t/r:^- ■■ > >*► b' ^ m \'^ \ '-^l ^^jti; * .■» . n • ^^t :t^apf t^^Vii :-^Ti^* 'SsS'- ■■ ' ' JW. :;^«i. •'^tr- '^.^^^jH&r M* '^i^ ■^i^^' » ■»»( ^ t V-i^ / ^^^ ^ PRINCETON, N. J. Collection of Puri-tan Literature. Division Sectio7i Numbei' ^ \i ~~ " -- r - S .-■"' ;'iv TWO BOOKS WSrT>%/fCH SIMfSlOJAC^ Late Mafter oiTembrok^HaWm Qimhndg^ And Preacher of the Goipel in London.' hi VIZ. y t OFUnbelief; Qrthewa^tofreadinefsto layJiold oa the Comfort given by Cnrift. n. NotgpingtoChriftfor Life and tSalva- dbflii att exceeding gVeat Sin^ yet it is pardonable. In tht Firft Book is fhewcd C be*- (ides many other things ) 1 H^at Unbelief his thAt is here fpoken of* 2 The bejtwkf to deal with Vnbe- Itef. y That Vnbelief is a fin agiitf{l al the Attributes of God, 4 That Chrili mil not bear with this Sin of Vnheilefi % That we fhould be quick and rea- dy to beleive. 6 Motives to indeavor for readinef tobeleevt, J Helps to attain readlnef in Be- leeving* In tile Second Boole is {hewed^ 1 That Unbelief is a great Sin, and exceeding provotiing unto God. a Several arguments provoking us to beleeve the greatnefs of the Sin of Vnbclief, I Many Objeilions anfrvered. 4- Several forts ofthii SinofVnbe- lief. $ Means to convince us thatVnbe^ lief is fo great a Si«. 6 Though the Sin of unbelief bo very great, yet it* s pardonable* 7 God hath pardoneji unbeliefs and; wil pardon it' VimtedbyVeterCole, Printecand Book-Sel!er, at the fign of the Vrinting-preffi in Corw-Jbi//, neer the: Royall T.xcbangs» 1^58. '\ >«■*■ BEcaufe it is ufuall, to abufe Rea- ders in thrufting forth broken Notes under the Names of Authors - that are of Repute : Thefe are to atteft -'^ the following. Sermons on z^^darl^ |6. 14.. 1 Tiw. 1. \%*fohn^^X m LuJ^, 11. 1 5 -Were Preached by Mri Sydrach Smpfon ; And are now Pub-* John Loaer^ >< And ^ ^-.?t! [heart was fet ; he endeavored 10 pui his blefled work into more hands, ihaa ttie fupcrftitioH;, or policy of former times would permit. * When other mens fpiritj flood otherwife^, he could with Jl4o/es fay^ Would God that all the Lords People l^ere Trophets. How oppofite was the mind andpra(5liceof this good man^ to thofc blind Popifh Guides, who in their age tooke away the K^y of lQioli?ledg and entred not inthemfeheSjand thofe that were entring they hlndred. Their Scriptures are loc* ked up in a ftrange language^ Knowledg confined to a fliaven Crown, and the key of inflru6tion tied to a CafTock Girdle. This RevcrerKi Author was otherwife perfwaded, and in his opinion, not fin*» gular ,• havingwith him, the concurrent Judgment of men eniinent in their gene= ration : fuch as Zulnglm^ SMu/cuIm^ As rtttusy T. Martivy ?Vn^, and of our own, Mr. (^artwri^htj Dud^ Fenner^MiL. Sates, Dr. -^^^^^ and others j as appears in that fljortdifputej which was feafonably publiflhed by hinv, in a time wherein m any^^ To the ^ader. many of our Reformers were very zea^/ lous to keep diftindl;, z Laity and Cler^ according CO that Popifii wont, and in fach rigidnefsthat none might be per^ mitted ta teach or inftrud out of th« Scriptures^ hut [nchzs are by them put into holy Orders. It was at that time endeavored much^ that there might be no preaching, but by thofe ordained, and no ordination^ but by a ClaC Presbi* tery : fb that in conclufion,without fuch, a form of Government as is laboured for, under that Title; In an ordinary way there can be no Miniftry^ no Coiiverfi* on, no Churches, no Sermons, no Sa* craments , which if fo , will prove as ingaging a Maxime to eredt. Presbi* tery, as no Bijhop no iQng^ot Extra eccle^ fiamnullafalm was for Popery and Epifi copacy. We are not in love with^ or plead for any of thofe Uniyerfalities * leaft of all for the laft^ , we are not for alt to preach without ordination,norfor any to }4pof^' :i preach ordinarily without approbation ;\^}^d'tf yet if the truths of Chriftjefus be prea*- ched- without either^ we dare not fay (as fome) a 7^« di' ■ pa. 1^2, . ' b 4 ^ >« univ'-ff/yJ/ ad mi r, preach withouf ordinatio/i- -. -■>* Tq the ^ader fome) fuch preaching is not a means to begec faith But this we humbly airert: Perlons duly approved of for their Piety and Gifts, though not ordained, nor in Office ^ we deem every way qualified for this work^, according to God and man. Our eftablifliment is both pious and prudent. Peace or di*' fturbancc in civil! affairs, is much from the lips ofthofc that are the publick Prea« chers in a Nation ,• It is of concernment by what ^arty the folc appointment of fuch fhal be claimed: We grant formerly the Clergy only were intrufted and none might preach but fuch as had Patents from the Bifhops or their Afsigns : But then who appointed Bifhops ? they were Pr^i/i-l^^^^^ independent Tribe,facred &from 'ftmes ;^ I themfelvcs ; as oui Ordainers, but their rife by Commifsion and from the Civil Magiftrate(as Crdiuwel was appointed Vi« car genetal in fbiritualibushY H%.) Pres* the church , . ^ •'^ r * without I biters are not lo. "rfri We do not defpife ordination, nor !^?^'-/^^vthofe that in the Name and Authori^ jju.Divi ty or Telus Chrift inaugurate Perlons * Officers ecclep.t&i' 1 col, are Chrifis of] [thefe cffi- i cers are '^hotb clew- ed and or^ dained by Rcpim. / ipa. ^^. to I To the ^ader. ■r— ;^i— B»^ ;'. ..-Lau^-e'jr^u—^— to this facred Office : It is doubt« lefs an Ordinance : Buc that none may preach but fuch this we deny, and diftinguifh with Junius between prea« ching and other Church Duties materi«» ally confidered, as done fix ojficio or as done Ex communi jure ; and this with Scripture warrant alfo. That place ^m.^ ID, evidently implieth as much/or there muft be a Church or Corporation be- fore Officers, Beleevers before a Church, ( which is c(£tmfidelium ) the glad tidings of good things muft be preached before Belceving, and Preachers fent before a« ny fuch good Tidings brought : Now this fending cannot be a putting into Church relation or Office,- Becaufe as yet no Church, but more common and generall : As when one man Ex charkat inftru6ls & teaches others. Parents their Children;, Governors their Families, Chriftian Kings and ^Princes the people under their charges,- Deputing fit and learned perfons, fome for juftice and Civil Government, others for the inftru^ ^ion of their people in the knowledg of Ecclejtit Cap, 6 ■- e To the 'J^eade r. II r Jcfus Chriftc Whenaconfidcrablc num* bcr by fuch bicflcd means become liVtng Stones , and built together ds a Spiritual Hou/e , He that was fent by the Magi^ ftrate or in any other Providential way, thus to inftruft, ( being called the-re unto) becomes zSte'^ard of this Houfc^ and a difpenfer of thofc Miftcrics in a more peculiar relation to this people, and CO Jefus Chrift, whofe name is in a fpecial way put upon them Matth. 1 8. Preaching thus or by virtue of fuch Office or flatten , hath for its Objedt a Church and Bcleevers principally : The former way is rather for the begetting Faith and gathering beleevers into fuch aftate. Our Brethren feem to limit all prea* ching to a Churchy and to fuch as are already Beleevers, as the chief fcope and principal ufe of this Ordinance. Their words are thefe : ^^The Word ^^ought to be preached to Infidels, Matth. "28. But the Principal Object of prea* ^^ching is the Church j Trophecy is not (i.e. not fo much^ forthm that heleeve not^ Ui JtfT ^-:g" r m ■■■- , I ■■■■ I urn ■ To the ^ader, i^tnumimjv^i^ I ^^not hut for them that heleeVe^ i Cor.14 22, *'Hcnce it is that God hzth/et his Officers -_.__=. To the Reader * Cor* 4 iTh:f.i.i Heb, 11$. wrought out;, and the eye of the foul o* pened upon the blefled God to falvation: This is that great and Mafter«=Grace, through which the Myfteries of Eterni* ty fhine in upon the foul,- without which, though they be preached to us, yet it is a Go^el hid^ and we perijh aot^ withftanding ; Nay, Reafon it fcif is abfurd and unreafonable where men have not Faith . which vcrtuc corrects and difpofeth Reafon even in relpei^of its proper Objeift, as Reafon doth our Senfes. The diftincH: and pithy opening the Nature and Operations of this blefled Grace, with Its Oppofite, UNBELIEF, are the Subjeds of the following Sermons, now by this good Providence put into thy hand : where we leave them. The Blefling of Chrift be with them , and with thy fpirit, that thy foul being tran^ Jlated out of Varknef into this marycf^ lorn Light y thou maifl: in the u(c of! all/ !Books frinted hy Peter Cole, &c. ^ fuch wholfom means grow in Grace, and in the Knowkdg of our Lord and Sayior Jefui Chrifii to Him he Glory, both noTif, and for ever. Amen- fohn Loder» Ihe %amef of ^ook^ printed hy Peter Cole, (Printer and f^ookc feller of London : and are to be fold at his Sbop^ at the ftgn of the ^rinting-prefl in Cornhil, neer the ^oyal Exchange. %ew ^oohj' of Mr. Jeremiah Burroughs. VI Z. Chrifts call to finners tnd to Saints, to come to himj if crcr they intend to have pardon of fin, or peace and Comfort. Alfo a Treatifc of Meck- nefs, and of moderating of Anger .* In fcvcral Books on Mattb. 1 1. a8. i^. jo. Afr, Hookers N^w Books in three P^O' Inms : One in O^avo, And two in ^trto* Thefe Eleven New Books of Mr* Thomas Hooker:, made in Netv-Sngltind Are attefted in an Epifile by Mr. Tfco- masGoodwiny and Mr. Philip Nye, To be written with the Authors Own hand: None beinj written byhim- ftlf before. One Volum being a Comment upon Chrifl's laft Prayer in the Seventeenth of /0f;»:whereinis opened. The Unidn belcevers have with God and Chrift,and the glorious Priviiedgcs thereof. Befides many o- Ither Gofpei Truths, there is alfo ftievfcd, C « 1 Tb4t »-^ f 'Books Truited by Peter Cole That the end why the Saints receive] thcmjdhrff^re old Age algloriom Grace, u^ That thiy may , 6 The Soul ts nnHfally fetkdin afitt^ be onCi as the Father and Ch'lfl are one. That God the rather Uveth the Faithful y as he loveth Jefm Chrift. That our Savior defireth to have the Fnithful in Heaven rvi'ih himfclf. That the hapfimfi of our being in Heaven} is to fee Chrifls Glory* That there is much wanting in the knowledgofGods hovej in the mofi *ble Saints. S direSlioTUy according to the dayly need cf his Servants. That it is the dejircy and endeavor of our ^ Saviory that the dearefl of Cods Lovcy which was be flowed m himfetf^fhould be given to his faith- ful Servants* That our Vnion, and Communion ivith God in Cbrifiy is the top of cur happinef in Heaven. fulfecuriiy. 7 The heart of a. 'Natural mm is wholly HnwiUi?}g \o jubmit to the ^'ord that would ftver him from his fins. B God the Father by a holy f^ind of violence^ pJuci^s HJj out of their corruptions, anddravts them to be- ieeve in Chri(l» The Ninth and Tenth Books of the Application of Redemption by the That the Lord Chrift lends dayly EfFeftual Work of the Word, and fpi- The firft eight Books : of the Ap- plication of Rcdemptionj Ey the ef- fedual Work of the Word, and Spirit of Chrifl, for the bringing home of rit of Chrift, for the bringing home of loft finners tb God. Beftdes many other feafonable, and Soal-fearching Truths, there is alio largely fhcwed. I The heart mu(i be humble and con" trite before the Lord wit dwd in it* 1 Stubborn, and bloody finners may be made brol^en- hearted. I There mu(i be true fight of fin, be^ fore the heart can be brol^enfor it* 4 Application of Special fins by the Miniftryy is a means to bring men to fight of, and forrow for them. 5 tPiieditation of fin, a jpecial means to break ihe heart. ioft Sinners to God. In which (be- ^ The fame word is profitable to fomfy iides many other feafonable, and Soui-j not to another* fearching Truths) there is alfo largely I 7 The Lord fomtimts ma^es the word prevaile mofi) t^hen its moft op* pofed. 8 Sins unrepentedofj maizes way four a Chrifi puts alHlS into pojjeffion of piercing Terrors* althat good that he hath purchafed. 9 The Truth terrible to a guilty confci- ihewed. 3 Chrifi hath purchafed al fpiritual good for HIS. 3 The Soul mufi be fitted for Chrift be- fore it can receive him : And a po- I yverful Minifiry is the ordinary means to prepare the heart for Chrifi. 4 TheworkofQodisfree: And the day of Salvation, is while this tfife lafty and the Gojpel continue* J God cols hk EUii ai any A^e, bi^t ence, 10 Grofl and fcandalous (tnne) s, God ufually exercifeth with heavy brea^ kings ofheartybefore they be brought to Chrift* 1 1 Sorrow for fin rightly fet on^ pier^ cnb tbs heart of the fimcr throughly.. ' " "T^O^/ , rrr f-ir"irtf i .« , at the ^rinting'prejiby the Exchange. iz They tvhofe hearts are pierced by 4. Want of Allurance, $. Afflidion the iVordi are cariedyvkh love and 6 Temptation. 7. Diflertion. 8. Un« rejhect totheMimfters of it : And fcrviceablenefs, 9, Difcouragemcnrs are bujie to enquire, and ready to fiom theConiition itfclf. Delivered fubmit to the mind of God, 1 in thirteen SermonSjOn 'P/*/i/;»j42» I'S.. 13 Sinners in diftrefi ofconfcimeyAre His Four Sermons concerning, ignormt rvbat tkeyjhoidd do. 4 Sin againft rhe Holy Ghoiu \\ A contrite jimer fees A Mcejfny of \ $ Sins of Infirmitie. coming out of his (inful condition 15 There is a fecret hope wbrremth the Lord fuppor.ts the hearts of con trite Jlnners* 16 Thty vfiho are truly pierced for their finSi do prife and covet deli- verance from their Jlns. 17 True contrition is accompanied with confefion offi?h Tvhen God cals thereunto. 18 The Soul that is pierced for fin, is carried with a reftleji diflitie againft It Six Books more of Mr. Hookers in two Volums in Qjarto, are priming. Tvftnty one fever at Books of Mr. Wil- liam Brid^Cj CoUe^ed into two Columns* Viz. I Scripture Light the mo(lfure Light: compared with, i. Revelations & Vili- ons.x.Natural^lJilJpernatual Dreams 3 Imprellions with, and without Word 4. Light and Law within. 5. Di^ vine Providence. 6. Chriftian Experi ence.7. Humane Reafon. 8. Judicial Aftrology. Delivered in Sermons^ on % Vet. 1.19' ^ Chri(l in travel: 'Whtx tin, x. The Travel of his foul. z. The firft and after effeds of his Death, 3 His Afiu- rance of Ifluc. 4. And his fatisfadion therein. Are opened and cleercd in Ser- 6 The falfe Apoftle cried and difco* vered 7 The good and means of Eflablifli* ment 8 The great things Faith can do. 9 The great things Faith can iaffer*i 10 The Great Gofpel Myftery of the Saints Comfort and Hoiincfs, opened, and applied from Chtifts Prieftly- Office. II Satans power to Tempt, and ChriftsLove to, and Care of his. \ People under Temptation 11 Thankfulnefs required in every Condition. 13 Grace for Grace. 14 The Spiritual A dings of Faith; through Natural Impoflibilities* 1 5 Evangelical Repentance 16 The Spiritual Life, &c., 17 The Woman of Canaan. 18 The Saints Hiding -place, &c.. 19 Chrifts Coming &c. 20 A Vindication of Gofpel Ord% nahces 1 1 Grace and Love beyond Gifts Mt.[Brightman on theRevclatioo* Clows Chyrurgery. Marks of Salvation. Chriftians Engagement for the Gar fpelj by John Goodwin. Great Church Ordinance of Baptifiiit Mr. Loves Cafe, containing his J?€^ Dions, on 7/4. 5511. 3 A Lifting up for the C^ff-«?ow«im| titionsj Narrative, and Speech cafe of, I. Greatfin. 2,, Weaknefsof, •^.race. f, Mifcarriagc of guties, Sook Trinted hy Peter Cole, kwelve Boof(S of Mr. Jeremiah Bur- roughs/4rf/> pMJhed 3 nlfo the Texts of Scripture upon which they are grounded. 1 Gofpcl Reconciiiation^OrChrifts Trumpet of Peace to the Wor'd, Wherein is Opened Gods exceeding willinjnefs to be Reconciled to Man 5 And Gods fending his EmbadadoM to that End From i C(;/;5. 19, 20, 11. a 'I'he Rare Jtvvel oichridim Con- tenimcnti on Vbil. 4. < !• Wherein is iliewcd, 1 What Contentment is. i It is an Holy art and Myftery. 5 The Ex cellcncics of it. 4 The Evil of the con- trary (in of Mutmuring, and the Ag- grav.itioMs'oiir. I Golpel-iroyfljipi on Levit. 10. 3. Wherein is fhewed, i The right man- ner of theWorfhip of God in Generals And particularly^In hearing the Word, Rtceiviiig the Lords fupper, & prayer. t 4 Gfilpel'Converfation^ on VhiL i 17 Wiierein isihewed, i That the Conver[acions of Beleeversmuil be a- bove what could be by the Li^ht of Naturc.2 Beyond thofc that lived un- der the Law. I And lutable to what Truths the Gofpel holds forth. To fvhich is added, "Vhe Mifery ofthofe Men thut have their V onion in this Life only, on VfaL ly* 14. 5 A Trcatifc of Earthly-minded' »f^:Wher€in is fhewed, iWhat Earth- ly-mindcdnefs is, 1. The great Evil thereof, on ^hil. j. part of the ip.vcrf. Alfo to the fame Book is joyncd, A Treatife of He/tvenly-mindednef^, and walking with Gorf,on Gen. 5 . 14. and on Pibi/.J* 20. 4 An 6xpefition on the fourth^ fifth, fixth, and fcventh Chapters of the Prophefie of Hofea, 7 Au ExpofitiQn on the eighth jninth, and tenth Chapters of Hofea* 8 An Expofition on the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth Chapters of Hofea, being now compleat. 9 The Evil of Evils, or the excee- ding finfulncfs of lin, on Job 16. xK 10 Precious Faith, on x 9ct. x. i. 1 1 Of Hope, on 1 John 3. ^. IX Of Walking by Faith, on i Cor, ^.7. Mr. Bwyrow^fei his fifty nine Sermons on Matth. ix. Printed. x8^ Z9, 30. Are A Godly and Fruci- ful ExpoJitioHy on the firft Epiftle of Peter. By Mr. John ^^ers^ Minifter of the word of God at Dedham in EJJex. Mr ^^ers on Teaman the Syrian, his Dileafc and Cure: Difcoverinj the iJ^oCic of Sin and Self-loves with the Cure, i/i^. Self- denial and Faith. t^Mr. Rogers bis Trcatifc of Marri- age. The Wonders of the Loadftonc. By Samuel ivard of Ipfwicb. An Expofetion on the Golpel of the Evange- lift St. SMatthew. By Mt.Wdrd, The at the frinting'prejs hy the Exchange. The Difcipline of the Cliurch in l^erV'tngUnd : By the Churches and Synod there. TbcWifcVirginsLfipp Burnings Or, Gods fweet incomes of Love to a ' plainly appears by the Authors Epiftle YecrSjhavingbeen eight times printed^ though al the former Impreffions wan- ted the Nature^Caufes^SignSjind Dif- ferences of the Difeafcs, and had only the Medicines for the cure for thcmi as gracious Soul waiting for him. Pob- lifr.ed by ^r. Thomas i^reld, late of 2feW'Engl/utd, Tvpelve new Books h one Volum of Nich. Culpeper, All culled the idetL of PyMcaI Vhyftck.. I % The art to preferve Health If. A Sure Guide to Phyfick and Chyrurgcry r Thai is to fay. The Arts of Healing by Medicine, and Manual Operation. Being an Anatomical De^ fcription ot the who! bcdy of Man.ani its parts, with their Rcfpedive difeafes, dtttvonftrared from the Fabrick and ufc ofthefaid Parts. In Six Books of RiolanuSi tranfhted, and adorned with mans body, and iheir Si^ns Of Medicaments. Of the art of Healing. Of the general Cure of Difeafes. Of External Difeafes. Of Peavers. Of Head Difeafes. Ofmiddle Belly Difeafes. 10 Of X-ower belly Difeafes. II Of Venemous Difeafes. 11 Of Childrens Difeafes. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 The preternatn^ diforder of an hundred eighty four Figures cut in ' " • '• Brafs. i6 yefllngm Anatomy of the Eedyaf t^a-fJiWhstcm is exadly defcribcd^the feveral Parts of the Body of Man, illu- \ ftrated with very many larger Brafs Plates than ever was in Englifh before. 27 A Tranflation of the New dijpcn-' fatoryjin^idt by the CoUedg of Phyfiti- ansof London. Whereunto is added The KO' ^^ Galens Method ofVhyfida a8 The Engli(h Vhyptlm enlarged. being an A ft ro! ego- Phvfical Difcourfc of the vulgar Herbs ot this Nation ; wherein is (hewed how to cure a mans felf of moft Difeafes incident to Mans Thirty four Bosk^ of Nich. Culpeper Gtnt. Student in ?hyjtck md Ujiroloiteiformerly ptiblifhed. Body, with fuch things as grow in The fiift Tewnty four Books.Are all j England, and for three pence charge. called the Pranice of Vhypck, Wherein is plainly fet forthjThe Nature,Caiife, Differences i and fever al forts of Signs 5 Together with the Cure of al Dileafes in the Body of Man. Being a Tranfla- tion of the Works of that Learned and Renowned Dodor, La\aru4 KiveriuSi now living) Councellor and Phyfitian to the prefent King of France. Above fifteen thoufand of the fald Books in Xatin have bscn fold in a very few Alio in the fame Book is (hewed, i The time of gathering al Herbs, both Vulgarly and Aftrologically. 1 The way of drying, and keeping them and their Juyces. 3 The way of making and keeping al manner of ufcful Compounds, made of thofc Herbs. The way of mixing the Me- dicines according to the Caufe, and Mixture of theDifeafe, and the part of the Body affliaed, 5 A !Books Printed by l^etec Cole, zg A T>ire5lorv for Mid^nvcs, or a -. ^y'lUiam Land, ihcn Bifliop oUinur- CuUe for" iromln. N^vvlv enlarged j ^t^i^ ^ ' r>tr • ^'*' ■' '^ -J Ml. j Abrah^ims Offer, Goo s Offering : j Being a Sermon by Mr. Hctle^ bsfoie ihe Lord Major oi London. Ml. Sp«>(/awi Sermon, being a Parcern of Rtpentance. Englrnds Deliverance from the Norrhern Presbic CiU- 55 Medicaments for the Poor, Or Phyfick for the Common People- ^4 Health for the Rich and Poor, •by Dyet without Ph) Tick. The London Dlfpmfatory in Polio, ofalargeCharaacrinLatine. The London Difpenf^tory in twelves, a fmal Pocket Book in Latinc. Six Sermons p.'eached by Dr. Hill. Viz. 1 The Beauty and Svveetnefs of an Olive Branch of Peace, and Brotherly Accommodation budding. ^ . % Truth and Love happily married in the Church of Chrift . , * The Spring of flrcngthening Grace ia the Rock of Ajes Chrilt 4 The flrcngth of the Saints to make lefus Chrift their ftrcngth. 5 TheBeftandWorftofP^/^. 6 Gods Eternal preparation for his Pying Saints. 1651 before the Parliament. By Peter Sterry. The Way of God with his People in chcfe Nations. Opened in a Thankfgiving Sermon , preached on the 5 ^of Novchb. 1656 before the Righr Honorable, the High Court of Parliament. By Tetrr Sterry. Mr. Sympfons Sermon at iveflmin^cr Mr. Fealis Sermon before the Lord Major. The Deft and Worft Magificate. By Obadi Ah Sedgwick' A Sermon. A Sacred Panegyrick. By Stephen Martint. A Sermon. Tha Craft and Cruelty of the Churches Adverfaries. By Mit tthew Nervcomin. A Sermon The Ma^iftratcs Support and Bur- den. By Mr. Johi Cordel. A Sermon. Mr. Oivens ftedfaftncfs oi the Pro- mifes. A Sermon. Mr. Vhiliips Treatife of HeU. of Chtifts Genealogy. The Caufe of our Divifions difco- vered, and the Cure propounded. King Charts his Cafe, or an Appeal to al Rational men .concerning his tryal. A Relation of the Baibadoes. ARela.ion of the Repentance and Convcrfioa of ihe Indians in New- ACommemorstionofKingr/;4v/;! England: by m Sliot, and Mr. his Inauguration. In a Sermon, By M^yhew. ^^^ at the Trinting^pre/s I?)' the Exchange. A Congregational Church is a Ca- tholick Vidble Church. By ^arnucl Stone in New- England. A Treatife of Polftick PowerSj wherein feven Qatllbr.s are aafwcred, 1 Whereof Power h made, snd for what ordained, i Whether Kings and Governors have an Abfoki*:^ Po wer over the People, g ^Vhsvhci Kings and Governors be iubj :6t co the Laws of God, or the Laws ofthci" Country. 4 How far ih^ People are to obey their Governors. $ Whe-^her al the People havc,be their Governors. 6 Whether it be Lawful to depofe an tni Governor. 7 What Confidence is to be given to Princes. The CompalTionate Samaritan. T) D: ^ibbs on the: Philipplans. f^ox Vacifioa ^ or a Pc:fwalivc to eaci Di Prt/?o»i Slims fubmiflion, and^ Sntan Oy»-'ithro'.v», Pioui Mins Pr.Vdice in Parliament tii^e. E^ififfs Miliary Difcipline. The ImniouaUty oi Mans Soul. The An?coir»iil: Anatomized. TheBiihop oiCanUibiirfs Speech on the Sc^.Sold. The King*s Speech on the Scaf- ' fold. A Looking Glafs for the Anab&p- tifts. ii'o^dwards Sacred Ballance. D.. Orven againil Mr. Baxter, ERRATA. In the (Book of Unheltef, Or^ Want of^adine^. Sec, P^g^) 7*1' ?? fo^ them r. you, p. 9. /. 13. for good r- God, p. 19. L xi. fet your r. their, p. 30./. iJ^.for dicr. do^ p. 36. 1. B.for Apoflle r. Difciples, f. 38, 1, i.forhisr. its, p, 94./. 1$. /or an equal y. as equal, in that dmcptdt 3 laft ^ one thing twice, p. lOg. / 9 for condcmnins; the a condemnation of the ibid./, ii./ijrfpcaksinr. fpcaksof, p. 10 j./. 13 /by put off r. put cfFs, ibid. I. as./orprcmilcsr.promifes, p. 106 /. ii./orther their peace, ibid./. lO. for prince r. promifc, ibid- /. i^for upon clecr eviedence r. that you muft have deec evidence, p. 107. /. j i.for as bonds r. as to fufFcr bonds, p. 1 10. /. 3. /or that unto r. you unto, p. 1 19. /. 28. for has need r. had need, p. x 18. /. 13. for To as r. fo much which p. 124. /. i2./br thereof r. therefore. ^« the ^oohi of ^ot going to Chriftfor Salvation, a great Sin* PAgei, I. 31. /or affedion y. affcdions, p 5./. 16. for ignorantly r, ignor- ance, p. 14. /. a. for the pardon y. thee for pardon, p. 20. /. 1 6, for would r ftiould, p. 26. /. I. /or tbefe ire r. there arc, p. 3i./. i7' ^ God (hould y. that God fhould, p. 1 1 5. /. 2$, for tcknowledg U o«r r. acknowledg our p. 110./. io./bnbrcer.tbird. ' ^ -* D THE r THE CONTENTS O F T H E Treatife on >J^^r;^. i6. 14* Pape o CH A P. I- T/:?e fervency of Cbrifls love^ The di^jificn of the 7exU Tfx Text reconciled vvith I Cot. 1$. S' and John 20. 24- What Taitb is in general ^cw this Taitb h difiinguUhed: i. lItjioricalTaith.2. Temporary cpaitt Why fo called, 5- ^^^^^^ ^ "Miracles,^ This is of Two forts: Firft, Am^e. Secondly,, Vafii^e. ^^Jufnfymg'Fait}'' WhyfocaUed. 1 Chap 2. Wl^erein Hiftoncal and Sannng 'Faith apree-'andvpherein they differ. Wl?e'rein Tempo- rary and Saving "Faith agree v and voheretri. they differ. What that Taiti? is, of vplnch t}je njnhehef here upbraided is a voant. What kjnd of Vnbeliefthis is.. . ^, ,. . -^^ Chip. 3. What upbraiding ^^ ViT^'''%'VL \ An Ohiemon Answered. Unbelief agatnft aUtl?e Attributes of qod. The heftvpaytodealvpithVu' belief is upbraiding it. I^ Chap. 4 Application. Letuschtd^ourfelves for cur Vnbelief. Several Objenions anfvpered 2^ rtfa The Contents. I Page Chap. 5. TheVoUrine. The ^ea fans of it : i, ^ecaufe this Reproof of Cbriji^s is an excellent means to take avcay Unbelief. 2. ^ecaufe Unbelief \ isagreatfm: Fn^^jComparatwely : Secondly, In it f elf i as being, i. T>ireUiy oppofite to the end of the Latv : 2. Oppofite to the Jluthority of the Lawgwer : 3. Oppofite to the Principle of Obedience, which is Lo've. Unbelief in a iveal^ degree vporfe in a ^elecnjer , than in a wicl^d man in its full power ^ and that upon federal accounts^ 3 1 Chap. 6. Application, i. T he former ^xhor* tation continued, viz. To chide our f elves for our Unbelief, 2. This jpeal{f the happy condition of the Saints*, they are ne-ver upbraided with what Chrifl hath done for them, but when they will not have more from him* An ObjeUion Anfwered* 3. Then total Unbelief is very bad. 40 Chap. 7« The Tlnrd ^eafon of the DoUrine , viz. ^ecaufe the caufe of a dull ^aith is exceeding bad. Unbelief the Iffue of fever al Sins :As FJrfl, ^oUy'j and that of oppofite, i. To knowledge, in^ive Particulars : 2. To Wifdome. Secondly, Slownefi of heart j which imply es Three things : I. Slothfulnefl* 2. ^ach^ardnef* 3. DhU-' nefi. Thirdly, Hardnefi of ^eart : The ^x prefftons of which in Scripture fignifte Two things: i*StubborneJS. 2*Senfeleffnefi, 45 Chap. 8. Application. T<^e heed of ^acl^" wardheji to ^eleeve. 61 Chap, 9. A fourth Sin, of which Vnbelief is the Iffue, Viz. T)ifordered Joy. This binders ^aith 'y I. ^y the T,xceji of it : %. 'By the Sweetneji of it. The ^our^j %eafon of the VoUrine, Viz. ^ecaufe the ^ffSs of Vnbelief are fo had. 66 — ~____^^ D 2 Chap. 10. ; 1 1 he Contents. I! Nil ii , it . Page Chap. lO. Appl^carion. i. Then th a Anger and ho've ofChrift may flan d together 'f i. After Con- i^erfioti 12. '^hich more before Converfton : 3. At the liifl day, Ul'e , 2 . Confidtr what it will come to , that y OH are fo ha- diy drawn to bdee've. life, 3* 1 ^ence learn the ^\eafon oj the Reproof es you meet • with from Chrift. Ufe, 4. It is then the Duty of ^Minifiers to Chide and ^jprove fharply ^nbe^ lee-jing Chriflianf 70. Chap. II. Ufe 5. ^j pjrfwadcd to be quich^of, Hearings when Qod (peal^r to you of Comfort* JVe\ fl^ould be foready tobdeea^^e : i. Ar that even the: leafl i?itima:':on fhould be amotin'e tons. 2. As\ ever we were to fin, 3. As a guilty Con^cie.ice is \ to ap^r^bend the wrath of Qod. 4,. A r we are to^e' leeveihe Will of Qad in any thing we arc to do for him, 5. As we were at our fir ft Converfion* 6, As pr.fumptuojis men are to apply Comforts to themselves, ?• As a ^ool is to beleeve what be hearsy without Examining it, 8. A.r Qod is 77 to give. Chap. 12. The former Exhor ration continuedtoi endeavor for a prowpitude to beleeve. Some have this §(uich^ie{f of^aithfrom their firfl Converfion'A Others attain to 7t by ind^flry under the meanfi vchich Qcd affords. Motives to endeavor for this\ ^eadhh'fi of ^aith : j, Herein principally liefi their love of Qod, 2. ^''i)ery good thing fpok^n of in j tbeQofpelis toyou^ An OhJQ^'xow Answered, 3.-J ^0 hurt can poffibly come to you by being forward to beleeve, Ob;ed^. Anfwered. 4. There is no ground for their bacl^ardnefs to beleeve. An Ob- j^Ct, Anfwered. 92 Clap* 1 3. Helps to attain a readinefi in beleeving, I . Coyjfider thegreatnefiof the fin of bang hac^ard tobelee*i>e. 2. Vnderflfand ppel the Covenari.t tf ^^^ Qrace^ The Contents. Page Qrace* Trve things in this Covenant ^ vohicb being jmderjiood wil md-i^.a man apt to belee^e. Firft, ThsloveofQod'', which kj i. ^ree. 2. ^ounti" fuU Secondly, The engagement of Qod* 5^. Qet the love of Qod>^ 4. hive much the life of 'Faith, 5. ^enyyour own reafon and undirfianding* 6. ^ray forthe fpirit of Jefuf Chrifi, The excellmcy of the I fpirit of a Chriftian lies in a readinefito heleeve, lAn, obyM . Anfwered. A. 6. life, The love of Qod is ex'^ ceeding great to ^eleevjrf. no /sJ^ai^.'^Jii^ Jj^^^f J)/5v^fi^,S -^M-.^i/) ,-m^Ak£ THE CONTENTS O F T H E Treatife on i Tim. r. 15. Page CH A P. I . The tvordr opened. The fir ji Vo- Urine. Unbelief a great fm. Fkft, lure' gardofit felf. And that ai con fidered. 1. Ab- folutely ^eing* ^irfl Againjt the end of tl^e Law* I. Ceremonial' z* ^MoraL Secondly ^Op-^ pofite to the Principles- of Ob edience. I i. Compa- ratiwely* Secondly , In regard of the ^erfons that commit it. As beings i. Voluntary i 2* A- gainfl ^ercy, 3. That which brings great eviU upon m.]ohni6* 7. B. Opened- 1 Ckap. 2^ Arguments to provok^ to a beUife of this^ t rii. thy ,t The Contents. * T^i truth J that Vnheleife k {o great a fin. I. The per- feUton of the under jianding lief in a Conformity to all the truths of Qod. II, Tofeei the greatnefi of fm is the tvay not to feel thd weight of Sin. LIL Sorrotv muft be proportionable to the fm. I V. The Concomitants ofbeleiving unbeleife to be agreatfin^ are many. i. It pal^es tha confidence of our ov^n rigPjteoufnefiy and humbles the pride of our hearts. 2. It poil bring the ^eart off from delays about be- leiving. An Objftion anfwered. 