the elect and true believers remains still the covenant of grace from which they do not fall nor can altogether fall as the comparison here between the fathers in the wildernesse and their elect posterity maketh evident 20. The Lord hath wisely joyned life with the means and way to life and death with the way to death and will not have that separated which he hath joyned This is collected from this that the fathers by not continuing in the covenant are despised and rejected of God and so perished but their elect posterity having the law of God in their hearts and cleaving constantly unto the Lord are saved 21. The Lord will have this doctrine taught where His word is preached concerning the election of some and reprobation of other some of Gods covenanting with some people and persons and not offering a covenant to other some of covenanting with some in the letter and with other some in the spirit also to this end and intent that men leaving the searching in particular of that which God hath keeped secret in the particular may follow commanded duties repent their sins and flee to Christ offered unto them and take up his yoke upon them and beware that they neither despair nor yet presume or turn the grace of God into wantonnesse This we gather from this that God sendeth forth Ieremiah to preach these things not only to the visible Church of the Jews going into exile and captivity but also to all who shall hear this doctrine from him to the end of the world And the Apostle repeating this doctrine for the use of the Christian Church of Jews and Gentiles doth confirm this CHAP. VIII Of the prudent application of divine covenants in general HAving spoken of these three divine covenants concerning mens salvation it follows now to speak of the application thereof first in generall and then more specially In the mater of application we must first look upon Gods effectuall applying and working in the hearers of these covenants such effects as he hath intended by these covenants to bring to passe Next we must look upon the means whereby he ordinarly doth convey and work his intended works in men And thirdly we must look upon the prudent way of use making of these means both by Pastors and people for peoples good 2. As to the first the Lords effectuall application is a reall and actuall bestowing the good of these covenants upon his own by way of powerfull working on their spirits Such as are 1. the giving the grace of understanding of the Scripture And 2. the belief of what is understood And 3. the application of the doctrine of the law concerning mens sin and misery to their own conscience And 4. the making them judge themselves according to the law And 5. the raising of sorrow in their hearts and fear of wrath And 6. the setting of their eye upon Christ for delivery from sin and death And 7. the makeing them perceive a possibility and probability that they may be saved And 8. to have an earnest desire after reconciliation with God in Christ And 9. the making of his own to cast themselves over on Christ and to believe on him And 10. the making them to consecrat themselves to God in Christ reconciling the world of meer grace to himself not imputing transgression to the reconciled through Christ And 11. the making them to wonder at the riches of the free grace of God who in a self-condemned sinner desirous to be reconciled with him requireth no personall dignity no good work which may commend him to God but only that he would receive and welcome Christ offered in the Gospel as the only necessary and sufficient remedy against all sin and misery requiring no other condition but that he flee from the curse of the law and the wrath to come unto Christ the Redeemer who offereth himself unto lost sinners in the preaching of the Gospel that through him the beleiver may be justified and sanctified and saved for ever And 12. after wondering raised in the hearts of his children the making them cleave closly to Christ and to strive against all temptations which
might weaken their faith and to rejoyce in believing and to be zealous for the Lords glory and carefull to bring forth more and more fruits of faith and love and working such other gracious works of his Spirit in his children as may more and more mortifie sin in them and perfect the image of God in his new creature This divine magisteriall and effectuall application of reall blessings belongeth to God only and is the end of all ministeriall application which is of the externall means appointed of God to be made use of by men the blessing whereof must be left to God to bestow on whom how and in what measure and in what time it pleaseth him as the Apostle doth shew unto us 1 Cor. 3. 6. I have planted and Apollos hath watered but God giveth the increase 3. The externall means which do serve unto the foresaid divine operations are 1. The doctrine of life and salvation set down in the Scripture to be heard and read by all men and meditat upon with prayer for a blessing And 2. sent ministers to whom God hath committed the word of reconciliation by whose ministery disciples may be made unto Christ out of all nations And 3. the administration of the Sacrament whereby they with their children are baptized and gathered together in severall Churches and put under the government of such Church-officers as his Testament hath appointed And 4. these Churches joyned together in the most edifying way of mutuall communion and strengthening one another in true doctrine pure worship and discipline which Gods providence doth make way for that the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus may continue and grow in the world and all his ordinances may be exercised publickly and privatly to the best advantage of the Church for perfecting of the Saints for the work of the ministery and for the edifying of the body of Christ as the Apostle requireth Ephes. 4. 12 13 14. 4. In the use of these external means and specially in the application of these three covenants prudence is required both in P●stors and people to which intent and purpose these following considerations may serve 1. The remedy of every sic●ness of the conscience must be grounded on the doctrine of salvation set down in Scripture which doctrine 〈…〉 be known and believed by the porty 〈◊〉 before he can receive benefit thereby And 〈…〉 a prudent application of wholsom and saving doctrine may be made of necessity the party diseased must be acqu●●ared with the doctrine to be applyed unto him before he can make use thereof to his advantage for experience teacheth us how hardly gross ignorants can be convinced of sin add how hardly such can be comforted when their conscience is wakened with the terrours of God because they neither know from the Word of God the cause of the terrour and anxiety wherein they are nor can they be capable of the remedy of their evill except they first be catechised in the heads of saving doctrine h●ld forth in the Law and Gospel which instruction can hardly be given or received in a short time and howsoever a prudent Pastor must make use of time as it is offered yet when death is near to the party to be instructed how little is it that can be expected to be done 2. The order of applying saving doctrine doth not begin at the application either of the covenant of Redemption or at the covenant of Grace but he that will follow a right order must begin at the law and covenant of works under the yoke whereof we are all born by nature children of wrath And if a man apply that covenant and law to his heart and subscribe his own dittey and deserved condemnation then may he turn up his soul to Christ Jesus the Redeemer and flye to him for refuge and accept the offer which he makes in his Gospel of a new covenant of grace for pardoning of sin and reconciling unto God in himself the person who is fled unto him and for sanctifying and saving of him which covenant when a chased soul doth consent unto and layeth hold on Christ offered for relief from sin wrath death and hell then may he ascend by faith unto the covenant of Redemption and apply to himself with Gods allowance all the saving graces purchased by Christ by that covenant to all that flye unto him and believe in him 3. This order of making use of these three covenants many do not follow but they begin at the covenant of Redemption and will either be satisfied about this whether they be elected or not given to Christ to be redeemed or not which is a secret and not to be inquired into save in Gods order as we have shown or else they will not enter upon the use-making of these means which God hath appointed to bring a man to repentance and faith in Christ. This is a tentation of Sathan which if they yield unto it shall lead them either to resolute profanity with Cain or to anxious desperation with Iudas 4. There are some also who make leap-year of the covenant of works and do take no notice of their own naturall sinfulness or wrath due to them and lying on them by nature but neglecting this order do start a race and run to a presumptuous avouching of their faith in Christ and will thrust in themselves in the number of the elect given before the world was unto Christ to be redeemed and saved pretending their believing of the Gospel when they have not believed the doctrine of the law and so do turn the grace of God into lasciviousness and wantonness and go about the satisfying and fulfilling of their own lusts Wherefore it is necessary that every man who seeketh to be saved and hath resolved to follow Gods way to attain unto salvation do begin first at the covenant of works and examine himself according to the rule of the morall law how he hath behaved himself in obedience unto the first and second table and having sound a dittey great enough that he judge himself and passe sentence on himself as guilty and worthy of everlasting wrath for his sins Secondly when he is convinced of sin and deserved wrath and of his own utter impotency to deliver himself then let him flee to Christ and lay hold on the grace offered in the Gospel applying the same to his burthened conscience according to the tennor of the covenant of grace fully revealed in the Gospel And thirdly when he hath in earnest consented unto the covenant of grace and reconciliation and hath laid hold on Christ with unfaigned faith seeking in him remission of sin and renovation of life being resolved by the grace of Christ to use the means appointed of him for that end Now it is time and not till now to look up unto the covenant of Redemption and there to read his own name as it were written in the book of life and to acknowledge that the measure of repentance and
and at length that they shall wholly give themselves to religious exercises and a holy life mean time they conceive they may come in among the true converts and young beginners albeit they come not up the length which they intend but are unde the power of some beloved lusts which they cannot rid themselves of but do hope they shall betime overcome them Such men do miserably mistake the mater first in that they think their purpose of repentance and a new life bred in them by conviction of their duty to be the very grace of regeneration and begun sanctification Secondly they conceive that the lusts which do reign in themselves are common to them and all other regenerat persons of whom few or none think they want their own grosse faults Thirdly they conceive they can repent more seriously when they please and will repent after a whiles following of their beloved lusts as if repentance were not a saving grace of the holy Spirit whom they do daily provoke by their vilenesse but a work in the power of every mans free-will being once convinced of his sin Fourthly they do not consider that by the delay of repenting and turning from all sin unto God their heart is daily more and more in Gods Judgment hardened and God provoked to punish their voluntary impenitence with judicial hardness of heart that they shall never repent Such men our Lord compareth to the disobedient Son who promised to his Father he would go work in his vineyard and went not Math. 21. 30. Such men are they who know the well of the Lord but do it not and therefore worthy of double punishment Math 12. 47. The ●●medy of this evil Christ giveth Luk. 13. 24 25 26. Strive to enter at the strait gate for many ● say unto you will seek to enter in and shall not be able M●n know not how soon God may shut the door therefore men had need while it is to day not to harden their hearts psal 95. 8. 2. Other some are who being of a civil life professe and do perswade themselves that they indeed do repent and believe in Christ and by faith in him do certainly expect salvation freely of his grace If you pose any such men whether they do indeed believe in Christ they shall presently answer that they firmly do believe in him and that they never doubted but he is their sweet Saviour who died for them If you press them to speak in earnest from their heart they shall presently be ill pleased with the question and ask what cause of suspecting the sincerity of their faith and repentance can be justly alledged or what cause hath any man to suspect them or doubt of Gods favour toward them in Christ In whom should we believe say they if not in Christ Is there any other Saviour of sinners beside him If a man please to try the truth of their faith by their repentance they shall forthwith affirm that they repent day and night and have just cause so to do for in many things we sin all and why then should we not alwayes repent If they be asked of their love to God and their neighbour they shall answer after the same maner Such men are these of whom Christ speaketh that they will confidently come to him and call him Lord Lord and yet be found no wayes carefull to do the Lords will but servants to their own lusts 3. Such men do deceive themselves first by framing to themselves such carnal notions of faith and repentance and of the love of God and of saving hope and other spiritual graces as in their phantasie they conceive they do practise which conceptions are not grounded upon the Word of God Secondly they esteem the assent of their mind unto the truth commending these duties unto men as good as the performance of them and they do take the sentence of their conscience concerning the equity of such duties for the sentence of their conscience bearing witnesse of their practice and obedience of these duties and while their conscience saith why should not I do so they take that for as good as if it had said I do so but saving graces go deeper then civil carriage and to commend the duties of repentance and faith in Christ is not enough except they be put in practice also in daily sorrow for sin and hatred of it and flying to Christ daily to be washen and more and more sanctified 4. Some there are who when they have heard that a man is justified by faith in Christ only without the works of the law do imagine a faith which needeth not to bring forth any good works at all and so they take off the justified man from all necessity of following good works as far as they take off good works from being the cause of justification and do open a door to themselves to live after their own will in the lusts of their flesh conceiving that they who believe in Christ are fred not only from the covenant of the law but also from the command of the law against whom our Lord doth speak and doth cut off such libertines and turners of the grace of God into wantonnesse from the kingdom of heaven Math. 5. 17 18 19. And the Apostle to guard against this self-deceit Heb. 12. 14. commandeth to follow holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. 5. Some there are who pretending to esteem well of the offer of the Gospel and of the duty of following the means of making them partaker of the marriage-supper do yet think themselves excusable when they have much ado in their worldly callings albeit they prefer the care of their family and provision for their things out-ward unto the main work of their entertaining communion with God yea they conceive that God will allow them in so doing as Christ doth insinuat in the parable of the ghuests invited to the feast answering the invitation with I pray have me excused Luke 14. 18 19. This is a rise evil in great personages rich persons and such as are much imploved in earthly affairs such men deceive themselves first in laying down this ground with themselves that their earthly affairs the necessity whereof doth first and most sensibly appear must in the first room be cared-for and that the one thing necessar may be followed after as their civil and earthly affairs may permit Secondly they reckon gain to be godliness 1 Tim. 6. 5. for they cannot be perswaded when gain may be had that God requireth of any man to slip the occasion or to put his worldly goods in hazard by defending or following maters of religion Thirdly they think themselves so wise as they can well enough serve two Masters God and covetousnesse albeit when it cometh to the proof they will be found to serve not God but their own lusts This error our Lord refuteth and giveth warning to beware of it Matth. 6. 24. And Luke 21. 34. Take heed
to your selves lest at any time your hearts be over-charged with surfeting and drunkenness and cares of this life No wonder then that such men profit not by the Word of God but remain fruitlesse because they are by our Lord compared to the ground that receiveth the seed among thorns Mat. 13. 22. He heareth the word but the cares of this world and the deceitfulness of riches choaks the word and he remaineth unfruitfull 6. Some there are who having received a sufficient measure of gifts whereby they may promove the kingdom of Christ and be profitable to the society they live in by making use of their gifts do pack up all their duties in a sequestration of themselves from all businesse conceiving this way to be fittest both for God's service and their own salvation Whereupon they betake themselves to a private life in some obscure corner choosing rather to live as Monks and Eremits then to appear in publick and make use of their gifts with the hazard of toyling themselves and tossing of their estimation among beholders of them And this their resolution is backed with a pretended purpose to spend their time in reading and prayers without provoking any man to hatred or emulation against them thus they conceive they shall provide best for their own ease and safety and if withall they apprehend that they are not fitted with gifts which may be profitable to others and do think what they have bestowed upon them by God to be scarce sufficient for the carrying of themselves on in the course that tendeth to happinesse then they conceive they are well excused if they let all publick works alone without putting forth their finger to help what they see amisse We do not deny but sundry godly persons in the heat of persecution have been forced to lu●k in a wildernesse among wild beasts during the time of the danger of whose fellowship the world was not worthy neither do we deny that age and infirmity of body may make men unfit for all publick imployment But the fault we tax is of such men as being able in Church or State to do service to God and the society they live in do for the love of their own ease hide their talent and not make use thereof for the benefit of others for if a narrow search be made of such mens resolution the fear of outward trouble in the world a declining to fight the fight of faith impatience to be at any pains and a desire to keep the estimation of their parts from the hazard of mens censure and love of their own fleshly ease will be found the fountain of their resolution But here we deal with none but such as the Apostle and Christ doth speak against to wit such as in some honest imployment for the common utility refuse to be at pains and work and therefore are not worthy of their bread 2 Thess. 3. 10. And let us hearken to Christs judgement of such men whom the world admireth for most holy Moncks in the parable of the talents he taketh up the lazy lubbart of whom we speak under the reckoning of a k●avish servant who because he had but one talent which amounteth to no small sum went away and hid it in the earth Mat. 25. 26. Thou wicked and slothfull servant saith he c. and ver 30. cast the unprofitable servant into outer darkness there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth The remedy is that men of parts and abilities do not yield unto their lazy humor nor to their discouragements which may foster their temptations to idlenesse but study rather to live in the sense of their obligations to God and to improve all that they have received from him for his honour and the well-fare of his people and to this end it is fit they should hearken to the counsel of judicious friends rather then lean to their own judgment over-swayed with temptations lest the Lord deci●her them and lead them forth with the workers of iniquity Ps. 125. 5. 7. Some are very like in all externals to the true converts so far as can be observed by beholders for they professe the true religion with others they seem to have consecrat themselves unto Christ they associat themselves unto and haunt the company of these who are in best esteem and joyn themselves alwayes with the reputed godly they seem ready prepared to bear Christs crosse and to go forth out of the city after him bearing his reproach and to be waiters upon his second coming yet inwardly they were never renewed they are not troubled with the sense of sin and sinfullnesse they do not in earnest or seriously seek after Christs righteousnesse and remission of sin through him nor worship God in their spirit These are described to us in the parable of the foolish and wise Virgins Matth. 25. the foolish were in company and outward fellowship of religion with the wise their outward conversation was without scandal as was the behaviour of the wise they had lamps of profession as the wise and were not suspected by themselves or others to be unsound they went forth in profession waiting for the coming of the Lord as the wise did and last of all no other infirmities were found in them then such as the wise Virgins were subject unto also they all fell asleep now and then nothing could be outwardly found to difference them from the wise Virgins which external likenesse as it deceived the beholders of these foolish Virgins So also it deceived themselves neither shall this personal difference be openly manifested till the Judge the searcher of hearts shall come and separat the goats from the sheep and the hypocrits from the unfeigued believers The remedy is that every one who pretend unto holinesse externally search their own hearts and inward sinfulnesse daily and flye to Christ in earnest that their nakednesse may be covered and their affections made spiritual seeking after things above and that by faith in Christ they may be filled with the unction of the holy spirit for bringing forth true fruits of faith 8. Unto the former we may joyn such as for their eminent gifts above the common sort of pious people and their abilities to conset discourse and dispute of maters of religion seem to themselves and to beholders also eminent Saints especially if they appear sharp censurers of others and z●alous against every least degree of sin in others but most of all if they for their enduements be fitted and called to pray in publick and preach the Gospel to others and withall do live without scandal they doubt nothing but they are high in Gods estimation as they are set up in reputation among the godly in the visible Church Now that such gifted men may deceive themselves and passe sentence in their own favours for their own absolution from any challenge which may condemn them our Lord doth fore-warn us Matth 7. 21. 22. telling us that not only many private
