Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n glory_n jesus_n lord_n 3,161 5 3.4412 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A09277 VindiciƦ gratiƦ. = A plea for grace More especially the grace of faith. Or, certain lectures as touching the nature and properties of grace and faith: wherein, amongst other matters of great use, the maine sinews of Arminius doctrine are cut asunder. Delivered by that late learned and godly man William Pemble, in Magdalen Hall in Oxford. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1627 (1627) STC 19591; ESTC S114374 222,244 312

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

VINDICIAE GRATIAE A PLEA FOR GRACE MORE ESPECIALLY THE GRACE OF FAITH OR Certain LECTURES as touching the Nature and Properties of GRACE and FAITH Wherein amongst other matters of great use the maine sinews of ARMINIUS doctrine are cut asunder DELIVERED BY THAT late learned and godly man William Pemble in Magdalen Hall in Oxford AUG de Grat. lib. Arbitr cap. 16. Certum est nos velle cum volumus sed ille facit ut velimus bonum Certum est nos facere cum facimus sed ille facit ut faciamus praebendo vires efficacissimas voluntati LONDON Printed by R. YOVNG for I. BARTLET at the golden Cup in Cheape-side 1627. TO THE RIGHT WORshipfull Nathanael Stephens Esquier Grace and Peace from Iesus Christ. SIR BOokes are more necessary in a state than arms Arms are to defend us from the invasion of foes bookes are to preserve us from the infection of errors enemies can but kill the body errors endanger the soule There are crept into the Churches a number of false opinions some that oppugne others that obscure the grace of God The earth is of it selfe prone enough to bring forth weedes but should one withall sow tares we should have much ado at harvest Our hearts are ranke enough to breed errors and our wits cunning enough to defend them but the scripture tells us that the envious man comes and sows the tares of false opinions and of weedes tares are the very worst sith therefore errors are so plenty bookes cannot but be very necessary T is true there bee many and it may bee according to the complaint too many bookes abroad already because many bee to little purpose some little to the purpose but of good and learned bookes bookes fitted to the errors and diseases of the time as this is there neither be nor well can bee too many Many errors require many bookes Nay I may safely say that many bookes are more necessary now than ever for that wee are fallen into the very age of the Church wherein as diseases in the body so errors the sicknesse of the soule doe and must abound For errors are necessary evills in the Church that they that are approved may be made manifest saith Saint Paul And this is all that Satan hath gotten by stirring up the corrupt witts and pens of many abroad and some at home to write they care not what Now wee doe begin to see that Truth is the daughter of time Truth is never new but let an old Truth be newly proposed and at first wee suspect it let it settle a little and in time truth gains ground and wins upon the judgement and consciences of men but erroneous opinions just like new fashions when they are first on foote many doate upon them give them but some time and they grow stale and vaine so now what by the decrees of Synodes and the writings and preachings of the learned Time hath brought it so about that there are few Schollars or others that minde these matters but doe begin to see thorow the conceipts of the Arminians Though then this treatise might have beene abroad sooner yet I dare promise that it comes not in too late for hee that reads it with judgement shall soone see that in the doctrine of Arminius there is more wit than truth I doe here commend it to your reading as to one whom the Lord hath made willing to learne and able to judge as also under your name unto the good of the Church to stand as a testimony of my duty and love unto you and of your zeale and love unto the truth Yours in the Lord Iesus RICH CAPEL To all that love and desire the grace of God and the glory of his grace in IESUS CHRIST MY deare and beloved brethren in Christ who are sensible of the dangers of these dayes and of the misery of this sinfull age wherein the heresies of the old condemned hereticke Pelagius that notable profest enemy of Gods grace are againe revived and raised up out of the bottomlesse pit by the malice and subtiltie of the restlesse enemy of mankinde that old Serpent the Divell working powerfully in and by that new upstart sect of Arminians the Wolves of this age who comming abroad in sheepes clothing and bearing the name of Protestants yea professing themselves Preachers of the Gospel in the reformed Churches are indeed Pelagian heretickes and disciples also of blasphemous Servetus and Socinus yea and also have joyned hearts and hands in many maine fundamentall errors with the Papists our enemies of the