15 Chap. 3, Ob j eft. A man hath no power to be- leewe. Anfwer. Vnbelief a fm againfhlSl^ture. ^an lojl his power to beleeve. Impotency k not the next caufe of Unbelief . but jomwhat elfe. It is the *Hy- pocrify of our hearts to plead this Impotency. Jin ObjeUion Anfwered. Qod accounts it a Qlory to himfelfy for m to tak^him^ vphenvoehavi tried all other means* Objeft. 1 do nothing but fin^ andis it a fin for me not to belie^ve ? Aiifwer. 23 Chap. 4. The Anfwer to the former GbjeUion conti- nued. I. Sinners are the objetf of J unification. 2 . SanUification is not neceffary to the Offence of ^aith. 3. When we come to Jefm Chrifi^ we are not accepted for the dignity of any worl{^we have done. 4. ^either are we received to pardon upon the condition of worl{ing for future. $' The pre- fence of good work/ is not neceffary to mak^ ^aith faving. 37 Chap. 5. Objeft* ^l^one under the command of Relie- ving but they that do believe, and they that do Re- lieve are not guilty of the fm of Vnbeliefy they that do not believe are not under the Command, and therefore fin not. Anfw. Two things in a Com' mand. i. The matter cammanded* z. The Au- thority commanding* And fo two waies of being under a Command* 42 Chap. 6. The Contents Page Chap. 6. Three fortf of men guilty of this fin of un- belief, to whomthh Exhortation is direUed* i . Qrojl Sinners* 2. Such as thinh^itmough to leave fm, andgonottoChrifl. 3. Such as would believe , but do not, bccaufe they dare not. 48 Chap. 7. Objed^. How can unbelief b2 fo great a fin, feeing it arifeth from Ignoranci? Anfw, There is a double ignorance* Seven Cleans of ConviUion that Vabelief is fo great a fm* i . Con- fider the Commandment and Law of ^aitb. Here' in are four things to be confidered, i . The ^"{ind of the thing commanded* 2* The Attributes of Qod fromvphicb the Commandmmt flows, and which are manifold in it* 3* Thel^ind of the La^ that is brof^en* 4. The Condition of the Q^erfons under that haw, 54. Chap. 8.. The fecond Means ofConviBion that Un- belief is fo great a fm, viz> The Coiiftdiration of the eviUthat Unbelief doth tfs. The third MeanS;, ^ix the thoughts ofthefe things i^pon your Hearts*. A difficult thing it is to bring our Souls to Medita- tion', and yet more dffi cult to bring them to medi- tate upon our own fms, and the great nefl of them;-, and moft difficult to h^e:) it in our hearts, that it is a great fm not to go to Chrijt bylFaith. 69 Chap. 9, The fourth Means. Regard not what Senfe and T\eafon figgefl* Two things go by the immeof^eafon* i*Innate principle r* 2* i)ifc0urfe and deduced one thing from another* The fifths MeaiK.- Labor to beleeve. The fixth Means., ►S'ee^ to have the Spirit. Obje^. I have not the Spirit of prater^ and therefore cannot asl^the Holy Qhoji. Anfw. The feveuth Means. Qetloveta Qod. \ 77 Chap. 10. Bod:. I L Though the fin of Vnbelief be very great, y et it if^ pardonable. Tl?e T>oUrine \ The Contents. Page tfpenedi and proved, i . (jod hath pardoned Unbe- lief. 2. Qodwil pardon it, 87 Chap. II. The ^eafonr of the T>oHrine* i. 0- thi^rvoife no ^kjl) can b ' faved. 2. ^nhHief is not ! the Sin againft the lAoly Qhoft* 3 . Qodgives even ' to Unbelievers ajfurance of Salvation. 4. The par- 1 don of this fin doth in a fpeciall manner redound to] the Qlory of Qod. Application, ^e perfwaded that unbelief if pardonable, 100 Chap^ 12. *^ fif^h ^eafon of the VoUrine : Tor- giviaefi of this fin vporkj moft upon the Heart, The former TJje continued, to perfwade that Unbelief is j pardonable, T/>>e benefits of believing this truth are many, ■ "^""T UNBELIEF O K, The want of Readinefs to lay hold on the comfort given by Chrift^ Mark,.i6 -4. afterwards He appeared unto the Eleyen^ as they fat e at meat^ and upbraided them with their unbeliefs and hardnej^ of heart, becauje they belieyed not them which had jeen Him after He was rifen. CHAR I. The fervency of Cbrijislove, The dvvifton of the Text. The Text reconciled with iCor. 15. 5. and John 20. 24. What ^aith is in general, Tlcw this ^a.ith is dijiinguifijed : i. Hifhorical ^aitfj. 2. Temporary ^aith. Why fo called. 5. ^aith of Miracles. This is of Two forts : Firft, ^mve. Secondly, ea, until fuch time as their unbelief were cryed down. That is the benefit of anAffembly of Saints or Chiiftians meetinc together, that they are to be as helps, and witn-^ffes, and confirmer s of the Faith of one ano- ihwi:. ^ , „ But that 1 may draw nearer unto the text. He that when he firft of all met with them, cryed no- ihnig eli'e but (peace, peace, Luk. 24. 3<5. H4s heart was full of Love, and his lips were full of Grace, ( on- Evangelift reports that hefaies, AU powers lirventomemnAea^vm and tn ^artb, Matth. 28. 18. wh'ch was as if he fkould have faid m this manner, I was with you in humblenefs, and meanneis, and in the want of all things: I had nottvbereontolay ;;iv;jeaa,Matth.8.20. 1 could do nothing for you: It was Che tim.e of my Sufferings : But now I can do what I will, and what I can do, I will do for vou -^ He that came thus fpeakmg to them, now the text laich, comes upbraiding. And wh.t is the caufeof it > The text eels you, it was thejr unbe- Uef and hardnefs of heart. You may, if you will, dillribuce or break the Text into thefe parts : I. You have herea Charge, and the Ground of 5 1, Unbelief, and The Charge is. double,^ ^. 'Hard7Jefi of "Heart. The g^ro^/ni of it, is, ^ecmtfe they did not belie-oe 2. You] It. themvohichhadfeenhim after be tvatrifen to Uyhoidon'ihe Comfort given hy Chrlft, 2, You have the perfons upon whom, or againft whom che Charge is made, Ibe 12,k/2 20. 24« youlhall find that T^a-;2^ was not \ prefent : So that indeed there was but Ten : Judas I being gone to bis ovonplucc^ Afts i. 25. there was but Eleven, left : ^athia^ was not yet Chofen : ^Tbomof he was away when Chrifl appeared to them : How therefore is it faid that he appeared to the Eleven ? For Anfwer to this in a Word : Either Taul doth fpeakofall the Appearances of Chrift, and not of this one : Or elfe ^aid fpeaks by way of Ant: cipa- tion: an ufual Figure in Scriptures, whereby in I the ftory of things, that is fee down together,which ' fell out feveraliy. As for example j in ^ew. 35. 29. ye have the deaih of the Patriarch, whom yet you findtobealive, (jen- 37. 35. There is none that knows the ftory of the Scripcure5but knoweth this : that places are oft-times called by thofe Names, which they had not then , but afterward. The Writers of the Scriptures (for the better under- fl:anding of them ) do give places thofe Names, which they then had, when they wrote j though they had them nor at the time,, when they v/ere iirft \ faid to have them. The num^ber of the Difciples was commonly known to be Eleven : And becaufe the whole Col- ledge, I 6 OfUnheli ef; 0 r, the T^ant ofreadinej? I ledge, or Society had that number ^ therefore Lw^e faith Eleven, ^atbiof was afterwards added to them, when as this was recorded by Taul, and therefore O^aul he numbers Twelve. The thing that I have taken this text for at this time C I fay at this time ) is a little to fhew you how^ill fefusChrift doth take a littic Unbelief at the hands of his» *He upbraided them becaufeaf their ^nbeli^. And that I may fhew you what Unbelief is, and what it is that is here upbraided, I nmft Firft of all fhew you, what that Faith is whereof Unbelief is a want. And Secondly, I muft fhew you what kind of want that Faith is, which is here meant, which is here upbra'ded. 1 fhall be as brief as poflibly 1 can in all. In the General. Faith is that whereby we do gi^e credit to what God faith as true, and that be. caufe he faith it. This Faith it is di- ftinguifhed into 1. Hifiorical^aitfy^ 2. Temporary 'Faithj 3. ^aithof^iraclef^^iidth^t 4. tvhich if Saving or Juftifying Thefe are not Four Species ^ or kinds of Faith : but they are Four Significations, or Ufes of the term Faith. For as 1 fhall fhew you by and by, all thefe may meet together in on€ and the felf fame fubjeft: even as that Soul which we call Vegeta- tive, (or life which is m Plants) and that Senlitive Soul, which is in Beafls, is in man, but yet wrapt up ia his reafonable Soul. So all thefe I fay do make but one Justifying, or Saving Faich foraetimes : aad to lay hold on the Comfort pven by Chriji. and therefore are notdiftiiift creations, or jfferw ofFaich. I ftiall f peak a little, and buc a little to every of them. 1. ^iftorical^aitby is a believing thofe things to be true, which God reveals, and makes knovirn : And itgoes no further. 2, Temporary ^aith^ adds unto the affenr, an in- ward fenle, or tafte : a love, and an aiFe^ion to Gods revealing, and to the things revealed. It's called a Temporary Faith by the Holy Gholt. i« Becauie the /iffent is tofuch things as the times will bear. If times tfe for crying down of Chrift, then Temporaries will be for that : Ifitbe for crying down of Ordinances, and the bringing in of the Kingdom of theSpirit5(an oppofition,and a great one to the glory of Jefus Chrift ) then they are of that Faith: Look what the State, and Times do favour, that a Temporary Believer conforms his content unto. 2. Or elle it is becaufe he hath his Affent and afFeftions unto truths, but by fits, and at times : W her ea s Salving Vaitb is a life, <^al 2.20. 1 Ih^e by. the^aithoftheSonofQod, Temporary Faith, it's like unto a dew that's licked up, and nor like unto I Water that comers from a Fountain, which is not licked up. 3. Therefore it is but Temporary ^becaufe it lafts not long before the heart grows to be as dark, as it was before it did affent : and as dead hearted to I God, as it was before it did ieem to have lome fe- cret inward tafte of the things of God. Of fuch 1^ theie^Ifuppofe, the text *He[?. 6.4,5, fp^ak?, and I ftiail^give t hem this r eafon of it. For whatf oever is there faid^ might be found in ^alaam^ vpho lon)ed the v^a^es of unrighteoufnefi^ and perijhed for ii*, as the Apoftle ^eter and Jude do fpeak, 2 ^et.2. 15,16 Judeiu it isiVd concerning them in the Epiftle 7 I to \ 8 Of Unbelief ; Or^ the want ofreadinej? to the Hebrews, that they were inlightned : And m^umb*2^*iS^i6. /Balaam (the Witch) isfaidto be arnanvphofe eyes areo^ened^ one who heard the vpordf df Qody and hjiepp tlje k2^ovpledge of the moji high : who faw the ojifion of the Almighty y f ailing int,' a Trance^ but having his eyes opened* i hey in thu Hebf ewes, had fome talle : So alio had Balaam jthc Wkchj'Z^/^mb.as.iQ. when he cry ts out inrhis manner , Let me die the death of the ''J\-ghteo^j, and let my latter end belil\e unto />>fx. As if he ihould have faid, I will never ^ask a better condicion chin the Saints have when t'hey are in the eycrs of aicn \i\ their worft condition, ( even when they come to die.) When the Sahits of God comes ro die, men ufe to fay of them, %piv jhall he die, and his narm perifl)^ as they faid of V^ividy pfal.41 .5. Let,iaith ^alaamy let what will befai him a: his d^ath, 1 had rather, faies he, have th^ condition of fuch, tiian of the King of ^Moah^ or any that he cun put me in- to. 3. ^here k a ^aith of 'Miracles ; 'and tha: is a ful perfwaiionupon a fpecial revelation chat God will put forth his power to do fuch ihings as h- ha:h foretold fhall come to pafs. I fay it's a full per- fwafion. Jullifj^ing Faith ( as 1 fhall fhew you by and by) lies formally in a fiducial aff.nt. A man may have true Faith, and yet not be fully perf wa- ded : But a man hath not the Faith of Miracies^thac hath not a full perfwafion. And fo itV faid ( you know) concerning c4^r^:7^w, that being to believe thathefhouldhavea S^ed out of the afhes of his Child, he fl^ggered not through unbelief, but was fully perfwaded, ^om 4.20. Now this Miraculous Faith it's of Two forts : t. It's either AHive^ when as a man hatha peculiar gift to believe, that he fhall do fomething which is above the power of Nature, andfecond Caufes. 1 ^^^^^^^^^.^p.^— »— III I I I I. I I I I ^ to lay hold on the Comfort giVen by Chrifi. 9 Caufes. Of chat the Apoflle fpeaks in i Cor, 1 3.2- If I bad all that ^aithy fo that I could rsnifiv^moiinr tains : ^f[i 2. Or elfe it's TafiwCy Wheii 3s a n^ah dotii believe that he and others {hall be made parcakers of forae t'uch extraordinary working. An inllance whereof you have in 1/4^/ 14.9,10. where it's fayd j by Vaul C perceiving that he had Faith to beheal- j ed) Stand upright on thy feety and he leaped^ and r)raU^d, This perfvvafion hath for the object of it feme fpecial revelation : for it's not given to all ! the Saints. The Word of God, as the Word of Go Jft.is not the ground of it, becaufe that is a com- mon rule for all to walk by : and it's a promife of God in common to all. All have not the gift of Miracles, and yet al are to lock after a benefit in al the Scriptures : and therefore the gift of Faith of Miracles hath not the word for its ground, but fome fpecial re?velacion. The Faith of Miracles was e- ver peculiar to fome, not given to all : and there- fore it doth not come by Saving Faith, nor hath it the object of Saving Faith, ( for its object) which is the Scripture. As concerning the Faith of Mi- racles, it's wholly ceafcd as to the introducing, or confirming of any Dodrine. No Doftrine ought CO be received, though men did work Miracles. 1 he Doftrineof the Scripture is confirmed already by Miracles, and needs no other teftimony. Ko other Doctrinebut the Scripture,, Is to be received, and therefore there needs no Mii^acleis for the oDening of mens eyes to the under ft andiilg of it, or lea ling thctruth of It. There ar^ Miracles now wrought but chey are invifibleones : fuch as are the opening of blind underftandings, and raifnig dead hearts and, the like. And they aregreater than the other, even as a Difeaie oi: iilnefs in the Soul, is harder to be cured, than any in the body. Were there any I D . other \ i; I \ I 10 \h I i 0[){i^k?lkf] dr^thc'ifMt ofreadinej? \ other Do&ine to be received than whac we have iu the Scripture {hilling in the leccei, and literaiienle oficV then ch-^re muft be work'ng of Miracles. But it^there Ihould be fuch a Doftriiie, it makes void this Scripture^ of which God harh iaid, itdoibm-\ dure for ever. The Word of God endures forever, and he tha: adds wertiinto^ Jhall have plagues added \ to Imrij Rev. 22. 1 8. That is^he ihali be more plagued than Others, that fhall find oi;t aDodrine, which is not conta-ned in thisBook. But of this Faith I aeednot (peak further , 1 have only Ipoken this ' becaufe it'^s that which mens curious, wanton, foo-r] lifh, unbelieving hearts look after. The Difiples are not blamed foi want of that. ^ 4. There is laftly, ^A Jufvifying^ or a Savings ^aitb : and they are all one. There are none that havea Juftifying Faith, but they alio are faved^ And therefore you fliall find that the Scripture makes Jliftification and Salvation all on^. Byl Grace ye are faved through Faith, ^ph. 7.* .8. And in 15^^'. 2. 16. 8c Tit. 3. 7. Faith is faidtobe juftify- ing, nor becaufe God hath appointed that the ad: Ihall be accepted infleadof the whole Law by the Covenant of Grace : but it's faid to juftifie, becaufe it doth lay hold upon him who died f on o:irfirir^ and rofe again for our ji^ftificatioyi , even Jefus Chriftj Tvp/w.4.25. And it is called juftifying, objeftively, becaufe it doth receive him that dpth juftifie, and not becauf^it dothit felf acquit us through Gods Acceptation. This Faith is the gift pfQod>, Eph. 2. 8. heworjkslt. Not only by his giving power, to be- lieve, and the aft of Faith coming from our felves freely, but by making of us as well to believe, as to receive that powe?, Joh. 6. sy^JlUthat the fa- ther hath given to me, (li)aU come to me. And in i;er/l45. lie that hath heard^ arid learned of the leather, comes unto me* Phil.2.13. ^ework/botbto mUandtodo* ■ ^- ' " ^- By ) to lay hold on the Comfort given hy Chrijl. II By this Faith a Sinnei' goes to GodiaJefusChrift for all things that do belonc^to Life and Sa|yaj^ion^ becaufe9fcfheWordofGoct;;^;i;;,.^^^^ .^^^^^'^;^ x\ To draw yet nearer. . < ' - ' ^ J •' ^.< "S -"■i-ij ♦************•*'*♦**'****♦***** ti-'^. Wherein Hiflorical and Saving '7' aith agree j and vpbereintbey dijfpr. Wherein temporary and Sanjing ^aith agree ^ and^ vpheyein they differ r What that ^aith is, of rvbich the 'Vyihelief here upbraided h a want. What kjnd of Vnhelief this h* HlftoricaiTaithi\ox.\\ digitQ with SavingTarih in knowledge and aflenc. None have Saving Fakhjbuc chofe chat do know Goci, and the things promifedjChrifl, and the Spirit, and Grace, though this knowledge be not by the light of Reafon, but i>y the light of Scripture. As the Sunfhe'v/s itlelf by its own light.; But Saving Faith differs from Hiftorical in this, T^^^^ itrvorkj by love, Gal. 5. 6. Whereas the Devils have the other Faith^ and tremble, as Jam^s fpeaks, 7^;7j.2.i9* rWhich place I (hall explain by and by. i: r . j * ? .^ I Temporary ^aitb agrees with Slaving Faith in this, That there is an, affed:ion, and; fweetnefs found in the t,hings that are revealed. But yet both it and Hiftorical Faith differ from Saving Faith in thefubjjeft: There is none but the Eleaarepar- \ takers of the one*, -^nd, therefofre it's called che ' faith o/(Jpir ^/e^,.Xit. I.I. 8c Afts 1^3,4,8/ v^j-Tp^ny Of were ordainejd to eternal Life^ believed* f - • It differs alio in the eff^c^s. Sayiiig Faith fanfti- D z lies I 13 I of Unhiief; Or^ the l^ant ofreadinej? I lies and purifies J v4il/ 15.9. Allchereilrof the forts ^f Faith n>ay be %vhere a man is in the gall of bit- ter nefs, and in the bond of in^qirry, as ir's f aid of Simon'Muij^u^t Afts 8.12,13. Saving Fairh is a life, QaU 2. 20, that is, there is a n.icural ronftanc mo^ ving, and tendency of the Soul to get out of its felf totneLord JefusChrift for all the things that do belong to eternal life and Salvation : It minds hea- ven, and a man is continually doing iomething or other that way : andincaCehe be hindered, it's a death to him: There follows a ficknefs upon the obfti;uftions of the aftscf Faith *, whereas fempo- xary Fakh fs only upon fome m.ighty difcovery ei- ther of Grace and Mercy, which/were never heard of, or unexpe c'led : or of fpme Notions, which are rare and fmgular. As you know it's lard concern- ing'Hcva4 in the Gofpel of ^larli'^ thaE^ar/^.6,20. he heard John ^uptiji gladly^ and rejoyced^ And in John 5. 35^. it'sfaid, 'ftey rejoyced in his H^bt for a feafoyu The ground of al that fweetnefs which Tem- poraries do rind, is either the pleafantnefs of the iN'otion ( for l"e:ht is pleafanc to the eye) Or elfe it doth arlfe from the hopes of earthly Profits which may come in. O^ it may befrom hopes of being delivered from wrarh to come only. But all this whilt there is fomiething in ihe Soul that it dorh.love mote than the truth : m.ore than the things the truth reveals. A man, though he be ca(r- ried on fti'cngly, hatliyet fomewhat that will af- terwards byafs. and tUrn his Soul to the love of other things : Whereas true Faith does fofet the Soul by ibve uponChrift, as that it hath none in heaven but him. The l^afl Faith will not part wirh hina ioi all the world. fi'^ - -- ' • That Faith^hich here they ai^ fiidlrd want, (their Unbelief ) k was a want ( I befeech you maick it ) a want in Saving Faith. Theresas no want r t$ lay hold oh the Comf&rt^iven hj Chrift. -:^rr 13 want jnthem of Faith as it juftifies, but a want of that Faith which doth juftiiie : Their want was in a circumftance of the Ob;e6t of ;uftify fng Faith. For whereas before they beleeved in the ^ejpalj to €ome, before he was born, and upon him As come, in whom they were well p leafing imto God : They j did not yet believe upon him as one that fhould rife I out of the mouth and jawes of the Grave to con- !verfe with them for a feafon, and to endue them with pbVer from on high, and with the gifts of the holy Ghoft, and then to go to heaven for to perfect andcompleat the Work which he came into the world for. Their Unbelief was about the Qbjeft of their juftifying Faith, though not As that Ob- jeft juftifie:. Chriil as God and man fatisfying the wrath of God, is the Obje(^ of juftifying Faith : Chriftjas man r ifen from the dead, is not fo, but on- ly thereby that life and immortality which heliath purchafed is brought to light, revealed, and mani- fefted. For they are blamed becaufe they did not beleeve ( faies the text) what was told them : and that was this : That Tefus Chriff was rifen again : Which in more words is no more but this j That Death, andKell were overcome, and the wrath of God was fully fatisfied, that hs had buried all our fins in his Grave, and that there was a way made for us (even from the worft cond'tion fin could bring us into) unto glory : fo that though the De- vil might hurry us, yet not kill us: Sin might throw us into the earth, but we fhould rife again to glory. This is the thing now that does belong to juftTfying Faith. For no man could look for juftification by Chriil, that did not beleeve thefe when they are revealed to him. His Difciples had Faith before, and did beleeve fuch things fhould be done: but BOW they were done, they were blamed becaufe they did not beleeve chem. The 14 OfUnheUef; Ofythelpantofreadifiefi Thetriuhis, if you do but look into theflory, you fhall find they weie blamed for wane of clear, neis in Sav'iig Faith. That; which they had before inaMyllerie, Chi^ift does now explaui clearly to chem, That -he that they hoped fhculd come, was ..come, and was dead, and rifen again \ and they re- ceived not that. That which he coldtlieni was for their comfort, and they took not in chat. Tiie)' were exceeding ilow th^ TcxtTfaith to believe, hu\\e 24. 25. The Unbelief that Chrilt blanijs here, it is a want of clearnefs in the Doftr 'ne of our Sal- vation : A wane of readinefs to lay hold upon coin- fore and the confokc ion chac is oifered and given to us. Meer Unbelievers therefore they were not now, but they were fuch as were defeftive in their Faith. I. In the clearnefs of it. JefusChrift now made ir more raanifeft than ever, that the mouth of ; Ju- ft ice which was opened againft them, was now fhut: and chat the Lyon which was in the way of their Salvation, had honey in themouch of him for them, (if I may lo exprefs it to y ou. ) They were wanting in ciie ckarnefs of their Faith. They were wanting alfo, 2ly, In the fulnefs of their Faith. For the text tells you, L«/(e24. 25. That they did not heleeve all that Moles and the Pro- phets fpaf:^ of him : and here in the Text, Theyb^^ leewed not thofe that badfeen him after be wof rifen>< • They were wanting, ^ly. In the comfort of their Faith i for inL«i^e24. i7« ( where you have this very ftory related ) he faith to them as they went to ^mmaus , What manner of Communications are •tbefe that you hanje one VQitb another , and are fad ^ And then Laflly^ They were wanting in thequick- nefs and nimblenefs of their Fakh, Luk^ 24. 25. They were Jloiv of J^eart to bekeve* Greater love than to lay^ hold on the Comfort pyf en hyChrift. t ^ llVan this Clirift could not fhew, than to lay down , hisLife, and to wraftle with the bonds of Death tor them, to iatisfieaU the <:laims of Juftice than j ■ could be made : In rifing from the Grave, he did ' break to nothing all the Snares of Satan, ( who verily thought he had difpacch'd him out of the way, when he had buried him as a Malefactor : ei- ther that hefhould not have rifen, or not to any Glory, or Reputation to men ) but by rifing again, j Chrift made a way to Glory, which thould fo have i re;oyced,theDifciples hearts, that all forrow and i heavinefs fKpuld have ceafed from them, and they ! fhould have triumphed and gloried: that whereas! they thought themfelves,fatiierlefs : Now the Fa- 1 therof Eternity, and the Lord of Life was Rifen, ! and come to them, not to fuffer any more, but to j diftribucc abroad the benefits of his Sufferings. The want of this Comforc is called Unbelief. The want of a Comforting Faith : The want of a quick- hefs of Faivh. : Th,e wane of a clearnefs of Faith : And the want of a fuhiefs of Faith : And for this, the Text faith, Our Lord did upbraid them. ' Second'}^ The Difciples ( which is the Second thing that I propounded to open, f/c^. The kind of the want of Faith) tliey were not altogether with- out Faith, as the Gentiles are called Unbeleevers, who want the means of Faith : Nor were they Unbelievers privative ly, becaufe that when they h^^M^^'^^s,, they did not attend to the Means of Faith ; For th^y wereBeleev^rs, and had not loft their Faith., Chrift told ^x^tcr (who was then pre fent, and in him all the reft of the Apoftles ) That the Gates of Hell fhould not prevail againft his faiths, Y^a, accprdiijg:to their Opinions who hold falling away, from Gpace, This kind of Unbelief could not cut off . their being in a ftate of Grace : ij For God would npf .^^ke .away his Grace -( accor- *' "^^ . ding / ■l(M-'*-f M.^;^ 6 Of Unbelief ; Or^ the wan t ofreadinefS ding to their Opinion that hold a mans flipping cue of a ftate of Grace is as a bone rhac fl'ps out of the fockec, or as the hand flips out of the glove ) For mark it: They had but little glimmering l.ghr of Chrilts Sufferings. Some they had from the be- ginning \ For ^Iwt and ^ofes met together upon the Mount with Chrifl:, and they fpake together of his Sufferings : but theii" knowledge was not much: The Means they had to know it by now, was but a few Women *, And thofe Women were in a great deal of fear, and That might be apt to form their Fancies according to their Defires \ and becaufe they would have Chrifl: to be rifen, therefore think and report that he was rifen. The Means therefore that they had to believe was fo weak, that it could not be a Sin of that Note as to throw them oUt of a ftate of Grace. But they are called Unboleevers, becaufe they wanted that degree, thac fl:r^ngch,and that readinefs in beleeving, which the difcovery of fo great Merit and Satisfadtion in the Deach of Chrilt,and fo much love and affeftion in Chrlft to- wards them, called them unto. For this the Text fa it h, Th a t C hri^ did upbraid them, €HAP. III. What upbraiding it* Three i^ytngr in it : %An Ob- jeUion iAnfvpered* Vnbelief againfi all the At' tributes ofQod, The befi voay to deal vpith ^n* I belief is upbraidirjg it. 1 Will open that word, and be at what I would prefent ly. To omic many things : 'J7 u vj i" ' We upbraided them. Upbraiding, is a dif gr accful Reproof. It's a Re- proof to hy hold on the Comfort given by Vhrtft. 1 7 proof with difgrace. There are feveral words ufed by the Scripture for reproving or rebuking. One word ftgnilies to reprove fo as to threaten punifh- ment •, "that word is ufed in Luk^ 23. 40. where the honeft Thief did rebuke him that blafphemed the name of Jefus, «W]«^««Vi^. The full lenfe of his words were^as if he Ihould have faid,look to it^take heed hov/ you fpeakagainft him-, if you do, you fliall be called to an account : There is but a little time between you and the Judgement, and wo to youwhenyou appear before God, although now you make nothing of it. There is another word lignifies Reproof with complaining of injuries doneto one,f'9/^9»»- As its ufed Co/. 3. 13. ThereV another word s^^wt^Oj and that lignifies to reprove with biting, fliarp, and bitter words -, and that the Apoftleufeth in i Tim. 5. i. ^ebu!;^ notan^lder, There-is laftly the word which is in the Text ^yeiJ)^af To upbraid V and that is, to mingle together with the knowledge of ones fault, reproach, and dif- grace, to reprove with reproaching, or cafting ig- nominy upon one : To take away from them not only innocency, but honefty. And you fhall find in the Scripture/ that it is made as a very hea vie afflidion. ■■LetusgofortbiisLnh the text], Heh, 13. 13.) andWarthe reproach of Jdfm Chriji : that is, though we fuffer as much as he d'd for our fins, yet Let usbeleeyeuponhim. So it?s faidbf "^o/er, in lii^Lj.ir26yfhatrhi: dtdchwfe to fif^ei^ vottlAhe people ofQodp^aridtQ'hear.the^re^roache^f'of^^^^ i?, , tq bqiipbraided foil Chriftsr fake := th^t men fhbuld I ' f^y^cohr^,,!^^, youareone of ^he Ke^\^Lights :| l y^u ar^e one that follow this QaliU^ayi:^' In 'IlehJ :i;p'. g3.;p:he Ap^ftleif peaks of this k4ndof^pbra id- ^ ing, ^a^^ .ti^t , which., hiajdehmeii^^^n 'open iWghing ffpc.k, afi^k0j^ni!(>jQthers;:>i fWhilit w^ wete mad-' ^j^aiingflochiby reproach i^i^^^^'^t^^^'tf 'which is the .u . E iame : I 1» 11 OfUithilief', Or ^ the wantofnaiineji [Tame wotd with that in the text Q upbraiding. T There are Three Th'ngs that are done co the dif- I grace of one, Avhen he is upbraided. j I. The foulneis ot his Jr aft is laid open. Nothing hue faults, and foul faults can be a reproach : efpe- I cialiy CO men that are imperfedt, and fubjeft co in- i firmicies. And my beloved there is not a fouler t fault f^which lihould have fhewed you) than unbe- lief is. It's not only the guard of ail your fms, while you are in theftare of uiuregeneration, and keeps them together, and defends them j but when youare beleevers;, tiieleaflaft of it i$ higher by head and ihoulders in guilt ,^ than the refl: of your fins. It's a fin of very great magnitude, even in the leafl degree. Properly you ufe to fay a man is upbraided, when as the Kindnels that hath been done to him is revealed, and laid open, and made known, and his ungratefulnefs difcovercd •, fo as that m€n may fee him not only to be an ungrateful man, but as one that is a dependanr, and that hath not wherewith- al to fubfift of himfelf. Now unbelief layes open the folly, and blockifhnefs of the heart of a man and the bruicifhuefs of his Spirit. Her^ Chrift fers before them, i . The iinfulnefs of the Aft, in Luh^ 24. 2S. Oh f cols ( faith he ) and flow of heart to be- li^vey how long fball 1 be with you > H^ tells them char it was a madnefs : So fame do render thofc words mLi^kf 24. 2$. [_ Ofooir^ As it is rendered by our Tranflators in fome placet of the Scripture, He.lhews them the fmfirinefs of th€ir aft-.. That (youknow) is the property of all reproof, To rip up, and Analife tne thing done into the fereral parts oftheiltaefs of it. So that that is the firft^ thing Chrift.' d^th Upbraid, or lay open their ftns : or if you will iji plain terms^ does fee their Con* fciences oii^^a^ccufuig of thexn. , ■ zfy^He ""^Fi^iy- to lay hold on the Comfort giy en by Chrijl. 