to prove a man to be regenerat but he must be proven also a true believer in Christ a man reconciled to God a man justified and an adopted child 2. It is necessary therefore for proving a man to be regenerat to know the right description of the regenerat man which is given by the Apostle Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision which worship God in the spirit and rejoyce in Iesus Christ and have no confidence in the flesh Wherein the Apostle holdeth forth the truly regenerat circumcised in heart 1. He is not sinlesse but so sensible of his sinfulnesse as he hath no confidence in himself nor any thing else in himself 2. He is not free of accusations or tentations and doubts but he flyeth to Christ for righteousnesse 3. He is not an idle and unfruitfull branch but a worshiper of God in spirit and truth 1. He is burdened with sin 2. He cometh to Christ for relief 3. He puts on Christs yoke Math. 11. 28 29. If a man have these three properties joyntly in him he is a regenerae man and may defend his interest in the state of grace and right to righteousnesse and eternall life through Jesus Christ. 3. Divine operations and saving graces which accompany salvation such as are faith repentance unto life hope Christian love to God and men for Gods cause effectual vocation justification reconciliation adoption go together in time by Gods gift but one of them goeth before another in order of nature for effectual calling goeth before faith and faith goeth before hope and before charity or love Again these graces which are given to the redeemed child of God joyntly in respect of time do not shew themselves in their evidence alike soon in time nor do they equally manifest themselves when they do appear in time And so the evidences of repentance may be discerned in not a few converts before faith in Christ do shew it self in them clearly So also love to God and his Saints oft-times may be discerned in a regenerat man before he himself dare affirm any thing of his faith in Christ. 4. Albeit there be many regenerat persons who for the present time cannot perceive in themselves any undoubted signs of their conversion yet it is certain also that there be many who to their own unspeakable comfort are assured of their regeneration and that they are translated from death to life and that they have received the spirit of adoption and earnest of eternal life as is pointed out in the experience of the Ephesians chap. 1. 14. And this is certain also that all who are fled to Christ for refuge should by all means labour to make their calling and election clear and certain to themselves 2 Pet. 1. 10. And to this purpose we are commanded to examine our selves and try whether we be in the faith or not whether Christ by his Spirit be in us or not 2 Cor. 13. 5. for otherwise except a convert know certainly the blessednesse of his own state and that he standeth in grace and favour with God it is not possible for him to give hearty thanks to God for the change of his state from being an enemy to be made a reconciled subject and child of God It is not possible for him to rejoyce in the Lord or set chearfully himself to serve God or comfortably call on God as a father to him in Christ Wherefore all who in the sense of their sins and fear of deserved wrath are fled for refuge unto Christ should deal by prayer earnestly with God that he would graciously grant unto them his Spirit by whose operation in them they may know the saving graces which he hath freely bestowed upon them of which gift of the holy Spirit the Apostle doth speak 1 Cor. 2. 12. 5. The knowledge of a mans own regeneration hath many degrees of clearnesse and assurance by reason of the variety of conditions wherein a man truly converted may be For many doubts may arise in the man regenerat which may darken his sight and hinder the assurance of saving grace granted unto him whereof sundry causes may be found and in special these four among others 1. In a man illuminat and renewed by the holy Spirit there remains a great deal of ignorance much doubting mixed with faith by reason of unskilfulnesse of the convert to examine and discern this blessed change made in him where through that cometh to passe in many young converts which will be seen in infants who have a soul indeed but do not know or perceive that they have a soul till they come to some years of discretion yea many sound Christians are oft-times at a stand about their regeneration and know not what to make of their faith or repentance especially when they feel the power of the body of death the strength of natural corruption in themselves and great indisposition for any spiritual exercise they are forced with the Apostle to cry miserable man that I am who shall deliver me Rom. 7. 24. mean time for weaknesse of their faith they are not able at the first to wrestle against discouragment and to come up unto the Apostles thanking God through Christ. 2. By the tentation of Sathan oft-times the perswasion of holy men is darkened so as they cannot see the evidences of their own regeneration clearly for Sathan sets himself to vex the Saints who are delivered from his kingdom and bonds whom albeit he know that he cannot destroy them yet he will not cease to trouble them that at least he may make them some way unfit for Gods service and marr their cheerfulness in his service and because he feareth harm from them unto his kingdom by their dealing with the unconverted to repent their sins and to turn unto God therefore he finds them work at home in their own bosome and puts them to defend themselves and to forbear to invade his subjects till they be setled themselves 3. Oft-times the Lord is offended by the sins of the regenerat and specially by their grosse transgressions for which his Spirit being grieved doth for a time cease from comforting them and doth not bear witnesse with their spirits that they are the children of God as he hath formerly used to do 4. Oft-times the Lord by suffering doubts to arise in their hearts useth to try and exercise the faith of his children and thereby to stir them up to the pursuing of the duties of piety and righteousnesse more vigorously and sincerely that after victory obtained over these tentations they may be more confirmed in their faith and more diligent in his obedience 6. It may come to passe that while the true convert doth most doubt of his own regeneration that the work of Gods special grace may be observed in him and clearly seen by others more experienced in the wayes of God and indued with the spirit of discretion The reason whereof is because howsoever the weak convert and child of light walking
faith and to follow hard after the growth of sanctification without which no man shall see the face of God and let us so extoll the covenant of Grace and freedom of the believer from the covenant of Works that we neglect not to keep up the authority of the moral Law and the commands thereof as the perpetual rule of new obedience the use whereof is very profitable in the whole course of a Christian life to hold forth the duty of believers in Christ and to shew unto them by their short-coming in duties the poyson and power of corruption remaining in the Saints and to make them sensible of the necessity of flying daily to that imputed righteousnesse by faith in Christ and of drawing strength from Christ to bring forth more aboundant fruits whereby Christ shall be more and more precious in our eyes and be acknowledged absolutely necessar for our justification sanctification and salvation 15. When question is made concerning Christian vertues and operations of the holy Spirit in us the order of Gods working held forth to us in Scripture is carefully to be marked by us which is that sense of sin should go before faith in Christ for the Law is a pedagogue to Christ for he came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Matth. 9. 13. And faith in Christ goeth before the fruits of faith and the fruits of faith before the sensible approbation of them and approbation of the fruits by Scripture goeth before the sensible fealing of the believer and the quieting of the conscience in its approbation of what the Scripture approveth for after we have believed we come to be sealed Ephes. 1. 13. Now for the not observing this order many real Christians do make unto themselves a very un-comfortable life for albeit they be convinced of sin and humbled in the sense of their own inability to help themselves and are fled to Christ for pardon and help and do lead a life blamelesse yet do they unhappily suspend the acknowledging of the work of faith bestowed upon them and do disquiet themselves so as they cannot rest on Christ but do quarrel the reality of their faith till they shall feel and perceive with approbation of their conscience such and such fruits of faith in themselves and that in such a measure as they have fore-imagined to be the necessar evidences of faith yea and they refuse to account themselves persons justified because they cannot perceive such mature fruits in themselves as they conceive must not only be but be acknowledged also to be in the justified person before he can lay hold on justification Such persons do in effect invert the order which they should observe for when it were their part to flye unto Christ the only Mediator because they come short of new obedience and because they are loaden with sin that in him they might have God reconciled to them and by his Spirit pouring in of his grace in their souls to make them more holy they take another and contrary course by suspending their faith upon their works and do exact of themselves works before faith and so do weaken their own faith and hinder it to bring forth such fruits as they do require It is reason indeed to prove our faith by our works and it is just that such a faith be accounted dead which is not accompanied with the purpose and endeavour to live holily justly and soberly But it is against all reason and equity to condemn weak faith accompanied with the purpose of a new life as if it were no faith because it hath not as yet brought forth so fair and fully ripe fruits as the weak believer would It were their wisdom when they perceive such impotency to do what is good and such strength of the body of death in them to flye unto the Redeemer so much the more and in him to seek remission of sin and strength to bring forth good fruits and to be sucking juice and sap out of him as the true Vine for if we come to him and abide in him we shall bring forth much fruit Iob. 15. 4 5. For faith in Christ in order of nature goeth before good works for only they who come to Christ and abide in him do bring forth aboundant fruit and not they who upon the apprehension of their want of fruits do loose or slacken their grip of faith and upon discouragment are ready to depart from the living God 16. The like wisdom is required in dealing with the consciences of men concerning the preparatory dispositions of such as may confidently come unto Christ to be justified sanctified and saved for albeit it be true that all that come to Christ ought to come in the sense of their sin and acknowledgment of wrath and death deserved for their sins ought to come with contrition of heart with godly sorrow for their sins and a humble renunciation of all confidence in themselves yet must not such persons as do not satisfie themselves in the measure or sincerity of such preparatory dispositions in themselves be keeped back or debarred from coming to Christ because they not only want as they conceive both the humiliation and sorrow of heart for sin and fear of wrath required in such as have accesse unto Christ but also do perceive in themselves such blindnesse of mind and vanity thereof such stupidity of conscience and stubbornesse of a proud heart as is not fit as they conceive to be received by Christ or fit to be comforted by him such persons I say are not to be forthwith debarred from coming to the throne of grace for oft-times sincerity of conviction compunction and humiliation is to be found in such as are displeased with their own short-coming in such preparatory dispositions more then in many others who make a fairer shew and profession of their godly sorrow and humiliation and are well pleased with themselves in that respect We must be wary also while we require sorrow and humiliation and other like preparatory dispositions in them who may come unto Christ least we secretly import and insinuat a sort of merit to be in such dispositions so as if he that doth not perceive himself thus qualified could expect no good at Christs hands except he have in his hand such preparatory dispositions as if it were a price of purchasing adresse to Christ. But let us hold this fast that the more poor and empty a man be in his own eyes he ought to draw the more near unto the riches of grace in Christ because in him only are to be found all the treasures of every saving grace and preparatory dispositions for receiving thereof he is that exalted Prince who giveth repentance unto Israel Act. 5. 31. he is the author and finisher of faith unto whom all they who in the sense of their want of repentance and faith do sigh in themselves ought and safely may come that they may have from him a more ample
found the spirit of consolation with-drawn from him and the wrath of God breaking his bones and consuming the marrow thereof Ps. 51. 8 9 10 11 12. Make me to hear joy and gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice c. 2. In answering this doubt we must proceed sutably to each degree severally In curing this case in the fi●●t degree let the afflicted admit all the just aggravations of his sins against the Law which the conscience doth presse for by extenuation of sin neither is Gods justice glorified nor the conscience satisfied and consolation or hope of remission of sin must not arise from the few number o● lightnesse of sins but from the multitude and largenesse of Gods mercy and therefore we must not cut short the reckoning with the Lords law nor must we diminish the weight and estimation of our evil deservings but course must be taken that by the sense of guiltinesse the judgment of the afflicted person be not so confounded ●nd perplexed as if his case were desperat and possibility of salvation were passed but rather let the afflicted humble himself under the mighty hand of God who alone can destroy and make alive and who usually bringeth down to death and brink of hell and bringeth back again and who alone doth work wonders This doubt then arising from the multitude of sins may be loosed first by a fresh consideration of the infinit excellency and worthinesse of Christ Jesus God manifested in the flesh and of the incomprehensible value of the price of redemption payed by him for all who flye unto him for the Father hath declared himself satisfied by him in behalf of the redeemed for whom he did offer himself Matth. 3. 17. saying This is my well-beloved Son in whom I am well pleased And Heb. 7. 25. ●his is he who is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God by him Secondly by consideration of the infinit largenesse of God● bounty grace and m●rcy wherein he hath set no bounds to himself in pardoning and abolishing the sins of those that come unto him how grosse and grievous soever they have been Isa. 44. 22. I have blotted out as a thick cloud thy transgressions and as a cloud thy sins return unto me for I have redeemed thee And Isa. 1. 18. Come now and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as sca●●et they shall be as white as snow though they be red as crimson they shall be as wool And Matth. 11. 28. Come unto me saith Christ all ye that labour and are heavy loaden and I will give you rest Thirdly by the consideration of the many examples and experiences of the mercy of God manifested in the pardon of hainous sinners both in the old and new Testament set down in Scripture of set purpose to invite such as are troubled with the sense of their manifold sins to come unto Christ the Mediator or to God in Christ reconciling the world to himself by not imputing sins to them who embrace the offer of grace and reconciliation tendered unto them in the Gospel As to the second degree wherein the doubt is augmented by the addition of the sins against the Gospel unto the sins against the Law by despiseing or slighting the means of salvation offered in the Gospel true it is that the despising or slighting of the offer of grace in Christ cannot be sufficiently aggreged because the sins of Sodom and Go●orah will be found lighter being laid in the ballance with the contempt of the Gospel Matth. 10. 14 15. yet notwithstanding when God is entered in reckoning with a sinner and is begun to challenge him for his sins against the Law and the Gospel also and hath by his terror humbled the man there is mercy insinuated unto that person in the bosome of the threatening Wherefore the soul born down with the sense of ill-deserving by his sins against both Law and Gospel must be exhorted to humble himself before God and flye in unto Christ who of set purpose 〈◊〉 he might answer this doubt hath declared that whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man it shall be for●iven him to wit if he repent this injury done to Christ Matth. 12. 32. and he standeth knocking at the door of luke-warm Laodicea with an ofter of coming in to them and supping with them that shall open to him notwithstanding they have slighted him long in their senslessenesse of sin nakednesse and misery As to the third degree wherein the afflicted doth suspect that he hath sinned against the holy Ghost because he hath sinned against the light of his conscience and di●ement of the holy Spirit let the afflicted consider that the sinning in actual grosse out-breakings against the light of the conscience is indeed a high provocation of God to his face for which the offender is to be humbled all the dayes of his life Secondly let him learn to glorifie God● Justice who hath made a proud rebell to be scourged with scorpions and sore bitten with the remorse of a slighted and contemned conscience Thirdly let those particular transgressions objected to be done against the light of the conscience be examined with their motives and circumstances and out of the bitter rod of Gods correcting the offender that he should not perish with the world let the afflicted take up the Lords love in judging him that he may not be condemned As also let the Pastor or the prudent friend who goeth about to comfort the afflicted carefully observe if the afflicted be grieved for grieving of the holy Spirit if he desire and long after the consolation of God whom he hath offended if he purpose to walk more circumspectly afterward and eshew the snare he hath taken into or what other evidences of repentance can be seen in him whereof use may be made to assure the afflicted that he hath not sinned unto death Because the sin against the holy Ghost as it is described unto us in holy Scripture is either a malicious refusing and opposing wittingly and wilfully of Christ Jesus after that the Spirit of Christ hath convinced the person that Christ is the Redeemer and this was the sin of some Pharisees desperat professed and irreconciliable enemies to Christ Mat. 12. 24. to 33. or it is a totall apostasie from Christ after they have known him to be the Redeemer joyned with a malitious oppugning of the christian Religion as it is set forth Heb. 10. 26 27. to 32. and whosoever falleth in this sin he neither repents him of it nor desires to repent or be reconciled with God And therefore let the humbled and afflicted penitent longing to be reconciled unto God through Christ and to find the sense of his favour granted or restored not suspect himself any more guilty of this sin but let him make use of the offer of grace in the Gospel and of the example of penitents mentioned in Scripture Who knoweth how soon the
do acknowledge that they deserve death for their sins do confesse they stand in need of Christ do thirst for his righteousnesse do desire earnestly to be united unto him by faith do follow the exercise of Religion and do endeavour to keep their consciences undefiled in all things and yet for all this do not only doubt whether they be renewed but also do esteem it a presumptuous rashnesse in them to approach unto Christ or to cast themselves over on him by faith before they be more seriously humbled before they feel a more hearty sorrow and grief before they feel the pangs of the new birth more sharp before they be more pressed with the burthen of their sins and do feel in themselves the spirit of fear and trembling and bondage in a higher measure From whom if you ask a reason of their doubt they shall answer that they are not yet called to come unto Christ because these are only called to come unto Christ who are weary and loaden in the superlative degree and are so born down with the weight of sin as they cannot be more and not despair for so do they interpret that saying of Christ Matth. 11. 28. Christ is sent only to the contrite and broken in heart who sit in the dust under the spirit of bondage that is to say as they take it to them who are under grief unspeakable as they expound Isa. 61. 1 2 3. So in their opinion Christ came to save only those who in their own sense are lost that is who are on the brink of desperation wherefore in respect they are not gone down deep enough as they think into this gulf and hell of anguish and sorrow they dare not approach or look toward Christ. Mean time they lye daily mourning and weeping and will not grant that their grief is worthy of the name of grief which sorrow they cannot dissemble or hide but do bewray it in their countenance habite walking and frequent sighing and will professe that they can hardly think they have right to eat or drink of Gods creatures and were it not for fear of adding yet more sin to the former they would not eat or drink at all oft-times they chatter as swallows and sigh as the turtle dove and oft-times their bowels sound out as if their parents or children or nearest relations were dead and yet for all this do not satisfie themselves in sorrow but do complain that they are stupid and senslesse of their sinfull and miserable condition wherein they do lye bound and though they do confesse that sometimes they mourn yet they alledge their mourning is but like the early dew or morning cloud that goeth soon away All the while it is in vain to offer to the afflicted consolation in Christ because saith he I am not one of the mourners in Sion whom he will comfort and in this their mistake they do confirm themselves by another error saying that the measure of repentance and sorrow should answer unto the measure of sin my sins saith he go far beyond the sins of others This and the like objections they cast in whereby they do obstruct their own way unto Christ and keep themselves aback from him till they be satisfied with their own prescribed measure of sorrow which case indeed deserveth much compassion for who would not commiserat their case who being in a very miserable condition dare not seek relief from their own misery which they do feel and all because they are not yet more miserable and when they are asked cannot determine what measure of affected humiliation they would stand at as sufficient 2. In the cure of this case as much must be yielded to the afflicted as reasonably can be and first it must be confessed that it is the duty of all who approach unto Christ to come in the sense of sin and acknowledgment of their miserable condition and that the due deserving of their sin is everlasting death It must be confessed also that the measure of compunction contrition and lamentation for sin may possibly be exceeding great as we see in the experience of Heman the Ezrait Psal 88. 11. I am afflicted and ready to die from my youth up while I suffer thy terrors I am distracted And David Ps. 38. This also further must be yielded unto him that the operation of the spirit of conviction by the law doth ordinarily and of its own nature go before the spirit of adoption or the operation of the spirit of the Gospel according to the covenant of grace so that no man can in earnest embrace Christ as a Physician as Mediator and Saviour of his soul except he be sensible of his disease acknowledge his natural enmity against God and his own lost condition being by nature under the curse of the Law Secondly when these things are agreed upon the afflicted person may be posed concerning the measure of the sorrow for sin whether it must be the same in every convert to wit in that extremity and superlative degree which he doth miss and desiderat in himself and how long that sorrow in this eminent measure must continue By this question he cannot choose but be at a stand and unable to answer with Scripture-warrand for the Scripture doth indeed require serious repentance but the measure of sorrow and sadnesse it doth not prescribe for Matth. chap. 3. v. 2. 6. many upon the hearing of Iohn Baptist preaching were convicted of their sins and did confesse their sins in the general and forthwith were baptized by him And Act. 2. 37. 41. three thousand souls at the hearing of one sermon of Peter were convinced of their sin pricked at the heart repented and fled to Christ for grace were converted baptized and entered members of the Christian Church all in one day Again the afflicted may be posed with another question seing he desiderats such a measure of sound hearty sorrow in himself before he can make his addresse unto Christ out of what fountain mindeth he to draw this sorrow of himself he hath it not and from Christ by his grounds he cannot seek it for he saith for want of his imagined measure of sorrow for sin he dare not approach unto Christ because as he alledgeth none are called to come unto Christ except such only as are in a superlative degree weary and loaden and so full of the spirit of heavinesse that he must be at the point of desperation near by But the Scripture doth teach us that Christ is that exalted Prince to give repentance unto Israel in what measure of sorrow he pleaseth and that therefore such as are convinced of and in any measure sorrowfull for offending God should run unto Christ that he may give them a better measure of repentance Thirdly the evils and danger which accompany and follow upon this practical error may be represented unto the afflicted for first by this his error he giveth way to Sathans tentation who when he perceiveth the