Romish Religion and faction I doubt not but that as you grieve and sorrow in your soules to see this smoake of pestilent heresies ascending upon the face of our land obscuring the light and eclipsing the glory of our Church so you do in your hearts earnestly desire to be made partakers of such worthy works painful labours of Gods faithful Ministers as are in all probability like to prove by Gods grace and blessing most powerfull and effectuall meanes both for the establishing of your hearts in the love of Gods truth and in the knowledge of the true doctrine of his grace and also for the confirming of your minds that they may neyther be daunted with the reproachfull calumnies and slanders nor troubled and entangled with the deceitfull cavils and carnall reasons which these subtile Sophisters have devised against Gods sacred truth in our Church professed And therefore I doe presume to commend unto you this ensuing Treatise which I having occasion to peruse it while it was under the Presse doe perceive to be as most necessary for these times so also most excellent and profitable for your purpose For I finde in it first the doctrins of truth concerning the grace of God and the powerfull worke of grace in the effectuall calling conversion and regeneration of the elect most plainly propounded and strongly proved out of the sacred Scriptures Also true saving and justifying Faith most accurately described unfolded with the whole nature and all the speciall properties of it by which it may be distinctly knowne and discerned from common fading hypocriticall Faith Secondly the maine errors of Arminians and Papists and their most grosse absurdities about universall grace and mans free-mill and power in working his owne salvation truly related their calumnies and slaunders of our Churches doctrine detected and discovered and their principall arguments carnall reasons and objections with wonderfull brevitie and singular dexteritie answered and refuted Thirdly by the way the authority perspicuity and certainty of the holy Scriptures strongly maintained and Popish errours about the uncertainty and obscurity of them beaten downe by strength of reason and by the Word of God as by a hammer that beates the rockes in pieces Though the style and maner of handling be somwhat Scholasticall sitted and applyed to the place and persons where and among whom these Exercises were first performed to wit in one of the Schooles of the
hath faith it must be administred to all and among them to some that have no faith indeed Wherefore it is as good and safe to baptize them in their infancy as to deferre it seeing at that time as well as afterwards the judgement of Charity holds good and tarry we never so long wee can goe no further than this charitable beliefe of them Wherefore to conclude the absurdity of Paedobaptisme because Infants have no knowledge nor actuall Faith whereby to embrace the promise is at the least an absurd conclusion as well for that the like inconvenience holds in Circumcision as also because where Iustification and Sanctification is given it is injurious to denie the benefite of Baptisme And wee are to know that in this case of Infants faith is not required as a Condition absolutely necessary to partake the benefit of Iustification howsoever in adult is such as are of age it be an instrument simply needfull to give them an Evidence and Assurance of it which assurance seeing it cannot be in children the actuall operation of Faith is not needfull in them But in such as are of age the case is farre otherwise whether they be Infidells or Christians children that have beene so long neglected they must have knowledge and Faith too so farre as the Church can judge of the tree by the fruit because if they have neither or knowledge only but no Grace nor sanctity of life the Church cannot but presume the worst of them as of those that yet are out of Christ rectified by their ignorance and profanenesse of Conversation which witnesseth to all the unbeliefe and impenitency of their hearts If it be now objected not to leave that scruple untouched that the Lords Supper may aswell bee given to Infants as Baptisme seeing the same presumptions may bee used here as there and that infants may make as much use of one as of the other being alike insensible of both to this I answer besides the dangerous inconveniency to their tender age which cannot endure the taking in of the very Elements of Bread and Wine that God himselfe the author of these two Sacraments hath in the manner of their Institution made a plaine difference of the persons that are to partake of them Thus briefly of the Substance of both Sacraments is one and the same viz. to set forth unto us the benefits of Christs death in our Iustification Sanctification and Glorification The Ceremonies of Administration are divers and in that sort differenced as in Baptisme they require nothing but Passion in the baptized and so may be