1 9 t ily. He fhews them the root of this illncfs, whence it comes to pafs that it is fo. Somefms the people of God are carried unto by ilrong temptations from without : As a Ship by aftrongguft of wind is carried upon the rocks or Sands : And Reproofs for thele are wonderful gentle,and indeed it is not I, fayes .z$* he doth not only call them /oo//, and men that were Jlotv of heart to believe y but he faies, verf ii.That they counted thefe things of Chrifhs %efnrrelUonto he hut Of anidletuU^aridiculom thing* Yea, where- ever there is any upbraiding^ there is alwayes a dif- covery of unkindnefs and unthankfulnefs : and both thefe were at the bottom and root of your un- belief. Upbraiding is properly a telling men of kindneffes done them, and their nor carrymg them- felves according to the kindneffes done them. And thus. our Lord JefusChrift deals with them, for he did C faith the text) j/pbraid them: As if he ihould have faid. Do you anfwer my love in dying foryc«a^ ajid being buried, and in breaking for you the Jarsvs ofDeath ? Is this a behaviour fuitable to fo great love as I have fhewed you ? Or unto iuch^ one as I am, who have all power in my hand to ufe for your good ? Is all the kmdnefs that I have fhew- ed you thus req^uited, that you will not believe me, \ but take me to be a Spirit^ or to befomePhantafm, or raear Apparition, as the word ^i^fut is, which Lui^ ufeth in this flory, huk$ Z4r. 37* B z ^tyl By •/ ^ OfUnklief; Or^tkti^antofreadinefi dy. By this they were put in mind of the Con- dition wheren chey were, when they firft beleevcd, but were now fallen from. He that upbraids a- nother, cells him how poor and mean.he wa^, when j I he firft cook a liking co him ', and how he promifed ; codoany.ching inreafon thac he fhould require of hmi: So doth our Lord Jefus Chrift : As if he fhou'ld have fa d, You were glad co know any thine concerning me, andthe time was whmas you huncuponme, and whatever 1 faid co you wa5 a Law, and whacever I did fpeak of co you was enter- tained wich a greac deal of greedinefs : Why is ic that you are fo backward nov/ > Are my Mercies any whic the worfe ? Or is it not becaufeyou ace | uotfofenfibleasyou have been heretofore of the j needofmetobe withyou? I 4y. And then Fourthly, In this Reproof of. Chrift there- is inftruftion. For upbraidmg tells ; him that hath received a kindnefs, what it is which | he expels from him, as well as what it is which ' he finds in hini : And thac is the firft thuig, Our Lord iayes open their fm to them in its fejf, and in the caufes of it ipec ally : In tlieir unkmdncfs : And chat they had Apoftatized from that forward* nefs of Fai^h, and gladnefs to receive anything from his hands, which formerly was in them. 2. When Chrift doth upbraid or difgrace a man, 1 he puts him among the number of thofe that are euilcy, and l-able to punifhmenc. ^atth, ii. 20. qie bepun to upbraid the City, becaufe ehey had not done according to the works thac had been done in them: And whac follows ? Wo^voototheeCora^in^ and to thee ^etbfaida:, that hath been lift up to beai^en, andnovp jball be thrown dovpn to belli i9*c. In chis Reproof our Lordfpeaks as it were wich ihaking the head, wich fparkling eyes, and a frowning face, as one chac counted them unworthy of his love, ; and -"At.'-'- I to lay hold on the Comfort pven hy Chriji, ^ i and unfit for kindnefs, and as one that repents chat ever he was lb kind to them. A man that upbraids, I fpeaks in this dialedl , 1 have done thus and thus to I you, but 1 will know you for time to c onie, and be ' more wary how I beftow my kindnefs upon you, I will wich-holdmy hand, you (hall ask for kind- nefs again and again, butl will be lure to fee that youefteem it before I will be fo prodigal toyoUj ieeing you carry your felf thus and thus with me. And thus doth our Lord Jefus Chrift, This is the Denfe of upbraiding. 3. When Chrift difgraceth, he fhews diflike^and (indignaticn, that his Soul harh no pleafure^ nay, ithat he knows n.ot bow to bear, and put it up at ones hand, Heb* 10. 38. The juji ft)all Iwd by ^aith^ bi4t if any man da vptth' draw himfelf^ my Soul fhaU have no pleafidre in htm. He that upbraids hath his he^t alienated, and filled with loathing of him, who hath received kindneffes from him, but dealt unworthily. Oh, faith the Lord, in 1/^.1.2,3. I have nouriihed and brought up a People, I hav€ "beenkindxo them, and they have been cacelefs of me, they have rebelled agamfl me, you have been worfe to me than Oxen and AfTes, worfe than any of the inhabitants of the earth. O Earth, earth, earth, hear the word of the Lord. His upbraiding of them faith thus, What care I for all that ever you do fince you will not beleeveme, nor give cre- dit CO the things that 1 have done for you > What are you tome ? Better were it for me to fhew my Favours to others who will bring forth fruits wor- thy of them. He upbraided them, Therefore, that is, he told them of their fins^andlufts in their hearts from whence this came : He warned them to look CO it, as they would avoid his wrath : He did for the prefent carry himfelf, as one that knew not how to be in their company, or to give them of tkofe / aa ' OjUnheli ef; Or^ the l^ant ofreadinef chofe bleflings, which he had brought from heaven CO earth, and through his lufFeruigs had merited on their behalf. This is the meauning of ic. He up- braided them ^ He fee their Confciences acaUirig them, and himfelf frowned, he held his Judge- ments over them, and with -held his Love from them. But, ( it may be you will fay unto me ) Why fliouldGhriftdo this > Doth not he hmifeif bid us that we fliculd be careful whac we do beleeve ? Is it not the wifdom of a man to be wary how he doth receive any thing, efpecially in the main matters of Salvation ? Try every fpirit ( faith the text ) I John 4«. I. and beleeve not every one : men wiil come in Sheeps garments, that yet notwithftanding are ravening Wolves, ^atth^y- 1 5- But to that I oinftver : What Jefus Chrift did foretel before he diedj was now told to his Dif- ciples by the Women that had feen him : Sochac there was no place for caution, but they were pre- sently to have looked after the matter. But befides chat, I befeech you confider this one Reafon, (for I ihall urge no more at this time) That Unbelief doth anger God exceedingly, be- caufe it'*s the fin that is againft all his Attributes^ The not receiving every difcovery which Jefus Chrift makes of himfelf, and of the Father unto the SouU it faith unco the wrath of God j it doth not much fear it : for by Faith only are we freed from that wrath. It faithco wiidom, It fpeaks not cleer- ly : or elfe unto truth, that what it faith is not to i)e credited : The things offered by Mercy are fuck as we have uc mind to : And we plainly fay it by Unbelief i for, what we are willing to nave, that we are apt to beleeve. As a man that defirec ho- nour, thinks it coming to him upon every occafioa, every nod, every invitation^ 8cc* And r""J. ^'f ■ wff*!.'" ■Mk^ to /^y hold on the CwifortpVen hy Chriji. 2^ And lee me ad4e one Reafon more, and that h 1 this ^ The beft way to deal with Unbelief is chiding of ic, upbraiding of it. Chrlft was a skilful Phy- j fitian, and therefore he applyed this Remedy to this Difeafe. As when the Winds were boyfterous, it's faidj He rebuild them , and they were culm, Matth.r8.26. tbeSeawoiOfaplain: So his rebuking ' of their Unbelief was the means to caufe it to ceafe i from them. As Nettles, they (ling if they be 1 touched lightly ^ they hurt not at all if you ufe j them roughly. So I fay of all corruptions : Make much of them, and they will kill you, andi}eyour death : Reprove your felves for them, and they will die, James4^y* QiefifltheVea^il^ izkhjoffief, and be will flee from you, ^eftji him : that is, Give no way to him in any kind, if he makes a itiotitm of delay, or denial of Fa'th, refift him : Atidiie will flee from you, as upon a wing : that is,yott {h^Ubeprefently freed from his temptatimis. Mat- ters of Faith are tobereceived, n6t to he qlieftion- edor debated. Sec Reafon to work with them, aJMithenK>re Reafon begin to look on them, the more it's dazled, and the kfs you fee in them : atid therefore the bfift^ay is t^ chide Unbelief. You have afii adarirable J»lace for this in %>m,4i*i9* where Abraham is faid not to confider hk ovon hddy^ which rcof notv d^ad , nor the deadntffi of Sarahs. Womky and therefore hefiaggsrinotattbepromifedf (^od through Vnbelief^ ITfptto Confider ! What ihould^ ratioiVal Crea- ture do bu;c cortfid^r ho^w the means whereby i thing fhouldbe brought to pafs may be enjoyed > andwhether t&eybe likely (ifufed) tofervehis endl- It'ith^^moft'l^mionalaftthaccahbe, fol'a man to take in things, ahd not to cbnlider.^h^dier 1 they he likely, c^rtinlikelyi whethet thfey' ht prO- I bd>ie> or impr obabte* , Buc thk novr MrSatti ii ^4 Of Unbelief I Or^ the wan t ofreadinej^ commended for : and he would never have been free from his Unbelief , had it not beeti for this. CHAP. IV. tApplication' Let us chidi our f^Iwes forvur TJn- bdkf* Scfveral ObjaHions anfwered. He life chat I fhall make of it (for I cannot i raife and open the Point as I did intend ) is blieflythisi Did Chrift chide his Dilciplesfor their Unbelief, for want of quicknefs and clearnefs ill their Faith, for want of fnatching at, and lay- ing greedy hold on the Comforts that he brought them, through his Reliirre If thou canil not find out the Caufe, yet chide and fall out with thy felf, tallupo^i qhy own heart.r. Chrift. didfonow,i being newlyconie to his power, to have- allpower in his hands boch in heaven and earth, he chides : And in this, do you exercife tha't Kingly power which Jefus Chrift hath given lyou i As you are. Priefts to God, and therefore rauft offer to him what he,harh^ppointjq4 : S^o you are Kings to God, and *3F{eaiV j[/ d..jpne.piece pJfiyourDorainidnlyesin thiSjTh^t yp'u chidej and^eprov^your felves, and not allow, feut condemne, a^ndlcenfure, and dil- aUpw every, ^vi}. that i^^ound i^ you^; i If you be no J v.^ry Mi^h fjft^ade^. \v^Jt^h .yoiiVi felveti becaufe 6f unDehet., y ou?a]:e very iinich to b^amei, jbetaicrfe your uhbelief "is a yex;y^^at fm^ jChriftians they • , v, , ....... .. .- are II .^p ^ — ■^^— ^ 1 1 I I I ■! I r I I II ■ to lay hold on the Comfort ^iVenhyVhrifi. 25 ] ( are wont to fofter and nomiih imbelief ; to lay it, ! SLS^Iichael laid David in the ^ed ifpon VovpnTil- lows, I Sam. 1 9. 1 3« Will you ipeak Peace, where God hath fpoken War? Will you defend chat which jefusChrifl reproves ? If io be Chriftians do reprove them- feives for their unbelief, yet they do it as ^li that gave a Reproof to his Sons, not Iharply, but foft- ly. Do you reprove your ielves fharply, that yoiz may be found found in the Faith? The'vvord ^T6^f, is cuttingly, Tit. 1. 1 3. Say to your Souls as our Lord Jeius Chrift doth here j O foolifh ! Oilugj- gilhl O proud heart, that art alwayes thustwift- iag and knitting of Objeftions againit thy felf, and the grace of Jefus Chrift. udf a ^orth Wind drives avpay%iiin^ fo doth an angry Countenance a Tale^ bearer^ faith Solomon^ Prov. 16. 25. I may make ufe of ic thus> Temptations to Unbelief, To live without Chrifl, To doubt of Chrift, will all be icattered when they are gathered together like Clouds, and you think it will bean ill time wnrh you if you will but thus chide your hearts, ^eftfi the Dcndly and he vcill flee from you^ Jam. 4. 7. A gentle denyal is an invitation* Have no fnendjhip ( faith the text ) with an angry many Prov. 22. 24.. So there will be no friendfhi.p between you and yourfins^ between your Spirits, anda temptation if your hearts be but full of wrath, and indignati- on, and anger againll the lead motion of it. Do not ftand faying now (as you ufe to do) I may v/ell doubt i and 11"*$ enough for me if I have any being in the number of the'Sainrs, any fellowfhip with Jefus Chrift ; Say not there is reafon (if you knew all) why! am thus full of fear. There is reafon I am fuce why you fhould be reproved and upbrai- ded for your unbelief; Chrift elfe would not have done ic. Buc theie can be no i;eafon alleaged or . F given 1 I wmm ■«>i»>Ji— jM>^ \ Vo Of Unklief; Qr, the want of re aim J? ^ \ qiveii for Urxbelief. O foolSj and flow of bean to bdic've: Luke 24.25. chads,. Asa fool is w.'criouc Keaion, fo is a If o Unbelief. You chat chink chac you have fo much Reafou not to beleeve, Ipeak ouc yourRealons, and let vis fee what they areinche prtfence of the Lord. He condemned ir a^-ifoily. ' Give ir no other name, it will deferve no other when it'stryed. 1 know not how to beleeve ( faith one ) or take incom.foit, and to be fo ready ar it, for 1 am thus and thus bad, and have done thus and thus evil. What a fool arc thou, to make thy own doings the t ground of thy Faith, when ihou haft for thy Faith' the word of a gracious God, and the mediation of JefusChrift.. Is not he a fool that will leave the fecurityof one that is worth thoufands,' and take the word or Bond of a beggar, and him that is a very Knave,and that doth neither know what truth is, nor will walk faithfully ? Thou oughteft to fay as one doth in another cafe^ thus, hath theLordfaid, he hath faidit to be beleeved : and therefore the ground of it is not upon any thing in the Creature, no more than fupernatuial truths are grounded upon Rea» fon. 1 fay. That there is the fame proportion be- tween the beleeving of truths that are fupernatural, upon reafon, and between the beleevmg of the truth of the G of pel upon fome ground in our felves ; There is no affinity, no nearnels , they differ v/hoUy ^ things that are known unto reafon, and things that are revealed fupernaturally, and I from above. So they differ in the receiving of them. But it may be you will fay unco me, I do not fee how it can be^ how fuch things ever v/ill be that are fpoken of. And fo diet fhefeDifciples mLui^ez^. iiv when _^ they. i to toy hold on the Comfort given by Chrifi. aj they were told thac Chr ilt was r ifen, itfiemed to be a'very Tale : Their words feemed co them as idle rales, andchey beleevedcheainoc. For chis thou art to be chid, and upbraided, and herein lies thy folly, that thou wilt not rhink him thac is the tirlt caufe able to work of himlelf : thac thou wilt not truft him out of the courfe of Natural Cauies, Though there be no Calf th the flail, nor hloffome on the^tg-tree^ Hab. 3. 17. Where there is no hope, yet the word of the Uord endures for ever, char, fhall be accomplifhed. If thou fayell thy Unbelief is not in the main things of Salvation,but in a circumftance, in a mat- ter which concerns thy Comfort, rather than thac which concerns thy being in a flate of Grace. That is a great fm too, and it was the fm of the Dif ciples here : for ijt was not the wane of juftify- ing Faith (as ycu have heard) but a want of cleer- nefs, and of the comforc of it. ObjeU. But riiePromifes are fo great and excel- lent things ( you will fay ) that 1 know uoc how to beleeve them, they are too good co be true: I hear fomecimes fuch things from the Word, as I know not how to bebeeve^ ac leail to be given co me. That was the cafe of chefe Difriples, andyec chey were upbraided coo, Lftk^ 24. 41 . They could not beleeve for joy J becaiife they wondered, Thacis^ the things were beyond their underftandings, and fogooi.thac they knew not how co take them in. . But I befeech you, if you will refufe Mercies be* caufe they are great, mark it, W hat dofi: thou do in this .( O thou fool ) but meafure Gods bouncy ty thy own narrow h€ai:t ? Either thou thinkeft -G^djs-p^poi:,jand ni^gardly^ and will not give like, ,himfeif. ; iEither thou beleeveft his irifimtegood-i u^fs w4U noG.floW forth, without Banks .or Bounds : Vm^ F z Or aS of Unbdief; Or^ the Id ant ofreadimj^ , Or.elfe thou doft noc belceve his infinite Wifdoiri^ I but thinkeft thuC thou art able to order .and dilpofe him in his diftributions. O Fool, O fool. As Jud^ laid when the Box of Oyntment was opened, ' It might hanje been fparcdy and gi*ven to thd poor ' ^attb»26. 9. Joh.i2,$y6. So thou layit^ruch ckoice ' refreihmgs and comforts as thefe are , Chrift in '^ Glory, and Chrift to bwng news of Hell, and ! Death to be troden under foot, andtobeburicd>,! are truths to be Preached *to humble holy ones : 1 But, faith the text, ^/^^^^^ when he ipake of giving 1 to the Poor, itwa^ not because be cared for tijc poor ^^ \ hut because he did bear the ^ug^ and tvoj caqjetoi^], \ Job*i2.6. Solfay thoufpeakeftrhis, not becaufe thoucareftfo niuch for Holinels orHumblenefs but that thou mayft advance thy lelf. For I ask^ Whence wilt thou have this Huir.blenefs, and Ho- linefs? It muft be either from thy felf ^ (Ofool ro look for life from death, and goodnefs frome- vil) orelfe it muff be from God": and then thou counfelleft him to this order. That thou muftbe firft humbled, before thcu haft comfort. O fool 1 Doft thou not learn yet, that nothing will melt thy hear tfo much as Mercy I ott 3. EKe if thou wilt not have thy Holinefs to go in Torder before his Mercy, yet before thy Faith. Shall that which thou doft by the help of another, ac- companied with weaknefTes in thy felf, be the caufe of ahyiaft in him who lis the Caufe of Caufes, and the iiirft Begimier of albthings ? Therefore -charge your heart home. It's not tendernefs, but hardnefs: It's not providence nor care for your felves, but folly,that is the caUfe of your Unbelief. Certainly as iChriftcenfut^s^j fo things are. for his judgement isfac€ordingTo truth. He upbraid? for any kind of unbelief, ^nd faith, it is folly, and tTiat Soul is hardened that wiM not bekeve, asiihall fliew i td lay hold on the Comfort ^ivtn by Chrlfi, q g 1 ic fhew you hereafter. You think ic is a piece of fofcnels of heart to mourn and weep : O it's the j ^reatefl pare of fofcnefs to beleeve. Thou doft ; I think it's a great piec^ of fofcnefs, to be fofc in ! [heart : It's the greateft to receive Mercy, and it's | !the ijreateft piece of hardnefs not to fear Unbe- I lief. If thou wilt not deal truly with thy own hearty and chide it, thou ihaln be chidden. An angry word of God, is that which cuts deep into the Soul. When I heard thy angry words, they entredinto my bones, and rottennefs entred into them. The voyce of God uttered by the Lamb is exceeding cutting. Who ihall hide us from the wrath of the Lamb? Chriftis raadeup of Love : but your Un- belief turns his] Love to Wrath : and his love makes him chide publickly, when there was fo ma^ ny of them together, even at that time when he came of purpofe to bring glad ty dings to them. The anger of Chrift will cut : but the anger of Chrift for unbelief goes to the quick, Heh^^.^ii, The Word of (jodC^- is perfwading them to believe it, and Jefus Chrift revealed by it ) ^ fljarper than any two edged fvcordj and it vptU diqjide between the Soul and theSpirity and the marrow and the hones* It will cut or divide. It's put for putting to pain^ as cut- I ting doth. Your unbelief will put you to pain. Where? In your Soul*, that is, in your Aifed ions, and in your Spirit, that is in your underflranding : the Underftanding will forecaft dreadfully: The Will, that will fear every thing,and be aftonifhed : You fhall have pain in every part. That which ihouldbelike bones to you, to fupport you, ihall fink and fail underyou : and that which fhould be likemarrow to ftireitgtfaen 'you, ^that (hall decay : What a cafe doth art unbelieving >£loul bring ics felf iaco I Ho^v is ic cut and lancai |i -^So *Iore chat ^ ■ *• 20 O/Unbelief; Orythe^antofreadineJ? Pfal.51. 8. k cannot be touched, it is not able to ftir. ^eal my bones which tJjou haft bro'i;enji^3.ithT>avid in that cafe. Every aft of unbelief lefuleth great love: 8c there is nothing makes a heavier accufation, than the re- fulal of love doth. r< ever art thou worfe, than when thou art tak'ng part with unbelief, or when thou doll not believe. Never art thou I fay worfe-, for then art thou juflifying that which the Lord condemns : ^c upbraided thtmbeca.?ifi of their un- belief. This indulging, and this making much of doubts, and fcruples, and fears, brings iLUch wra^ h. Thou oughteft to make a great matter of the leail degree of the hn of Unbelief that thou fliouldeit d e : and not to fhew any kuidnefs to thy feif in it. Tender perfons, if they would but ftir, they would work our thofe difeafes , which in a fedentary courfe do faften on them : even as the Green Sick' nefs ( which eats into the very Spirits) is wafted by walking: and the Scurvy, and divers others. So if you would but be ftirring, and doing, and i chid'ng, and reproving your Unbelief, it v/ouid keepyour Unbelief down. When nothing would make the Difciples leave their qucftioning, Chrift being returned to rhem, he comes with a frown in his face, and calls them all to nought, as I m^ay fay, as in the text,vL7/^e244» 25. Oh fooles^ and flovo of heart to believe. Look to the caufe whence aU your doubts come. Its becaufe you would be wife, and order your own doings : and becaufe you are un- willing and backward to come to Chrift: Chrift: fayes fo, and with him are the words of truth. You think not to nourifh Unbelief: fain you would have Chrift, you fay 5 but you wouldiiot. Either Chrift or you fpeaKs true. He !^z\Kh^i)fiQV(? of bean tobekenje. He may call again and again, .and yen the Soul cannot hear of that ear. h will catch at a word^ nay mifp lace words it may be to affliiS its :, felf. to lay hold on the Comfort given hy Chriji. g i ( feif, but CO words of Comforr, the head is turned I aiide. I beleech you beloved know, That you are I the greaceil fools, and you dull your feives excee- dingly, andmake your feives excredm backward, and'xemiis, and caieiefs, and negligent to every thing that is good, v/henas you do not fpeedily, eafiiy, and forwardly lay hold by Faith upon all the Comforts and refrefhments that are offered to you by the hand of Jefus Chrift. CHAP. V. ' T/?e DoUrine- Tf?e ^eafons of it : i. ^ecaufi this Reproof of Cbrifl'*s is an excellent means to takeaway Unbelief. 2* ^ecaufe Vnbelkf is a great fm: Fn^yComparatwely : Secondly, Initfelf : Of beings i, Din^Hly oppofite to the \ end of the Law : %. Oppoftteto the Jluxhority of the havo'gi'ver : 3. Oppofite to the Principle of Obedience yvohich is Lofve* Unbelief in a voeal{^ degree vporfe in a ^eleever , than in a wicl^d man in its fullpotver y and that upon fever al j accountf* THe Doftrine from thefe words was this : That backv/ardnefs and unreadinefs to believe the great things that Chrift hath done, and v/ill do for I believers, & to be comforted in them,is a iin in them which fhall be faved, which Chrift will not bear with, but is very much offended at. Backwardnels and unreadinefs ( I fay) to beleeve the great things which Chrift hath done, and willdofor Beleevers, and to receive comfort therein, is a Iin even in them that jQiall be faved,which Chrift will not bear wichal, but is very much oifended at. Thefe 33 Of Unbelief ^, Or^ the ivantofreadinej? Thefe iiad favingFakh. The-y wanted only a readinel's of Faith, anda fiilneis of Fai h, andto receive comfort by their Faith, and for that our Lord Jetus Chrift upbraided them. Although Je fusChrifldo loveB;;ieevers, ye: he will not bear with ha in them. They are the Members of his Myftical Body, and he will not endure any difeafe, or any fore, or any diftemper in them, but he will take a courfe with it. The hn of Beleevers deferves the wrath of God, as well as the iin of Unb^leevers' do. Their relation makes not their fin a whit the lef.s guilty, or their guilt a whit the lefs. The de- ferts of their fins indeed fhall no: be given to them, Chriif will nor condemn them. But though he v/ill " not condemn them , he v/ill reprove and upbraid them. And the frowns and reproofs of Chrllt are I as n.uchas Hell its felf to a Beleever : Even as Hell was to them before they beleeved. The Con- fci^nce is more wounded by the wane of Gods {pe- cial love, than by Gods hatred as an enemy : The want of Gods fpecial love, is as great a trouble, as Gods being an enemy is : for ^he love of God I makes the heart more fenfible and feeling than felf - love does. It it were pollible for a man to be thrown out of Gcds arms of love into the torments of Hell, Hell would be more to him than to any oih^r. „And this made Chrifl'^s SuiFerings lo great, •becaufe he Vv''as fo infinitely loved by his Father. Cf all rhe fins of Beleevers, Chriftwill leaftof all bear with their Unbelief. Many faults were in the Difciples befides their Unbelief : How ambuious v/ere they to get the right hand one of another ? Hov' carnal were they to think of a Kingdom that .did confiil 'in outward pomp , and glory ? JVa tboug;ht ( fay they, in Liei^e 24. 21. ) that it had been he that vpould have redeemed Ifrad* '- But 1 to lay hold on the Comfort given by Chrijl. 33 But Chrift he lets all pafs, or elfe he doth re- prove all, in reproving of their unbelief , he ihames chem for chat ojUy. And the R E A S O N S are thefe : REASON L I. Becaufethis anger and this reproof of Chrift is a good and excellent way to take away unbelief. Although the ad of Unbelief was paft, yec the /lain of it remained which would difpofe them to chat, or CO a greater fm. To prevenc that, Jefus Chrift doth reprove chem. The reproofs of Chrift are Medicinal, he would noc elfe ufe them : And chey are chenmoft Medicinal when chey are Iharp, ^faU 141 . 5. Let the n^bteous fmtte me (' faies Vanjid^ and itjbali be cua apretiom Ointment to me, which Jhall not hrea'ojnyhead: And yet the fniicmg there, is the fame word which is uled concerning JaeU whotool^ a hammer and a nail, and dro ^ I Liik^^ chap, iS. 'verf. 3. Kow ic being a new I i Couvt^riion , as s.u firft, men are convinced of their ' j linfuloels, and of the wrath of God due cofiHyi and aie driven to feek pardon of fm : So the fame ; coLirf J muft be taken atterwai ds j and our Lord Je- fus Chriit doth take the fame courfe here. As a peremptory denial keeps off temptations, fo a| Ihaip Reproof for Im, doth free from iin, when! temptation hath overcome and foyied us. Its faid of our Lord Chr ift in the word of the Text, ^atth, ^ 8.26. That he rebuk^'d the roaring vpanjds of theSea^^ and they p>:creflill. The Rebukes of Chrifl-, w^ere a I means to ftay the fluctuating of the Souls of the I Dilciples through unbei2ef, and therefore Chrift 1 ufed it. Do but once convince a godly man of the ' finfuinefs of any courfe, and he will depart from ic. I If you tellhimthat Chrill will be angry, you take ! off his hear: from any courfe, though never fo much beloved by him, becauie his life lyes in Chrills love : and fm is to him a great evil, and hateful, not only becaufe it is a breach of the law | but becaufe it is an offence of him whom he loves. Of all fms. Unbelief is a iin that is not to be dealt mildly withal, if you mean to be free from it. jf 1 you flop it not at jealoufie, ic will grow to difpuce, andfromdifputingco doubt ing,and from doubting tomif beliet, or mif-perfwafion that things are o- rherwife than chey are with you, thac the word is not fo true, as it is : And from that, to unperfwa- livenefs, as the Scriptute calls ic, thac you may as well move a rock, andmaketbe flonss to hear, as you can make a man to perceive, or take any notice of the Grace that is offered. Unbelief is a Iin thac is not to be fpoken unto, or regarded. It's fald of Abraham ^ Rom. 4. ip. Thac he did not confider through unbelief the deadnefiof his own body, yior the barrennefi o/Sarahs Womb, He confideredit not h he flighted] 1 to lay hold on the Comfort ^ive?i by Chri/i. 5 5 flighted whatever Unbelief faid j whatever Argu- ments could arifefrom that head of Reafonoffe- condary caufes. He thought it was not worth mind ag, or looking to, whatever could be faid j concerning fc condary caules. In yames i. 21. The I Apoftle fpeaks there of Beleeving, for he fpeaks I oi receiving the ingrajtedword : which is by Faith : ' and he doth compare Unbelief ( the oppofite to j Faith, or to receiving of the word) unto a Whit- j lough upon a mans finger : puTm^Uu : The word tran- flated filthinefs, it's a Difeafe in the very top of the finger which we call a Whitlough. And that which I obferve from thence is this. That as a Whitlough muft be beaten with a hammer^orxrodenupon with iycur foot, elfekwill grow to a Fellon, and put j you to more pain, or you will never be rid of it : I So you mult ufe your Unbelief, fayes theApofllej for he ufeth a word of the greateft difdain ; Tut a- ' voayfromyou : "^^.utva,- a word that is ufed for a i mans crofs^ chur lifh uiing of one. As Amnon when jhe had defiled his Sifter Tamar ^ put her away from hinty z Sam. 1 3. 1 7. he w ould hear no intreaties nor lecherftay in hishoufe, but thrufl her out of doorsy and ba) red the doors after her. Do fo with your Unbelief, faith the Apoftle, do not itand ex- tenuating of it, or reafonuig with Unbelief, and fay it is an infirmity, and muft be born withal. -^ How many Souls are there that have abounded v^ith | doubts, becaufe they have not chidden andupbrai-j ded themfelvesbecaufe of unbelief r Becaufe ChriU'i would kill yoiu' unbelief, he therefore upbraids ic. G 2 REASON, ^n0>m I , , , , I , I ■ ■ ■ ■ , I ■ — '^ Of Unbilief; Or, the want ofreadinejf 0 1 REASON, 11. 2, Therefore Chrift is fo much angry at their Unbelief, becaule their unbelief is a great fin. The Anger of C hrift was never more than the OiFence : nor his B-eproofs unfuicable to the Offence. As he will not g'.ve thirty nine blov/s for a fmal fault, (o where he does give many blows, you may be fure the fault is great, fm does abound^. It's true^^i^ndeed, that this unbelief of the Apoflle differed much from that negative, or privative unbelief which is in Heathens, or menunconverted'.but as eve-iy drop of water is of the fame nature with the whole Ocean j fo every degree of unbelief is a fm of the fame kind that that privative unbelief is. Unbe- lief in a regenerate man is a want of Faith, of fome degree of Faith, and it is of the fan.e nature with a total v/ant of it in men that are not called. Where- ever it is found, it is a great fm. A fm may be faid to be great comparatively, when it's fer with others j and fo the leaft breach of the firft Table, compared with the fms of theie- cond, is greater than they, becaufe it is a tranfgref- fionagainfl: the firft and great Commandment, as our Lord faith. Now unbelief is a great fm in this refpeft, becaufe there is more fmfulnefs, and Ma- chevilnefs of evil in it, than in thofe things which are fcandalous,though there be not fo much infamy or reproach, or difgrace caftuponit. And it is not only a great fm comparatively. ^ut it's a great Sin in its Self* i0f. That fm is great in its felf, which is direftly oppofite to the end of the Law, and the Law-giver. The Law-giver makes the Law, but a mciins to his end,: 1 ^ I 1 1 I II (I to lay hold on the Comfort giy en by Chriji. 3 7 end, and his end gives Ip'rit and ioulto the Law. Now Unbelief is a great fin in this refped: : for faith is the end of the Law. Chrift is the end of the Law^ faith the Apoftle^*I^ow. 10. 