sense of sin begun in the afflicted by Gods mercy and that the afflicted cannot now be hindered from repentance nor be keeped in his former snare doth change himself as if he were an angel of light and setteth all at nought the measure of sorrow which the afflicted hath already and shews unto him how unanswerable the proportion of his sorrow is unto the multitude and hainousnesse of his sins and so spurreth him on to mourn more and more that if it be possible he may distemper and distract him or make him pine away and perish in his sorrow without faith or consolation in Christ this is one evil Another evil is this the affectation of such a degree of sorrow smelleth of seeking some sort of expiation of sin and compensation of the pleasure taken in sin by suitable sorrow for it unto which practical error we are by nature too too prone for as by nature we strive to be justified by works according to the covenant of works written in the children of Adam so when we see our selves come short of the righteousnesse of works we go about as is to be seen in Papists to supply the defect of works by some one sort or other of our sufferings and satisfactions for sin in special that by sorrow and tears in abundance we may wash away the guilt and pollution we have contracted by sin And in this course we run on naturally after wakening of the conscience to exact pennance and punishment on our selves till the deluded heart say it is enough And then as if all were well the deceived sinner resteth himself which deceit of the heart the oftener it hath place and prevaileth without being observed it is the more dangerous A third evil following on this practical error is by it the free grace of God and merits of Christ are greatly obscured and both the mans consolation and sanctification are marred the loss that the afflicted sustaineth on the one hand and the drawing on of new guiltinesse by such a course on the other hand is covered under the vizard of humiliation A fourth evil followeth this error which is this the afflicted person so long as he continueth in this mistake he giveth way to the tentation and doth of set purpose foster his own misbelief that he may thereby foster and augment his own sorrow and afright himself with dreadfull imaginations what shall become of him that he may augment his affected heavinesse of spirit and make the fountain of his tears run the more abundantly A fifth evil is the afflicted so long as he suspends his going to Christ because he hath not mourned sufficiently for sin he fosters another fault unawars to wit a purpose to lay down any more sorrowing for sin if once he had overtaken his imagined measure of sorrow and had his accesse so made unto Christ. This deceit of the heart is brought to light in the practice of some Antinomians who allow themselves once to mourn for sin that their mourning may make way for faith in Christ but after they apprehend they have once repented and casten their burthen on Christ and do number themselves among believers they scorn to mourn any more for sin they harden themselves against all remorse of conscience and do reject secret challenges as groundlesse and make themselves merry with their own fancy and reckon all penitents to be under the spirit of bondage which evils if the afflicted person would perceive to follow upon his error which as a net is spred before his feet to keep him from going to Christ and following the course and exercise of repentance all the dayes of his life he would take heed better to his steps 4. The afflicted must be informed or called to mind concerning sorrow for sin that it is not commended from the quantity or measure of it but from the quality or sincerity of it Now sincere sorrow for sin is best discerned by the hatred which the mourner hath against sin by the mourners humiliation of himself before God by his abhorring himself both for his sin and for the hardnesse of his heart under sin by his purpose to strive against all sin by his flying in unto Christ for relief from sin by his entertaining and renewing of godly sorrow after he hath believed in Christ according as he findeth the inherent roots of sin to be springing up in him This is indeed sincere and godly sorrow which causeth repentance never to be repented of 5. Fifthly and last of all the afflicted must be exhorted not to linger any more but flye to Christ and let him be humbled so much the more as he is not so humbled as he should and would be let him call to minde that Christ came not only to comfort mourners for sin but also to call sinners unto repentance for Christ hath not put such a measure of sorrow whereof we are speaking to be the condition of the covenant of Grace he doth not fell his precious wares nor his gifts of grace for the price of mens tears but let him remember that whosoever is so destitute in his own sense of all good as he finds neither the sense of sin nor repentance nor faith nor any other good thing in himself which may commend him to God but by the contrair much evil of all sorts and yet cometh to Christ is no doubt the poor in spirit whom Christ hath pronounced blessed Matth. 5. 3. and that the sense of his sin and misery in the measure which he hath of it is the evidence of eye-salve already bestowed upon him to encourage him to buy of Christ all the riches which he holdeth forth to the poor in spirit Revel 3. 18. CHAP. VII Wherein the Christians doubt whether he be regenerat because he findeth not his righteousness exceeding the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees is answered THere are some regenerat persons who in the sense of their sins and acknowledgment of their unworthinesse and inability to help themselves are fled unto Christ and have given over themselves to him by faith and are endeavouring to bring forth fruits suteable to repentance who for all this fall a doubting whether they be renewed whether their faith be true and saving faith and the reason which they give of their doubting is because the reformation of their life whereunto they have attained appeareth unto them not to exceed the righteousnesse which may be found in some Pagans or in Scribes and Pharisees of whom Christ hath said in the Evangel Matth. 5. 20. I say unto you that except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven This doubt is followed with grief anxiety of mind and fear least all vertues in them be found nothing but counterfeit and this case except it be speedily cured cannot chuse but draw after it heavy and hard consequences For curing whereof we must confesse that many Pagans and Infidels
of eternal life Other some doubting of the soundnesse of their conversion because the ●error of God and fear of condemnation and hell prevailed more with them for changing their course then the love of God and true holinesse did and both the one sort and the other do conceive the chief rise of their change to have been natural or carnal self-love fearing harm and loving life 2. For removing of this doubt we grant that there are many who after some notable delivery from death or some notable benefit received or after some sharp rod of chastisement for their sin have changed their outward way of living left off grosse vices and led a more civil and blamelesse outward life and yet have neither seriously repented them of sin nor seriously fled in unto the grace of Jesus Christ offered in the Gospel neither knowing what saving faith is nor carefull to know it but of such we do not speak here for we are speaking of the true convert and renewed man who in the sense of sin is fled to Christ in the sense of his unworthinesse maketh the grace offered his refuge and in the sense of indigence looketh up to Christ and seeketh supply of him in all things and by the holy Spirit is striving against sin endeavouring in some measure of sincerity to bring forth the fruits of faith and repentance and yet for all this he doubteth of the sincerity of his own conversion for the reasons foresaid To this souldier and wrestler we say as before we said to him that doubteth of his conversion because he cannot design the time of his conversion it is not material by what way or means or motives a man is brought unto Christ provided he doth come and indeed adhere to Christ it is all one whether the rise of the mans turning from sin to God was love alluring or terror driving him whether a benefit or a sharp rod whether fear or hope did at the first beginning of his change move him to seek God provided God manifested in the flesh Christ Jesus the Redeemer of sinners be now his beloved Lord and precious in his eyes for he that is most sweetly allured to come to God and without much fear is converted who possibly after serious conviction of sin and deserved death is not keeped long at the door of mercy but forthwith is admitted to the throne of grace and tenderly entertained by the Spirit of consolation may fall in hard exercises afterward This is evident in the experience of the Prophet David in whom his brethren living in the same family with him did not perceive any signes of a sorrowfull or heavy heart as his brother Eliab's words do shew 1 Sam. 17. 28. I know thy pride and the naughtiness of thy heart Thus did Eliab judge of David's chearfull carriage whereof also we have some evidence that David was of a ruddy and beautiful countenance and for some years of his youth did passe the time pleasantly serving God with his songs and harp while he was feeding his sheep in the wildernesse now none can justly question his conversion all this time or his sincerity in this service yet afterward he was otherwayes exercised for oft-times he felt the power of the Law upon his spirit and was tossed with the terror thereof and made to mourn and weep heavily Such doth Iob's condition seem to be in his youth as it is described Iob 29. but afterward in the tryal of his faith what a conflict with temptation he had the sacred History doth testifie Therefore there is no reason why any in whom these evidences of a true Israelit are found in any measure should suspect the sincerity of his regeneration because he hath been gently handled in his conversion for it may come to passe that the same person may fall in firy tryals and so hard temptations as he may fall in doubt of his conversion in regard of the sad afflictions inward and outward whereby he is exercised In which case he will be found to be mistaken no lesse then he was mistaken in the former case and condition for some dear children of God may possibly both in their conversion and most part of their life be exercised with the terrors of the Law and yet retain fast hold by faith on Christs grace in their deepest afflictions For instance we offer that precious soul Heman the Ezrait who came near unto Solomon in the point of wisdom 1 King 4 31. and yet how bitter his afflictions of spirit were the 88. Psalm beareth witnesse specially v. 13. 14 15. But unto thee have I cryed O Lord and in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee And why castest thou off my soul why hidest thou thy face from me I am afflicted and ready to die from my youth up while I suffer thy terrors I am distracted c. And therefore there is no just cause that any in whom the evidences of faith and repentance may be found should call the sincerity of his own conversion in question how hardly soever he seem to be handled of God for whosoever is joyned to the Lord Jesus and will neither suffer himself to be driven from him nor yet will endure sin to remain in himself uncontrolled is certainly a true convert As for these who for some temporal cause are come to Christ as many did come in the dayes of his flesh that they might be delivered from some temporal evil or obtain some temporal benefit and for that cause do doubt of their conversion or sincerity thereof they need not dispute much about the occasions of their first seeking after God provided that they have learned what Christs grace is and do seek righteousnesse and salvation in him for we read in the Evangel that sundry that they might be cured of leprosie palsie blindnesse c. came unto Christ who afterward came and adhered to him by faith as the only Redeemer and Saviour of their souls from sin and misery Wherefore in such doubtings let not the afflicted trouble himself nor call his conversion in question but let him give all diligence to strengthen his faith and to increase in holinesse making his calling and election sure by well-doing for if he do this he shall neither be found idle nor unfruitfull in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus as the Apostle promiseth 2 Pet. 1. 8. CHAP. XI Wherein the converts doubt of his being in the state of grace arising from heavy afflictions and grievous tentations is solved SOme true converts sometime fall into great suspicion● of their regeneration of their effectual calling and of the love of God unto them and that because they meet with sore outward afflictions and are assaulted also possibly with horrible inward tentations which do befall them unexpectedly and are ready to swallow them up for whereas after divers conflicts in their conversion and peace of conscience following after these sad exercises of mind they hoped to have injoyed Gods peace still after
senselesse and secure and doth please himself in his pollutions for whatsoever he may be the holy Ghost points him forth among the unregenerat as a dog or sow If such a man after a time shall repent and bewail his condition and set himself to the seeking of God in Christ and to draw grace out of Christ to mortifie his lusts we shall not pronounce or determine of his former estate whether he was before that time regenerat or not but for the present case of his repenting he is on the way to evidence his regeneration more clearly then before only let him take heed to humble himself in earnest before God and to repent more seriously that so he may confirm himself and go on in the course of faith and obedience of the Evangel strengthening his brethren as Peter was commanded to do by our Lord Luk. 22. 22. 3. But if corruption of nature do not break forth to defile the whole man but inwardly stirreth and striveeth to bring its old servant into bondage again unto which tentations albeit the afflicted do not succumbe yet he is shaken and staggers in his faith doubting of his state and of the sincerity of his conversion because he findeth the power of sin in him more vigorous then he had found it before the change of his old conversation We do not deny but this case is readily incident unto such as are lately converted from formality in religion and fair civil carriage before men to true repentance and inward holinesse beseeming Christians This case because it may have sundry causes doth require also sundry cures 4. First this case may befall a young convert who because he hath not as yet gotten the experience of his own weaknesse is somewhat puffed up in the conceit of his own strength and is more confident then he hath reason that the sincerity of his purpose shall bear down and overcome all his spiritual enemies so oft as they shall oppose his holy resolution In this case what wonder is it that the Lord by a new proof of the mans weaknesse let him see that it is not in him that willeth or in him that runneth but in God that hath mercy to the intent his pride may be broken down and that he being humbled in himself may learn not to trust any more to himself but to God to Christ who by his Spirit maketh his children to mortifie sin in themselves as the Apostle teacheth us Rom. 8. 13. saying if ye mortifie the deeds of the flesh by the Spirit ye shall live Therefore the afflicted in this case must beware to fret or murmure or entertain suspicions of Gods grace in himself but rather let him after experience of his own weaknesse humble himself and renew the exercise of repentance and resolve in the use of the means to lean to the strength of Christ who doth help his souldiers in their conflict against sin and Sathan either by giving them the victory quickly or else sustaining them in the conflict by his grace as he did the Apostle 2 Cor. 12. 7. to whom Christ did not grant the victory till he despairing of his own ability to stand out against the messenger of Sathan did humbly beg deliverance from the tentation and then he gave him assurance that the assistance of his grace should prove sufficient to sustain him in the conflict and to deliver him in due time Secondly this case may fall out by the meer malice of Sathan who doth set himself to vex the young and ●ender convert lately taken out of his dominion to the intent he may make him repent his coming out of Egypt if it be possible and by leading out against him a new army of temptations may move him to despair of the victory and so bring him back to the flesh pots and taking on again the yoke of bondage if he can 2. And here consideration must be had of Gods wise and holy permission who suffereth Sathan to put a young convert to so hard tryals that in the weaknesse of his own child he may make evident his great power in upholding his young souldier against the forest assaults of Sathan and his wisdom in breaking by this mean the strength of in-born corruption raging against the work of grace in his child In this case let the afflicted remember he is called to give a proof of his faith and sincerity that he may acquit himself manfully and not be afraid of the power of temptations but bear out stoutly resisting Sathan being confident of the victory and of tramping Sathan under his feet shortly yea pre-suppose with inward temptations external persecution be joyned let the Lords souldier follow the example of the godly Hebrews whom the Apostle doth exhort to prepare themselves after spoliation of their goods to meet with grievous affliction under hope to overcome Heb. 10. 32. 36. and 12. 4. 3. This case may fall out not so much from the growing power of corruption as from the growing light of grace discovering sin more clearly then before regeneration for he who before regeneration was lying dead in sin did not feel the weight of sin at all or was sensible only of grosse out-breakings but when the clearer light of the Law doth come opening up the dens and caves of natures corruption out of which come forth legions of sinfull motions and amongst these sundry monsters of unperceived wickednesse are discovered to the young convert what wonder he be afraid and cast in many doubts and suspicions For if even the Apostle Paul himself out of the sense of inherent sin and of the bonds thereof where-with he did find himself bound was compelled with tears to cry out Miserable man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Rom. 7. 24. what wonder is it that a novice in Religion do tremble when he seeth and smelleth the dunghill and filthy stable of his own unclean heart In this case all the comforts which the Gospel doth furnish are to be ministred to the afflicted hope is to be fostered in him of victory over all those evils the wisdom of God is to be set forth before his eyes under this exercise wherein the Lord hath brought to light the latent corruption of nature of set purpose that he might yoke his young souldier in combat with it and give him the victory by the holy Ghost over not only those evils which do trouble him for the time but also all other sins and so promoveth the mortification and abolition of the whole body of corruption in him 4. The fourth cause is or may be this that the afflicted hath not such estimation of the imputed righteousnesse of Christ as is requisit but with the slighting of Christs satisfaction and righteousnesse purchased to the believer by Christ goeth about to establish his own righteousnesse whereupon the Lord discovereth his short-coming in sanctification which in this life is imperfect and should indeed be followed after carefully