administred to Children but in the Lords Supper they require such Actions as cannot bee performed but by those only that are of yeares of discretion such actions are those of Discerning the Lords body thankfull remembrance of the death of Christ Examination of our spirituall estate which together with that circumstance of often repetition apparantly shew that God in this Sacrament intended such an exercise of our Faith and Piety as cannot be performed by Children I will not stand longer upon this point the full descussing whereof belongs more properly to the doctrine of the Sacraments and therefore I conclude this Discourse touching the Conversion of Elect Infants with this generall rule That the Scriptures are very sparing and silent touching the case of Infants so that when they speake of Vocation Conversion Faith Repentance and such other workes of Grace done by us or in us by the Spirit of God they are generally to be understood of those that are of age and by proportion only to bee applied unto Infants Which would be observed for taking away of some doubts that may arise in reading of the Scriptures The next sort of Elect persons are those that are of Age who having some while g●ne astray are at length brought home to the Sheep-fold of Christ under the obedience of that great Shepheard of their soules Of these some are let runne longer others recovered sooner some have a more gentle and sweet passage from Mortality to Grace whose lives have beene ordered by the rule of stricter discipline others whose conversation hath beene notoriously disordered are converted with more bitter plunges terrors and anguish of Conscience some are strangely changed on a sudden upon the reading of a sentence in Scripture or hearing of a gracious word uttered in due season and deeply apprehended others wrought upon with much paines and long time in a word so various is the dispensation of Gods grace in our conversion that as Christ speakes of his comming in the flesh so may wee of this in the Spirit The kingdome of God commeth not with observation and impossible it is to set downe a generall rule that will hold in all Converts But though the manner be divers yet the meanes are Vniforme and Constant namely the Spirit of God the chiefe worker and the Word of God the subordinate instrument by which it workes our Conversion The word discovers what is to be done the Spirit inables us to the performance In Infants the Spirit without the Word in those of yeares the Spirit and the Word joyne together to work our Sanctification In which respect their conversion is properly tearmed a Vocation or Calling because it is effected by the preaching of the Gospell which is Si●ilus Pastor is the whistle or voyce of the good Shepheard which the sheepe heare and follow And from hence the whole Company of Saints is properly styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Evocatorum coetus Saints by calling and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as t is 1 Cor. 1. 1. that is such whom God hath called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an holy calling 2 Ton. 1 9. or unto Holinesse 1 Thes. 4. 7. by the voice of the Word from out of the corruptions of this present evill world to the communion of grace and glory All this is most excellently set downe by the Apostle Paul in those few but most pithy words containing in briefe the whole administration of the workes of our Redemption 2 Thess. 2. 13. 14. But wee ought to give thankes alwayes to God for you brethren beloved of the Lord because that God hath from the beginning chosen you to Salvation through Sanctification of the Spirit and the Faith of truth whereunto hee called you by our Gospell to obtaine the glory of our Lord Iesus Christ. Now we might iustly in this place enter upon an inquiry how and in what sort the Word and Spirit doe worke together in causing a sinners conversion a search needfull in these times wherein it is peremptorily denyed by those of the Arminian faction that there is or need to be any inward power of the Spirit working on the soule besides the outward ordinary preaching of the Word Which opinion is but the issue of their maine errour touching the liberty of Mans will in his conversion which cannot stand if withall they grant that inward Force of the Spirit giving life