4,. The end of the Com- mandment is love out of a pure Confciencc, and IFaith unfeij^ned^ 1 Tim. 1.5. It's true indeed tiie Apoftle fpeaks of that Ccmmandement in parcicuiar of plain preaching or preaching plainly, but it'*s true of all the reft of Gods Commandments. The Ce- remonial Law was only to teach menChriftasa Schoolmafter, th^t they might be fitted to receive the Doctrine of Faith. AstheApollle faith, (j^zL 3.24. Faith was the end of the moral Law : the end of its conviftion and condemnation. It was therefore faid, thate'very one vposcurfed that continued not in eojery things to do it, Gal. 3. lo. Although m.en could not be juftified by their own righteoufnefs, but by the righceouf nefs of another.as the Apoftle reafons, QaL 3. The very direftion of the Moral Law was to this end, that men feeing how great their debts was, and how n uch v/as required at their hands, they might heleevc on him that jnjhifies the un" godly ^^om.f^,$^ God did not reft in this that the Law was a Declaration of his mind towards men in the things which he would have them do : But lie added this alfo. That the Law fliould prepare and fit men one way, or other, ( but fome way) for beleeving in Chrift. 2. Again : That lin is great in its felf, which op- pofeth the autiiority of the Law-giver. As Jam.2> 10, II. If thou hreakef^ one^ thou art guilty ofaU : for hethatfaid unto thee^ Thou flmlt not ftealy [aid alfo^ Thou fi)alt not Commit Adultery : that is, His Au- thority is difpifed which fhould be the leader and guider of you to every Commandment. If you break but one, that is, difpife it. Unbelief is the great controller of God, and unthroner of Godj -for Of Unbelief ; Or^thewantofread'meJ^ J fork layes his hand upon him in his ma;efly. Th: whokDodrine of Faich depends meerly on Goij Will: There is no reafon to be given why we fhould that way, rather than by doing, befavedj but only becaute God pleafeth. There is more ni..- ;efl:y andgreatnefs fhewed in making men to wait upon God for Salvation in this Avay of Faith, than there is in doing all the Law requUes betides. But, 3. That fm is great which is oppofite to a Prln* ciple of Obedience: That which deftroycs Obedi- ence in the root and feed of it. Love is the} rinciple of Obedience: and unbelief hinders love^ and lo layes open to all manner of fin whatioevr . ,. in a Beleever, as unbelief is a great iin, fo it's aworfe lin in him in a weak degree, than it's in a w eked man in its full power : Worfe, I fay, by interpre- tation, and in Gods account. Worfe, in juftice. For, T. A Beleever hath means afforded him : So| the text points you,and faith, Chrifl uphraidedthem because they heleeved not them that rvere fent to tbem^ \ and told them that be vcas rifen, Jelus Chriil doth nourifhand cherifK eveiy plant of Grace which he fows : The feed of Faith, though it be hut as agrain of '^liifiard'feed at the firfl^ Matth. 17. 20. Be- leevers they wane for no means to encreafe their Faith. 2. He that hath any degree of Faith, hath a power to work with God, and to receive histefti- mony -, and therefore his unbelief is worfe, than in another man. And this is the reafon why ^ofej his rafhunbeleeving words cut him off from going into Canaan, 3. A Beleever hath already received love at his Converiion, and therefore fhould be eafily per- fwaded of the love of God to him. When a man hath] 1 to lay hold on the Comfort given by Chriji. op hachpivenhimfelf in marriage to a Woman, then her jealouiietohim is very provoking : for whac can he do more ? for in giving himfelf, he gives all he hath* When God hath converted thee, he hath given txhee himfelf : and having given you the grea- .ter, will you queltion him ini'maller, and lufpeft him in leffei K .^ j 4. Allunoreadinefs tobeleeve, it is a backiliding, iorakind of Apoflacy from that frame of heart, i which is given to all at the iirft iZonverfion. God ^ever brings men to this at the iiril Converfion, that they are glad to tafte of thofe comforts which be- fore th^y refufed : and to catch at thofe crums hungrily 5 and at thofe drops, which before they did iic^ value. If the Love of a Wife grows cold after marriage, and her love be other wife than it was in the day of her firft embracings, what wrath doth it provoke in her Husband 1 Now, beloved, ,this was at your firft converfion, that you catched at a word: that you could fee light but through a cranny: an intimation was pleafant : if any thing come near, you reached at it ; you were pleading your intereft in every thing. In this and this Mer- j cy Lprd. Ev ery Mercy you faw, you were greedy \o(: And now, if you are not thus and thus after- I wards, how can the Lord bear it at your hands? It is> I fay, a kind of Apoftacy, and felling from your firft love. %ti-k^f4^if1f^itit^^'-it^^4f^'-^4f1)i>^^it^^if CHAP. / 40 Of Unbelief; Or^thel^antofreadineJ^ CHAP. VI. Application, i. The former Exhortation con" tinned^ viz. To chide our [elver for our Unbelief* z, Thpsjpeakf the happy condition of the Saints , they are never upbraided with what Chrifl hath done for therriy but when they will not ha've more from him* Jin ObjeUion Anfwered, 3. Then total Unbelief is 'very bad. NOw for ^application ia a word. And I fhall although without any Pxepetition of what I faid before, take up the ^fe which I ended with the lalt time. USE, L If Chrifl be angry with Unbelief y then do you chide your fela^es for it when you find it. This is our con- formity unto Chrift as King : our loyalty : that what Malefa^crs he cenfures, and condemns, we wiUnot harbour, nor give any entertainment unto. It's our miferable condition that we receive the Grace of God in vain : that we deal fli'ghtly with Mercy, and deal refped:ively with iln and unbelief: Itlives^ and it*s bred with all that either fenfe or reafon, or experience is able to fay for it. Men ufe it as thougli it were a friend, although it comes but in CO deftroy, and to make an end of them. Ma- ny a Soul faith fomecimes when it hath wrapt it felf into fears and doubts of the love of God, that now it's in a llrate of Spiritual life, and now God will love it.j ^_ This f to lay bold on the Comfort given by Chrijl. 41 This is all you fhall find at the hand of God^Thac < he will fee jeiui- Chnft co upbraid you, and to be angry with you. And therefore 1 befeech you my beloved, having heard how Jcius Chriil is offend - ed, be you in the like manner offended at your un- belief. Lee it find no countenance from you, wh'ch ihall befure to be dealt fharply withal by him. if there be a motion made, and fomeching in;ed:ed and cad, that fhould put you into fears, whether the word of promife be true, and Chrift be fo lo- ving as is reported : Say unto your Souls, O do not that abominable thing : you have angred Chrift enough already, provoke him no more : He hath been io good as to make you look towards his name, and to beleeve upon him : look ftedfaitly -, beleeve perfectly i comfort your felf in him throughly. Say to thy own heart. This is Pride, and this is folly , and ignorance, and hardnefs of heart ^ this goes not alone : If fo be I were not ex- ceedingly over- run, and over grown, this could not be, that 1 fhould be fo dull, and make fo flight a matter of receiving Mercy, and the tenders of Grace and Mercy. Look, 1 befeech you, ray be- loved to the root of your Unbelief, and to what your unbelief will beget and bring forth in the heart of Jefus Chrift concerning you, hard and angry words. If any thing , then this will make him repent that ever he hath been kind to you. No, nojfay to your own Souls, It is not watcbfulnefs, or warinets that makes you thus to fuipeft, and to be fearful, but its ignorance of the truth, and in- fenfiblnefs of your needs ^ and pride, that you will not be beholding to Jefus Chrift. H USE, 42 of Unbelief i Or, the '^mt ofreadtnef^ USE, II. But in the Second place, which is that rhacldo more aim at. 1 befcechyou my beloved confider. What a happy condition the Saints are in. You' are cut oft' from t,he Vine that you were branches j of, andyou are im^rafted into Chrifl, and you fhal I have never a hard^word from Chrift, aor hear of anyunkindnefsdonebyyoutoChrift, he will ne- 1 ver fpeak of what he hath done, or that he hath , done much, but only when you will not have more ; from him . "He upbraided them, hecaufe of their Vn- j belieh and bardiiefi of heart : This you fhall have : at his hands, when you do not come often. Why ; will you have no more > Hitherto yon ha've asked no - ' thing, Toh.i6.24- But do you think that you have enough ? And are you glucted with carnal appre- \ henfions of his Mercy, till fm hath gotten your i heart, that you have no need of any further thing i to be' done by him for you \ Then^ and not till then fhall you fee a frown in his face. So exceed- ing kind and wife is he, that if he can but kill your Unbelief, you fhall live like him : And if he can but take away your Unbelief, you fhall do all things in your n.eafure like him. Faith fetches pardon of alllin, and fetches Grace to help againll i all particular corruptions and fins. Obji'^. But you will fay, So much time is due^ " and jo much AjfeUions are due from me to t}?e Law of Gody that Ijhall he fure never to bunje any thing voell taken. A %od vpiU alvoayes he upon my hack^, if I mcegin>e up my felf to Us tvay j IJhaU not ha've a good day afterward* Anfv<^. I 1 to lay hold on the Comfort given by Chrifl. 43 Anfvp. Can there be a better life than to be al- wayes receiving good words from the hands of Chrill > Is not this a happy condition, for him never to be chiding, but becaufe we will not re- ceive all Mercy at his hands, that we receive not every truth, and the benefit of them ? He upbraids therriy becaufe of thiir Vnbeiief. That was the adequate objedt of his anger and difpleafure a-* gainft them. USE, III. ThereisaThirdllfeof this 5 and that is, If want of Faith in fonie particular be fo great a fin, and be recompenced with fo great anger. What is the total want of Faith then ? if fo be the Medicine, that which cureth the want of a degree of Faith, be fo fharp, what is the pain which Unbelief (being al- together without Faith ) bring upon a man? If i the word of. Chrilt, when he rebukes, be fo fharp, what will they be when he condemns ? You think you fhall not be called to any other account but for fins which are fcandalous : if you pay all your own, and be not unjufl, it you keep out of unclean- nefs, and have not common infirmities on you,then you fhall be well enough at the lafl day. No be- loved. This is condemnation, than you that have the means, and Chrifts offers, will not take that which he brings : but thou wilt not beleeve that he will be angry for not taking of it, and thou wilt not receive it. And if you think he will not be an- gry with you becaufe you take not heaven, and comfort, and glory, look what he doth with his own People, If he doth thus with his ownChil* dren, what will he do with his Enemies ? If he faith thus to his people in the day that he rofe, ^ H 2 when I ' 44 Of Unbelief ; Or, the tpant ofreadtnej? when he was hoc in love to them, Ob fools ^ Ob hard hearted people^ you have a heart of ftoiie in you, youareiuchas none woiii.l life, for who canufe him that is a fool ? If he will ftrain his ingenuity (for truly an ingenuous man will rather give much, than fay what he hath given ^ and fo will our Lord Jefus Chriil. ) If Chrilt will reprove, and re-[ buke, andreproach, andfay what he hath done to his o\Vn people, what will he do with thee^ who haft altogether rejected him ? If to him that hath failed in fome afts, he fpeaks. thus ill, what ihalt thou hear that haft no a^ts at all ? // this be done to the green tree^ vohat jhall be done to the dry .uU* nefi. Thirdly, "Hardnefl of T.eart : The things: i.Stubbormji. 2» SenjeL'ffriejL Z' REASON, III. CHrift is fo angry, or doch upbraid Unbelief iiv his Saints, or Unbeieevers, beeaui'e ic is the Iffue and Birch of fo many Corruptions, ^s Qod fhut the ^aftards in the time of the Law from the. Temple, and would not fuffer them to bear any Office^ ©ewt. 23.2. not for any hatred to them;, but ro {hew his hatred to the Luft out of which they were begotten. The eyes of the Lord are more upon the Root, than upon the A<^ of Sin. As a wife Phyfiti- an more coniiders the caufe of the Difeafe, than the prefent 4iftjemper wherein the party is : his hot,or his cold Fit is not much, but the ill humors whence they arile. As Jefus Chrift in Comforting doth fpeak to the heart, and waters the root that fo theremay be a continual fpringingcf Confolatioa and RefrelhHient. So in his Reproving too, he Re- proves to the heart, and goes to the bottom of every fui.. And : / 46 Of Unbelief ; Or^ the want ofreadinef And you fhal find if you look into the Scripture, that this Unbelief doth grow alwayes likt fonic Flags in fome miry heart. There are fun dry Sins which th? Scripture in- ^ftanceth in : As Fiift, Folly of heart, L/z^e 24. 25. O ^oolr, and jlovo of bsart to belecve^ That 1 may open that place a. little to you : Folly you know is op- pofite to, I. 'J^iowk'd^?, 2. Wifdom. I He is a Fool that v/ants under/landing : and he } is no better that hathunder/tandingr.and is not wife to order and manage the things thac he knows, that he may thereby attain to his end. Unbelief pro- ceeds from Folly in both thefe interpretati- ons. . I. There is a want of the knowledge of God and of Jcfus Chrift, wherever there is a fhineis , or i I loofnefs, or unwillingnefs of heart to beleeve. For L I thdy that kjiotv thy lS[ame^ will tmj} in thee^ Pfal.9. 10. ' Andaithough God gives unto all men as great a* Right unto what they have, as if they bought ic, (which is the meaning of that place of the Pro- phet IfaiaJy, ^uy voithout moneys and money tvorth^ if2i. 5^. I.) yet they do not beleeve it. Though the \ thoughts ofQod are not oi our thought f^ nor his wayes as our vf^ayeSy but of far above them as tJje heavenr are above tbeeartl:>, Ifa.55.859. In 7er.29.11. God tells them that they might beleeve thai tkeir warefare I (hould be accomplifhed 5 that hii thoKghtc^'were thoughts^ of peace towards them '^ I l{7iow the thoughts that £ hate towards yony faith Q od^ ff)ey are ifwughfs I of Veacey and not of evil Did men know the rich- nefs- II td lay hold on the Comfort pven by Chrtji, 44 nefs of Mercy, and the abundance of goodnefs in God, and the largeneis of Gods intenfions of hearc towards finners, chat he placech his glory in being {kind ro them, and that therefore he can be no llofer, but a gainer in what he gives to them : Did I men know Gods faithfuinefs and truth, and that I Jefus Chriit was lent by him only to open the door jthat wehaditopt, and to open thofe pipes which Iwe had filled with i\n, that loving kindnefs might flow towards us, then men would be ready to be- leeve. Why do men fcruple the trufling of men ? but becaufe chey know them not, or elfe know them not to be able, or^uft, in the performance of their promifes. Did we know one who is rich, (to whom thoufands would not be felt, be-caufe his e- ilate is fo large ) and one whofe ambition was to fupply Wants for nothing , we fhould be ready to thinkweihouldbefupplyed by him. This is the firft caufe of Unbelief i Folly; that we know not ; our beft friend. As that Child that knows not his i Father to be the beft friend it hath ; fo it is with ' us. That we know not the afFed:ions and difpoiiti- I ons that are in Godtowards us. I 2. Befides this, there is this folly alfoinUnbe- i lief. That the great things of Jefus Chrift are not ' countedreal, but ct5ncelts, and words, and i^xpref* ficns, and notions, and artifices, only to perfwade [ and diaw men. So y ou fhall find it was with thefe very Difciples in Lnh^ZJ^. 37. that when Chriit came to them, they thought he had been a Spirit^ or as it is in another place, a ^hantafme^ a Pic^ture chat had been made only by their own conceits. In ^a?w.2.2Q. you havea/ir)rme ofkj^owtedge fpoken of, and the meaning of it is this. That the Jewes did know the matters of Religion, not in themfelvesp but in their Notion, as they were parts and pieces of that Syileme of thac profeilion of Religion that was a8 Of U nbeli e/ j Or, the foant ofreadinej? I I was among chem. So now do ofc cimes Beleevers I look upon the great things that are reported to be dou2 by Jelus L^hrifl, to be things that only (ill up th^ ilary. Qr that 1 may exprels my meaning more fully to you, : As in a parable there are many words, wh'ch the fcope of the holy Ghoft doth not lye in, only thofe words are put in to make the pa- ruble, a compleateemblen\, or hieroglyphick, or reprelentaciou of fome thing that Chriff meant in ' it : So men think the great promifes and things chat are fpoken of by Jeius Chr:ft, that they are but great expre/lions, whichferves but the turn of per- fwadiug, but are not to be exhibited forth or a c complifhed. As men that come to woe fpeak great things, andmak^ great promifes, but thofe great promifes are to be interpret-ed only as expreliions of great afte(!tions, and cords of drawing love a* gain, but all that is fpoken, is not to beexpefted. So do Saints do with the great and precious Pro- mifes, Liil^e 24. II. when they told them that Jefus was come again, it was as if they had told them a 1 very tale^ the text faith. And the Heafons that the Saints do not look upon the Gofpel as real, are thefe : Partly from the contrariety that is between the Gofpel and our reafon and fenfe. As Sarah laugbedy and counted it a ridiculous thing, thacfhe fhould have a Child, the feed of theProraife, in whom all the '^anou of the World Jhould bebkffedj 2vhm ftm v^c^ grown fo old^ Gen. 1 8. x 2. Another Reafon is, The dif proportion chac is be- tween the things of the Gofpel, and our Condition. \ Come and teil a Beggar that he fhall have enough ' to live upon,and you may perfwade him : but come and reil aim chac he ihall be made an £arl^ aad to have •v I to lay bold on the Comfort given by Chrijl. 49 have thoufands, -to have Cuch an Eft ate as never cAme into his thoughts or deliires, and he will think you fpeak things to delude him, and are not to be credited by hmv. So the Saints lay. What, I put into the bofonie of God, who am a 1 oad 1 What, I fet upon the Throne, who have laboured to put it down 1 What J efus Chr ift become a Curfe for me, who '^ if I perifh ) he hath not any lofs ac all by I Will God pardon my 1ms after 1 have abuledhis grace and mercy 1 It is too great, and too good^and coo much for me. Mow this is Folly of Heart, Mark it. As a Fool makes all things that are tri- vial, real, and puts great weight on chem : So its as ^reac folly to make things that are real, co be as if they were not. What a folly is this, for a man to count thofe things which only have fubhftance, co be imaginary > iindto count thole things which are but cranfitory only, to be iubftancial > 3 There is another Folly of Heart befides chat, for which Chrift may be >uftly angry an in Un- belief: and that i?. That it is not lutable to the Principles of Faith which God hath ingenerated and infuled into his people. He is a fool you know that doth not a6t according to the principles of Reafon. So is he that doth not adt according co the grounds and principles of Faith : which are nothing in us, but only Gods jgrace made known by Gods Word: which Word is to be accompliihed by his truth that cannot fail. Becaufe he laith he willbcgood^ who can fay that it isnotcobeac- complilhedj therefore they are to be beleeved* Now all Unbelief arifeth becaufe a man leaver \ thefe grounds, and thinks to find a ground in him- ' felf. ; , lamunworthy, faith one, that God (hould do thofe things for me. I Whyl\ t t •• I \ OfUnkliefi Or,the-9?antofreadine^ I \ Why? The ground that God will do anything,! ic not any thing in thee ( thou fool ) hut n e grace | that is in iiimlelf. What a folly were ^t for a iian ' j that is not worth a farthing to chink of pur chafing I thoufands, and millions In the year ? I 1 cannot think (faith another) however I fhould be free from fuch corruptions, or that Chriil fhould ' ever love fuch a one as I am. | Thou art but a fool, for the ground of Gods love is his own good Will, and not thy Goodnefs. lie that belee/ver bpf ovon beurt^ faith Solomon, Prov. 2b. \ 26. js a "very^ooU iNow all mens doubt ings arife j from hence. That they liften to what their hearts • fay. ini^al 3. the Apoltle reproves the Qalathi- \ ^ns, that they relyed not wholly up6n t)ie righ- j teoufnefs of Chrift for pardon and jtif^ification, 1 but looked in part to the works of the Law. O fooliflj Qaldtiaris, faith he, who hath bewitched ym. Gal S' I- Ihe word of the Apoif le, i^c^otcti^g, there, uied for bewitchiiig, is a word which is ufed among the Heathen for Falcination, or as they fuperfti- roully conceived, a bewitching of one by looking on them. 1 here is no fuch kind of way v/hereby th^ Devil can do hurt, or any that do work from him. The eye of the Lord chat kills and makes I alive, but the Devils eye, nor none of his, can do any hurt. There is no fuch way of bewitching as by looking, as the greateflPhyiitians do accord in. But the QaJadmiJ had taken up this opinion, That if old Women, ok thoie who had any ill will to a- uy of them, did look upon them, that then it would \ hurt them. Nowthe Apoftle tells them that the ireafon why they beleeved not, was nothing but only fomefuperlbkious fear, or groundlefs imagi- nation. That he means by being bewitched. It may he one ChriXtian falls into the company of another, who knows not much of Jefus Chrrft, and to lay hold on the Comfort giVen by Chrifi. ^ i V' I and chat walks unevenly, and therefore is concinu- r ally kept under doubt and fears, and by fpeaking I with them he is dulled, and his fpirit is hindred from beleeving. This, or lome other thing, is the ground why men do not beleeve perfedly ^ but it is no fubflantial Ground. It is a Folly beloved. You would count a man a fool chat would be tyed by a ftraw from going to eat or drink, or taking polTeffion of any thing. Whatever there is in you , it can be no more ground or reaion why you thould not go to Chrifir, than -that a fir aw Ihouldbind i'uch a one. Say thou ait fuch a one : there is the more reafon why thou fhouldeft look to be clothed with cherighteoufneis of Chrift. The Lord Jefus Chrift is not prepared for the innocent, but the guilty. He is come a Me- diator, and that fuppofech that there is odds be- tween God and Souls. I 4, And there is another Folly which is a ground of Unbelief, and that is a vanity or lightnefs of mind. tA fooly faith Solomon inTroT;. 14. 15. be" lee^jer e^ery thingj and therefor? he beleeves no- thing. A fool beleeves what any one faith, becaufe he hach no judgement of his own, or becaufe he de- files his own judgement. As foon as he hears a thing, it paiTech from him ^ and another thing is as much beleeved as that was. Some Students are in* formed by the Books they read, and have no judge- ment of their own. So it comes to pafs v/ith lome Chriilians that they have no ftability of judgment concerning the things of God, and their own ftate. If fo be therefore they hear a good word, a word of Grace from God, then they are raifed : but if they hear by and by the wrath of God as aFather againftfin, then they are down again. One glori- ous dilpeafation of God that fets you up, if there comes another kind of dealing from God, then! I z they I I' ijx OfXinUliefi Or^theivantofreadmeji j they call all in quefl ion. Conlcience faith. Peace beuncoyoufionitheLord, thy iniquities fhall nc- | vei be thy ruinc : but then conies inSenfe and laith, j What peace can there be lb long as there are fuch , qKarrellings and contentions with the righteous ; Law of God : and then farewel all Faith again. This is an exceeding great folly and weaknels of Spirit, if a man hears a choufand objeftions againft i a feaan:, he is to hold it until fuch time as the bo r- [ torn principle upon which he holds k, be removed. So beloved, a man fhould hold his hope, and keep hisfacetojcfus Chriil, and his refolut ions to go to him, and beleeve on him, and his confidence that Chrift will be to him according to all his hopes, al-1 though there be never fo many various dealings ! from God, and ob;e^ions arife againft it. 5. But the laft thing 1 will fpeakfrom this Par- ticular, is the abfurd reafonings of mens hearts. Wijy do you reason among your ftlfites^ faith Chrift, Luh^ 24. 3 8. fpeaking to this very Point.. Oh Fools: o^ituim/, huh^ 24. 25* It is rendi ed- by fomc of our beft tranflators of the Scripture , O mad men that hai>e not the right ufe of ^eafon. And truly you would think anllnbeleever to be bewitched, whea 1 ypuwellweigh by Scripture, what the Argument s^t are which he hath againft hia.felf and his Faith : j what the grounds are from which he thinks that | God hath no love to hint, nor will not do fuch' j tbingsfor hinias the Scripture faith. As for Example : In John 1 1 . 2 1 . ^Martha and^ary came and told ^efus Chrift, that if be had been tbere^ their brother ad not been dead'-, and yet th^y queft:ion againft his Refurreftioa, becaufe he did ftink. What a contradi^ion is this ? Whenas it is the fame po- wer which can raife him again, which could have / kept hira froQi dying. If Chrift had power to keep — Mian to lay hold on the Comfort pven by Chrifi. ^55 keep him from being Dead, then he had po- 1 wer toRaife him again, if he had been rotten. If Chrifts Power had been the Caufe of his Re- I furrettion, as they conceited, then he could raife ! up La^arus^s duir, when he had been rotten, and | thrown into all the corners of the earth. In like j manner do many Sa'nrs re afon thus : 1 have done i fuch things againft the Lord, and therefore will he j hide his loving kindnefs from me for ever. I am thus and thus,^ and therefore will he do no gr;;at thing for me. Should a man come and reafon thus : If the Clock ilrikes ten, I fhall dye ; you would count him to be a fool. If you fhould hear him fay, becaufe his finger bleeds, therfore he fhal luddenly depart this life j you will lay Folly is within him. Beloved, it is the fame thing. What is the grace and love of God in Jefus Chrift appointed unto,buc only tomake them accepted;, who are unworthy in themfelves : but only tomake them holy, who are defiled and ftained in their guilt before the Lord. God can as well forgive the greateft fins, as th'^ leaft : and there is not the leaft fm, but doth de- ferve infinite condemnatio«, as well as the great efl guilr. Iniome refpefts a leffer fin may make a man^ more abominable and odious in the light of God,, than a greater *, becaufe there is fo much the more of the Will in it, than in a greater, andfo much the more contempt of the law : That for a fmall thing we will break theLavo that if holy ^ jufl, and good I Is this any good reafonmg , that becaufe the Lord hath afflicted thee, and made thee wait long upon him, chat therefore he hath no love unto thee, nor willbeflow upon thee ? It's no mere reafoning than to fay. That becaufe it hath not rained this day, that it will rain no more : or becaufe God hath not fitted a man for mercy, therefore he will not Ihew mercy, whenas mercy fits for mercy. _..^__ : Folly t ^ Of Unbelief; Or^ the wan t ofreadine^ Folly as it is oppofed to knowledge, is the caufe of Unbelief. I will ftand no longer in the opening of chac. 2. ^oUy^ £Ji4itii oppofite to Wifdom, is the caufe oji 'Unbelief* Wildom in God doth lie in bringing things about his own way. It would be no honour to h s Wiido.n to bring things about in likely means. He brings in Righceoufnefs by fin : and life, by the death of Chriil. Our Wifdom lyes in w,a icing upon God for the fulfilling of his Promifes in luch by-wayes '-, as i may call them. Therefore in (P/^/. 107. 43. when the Pfalmifl had fppken how God brings down to the grave, and raifech him * up again,and makes a man to be as at rhe bottom of the Sea, and caufeth a calm to come again: Oh- faith he, he that is wife jlyall under fhand the fe things^ and fljaU k;nov(? the leaving l^indn-jfl of the Lord. That is, the loving kindnefs of the Lord is fhewedeven as deliverance that men find in the Sea, which comes at Gods command to them: when they are near to death, GodraTeth them : when they are near finking, a calm comes : So when the hearts of j Gods people are ready to faint, and when they are under the heavieft affllftions, and faddefl diftem- J pers, then God coms in, and brings loving kindnefs. Now Unbelief that goes by Seine, and ryes and binds God to a way, wherein it may trace hmi. if all things be not fair and probable, it concludes againft the fulfilling of the Promifes. No wonder therefore if God be angry with you. Hath God any pleafure in fools ? Can he take any delight in fuch filly, fimple behaviours as thefe are ? That is rhe firft thing : ^oUy is the ground of Vnb^- lief. 2. And not only Folly, but as it goes on, there is a flownefs of heart alfo. Oh fools and flotx? of heart tobeleeve* That I I i..,iiyKa •*■ I !■» td lay hold on the Comfort given by Chrift. ^ h 1 That Phrafe ( Sloxx> of Heart ) imp lyes thefe Three Things : 1. Slothfulm^' 2. ^achp>ardneflyOV 'Delays \ I. He is Slothful that aifeth not the Means with all his ilrength. 2. He IS Slotv, that uieth the means, but is long before he falls to work : And when he is at work, is long about a little. 3. He is Dully whofe under flan cjing doth not eaftly receive what is fpoken to hii:n. Now all thefe Three are in your ^ackjvardnefi to Be- leev€. There is A negleH of Tbe^eans of Taitb : The Means of Faith are ; 1. Firft, the word: Thisisthevpordof^aith, vobkbvpe pr each yKom. 10. 8. 2. The Experience which you have of Gods truth : for ai we lonje the Lord^ fo rve beleeye on him^ becaufi bt hdars dur 'voice* 3. The Company of Beleevers : Wknovo^e- lee^ve, fay they in Jobn^* ^9- for the faying of the Waman^'&c. 4* SoTTie mufl befentfrom the Lprd^ Roifi. 10. 14, 15. bef&fe' vpd tan betteo)^ m bint, Eichei' t'hdU doit hot h&ar the ^brd of ^omife which i^ iucable to thy condition : or tliou att witli God, as if he had been never kind : thou bafkforgottentbe confolations^ ffcb.i^.