things to come and the gift of working miracles and the gift of preaching the Gospel may be granted unto the unregenerat for the use and edification of the Church The observing of this difference shall teach the afflicted to esteem well of all the gifts of God which may serve for humane society or to edifie the Church but not to look upon them as evidences of regeneration for they are nothing in comparison of saving graces for if he shall study to humility and repentance toward God and faith toward Jesus Christ and love to God and his Saints and to a holy life by the grace of Christ in any measure let him esteem more of them then of all these common gifts how glorious soever they seem As also let him put a difference betwixt the judgment of charity concerning other mens estate which contents it self with probabilities and the judgment of certainty and reall verity concerning his own estate which proceeds from the operation of the holy Spirit bearing witnesse to our spirits that we are the children of God and revealing unto us what things are freely given to us of God to wit among other gifts giving unto us eye-salve to make us know that we are blind poor naked and miserable with grace leading us to buy without money or price from Christ gold tryed in the fire and garments to hide our nakednesse which is the righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto us In the judgement of charity concerning other mens estate we see nothing save what is outward and cannot pierce into their hearts which God only can and doth search but concerning our own estate we may know certainly if we search well 1 Cor. 2. 10 11 12. Wherefore that the afflicted may overcome this doubt let him leave unto God the judgment of the hearts of these hypocrits and apostats which were never humbled in 〈◊〉 sense of sin nor seriously believed in Christ but to satisfie himself concerning his own estate let him study to discern the power of sin in himself more and more and daily be humbled before God in the sense of it And the more he discern the loathsomnesse of sin in himself let him the more heartily embrace Christ offered in the Gospel and consecrat himself wholly unto him that in his furniture drawn by faith out of Christ he may bring forth good fruits and add one vertue to another and so shall he be sure that he hath passed the perfection of the unregenerat and is a true subject of the kingdom of God effectually called and elected of God unto eternall life 2 Pet. 1. 5 6 7 8. CHAP. XIV Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert whether he be in the state of grace because some godly persons look upon him as an hypocrit SOme true converts do suspect themselves not to be true converts because some of the godly of their acquaintance whose judgment otherwayes is not to be lightly rejected not only do suspect them to be hypocrits but by words spoken of them and behaviour toward them declare their judgment of them 2. This tentation doth not a little afflict the weak in faith who of themselves are ready to call in question their own conversion and when they perceive their own suspicion of themselves to be as it were confirmed by the suspicion and testimony of some Saints howsoever rashly judging other mens hearts no wonder the tentation of Sathan questioning whether they be the children of God grow strong against them By this stratageme Sathan useth to assault the strongest in faith and to vex them at least as we may see in the exercise of Iob whose faith was mightily assaulted when his godly friends mistook his affliction and condemned him as a wicked hypocrit The like we see in the exercise of the Prophet Ps. 38. 11. when his friends stood aloof from his plague 3. For strengthening the afflicted under this tentation first let him examine himself so much the more acuratly because of the suspicion that the godly have of him after which examination if he find any measure of sorrow for sin in himself and of faith flying to Christ for relief and of endeavour to live holily righteously and soberly albeit joyned with much infirmity and manifold imperfections let him not cast away his confidence but rather strengthen what he findeth of the Lords gracious work in him although it seem to him ready to dye Secondly let him consider whether this exercise and affliction be a correction from God chastising him for his rash judgment of others whom possibly he hath wounded with such rash suspicions of them but whether he find this or not let him not despise this exercise but be humbled before God in the acknowledgment of the reliques of hypocrisie in our corrupt nature and flye unto Christ in whose mouth there was no guile that he may be cloathed with his righteousnesse head and feet and let him study unto more and more sincerity that he may approve himself to God and to discreet Judges of his conversation and let him not alienat himself altogether so far as in him lyeth from them by whose suspicions his faith and good name hath been wounded but in humility and charity toward them in the constant following of piety toward God and righteousnesse toward men labour to commend himself to all mens consciences And in so doing he needeth not stand for the rash judgment of any man for by so doing Iob was victorious over this tentation in his conflict with his friends and it is sure that men may be deceived in their judgement of other mens estate for first the ignorance of another mans heart maketh the Judge to judge what he knoweth not It is true God hath granted unto his children liberty according to his Word to judge of the actions of other men and from their actions to judge of their condition and temper in relation to those actions but to judge of their state who outwardly do what is right doth not belong to men but to God who hath reserved to himself the searching of every mans heart and only knoweth who is the upright and who is the hypocrit who is the wise and who is the foolish virgin the outward conversation of both being like one to another Again to know another mans manners ingine inclination and way of his life doth require long conversing with him comparison of his actions one with another and a prudent conjunction of all signes of his inward disposition before a discreet charitable judgment can be had of him And whosoever do judge rashly of other mens hearts do not well know their own heart or of what spirit they are in judging for many presume too much to justifie their own condition and state and make themselves to be as rules and paterns unto others and so become too too rigid censurers and severe judges of other mens conditions and state except they find it like to their own And if there be any
dissimilitude of manners or discrepance of judgment or contention about any mater then partiality hindereth a right judgment one of another and affection marreth reason many times that it cannot discern what is right Therefore let the person afflicted with this tentation turn himself to God who searcheth the reines and let him humble himself in his sight renewing the exercise of repentance and faith in Christ and let him apply to himself what the Scripture doth pronounce of these who in the sense of their sin do flye to Christ Jesus that in him they may have remission of sin and amendment of their life for so did the Prophet in the whole Psal. 17. when he had to do with his uncharitable friends and kinsfolk and so let the afflicted do CHAP. XV. Wherein the converts doubting of his being in the state of grace so oft as he doth not feel the sense of his reconciliation with God is examined and answered SO●e true converts are who indeed are indued with the saving graces of faith hope and charity and give evident proof of the in-dwelling of the holy Spirit in them and do rejoyce now and then in God their Saviour when his love to them is shed abroad in their heart but when a cloud cometh over their eyes and they do not feel the warm beams of the Sun of righteousnesse shining in their soul as they before have felt they are assaulted with doubting if any saving grace be in them at all and do entertain these tentations oft-times so far as to suspect and expresse in words that there is no solid faith in themselves no lively hope no christian charity no mortification of sin no purity of heart and such like if when they are thus tempted and tossed they lay hold on Christ as in their first conversion and find the sensible comfort of the holy Spirit by the word of the Gospel applyed unto them then all is well their doubting is overcome for the time they rejoyce and praise God But if the Lord shall delay for his own wise ends to renew their sensible consolations and to renew the earnest-penny of their inheritance forthwith they begin to doubt again and to hearken to Sathans suggestions and to suspect that their former feelings were but temporary and not the special operations of the holy Spirit and at length break forth in many sad complaints And in a word they do not maintain the work of saving grace in themselves longer then the sun shine of spiritual felt consolations abideth with them And albeit their exercise be no wayes so hard as was the Prophets Psal. 77. yet they fall out in the same complaint which the Prophet expresseth ver 7 8 9. Will the Lord cast off for ever and will he be favourable no more is his mercy clean gone for ever doth his promise fail for evermore hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies 2. For clearing of this case two diseases may be perceived in the afflicted which is here described The one is this the afflicted setteth himself to live rather by sense then by faith and doth put his faith on work of set purpose that he may obtain or recover consolation shortly but if his desire be not shortly granted he maketh not use of the formerly felt consolations to strengthen his own ●aith when consolation is withdrawn The other sicknesse is this the afflicted doth not take up the nature of saving graces nor perceive the beauty thereof except in the sun-shine of sensible divine approbation thereof he doth not take up the right definition or description of saving graces for saith is to him nothing if it be not a full perswasion except he can pour forth tears alwayes he thinks he doth not repent except he find a joyfull expectation of Christs coming in glory he thinks his hope not lively and so of charity and patience temperance righteousnesse and holinesse if he do not find them in some eminent measur as they may near●by stand before the law the afflicted of whom we are now speaking thinketh he hath nothing of saving grace in him We grant that this sicknesse is very rare and few they are that are troubled with it yet where it appeareth it must be speedily cured but with great circumspection cured for the earnest desire he hath of feeling the sweet sense of the joy of the holy Ghost must not be disallowed but commended to him and he taught to cry as it is said Cant. 2. 5. Stay me with flaggons comfort me with aples for I am sick of love yet with holy submission unto Gods will for time maner and measure 2. He is also to be commended that in his trouble he goeth to God in Christ not altogether without faith which he putteth forth in active exercise thereof by confession of sin by supplication and otherwayes but here is he to be reproved that while he is actually exercising faith love hope c. he reckoneth all he doeth to be nothing no faith no hope c. because it is not in such a measure as he would 3. He is to be commended that he doth aime at the highest degrees of faith love hope patience mortification of sin and practice of holinesse and all commanded vertues but here he faileth that he counteth all as nought when consolation and sensible approbation of what he hath is not felt for here he despiseth the day of small things and unthankfully mis-regardeth the lower degrees of these saving graces which notwithstanding are bought to the redeemed by the same price wherewith the highest degrees are bought to wit with the precious blood of Jesus Christ. 3. Wherefore let the afflicted consider first that the will of God revealed requireth of us that we walk by faith and under the sense of our sinfulnesse and afflictions whatsoever hold fast the covenant of grace in Christ Jesus and by adhering unto him hold up our heart and entertain spiritual life in us Secondly let him consider that this way of living by faith and dependence on the word of Gods grace doth please the Lord well for without faith it is impossible to please him and thus living by faith in him doth give more glory of truth grace mercy and constancy unto God then when we suspend the glorifying of him till we find the sense of consolation from him for if we believe in God only because we find the consolations of his Spirit our faith in that case is weak and leaneth more upon the pledge and sensible evidence of his truth bestowed upon us then upon his promise without a pledge for no man will refuse to give credit to a man upon a pawn but God is worthy to be credited upon his word without a pawn yea when his dispensation seemeth contrary to his promise Thirdly let him consider that the Lord useth to give sensible consolations not only to help our faith in the time of consolation but also to help our
his lamentation for his short-coming in duties unto God by prayer for this is the way to make progresse in faith and repentance and humility and submission of his will unto God in the use of the means and let him thank the Lord that from day to day he is keeped from scandalous out-breaking CHAP. XVII Wherein is solved the converts doubt whether he be regenerat because he seemeth to himself to follow religion and righteousnesse from the common operation of Gods working by morall swasion and not from the special operation and impulsion of the holy Spirit THere are some true converts who have profited so far in the amendment of their life and conforming their conversation unto the rule of Gods Word that the yoke of Christ is become easie to them and their delight is to be frequently about the exercises of religion and works of righteousnesse and yet sometime they are troubled with suspicion whether the work of regeneration in them be solid because any thing they do may be done as they conceive by temporary believers in whom no sound renovation of corrupt nature will be found I find nothing in me saith one of the effectual motion of the holy Spirit but all by way of morall swasion by imitation of others by education as may be found in the unrenewed disciples of morall philosophy for as they by frequent actions do acquire habits wherewith being indued they discharge moral duties more easily and with delight So I by discharging acts of religion and acquainting my self with them daily do seem to my self to have acquired a facility and delectation in religious actions and works of righteousnesse toward my neighbours 2. This case we grant is very perilous and subtilely coloured by Sathan to deceive and weaken the true convert for it is true what power hath been seen in morall philosophy among Pagans to put a luster on mens civil conversation must be also granted to Theology among professed Christians because divine threatnings and promises for procuring outward reformation of a mans life are more apt to prevail with a man then all morall philosophy and it is true also that education by parents and imitation of good men is of great force morally to perswade a man to the following of the outward duties of religion and to a civil conversation Wherefore it is no wonder to see a true convert doubt of his own regeneration when he compareth external duties discharged by himself with the external duties discharged by others whose heart he cannot see but must judge charitably of them and yet can neither be clear determinatly to affirm all such to be true converts nor to affirm himself to be a true convert so long as he suspecteth that as some others reformation So also his own reformation may prove no better then from morall swasion which may be ●ound in a man unregenerat 3. For lousing of this doubt and strengthening of the faith of the true convert let him examine himself whether in the conscience of his natural sinfulnesse and sense of his own unworthinesse and inability to deliver himself from the power of sin wrath and misery he hath fled and from time to time doth flye to Christ according to the tenor of the covenant of grace to be justified sanctified and saved by him and doth follow the exercises of religion and righteousnesse in obedience to the commands of God If his conscience answer him that so he doth then first let him look upon his doubting of his state as the subtile tentation of Sathan and that he may be strong against this tentation let him renew the acknowledgment of his sins and sinfulnesse of his weaknesse and unworthinesse and renew also his consent to the covenant of grace in Jesus Christ and his purpose to obey the commandments of God in the strength of Christ for by this means he shall gain the entry into his refuge where-from Sathan was drawing him by furnishing doubts and weakening his faith Secondly having casten his anchor within the vail and setled his faith on Christ Jesus let him now maintain his former course so far as truth will suffer that his former course of life in following with delight the exercise of religion and righteousnesse did proceed from the holy Spirit and let him consider that it is not a sufficient reason to call in question the infused habits of saving grace because supernatural habits infused immediatly by the Spirit of Christ are entertained augmented and confirmed by frequent acts and daily exercise no lesse then natural or morall habits are which are acquired by exercise And this is clear from Scripture wherein are many exhortations to put faith love repentance patience c. in frequent exercise that these gracious habits may grow strong as the Apostle Peter doth speak 2 Epist. 1. chap. ver 5 6. c. Thirdly let him put a difference in judging of his own conversation and the conversation of others of whose principles and ends of outward godly carriage he cannot judge as he can do of his own for a man in nature unregenerat or a temporary believer may make profession of true religion and outwardly go on in a blamelesse conversation with this opinion that by his works he shall please God and procure salvation to himself But the true convert shall be found a renouncer of confidence in his own works a man sensible of his own sinfulnesse and imperfections who hath fled and resolveth still to adhere to Christ for righteousnesse and salvation through him the finding whereof in any measure after examination may solve the converts doubt for a man in nature cannot so hate sin and follow holinesse as to renounce confidence in his holinesse and slve unto Christ for righteousnesse Fourthly let the afflicted convert consider that the Lords dealing with his children both by morall motives and by effectual perswasion unto the obedience of faith may and doth very well concur and agree together neither is the special operation of the holy Spirit with any reason to be suspected because he sweetly leadeth on his child by way of counsell without the childs observation of any notable impulse making him to overcome strong tentations unto sin whereunto he is naturally inclined for the more victorious grace is over corruption the efficacie of the Lords grace is the more conspicuous and that obedience is most pleasant to God wherein corrupt nature maketh most opposition Therefore in this case here presupposed let him stand to the defence of his faith in Christ and go on cheerfully in the way of righteousnesse against Sathans tentation solliciting him to doubting and discouragement which counsell if he follow he shall find by experience that he hath made use of the shield of faith and gotten the victory not without the special operation and impulse of the holy Spirit CHAP. XVIII Wherein is solved the true converts doubt whether he be regenerat because he findeth not self-denyal in the measure which is requisite in converts
free of grosse out-breakings This last sort deceive themselves also because they esteem their natural sorrow for such sins as are grosse and scandalous to be true repentance albeit they be not humbled for the fountain of these out-breakings to wit their in-born corruption of nature and filthy concupiscence and the daily out-breakings thereof to the polluting of their spirits whereof they do take litle or no notice Many also there are who deceive themselves esteeming the outward exercises of religion and some works in themselves commendable to be sufficient fruits and evidences of their faith in Christ and of their regeneration albeit they have not as yet fled to Christ sincerely neither ever put a right estimation upon the imputed righteousnesse of Christ. Such men when they should renounce all confidence in their own works and in the sense of their sinfulnesse flye unto the covenant of grace offered in Christ that in him they might have remission of sin and from him by faith draw strength and ability to bring forth good works they run a contrary course for in the confidence of their own strength they go about sundry duties toward men and exercises of religion toward God trusting in those works as if by works they were to be justified Therefore justly shall Christ say unto them depart from me ye workers of iniquity I never knew you Such were many of the Israelits who being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God went about to establish their own righteousnesse These things when one weak in faith doth consider no wonder he be troubled and be afraid lest he deceive himself and perish as others have done 3. This is a dangerous disease and so long as it is not cured it hinders much the tender beginnings of the new creature that it cannot come up to manly strength First therefore let the afflicted wisely examine the course of his by-gone life lest he either absolve or condemn himself rashly and let him beware lest he esteem the worse of the evidences of a new creature and the fruits of faith because these that look to be justified by their works can produce the like works Secondly let the afflicted call to mind whether in the beginning of the re●ormation of his life the Law as a Pedagoge did lead him unto Christ and whether since that time the law did daily put him on and force him to ●lye to Christ and to embrace Christ and his righteousnesse and hath made him to study obedience to the law out of love to God so much the more carefully as he perceived himself obliged thankfully to acknowledge grace granted in Christ to him for if any measure of the daily exercise of repentance if any measure of love to Christ and any measure of endeavour of new obedience be found after examination in the person afflicted out of doubt the ground is laid solidly of his salvation out of doubt he hath an evidence of the work of grace by the operation of the holy Spirit in himself 4. If in this examination the afflicted be not clear but the doubt doth yet stick because of the suspicion he hath of the felt deceitfulnesse of his own heart we offer unto him this counsell that he quickly humble himself before God and do ingenuously acknowledge the native perversenesse and deceitfulnesse of his heart and for that very reason let him embrace Christ the Redeemer in the armes of faith offering himself to every condemned sinner and let him thank God who hath deciphered unto him this deceitfulnesse of his heart and offered Christ unto him for the true remedy of this and every other sinfull malady And in the mean time let him put a difference between himself and an hypocrit in whom the deceit of the heart is neither acknowledged nor seen but fostered and defended for a close hypocrite after hearing of the doctrine of the deceitfulnesse of the heart will stand to the defending of his own sincerity and will take it hardly if any man labour to convince him of any measure of hypocrisie but a true convert or regenerat person will not deny but much hypocrisie may be found in him and albeit he be sorrowfull that this deceitfulnesse of heart hath had lodging in him and lurked too long yet is he willing and glad to have this evil more and more discovered unto him and heartily doth he deliver up this traitor to Christ to be mortified and abolished by his Spirit 5. But if the afflicted cannot be quiet and satisfied still fearing and suspecting he be found a man unrenewed and that for the running issue of this filthy boyl opened up to him by the sword of the Spirit let him beware that he passe not permptor sentence against himself that he do not conclude himself to be a man altogether in the bond of iniquity but let him suspend for a time the disputation and do that which is allowed unto every self-condemned man in the beginning of his conversion that is quickly let him flye unto Christ for remission of sin let him lay hold on that righteousnesse purchased by him and the more he feareth to find God a severe judge let him the more firmly lay hold on Jesus Christ the Mediator who justifieth the ungodly by faith this is the only solid way to persevere in faith to overcome Sathan to solve doubts to resist temptations and to cure the wound made by Sathans firy darts for unto that man who in the sense of his sins and ill deserving and inability to help himself doth flye unto Christ it shall never be said by Christ depart from me I never knew thee 6. Now when the person afflicted hath of new laid hold on Christ and guarded the fortresse of faith and repulsed the tempter who by all means and specially by quarreling and questioning the by-past work of grace in him had laboured to weaken and overturn his faith for by-gones and for the present also lest it should convalesce and grow stronger for time to come now I say let the afflicted after victory return to the dispute and to the examination of his state in grace of his faith in Christ and of his regeneration and he shall see all the begun saving graces which were darkened by temptations clearly appear and shall perceive the several steps and degrees of Gods grace toward him in former times more evidently then he could discern them in the hour of darknesse and temptation And so he shall return from this battel strongerin faith then he was before and more perswaded of the work of the holy Spirit in him then he was before the temptation CHAP. XXV Wherein is solved the doubt of the true converts conversion arising from his breach of the covenant of Grace as he conceiveth THere are some sincere converts who albeit they do not doubt but penitents flying to Christ are received in favour with God are justified from their sins and do obtain right unto all the priviledges of the Saints yet they doubt