Prophets in the famous Vniversity of Oxford yet I assure my selfe that whosoever reads this booke with good attention and understanding shall finde the Authors meditations therein so throughly digested and the nature properties and proper acts of Grace and Faith so distinctly layde downe and accurately distinguished that he shall reape to himselfe much profite and comfort thereby and shall with me admire the grace of God abounding toward the Author in all wisedome and in all knowledge lively sense and utterance of heavenly and supernaturall mysteries far above all which can be expected from or is ordinarily found in one of his age and yeares If as we know trees by their fruit so we may passe our sentence upon the composer of this Treatise by his work we cannot conceive or speake lesse of him but that as hee was from his childehood trayned up in the Schooles of learning and had profited above his equals in the studies of the best arts humane divine so undoubtedly he hath from his tender yeares beene throughly disciplined in the Schole of Christ and hath by much and daily experience of afflictions and manifold temptati●ns in himselfe and of the inward sensible operations of Gods spirit and grace in his owne soule attained to this high measure of heavenly knowledge and understanding whereof he hath here given us a lively experiment It is not the most strong out stretched arme of humane reason nor the most swift and farre flying arrow of the sharpest naturall wit nor the farre extended lines of long continued studies which can reach so high to these heavenly and supernaturall mysteries It is onely the holy Spirit of grace comming upon all these taking possession of mans soule dwelling in him and making him a new creature which brings this kind and measure of profound wisedome and this distinct knowledge of divine things yea by the fiery tryall of inward temptations onely doth that blessed Spirit drive the thirsly soules of Gods militant Saints to digge and dive so deep into the fountaines of the sacred Scriptures and to draw such living waters from the very bottome of those Wells of salvation In a word as the Apostle saith of yongue Abel that by Faith having offered up a more excellent sacrifice than his elder brother Cain he by it obtained witnesse that he was righteous God testifying of his gifts by it he being dead yet speaketh Heb. 11. 4. so I will not doubt nor bee affraid to say of the godly and learned Author of this Booke who having offered up to God in a publike place these exercises as the first fruits of his heavenly learning did not long after leave this world in the flower of his age and ascended up into that supercelestiall glory towards which he had ever bent all his studies and desires and which alwaies hee had sought after in the whole course of his life that by faith hee though yongue in yeares hath offered up a more excellent sacrifice than many of his elder brethren by which hee being dead yet speaketh and shall speake to future ages And as hereby he shall obtaine witnesse of all Gods surviving Saints that hee himselfe was a righteous and faithfull servant of Christ excelling in grace and vertue in the dayes of his pilgrimage here on earth So God also will testifie of this his gift that it is holy and acceptable in the eyes of his Majestie by making it powerfull and effectuall to the begetting and increasing of saving grace faith and knowledge in all such as reade and peruse it with true Christian docilitie diligence and humble devotion To the blessing of which gracious God I leave this worke and to his grace commend you all desiring in my daily prayers to be and continue Your brother companion and fellow souldier in seeking the glory of Gods grace defending the truth of the Gospell and fighting against the spreading errours and springing heresies of this age George Walker The Table of the chiefe matters contained in this Treatise ABilities of man are not to be measured by his own partiall iudgement page 145 Actions of grace and holinesse how far they are in a godly mans owne power 147 Admonition three-fold about searching the Scriptures 217. c. Affections two-fold sensuall rationall described 125 Affections not quickned nor stirred vp to loue of goodnesse before conuersion 125 Not rightly moued towards Spirituall things but when thoy are affected spiritually 130 Articles of the Arminian faith 53 Arminians how they erre about vniuersall grace 54 Their errors about the worke of Gods Word and mans calling 99 Their obiections and reasons answered 106. 107. c. Their errors about the subiection of mans naturall affections to his reason discouered 125. c. They giue large allowance of grace to men vnregenerate 127 Their absurdities therein 128 Their grosse errors about mans will discouered 132 c. Their errors in holding that conuersion doth begin and consist in the act onely of beleeuing 134 135. c. The dangerous issue and conclusion of their errors 136 Assent differs in degree according to the diuersity of the obiects assented vnto 169 Assistance effectuall why denied by God at some times to the regenerate 153 B BAptizing of Infants lawfull 47 Beleefe how it differs from faith and trust 170 C CAlumnies of Arminians and Iesuites 155 Calling outward and inward described 94 How the Arminians conceiue of Calling 99 Catechizing needfull and vsefull in the Church of Christ Preface page 6 Certaintie of assent in Faith springs from three grounds The first 206 The second 220 The third 222 Communion with Christ two-fold 15 Conuersion of a sinner to God 6. 