^. Or _^ • ■ — ■' ■ ■ ■ t6 Of Unbelief; Or^ the ipant of readme/^ ) Orthoudofl: affociate thy fclf with coirplan- j ingChnltians that are never lacisfted , although 1 God be nevei: fo good to them. Elfe this is thy cai'e. It' thou doft medic ace upon the word, yet it is flighcly , and thou pondereft ic not. And thou calleft to mind what God hath done for thee,but not as an engagement for God to do for thee again. And thou keepeft: company with Chnil'ans that are chearful, and above the amazing diftradting fears of judgement, or of theciieiuies of cheir Sal- vation j but yet thou doft not draw from rhem how they come by that confidence : I hou doft not learn of- them the way whereby cheir hearts came fo fettled. This is moft certain, beloved : That there is no work of God, but it gxowf; exceeding eaue by the praftife of the means of ic : Together with the means, God gives power to whatever they are ap- pointed unto. Elfe if chou doll ufe the means, thy flochfulneis is yet perhaps, that thou art negleditftzl to ufe thy Fa-ch : but as the fluggard lives in the Summer time upon the things which the earth brings forth of herfelf : So thou doft live upon the comforts wh'ch God gives thee out of common bounty, but thou doll not live by Fairh. This is the life of Faith, to look for all through JeKusChriflmeerly becaufe of his word, although ic be without means, and where there are means, yet the means are look- ed upon as altogether infufficienc. I might inftance in thefe, but that 1 ftiould hold you too long. Now as the Wheels that do not ftir, grow rufly, and require much ilrength to ftir them t .So the heart that isnotufedcobeleeving, growsunapt to beleeve. ^. But to lay hold on the Comfort given by Chrlfl. 57 t \ 2^ But befides. this fluggifhnefs and carelefncfs which dorh even over- run the hearts of the people of God ', they lay not out themfelves to the ucmoft, they do not do what is to be done : they ipare chemlelves in Prayer : and fpare themfelves in Me- ditating : and ipare themfelves in the life of; Faich. There is betides that, afy. A flownefs of heart which hinders beleeving much too: .When a man is deferring or putting off from fome grounds or other for a better feafon : When the heart is_in a better frame : When he is more humbled, and more affeded with his own guilt : When he deli- berates, and puts fo n\any ifs, and hath fo many fufpitions and jealoulies. That which kept the people of %ubtniiom going up to the Battel of the | Lord, Judg^S'^Sy'^^* was the exadnefs of heart, as. 3^—ip-pn m'ghc be rendred : for they put this. cafe, What if they fhouldbeworfted ? What if the Battel fhouid go againft them >. What if they fhould be Engaged, and their Friends be at a di- ftance? All chat they could poffibly lay in their way, they did, when the Enemy was upon his March: and lo.they went not out. So men are fo exad^ about beleeving, tliat they do not beleeve. They put fo n.any cafes, that they dull their hearts. God would have a man to be wife, but yet zealous, It^s enough for a man to have thePromifes of God, that if he come to him, he fhall have life, and parr don,andholinefs. 3. But there is 3//. befides that, comprehended inthisflqthfulnefs of heart, em becaufe of their Vnbelief^ and hard7iefi of heart. An Unbeleeving heart, is a hard heart. There is not ftoninefs of heart in a regenerate man, but brawni- nefs ; that is, he is not fo hard as he was, nor with that kind, but he is ftill byreafon of corruptions in him, and fm that he runs into ftill hard. And that PV'-'^* "' ■ J. l«,J — ' ■^■^^"" ' , ■ - ^ ... ■ to lay hold on the ComfongiVen by Chrift. ep that dif covers its felf in point of beleeving. Men arc ape to chink if rhey can but v/eep when^they do complain of ftn, that their hearts are fofc. Hard. nei's of heart lyes properly in not beleeving : which I will make out to you thus : The Scripture takes up expreffions of hardnefs, to fig nifie Two Things in the Souls and Con* fciences of men. i^ Stubbornnefly or ^nyUlding- nefi. 2, Senfdleffnefi. Things that are hard, have no feeling in them* And if there were in our hearts indeed a fenfe of our need o£ Jefus Chrift, or a feeling of the excel lency of the things of Jefus Chrifl-, ic would make us to lay hold on them, and to catch at them. As cheMeffenger of theKingof .Syr/^ did catch at the vpord that fell from the 1\ings maurh, although ic was by way of complement that he calkd him brother, I King. 20. 3 2. is my ^rotf^r Benhadad yet alvve? and let him live. They therefore did cacch at his words, becauf e their life d^d lye ac the ftake, and all their v/elfare. Lee me fpeak that which I have found by experience : You fhall fomecimes meet I withfome chac cry out and complain of the wrath | of vJod, and of their own defertsof e.ernalpuiiifh^/ ment, chat will cry ouc of their fins, fpeak of, and! lay before them the oifer ; of the G ofpel and they j^c the .away ft ill from them : Truly the reafon is, b^ciule they know not what Heil, and thel Wrath of G:d is j and becaufe they have not in- 1 deed a right fight of fin. For if they did indeed! know themfelves to be in fuch danger, they would I K Tif readily \ f ■6WW r«a**" ^ ■ ^ — :;::.■_ rsa^ — . I ^o 0/ Unklief ; 0*^, the v^mt ofreadtneJS ffead ly iay^ hold.on ^aay goo'd v/oxdof God* So I niuch as there is in you of uabelkf, there is fo much ! ftniekffnefsinyou, co uplain as long as you will of fin^ and of hardneis of iieart. 2, Again where there is hardnefs of heart, there is feme degree of uny ield ngnefs and ftubbornnefs of heart. As you lee evidently in thefe Difciples. He mnft come to their way of informing them whether he was rifen or not, elfe nothing would fatisiie them. He fent them Meffengers which they knew were godly J and news that be was Rifen and come again, and yet they beleeved not : Nor would Thomas uniefs that he might come and put his finger in his fidesjand feel thf wounds that were made there, y^^w 20. 25. Stubbornnefs of h%art, j fay, doth in fome fort remain in the Saints,and that is the reafon why they are fo backward to beleeve : becaufe they cannot captivate their reafon and fenfe to 'the way which God revealed his love by. Some other grounds there are which I thought to pent ion, but cannot, and therefore I will only fpeak one word by way of iApplicationyd^nd fo con- clude -, and that is this : to lay hold on the Comfort giyen by Chriji. 6i .' ti) :■ CHAP. VIIL Application, Take heed of ^ach^ardmfi to ^e^ APPLICATION, i' > TAke heed I befeech you ( you that are Be- leevers ) of Backw ardnei s cobeleeve the greac love, and the great things of Jelus Chrift, by which you fhould be conforted. Take heed of being hard to be comforted under any difpenlation and dsal^ ing of God with you. My text will give you the reafon, youfhallhear of ic ( if you be his ) from the mouth of Jefus Chrift. JelUs Chrift will be angry, andwhat will you then do, if his wrath be l{indled^ yea but a little ? The frowns of his face are death to you, worfe than the Ipfs of all things he- fides. Can you bear his diipleafure ? as the Apoftle faith in i Cor. io'.22. Dorve provoke theLordto An- ger ? Are weflronger than he .^ Can we pray when he is angry ? Or read when he is angry ? Do you not go up and down as if y ou were in darknefs, and the Sun fee in the midft of the day, (which is the. meaning of that Prophet ) when you want the favour of Jefus Chrifl ? What keeps you out of lin ? Only this, or this mainly : becaufe you would not offend who;^l you, love : or you would not lofe the love 9f hiin, in whom you live. There is no- thing will make you Ipfe his love, nothing will al- ter his countenance, or change his voyce more than to fee you backward to beleeve. He cones to yourSpuisapdiaysj I ba,ve doi^e.fhus and thus for ■ ' '' ^ L yQ^> 1 da OfUnbeUef;Or^thetpaHtofreadineJ^ you, but I will do more : when you would be glad to have the old ftate continued, he laich he will do greater things than thcie for you : And you begin to think, thefe things cannot be , this is but the thoughts of my proud heart : and the thoughts of my devituig proud Spirit : It's true, thou haft a proud Spirit, but it's bccaute thou doft not beleeve. And thou haft a proud heart, but it's becauf;? thou doft not beleeve, and yield up thy judgement to what he promifeth. Chrlftians fhould be as greedy of drawing in comfort, as the earth is of drawing in the ram when it'^s chapr and dryed. As wicked men are prefumptuous, and catch at every thing that may give them hope in theii finfulnefs : So a god- ly man ought (and it's his excellency) to catch at, and to lay hold on every thing that is fpoken to them, and every promife that is uttered. Confider thus much ^ If there fhould be any error in you, in being too forward to beleeve, it's an error on the right handj and it's far better thuubackwardnefs. As it's a lellcr evil to err through zeal , than through neutrality and coldnefs J if I may call it by that name. There is a great deal of preftimptuou? Faith which imagins its felf to be meant in every offer of Grace ; which takes every dealing of God to be in love : which takes the word out of Gods mouth ^as I may exprefs it) whiift he is fpeaking, and ap- plyes it to its felf. As ill will doJ:h nVke a man think himfelf to be meant in every word that is fpoken by another : So love in the hight makes^a man to think that al the good that God fpeaks of,^'s fpoken to him* When thou therefore ^om.eft to the Word of God, and heareft that God will do this and that for Beleevers; Do thou fay he wtU I do it for me. All thi« is for nte. This ipiiitual I madnefs, is Wifdom. I call ic madftefs, becaufe k i& mmr II . ,11 I ■ ■ " ' ' - - Mil I I I _ ■■II td lay hold on the Comfort ^iven by Chrifi; ^^ is fo unto carnal reafon, and the underftanding of a man. They cell a flory of a madman fitting in aPorc, and when any Ship came in^ he would fay, This is my riches and v/eakh, and muft be laid in ray treafury. Do rhou fay fa of every promife of God, and thou fayil no more than is true, forall^ that Godhaih, is thine, and all that God fpeaks" unto thee. What a toy le is it for the husband every day to be perf wading his Wife that he loves her, /and to be wooing h^r as he did at iirft I How ftall Godbear this at your hands, when all his dealings ihall be mif underftood by you ? And unlefshe fpeak in the fame manner that he did, when he firft made love to you, you will take no notice of what loveheihewstoyou? Do not commend thy felf for warinefs, when thou keepeil off from promife : It is hardnefs of hearc and flo^hfulnefs, and that 1 which will cloarh thee with rags, as Solomon faith! in another cafe. Put off now, and it may be thou mayft come , ere long, to be as it was with the Church, that thou mayfl: want thy beloved, and know not where to find him : thou mayft not hear that which God fpeaks. Oh may the Soul fay that God would fpeak this, and that which he fpake fo long before, which I regarded not ^ but let pafs by? Comfort not thy felf in this, that thy Unbelief is ■ notfrom ftubbornnefs, and therefore thou flia It be born withal : For there is no unbelief, but there is fome degree of Stubbornnefs : And if thou art not ftubbornas aRebel, yet thou art as a Child, and God will whip it out of thee. When thou haft faid unto the Lor d^ Depart from me 5 No, this is no futable to my condition : I had need rather of Cor- jrafives, than Cordials: When thou haft fpoken this, behold the heavens are darkned, and the face of Jefus Chrift that is clouded, and thou Ihalt hear ^ chi ding, I •^m ^4 OfUnhelief,} OrytheTi'antofreadine^ > I 1 chiding and he will upbraid thee, and reprove thee, and i^ec all chy tins in order before rhee r it's an argiimenc ndeedchar a man is called ofGcd, whenas nothing lb much troubles him, as his unbe- lief: And when his unbelief doth not lo much trouble him, becaufe of the goodnefs it keeps him from, as of that anger and difpleafure which it pro- vokes in Chi iff, as 1 told you the laft time upon a- nother occafion, Tell a godly n:an, this is that which Jefus Chriff will not like, and he will leave it, becaufe his life lyes in the love of Jefus Chr jfl. I tell you that this caution, and this Vvar in efs, and this demurring, and this forbearing, and putting off: this ftrangnefs, and this fhynefs unto Jefus Chriil doth anger him : Thou ihalt hear him not only charge thee with thofe tins, for which thou fayeft thou art folhy of him : but he will charge j:hee with thy fhynefs, w^hich is the caufe of, thy Unbelief: ^■Je uphr aided th em y becaufe of their Unbelief, Whenever thou therefore iindeft and feelefl: but a ftirring of a temptation to keep thee from, or to hold thee to tiiat Faith whereunto thou haft attain- ed, I fay to keep thee from beleeving altogether, or from beleeving more, to keep thee to that mea- fure : Now thou art doing the thing which Jefus Chrifl cannot bear , and therefore Anfwer thy temptation thus ; I have angred the Lord already, ihuU I anger him more > 1 have provoked him : but being provoked by fin, there is a remedy through Grace: but Grace.being flighred^what way, Oh what courfe, or wliat remedy can be taken i j Prefs thy Soulupon this ground to beleeve^ becaufe that the wrath of QodfhaU abide upon theey becco^feof thy Vnbelief, Joh.3.36. Abide upon thee : that is. If ) to ky hold on the Comfort gly en by Chrijl. 6 5 If thou beleeveft not at all, thou art, and fhalt con- tinue under Condemnation ( but that is not the fubjeft that I am now ipeaking to.) But although thou doll beleeve, yet if thou art not nimble, and adive, and ready in beleeving : his wrath lafts lon- ger, and his d fpleaiure holds longer, an^ his ftrangnefs longer, than for any other fm. Whac will Jefus Chrift fay. Can ye live without me> Have I been lo kind to you, that now you have no need of me? This is the iniquity from whence it comes, even thy Unbelief : and fo he will rip up all thy heart, that thou ihalt be as one that knows not which way to turn thee : Take heed of the fin of Unbelief : And although thou haft Faith, and fhalt not come under Condemnation, yet for thy want of readinefs of Faith, and for want of aptnefs to be- leeve, thou fhak provoke him to fuch indignation, that thou ihalt have never good day, whilft thou art in that way, and courfe. CHAP. \ / ^(5 Of Unbelief; Or, the ^antofreadinef? CHAP. IX, ^ fourth Siih of vohich Vnhelief if the ijjue. Viz. Vifordercd Joy. Ibis hiv din ^Faitb'^ X. iy the ^xcefi of it : 2. Q3> the Stveetnej! of it* The fourth ^cafon of the VoUrim^ Viz. ^eccuife the ^ffSs of Vnbelief are fo bad. Fourthly, and Laftly , the ground of this Unbelief IS Toy. In Lnl^ 24. 41 • They yet ^ele^nfed not for Joy. Beleeve they did, becaufe they joyed; for joy arifeth from being made partakers of fome known good. But they beleeved not fiUly, but doubtingly. It was probable to them, that Ghrift miehtberifen, and in that they rejoyced, becauli that they defued : But this joy did hinder their Faith. They ^eken^ed not for Joy. All AfFeftions do hinder Judgamenr. Anger that puts a vail before the eyes of aman, that he cannot fee things as they are. The D:fciples being grieved becaufe of Chrifts going away from them, didnot mind what he fpake to them concerning his coming a^ain. And as Anger and Grief, fo alfo Joy doth h nder the judgment, ^fal. 1 26. i . When the Lord tuniedagainoHrCatnmty, fay they, voe vvere as them that dreamed: chat is,' they thought it was bat a meet fancafie, and imagination, and no true change or akeration of their Condition. Now Joy hinders | j Faith, when ^ ^^^^ to lay hold on the Comfort given hyChrifl. 67 I Firft, It is an ^xcejl. llnfpeakable Joy and Faith, cannot well ftand together. They may be in the fame fubjeft, but not in the fame aft. In Heaven you know there is a great deal of Joy j In tbyprefenceh fulnefiof joy^ Pfal. i6. ii. and there we live by fight. lt'*s the defire of many Chriftians that they may haveiravifhment and joy, and it's de firable in many refpefts, for it^s a heaven upon earth, and they are great ftrength unto the Soul: they deaden a man unro temptations, and unto the world. But as Joy and Ravifhaienc are in that re- ipeft defirable, fo in this refpeft they are not fo de Arable, but that Saints may well be contented with* out thcui, becaufe they hinder beleeving, which is the great Work men are in the world for : Joy is a priviledge, but the life of Faith is our duty. As God will not Ipare his people from chaftifement, and correftions here, becauie ic's the only time he hath to correft them, whereas he hath eternity to punifh his enemies. So God will not abate his People of the life of Faith, becaufe it'^s that where- by he only hath glory while we are in this world. And as Joy doth hinder us in the ^;i:ce/J of it, and in its high degrees. Secondly, So it alfo hinders the life of Faith by theSiveet«e/?of it. The Soul is fo takm with the fweetnefs of the goodnefs of the thing ^*t felf , that ic cannot look off from it. It is fo drunk with the fweetnefs of the thing it felf; that it cannot look af- ter any a^ which becomes this life of Faith. As in John6» the People were fo much adifted unto the Loaves wh^ch Chrift gave unto thole that followed his Preaching, chat they minded not the Word that was fpoken to them : So it falls out,that the good- nefs even of fpiritual things, doth hinder the Saints h z from / I -r^ 68 Of Unbelief; O^y the want ofreadinej? from olf^-Tving the light whereby rhey are reveal- ed and the gr unds and reafons char are given for them thac they ijnay beleeve them perfe^iy. You fhall find chat the iwecrtnefs of the things by joy, doth n ake the Soul f -arhil lead it fhoiild be mifer- able aftcirwards. it carries a check with it left ic Ihouldfail, and leave a man -n greater imcomforc- ablnefs^ and fadn fs, rhen he was in before. Many that are taken up with the thoughts of their Pviches and Plentyjare thereby made covetous and fparing, left that they ihould come to wanr afterwards. And , this was the cafe of the Difciples, That their thoughts returned, and faid, What if this fhould not be as we think ? Suppofe hj fuould not be rifen : 'j or he, whom you fee, lliould not be the Lord, Lul{e \ 24.15. Andbecaufe o^ this, they d'd begin to rea- j Ion the matter with rherafeives, and they belecved not. And that fhalUuiiicefor one of the Reafons. Therefore the Lord is fo angry with the Unbelief of Beleevers, becaufe it proceedeth from an evil frame of heart. It's not evil for a man to joy in God, but it'^s evilfor a man to be hindered by any thing, by his joy, from beleeving in Jefus Chrift. I fhall add a Toiirtb ^^A S 0 ISi', and that is this : REASON, IV. TheEiFefts of this Unbelief are a juft ground, why Chrift fhould be thus offended with it. God in iudging of fms, looks as well to what evil they breed^ and bring forth, as what is in the prefent ad. He looks, . Firft, To what a corruption inclines unto,as well as what degrees are put forth at prefent. Sin is I eternall]^ to lay hold on the Comfort given by Chrifi. 6p eternally puniflied in Hell, becaiife it makes a man eternally willing toTm. And this feems to be the reafon why Jefus Chrift reproved the Difciples here for Unbelief : for it did hinder them from be- ing fuch MefTengers and Preachers of his glory as they fhould be. How Ihould they teach others who beleevednot ? How unfit were they to endure what they fhould meet withaV, till they were com- forted in what he had done for them, in breaking afunder the bonds of Death ? The truth is. There is nofm that makes fuch a fpoyl in the heart of a regenerate man : noth'ng caufeth fuch a looinefs, and diffolutnefs of heart, as this Unbelief doth. It befools a man, andbeiots the underllanding. Oh ^oolsy faith Chrift in Lw% 24^ 25. Becaufe Unbe- lief puts a man to the knowledge of Heavenly things by Reafon, by which they cannot be difcer- ned. Unbelief doth fpoyl the memory, and there - foreCinlfeb. 2. i.^i phe Apoftle tells them of their Unbelief under this Metaphor, of letting things jltp from them. His meaning is. Take heed left there be in any of you an heart of Unbelief: But he ex- prefleth himfelf thus, Ta'^ heed left the things thus deli'veredtoyoMy flip from you. It makes the aiFefti- ons dull and heavy. Slotxr of heart to hekevj^ Luke 24.25. as our Lord expreffeth it here. And if ycu lookinto^/^J.63. T)aTi«4^4<4^#«#««4^ CHAP. X. Application, i. Then the Anger and Love of Chriji mayfland together i i. Jifter Converfton ; 2. ^uch more before Converfton : 3. At the laflday* life, 2. Conftder vohat itvcnU cometOy that you are fo hardly drawn to bdeea>e, Ul'e, s* Hence learn the ^eafon of the ^yjjjroofs you meet voithfrom Chrifi, life, 4. It h tl?en the 'Duty of ^Imi(lerj to Chide and %jproveJharply Vnbe* leering Chriftianr. USE, I. THe Firft Vfe that I fhall make of the Point now, is this; That if Chrift be thus Angry prith hff Difciplej- for their Vnbelief ; then the Anger of Chrifl , and the Love of Chrtft may jirid together. Here was great love *, for what could be more than to be oiFcnded becaufe they were not comforted in him, and refrefhed with h'-sprefence, and with the life that he had brought to light ? Here he is an- gry, and upbraidf them. And how could he b^ worfe angry > For as I told you in the Explication, Upbraiding was a d^fgraceful Reproof. Chrift can take pleaiure in us. and yet notw'chflanding be angry with any thing that hinders us of our good. Angry he is with us b- caufe there is fomethng in us that he loves not : and becaufe we do not beleeve that he loves us as he doth. If there be lin in us, '; there cannot be then but anger in Chrift, becaufe he IS I to lay hold on the Comfort pVen by Chrifi. 7 1 is of holy and pure eyes. Anger is nothing elfe but adiflikeof chat which is evil. If Wn hinders us . from good things, Chrift cannot but be angry, be- ^ caufe he loves us : for anger is a diflike of what hinders us of v/hat we have a mind unto, or what we take deiighc and pleafure in. And if after Con- verficn Curijt can be ungry^ and loe upbraided and reproved as aay Icandalou^ courle of living.^ k would be thought a great deal of wan: of Wiidom and tendrnefs, if one fliould come in the fadn is of cheir heart, and complain to a Minifler, That thrift is gone from them : tin hath taken av. ay cheir i^ord^and they know noc where to find h m : And he ihould tel nim again.this is folly of heart, hardnefs of h arr,flugg4hnefs & floathful- nefs of h^ar:,Ccirelelfnds and negligence of Spirit that pucs you into this cafe and condition : Who wou-dnot air oflch-nk this, and judge this to be anharfh, and an unfitting way to take wichfucha one ? And yet you fee this is the way and method wh'ch our Lord takes in the way of his love. When Clirift couldbyno other means bring the n to be- ^keve that it was he, he falls on chiding. \¥hen the SluremenLS and perfwafions of the Golpel will not, ^hen the terrours and reproofs of the Gofpel n ufir be ufed : If Gendenefs will not, yet the Rod muft drive out this foliy. It is noching ( beloved ) m Jefus Chrift that keeps you from beleeving : for he is troubled chat you will not have of his Fulnefs : that you apprehend not his kindnefs. !•: ; no good • nefsinyouchatyoudonot beleeve,but ;^ our folly, your flownefs of heart, and dullnefs of Spu it. Re- proving will not hinder your Faith, for thereby M 2 Chrift i t b' I I ^ *■ "iWpilfT" '^J' ^^Wi 7^ OfUnkUef; Ot,the wantofreadinej^ Chnft means to excite it. As every godly man when he fees his I'm, immediately runs to Jefus Chrilt that he may cure it : So Chrifts difcovering the fmfiilnefs of complaining, and of unbelief, is a means to ftir up that Grace to go to Jefus Chrift to have it cured. As Chyrurgions are wont to fay. The making of a larjge Orifice, when they let blood, or the cutting deep into a place that is pucrified, is the beft kindnefs that can be, becaufe k lets out the worft blood, but not without ground, but upon fmall ones, that is good : And not to need many Apparitions of Jefus Chrift fortheaffuranceof our hearts, nor many Meffen- gers to carry tyd'ngs of his heart andgood will to us. Do not ftreighten nor limit your ir'aith only 10 "Fromifes which concerns Freedom from condien\* jnacion buc as ic is in Luk^ 24* 2$. Beleeve all thac ^che Prophets have fpoken^ elfe you are Fools, and I ^_ flow \ I Of Unbelief ; Or^thewantofreadineJ? flow of heart to beleeve, and do fall under this re. prehenfion. As the parched and dry ground drinks in the rain : or as one that is of pregnant pares takes in learning ; whatever he reads or hears is his own, h: apprehends the natter as foon as it is mentio- ned, and he underftands much in a little : As feme delicace bodies take every. inf^*<5t ion, fofhoulde- very beleevcr qu'ckly embrace and cake hold of the Grace oiFered. And i have the: bell Argu nent that can be ufedfor it in my ttxt : You will not clfe keep the love of Jefus Chrift, but he will be angry i Continue you tn my lo^ey faith Chr ill, in Johni<;.9. Andhctelis them next, ^eep my Co-.nmandfm^ntf : For he knew that rather than the Apoflics would loiehis love, rhey would do any thnig. Fo: in- deed that is the temper of one that >s a beleever. What will not iuch a one do, rath ^r than h<: w 11 grieve the Spirit of elus Chr ft ? Do what y^.\x will, yet Jefus Lhrift w 11 be angry -f you be iiot apt and ready to beleeve, if you be not apt and rea - dy to be comforted through him. ^cin^ angry ^ he vpiU upbraidyou, Weuie to fiay that meats do upbraid, -when they rife up from the Stomacn, and we canno: digeft them : In fucha caie they have a iilthinefs with them which is very difpleafing !' Qhoie meati. v/hich are moft pleafant to th^isftfe, are exceeding troublefome when they come up again. Mercies' will be exceeding affl'ftive, when w€ ar^ upbraided by them, and that we fhall be, when we do not be- leeve and lay hold upon more. Ghirift never th'nks much of what he hath done, but when We think we have enough of him. - When Ghiift (hall cortJe and fay. It repents me chat ever I did this and rh?it. Or I am angry at you ; The Soul will prefencly fay concer- i u ■ r t0 lay hold on the Comfort giytn by Chrift. 7^ concerning all its enjoymcncs,as Ahfalom did when he lived like a Prince, buc was ouc of thefighc of ! his Father-, What is all this to me? I am as a banilhed man fo long as I cannot fee the face of my Father. What are Gifts and Parts fo long as Tefus Chriil is angry ? No more than beauty is in aark- Uiefs, no more than things that have a relative good Ure when as their Relation pr Dependency are cut I 'ifrom them.This is that which ft.rs up anger in Jefus 1 Chrift, that you are backward to bcleeve, that you j are not ready to beleev.As it^s faid of an Elder,r/^^t be niufi be apt to teach ^ 2 Tim. 2. 24. that is, be fo full of knowledge, as upon every occalion he may give advice, and counf^l : As a man is faid to be apt to be angry, when he is provoked with the f ma Heft things that crofs his will : So a man ought to be apt to beleeve, that is, by the fmalleft and leaft intimations of Gods love : the leaft found of his feet and voyce may affL(!^ his heart, and be enter- lain^d by him. It is the conimendationandexcel* lency of a Chrift ian, thdt he is prepared unto every goodwor\^^ 2 Tim.2.:ji. ^repar ed te every good Wor}{. , That is. You need but fhew him his duty, and he Lwill forthwith go about it. As ic is the commen- dation of a Patient, thai; he will take any thing that thePhyfitian (^ to whom he hath committed him- felf) Ihail prefcribchim. lii^om.\2*i»lhefeech you /Brethren (^faith he ) prefint your filvei a living Sacrifice to Qod. fPrefent i \ V recent your Sel*vsf. It is a mannec of fpech taken from the Cuftom of the Jews, to bring their offerings, and to hang them upon the homes of the Altar, that the Pricfts may do with them according to Law . to have them ready at hand, that he may offer fuch parts of them unto God, as by the Law was required. Now I xheApollle doth require of the heleeving Romans as a requital and an anlwerablnels unto the Mercies of God rhat they would be in read incfs for any ho- ly ufe that God would put thim unto, i.nd elpeci- ally ought you to be read/ to beleeve. Be ready to this workofal works, becaule its that work which pleafethGodii.oft. John. 6- 29- Tbhisthevporh^ of Qod that ye beleeve : as if he fhou'.dhave fa'd Jts better than your hearing, and acknowledging lefus Chrlft to be the Prophet whom God hath l>nt inio the world, i John^ 3 • 2 3 . This it his commcmdemmt that ye beleiyveon him vc>lM)m lye hathfent. This is his Commandement, As if he fhould have faid.This is chat whpch he lays the greaceft ftiels upon, and that of all other things which he gives moft in charge.This is his CommancJ;^ ment. My text ckers it to you. If angry , and angry foirjtioth^ng but only for theiir unbeleife:then on the contrary heleeving is mod pleafiHgtohim. God doth principally Xet up and advance the atcrfbuces of his love, and of his truth : and faith deales wirh both. There muft needs be therefore thoughts chat God is not loving, or fo loving,or that he is not fo true and punftual in the performance of h^s promi- fes, where there is backwardnefs to beleeve. In James, i • 1 9. 21. He bids them befivift to l^ear^ and t^\ <■ to Uy hdd mthe Cm/on gi'Ven hy Chrijt. 8 1 V to receive fhii word with meehjie^s. Hedoch fpeak uuco bereevers, and he bids c hem be fwifcrohear. Thacis^o catch ac every word of comfort, as wel as at every word of diredtion : To have in their hearts as Imay expreis it, before it be out of the mouth of God. As a man you know that is of quick un- derflanding, hs hath the meaning of that which one fpcaks unto him, before he hath delivered his fentence compleatly and perfectly. The under- ftanding fees whereunco the fpeech tends, and ga thers up the whol mind of the fpeaker by that which is uttered. So would the Apoftle have us in j heating of the word of God, as foon as God comes ^ I CO turne his face or fpeech t.oward any foul, by and j 'by, by chat time that he hath fpokcn a word, for the heart to clofe with it, and to takeirs portion and contentment from it. Pveceive it faith he with Meekneis, Meekneis is oppofire to anger and con- tendon : Do not ftand difputing, but encertaine it. Stand not queftioning whither ic belongs to thee or not, but apply it to your felfe. i. ^tt. i. 13. Qird up thi! Loyns of your minds ^ and beleea>i'y or hope pi,*ifettly. f - !j (jird up the Loyns of your ^indf That is a fpeech taken from the Jewes, who were mever wont to go with long garments :and that they might not fhakie their feet, and be under their feet as they went,; they ufed to tye them up to their Loyns, Which is the meaning of the ApofVle, whatever it be which hinders you from beleeving, put ic off from you. In t he exercife of your faith, be not like men tha: walk but like men that run. They might have walked faire and foftly with their cloathes dov/n to their feet : but run, they could HOt.' (jird up the Loynes of your minds ^ that you may I N bek&ve j beleeve p^rfeUly. We ai-e a5 backward co beleeve perfediy, as co do perf e^Iy for God. We are ar backward, and as hard to be brought to beleeve chat God will da g:cac rhiiig? for us, as to do great things for Gcd. That 1 may perfwade you to thU Duty, (^ which will fave you from the anger of Je- fus Chrift ) give me leave to exprefs my £elf divexily, according to the Analogy of the Scripture this way. I. So quick ani;r nimble ought you to be in laying hold on Promifes, and apprehending the love of Chrift, as t|iac theleafthinc andintimati* on, fhouldbea mopivetoyou. It there do but a word fall, you fhould catch hold of it. If a word can be conflant to ypur comfort, it fhould be con- ftant. If it can poffibly extend to your perfons, it fhouldbe ftretched to it. And this is cleer in the text : As foon as ever the Women had feen fefus Chrift, they by arid by ran with chenewes of it un- to the Difciples, LhI\€^2^, 9. Againft giving credit CO their tcftimony, there were many things to be faid : As, That they had but a blufh of him : That they v/ere not com^oter mentis themfelves when they did fee him, for they were exceedingly fright- ed at the prefence of him : And they were but Wo- men, andof weakunderftanding : That the thing it felf was incredible, and not to be aflcnted unto iareafon : But yet though tji^y were but Women, though it were not a demonftiation, but aii infinua** tion-, alchouqhit wasbut newes, and not an evi- dence, though they had but a 1 trie light in this My- flerie, yet becaufe they did not beleeve, nor were comforted, therefore Jefus Chrift reproves chcm. And let me further exprefs it, Zf You i_MiiMn ■ ' ■ 11 I 11 ----- - — ■ I > II I ^— — ^__^— —^.