from Sathans insinuations and crafty suggestions or his more discovered and open assaults that there is no businesse we can go about wherein this crafty hunter shall not dig a pit or lay a snare to intrap us no affliction nor difficulty wherein he shall not study to keep us back from making Christ our refuge our helper and deliverer and that therefore we must take heed to obey the warning of the Apostle Ephes. 6. 10 11 12 13. Finally my brethren be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might put on the whole armour of God that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil and so forth to the end of the Chapter CHAP. XXX Wherein are some mixed cases spoken of whereunto the true convert is subject and so may fall to doubt of his conversion or interest in Christ. THere are beside the cases whereof we have given some examples and instances other cases also which we may call mixed cases the causes whereof are partly natural partly spirituall wherein the true convert may be afflicted with both bodily and spirituall distempers melancholious humors abounding in the body and Sathan busie to stir himself in these distempers to the weakning the faith of the convert may take advantage to vex the child of God 2. These bodily distempers are common both to the unrenewed and to the regenerat for God hath not exeemed his children from diseases of the body for the righteous and the wise and their works are in the hand of God no man knoweth either love or hatred by all that is before him all things come alike to all there is one event or accident which may befall to the righteous and to the wicked to the good and to the clean and to the unclean to him that sacrificeth and to him that sacrificeth not as is the good so is the sinner and he that sweareth as he that feareth an oath Eccles. 9. 1 2. Saul the King of Israel in his melancholious fit may by the instigation of an unclean spirit changing himself into an angel of light fall on prophesieing in the midst of his house while he is about to murther David 1 Sam 18. 10. and experience hath shewed that some lying in grosse sins who while they were themselves and in their wits were found very rude and ignorant in maters of religion and things divine but sometimes sudainly falling in a melancholious ex●asie and rapture they could rehearse a number of passages of Scripture and seemed to pray and to bring a number of arguments in their praying as if they had been wrestling with God for mercy of which Scriptures or words of prayer they had neither sense nor memory when they came to themselves after the melancholious extasie was over which sit lasted sometimes an hour sometimes two or thereby all which time they neither did hear nor see the wittnesses sitting by and beholding the spectacle On the other hand experience hath shewed how far Sathan may abuse and hath abused the phantasie of some holy persons in the height of sharp feavers and frensies and what speeches against God and their own souls by his instigation they have uttered We have an example in Iob who in his hot feaver and painfull boils like a man distracted cryed out that God was turned an enemy to him that he did shoot all his arrows against him whereupon in his distemper he cryed for death and cursed the day of his birth most bitterly Of which expressions when he is challenged by his uncharitable friends and judged to be nothing but a wicked hypocrit he excuseth himself that when he spoke these words he was not himself but in a roving distemper Iob. 6. 26. Do ye imagine to reprove words and the speeches of one that is desperat which are as wind 3. But our purpose here is not to discourse of melancholy in general nor what may befall in common to the godly and the wicked in melancholious fits for this doth require a larger Treatise and the concurrence both of Physicians and Divines We purpose only to speak to what the true convert is obnoxious unto and when we speak of mixed cases wherein both the distemper of the body and brain do concur with the temptation of Sathan we do not take notice of any light distemper of body and mind which suddainly cometh and is soon removed or which the privat diligence of the child of God in the use of the means may and useth to overcome Neither do we meddle with phrensies and madnesse which so bereaveth the man of the use of common reason that he cannot understand or make use of wholsome advice and counsell from the Scripture or rightly conceive truth when it is told unto him for in such a case the Physician only is to be called to deal with the diseased not excluding the prayer of the Pastor and Christian friends for him But we are to speak concerning more moderat distempers wherein the afflicted may lay forth his tentations and propound the reasons which seem to fortifie his doubts and to dispute of them receive reasonable answers to his objections as they are offered unto him And in a word such a condition of the mans mind as maketh him ready to hear and follow the advice both of the Physician and the Pastor as his need requireth Now it is not our that the imagination of these who are of this midle sort of distemper doth ordinarily fain to its self sad and terrible things and being fired with melancholious humours and tentations of Sathan mixed therewith useth to represent to its self Gods hot displeasure death condemnation and hell as it were before their eyes so that it is no wonder that for the the time they doubt whether they can possibly be in the state of grace But in special this seemeth most heavy unto them that their conscience in the mean time doth write bitter things against them and double upon them the deserved sentence of condemnation casting up the particular sins possibly repented of and pardoned as meriting rejection from God And here mainly is the stick 2. In discerning and curing such cases there is great need of wise circumspection For first information must be had of the afflicted's condition so far as his friends and familiars can furnish 2. The cure of his wound must be tenderly gone about as the Chyrurgian useth to do when he is to deal with the aple of a mans eye 3. Whatsoever seem at the first it shall be safest for the comforter of the afflicted not to speak peremptorily of the mans state or condition yea nor to judge within themselves determinatly about him 4. But it shall be sa●est to hear the afflicted patiently to lay out his own condition more or lesse confusedly in moe or fewer speeches as he is able to expresse it 5. What is further to be searched after by prudent interrogations let it be pumped up so far as conveniently may be 6.
So soon as his condition is clear to the Pastor or friend who is about to help him let the speaker unto him recollect in few words his condition as he conceiveth it and take up his doubt in a word as shortly as may be that the afflicted may perceive that his case is well taken up by the Pastor or Christian friend For oft-times here is the cure marred when the afflicted conceiveth that his case is not rightly apprehended or what is spoken is not spoken to purpose 7. Whatsoever his case seem to be Christian compassion must be shewed to the afflicted and his affliction estimat no lesse then the afflicted conceiveth of it but made possible for God to cure it For even our Lord in the resurrection of Lazarus groaned in his spirit in compassion toward the mourning friends before he gave them the full consolation And surely compassion doth well become a Physician for it is an addition to the affliction of the afflicted when the beholder cometh to him to think little of his pain 8. Whether the afflicted seem to be a convert or not let him be exhorted by his present exercise to humble himself before God and confesse his original and actual sins to God and flye to the grace of reconciliation and remission of sins and consolation holden forth in the Gospel to every self-condemned sinner through Jesus Christ our Lord for Christ is the end of the law for righteousnesse when the conscience is burdened and the rod is heavy the curse of the law and the rod of correction do drive the man to flye unto Christ and take his yoke upon him And this course is wholsome and safe whatsoever be the afflicted mans estate whether he be converted or not 5. And as for that speciall stratageme of Sathan whereby he beareth in the sentence of condemnation on the afflicted and fiteth his phantasie with the continual ingemination and inculcating of this fiery dart crying over and over again blasphemous words charging the afflicted with the sin thereof and pronouncing sentence against him saying thou art condemned thou art a reprobat and such like the afflicted man must be informed 1. that such peremptory sentences are not from the Lords Spirit speaking in the Scripture but from the false accuser of the brethren for God pronounceth not condemnation but remission of sin to every one that flyeth to Christ. 2. That he must put difference betwixt Sathans part in the sinfull suggestions and his own part in rejecting of them abhorring them and grieving for them 3. That he must put a great difference between his imagination or phantasie and his conscience between the voice sounding in his phantasie whether he will or not and the sentence of his well informed conscience approving or disallowing what is offered unto it to be chosen or refused consented unto or dis-assented from by the conscience judging according to the rule of Gods Word for a sentence of words may be suggested to the phantasie repeated and obtruded upon the phantasie a thousand times which the conscience may and should refuse and reject a thousand times We know by experience that a sentence of words may by oft repeating in the ears of a parret and other birds take such an impression on the phantasie of the bird that it shall repeat vocally the words one by one and pronounce them disstinctly as if that sentence had been the work of its own invention So also we see that by frequent repetition of any whistle or song the phantasie of some birds may be so beaten and informed that they shall chant the same song over and over again and make it as if it were its own Now phantasie and imagination being a thing common to man and beast it is certain that the phantasie of a man may be wrought upon and stamped with the like impression And this much as experience teacheth us doth befall men for when a certain song or toon is sung in our audience and is often repeated our phantasie before we be aware useth to repeat and same song or toon or quietly whisper the notes and measure of the song or toon And after our judgment hath observed this work of the imagination we can hardly stay our imagination or phantasie while we are about other serious thoughts from its secret sowthing of the measures and notes of the song for phantasie will not be ruled by the laws of reason more then the outward sense of seeing can be hindered from observation of what it seeth whether pleasant or displeasant What wonder is it then that Sathan who hath great influence on mens imagination doth make so deep impression on it by continual iteration that the afflicted seems to himself to own those blasphemous suggestions as his own thoughts and as the voice of his conscience and yet they are indeed nothing but Sathans whistling and false sentences pressed on the mans imagination And put the case that his deluded mind should take them for the justly deserved sentences of the conscience yet are they only the voice of the conscience ill informed not judging of the mater according to the rule of Gods Word which ●oth not impute Sathans suggestions to the soul afflicted by them and mourning for them And so much for solving of the doubts of the true convert concerning his state in grace and regeneration THE THIRD BOOK CHAP. I. Concerning some premises WE have handled some examples of those cases of the conscience of a regenerat man wherein his state whether he be converted or not is brought in question Now follow some examples of those cases which concern his condition In which cases albeit the state of the convert be not at the first brought in question yet his conscience may be deceived and miscarry for a time to his detriment Of which cases that we may speak the more clearly some considerations must be premised and taken along with us 1. A mans sta●e and his condition sometime are taken in a larger sense indifferently for the same thing as when we say that all the regenerat are in a blessed state or good condition and that all the unregenerat are in a miserable state or in an evil condition But when we put difference betwixt these two in a more strict sense a mans state is that relation of his person wherein he standeth either as a child in grace or as a child of wrath In which sense every convert is said to be in the state of grace and every unregenerat person is said to be in the state of wrath judicially declared such in Scripture But the condition of a man is his present morall disposition in order to his exercising of vertue or vice better or worse In which sense the renewed man or true convert is said to be in a good condition when he is going about the duties of religion and righteousnesse as becometh a renewed man and said to be in an ill condition when he is otherwayes disposed and exercised for
the present And in this sense an unrenewed man is said to be in a better or worse condition for the present in comparison with other unrenewed men or with himself at another time In which sense Mark 12. 34. Christ speaking to the Scribe who answered him in all things discreetly saith thou art not far front the kingdom of heaven The condition for the present of this Scribe was better then his fellows and better then his own at another time and yet his person was in the state of wrath because he was not entered in the state of grace or in the kingdom of heaven howsoever he was not far from it In this more strict sense the judicial state of the mans person is fixed so long as the judicial sentence of the Judge binding the unconverted to the curse that is pronounced in the Law or in the Gospel lousing the converted from the curse doth stand But the morall disposition and the condition of the man whether in the state of grace or nature is variable and changeable to the better or worse in comparison with others or himself at another time Whence it is that one and the same person may be in a better or worse condition his state remaining the same to wit good if he be renewed and evil if he be still in nature unrenewed 2. But here we are about the condition of the renewed man only which may be better at one time and worse at another time as his disposition and ca●●age in order to the duties of religion and righteousnesse falleth out to be better or worse according as his actions and behaviour are more or lesse conform to the revealed will of God and as his conscience doth its duty more or lesse commendably Sometimes his conscience upon good grounds speaketh good to him while he studieth to walk before God unto all well-pleasing and then he may say with the Psalmist Ps. 26. 12. My foot standeth in an even place in the congregation will I blesse the Lord. To this good condition we need not say much because there is no present disease which calleth for cure of this case Only it is for the child of God in this case necessary to observe dyet and exercise to maintain his good condition and to watch over his heart and wayes that he may continue and go on therein All that we have to deal with is the ill condition of the true convert when his conscience doth deceive him or doth not discharge its duty for in this case only remedy and cure is called for 3. As that condition wherein the convert is best pleased with himself is not alwayes the best So neither is that condition wherewith he is worst pleased alwayes the worst But that is the best condition wherein the holy Spirit doth most bear down the power of sin and advance the work of sanctification of the man and that condition is the worst wherein sin most prevaileth And as the goodnesse of a mans condition is is not to be estimat by any eventual accident but by its own nature and proper effects So the illnesse of a mans condition is not to be estimat by any eventual accident but by its own nature and proper effects as God in the Scripture giveth grounds of judgment of a good or ill condition for otherwayes by the default of the renewed man the best condition may degenerat in a very ill condition As when a man doth abuse divine consolations and after receiving of the renewed earnest of the inheritance from the holy Spirit groweth carnally secure and negligent in his duties or when after some grosse pollution of himself in body or soul having grieved the holy Spirit he doth not humble himself as became him but by Sathans suggestion of wicked thoughts against God and his former work in him doth fall in suspicion of all former gracious operations of the holy Spirit in him and mis-calleth all these former experiences and in his tentation esteemeth and nameth them among Sathans delusions or else at least suspecteth and feareth they shall prove no better then such On the other hand the worst conditions of the renewed man by the wisdom mercy and power of God may be turned to advantage in order to Gods glory and the renewed mans salvation as the experience of the Psalmist doth shew us Psal. 116 3 4. c. 4. An evil condition is so called either 1. in respect of the evil which the convert not only feeleth really but laments it seriously or 2. in respect of the converts estimation only who laments his good condition without cause or 3. in respect of a reall evil which the convert lamenteth not at all but lyeth under it securely Of the first sort is the condition of the convert when he seeth his own blindnesse nakednesse and misery the hardnesse of his own heart and the deceitfulnesse of it and doth flye for remedy thereof to Christ the true Physician to cover and cure all his diseases This condition is evil only in respect of felt evil but in respect of the converts making the right use of the discovery of these evils and flying unto Christ for relief therefrom it is a good condition because the diseased convert carryeth himself well and wisely in this exercise Of the second sort is the converts condition when his faith is put to tryall by manifold afflictions and tentations and he conceives himself to be in a very evil condition wherein he ought not to afflict himself but to judge this condition to be a good condition according to the Apostles exhortation Iam. 1. 2 3. My brethren count it all joy when ye fall in divers tentations knowing that the tryall of your faith worketh patience Of the third sort is the condition of the convert who when for example he feels himself unapt and unable to pray or praise or discharge any duty heartily doth not trouble himself with this his ill case but either layeth-by the doing of the duty or doth the work negligently and perfunctoriously and pleaseth himself in so doing for a time This condition is evil indeed both in respect of his spiritual diseases and of his sinfull slighting the duty of seeking relief thereof 5. For rectifying the judgment of the conscience in any or all of those conditions first let difference be put between the sinfull diseases and distempers of our spirit which are evil indeed and the discovery thereof unto us which is a benefit in it self and a gift of eye-salve bestowed by Christ upon us and the right use of that discovery by flying unto Christ which is yet a greater blessing even the work of God drawing us to the Saviour of souls the remedy of every evil Secondly let difference be put between tentation or tryal of faith and yielding to tentation under affliction The observation of tentation offered to make us depart from the truth in tryal is a matter of joy but yielding is a sin and mater of