7 The causes of it 16. 24 The subiect 37 The manner how it is wrought 27 It goes before Faith 4 It signifies First Gods infusing of habituall grace Second The regenerate mans actuall imploying of grace infused 89. 144 Conuersion mistaken by Arminians which is a cause of confusion in their writings 92 Conuersion how to be truly discerned 115 Preparatiue meanes vnto it 137. 138 How weake they are and in a man vnregenerate how they are said to be sinfull 139 That they may be resisted and how 140. c. Cooperation of Gods Spirit necessarie in all holy actions of men regenerate 151 Corruption of nature what it is 5 D DEsire of spirituall things after a naturall manner is a corrupt desire 130 E ELect men onely are the proper subiect of true conuersion vnto God 41 Euidence of the Scriptures declared proued 175. 176 Conclusions touching it The first 176 The second 182 The third ibid. 183 F FAlling from grace and finall resistance described 142 Faith in Christ a part of sanctification 10 The habit and act of it and when it is wrought ibid. It is not properly the root of all grace 12 There is some Spirituall life before it 13 and some participation with Christ 15. 23 It helps forward and increaseth grace and all gracious actions 14 Faith is commanded in
actuall Concurrence yet we truly and properly ascribe such effects to their Visible apparant immediate causes But in this point concerning the replantation of Holinesse in a Sinfull man we affirme against Pelagians Semi-pelagians Papists Arminians or other sectaries however branded that as the Agent or Efficient of mans Sanctification is simply supernaturall viz. the Holy Hhost so is his manner of working altogether Divine beyond the power and without the helpe of any thing in man An assertion that layes nature flat on her backe and yet gives vnto her as much as Sinne hath left her and that 's just Nothing in matter of Grace And the truth hereof will easily appeare to any that will without pride and prejudice consult the Scriptures or common experience Me thinkes when we reade in the booke of God these and such like sayings that every imagination of the thoughts of mans heart is only evill continually that of the children of men there is none that understands and seeks after God that they are become altogether filthy none that doth good no not one that the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the Spirit nor can he know them being spiritually discerned that wee are blinde till God Open our eyes that wee are deafe till God bore our Eares that wee are Darknesse vtterly destitute of Spirituall light that the Wissdome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the flesh is enmity or hatred against God is not nor can be subiect to him that the flesh lusteth against the Spirit rebelling against the worke thereof even in the regenerate much more before regeneratiō that of our selves we are not sufficient to thinke a good thought as of our selves but that our sufficiency is of God that it is God which worketh in us both the will and the deed of his good pleasure that in our conversion wee are New begotten New borne New creatures created in Christ Iesus to good workes in fine to put all out of doubt That wee are Dead in trespasses and Sinnes and that our Sanctification is the first resurrection from death effected in us by the same Almighty power which God declared in raising Christ from the grave When I say wee consider of these and the like places were wee not too much in love with our selves and held some scorne to con God all the thankes for our salvation our hearts and tongues would presently bee filled with a sincere acknowledgement Not unto us O Lord not unto us but unto thy Name wee give the glory for thy loving mercy and for thy truths sake Besides I wish wee would descend unto an unpartiall examination of our owne hearts to make discovery by the light of the Spirit of that body of Death wee be are about with us what strong rebellion there is of the Law in our members against the law of our mindes what secret and powerfull attractives the affections of Sinne have to pull us unto disobedience what violent and bitter opposition they make against Grace checking their disorderly motions how seldome any blessed resolution tending to sanctity rises up in our thoughts how vnwildy we are in the managing of any gracious motion from the Holy Ghost with what slacknesse and cumber wee prosecute such holy inspirations to action and full accomplishment in a word how passing slow our course towards heaven is when wee have all helpes of nature and Grace to carry us forward I am fully perswaded that whatsoever any man may conceive in abstract speculation there is no converted person if he make application to his owne particular but will confesse freely if he deale truly with his owne heart that not only if God had not done More for him than he could for himselfe but if God had not done All for him he had utterly