^^^.i to lay hold on the Comfort ^iven hy Qhrifl. 8 3 2. Tou ought to he 04 ready to ^elecfve, 09 ever I ym voere (or any man} to the committing of Sin : lou \OMght^ 1 fay, to be already to^eleewe, of you, or any I man hy nature, is^ or can he ready to fm* We are fo ready to fin by nature, that the kaft temptation I prevails with us : like a fpark of fire upon tinder. The motion chat is made to us by Satan to fm, pre- vails with us, although we have never confidered what will come after it. The kaft colour of law- fiilnefs gives a man encouragement to a finful pra- &ife. We put our fe Ives upon the occalionoffm before the wind, and upon the ftretfm : So willing are we to do ic. W hy ? Becaufe we are fo apt and willing to fm. Therefore we fhould be as ready to that which is required of God : As fhe laid. If her legs could fern^e her to dance, iheyfl)0uJd thenferve her to go up the ^lU io hear the Word of <^od. The new Creature fhould be as forward unto the Service of God, as the old Man is to luft. Is there not much moreinChrift to make you run into his embraces by Faith i than there is to be had in fm, that you fliould be fo mad after it ? If but a word be deli- vered by Gcd ', if but a pofiibility of Salvation be revealed from God concerning one in thy conditi- on, thenrowl it inthy thoughts and keep it there. For thou didft do fo wirh thy fins, when theDevil told thee that thou mightft by them come to fee the defires of thy heart, thou didft continually meditate on it, till thou wert inflamed with it. There is much more good to be had in Chrift, than there is evil prcmif ed u fin. Becaule we have been fo apt tafm, therefore we Ihould be the more dili^ i gent to plcaf e Chrift. And that is done by nothing fo much, as by Faith, and the forwardnels of it. it j any fiaial ana weak tem.ptation prevails with us tjQiircak the Comnjandements, then a word of the ' bi'V ' N 2 , Gofpel ■ i 84; ^f ^w^e//>/ • Or, the wdntjofmdd'mf \\ iGofpcl fhoiild prevail with us, J^g lay hold on Mercy. JLec me add yer further. * *- .-^•^^ 3. As r^ady as a guilty Conscience is to hpprehend^ the v^raib ofQod, fo ready fljoiild a ^elee'ver be to ap" prebend th^ love of Qod. Guile is very incredulous. A guilty Conscience imagins where ever it is that ic hears thcfencencc of chat wrach chat ic hath de • ferved. i heard thy woyce ( id^uhAdam ) in the Qarden, and I did hide my felf. Gen. 5. 10. and yec Godfpakenoca word until the evening, when he calie d^'^ Adam '^ Where art thou? Like amaMthac is in fear of being apprehended by Jultice : every^ leaf is a man, and every man is an Officer to ap- prehend him that hath broken the Law, and that hath fled from ic. Its reported concerning Mr. ^ittt'in the Book of Martyrs, That he in the trouble of his Confcience could fee Hell in every Promife, becaufehed'dfeethat good that he Ihould be de- prived of. As Muiick makes fome ears exceeding fad '-i fo the hearing of Mercies do forcly afflift thel Confcience of him that is guilty, and under the wrath of God. None can be happy, faith the Soul, but fuch as enjoy Gods love, and that hath God en- gaged to them by fuch a word of Promife, and I am imder his difpleafure. You ought to be more rea- dy tobeleeve, than you ought to fear : For God will fulfil t\ventyPromifes, before hewillaccom- plifh one Threatning: he had rather fave the lives of thoufands, than put one to death. There is more f round by Chrifts Right coufnefs put upon thee by airh to expect mercy, than there is ground of fear in thy own guilt. Why doft thou not then when thou heareft thrcatnings fay. This is the evil which the Lord hath delivered me from ? This is that Mi- fery which the Lord will never fuffer to fall upon Ime ? Why fhouldcfl: thou not as well in Promifes I find I to lay hold on the Comforts ^hen lyChrtfi. 85 find out the love of God co deliver thee from the evil of the threatnings, as in the threatnmgs thcu findeft. out the wrath of God to fear thee, that by it thou (halt be deprived of the Prom if es > You know Chrift calls the Woman of Canaan a T^og, Matth. 1 5. | 26, 27. and yet fhe gathers Comfort from it ; 1/ I am a T^og, I mi^fi ha*ve the Crumbs : I muft not have bread with the Children, but have it after them: There is enough for me, and for the Jewes, and therefore ft ill faith fhe, hord hai^ meccy uponme* Let me go on further. .-•-'— 4. As ready thou fhouldft be (who art a godly man) to beleeve the love of God unto thee, as the Will of God in any thing thou fhouldft do for him. It if joy to an upright man to do for Qod^ Prov.2 1 .15. iTpaigladtvhentheyfaiduntomey Let mgo into the Voufe of the Lord : Unto Sanftiiication a godly man would fain be as anoyledwheele^ which if you do but touch, it will run. He would be up early and prevent the morning watch to pray, if he be him- lelf, he takes opportunities to duty gladly. He thinks it allthereafon in the world that withouc much fpeaking to, he that hath done fo much for him, fhould bs ferved by him. And thou oughteft to be as forward to beleeve, as to any other Duty. It's a Duty which ispleafmg unto God : It's that which will enable a man to every thing elfe : It's a Duty, a great Commandment, 1 told you before. This is his Commandment : It is that which will enable thee to every thing : It is that which being not done, will flugg thee in thy pace, whatever thou art about. Is not this falfenefs of Spirit to make exceptions at thy duty, and to be forward to feme things, and not to others that are equally commanded by the Lord of life ? I fay, is not this pride of heart, that thou wilt be forward to do ' ~ what Pf.l22- 8^ Of ^nhelief^ Or^ the v^ant ofreadinej^ what may fhtw forth the Grace that is in thee, and not as forward to receive the Grace that is given thee by Jefus Chrift ? I befeech you confider it. Your life is no where faid in Gcriptme to lye in do- ing according to the Law but to lye in beleeving , upon Jefus Chrift. Confider but v; hat thou were [ at thy firft Converfion, when as God had brought I thee forth, and lookM upon thee as a Mother doth upon the Child of her Womb which Ihe endured the pangs of death for : when God killed thee with the kiiles of his n.outh : Oh how greedy wert thou then ! How didft thou turn rhy thoughts from all things elfe, that thou mighteft meditate on the love of God, which is laid up for thole that do beleeve ? What aientence couldft thou then have pall upon thy felf, if thou fhouldft have given the lye to any ' Promife, which ihould have been revealed to thee ^ Then thy heart was fully iatisfied in this. That no unworthinels could keep thee from the love of Chiift, becaufe there was nothing elfe butunlove- linelsinthy felf, and deferts of wrath. Why my beloved ! Look how- ever forward you were at any time, when you were newly convcrtv^d to elofe with a Promife, and to look after the love of Chrift i f o forward, and much more, ihould you be continually, becaufe you have had more experience of the love of j elus Chrift : you ihould have more Grace, and walk more like Beleevers. And there is the fame ground of Faith now, which then you had : and the fame ground to beleeve, that then you went upon. '^ -' 5. As men were at the iirft Converfion*, 'W ought men to be ( that ar^e Beleevers ) and nfmch more afterwards : Then thty were asgreedy of t Proraiie, and laid as much hold of it as the Child did on the Breaft, and as naturally. ' Asihe Apoftle mentions to lay hoU on the Comfort ginn by Chrifi. luentionirn r« ti^MMI *rf-« ^b^^^fcfc;,'*! 'fa afiaw^^tfSJ ro lay hold on the Comfort given by Chrift. • 8 p 8. *As ready of Qd'dfsto toghnje to thee, fo ready \ bu^htthou to be by faith to receive from /^im.H aft thou ! not found this by expeiience^that God hathheark- i tied to thy Prayers, and not let a word of theni be unanfwered ? That God hath given to thee upon awordfpeaking, when thy defires have been but lifped, and not exprefied .^ Thou haft experience chat Ibmetime when thou haft not made a thing the fub;ed:of thy Prayer, but only hinted it, or ini- plyed it *, yet God hath given it to thee. 1 hat Pe- tition in thy Prayer which thou thoughteft had i been loft in the crowd of them, he hath found out ? He hath feen which way thy mind hath ftood, and he haih opened his hand, and given it to thee. Thofe things which thou haft not infiftedupon in I thy Prayers, he hath taken fpecial notke of, and much regarded : ¥ot he is attentive to the Pray- ers of his people^^^/^c'w.i.i I. Upon a word of thy mouth, he hath been ready to thy help. Is there not much more reafon, that from an hint and infi- nuation of Gods mouth, thou Ihouldft be ready to beleeve ? Shall God be more at thy Will, then thou wilt beat his Will ? Shall he teach thee by his forwardnefs, and wilt thou be unteachableand undocible ? I fhall fay no more but this 5 That as it isabriiiiifhSpirit in a man not to be guided by Gods Eye ; as ic is in the Pfalms : ^e not en the Trior fe and 'Mule that hath no under ftandhigy but mufi be guided by the ^ye of the Rafter ^ Pfal.32.9» I fay, :ilitffaitriaitiih<'Uridef ftamiing^idiac raufiiije inftru&r Eje^fcylfuoh jdow>n!*r^ighE inftrikticaiG^^dlia it canncet ^undf^iJ^tand and: find outi theHiiJi^ofi Gxwd> 7 ?Ifiaico3 H bruici&Qcls.d!iaawilvnx)t:gotro, And a guilty Confcience to apprehend the wrath of God io ready ought a believer be to lay hold on the fulnefs of all that which the Prophets have reveal- ed concerning the love of Jefus Chrilt to us. Th^re remains fomething flill to be fpoken : Only I will fay this,! hat although thou art backward and hard to beleeve, God will not caft thee off. He hath his glory by overcoming our evil with h sgood- nefs. if Thomas will not without feeling of the prmt of his nails, and the wound of the fpear, be- leeve that Jefus Chrift is he that was put to dsath, it may be Jefus Chrift will be contented to come anduubare his fides, and his hands to hira, Job, 20.- 25;. ButasheiaidtoT/^aw^/, ^leffed is he that hath notfeerif and yet beLeeojes : So 1 fay that n\an is happy that hath Faith, although he be very dull and flow to beleeve ^ but he is ten thoufand times more hap- py whom God hath made quick, and fpeedy, and forward, and apt to go to Chriil to take in the Mercies of him, as he was prone to fni in the dayes of his vanity, and to entertain every motion of it. And fo much fhall fuffice at prefent. i^dv JJO'iQ ■n ■.,'•■ 7^ . i 1 -* ■yyi >i 3tl ■f -•'.! .-ri/JJ ^dttsoii ;:\' »ti»n>i \Jt wx}&: p 2 Of Unbelief) Or, the ^ant ofreadinef? i ♦**-'*****'*****'?:^***'^**^*'iP'i?'-S»*i-* CHAP. XIL The former Exhorration continued to endeo-voiir for a promptitude to bcleeq^c. Some have this iluickjie^of Taitb from their firjl Con^ojrfwn : Others attain to it by Induftry wider the mean f vrhicb<^od affords. Motives to endeawour for thJsTieadiuejiqfTaitb: i. herein principal- ly lies their love of (jod. 2. ^very good thing jpoken of in the (jofpel is to you, An Objedion Jlnfppered, s* ^0 hurt can pofftbly come to you by being forward to heleenje, Objed:. AnfwerecU 4. There h' no ground for their backjvardnejito beleenje. xAn Ob;ed:. Anfwered,. NOw in helping you to get this whiclil exhort youunto, you muft know that there are fome Chriftians tiiar. have a quicknels of Faith from their firitConverfion : Asiome Children are from the Womb of quicker parts and under/landing than others : So fome Chriftians are even from their new Birth, and Regeneration, apter to beleeve thano- thersare. The Apofllefaithin t/i^/ 17.11. of the menof ^ere^^. That they were iuy^vi^t^i, (it'stran- flated ) more noble : but the word figniiies better hred^ as well as noble. And it incimates to us that there is a different kind of breeding of Saints, Some are bred by God one way 5 and fome another, and they have Spirits accordmgly.. For the judi- cious receiving of the Truth, by the men of 'Berea^ and not to be led afide by what was fpoken, did a- rifefrom their manner of being converted. As it is faid concerning John ^aptifly That he vpof fanUtfied fromtbe Wombp Luk. i, 41. So while he was in the ^____ Womb, •jli.j(]i«ii.!j »i tim' I to lay hold on the Comfort ^iven by Chrifi\ ^y Womb, he kajjed and vauked, (as the wordi^k^^^^ iigniiies y tvben as he heard but only rbenjoice of the \ 'Mother of Jefus Chriji, Saruiified f^om the Womb j landthen in the Womb^ he is mighcy full of joy landgloryingin JefusChriit. Butchac isanexcra- ordinary cale : Only it proves the thing ilrongly. Sanietmies the work of a mans Converfion is fuc- ceflive, ic is done by parts •, God is long about it, ! it may be, years : He comes and toucheth the Con- I ifcieace, but ic is but a touch, and no conviction: TheSoulhathafenfeof fin, andof judgement, but it goes off again ; like a fit of an Ague that goes off again : which comes on, and then goes of, and he is well again, it goes off, and then God comes and fets it on; There are fome which after, or at their Ccvnver- (ion, have had large difcovery of their fins by the Miniftry they have lived under, but the Miniftry they have lived under, have been very Iparing in opening the Gofpel to them. The Golpel was preached legally and upon fueh terms that mens fingers were knocked off- from the Grace oiFered to them. Mark it now beloved i As when Parents do eat trafti and un wholf ome things, the Children that I they go withal, are bredful of humors and become groffe and exceeding dull : So' I may fay with re- verence, when at our converfion there are many coolings of heart, when God lets a man fall from the fight and lenfe of fin, and fin takes them up a- gain, then k comes to pafs that the Spirit grows heavier an4dull. Whereas when God makes haflr of the work of Converfion, the throws areftrong, and the convi^ion is home, and goes through and through : There is the abounding of iin, and the fu- perabounding of Grace laid open then the Spirit is more apt to take in the things of the Gofpel. But i< i 94 Of Unbelief ; Or^ the want ofrea^inejl Euc in the fecond place, you mufl: know chat j there are iome, Who although they have not this qinckjiefl of ^aicb from the iimnner of their con'verfir' ou-y and (jodf bcarii?^ ofibim in the rxomb of his mer" cy, yet they come to it by induftry and taking 'pains 7{nder thatmeanes vphich Qod afforded them, in T)eut. 6. 7. SaichGodcoche JParenc, thonflyalt vphetthefe things upon thy childm. Whec th^-^ni : which is tranlla^dTe^t:/.', but in the Hebrew ]C is DnJJ\yi and thou (hair Whec. As Iron be ng whetted be- comes Sharp although it be dui in its i'elfe : So dui parts with indufiry behig alwaies exercifed, do become poll'fhed and acute. My meaning is thac there is no beleever but by the uimg of his ta -th, he may in time come to be quick and apt to beleeve. A cioath hath not in it a readinels to take ^tx, but but when it is made into tinder, then the leail Ipark takes. The ufe of means makes you tinder, and it brings you into a fharpneis and largn^fs of capacity of Grace. You can never come to get Grace5or to be fpiritually wife by the ule of natur^e becaufefpiritual things are known by a fprrrual and fupernatural light. Lee a man ufe hearing never fo much, it wil make a mans fight no better: 8c it is an equal an alfurdity to imagine a mans ufe of nature fhould make h:m iupernatural. BiK though a man cannot by the ufe of nature come to fupeinatural l^ght, yet hen ay ( be ng madelpiri- tual ) by that little that he hath be made more ac-5 cive and nimble in the ufe of means, and fo come to greater degrees of grace. And this 1 cake, to be the meaning gf the talents ^lat» 25. 16. A man in- creafedthat Talent, that he traded with ; that Talent in kind gained. more of the fame kir^d ; be- eaufe it was of the fame kind, thecef oue k was geacc did increafe more grace : and becaufe it was of .the fame kind^theref ore it was grace did increafe more grace;' tolay hold m the Com fortgiyenhyChriJi. .95 grace : and becaufe ic was of the fame grace, it jmade a man rich, and able to every good work. I And having cold you my beloved chat there are khefe diiFerent forts of coming to quicknefs in be- j ileeving. Confider alfo. That fo yon baoje of this \ ' ^ic'jjiefpy it is at o;zd wbicb rvay you come by it, That \ readinefi of faith is afacceptahk which comas by indii flryy as if it had come by nature at their firft cou'v^r- \ fion. Which is appearent by this , That the ajter j decrees of Q race are c^ divine^ cPf thofe degrees of \ grace which are at firft infufed. To make it a little j plain to you. A man, luppofe, hath grace to fuch j a degree when he is firfl converted infufed into him Iritheufrng of the means by th;,^ blefling of theipint he comes to further degrees : thofe further degrees, ' j though they come by ih> ufe of meanes, yet are as ! divine, and of as celefl aia nature, as thofe that are infufed, wherein a nian is.meeriy paiTive. And , that is cle«:e from thefcripture, ^phe, 4. 24. The' Ap oft ie f peaks to beleeving Ephehans, that they '^ \Jhould put of the old man, and put on the new man 1 j ( that is do it more ) which faith he, fs created after \ ! (jod. He calls ic ftii the new creature, though done ' 1 by their means. In Math, i b. our Lord tels them, j that when they fhouid grow to a further degree ofj holinefs, they fhould be concerted. Recalls it j converfion, though it comes d vers wayes, yet it is ' the fame thing,, and r^afm makes ir apparent, be-^ ; caufe it is not the ufe of Grace which increafech it : but a mans uftng grace through the means doth touch God ( that i may allude unto the touching of , Chrifts garment ) and vertue, comes out from him- to ruake it increafe. ifaya man dochnor make \ Gface more by the ufingof it, as a i\\an lengthens tlie wire by drawing it througha mil, or as a man,| maK-es Gold chin^r bf beating of it. But a man doth 'n theufe of meanesjby that grace i 1' which' ■1 . Tt "■ ■ - t ir^ - • - *"-" * *" ~- -■ ■ j 06 O[llnbelief';0r^thewantofreadinej? m\ ii;i which he hath, draw neare tnto God wlio gives from hinilelf further Grace, as he did do a: the fir ft : So chat ic is alftil of the fame nature. And I lay in upon this ground, chat 1 may with more flrength of argument prefs you to get it, and take I ofFthedifcouragemencs chat are in men, who fay, j 1 liave a duland heavy fpirit and God is pleafed to I give me but a dul and a narrow capacity in taking , in of Spiritual things, and therefore ic is not I my duty to be thus aSive and ready in beleeving, ; as others are. i Lee me ad furrhei' to fee this on : As tvhat quick^ ncfi tbougettefl by the ufe ofmeaneSj k (M diriie of thofe \ that had it jvithout it: fo if thofe that ha^vd much quiC'^ \ nefl of parts by cona^erjion, do not ufe the meanes^ m- ; dujirioujlyy they become exceeding did. It fais out j. we find by experience : that as it is with fchoUars, ! thofe that are of quick parts are feldom ftudious : I fo thofe that are of quick fpiritual parts do grow Izay and floathful and more floachfui than others : ( if fuch unequal things may be compared ) As Horfes that are fiery are not lafling : As edges that are keen, are brittle: So beloved you fhal find by experience that Chriftians which are wonderftil forward at their firft converfion, come afterwards to live upon the fweet of thofe times, and lay not out themfelves fo effeftually and to purpofe as they fhould do. If they ufe the meanes induftri- oufly that have this quicknefs by converfion, they grow eminent in Grace. As where the parts of^ja- , kiiowledg and iearn1ri^-'i>"fotm^^tt^iWi^d^^^^^ 'j^[ av^ght giweinfta»cefriR^f^is. 'JBu?*!!^^^ me tel^pig^' SFhe bfintercheiron i§, tte^lbfe "^iih^ fiiuff t^ Uf, k^n^ .. Tiieanofery6il^Sb6^'fo'be 5rftW"itieaifu:s,^Thq, j duller the heart^ft,V tet ^4lt l^s Uv^ly ^^^^4^s l^^ay^ii^oiijvi^rtiiig^^fei^beetl.^'^^^B^ worn: of in^idv/ ' _. fe to lay hold on the Comfort gi^en by Chrifi. 97 Faith come en more flow with thee at thy firft con- verfioii ^ now thououghteft to beflirre thy felf. j Doft thou find it a hard matter to get any under-' ftandiag in any thing^which is mifterious and ful of depth o£ love unto thee : ^lisn take the more pains^ for the more dui the Iron is, the more llrength muft be put to it to make "it fharp. We fee it daily i by experience, that fonie Chriftians do giow to' doubt in their faithj and to difpute, and to delay. ] And fom.e who are doubters do grow to be very \ forward to beleeve, to nuch alfurance, and to ^ fharpnefs of underllandingin the myfteries of the ; Gofpel. The reafon lyes here : One ufeth the | meanes, and the otht-r doth not induftrioufly. And ^ therefore let m.e exhort both, them that have live- 1 ' ly fpiritual parts from their iirft converfion, to keep them. And thofe that have not had fuch live- j ly difcoveries of the grace of the Gofpel that they might beleeve. Labor to attain to them. And for that X fhal propound fome Motives, and fo if I can, drawto ajconcluiion of theText at this time. MOTIVE.!. I. Herein is principally the friendjhip and lo^e of (jod.IndeedhoY Qt3k.es sii that is fpokeningood [part and as wel meant. Gods heart is open and I Large. And when it is f o to you, be not you ftrait- ' ned in the application of it to your felf. The love of God is fo large that it gives al, and knows no bounds. In^ph, i. 3.^6 hath bleffed us tvitb al fpiritual blejjin^f, He bath given us al things that belongs to life and ^dlinefi J in 2. ^et. i. •3. How cand thou fay that thy heart is not ftraicj and hard .luilefs thou faift that his heart is ftrait, andiiard to j thofe that are his delight, and the children of his jlove -.when as thoU thinkell every thing he gives P too 98 OJ Unbelief ; Or, the iva?it of readinej? coo miich for thee to have, and pucreft away abun- dance of confolacion and grace fro.ii chee. l^ou ! fee here in the Texc that oul Lord gives this as the ground of the'r unbeleife \ that their heart was hard. A hard heart IS an unmerc'fulheait, anun- relenting heart : it is cruelty of fpiric. When a man does apprehend of Gcd fo, there is a kind of harihnefs and bruit ifhnefs, and cruelty of Ipirit to araansfelf. AUo when a man does debarrehini- felf and deny himfelf what God tenders to him. And as we love God becaufe he loved us lirfl, fo if we had but the love of God there could not be this kind of apf rehenfion. Let me eel you, MOTIVE. II. In the fecond place to encourage you to this. That there if not any one good thing jpoh^n of in the Qofpely but it if to you : your names are upon it, (^r ace and mercy and feaceis to the Saints in Jefy^ Chriftj As the Apoftle fpeakes every where in his Ep files. Ailthings are yours ayid you are Chrifls and Chrift is Qod'*s. iCor.3. 22. 23. IVhat e*ver you as^of the leather ftjal be gi^ven to you. And you muft ask^ according to his voiU i John 6. 23. His wil is therefore that youfhould have every thing that the Gofpel hath. As God faid to -nbraham, tAbrahamgoe abroad and lookjipon the hea'vens^and at farre as you canfee^andfurther^al is yours , and if you Can tell the number of tl)e ftarrs^ Jo fljal the number of your feed be,Qen 15. 5.I fay as God gave Abraham as farre as he could fee,or his eye reach : fo God gives all that he reveales unto the Saints. As the Sun is to every man, as if it were but one man that were to be inlightned by it: When a man comes to a feaft,rherc is nothing provided and fet before him,bucheisa liberty to take where he wil : So it is with th grace of the Gofpel. Obje^ to lay hold on the Comfort gi'V en hy Qhri/l. ^p ObjeU^ But how wil you fay whenas there are higher and higher degrees Ipoken of. Can 1 thin\ the bighefi degrees are xo beginjen to me ? I anfwer, That look as a man cannot fay he is not cleded, and he is not to exclude himfelf, but God ! niuft exclude him ; So neicher is a man to exclude i I himfelf from the higheft degree of mercy : it is no ar- I rogancy nor prelumption for a man from free grace ! to lookuponhiu.felf ( althongh moft vile ) as a , veffel of the greatefl favor that Gud can fhew a foul. MOTIVE, IIL 5. There h no hurt can pojftbly come to you by b$^ ingfoi-ward to belesnje, A woman may be too for- ward to accept of love from a man : (he may accepc of the motion to marriage too foon, becaufc flie is not bonnd to marry, but only on luch termes, viz, in the Lord. i. Cor* 7. 39. But it is an abfolute neceflary duty that lyes upon us to beleeve, and there is nothing to be done by a man before he do:h beleeve : For every duty that is pleafmg unto God doth come from love, and that comes from faith. The end of the commandment ^th^i commandment andal othet commandment s,f a it h the Apoftle) is looje out of a pure heart and faith unfaigned. i Tim. I. 5. You cannot be deceived neither. As a woman may be in the per fen and eft ate of a Lover-, if fhe looks not weltoit. You fhal find our Lord Jefus Chrift betcer and richer and kinder then any words are able to exprefs him, much more then any words of a Minifter, whofe underftanding comes Ihort of thefullHefsof the fcripture. [ F 2 ObjeU, 00 Of Unbelief '^ Or^ tie ivant cfreadinej? ; OhjcU^ But youwil fay, Af a man may toofopn after fhch^wfieatCj if he eates before he hd purged^ he vpiirelcL^fe : fo L have a fowl and aniinpurged hearty and therefore I may not hefo ready to beleenje. ^ . To that I anfwer. Faith is a purging Grace, In tAiff^ 15. 9. It is the proper operation of faith to huaible and to Sanftify. That as thofe fickper- foiis that Chrift healed had meat given thera pre- fently toeate, and yet that meat did wel enough with them, and they furfeited not : foyou may eate and feed on Chrift by faith freely, and yet be humble and holy. Ljyii^ was converted, and flie beleevedprefently. God opened her heart, ./4^/, 16. 14. The jaylor bekevedprefently,ty^f]Fj' 16. 31. And how humble was he to wafh the fe:^t of the dif ciples, as wel as juft> 'n being kind to them, un- to whom before he had ben cruel. Had a man been fick before and but newly recovered, if the meat he cates do purge the humor, whereof he had beenfick, it is as good as Phyfick. Now faith is Phylickaswelasmean, it doth as wel purify the heart from al fin, as it doth comfort the heart a- gainft fm. Therefore be thou v/hat thou wilt be. Be thy fins what they may be, be thy heart as bad as can be, yet thou maift fafely put thy felfpre- fentlyuponbeleeving. It is true thou canft not beleeve until thou arc fenfible of thy fins, dnd thy heart be humbled, but that wil come with eafe and lefs difficulty if thou putteft thy felfupon belee- ving firft. Your beleeving and going about that work,wilmake the work of humiliation eafyer and pleafancer toyou. The end ( you know ) doth injoyne the meanes to it. It puts a neceffity upon themeanes, andthefameneceificy that there is of its felf. As for example. If a man be to build an houfe '^i to lay hold on the Comforts giy en by Chrtjl. lo i houfe ( who hach none to put his head in until ic be provided ) he wil get together ftraw and timber, andgetthem with hufl^ he wil make haft to the work, why ? becaule he hath not whereto hide his head until his houfe be built : So i£a man makes this his work ^ to beleeve, if he laies a necefiity onhisSoul to lay hold prefently on the mercy of- fered, he wil let himfelf upon the finding out of fin and judging of himfelf. It is a great failinge, that Chriftians look at humbling and niourning as things good in themfelves, and not as means to faith. And from thence it con^s to pafs that they are dul to beleeve, becaufe they are not humbled : and when they are humbled, they are as dul to be- leev e as ever, becaufe I fay they look on thefe things not as coming from faith, and tending to faith, but meerly as things good in themfelves. Mark what I fay. As the confcience ought to be fo tender that the leaft reproof fhould ftiaaie it and convince it, A man fhould not need demonftrations to prove a matter and the hainoufnefs of it where he is guilty : A man fhould not be unto reproofe as a man at d barre of judgment,who pleads not guilty, 'whatever confcience tells him, until he be proved to be guilty by wittnefTes, and according to Law. Buc a man fliould ingenioufly confefs his fault, and receive adtnonition from his brother, fo farre as what is fpoken be truth, thouf^h it cannot be pro- ved:I fay fo farre as what is fpoken be truth,it ought to be acknowledged, though it cannot be proved. Now as a man oupht to be thus tender of confcience to receive a reproofe, fo he ought to be as tender in receiving of the promifes and the appreheiiilons of Gods love, if there be but the root of the matter in him, if there be but a good ground of poffibility and probability that he is fuch a one as Jefus Chrift raeanes welunto* For I befeech you dobutob- ferve 1 02 Of ^nhelief'^ Or^ the want of readme J^ ferveichere, which is che ground of al that I have fpokenj Chriftgives areproofe to them that be- j leevednot.As therefore a rjproofe of fm ought to be takenin one kind^fo it ought in another:a man ou^hc to be as tender of being found guilty of backward- ncfs to beleeve, as he ought to he tender of Berns; found guilty, or of yielding to the guilt in him of any other lin. Oi>jVEf 5 But Peradventure you wil yet fay unto ' me, ^oppcantbeje ftand togetl^er'-, A quicl^^fence of I fitly and a readinejl to belee^je'y If I have a lively and a frej}) fence of my own deferts^ that 1 can tak^ nothing . to myfdfhutfJf)ame,wbat have I to do with tt?e promifes oftheQofpel. h I anfwer, it is true, thou /lafl- nothing to do of thy ielf : but the ground of thy fa th, is not thy grace, but Gods gtace, it is not thy deferts, but the merits of Jefus Chrift. You fhal find that thefe two may very wel ftand together. The fervants of ^enhadady they came from their mafter, who lay clofe and durft not fhew his head being conquered by King Aijab, He was in a cave and fent out thefe I men to fpy out what likelyhood there was to come , upon any termes of Grace and favor. They look ' upon him as become the fervanr of a king : and yec notwithftanding they are as quick to lay hold on thekindnefs of a King unto him, as any brother. Thy Servant Benhadad/^itb let him live. Is my ^ro^ ri?erBenhadad}'et alive? QThy brother fay they") let himlive, i ^m^/5 20. 