from him in fatherly wrath yet must he not yield to the weakening of his faith but rather yet more humble himself in the sense of his sins which have stirred up wrath against him and flye in to Christ and lay hold more closely upon his grace because God being offended is not pacified nor pleased save only by flying in t● Jesus Christ. Quest. II. Q. But what will you say unto them whose confidence is weakened whether they will or not whensoever they apprehend God angry against them and especially when they feel that God being provoked justly removeth gifts and benefits comfortable from them Ans. It is not to be doubted that the confidence of many true converts is shaken and weakened in this case but the question is what shall be said unto them We answer that they must acknowledge that they have leaned too much upon these carnal props the failing whereof maketh them to fall 2. Let them be humbled yet more because of such sins as have provoked God to change his dispensation toward them 3. Let them lean more upon the only rock of free grace in Jesus Christ offered in the Gospel for the comfort and relief of all those who in the sense of sin and unworthinesse in the sense of their ill deserving and of any measure of apparent fatherly wrath that hereafter however it fair with them they may rely upon Jesus Christ who is the only foundation to build our selves upon and whose grace is sufficient to help and uphold them who have their recourse unto him in every condition whether it be adversity or prosperity Quest. III. Q. ALbeit common benefits are not sufficient evidences of Gods favour yet new obedience of faith and fruits of the spirit are sure signes of Gods special favour bestowed only on the Elect Seing then as these signes when they are present serve much for the strengthening of faith so also when they are amissing have as great force of reason to debilitat faith yea seing faith without fruits is dead may it not be concluded where no fruits are no faith is Ans. If the question be of the universal want of all fruits of faith such as is to be found in all unrenewed men whose fruit cannot be good so long as the tree is evil whose seeming service cannot be acceptable so long as they remain unreconciled to God through Christ let the question be yielded unto But we are speaking of the true convert in whom there is a missing of the measure of formerly felt fruits and that in the time present wherein by some temptation or tryal their faith is sifted and winnowed And here indeed there is a vast difference between them that were never humbled in the sense of their sins nor led for relief from sin and misery unto Jesus Christ and the true convert who hath renounced the works of darknesse and hath fled unto Christ and consecrated himself to his service and who is set upon a new course of life hath brought forth new fruits of repentance faith love and hope and hath felt consolation in this course and now under exercise of conscience looketh upon himself as barren ground doth lament his impotency to bring forth good fruits and while he is under this exercise liveth in a sad condition blamelesse and free of scandal-giving great ods between this man and a man yet in nature We grant in the unrenewed man who is a stranger to the life of grace and true godlinesse the sentence holds No fruits no faith but as for the convert who hath had comfort in Christ and brought forth good fruits in some measure he must not reason from his present dead condition felt and lamented barrennesse to the denying of true faith in Christ or to the weakening of his saith or marring his confidence further then to acknowledge he hath leaned too much on his formerly felt fruits and hath not grounded himself wholly on Christ and the rock of free grace in him but may and should maintain his faith in Christ against his discouragment that he may be inabled to bring forth more ripe and aboundant fruits Quest. IV. Q. BUt what shall be said to humbled converts who looking to the holy Law of God and finding no fruits such as should be do passe sentence in the time of tentation upon all their works as unworthy of the name of the fruits of the Spirit and then do dispute against their own faith by the Apostles words Iam. 2. 20. faith without works is dead Ans. If the conscience do pronounce according to the truth as the mater is indeed it cannot be denied but faith without works is dead and God is greater then the conscience and knoweth all things But when the conscience is misled by a tentation powerfully pressed in by Sathan in the time of some sad affliction and appearance of Gods displeasure the testimony of the conscience is not a sufficient proof to infer so hard a conclusion for it cometh to passe oft-times that the convert who liveth blamelesly and entertaineth the love and purpose of well-doing in his heart followeth the exercises of religion constantly is not negligent in his calling and is ready upon occasion offered to let forth the fruits of love to his neighbour for all this sometimes walketh in darknesse and under desertion seeth no light as Isaiah 50. 10. In this case it may be he set all his works at nought as no wayes answerable to the Lords Law I see nothing saith he but sin in me I see no fruit of true faith in me I feel no operation of the holy Spirit in me save the work of convincing me of sin and unrighteousnesse In this case we must not give credit to the afflicted but convince him rather of his error and in special of his leaning too much weight on his works before this sad exercise fell upon him for when a convert maintaineth his faith in Christ only so oft and so long as he findeth in himself the fruits of new obedience but when he hath new experience of the power of the body of death and findeth the course of good behaviour and bringing forth good fruits to be interrupted in himself incontinent he resiles from his confidence such a man certainly giveth evidence that he hath relyed too much on his former felt righteousnesse an himself for he doth as if he durst not for sin approach unto Christ and so he falleth in Peters case who looking on his own sinfulnesse and the brightnesse of Christs Godhead shining in a recent miracle cryeth out Luke 5. 8. depart from me O Lord I am a sinfull man for Peter in this case did forget Christs mediatory office and that he stood so much the more need of Christs drawing near to him as he was a man convinced of sinfulnesse Another answer we give to this question the afflicted person must not think that he wants altogether the fruits of faith albeit he find them to be short of the
conscience and felt wrath pursuing me for sin may be clear to me by its own light and scriptural evidence albeit it being possibly the very instant of my conversion I cannot produce any fruits or evidences of my conversion past or else what shall be said of malefactors on the scaffold presently to be put to death and possibly not wakened in conscience before not fled to Christ before What shall be said of sick persons near unto death who being self-condemned do betake themselves in their last agony unto the grace of God in Christ offered to self-condemned sinners in the Gospel 2. I must put difference between a reason to prove that I have believed and a reason why I may and must now believe The reason to prove that I have believed is from the effect to prove the cause thereof to wit faith to be in me but the reason why I may now and must believe is from the cause to infer the effect that should be in me the cause of believing in Christ is Gods command to self-condemned sinners which command I must now obey left I perish and so if I find fruits I prove I have believed because I feel the love of God shed abroad in my heart and that I love God who hath freely loved me and here I reason from the effect to prove that the cause of this fruit to wit sa●ing faith hath preceeded and is gone before Again I prove that I should believe because the offer of the Gospel and of free grace in Christs made to all self-condemned persons renouncing confidence in their own worth or works is made to me with a command to believe in the Son of God Christ Jesus for which cause I may and ought to cast my self upon his grace who justifieth the ungodly flying to him without the works of the Law 3. I must put difference between my having fruits of faith in me and my observing and finding these fruits in me for a true convert may have both faith and fruits and for the time being under tryal and temptation may be so darkened that he can see nothing in himself but sin and apparent wrath pursuing him for sin as may be seen in Ionah in the belly of the fish Ionah 2. 4. and David Ps. 51 9 10. 4. I must put difference between my perswasion that I have been and am a true convert and a sincere believer and my perswasion that I have right reason and good warrand to believe in Christ in my lowest condition howsoever then I find my self emptied of all signes of saving grace in me for the time yet my perswasion that I should in this sad condition flye to Christ and believe in him doth serve to make me consent heartily unto the offer of the covenant of grace in Christ doth serve to make way for my justification and looseth all doubts and objections of Sathan tempting me to mis-believe and to run away from Christ and the offered mercy in him 5. And last of all I must put difference between making use of good fruits brought forth by me for confirmation of my faith and my putting confidence in or laying weight on these good fruits for many true converts do here fail and do not mark the mistakes for when they find love to God and his Saints with fear and holy reverence and such other like signes of grace in their hearts and outward fruits thereof in their life then they do believe in Christ and rejoice in him but when at another time they find hardnesse of heart profanity and perversenesse of a wicked nature in themselves they are like to quite their interest in the covenant of Grace and to stand aloof from Christ like strangers when they should most be humbled and creep in to him for remission of sin a●d hiding of their nakednesse by his imputed righteousnesse And what is this in effect else then in the first place to lean on their works and holy disposition as if there were merit in them and then after in the next place to believe in Christ who hath furnished them those fruits whereas they should in the sense of their sin and unworthinesse first flye to Christ and firmly adhere to him by faith that out of his fulnesse they may receive grace for grace according as we are taught to do by Christ himself Ioh. 15. 5. He that abideth in me and l in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me you can do nothing CHAP. VII Concerning the case of the convert in some point of doctrine deluded and pleasing himself in this condition TO speak of delusion and bewitching in the general requireth a large Treatise It shall suffice our purpose to speak of it as it hath place in the point of doctrine and practice erroneous Which we describe thus Delusion is a powerfull operation of a lying Spirit whereby he obtrudes to men some noysome error in doctrine or practise contrary to true doctrine fairded over with sophistical deceits and doth perswade inconsiderate souls effectually to receive the error for truth and to defend and spread it in their rash zeal For explication of which description we say 1. delusion is a powerfull operation of a lying Spirit wherein Sathan in Gods judgment is permitted to put forth his power in lying effectually Therefore in all his effectuall delusions there is a concurring righteous judgment of God in loosing reins to the rempter that by delusion one sin in one degree may be punished by a following sin in a higher degree No wonder therefore that a lying Spirit do work more effectually when he is not restrained by the powerfull hand of God 2. We say that delusion is in some dangerous error tending to the damage of the Church and hazard of souls And this we say not as if we did think that any sin doth not draw with it the merit of death for the wages of every sin is death but because Sathan is not so busie to spred and foment such errors as are lesse perillous as he is active in such errors which do most tend to pester the Church and divert the professors of religion from the path way of saving doctrine And to this purpose he essayes all means that he may obscure and darken the truth and devise and spread abroad the most pernicious errors Mean time he is not idle in sowing and spreading lesser errors that he may stir up contention and jangling in the Church whereby precious time which should be spent for mutual edification may be idly wasted in needlesse disputes and mens minds may be prepared to receive grosser errors Thirdly we put some difference between errors in doctrine and errors in practice albeit there cannot be one error in practice whether it be in the external worship or government of the Church or in outward conversation which being stiffly maintained hath not some error of judgment and doctrine joyned with it or else it should not be contrary to sound doctrine
examples of a conscience erring by esteeming a good condition to be an evil condition Of the which sort this shall be one Sometime some converts do mistake the peace of God granted unto them after hard exercise and do esteem the quietnesse of their conscience to be nothing else but a carnal security and sleepy disposition of the conscience To which case that we may speak the more clearly we do not deny that many are who indeed fall in a carnal security and please themselves therein conceiving they have the peace of God and a blessed quietnesse of conscience Such persons have no doubt nor suspicion but all is well with them for they do not examine and compare their condition and wayes with the Word of God but sleep sweetly in their carnal security and negligence of spiritual duties like to these luke-warm Laodiceans Rev. 3. Of such we do not speak here 2. Again we do not deny that true converts are in danger to suffer the peace which God hath granted unto them to degenerat unto a carnal security For easily may a convert after consolation divine fall in a sleep as the Spouse did in the Canticle 5. 2. But we are speaking of the case of a convert watching unto duties who after no small vexation in his conflict with the tentations of the devil with the terror of the law and sense of divine wrath hath gotten the victory by faith in Christ and hath obtained peace with God graciously granting his petition we are speaking here of these converts who after the Lord hath granted peace unto them through faith in Christ dare not injoy their peace but do suspect that their peace is not sound and at length do count and call it carnal security and so do breed themselves new troubles of mind The pretense and seeming reason whereby they do deceive themselves is this When God say they seemed unto us angry with us when we found no peace and were wrestling under the sense of sin and in doubt whether such as we should find mercy then we did pray very earnestly night and day then we were diligent in hearing and reading of the Word of God and were painfull in the exercise of all duties of religion and obedience But now we find our selves much cooled and slackened in all these duties whereupon we justly suspect the peace which we now do find to be nothing else but a carnal security of a sleeping conscience By this mistake all thanksgiving for the peace granted unto them is well-near suffocat extinguished Their former condition under doubts and fears is judged to be better then their present condition they wish their former fears may return rather then they should continue in this condition wherein their tears are dryed up and their former diligence eaten up Hence go they on to lay forth their complaints before their intimat acquaintance concerning Gods dispensation and dealing with them because the spirit of fear and reverence toward God the spirit of grace and supplication is much diminished and near-by quenched in them By which complaints they do not only breed trouble to themselves but also make heavy the hearts of their godly friends and do tempt them to fall into the like complaints and to grieve the Lords Spirit 2 This mistake doth arise partly from the not considering and esteeming of the gracious gifts of peace and other graces bestowed upon them and partly from a wrong comparison of their former present condition For first the afflicted person taketh no notice of the evidences of a new creature in himself he doth not consider how great a benefit is bestowed upon him when he feareth to offend God feareth to be shut out from society with him and earnestly desireth to be sure of his favour in Christ he hath not a due estimation of having peace with God and war with sin in himself joyned together to be freed from the torment of the conscience condemning him according to the law and withall a desire and delight in the obedience of the Gospel joyned together 2. He doth inconsideratly exact of his conscience that his soul should be in the same disposition before peace be granted and after that it is bestowed or that his affections should be stirred up one and the same way in both these cases for before peace is given he cannot choose but he must have sorrow heavinesse of heart unquietnesse fear and such like other sad affections But after that God granteth peace these perturbations are quieted tormenting fear ceaseth lamentations are restrained tears are washen away in a good measure and in their place do thanksgiving to and praises of God succeed and every duty do call for their own place in a pacified mind so that the mans body be not neglected as before but care had of keeping health for inabling to do what is required of him in his calling toward every one with whom he liveth For now his condition being changed why should not his affections and the effects depending on them be changed also Who can reasonably exact the same duties of a man in a fight which he may require of him when he hath gotten the victory who can expect the same carriage from a man when he is sick and when he is in health Doth not the Apostle say Iam. 5 13. If any man be afflicted let him pray Is any merry let him sing Psalms 3. For remedy of this evil 1. le● the afflicted examine himself whether this peace hath had a conflict of conscience and faith under the sense of sin and fear of the wrath threatned in the Law going before it or not 2. Whether this peace hath followed upon flying to Ch●●st by faith unto whom he did cleave in his sad exercise 3. Whether this peace hath followed after prayer and supplication made to God for it that he might without fear of his enemies serve God all the dayes of his life 4. And last of all whether his heart still inclineth and endeavoureth to give obedience to the commands of God and to be grieved for his short-coming therein If these things do concur which beseem a convert let him perswade himself his peace which he hath censured for carnal security is the solid peace of God mistaken by him And therefore 1. let him no more suspect the gift of God but hold fast the Word of God which faith of the soul chased to Christ hath laid hold on that being now justified by faith he may have peace with God Rom. 5. 1. For God doth not give to his supplicant carnal security for peace a stone for bread and an adder for fish But 2. let him observe the wiles and malice of Sathan who cannot indure that the soul fled from him to Christ should have peace or in the enjoying of it blesse God for his gift of grace And 3. let him study to make use of this peace granted to him going on in the obedience of Gods commands chearfully and to
convert being chased by the law to lay hold on Christ who is the end of the law for righteousnesse unto every one that believeth shall stand aback from laying hold on the highest priviledges of Saints and the greatest promises made to justified souls because of his own unworthinesse doth he not say in effect if I were more worthy and like in holinesse unto such and such Saints I could be more confident to lay hold on these high promises which ground if it be once holden it makes the reason of the mans confidence to be his own well-deserving and not the meer and only grace of God the free promiser thereof and so the way of salvation by grace should be undermined and over-turned which is absurd because the Apostle Ephes 2. 8. saith that by grace we are saved through faith and that not of our selves it is the gift of God Therefore let not the humbled convert think it presumption to lay hold on Christ and the fulnesse of all promised grace in him how large soever it be CHAP. XIII Of the condition of the convert fearing that the joy of the holy Ghost which he hath felt be found only to be either the joy of speculation common to temporal believers or a meer delusion OF this sort also is this case wherein the convert doth suspect that the joy of the Spirit which he hath felt at some times was either a joy of speculation or contemplation only such as Philosophers may find in their study of humane learning or else a delusion of Sathan also This case may fall upon the true convert in the time of affliction and felt desertion when not only the sense of consolation is withdrawn but also sorrow and heavinesse have seized on his spirit when the sharpnesse of affliction takes up the whole soul and sorrow doth fill the heart At such a time the memory of by-past joy is greatly darkned and the sense of present grief inflameth the whole man For as it falleth forth in a mans body that both sweet and sour liquor do affect the sense of tasting most when they are presently felt but when they are past the memory of them doth affect the imagination only and that but lightly in comparison with present sense As the sense of a fiery coal doth otherwayes affect us when it touches our flesh then the memory of the pain we have felt doth move us when the pain is past So it is in the passions of the soul for joyes spiritual shine for a while when they are lately raised up in the soul but after a time they are darkned and in some sort worn out especially when grief doth arise then they are swallowed up with sorrow or are well near forgotten or lightly esteemed and rejected My soul refused comfort saith the Psalmist Ps. 77. 2. Such was Davids condition Ps. 116. 11. when he said in his haste all men are lyars at which time whatsoever joy he had felt in believing the promises made to him by Samuel or other Prophets he counted all to be but deceiving of him and delusion This mistake is strengthened ordinarily by Sathans tentation and wicked suggestion watching upon all occasions to traduce and slander all Gods words and operations The complaint of Ieremie savours of this malicious suggestion which the Prophet layeth out before God to be rid of it Ier. 20. 7. Thou hast deceived me and I was deceived Yea oft-times it cometh to passe that our old man and corrupt inclination taketh part with Sathan and when occasion doth offer scorneth all the spiritual affections of the new man as Ishmael mocked Isaacs devotion 2. This evil except it be speedily and solidly cured not only casteth the convert in a miserable condition but also calleth in question his state whether at all he be regenerat reconciled and in the state of grace for if the joy of the holy Spirit granted to the supplicant praying to God in Christ for confirmation of his faith granted to the mourner for sin that he may be comforted shall be esteemed as the effect of speculation only then the comfort of the earnest-penny and first fruits of the spirit is lost the confirmation of faith by that consolation is enervat and weakened thanksgiving formerly offered for the comfort sometime felt is recalled and the testimony of Gods Spirit speaking according to the word in oft-repeated experience is laid aside And so the afflicted soul shall seem to himself in worse condition then when he was lying in his sins because he shall seem to himself to have lost his labour from the time that he renounced his sins Wherefore it is necessary that this sicknesse be speedily cured lest it prevail 3. For remedy of this evil let the afflicted lay aside the dispute for a time whether his joyes and spiritual experiences of the Lords working in him have been reall as they sometime seemed and let him turn his eyes upon his present miserable confused condition let him take a new view of his sins and unworthinesse let him observe Sathans malice power and wiles to weaken faith and what need now he standeth in of Christ Mediator Redeemer Surety and Physician by office after a new discovery of his sinfulnesse and let him look upon the riches of the grace of God offered in the Gospel to every hungry and thristy ●oul flying to Christ for refuge and let him say to God Lord there was never a time wherein I had more need of Christ for righteousnesse and salvation behold I flye unto thee I welcome and embrace Christ offered in the Gospel and heartily do consent unto the covenant of grace through him and do accept embrace and relye upon remission of sins through him and the imputation of his satisfactory righteousnesse made over to such as flye unto him or else I should perish utterly and do give up my self to thee that thou mayest write thy law more powerfully on my heart By this means the confidence of the afflicteds interest in the covenant of Grace shall be more fixed and made sure to him and Sathan disappointed of his design to cast the afflicted by his tentations in mis-belief and separation from Christ. 4. Thus when he hath renewed the grips of faith in Christ let him now enter the lists and dispute the solidity of his former felt experiences by discussing the objections which did weaken his estimation of the former felt joyes of the Spirit One objection against them was because they were of short endurance and therefore seemed not solid The answer may be this The short staying of the joy of the Spirit is no proof against it as not true joy for it is sufficient earnest of the promised salvation if when the Word of God in the Gospel speaketh peace to the man fled to Christ he findeth the Word believed to be confirmed to the believer by peace and joy albeit the sense of it remain but a short while After you believed saith the Apostle you were