perished in his sinnes And he will acknowledge that it is impossible there should be in and of himselfe such Preparations and forward dispositions to worke his owne Conversion who being Converted is hindered by none so much in the finishing of his salvation as by his owne perpetuall indisposition to goodnesse This our disabilitie whereof wee are convinced in our owne sense and by testimony of the Scripture will inforce us if our pride bee not as great as our povertie to confesse whence wee have our riches without stammering shifting and mineing of the matter as the fashion of too many is who by many prety scholasticall devices distinguish God out of all or the greatest part or at least some part of his Glory due unto him for our Conversion and thrust in the Abilities of their owne Free-will as co-workers with Gods Spirit joynt-purchasers of this inheritance of Grace But let God have glory and every man shame and let all whom grace hath taught to judge of their Corruption say with the Church Es. 26. 12. Thou O Lord hast wrought all our workes in us I will not prevent my selfe by larger explication of this point at this time but wrapp up all touching this first conclusion in a needfull distinction or two and so passe on Mans Concurrence in the worke of his sanctifications is double 1 Passive which is the Capacity or Aptnesse that is in mans nature for the Receiuing of Grace for being a Reasonable creature hee is naturally prepared and disposed with such a substance and faculties as are meet subjects to receive the Habit and instruments to performe the actions of Grace This Concurrence of man to his regeneration is most necessary nor doth God sanctifie senslesse or irrationall creatures nor is man in his conversion in such sort passive as is a stone blocke or brute beast as our adversaries absurdly cavill 2 Active which is some Strength or Power that man hath in the Vse of his faculties especially of his will for the Production of Grace This strength of man in doing good is to be distinguished in regard 1 Of the Beginning and first Act of our Conversion when Holinesse is at the first reimplanted in the Soule 2 Of the Progresse of our Conversion in the practise of Sanctification In this second respect none denies Mans actuall concurrence with the Spirit of God for being sanctified and inwardly inabled in his faculties by Spirituall life put into them he can Move himselfe in and towards the performance of all living actions of grace even as Lazarus of Nature Whereas yet you are to remember that even in these actions wee cannot worke alone we are but Fellow-workers with the Spirit of God and this not in an Equality but Subordination to him we indeed move our hands to write but like raw schollers wee shall draw mishapen charecters unlesse our heavenly Master guide our hands Neverthelesse these actions take their denominations from the next Agent and though performed by speciall assistance of the Spirit yet are rightly said to be mans actions so that when a regenerate person Beleeves Praies gives almes rejoyceth in God c. we doe not say that the Holy Ghost in us
plunging him into some abominable practice to his owne destruction and the disgrace of his Religion Who could have thought that many Starres in the Church shining bright in all outward holinesse could have fallen from Heaven their light bin put out in utter darknesse had not after times discovered that they alwayes lived in some secret ungodly practice For our selves if wee will duely consider the state of our soules it wil be easie hereby to make a prognostication unto our selves what will become of us hereafter Hee that can shift and distinguish and put off from himselfe be content to give God the hearing yet choose to think and doe what hee lists let not his forward faith and zeale in something deceive himselfe as it doth the world but let him write downe himselfe for a counterfeit whose Faith will certainely ●aile when it shall bee assaulted by stronger temptations Now on the other side that Faith which is true and sound hath alwaies this essentiall marke that it doth assent Vniformely to all Gods revealed will It makes not choise of some where it must embrace all it knowes God must have all or he will have nothing and therefore it divides nothing to times and seasons and private respects it beleeves what it likes not as well as that which contents it as well that that brings disadvantage as where there 's likelihood of honour or profit It compares all things within and within us on the one side with Gods truth and goodnesse on the other so reckoning the worst it finds Gods anger to be worst of all forecasting the best it beleeves Gods favour to be better than it Then it resolves let God say what he wil to beleeve that that is good honest profita and excellent to bee followed at all times in all places above all things that can be set against it This is that temper of the soule which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Faith without faining 1. Tim. 1. 