32. 33. As a man may have a fharp eye, and yet a quick eare, thefe two hinder not each other: So neither doth the quicknefs of the fence of fm hinder a man at al from beleeving. For confider it. The fence of] fm is wrought by God on purpofe to quicken a man to ,-- < ^ — — ''■■•• to lay hold on the Comfort gi ven by Chriji. 103 / tobeleeve. As when a man is backward in pay , j menc, the Creditor lets the Serjeant on his back, artdthenhe comes and brings the fumprefently : orelfebeggs mercy heartily from him. So God chargech lin upon a mans foul on purpofe, chat he may come to him for forgivenefs. Hbe Law if a School- majier ( faith he ) to bring us to Chriji Qui. 3. 24. A School mafter. The Apoftle fpeaks of condemning the moral Law. For he fpeaks of that which faith Cur fad is every one that continues not in the Law to do it. And he fpeaks in condemna- tion of the moral Lg w as fet out by the cereaionies which God had appointed :A11 the bloody ceremo- ny es were to fhadow out what our defercs were: that we Ihould dye rather then the beaft : and what Jefus Chr ft fhould in our Itead endure for us : Now all th s was to bring us unto Chrift. Therefore I fay there is no hinderance at al in the fenfe of fm \ unco faith. It is a doubL^ lin for a man to have the fence of iin,and not ro be ftirred up to go to thrift; yea, ^t is no fence of fm. For unbeleife is a fm,and as great a one, as any, or al that a man can be guil- ty of befides. Thy fenfe of fm is parciall which is not of alfin. Thy fence of lin is feigned and hy- pocr tical, wh^ch is not according to che nature of the fms thou knoweft. Unbeleife therefore being the greateft fin, mull needs have the greateft fence offorrow, itchy fence be as it fhould be. Take a Jew ufmg the ceremonies of the Law, were he afF-fted never fo much with them, but yet knew nothingof Jefus Chr-ft in them, it were fuperfti- tion in him, and not the worfh'p of God. So i fay^ if a man be never fo much afFeaed with the evil of fm, und the danger of fin, and is not thereby drawn un:o jefus Chrift, ic is no godly forrow: ho godly forrow at al. You fhal find yet fur- ther. That 0/L Of 'Unbelief; Or^ the want ofread'mej? That chel'ence of fin when it is kindly, doth of its own nature prompt a man co look out for par- don. This pardon mull be iiad : and this deliver- ance which a man needs muft be had, Ether from himfelf, ( and tlien a mans fence of hn is not good, by the Law; for where the Law convinceth, ic fhews a man that from it he muff expert no mercy, and by the doing of it, he cannot come to make fa- tisfadtion. ) If it puts a man to look for it from Jefus Chrifl, then it is but as a fpurre in his fides, or only as a warning peece that is Ihoc of by the fhip, which leads a fleet, that al the reft may come af. ter into the fame fhe Iter, or upon the iamefhore. Let me therefore my beloved ftirreyouuptothis. To be as fenlible of your fm, in being backward to beleevejas you are fenfible of your danger in break- ing of the Law. And all this ferves to clear the third motive,that is, that there can be no danger ac al in beeing forward CO beleeve. MOTIVE, IIIL 4. Lee me add another Motive, and that is this. There can be no good ground ac al for you to be backward to beleeve, or to put of the grace chac is offer ed in the Gofpel, no reafon 1 fay can be given for ic that is warrantable. You heard what ground CUE Lord Jefus Chrift doth analize it unto,he faith it is ^oUy and Sluggiftynefi^ bardnep of heart, and carnal joy that makes it L«/;e, 24. 25. ThO/C ground beloved which mofl people go upon is this. 1 hey are unworthy : They can do nothing fuitable to that grace which is tendred. It is too much for them. Is there any realon that they fhould be fupream and give a law to Gods bounty? Is there any caufe why the beggar fhould not receive, be- caufe he is not worthy to come under the roofe ? Is to lay hold on the Comfort p'Ven by Chr'tft. 105 Is this a ground, than the patient fhal not go to rhcr Phyiitian,becaufe he is fick ? or to the Chyrurgi- an becaufe his difeafe is loachfom and corrupted ? 1 faX there is no reafon whatever ( do but mark it. Hay, ) whatfoever thou thinkeil is good to keep rhee from beleeving for the prefent, wil be as good while thou liveft, that thou may eft never beleeve. Thou wilt never be worthy : nor able to walk wor- thy of the Lord unco all wel pleafing :Thou wiJt never be good enough for fuch a kindnefs and boun- ty to be beftowed on thee : If ever thou doft there - fore beleeve, it wil be with more difficulty. All thefe put off do but beget a greater dulnefs and liftlefnefs. As God took difpleafure ac ^Mofes and would not let him go into the land becaufe of his unbeleife. So Jefus Chrift ( my Text tells you ) wil grow angry and upbraid you, that you are Itil unfatisfied, and that you wil never come to the knowledgof the love, and tendernefs of his bowels towards you. Mark it as by often \^micing the ftomach comes to grow fo weak, that it can retain nothing : So many Godly perfons ( as experience hath proved it ) have come to be wholly unf at is- fyed in the matter of their eftateby delaying and difpucing with particular premifes. It may be God wil bring the time upon thee, when thou w^ik be glad and catch with al thy heart at chat cruft which thou now throweft under the table : Thy | leavings wil be daintys to thee before thou dyeft/ it may be. As our Lord Chrift told them at Jem- 1 falem, ^ovo the things of thy peace are hid from' thine eyes j'Mat^ 23. 57. 39* That is, there was a time whenas if they had but taken the counfel giv- en them, the Romans Ihould not have begirt nor! \ cakeiJi their City, nor put them to fuch famine andi :?xtremity, but it was too late : you fhal fay bleffed is he that comes in the name of the Lord* That is,! ^ JS.^^ ^^ yo^l o6 Of Unbelief) Or^ the^l^antofreadinef^ " I youchac puc Chrift now to death, fhal fay before you die. If now we had him alive upon the earch^we would heare his voice, and do according to ic : we would never Ciiicify again the Lord of life. So thou mayeft be brought to this, to lay, If the Lord wilbut nowcendcr, if he would but now reveal, and ofter that which I have refufed, I fhould count ic as a mercy of mercies, and count it my duty to lay al things afide to be made partakers of it. My beloved, I pray conlider ic. It is not the work of they that are beleevers only to keep the peace with God, and to keep your felves from being upbraid- ed by Chrift, and to abide in the ftate of faith, but you muft have a forwardnefs to b^rleeve, and a largenefs of heart to take in according to the larg- nefs of the promifes. Put this then into the num- ber of your fms, and write ic with great letters that you may fee it every day, as you turne your eye upon your confcience,that ic is a fm to reft m be- leeving the Prince of Salvation only : I rauft as wel receive in the promifes which belongs to the com- fort of my life, as take in thofe that belongs to the giving of me life it felf. Write this upon your hearts, that upon every reflection on your felves, you may fee this to be your great fin, chat you reft I iubeleevingfor Salvation, and bcleeve not exten- lively unto the confolation of your fpirit. It is your fin chat upon cleere evidence, that al this be- longs to you, and every objeftion muft be anfwer- ed before you v/il clofe with the promifes. There are many Chrift ia:ns that are fo exaft, and juft, and fevere to tkemfelves that as a man that is juft, if he Ibenamed inawil, andfo difcribcd that he thinks 'he may be meant, andycc he is afraid to cake any thing, becaufe he is not defcribed fo punftually buc that another may be meant. Or as a man that ir excreamlyjuftjthac wilnotcakea letter that hath | his to lay hold on the Comfort pv en by Chriji. 1 07 his name on it, imlefs it be direfted to him in fiich a place, becaiife he knowing not the party from whom it comes, and thinks there may be nothing in it of much concernment to him. There is fuch ju/lice andfeverity in the hearts of men, but the truth is,ic is cruelty and extream difhonor to God,co put God ( when he gives out of grace ) to deaie \ with you as if he dealt out of juftice. Look for al j the evidences that you can poilibly, if there be any I thing that may ( in the world ) make you appeare to be the perfons that are intended in the promife, get it, that is a part of your readincfs to beleeve: you may b« meant, and why net you as wel as o- thers : but though you have many doubts, if they be not exclurive,although that you have many fcru- pies, if they be not deftruftiveuntothe^rounds of raithjbc ready to lay hold on the prx^mife. Ohjeti. But you wil fay in ^ath. 13. 20. They arehlamedtbaf did forthivith r^ceive^jtbe vcord of (jod. They received the word of God with Joy, and anon they brought forth fruit, andyet they are rech^ned up among the bad ground^ and the ground of their apojiafy is laid on that* I ./2n/n?er,the reafon of their fudden rcceving the Golpelwas becaufeof the iiewnefs of i% and not becaufe of the excellency of the matter, or the truth of it : which I demonftrate thus : when as perfecutions and troubles did arife, and the fun came upon them, whenas they came to fee what they muftfuiler and loofe if they would beleeve upon Jefus Chrift, then al that which was preached concerning him, was not fo much worth as bonds and inprifonments, and poverty, and the lofs of al. Bur knowing the truths of Chrift, and the excel- lency of the things promifed by Jefu? Chrift, that Q z there 1 08 of Unbelief ; Ovy the l^ant ofreadlnej^ . there are no beccer things: thou niaifl: now as Toon as Ithou wile lay hold on them. V J Ifhal draw to a conckiiion. In AiiSy z, 41. you have the defcription or title of a good Chrifti- an : Tbcy that gladly recewcd the word. The firft and primitive Chriftians, upon whom the glory ot jefusChriftdidlliine;, they are faidtobe fuch as received the v/ord gladly. The word was the pro- mile that they Ihould have pardon offm: and the word of exhortation to beleeve uponjefus Chri/t they gladly received that word. Gladly received it. We are wont to defcribe a glutton thuS;, he hath a belly for every meat, and his hand is in every difh : And a Covetous man thus. If any thing be gotten, he wilbeluretohaveafhare in it. And a man than is over-bufy in other mens matters thus, he wil have an oar in every mans boate and be partner in every mans bufmefs. The difcripti- on of a GIfltioUs Chrillian is this , that he is ready and greedy to receive in the comforts of the.Go- ipel. If there be any revelation of Grace and com- fort he wil be fure to lay hold on it. Here.are two words to defcribe you, receinjing^ and gladly reccL njing, ^eccivingy which iignifies fuch a kind of re- ceiving as is made by an Inne- keeper of his Gued, or of a friend of a ftranger, or thofe bid by him ta him:Thole we entertain and bid as welcome ,we are faid to receive in the Language of the fcripture. IJe that recewef a VropJjetin the name of a Prophet /I\Iat. 10,41. That isjhethat is glad that by a Prophet the mind of God, is revealed to him, that bids him come in, 8c faith,chough he hath no Gold^nor Scrip, nor Shoos, &c. yet he fhalhave al things from him, I So they gladly received. They itood in the door 1 of the Temple, and watching al the time of the Ser- \ mo», when of Mofes and prophets and Vfalmes concerning me : and he opened their underftanding that they miglyt underftand the Scripture. And the reafon why this is a meanes, is becaufe the covenant of Grace is not only the mat- ter and objeft of our faith, containing al things that are to be beleeved to Salvation and the motive of our faith, ( that even as color doth draw the eye, lo the promifes do ftirr up and aft belief e in us ) R but n4 Oj'Unhelkf'^ Or^ the want of readinef bu: the covenant of Grace is rhe caqfe of Faith. This is thatvcord of 'Taith 1 a i t h h e , vobich voe preach unto yen, ^onu lO- 8. Ic is the caufe of Faith, for the Gofpel is that feed rhat brings it forth. JVe are begotten by the word faith the Apoftle ^aid Now mark it, if that which makes faith in the foul ro be in one degree, be conveyed to many degrees, faith wilrife in its degrees alfo. Every inflrument works according as the principal caufe works : Faith now being the inflrument of theCovenant of grace, fee on v/ork by it, according as we know or underfland the covenant of grace, fo our Faith wil work, i I There are two things in the Covenantof Grace, j which being underflood wil make a man very apt tobeleeve. The firll is the love of God. The fecond it is thelngagemenc of God. Firft the love of God. Before our Lord Jefus Chrift was to die and after he was rifen, before he did afcend, you may fee there was nothing that he fpak efomuch of to encourage their faith, at that his father' did love them, and that be voould alfo not hcwe them orphanr or ^atberlefly that he would fend the comforter to them, Al his Sermons I fay are no- thing elfe but of the love of God, and of his own love to them, that fo he might make them fal of Faith. The matters of Faith not being evident in themfelves, there has need be a pious afFedfion which fhould move and fet the underftand'ng and helpe ic to confent and approve thereof ; now the love of God makes us love him, asi ihal fhew you by and by. The more loving any one is to us or the more we are perf waded of his love, the more i« »'■ » to lay hold on the Comfort given by Qmft. \ i ^ more apt we are to beleeve every thing he faith. Now the love ofGod in the Covenant of Grace is glorious in two things, and both of them help to quicken our faith. Firftinthe£reenefs of his love. Secondly, in the bounty of his Love, I His Love is free, moved by nothing, but by j it felf. He loves becaufe he loves. For my names ; fake faith he,I have done thisilwilha've mercy becaufe voil have mercy ^ Rom. 9 i8. 'He doth alto the praise I of the (jlory ofbk Qrace.^ph. i. 6. So free is God, that he doth do good for evil. There is no prepa- ration to the feceiving of any thing from him which he works not. and therefore he hath a good wil andlove to us although we be indifpofcd.He doth do good becaufe he hath done good. He doth good often, becaufe he hath done it once. He looks neither for condignity, nor congruity, nei- ther for any thing that is worthy of his love, nor for any thing that holds any kind of Moral fuit. ablenefs,or may be any kind of inducement to love. The meaner we are, the more pleafure he takes to do good to us. The fpirit of the Lord is upon me, faith he y andhefentme to bind up the broken }oearted, andto preach deliverance to the Captives' If a. 61. i. Hehathrefpefi faith Mary to the Low degree of his hand^maid. Lul^, 1.48. Now this freenefs of the love of God, being without any groimd in us, being without any relation to any thing that is done by us, or to be done by us, it is a mighty gromid for CO make a man beleeve at al times al things. What is the great ftick of our Faith > that at which our feet in beleeving ftumble, but only this, that we are not meet for fogre^c mercy : we are great fm- R, 2 ners ij6 Of Unbelief '^ Or^ the want of readme/^ ners under much guilr, infinitely beneath, andun- fit for fuchcomnmnion and Favour with God. Or elfe we think that if we do receive mercy from, God, he wil require of us luch obedience, which we fhal never be able to performe : and therefore we think we had better refule the mercy ^ then be foundguilty double through our difobedience af- terward.Mark it, Theunquaiifiednefs,andunfuifa- blenefs of our hearts to the promife^a;iJfpeaks in^fuL 51. i. " ^ccor- wg to the multitude of thy Mercies do away my tranf" ^reffionr. T hou faieft it muft be fo, as which muft waih thee cleane: Mercies without bounds and bot- toms. Let not that hinder thy faith, for God is bountiful. And he gives according to his own eftate, foas becomes him to give that is fo Rich. Do but thou confider with thy felf whither thou haft more fin, or God more mercy. Can a finite creature do more evil than an infinite God can do good? Secondly, But befides that in the Covenant of grace, confider Gods ingagemenr. God is true and faithful of himfelf, but he hath bound hirafelf. A covenant IS a tie and obligation: and into that he hath cHtred. God hath enough to dif charge al his promifes. Men that have enough, may become poor before the time of the difcharge of their pro- iiiife (Tomes: hut the mercy of Qodinduresfor ever^ andihereitnoendof hk goodneflyVfaU S^« i« ^^n that promife may be in fuch engagements to others before hand that they may be as poor and as unable to pay as if they had nothing, Al the promifes that God hath made unto others, are but only tefti- monies of what he wil be unto us. The fcripture propounds what God hath done unto others, as the to lay hold on the Comfort gi ven hj Chr'tfl. up the ground of our faith, and therefore they have not exhaufled him, they have received from him. He is fill rich notwithftanding alhis communica- cions. Men are carclefs of their proraifes, but Qod Hevermindfiilofhh covenant. (P/^/. iii. 5- Now I befeech you my beloved contider how this is a mcanes to a mans faith, and a help to readinefs in it. Men do readily truft thofe that are able and careful of their words, when they give them a fpe- cialty or a bond. Now God hath done fo. Let me fpeak it w ith reverence. It is not free to God v/he therhe wilgive or not, what he hath fpokenof in hisv/ord to a beleever that is weak in his Faith. It is not free to him. Free it is to him thus, becaufe he doth it willingly : but free it is nor thus^ It is not in his choice, becaufe he hath fetledit and en tailed it, and he cannot cun it off. Meditate thou therefore upon thefe things. Keep the Covenant of Grace continually in thy thoughts, and fuflPer no- thing to take thy thoughts off from 4t. As when men goe into infeditious places they put a piece of fom antidote into their mouth that may prevent the taking of the infeftion, or fent of the aire there. So do thou as an Antidote againfl thy quefbioning and doubting of the fulfiling of the promifes, what ever they be, think of the bounty and freenefs of God in the Covenant of grace. Theufualheadof reafbning that Satan hiftders our faith by *, that either we are not fit for fo great mercy : Why God is free. Or elfe that it is wel enough if fo be we may have but fo much as may fave us from wrath to come : Why God is bountiful. I Or elfe that Godhath cafl us of: Why he is enga- _ ged 120 Of ^Unbelief; Or^ the ivant ofreadinef? ged. Audthac (hal fuffice to have fpoken of the iecoiid meanes. Thirdly, The third meanes to make you ready in beleeving is this, get the love of God. QaL 2. 20. / Iwe the life of faith by him that lonjed me faith he, and ga.n of fins • i theTSJurfeofJins . worfe( al things he^\ being conjidered) than fBlaJphemy^ than. Murder. It's true the Apoftie faich he did it ignorantly, but he faith his unbeleife did blind his eyes. And that ignorantly in us which comes from the prevail- ing of any hn, is like that blindnefs in men which comes from fome venemous humor. As it doth notexcufea man from murther, becaufehe did it when he was drunk, becaufe he was the caule of that intemperancy : Neither doth it excule a man from an Ad:, becaufe it is done in paffion, although paiFion makes him do it. So neither dotii it excufe a man of ignorance, when it comes from hisnotufmg the meanes of knowledg. But that which I ihall now fpeak to, is. To con' vinceyou ofthegreatnefs of this fm, or to exhort you to bcleeve. That Unbelief is a fm of fms. A fm 6 l>^t going to Chrijlfor Life and Salvation I A fill may be accounted great in regard of it? felf, and in regard of the perton that commits it. ! i In regard of its felf, A fin is great, either fimply* confideredjOr comparatively. Simply and Abfo lately conlidered. That Sin is great 5 which Firflofall, isagainftthe end of the Law, and which the Law- £[iver doth aim at in the Law. i I I Secondly, That fin is great which is oppofite to the Principles of all Obedience, and whch takes away the ground, and the formal cauie of Subjecti- on to any thing. As the Apoftle James faith. That he that brea\r one commandment brea^^f all, |am.2. 20. becaui'e he llights that Authority in one iin, which ' flighting will make him account lightly of any o- ther : So alfo that tin whatever it be that crolleth a principle of Obedience, that deadens that root of the tree of Life, muft needs be a very great iin. Now unbelief is iirft againft the very end of the Law: ' againll the end of the Ceremonial Law. That is c leer in QaL 3. 24. Chrift is the end of the Law, It's againft the end of the Moral Law, as it was given to man : for the end of God in that, w^as not that man ihould be faved by it : but it was that mian feeing how weak the Law was in regard of the fleih, there might be a way made for life and Salvation by Je- fus Chrift to be received. True, conlider the Mo- • ral Law by its felt, audit requires no fuch thing as ibeleeving: it knows no Surety: it takes no pay- ment from any other , but the party himfelf : But the Moral Law in regard of its end,thc fupreme and hidrendwas, to ulher in the Covenant of Grace. The i$ an exceeding great Sin. The Covenant of the Law was buc a way to bring CO pafs the Covenant of Life. The end of the Com- mandment ( faith the Apoftie ) is love out of a pure hearty and faith unfeigned^ i Tim. 1.5. And what he faith concerning that Commandment of Preach- ing the Word, is true concerning all Command- ments as they are now given. There is no Com- mandment but God gives it now to this end, that is. That we may feek Salvation but by Faith in Jefus Chrift. Unbelief therefore is a great fm becaufe it is contrary to the end of the Law : And it is as contrary to the root of ail Obedience : for nothing purifies the heart but Faith, becaufe nothing buc Faith iayes hold on the Blood of Jefus Chrili, whereby we are not only wafhed, but rhe Spirit of ^race is purchafed for us. Faitii hath the greateft efficiency to make us holy , becaufe it tetchech llrength from Jefus Chrifljand adeth that ftrength. It''s not only a begetter of Grace, but alfo that which doth excite, and by perfwafions draw forth that Grace with all its afts. Comparatively every fm of the firft Table is greater than thofe of the f e- cond : For this is the firft and great Commandment^ That thou Jh At love the Lord with all thy heart : And. the Second is but like unto it. That thou flmlt love thy Neighbour Of thy fdf, Matth. 22. 38, 59- In this refpeft alfo Unbelief is a great fm, becaufe it'*s a- gainft the firft Commandment, and ackno wledgeth not the authority of God which reveals Faith, and requires it as the only means of life. And againfl the fecond Commandment , becaufe it Iayes not hold on Chrifl whom God hath inftituted to be the head of Salvation. And againft ehe Third Com- mandment^, becaufe it makes all the Ordinances and means of Salvation to be in vain. And fo I might go through al thereft. But 1 I 8 Hot going to Chrijlfor Life and Salvation^ But befides this, As fin may be faid to be great in its fe If 5 ''•• So it may be faid to be great in regard of them that do it. If Firft it be done voluntarily *, in ^fal 19. 1 3. Dan)id calls a prefumptuous fin, a great offence. Unbelief is a voluntary fin in all , but moft of all in them that are in trouble of Confcience, who when they are prcffed and driven, who, when Sal- vation is offered to them, do not yet giveupthem* felves unto it. That is a great fin which is done a- gainft Mercy. How ihall 1 do this great evil ( faith Jofepb^ andfinagainftGod ! There is no rdercy like this that God iheweth, that God hath given us Mercy in Chr iff, and that we are but to reft on him, and to have all that is in him. That is a great fin which brings great evil upon us. So faith Cairiy ^y fin is greater than I am able to bear- No fin brings fuch punilhment upon men as unbelief, in Tieb* 3. 12. Tal^e heed left there be in you an evil heart of Un- belief ^ for then how fhall you efcape the judgment of God? ^e that tranfgreffed Mof e s laWj died undir two or three witneffes j Of how much forer puniflj" ?7ient fl)aU he be thought vporthy^ isrc, Heb. 10. 28. 29. He that tranfgrelTeththis law of Faith, fhall have the m.oft fore punifhment. If any man tvith-draw himfelf^ ?ny foul flj all have no pkafure in him : *AndI will fwear in my wrath ^ he Jhall never enter into my reft. But although the fin of Unbelief be great in alltheferefpeds, Yetlbefeechyou count it great in regard of ics Self. The leaft degree of Unbelief is a very great Sin. Although it be without ffubbornnefs , and have is an exceeding great Sin , hath as little of the Will in ic as can be. Ic is a hainous fm to reject a truth oflGod, for God is truth j But efpecially for a man not to beleeve^ or not to receive the truths of the Gofpel. Tbisk Condemnation h that is. This caufeth, and this is a figne of Condemnation 3 That light is come into the I Worlds and men lonje ddrl{nefi rather than light. So I may fay this is condemnation that this light is come into the world, that unbelief is the great fm, and yet men will not receive Jefus Chrift. It's a dangerous thing for a man to account of any fm fmall, but efpecially unbelief to be fmall, which is a ihutting the hand when God would fill it, a refu- fing the Grace which God offers, and which men need. What Prince would bear with that Malefa- ditor, who when he oifers him a Pardon, doch refufe it ? What Parent would indulge that Child, who, when he began to be kind, would be erofs and op- poijte to him ? That man that accounts anyun Imall and efpecially his unbelief, is either in love with his fin ( for love covers a multicude of fms ) or elfe he is under the deceit and temptation of fm. For when the Devil doth intend by one fm to bring a man unto another, he makes the firft fin fmall^ like unco Theeves, that firft put a Child into the Window to open the Door for all the rout of them that offer violence. Or as they fay the Devil firft appears unto Witches in the Ihap'e of fome fuch Creature as they can play v/ichal j but afterwards appears like a Lion, full of fiercenefs j or fome fuch like kind of Creature. So before Satan doth drav/ men to fm, there is but little dfcovercd^ but afterwards he makes it appear in all its foulnefs. If fm after the ad of it dbth not appear in all its foulnefs, then it is but a leader ^ and a guide to ano- ther fm : There is fome worfe thing than unbelief that the Devil aims at -, if unbelief feems but afmal -_^ E Sin. I 1 o Not going to Chri/ifor Life and Salvation^ w I I iin. What^ it will come unto/the Lord knows. A I man is not? exempted from the greateft and the worft of fms that doth not beleeve, and that counts unbelief a f mall fm. lnjoh.12.^, mark what our Lord faith, lie bath blinded their eyes, and hardened their hearts, Whofe ? They that did not beleeve ; as you may fee in 'yerf. 37, 3 8. That they could not fee with their eyes, and hear with their ears^ nor under' ftand with their hearts^ left t^^ey jhould be converted^ \ andljhould^jealtbem- That is the great fin of Un- belief: As it's evident thus y becaufe this b Iin d- nefs and hardnefs is a judicial a(^ of God : when God doth blind and harden a man, he gives him up to that blindnefs and hardnefs which was in the heart before, and gives him up to that fin, which he before conunitted* Their fin before was unbeliefi and therefore the hardning of them was to make them not to think unbelief to be a great fin. If they had feen unbelief to be a great fin,ic could not have been, but they fhould have been converted They JhaU not he Converted, That is. Never changed, but fhall go with their fms to the grave. IwiUnot heal them- Healthem- felves they may ; but their fore fhall break out a- gain : Comfort themfelves they may, but they fhall never be foundly freed from their grief and fear. Do but obfervc how the manner of fpeech is altered ; Leaji they jhould he converted^ and L flwuld heal them : That is, They fhall never have any balm from me to cure that wound : Never have any grace from me to heal them of tho£e corruptions. That fm now which is thu« greatly punifeed, muft needs be very great, becaufe God he never over-punifh- eth : he being jufl, doth not give more than the fault deferves. AU unbeleevers are 8ot thu? pu- \ nifhed •e^ — — ■ I III ^^^m^^m^^m^^m^mmi^mm^^ is an exaeding great S/«. II nifhed : AU unbeleevers fall not into this ftace of being never converted ; but that which I aim at is this. That the Unbelief of thofe that have the means, and lay not hold on Chrifl, they are the lubjefts of this judgement 5 and^their unbelief doth ^iipofe them to this judgement. As fire comes into the Wood that is dry *, fo doth hardnefs of heart andblindnefs come into thofe that count Unbelief fmall, and not into others under the Gofpei ; fet down this therefore as a Principle, That thou canft not fm a worfe fin than not to feel thy need of Chriil : Nay rather,you cannot fin a worie fin, than when you feel your need of Chrift, not to call your felvcs on him for fupply. In John 16. 