Doctrine and Discipline of Christ. Of which question there is enough written by learned and godly men and and in this place it doth not fall in conveniently to be disputed 2. Concerning the other pretense of being oft-times deceived by sundry such as were unworthy of respect we grant that there are many hypocrits who pretend to be Saints and worthy to be blamed in that respect and it is no wonder that the charity of many wax cold when so many speak vanity every man to his neighbour Ps. 12. 2. for this our Lord foretold Mat. 24. 12. Because iniquity shall abound the love of many shall wax cold Yet it is not iustifiable to cut charity short because of mens ill-deserving Rivers of tears saith David run down my eyes because they keep not thy Commands Here is love to Gods glory and pity toward perishing ●ouls such mourners were spared in the day of Gods wrath Ezek. 9. 9. 1. Ob. But some may say the same Psalmist did hate the wicked and profane Ans. 1. But he did so with a perfect hatred not with a carnal and corrupt hatred against their persons but with a spiritual and sincere hatred tending to the abolishing of their vice and safety of their persons for which end the Psalmist presenteth his affections to be examined of God and teacheth men by his example to purifie their hearts in hating sinners 2. 〈◊〉 ca●e that God did reveal unto the Prophet the reprobation of some enemies of God for whose perdition he prayed in sundry Psalms that the justice of God might be ministered and the Church preserved from their malice This his practice is not to be imi●a● by them who know not of what spirit ●hey are and cannot justifie before God the integrity of 〈◊〉 ●earts in the particular 2. Ob. But put case saith one that I am a civil Judge shall my charity hinder justice and cutting off malefactors man-slayers or others such-like Ans. Not for charity to the malefactor may stand with the love of Justice and the Common-wealth when the malefactor is adjudged to death For when Ioshua was to destroy Achan he exhorted him to repent and give glory to God that his soul might be saved Ios. 7. 19. Likewayes the Prophets when they denounced the destruction of Cities and Nations had melting hearts in compassion toward them who were condemned by God Is. 16. 11. Ier 48. 36. and Christ our Lord charity it self weeped for the misery of Ierusalem destinat justly to destruction Mat. 23. 37. 3. Obj. But saith he a special regard must be had toward believers in the exercise of charity Gal. 6. 10. Ans. It is true but the Apostles words are As we have opportunity let us do good unto all men especially unto them that are of the housheld of faith Which houshold consisteth of all them who by profession have subjected themselves to the doctrine and discipline of Christ and are members of the visible Church 4. Ob. But saith he as all that are of Israel are not the Israel of God Rom. 9. 6. So all that are in the visible Church are not of the houshold of God Ans. Who hath made thee a Judge either to discern who are elect who not or to discern what shall become of this man or that man whereby thou may abandon charity toward him God hath given to us his Spirit saith the Apostle that we may know what saving grace he hath given to our selves but not to know what he hath bestowed on others 1 Cor. 2. 10 11. God who only searcheth the secrets of all hearts hath reserved the judgements of mens hearts to himself and he alone can discern who is the hypocrit and in whose heart there is no guil 5. Ob. But saith he the judgment of charity i● not blind but should be according as the truth is otherwayes I shall esteem a man a true convert who is not regenerat and so deceive my self Ans. The judgment of charity concerning other mens inward estate and condition is not one alwayes with the judgement according to verity for the rule of the judgement of charity is equity and commanded duty reserving the judgment according to verity to God For this distinction the Apostle gives ground Phil. 1. 6 7. in charity judging all the Philippians to be sincere converts he saith his speech and estimation of them was according as was meet for him to think Now equity required that he should judge the best of them all albeit he did not know the hearts of them all as he saith 1. Cor. 13. 7. charity believeth all things hopeth all things endureth all things But for the judgment of other mens estate and condition in grace according to verity he doth forbid men to judge before the time 1 Cor. 4. 3. 5. Rom. 14. 4. Iam. 4. 12. And 1 Pet. 5. 12. the Apostle speaking in charity of Sylvanus saith he is a faithfull brother as I suppose 2. If we see it our duty to show charity to our neighbour whatsoever he be our charity is not blind but clear-sighted 6. Ob. But saith he mens profanity wickednesse and atheisme may clearly be seen for the Psalmist saith The transgression of the wicked saith within my heart that there is no fear of God before his eyes Ps. 36. 1. and Christ speaking of false Prophets Mat. 7. 16. saith Ye shall know them by their fruits Ans. What the Prophet saith by the Spirit and what Christ saith is true and we grant that mens ill deeds and corrupt doctrine do be wray their naughty inward disposition but what serveth this to justifie thy rash judgment of thy brother that there is no saving work of grace in him because they cannot perceive the evident signes thereof in him in whom possibly thou cannot find any reigning vice or open out-breaking scandals What doth this serve to hinder expressions and fruits of charity toward open sinners so long as God waiteth patiently on their repentance It is one thing to be wary lest we be infected with the contagion of mens ill maners or corrupt doctrine another thing to cut them off from being the objects of our charity 7. Ob. But we are forbidden saith he to have fellowship with sinners who may intise us to sin Pro. 1. 11. and to make friendship with an angry man Pro. 22. 24. Ans. This warinesse may consist with charity for albeit we cannot be partakers with evil workers or enter in needlesse familiarity with those with whom we cannot converse and be free of damnage from them yet we may not exclude them from the object of our charity or carry our selves so toward them as they can take no good from our hand for so long as we live in the world we must follow peace with all men and holinesse Heb. 12 14. 1 Cor. 5. 10 8. Obj. Albeit it be true that we must in common duties of civility and humanity prudently behave our selves yet we must carry otherwayes to professed Christians if their conversation
be grosly scandalous for with such we are forbidden to eat 1 Cor. 5. 11. Ans. This place pertains to the exercise of the key of discipline and execution of the censure of excommunication judicially pronounced by the Church as ver 12. following doth declare And this as it doth not cut off natural duties of parents or children or parties married one to another So it can well consist with charity toward the excommunicat who in order to his salvation should be thus dealt with that he may be humbled and brought to repentance And so doth the Apostle give warrand for when he hath given order to excommunicat such as walk disorderly 2 Thess. 3. 14 15. he subjoines for keeping charity to the excommunicat person saying Count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother 9. Obj. But I saith he have been mistaken and deceived oft-times when I esteemed charitably of some loved them dearly and bestowed not sparingly on those who proved afterward unworthy of such respect and dealing Ans. Our Lords words may satisfie this objection promising whatsoever is done to a disciple in name of a disciple shall not want a reward Thou therefore needs not count thy self deceived in this respect But if thou by rash intruding thy self to judge better or worse of the mans inward condition hath deceived thy self be more wise in time coming For remedy of this evil 1. let not the convert mistaken in the point of charity be feared to be mistaken and hindered from exercise of his charity because he knoweth not the sincerity of the mans profession There are relations enough between him and the party toward whom charity is to be exercised such as bonds natural civil ecclesiastick and spiritual obliging to the duty 2. Let him be sparing in judging of his neighbour even within himself and far more in expressing his judgment of him to his prejudice 3. Let him rather judge this that he lay no stumbling block before his feet which may hinder him in a good or harden him in an evil course Rom. 14. 13. Let him not be rigid and censorious in aggreging every sinfull infirmity in his neighbour for this is forbidden Iam. 3. 1 2. In a word let a convert beware to alienat any man from making use of his charity whether by injust suspicion of him or inhumane dealing with him or imprudent speeches of him but rather let his whole carriage toward all in every case be such that a patent door may be for mutual giving and getting good one by another CHAP. XX. Concerning the converts mistaking his condition because of felt in-lake in his charity and love to God and men HItherto we have spoken of two sorts of the converts mistaking of their condition and have given some instances of their being well pleased with themselves in an evil condition and some instances of their being displeased with themselves in a good condition It follows that we give some instances of a third sort of mistaking in the converts complaining of his condition as if it were altogether evil when indeed his condition is partly good and partly evil and the first shall be of those who do lament their condition because they cannot be affected with the sense of their sins nor with the sense of Gods benefits and favours bestowed on them as they should cannot be affected with the sense of threatened judgments as is required and cannot be affected with the sense of the miseries and mercies dispensed toward others and cannot come up to the obedience of the Apostles precept to rejoyce with them that rejoyce and to mourn with them that mourn which doth so afflict them as they reckon this their condition altogether evil and are near unto discouragment because of their apprehended hardnesse of heart 2. For remedy of this evil 1. let the convert consider that the hardnesse of heart whereof he complains is not that hardnesse of heart which the Scripture calleth hardnesse of heart For the Scriptures do not charge any man of this sin who lamenteth his sinfulnesse but those who do not acknowledge their sins and go on in them when they hear them reproved mis-regarding what God saith commandeth commendeth or threatneth Mean time we do not deny but those in-lakes whereof the convert doth complain are sinfull defects of duty and inclinations of corrupt nature unto hardnesse of heart But we deny that this defect lamented is charged in Scripture for hardnesse of heart 2. Let the convert consider the difference between the evil whereof he complaineth and the good gift of God pointing out that evil unto him and making him to dis-allow it and lament it and he shall find his condition not altogether evil but such as he hath cause to be humbled in himself for it and also to blesse God for discovering this defect and making him lament it 3. Let him consider that his lamenting his coldrise affection to God and his small compassion toward men is good and commendable for this lamenting the defect beareth witnesse of his will and desire toward the duty and in effect is a part of the exercise of repentance and of begun renovation of his heart 4. Let him consider that there may be made good use of this condition both for the exercise of humility because of felt defects of needfull graces and also for the exercise of faith in Christ by application of his imputed righteousnesse which hideth the nakednesse of felt defects and drawing vertue from Christ to sanctifie and renew the heart more and more 5. And last of all let the convert under the sense of this defect in his affection study to bring forth the effects of those affections that is to say let him go about to do the work of a lover of God in having respect to all his commandments and to do the work of a compassionat affection toward men in misery of soul or body and so what seems to him in-laking in his heart shall be found forth-coming in his hand and actions for the greater glory to God and edification of his neighbour CHAP. XXI Concerning the converts despising of his own exercises of religion because of his felt vanity of mind therein ALI true co●verts do agree in this principle that God should be worshiped in spirit and truth and that the more a man strive to be sincere and upright in his worship the lesse can be comport with the sin which doth hinder his worship When therefore a true convert doth perceive in himself so great levity of his thoughts that in the very time of hearing Sermon praying to God or singing of Psalms his mind runneth out to think of naughty and profane things impertinent idle and foolish maters unworthy of his thoughts at any time but most untimous and sinfull in the time of divine service he is so displeased with his condition that he condemns all the service and devotion he is about for the time and cast it away as altogether polluted and
and for ever but for a short time and that he keepeth love to them constantly albeit he do hide the tokens of his love sometime and dispose of the acts of his love as he seeth sit for the advantage of the work of grace in them Let him put difference between desertion and the gift of discerning of the desertion for albeit desertion be of it self a sad visitation yet the sight and observation of it testifieth Gods presence with his child giving eye-salve and light and thereby doth not only teach that wound to be curable but also that the Physician is begun the cure of it by pancing and lancing the wound 3. Let him not count it a desertion when God in any service whereunto he puts his child emptieth him of all conceit of his own ability that he may open his mouth wyd and be filled for this emptying of the convert is the very fitting of him for fresh supply from Christ to go about the service in Christs strength and furniture which the Apostle felt by experience 2 Cor. 12. 10. When I am weak saith he then I am strong Poverty of spirit and hunger and thrist for righteousnesse are not to be counted desertions 4. Let him observe the degrees of Gods presence no lesse then the degrees of his absence as the Psalmist did when he recollected himself Ps. 73. 23. after the tentation which troubled him was overcome Neverthelesse I am continually with thee Thou holdest me by thy right hand and ver 26. my flesh and my heart faileth but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever 5. Let him put a right construction upon Gods dispensation believing alwayes that God doth what he doth for good to his afflicted subject whether he draw forth by his desertion the latent-corruption of the heart as he did to Ezekiah 2 Chron. 32. 31. or whether to prevent out-breaking of corruption as he did to the Apostle 2 Cor. 12. 7. 8 9. or whether to exercise his faith love and patience and to sharpen his prayer as he did to the Psalmist frequently And therefore let him in the observation of whatsoever degree of desertion humble himself before God flye in more closely unto Christ and patiently wait upon the change of his conditon in the use of the means and following the duties of his calling as the Lord shall enable him for this is the counsell of the Lord Isa. 50. 10. Who is he among you that feareth the Lord that obeyeth the voice of his servont that walketh in darknesse and hath no light let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God And this much sufficeth for instances of the third sort of the converts mistaking his condition CHAP. XXVIII Concerning cases wherein the convert is in doubt what to determine about his condition IT resteth that we speak of the fourth sort of cases of the conscience of the convert wherein he is at a stand and in doubt what to determine of his present condition 2. In these doubtfull cases the convert is not properly deceived as in the former ranks of cases it is presupposed of him because in this sort of cases the convert doth not positively determine the question wherein he is fallen but standeth in doubt what to resolve upon 3. Cases of this sort pertain to the mind and judgement of the convert and if his judgment be cleared by loosing of the question incontinent he is satisfied and quiet 4. It is necessar for the converts clearing that he form the question rightly and to this end 1. let him consider his case and condition in himself so accuratly as he can 2. Let him ingenuously lay forth the question or doubt he hath before his Pastor or Christian friend acquainted with cases of conscience and ask their judgement what to think of or what to do in such a case The reason why he must examine narrowly his own condition before he speak of it to another is partly because otherwayes his doubt or question may prove frivolous and unworthy of an answer partly because the convert after examination of his case and prayer unto God may find satisfaction to his doubt and partly because if his doubt remain the question may be the more clearly propounded and so receive the more clear and speedy answer for his satisfaction 5. Of this sort of questions we shall propound some examples and give some resolution unto them whereof use may be made when such like questions shall occur The first question shall be concerning confusion of mind IT cometh to passe sometime when a convert is upon examination of his own estate or condition that such a mist and darknesse falleth on his mind and such a croud and throng of thoughts within him that he can discern nothing but mist multitude of thoughts and darknesse and confusion The question is what shall he think or do for removing of this confusion of thoughts and darknesse of mind Ans. This case befalleth converts frequently and therefore had need to be the more carefully cured Which cure that it may the better go on let the afflicted renew the examination of his former behaviour and see if he can find out the meritorious cause thereof in himself for this case oft-times is the castigation of the afflicted for his former negligence and omission of duties or slight discharge of religious worship yea it may be found possibly that the afflicted hath been so carelesse in keeping his heart in the fear of God that he hath involved himself too far in earthly and thorny affairs or hath exceeded in the use of things lawfull or by some corrupt communication hath grieved the Lords spirit and so hath drawn on some desertion and with-drawing of illumination from him 2. This case may also fall out from some present perturbation of mind and passion whereby his reason is so taken up for the time that it cannot discharge its duty as cometh to passe usually in anger or fear or grief or some such like passion as may be seen when a man is injured by his neighbour or doth meet with some damnage or is put in fear of some imminent evil coming on him or findeth sharp pains of body or some such like cause perplexing him The question is what shall he think of this condition Ans. If the afflicted shall examine how he is fallen in this case and shall in consideration of his weaknesse be humbled before God by prayer he shall not want clearnesse of mind and directions from God what to do and how to behave himself in ordering of his conversation aright Ps. 50. 23. for the Lord gives wisdom liberally to all that ask it of him in faith Iam. 1. 5. and this his present condition giveth him an errand to God The second question is concerning the convert who most part walketh heavily THere are some true converts who after examination of themselves cannot deny but their heart is toward the wayes of God