5. this is faire sincere hearty plain dealing This is to ascribe glory to God and give him his full due setting our seale unto his truth ratifying it by a most willing absolute subscription to all Such hath beene the Faith of the Saints That of Abrahams is admirable conflicting with so many yet conquering all oppositions being throughly grounded upon the infinite truth goodnesse and power of God If God bid him leave all his friends his fathers house the land of his nativity to goe into a strange countrey upon hopes of great matters he is upon his journey straight and no intreaty can stay him in Mesopotamia When hee is in Ganaan where bee now his great possessions Hee hath not so much as a foote of land given him Act. 7. 5. not so much as his grave without a purchase from the Hittites But shall his seede enjoy it yea they shall but is a long time first some three hundred yeares after Abraham is dead when the wickednesse of the Cananites is full But where 's the seed it sel●e that shall enjoy it Abraham waits a hundred yeares before hee have Isaack Now hee hath him shall hee live in Gods sight No Abraham must goe and cut his owne sonnes throate and Isaack the hope of Abraham and of the world must dye by the hand of his old Father Who but Abraham would not here have quarrelled with God and laid slacknesse falshood unjustice and cruelty to his charge But Abraham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doubts nothing all this while let God command or promise the most strange unlikely unpleasing unreasonable thing in the world hee will not question it t is God that saith it and therefore hee is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fully assured that hee which hath promised is able to doe it Rom. 4. 21. Moses had a faire way to pre●erment he was learned wise a proper person brought up at the Court beloved as the Sonne of Pharaohs Daughter every way a man of singular hopes to become Great in AEgypt This would have made a Courtier of these times to have borrowed many a point of Law and Conscience and strained hard to conceale his Religion denie his Nation and turne AEgyptian at least his head would have beene hammering upon a piece of pollicy that the poore Hebrewes might have beene much releeved by him being a great man with Pharaoh But Moses hath no such thoughts his Faith turnes his eyes another way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the Recompence of Reward and then Moses comparing the adversitie of Gods people with the pleasures of Pharaohs Court the rebuke of Christ with the riches of AEgypt hee concludes that it is better to bee a bond-man among the Hebrewes than a revelling Courtier among the AEgyptians that its farre farre better to bee poore and religious for Christs sake though rebuked and scorned of the world than to be great and ungracious Heb. 11. 24 25. 26. In a word reade that whole chapter once and againe and see what is the practice and power of Faith in the Saints of God you shall behold in them an absolute Vniforme and constant resolution to beleeve God above and against all that can bee opposed when temptations come on every side reproaches bonds imprisonment banishment the sword the fagot the gibet and a thousand difficulties present themselves their faith makes way thorough all and come what 〈◊〉 come they are resolved to Follow the Lambe whithi● soever hee goes Rev. 14. 4. For Conclusion of this point let me intreate you to be exhorted each one to looke unto this matter to trie how his heart stands affected in point of religion and to remember as long as you live this most pretious and certaine truth That true faith is uniforme and equally respecteth the whole revealed will of God without limitation to this or that particular without reseruing to our selves such or such a wicked resolution without all provision that no inconveniences accrew unto us Hee whose faith is thus patched up and dawbed with untempered morter let him know for certaine that in a frost t will shatter all to peeces and when temptations beates upon it the whose building will runne to ruine Take therefore I beseech you that counsell of Christ which hee gives in this matter Luk. 14. 25. seq Great multitudes then as now did runne after Christ very forward to heare and beleeve his doctrine Christ turnes unto them and tells them that t is another manner of matter than they are aware of to bee his disciple Hee that will be so must hate his father and mother and wife and Children and brethren and sisters yea his owne life for his sake forsaking all taking up his crosse and following him Doubt yee not but this seemed to them a harsh doctrine a very rough and unpleasant religion But t is neither better nor worse and therefore our Saviour bids them bethinke themselves what they have to doe like wise builders to cast up their charges aforehand like provident warriours