whether the believer perceive his absolution or not for the time 4. There is a sensible intimation of this sentence unto the believer joyned with peace and joy which the Apostle calleth the shedding abroad of the love of God in the heart Rom. 5. 5. and the sealing of the holy Ghost stamping the heart with holinesse Ephes. 1. 13. The first three makes the absolution of the believer certain whether the believer thinks so or not but the fourth which is the sensible intimation of this sentence doth make the believer both sure and joyfull As justification is taken passively four things may be distinguished in the believer justified The first is his actual receiving of Christ offered in the Gospel for a perfect remedy of sin and misery The second is the Lords judicial setling of the general sentence of absolution upon the believer as if he had spoken to him by name as he did to the Apostles Ioh. 15. 3. Now are ye clean through the word I ●ave spoken unto you that is you are clean from the guil● of sin by my absolving of you The third is the believers observing in a reflect act of his conscience that he hath fled to Christ for absolution and therefore justified indeed The fourth is the feeling and observing of the testimony of the holy Ghost bearing witnesse with his spirit that he is a child of God absolved from sin and wrath The first two of these to wit the act of faith receiving of Christ and of the right made by Christ to the believer in him of his absolution may be in and on the believer without the other two to wit his observation of the act of faith and the felt intimation of this worl● of grace by the holy Spirit 2. For solving of the doubt then as justification is actively taken as proceeding from the immanent act of Gods eternal purpose and decree to justifie the believer it is no more the actual justification in this life of which we are speaking then the immanent act of Gods eternal purpose to raise the bodies of believers in Christ and to glorifie them in soul and body can be called the actual resurrection of their bodies and glorification of both soul and body in this life But the transient act of justification in a judicial way which is the Lords judicial sentence of absolution of the believer declared by his Word set down now in holy Scripture it is indeed and formally the believers justification and is judicially terminar upon every believer in the act of his conversion whether the believer doth clearly perceive his own conversion or be in suspicion of his being reconciled and justified And this may be made to appear if we compare the condemnation of the unbeliever with the absolution of the believer fled to Christ Ioh. 3. 18. As he that believeth not in Christ is condemned already because the curse of the law and condemnation pronounced in the Scripture by God the soveraign Judge stands against him so long as he doth not believe in the only begotten Son of God And this sentence standeth fast whether the unbeliever take notice of this sentence or not whether he do apply it to himself or not do find grief for it or not So the believer in Christ is relaxed from condemnation and absolved and hath right unto eternal life and begun possession of it albeit for the time of his infancy tentation trembling and fear it be not so albeit he doth not perceive the blessed change of his state nor doth lay to heart as he might the words of Christ judicially pronouncing the sentence comprehending him as certainly as if his name were expressed Ioh. 3. 18. He that believeth on him is not condemned and ver 36. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life and Ioh. 6. from ver 37. to 41. Hence we conclude that the formal act of justification of a man fled to Christ is to be found in the written sentence of the judge absolving every believer and the man we speak of There is another transient act of God in an actual revelation of justification wherein the holy Ghost openeth the eyes of the believer to behold and perceive the gift of saith already bestowed on him Of this speaks the Apostle 1 Cor. 2. 12. And after that the holy Ghost hath pointed out his own grace bestowed on the believer he followeth his work by giving remarkable peace and joy as earnest of life everlasting whereof the Apostle speaketh Ephes. 1. 13. In whom ye also trusted after ye heard the word of truth the Gospel of your salvation in whom also after ye had believed ye were sealed with the spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance Therefore he that desireth to have the intimation of his justification after flying for refuge unto Christ for relief of felt sin and feared wrath must read his absolution in the Gospel as well as he hath read before that his condemnation in the law Unto which sentence of absolution let him hold fast in his daily endeavour after sanctification The fifth question is how to satisfie the convert who findeth himself pursued for his sins after remission believed and is brought in question what to judge of his case MAny converts have fallen in Iobs case and seemed to themselves to possesse the sins of their youth Iob 13. 26. For after conversion and felt reconciliation they find the sins they did repent of and did believe to be forgiven through Christ objected to them afresh pursued with sharp accusations and signs of wrath joyned therewith Their reconciliation and righteousnesse through Christ they purpose to hold fast their old guiltinesse and sentence of their conscience writing bitter things against them they cannot deny The pinch is here either the remission they did believe is null or the challenge is unjust do they reason with themselves the nullity of their remission they dare not admit and the just ground of challenge they cannot deny and the doubt what to think of this case they cannot shun not seeing how these things can consist and stand together 2. For answer to this doubt these four things must be distinguished and how they may all consist one with another must be timously considered The four things to be distinguished are 1. the reconciliation of a convert with God 2. the remission of the reconciled mans sins freely gifted unto him by God 3. a renewed bitter accusation raised by Sathan against the re●iled convert 4. The holy and wise dispensation of God permitting ordering these renewed accusations of his child by Sathan for the tryal and exercise of his faith and growth of his repentance and other good ends Now for the consistence of these four we need not doubt but the accuser of the brethren can cast up to us forgiven sins and bear upon us that they are not forgiven N●ither need we doubt but God in wisdom and love to his children may suffer Sathan to
and faith in him and so saveth the believer 1 Ioh. 1. 9. and 2. 1. 7. As for the last objection taken from the impossibility of knowing taking notice of or confessing every sin wherewith we are daily polluted or from the impossibility of putting repentance and faith in exercise about every particular sin we answer first that the children of God notwithstanding of this impossibility acknowledged by them have sought and obtained renewed remission of their innumerable sins Ps. 40. 12. and Ps. 19. 12 13. 8. Secondly such as are justified by faith upon confession of such sins as they know and do remember are accepted of God as if they had confessed all their sins particularly because he that hath no mind to deny or excuse any sin in himself but is willing to open up his heart to God in sincerity and to canfesse every particular if he were able he hath presented a contrite heart before God which is a sacrifice acceptable to God Ps. 51. 8 9. Ps. 32. 5. and this much also Christ doth teach us speaking of the Publican who made a short and general confession of his sins in sincerity and went home justified Luk. 18. 13 14. Thirdly it is not impossible for a watchfull conscience to observe daily as many particular sproutings from the root of in-born sin as may humble him daily and bear down all confidence in his own righteousnesse and furnish to him mater for exercise of repentance and faith in Christ. And this lesson the Lord did teach his people under the Law by the twice offering sacrifice every day morning and evening that his people observing daily the running issue of corrupt nature might daily have their recourse by faith unto the lamb of God that takes away the sins of his own people and hitherto we are directed to look Is. 45. 22. and 1 Iob. 2. 1. Mean time on the one hand let us beware to lay any sort of merit upon our daily exercise of faith and sorrow for sin in our repentance otherwayes we should be found offerers unto God of satisfaction from us and not suiters of remission of sins from God and on the other hand let us beware to be discouraged albeit we do not find daily the renewed intimation and sense of remission but as we apply the Law to our selves in the exercise of repentance So let us apply the sentence of absolution pronounced in the Gospel in favours of every penitent soul that flyeth to Christ for refuge The tenth question shall be concerning spiritual dispositions of mind and qualifications which may be joyned with or separat from the special work of true conversion and saving grace THe Apostle Heb. 6. 4 5 6 9 10. tells us of sundry qualifications which may be found in unconverted men and also he tells us of better things which do accompany salvation and are sure evidences of regeneration Of the first sort there are among others these five 1. A legal conviction of the vilenesse of sin and vanity of the world 2. A renouncing of unlawfull pleasures joyned with a refraining even from lawfull and allowed wordly delights 3. A natural desire of salvation and of sanctification that they may be saved 4. A purpose to live righteously holily and soberly in this present world 5. An outward change of maners and conversation so far as they may be blamelesse before men These and such like qualifications may make a fair show in the flesh and yet may be found to be not only in true converts but also in such as are strangers from the life of God such was the Apostle Paul before conversion such was Israel Rom. 9. 31. Which followed after the law of righteousnesse and did not attain to the law of righteousnesse Who being ignorant of Gods righteousnesse did and going about to establish their own righteousnesse did not submit themselves to the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10. 3. Of this sort are such of the Papists who go about to be justified by their own works and do but mock at the imputation of Christs righteousnesse calling it blasphemously a putatious or conceited righteousnesse not considering that the Pope and his servants do reckon the imputation of the righteousnesse and merits of men and of the superfluity of the Saints righteousnesse by reason of their works of supererogation to be worth a great sum of money as they find their merchants Concerning these five qualifications some converts especially such as desire to see the evidences of saving grace in those with whom they will joyn in the society of Church-membership may make question what to think whether they be saving graces or common operations of the Spirit 2. For answer we must distinguish between a mans judging of those qualifications in himself and his judging of another in whom these qualifications appear to be for a man judging of himself may attain to a clear and certain discerning of saving grace in himself as the Apostle giveth us to understand 1 Cor. 2 11 12. In which case of our judging of our selves this much may be said that if a man find in himself those qualifications joyned with faith in Christ for righteousnesse and eternal life and is seeking furniture from Christ to bring forth fruits of his faith in new obedience he may be quiet and be out of doubt of saving grace in himself for unto such a person the description of a true convert may safely be applyed Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision c. And pre-suppose he hath observed these qualifications in himself before he hath observed his closing with Christ or his application of the offer of reconciliation through him he neither needeth nor should trouble himself or others with questioning whether such and such qualifications in him before his fixing on Christ were the common or special operations of the holy Ghost for seing the kingdom of heaven cometh not with observation alwayes it is hard to determine of the first beginnings of the working of saving grace by the holy Spirit because saving faith hath in it the substance of historical dogmatical and temporary faith And therefore when both saving faith and historical dogmatical and temporary faith may produce belief of the law and convince the man of sin and wrath due for sin and produce the belief of the Gospel also without application of the offer of reconciliation how shall a man determine whether these effects were produced by vertue of dogmatical and temporary faith or by vertue of saving faith untill the time that the humbled sinner flye in unto Christ and seek to draw furniture from him for new obedience of the law of love toward God and man and so put difference betwixt saving faith and that faith which may be in an unregenerat aud unreconciled man But when the man is come up to apply Christ and cleave unto him for righteousnesse and life and furniture to carry him on the way unto salvation it is not his wisdom to dispute whether these
five qualifications were common operations of the spirit or effects of saving faith not as yet manifested to be such before the person did close covenant with God in Christ for not imputing his sins unto him and making solid reconciliation with him 3. As for judging of others when we observe these qualifications all or some of them we must not determine positively what sort of operation the holy Ghost hath in hand but our part is according to our place and calling to help on the least preparatory qualifications which may serve to be inductive and serviceable to beget and foster saving faith in them even when the sense of sin and unworthinesse is like to drive them from Christ as it did Peter when he cryed out unto Christ Depart from me O Lord for I am a sinfull man For God hath not made us Judges of the operations of the holy Ghost in this or that person but to be their helpers unto faith when we perceive any good qualification in them and helpers of their repentance when we perceive any out-breaking evil in them The eleventh question shall be of the converts doubting what to think of his condition when he finds more freedom of prayer in the presence and audience of others then when he prayeth in secret alone IT is not a case unusual that some converts do find a great deal of freedom of prayer in the audience of others more then alone for they have experience that when they pray in the audience of others in their family or occasionally elsewhere their prayer is more copious then when they are alone their stile of speech more polished their words in better order their expressions more significant their notions more sublime more fervent more zealous then when they are in secret in their closet which difference when they consider they doubt what the matter doth mean 2. For answer first there is a difference to be put between solitary prayer in secret and prayer in society with others for in secret oft-times the converts worship is carried on in the sense of his sinfulnesse unworthiness and indisposition presented to God through Christ with sighs and confused groans without words for he studieth most for affection and not for words having no ear to care for but the ear of the searcher of hearts who knoweth his weaknesse fears tentations and wrestling with doubts But in company he studieth most to make use of knowledge and to expresse himself so as he may carry along the company with whom he prayeth with consent that he may edifie himself and them in worship and in this case he may find greater fredom possibly then he findeth alone in secret Secondly it is oft-times found that God for his own glory and the mutual edification of two or three gathered together in his name doth inlarge the freedom of speech in the speaker Upon which considerations the doubting convert may satisfie himself only let him beware least vain glory or studying to have the applause of such as hear him pray do not blow wind in his sails and in as far as after examination he findeth himself guilty let him when he is in secret alone be humbled before God for it and crave pardon through Christ seeking help and healing of this wicked inclination The twelfth question shall be of the doubt which the convert may have in a case contrary to the former SOme converts do find themselves more inlarged in secret prayer and alone then in the company of one or moe In company saith he I cannot utter my own privat condition without a needlesse and inconvenient discovery of my present case to others and I can hardly conjecture what may be their necessity with whom I pray or condescend upon petitions and thanksgiving fit for us in common I am taken up also with thoughts of what estimation my hearers may have of me c. But in secret prayer I am freed of that care I am not feared that God shall mis-construe my words or thoughts I may in secret make a long pause in my petitions and fall in meditation upon some passage of Scripture and after a while direct my speech unto the Lord I may expresse my affections by voice and gesture as they fall out and pour forth my heart to God with tears without fear of being esteemed an hypocrit c. Mean time I doubt what my indisposition to pray in company doth import when duty calleth for it 2. For answer we grant that God to some of his dear Saints whose prayers in secret he will accept and reward openly hath not given ability to edifie others by way of praying in their audience to others in regard of age of sexe to whom modesty and silence is most suitable he hath not given confidence to pray in name of others whether moe or fewer as their mouth But as for these to whom God hath given ability and a calling by reason of a charge in the family or some occasional exigence to pray in the audience of others and yet notwithstanding they do foster their natural aversenesse from such a duty they had need to examine themselves whether they be hindered by fear to loss some of their estimation at the hands of the hearers if possibly all things should not be found so well digested and expressed in the prayer as they would The thirteenth question shall be of the converts doubting what to think when he compareth his disposition to prayer and Gods dispensation toward him in prayer SUndry converts when they compare their own divers dispositions to prayer with the divers dispensations of God toward them in prayer they are at a stand what to think Sometime saith one albeit I be very hardly drawn to pray at all yet when after wrestling the conscience of the duty doth set me on work my prayer goeth on as I could wish light is furnished to me what to confesse what to thank for what to seek both for my self and others whereby I gather for the time that the Lord is pleased with my person in Christ and hath accepted my prayer Sometime it fareth otherwayes with me for when time place and leisure for prayer concur and I am now about to make use of opportunity and do fall down before the Lord to speak on a suddain I have nothing to say matter words and light do fail me darknesse and confusion falleth on my mind and my prayer suudry times is stopped and closeth with a sigh or groan which dispositions of my heart and dispensations of the Lord when I compare I am in doubt what to think 2. For answer in the first case concerning the Lords blessing of the aiming at duty the matter is clear and speaks for it self for God will have us to aim at a right frame of spirit when we are about the discharge of any part of his worship but not forbear to do the duty if we cannot reach that fitnesse of spirit which we desire let us
from the body of this death and while he searcheth how it cometh to passe that such a body of death lodgeth in the children of God and so powerfull relicts of sin remain in the justified man he cannot satisfie himself considering that God doth hate sin and maketh the new creature hate it also which God could easily take away in a moment in the day of the converts reconciliation and justification 2. For answer to this question if a reason of Gods permission of the relicts of sin to remain in the Saints all the dayes of their life be asked after a reason superiour to the most holy will of God to permit it can none be given nor should it be sought after But to quiet our minds in this case these following considerations may suffice 1. it is the will of the Lord our God our wise and loving Physician to renew and restore his image in his children piece and piece till it be brought to perfection in all the lineaments parts and degrees thereof and to heal our sinfull sicknesses and infirmities not in an instant but by little and little as he seeth fit this way of bringing his work to perfection by degrees he keeped in the creation of the world which he did not perfect in a moment but in six dayes So also the seed that is casten in the ground every year he doth not bring forth to maturity for mens use in lesse time then some moneths He doth not form infants in the womb and bring them up to their appointed stature and strength in lesse time then a number of years And for the relicts of sin how odious and loathsome soever they are in themselves yet he can in his deep wisdom make use thereof in a most holy way for the good of penitent converts for as it was fitting that a difference should be put between the militant Church on earth and the triumphant in heaven So it is the Lords wise will to exercise his militant children in conflicting against sin and misery in this life that the next life and triumph over sin death and hell may be the sweeter when it cometh and more desired till it come 2. Secondly as the Lord after sub-duing of the Canaanites did not forthwith cast them altogether out of the holy land but suffered a multitude of them to live for the exercise of the Israelites with warfare and for teaching his people by their own experience that the victory which they had obtained over the Canaanites was not purchased by their sword or bow but was given unto them from the Lord of hostes who led forth their armies and prospered them So doth he not abolish the relicts of sin in his Saints in this life after their conversion that they may know that the victory which they have received over the devil the world and the flesh in their conversion is not to be ascribed to the power of their own free-will but unto God only For if the renewed convert cannot over-come the relicts of the broken forces of his spiritual adversaries within him which his renewed will would most earnestly expell how can he give the glory of his victory over the devil and the world in his conversion unto the power of his corrupt and unrenewed free-will 3. Thirdly it is required of all that come unto Christ that they deny themselves take up their crosse daily and follow him and to make them so do strong motives are daily furnished from the feeling of the relicts of sin in our selves for how can a renewed convert look upon his own ignorance errors folly and vanity of his mind perversenesse of his will impotency to good and propension unto all sin and not loath himself and so be forced to flye to Christ the Redeemer for relief 4. The remainder of sin being an adversary to all vertues doth furnish work to all the habits infused by God for the daily exercise thereof according as inborn sin doth put forth it self to the hinderance of faith love hope patience temperance c. but in special it serves to bear down pride and to foster humility for this doth the experience of the Apostle shew 2 Cor. 12. 7. Least I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelation there was given to me a thorn in the flesh 5. Nothing doth more manifest the infirmity of the strongest souldiers of Christ then the power of inborn sin brought forth in the conflict against the new creature No sharper spur to prayer and imploring of Gods help then the felt power of the remainder of sin this also doth the experience of the Apostle teach us 2 Cor. 12. 8. For this thing I besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me 6. How much the endurance of this conflict with the remainder of sin doth serve to manifest the greatnesse of the Lords power and largenesse of his grace towards his weak souldiers whom he upholdeth and comforteth in this conflict the answer which the Lord giveth to the Apostles prayer maketh manifest 2 Cor. 12. 9. And he said unto me my grace is sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weaknesse 7. We are slow to believe dull to apprehend and learn that which the Word of God tells us of the uglinesse of the body of sin the perverse wickednesse of corrupt nature the filthinesse of the flesh the wiles and deceitfulnesse of the old man and the enmity of our corrupt nature against God Therefore in and by the frequent and renewed conflicts now with one lust then with another we are forced by experience to learn the lesson more and more solidly and believe the truth of the Lords Word speaking of sin that is in us and to ingage our selves to prosecute the mortification of sin unto the death 8. The renewed experience of the power of sin in our flesh should make us so much the more vigilant against it and daily to put on the whole armour of God Because we must fight not only with the flesh but also with principalities powers and spiritual wickednesse which take advantage of the sin that naturally dwelleth in us Ephes. 6. 11. 12. Put on the whole armour of God for we wrestle not with flesh and blood to wit only 9. The conscience of the remainder of sin dwelling in us serveth to move us to pity and to have compassion on the children of Adam and meekly to restore our weak brethren who are overtaken in any offence as the Apostle doth teach us Tit. 3. 2. Shewing all meeknesse to all men For we our selves also were sometime foolish disobedient deceived c. Gal. 6. 1. Brethren if a man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual restore such an one in the spirit of meeknesse considering thy self lest thou also be tempted 10. Last of all the permission of the reliques or sin to remain in true converts all the dayes of their life doth serve to decide the great controversie between