7, B. you have another like inftance, When the Voly Qhoji which is the Comforter jh all come, whom I will fend in my ^ameyhefhaUcon'vincei^^e World of fin, hecaufe they heleeve not on me. The World he fpeaks of there, is the World of Eleft : for the Holy Ghoft comes as a Comforter to none elfe : there is none elfe hath this conviction j for ifs fuch a conviftion which the holy Ghoft makes to be jpeculiar unto Faith. In Heh* i i.i. the Apoftlc faith, That T'aith if the fuh fiance of things hoped for, and the evidence of things not feen* That word Q^^^^h©-, ^qjidence'] is the fame word which Chrift ufeth in John for C Conmnce,"} So that compare the places together, and that cominctng being a peculiar work belong- ingunto Faith, is here a peculiar work belonging untobeleevers^or theEle^* All the three Con- viftions go together ; Conviftiou of fin, and of Righceouihefs, and of Judgement. Conviftion of Sin, and of Righteoufnefs in Chrift, and of Judge- ment ; that is. That the Prince of this World is judged, that ha^h no power in law •, that is, bound up,andreftrained, that he cannot hurt. So now is all the power of Satan taken off from thofe men, E 2 that iy-- IX 2^t going to Omfi for Life and Salvation, that are convinced of fm,andof therighceoufnefs of Chriftjandof judgement. All this makes it ap^- j pear to be meant of the Eiedt, He convinceth them of fm^becaufe they beleeved not : that is, he makes them beleeve that uribt-lief is the greateft iin. it's true, all other This ate included in this, bun this is only named j as that which the holy Ghoft makes theSoullenfible of above all others. As when we fay a man is unthankful , v/e mean that he is f ome- what clfe befides that : So when we fay a man is anunbeleever, we fay a great many other fms, but that is the woril of all. As the Lord faid concer- ning ^bawah^ He fhall know that I aai the Lord , ! that is, although he will ROt yield in other things,' yet he fhallyield in this : So he will convince them \ of ftn, becauie they beleeve not 9 that is, although i there may be many evils which they take no notice 1 of, yet as concerning this, they fhall be fully per- ! fwaded, That they cannot do worfe than tb be at a j diliance from, or co live without Jefus Chr ift. Na- | turally men do not beleeve this, and therefore they do not, becaufe they arc fo full of Pride and enmi- ty unto Jeius Ghrift, and fo full of in judicioufnefs,^ and ignorance abont fm. As the great Stars appear to us as little, and tbe lefler ftars are not difcerned. So naturally great fms make but little touch upon the Confcience, and lelTer fms none at all. As the \ Jewes 5 they quitted ^J.rrczbaf, a notable Thief, but i condenmed Jefus to death out of their pride,and of j their hatred to him : So naturally we take the part of the greateft fins, and would quit them from lin- fulnefs, if we could ^ and efpeciaily we do fo about Unbelief. Have not i caule, faith one > And have j Dot I reafon ? And is it not better for me humbly j to deny my felf, than boldly to prefume, and caft ! my felf upon Jelus Chnlt ? That fin that we : would fparCj that fin we keepclofe. InLul^eiS. \ II. you j is an exceeding great Sin* 13 1 1, you (ball find the Pharifee did glory in this, . Thathetvoinot as that Public auy that is. That he j didnot feek Salvation by beleeving on Jefus Chrift j as the Publican did. That Publican /wzte/ on the bre^j^, and faich. Lord he merciful to me a fmner. Through him (whoai the propitiatory fignified iu the law) dol look for to have mercy by, and none elfe : I can plead nothing that I have done, only Hook for favour through Chrift. This is the fum of the Publicans Prayer. L than\Qod that I am not as thh ^ublicany faith the Pharifee : This word [tbif'] doth Note fomething in the Publican,where- by he was diftinguifhed from all other Publicans, LordIamnotCovetous,nor an extortioner (which were the common fins of the Publicans ) and that by which he did diftinguiih himfelf hy^ was his fesking for Grace by Jelus Chrift. For the Pha^ rifee and the Publican are fet down as Examples of two men, that take two wayes of going unto Je- fus Chrift: The one going by his ownrighteouf- nefs, the other going by the righteoufnefs of belee- ving. So that the Pharifee made ir as a pare of his glory, that he ftooped not unto the Condition of Faith. If you would but a little confider what men do, when they are under the Law : when the Law is gotten into the Confcience of. men, and doth con- demn them,and hath put a man as ic were into hell, , on this fide hell, ( which hell we hope men may be I delivered from, which differs from hell that men j are caft into after death)then do men try all wayes and means to find mercy : Then men confeis in- genuoully ( Judas did fo J what that fin is which in their thoughts, and by the light of the Law, is moft grievous^ that then they urter : Now do but hear- ken to a man in trouble of mind, and you fhall hear him roar and groan out his complaints: Lord, I have been proudj unclean^ unjuft, formal, unfaith- ful: 14 Not going to Chrijl for Life and Salvation i\x\ : ButUtcle of this : Lord I am an unbelecver, I one chac looks not unco the pardon, one that goes nocoucofmyfelf unco Jefus Chrift. O! picpoftc- rous thine, Toconfefs thy fms againft the law, and noc chy nns againft the Gofpel. Moft people arc ape to chink it a duty not to beleeve : that ic is an humble, felfe-denying, religious tendernefs of heart. It's againft juftice Taith the foul that I fhould go free from the punifhmenc threatned It's not for one to beleeve who hathlftnned as I have done : It's fit for me to lie down in forrow Why do you cal a Fiflia Serpent, and an Egge, a Scorpion > Faith is your duty, let your 1ms be what they wil be. It's not your duty forthwith to be affured, but it'syonr duty to go to him that can ailureyou. It's your duty to lay hold on Chrift, although it be not your duty to put away al your fins as if they were covered. Thou haft done ill to fm, thou wouldeft do worfenotto beleeve. Thy ^ iins have ftung thee. Thy fting wil be incurable if thou lookcft not up to the Brafen Serpent. It^s noc for thee to beleeve upon any ground in thy felf, but thou haft the free grace of God to beleeve upon and it is thy fm if thou doft it not. And as we do not beleeve unbeleife to be the greaceft fm, fo naturally we cannot beleive it : for faith is a grace commanded by the Gofpel, and noc by the Law. The Law takes hold of every man, and demands the debcof himfclf. By the moral Law we are only bound to beleive whac God faith to' be true^ and that is only the common na- ture of Faith: The proper nature of faith lies in go- ing out unto Jefus Chrift for pardon. Now mark ic. We having nothing from pure Mature buc this, Noc to diffent from the Law of God and not to queftion the truth of what it faith, it is impoflible a man ihould count non-depcndance, or nonrely- 1 ance upon Chrift to be the greateft fm. For accor J ding ■ *i I 1 is an exceedinggreat Sn. 5 ding to rcafon or nature, it is a farre greater faulc not CO allenc unco chings evident in cheaifelves,chen ic is noc co affent unto ceftimonies : For according unco reafon^Teftimony is the weakeft ground of ai- enc or underflanding thac pofliblycan bc:Buc al- though it be ouc of our power co beleeve, yet wc rauftbeleeve, for here begins che work of che Ho- ly Gholl, he convinces che world of Sin, becaufe they beleeved nor. God by revealing of our duty, andofcheuglinsfsoffin, doch give power co avoid ic. As the ftr ipcure muft firft be underftood in the leccer, before we can underftand che fpiricual Cenfc^ andchemindofGod in ic: fowe muft firft know by che hearing of che eare what unbeleifi is, before we can know it fpiritually- CHAP. n. ^rgwnemsto provoke to a heleife^tbk truths that ] 'Vnbeleife itfogrtat a fin. I. 'the perfetfion of the underflanding lies in a Conformity to al the truths of Qod* Lh Tofeelthegreatnefioffmn tbewaynottofeeltheiveightofSin. 111. Sor^ row muft be proportionable to the fin. I F. The Concomitants of beleiving unheleifeio be agreat finy are many, i . It pak^s the confidence of our opcm righteoufnefiy and humbles y the pride of our hearts. 2. It wil bring the ^eart off from delays about beleiving. An Objftion answer- ed. TOftirre you up therefore unto this, Firft know that the perfeftion of your undcrftanding lyes in being conformed unto che cruchs of God, of what |forts f o ever they be as wel iu the things that make againft 7 6 2^ot going to Chrljlfor Life and Salvation^ I againft you as in the things done by you. Its as wel an Evangelical faith to beleeve, that he that be- leeves not fhal be damned, as to beleeve that he that beleeves ihal be laved, ^vj^rl^. i6. i6. Its the per- fection of the underftanding as wci to know the greatnefs of a fin, as it is to know the goodnels of a promife. , It is not the matter, but the formal rea- fon by which the underflanding alTcnting unto things, is made light in the Lord : As iome iJivines havefaid, that if men could fubmit to the juftice and power of God (although God ftiould inflict the paines of hel upon them ) they fhould not be un- happy. 1 may fay much more here. Although it wil fil men with a great deal of care 8c folicitous pain to know that they are guilty of unbeleife, and that that is fo great a fm, yet beleeving the greatnefs of the fm wil make men happy becaufe the guile is but a particular evil, but the knowing of the greatnefs of the lin, is the receiving of a divine truth. Every negative is founded in the affirmative, as the know- ledge of evil is founded in the^'knowledg of Good. A man cannot beleeve a fm to be great except he hath much of God in him. He muft know the wil of God and own the authority of God, and efleemof the having of his favor. And as no man can think it any great fault to hurt another, whofe good he looks not after, fo no man can think the refufing of the grace of God by Chrift to be fo great ^ fm, "if he do not efteemof the grace of God as fo great a good through Jefus Chrift. II That fm which thou feeleft to be greateft that thou ihalt never feel the weight of. As fin grea- tens in our eyes, fo it leifens in Gods eyes. . in ^pm. 5. 20. Where fin abounds ^ grace fl^^^ fuperabound. j Not in number but in quality ,there grace ftal much ! more abound. And I told you the fenfe of the fm- ' \ fulnefs isan exceeclin^great pn. ty fulnefs of unbeleife is, anaft of rheHoly Gholi: as a comforter. They that defpake,do not defpaire becaufe of the greacnefs of fin (for then they would notd jfpair, and thereby add a fecond fin to it) Nor doth defpaire arife from the greatnefs of the punifh- ment of Un ( for then would men be afraide of com- ing prefenrly into it) but that men think it no other fm they have done but fuch as they may fatisfy for, 8c finding they cannotjand being difappointed ther- fore it comes to pafs that they fay there is no hope for them. 1 11^ rtsnecef&ry for you to know the great- nefs of fin, as wel as the fmfulhiefs of fm, becaufe forrow for fm muft be proportionable to the fm. There muft be a proportion between forrow and fin, ■ but not a proportion between forrow and the de- j grees of fm : That is, look how high a man hath gone in fm, fo great muft his Sorrow be, ( for the leaft touch of heart that is Godly, is prepara- tion enough to beleeving ) but it muft be accord- i ing to the kind of fm. All Godly forrow is ci^ntvouty I MA7i?f Thou tookeft up the way of faith, becaufe God laid that command on thee. If that which led thee to Jefus Chrift, be that thou maift not difpleafe God and Jefus Chrifl, thou mayeft find al things which may give thee con- tent. • Obje^. ^ut fbme voil fay J Ibeleenjeiinbeleifeis fo great a fin : Thisl do^ I linje bolily. There is no duty^butlpraUifeit: Canfh thou thinh^tt the fm of fmfthatlgonottoChrifi:, In lohn, 6. 28. Toufljal find that when the bearers of Chrifh were repronjed that becaufe they did not loohjn their hearing to have the offer of life':, they faid^ What ftial we do that we may do the woirkes oiGo6}As iftheyfhould have faid, vphat is there to do more ^ do but tdLm what there is to do more, andvoewil do it.andyet theyvcould not do thatvpork^of Qod tobeleeve. i ; ,^ j, .,,i /,: I Anfwer, Firft, Thou canll not live? holily un lefsthoudoft beleeve; imputed and inherent holi- nefs goes together. In Vfal. 32. z. That mans fpirit "/;io-.; F 2 hath 20 1>lot going to Chr'ijl for Life and Sah at ion ^ hath no gu ile vphof.' iniquity the Lo rd co not the peace which Chrift gives to his people,. You may do much, but in wirnot be truly good, i Thofe 2. Cpr..[ 2 2 lS[ot going to Chrijlfor Life and Salvation Thofe duties alone do you good, thofe prayers^ thof e leiiiioiis, thofe mournings chut are as bellows to blow up and quicken the iparks of faith in you. Thole diicyes become fin unco you wherein you pray away the fenfe of the need of faith. Ihac which duls your fenfc of your need of Chriftis a iin, and the gieaccft iin, becaufe Jefus Chrift is the glory of God the Father. Oh^ that I could per- fwade with your hearts that you have more to do with the Gofpel, than with the Law. The Law is your rule, and the Goipel is your principle. Ic lyes on you more to beleeve, then to do any work befides. Y ou are worfe under a doubt,than you are under an inclination to any other hn. When chou coniefl: to view over thy fms with a righteous judg- ment, thou wile fay, Oh this pride of heart that hath ipoy led thee,becaufe it harh carried thee on to duty. Thou wilt fay much more, Oh, this unbe- leifeof heart that hinders thee from clofmg with Tefus Chrift. Thofe fhal have the fhroadeft pun- ifhmenc that have not beleeved at the lafi; day. Let your heart therefore go out moil: after faith, and with draw your felf mofl from that that oppofeth faith. A wifeChriftian affoon as he fees whither a temptation wil lead, even to truft to any thing without Chrift, or to fit down withouc Chrift, he begins to ufeal helps againft it. Satan comes and whifpers thoughts of uncleannefs into his heart, and he faith God forbid : Why doft thou not /ay fo againft thy unbeleife > When he faith it is not foitheeto be in Chrifts armes who art fo filthy anduncleane ! Why faift thou not, Lord, refift Satan > Doubts come to be great andunanfwerable, becaufe thou lookeft not to them in the beginning. Kever let that man be counted a Saint that wallows in drunkenefs, or any other ftn. But if this makes a man more a Chriftian that he bcleeves, than that he abftaines is an exceedinggreat Sin. 3 abftaines from moral faults, thenchac manis leaft ! a Chriftian, that hath leaft faith. Therefore come ■cothispafs, do^sTanldid, fay, Lord, I have ma- ny fins thou knowefl, but this is theworftofal, evenmy unbeleif€. «i?4?#4?4?f #'$"^ i 4? * 4* ^'•^^ 4? 4? 4? 4" 4 •'''l?'l'4?4?4?4?4? CHAP. III. Objedt. Jl man bath no power to bdeere* Anf wer. ^nbeleife a fm againji ^atitre, ^an loji bis . power to beleeve, Impotency is not the next caufe of Unbelief, b fit fomevphatelfe. It is the Hypo* erify of our hearts to plead this Impotency* Jin Objeft Anfwered. Qod accomits itaQloryto bimfelf: for m to ta^^ him^ when we ha^ve tried all other meaner, Oh)t(k. I do nothing but fm^ andisitafmformenottobeiienje :' Anfwer, Objeft IT may be faid^ How can unbelief be f o great a fm ieeing a man hath no power ^o beleeve > aiid it is queftionable whether he ever had that po- j wer to beleeve when he was in innocency ? A man is now dead in fins and trefpaffes. We cannot beleeve of our fel'veSy it k the gift of Qod, in ^ph. 2. 8. The fame power that wrought in Chrifl when he was raifedfromthe dead,^ the fame power doth work inthofe that do believe, ^ph. i. 20. that is, After believing they have need of that power to preferve their Faith, and to carry on their faith, til they come tobefealed with the fpirit, and much more need', therefore have they of that almighty power to make them to beleeve. Is this f faith thehear.t of a man ) fo great a fin, not to beleeve ? You may as wel fay^ It is a fin not to make a World : or for a man not to quicken the dead*, or for the dead not to make one alive. God requires of no man im- ^^^ ^^ pofTibilities, Q^ Nof gohig to Chrtftfor Life and Sahation^^ pofTibilicies, or rhac they fhould do that which is peculiar co himl'elf. xAnftv. ICs moft certain my beloved ( for Anfwer unto this) tha;: it is not in our power to beiecve. In 2. Thef 3. 2. AU men have not faxtb : Luc in the Greek,in the original it is thus,ou m>7writ ymm: not al have faich. The negative Qnot ] is put before the univerfal note [^ al] and by an Hebrewifme or manner of fpeech, the meaning is this,thac there are not any that havepov/er to beleeve. %pt all have faitb. That is, not one of al, hot one nor other of al mankind have a power to beiecve. This muft be rooted and grounded in your hearts, elie God wil not inable you to heiQ^VG:f/)rhefillf the hungry with good things ^and tbi rich he fend f empty away. In huks^ i«53> 54* *He helpr bis firvant Ifrael. That is, he hath helped. Thofe in the Scripture that are ex- pounded to look to al the poor, and to releeve them in their neceffities are called helpers, i. Cor, 12. and the latter end. Now as the treafure is to be given to the poor, thetreafury of the v^hurch is to be given to the needy, fo God gives out only grace to them that are not able, and that have not wherewithal to help themielves. Who wil releeve a rich beggar, he that can help himfelf, and wil not ? Andagain, thedeeplenfeofa mans inability to lay hold on Chrift, and co beleeve, becaufe that is a work of fuch a power, that can be no d fcourage- ment to a mans beleeving, becaufe no man is requi- red to beleeve in his own power. And the lame power which doth work faich is therefore revealed - and is an exceeding great Sin. 25 and made known chat we may beleevc, God doth unbare that Aim to this very end, that he may- work faith in us. Nor my beloved is our inability to beleeve any excufe of the fm of unbeleefe. If you do but com- tider that our impocency to beleeve, our cannot be- leeve, it arifeth either from our nature, or from a juft judgment of G od. Fromafpiritual;udgment of Godyou fhal read it doth arife in John 12* 39. 40 They could not beleeve ( faith the Text ) bccaufe that Ifaiah bad faidy be bad blinded their miridfy and hardned their hearts^ that tbeyjhould notfee^ nor underftand^ nor be conver- ted. And in AUs. 28. 25, 265 27* the Apoftle faith. That they did not fee nor under ft and becaufe their hearts were tvaxedgroffe, leajh they fijould fee ^ and un- derfland^and be converted : and therefore he turned from them as thofe that there were never hopes of, that they would beleeve. When God doth pimifh any man fpiritually, it is by giving a man up to that fin which he was guilty before of. So the text faith in ^om. i . 24<.That becaufe that when they hjiew not (^odj they glorified him not Of Qody but were vain in their own imaginationSy he gave them up in the 24. ver. to uncleann^ through the lufls of their own heart. Our fins being the caufe of this judgment, therefore this impotency, this want of power to beleeve, can no way excufe our unbelief. Confider as it comes from natural impotency. It is either the feeble nefs of nature, or its infufficiency in innocency , or fmce the fal. I befeech you mark what I fhal fay, becaufe it tends to great convifti- on. I . Although we be fallen( mark what I fay ) yet the fm of unbelief is againft thofe principles which are left iu our nature, by which we aft, and by a whicn i 11 m. ■_! i_liw WmTi - • - m m t mmm^t - r - - ■ j 2 6 ]S[ot going to Ch/tjl for Life and Salvation, - 1 whichweareaftedin other things. Thefe are in I men chat are fa lien natural principles not onely to ' preserve th 2 ir kind, but to keep awak^ their con- 'iciences. And even againft thofe natural princi- ples do men fm by unbelief. Nacucaliy men hold this, that whatfoever God faith, is true, although they underftand it not. And therefore you fhal find that the Heathen would receive a riddle, or fome iefitence fro.n their oracle as infallible, al- though they were not able to find out the true mea- ning of it. By nature wc know that God can no more fpeak falfely, than he can do wickedly. The (/irft caufe cannot do ill.There is naturally in men a fear of wrath and /udgment. Nature t^s men that they are not the firfl, but an inferior being, and have their dependance on another, to which they muft give account. There is in us a felf love and a defire after happinefs. Now unbelief is againft al thefe. For it makes God a lyar. How can it be faith the foul) ThatGodlhouldbefokind, and have fo much mercy ? That I who am fo vile, fhould be fo muck in his account, and have fo great things for my portion ? Unbelief hardens the heart againft the wrath of God and judgments to come. And as faith is the means of life, fo unbelief is the refu- ial of the means of our happinefs. Ob;edl. Tea ( you wil fay ) That, that proves \ not that it is a Jin againft that defire of happineji . which is in m by nature^ becaufe faith and happinefi is above nature^ and is not in Jfs by nature'. AnfcQ. Firfl:, but mark what T^/zZ faith, Thathe didftri've if by any means he might attain unto the re- furreUion of the dead by Jeftis Chriji^ Phil. 2. 1 1 . So it is the work of nature to ftrive in the ufe of any means. Grace makes a man ftrive (as Vaid did)with \ _^ underftanding "^■—w^t ».m is an exceeding great Sin. / uuderftanding and liking of them. But nature tea-, chethamantoftrive in any means wherein fafetyi may come CO it felf. Asfor example. In th^ bo- dy of a man there is fuch a natural care of himfelf thachewiltry every medicine although it be to a choufand that he hears wil do him good. Tel one \ lick of an ague, or of the ftone, that this and that is goodforhim, hewilfubjed^his body tothe ufe of them., andufe them continually 5 and not be weary. As there is in the body this care, and therefore ic ufeth this means, fo there is in the foul too natu- rally. For the foul is as careful for its prelervation, as ic is for the body. And therefore in 'Math^s, 7.the Scribes&Hypocrites came to fly from the judgment to come, to che baptifme of John. And J^^^rhat he might ef cape Hel, becomes and tels the llory of his treachery againfthis Lord and Mafter. ihac there may be no miftake in you, the fummeisthis. That nature doth as wel lay hold on al means thac are revealed for its prefervasion, as Grace laies hold on al the means which are revealed with knowledge and approbation. Therefore imbelief being anegled: of che way of falvacion, is a fin a- gainfl nature. Secondly, Suppofe a man to be never fo impor.enc and unable to beleeve, yet he hath brought that upon himfelf. God juftly, buc yet out of his Soveraign power, would have this Law, that which the fir ft and fecond Adam did, he would have com- municated to the pofterity, thofe that are accor- j ding to the flefh and fpiric of them. Buc yet chere ! is no fin that comes into us by nature, whijch we ^ make not our own by approbacion and loving of ic. \ \ We aft over again AdamM^m, and do thac in our j flefh which we are guilty of in him as an Head. We \ have loft therefore our power to beleeve. And j i . G 2 thac [i y ' ■ ■ ' ' . .. T I . I I 28 Not mng to Chr'tjlfor Life and Sahation^ I that you may linderftand that, A power ( you muft know ■) CO a thing may be loft two waies. 1. Formally, when th^ quality and habk of its fe if is loft. 2. When rh^c wh'ch is requifice to the in-being of that quality is loft. As for example, A man lofeth his feeing or hearing, as wel when he lo- ferh the organ, the Eye aud rhe Ear, as v/hen he lo- feth the power of feeing or hearing. There muft be fuch a thing as the Eye, and Ear. as wel as the fenfe of feeing and hearing, for the organ and the fenfe are two different things. So there is required to faith, an humble fenfe of our nefcience, or that we do not know that which is beft to our happinefs. There muft be a reverent refpeft, and efteem of God as one who doth know and wil not deceive. There muft be a love to him, that fo what is not evident in it felf to Us, and to our underftanding, may be taken upon his credit, and affeftions to our good. There muft be laftly a fubjedion of heart, to let God do what he wil with our underftanding and afFeftions that faith may be formed in us. There is no man can beleeve, but muft have al chefe. He muft acknowledge that he knows not what is beft for him. He muft account God, as him that is only wife and able to dire ft. He muft haveja love too, and a reverent efteem of him. . And he muft be fubjeft to him. Now beloved \mark it. I Suppofe that Adam had not the formal power of ( faith, andhabit of faith4n him, yet notwihftan- ding there was ill t/4^ ^. A Hotgrnng to Chnfljor Life ahd Salvation ^ care to difcharg^ what is charged : So I fay in this cafe. Haft chou known fuch dayes?and have there been fuch ofFers?andhaft chou made fuch refufalls? donhoufono more. You ihal find this cleerely in^cb. 3. 9. 15- Where the Apoftlc incimares chacGod wil beare with men as he did v/irh the Ifralices forty yeares in the wildernefs : He wil give them a time afcei" al i^eir refufalls of him in which, if they accept, they fhal have f-Jvacion. Tb day if you vail beare bis njoicjy bardm not your beartfj as- your fatbers didy wbo grieved me forty yeares hi tbe voildcmi'p. The Holy Ghcft doth prels them upon this ground^ becaufe they had deferred it long, like unto their fathers in the wildernefs, therefore that they would not deferre it a day, but beleeve on the Lord Jefus Chrift. Do not harden your hearts, fo much as to forbeare a day : This day, before it goes over thy h?ad. Nay this home as foon as thou goeft from the ordinance, take thy foul and fay, foul, is not this the word which God fpake many yeares, and which thou continually puttefl off. Oh patience that would forbeare me ! and Oh mercy that would be io kind I Oh Soul, do not delay ! Let my fins be never fo many, and be- leeving be never fo great a work, yet 1 wil not dif- pucel wil not forbeare. This isalthe time that thou haft to beleeve in. And Confider that God wil take it as a glory to him. For thee to cake him when thou haft tryed al I other meanes : when thou haft fucked other means, i andfindeft nothing in them, that thou wilt come and lay thy mouth at his breaft of Confolacion through Jefus Chrift. Although chis hath been a ' diihonour to him chat thou wouldeftnoc come to himfooner, vet he wil put this interpretation on! J it, chat thou doft comxe roacknowledg more in him. I ' then! is an exceeding greatpin* 35 I then thou doft in al the world befides. ]tis not I felf love neither, when thou feeft in him that which 1 thou I'eeft in nothing but himfelf. And thou fhak noc be refufed. The wanderings of the children of Ifrael in the wildernefs, and their unbeleife, was a meanes to cut many of them oif from entring into the land which God prepared from them. And fo God might juffly when men are fo unfatisfyed, leave them to their unfatisfaftion : And when they wil do nothing but doubt, leave them, to their doubtings. He might fay, fuch times have I fhewed my kindneis to you, and you would refufe it, I wil fhew it to you no more. You fhal dye without fee- ling of your fpirits, if you be converted : but if you be not converted, you fhal never ha,ve it more. But he wil not do lo. For in John^ 6. God gave : Chrift commandment that he fhouldnoc rejed: any that comes to him. Look on thofe words as the ibed of life and of faith to many a foul. In verf. i 37. All that the father hath gia)dn to me^JhciUcome to me, for thfs is the fathers wil that fent me^ that of all that he hatij ginjen me-, 1 Jljoidd looje J20thmg, Mark it. It'^s not he that comes before ; he hath run into fin and hypocrifie : Far xhat do- ;£i:rine were not proper to that auditory. For they j were hypocrites that made Chriit to beleeve that they beleeved, and carryed it m their profeflion, for they came to Chriit, but it was for loves : He . doth not fay he that comes nov/ or now, but at any ; time, he that comes tome. There is no time fet, I becaufe there is no time fetfor.the refufalof any I wheirthey come. And he faith, this is the end of this camming. That as Abraham flood in the door 'to entertain thofe that palled by : So Chrift faith i to the ioul, Oh pore foul, thou hafl wandered for - ry yeares, Come. And thou that hafl fortifyed thy foul with al the doubts that Satan could help H % thee :^^ ?^ot o-oing toChriJlfor Life and Salvation ^ cheewich,Come. And thou chat haft gone from nie,l Come. And do not lay chou wile come hereafcer buc come now. Do not lay, chou haft nor come: andcherefore thou wile not cake me when I come No, come, and 1 wil receive chee, faichhe: for I can but do whae ehe Faeher hach laid on me, and this ehe Father hath laid on mc, that al that come ; unto me, I fhouid receive, and loofe none. And] look into /p. 50. II. You wil find none iKal lyei down in forrow, but be that hjndles a five of bis ovcn^ ! and lyes down by it. Let a man be in darknefs,and fee no light, ana be in feare of the law, yet if he wil pur away difcomfort, and take comfort from his God and reft upon his God, he Ihal fee light, and although his bones may be fore a long while, yet he ihal lye down quietly. Qh'j^Cc.fBjnyon vpiI {ay unto we, I do nothing in the world hut fm^ and is it fin for nienot toheleeve^ and not to come to Jefus Cbrifi ? Anfwer. Coniider what you have JnTyp-m, 4. 5. To bim that vporketb not, hut helee^veth on him that juftifies the ungodly ^ his faith is counted to bim for righteoufnefi. Ungodly men therefore you fee are to beleeve. And faith doth not juftify a man or do him good as it is a quality, but as it is a relation, and not as it is chat which doth alter the difpofi- tion, butasic is that which doth alter the ftate. A man is an ungodly man according to the Law, when he is righteous by the imputation of the righ- reoufnefs of thrift. He is not righteous by any inherent righteoufnefs after he beleeve$,buc becaui^ that God imputes to him al that Chrift hath done. And therefore as Chrift faith in John^ 6- 29. If thou wilt worl^th^ worb^ of Qod, heleeve on Jefus Chi^iji. , , CHAP.! is an exceeding great Sin. CHAP. IV. / I The Anfpper to the former objeU. continued, i* Sin- ners are the ohjeU of Jiiflification, 2. SanUifi- cation k not neceffary to the Offence of ^aith 3 When we come to Jefj^ Chriji^ tve are not ac* ' cepted for the dignity of any voorhjvehanje done. 4. ^eith^r are voe received to pardon upon the condition of voorhjng for future* 5. The pre" fence of good rvorl^s ts not neceffary to make ^aith faving. Obje dc. It may he faid hy a foul j I do nothing elfe butfin. The thoughts of my heart are oiily easily and that continually : xAs foon as ever I do hut begin to fet myfelfand toflirre up my felfto any duty ^y on would not thin\what'Legions of lufis do come forth '.1^ this a fin in me ( that am fucha one) char. I beleeve not ? lanfvveryes. Forfirftof almarkit, the objedli of juftification, it is linners. The jfirft and the i niaine adt of faith is to lay hold on Jefus Chrilt for j pardon. This makes unbeieife fo great a fin, that Chrift is not accepted to the pardon, or for the pardon of our fins, through beleeving in him when we feel that we are condemned.no w this aft of fa irh is done by an ungodly man as the Apoftle fpeaks in ,^k|m. 4' S* To him that worh^th not hut heleeveth ^Whim that juftifies the uni(odly^ his faith is conn' \ted for righteoufnefs, Juftification, and Sanfti- fication goe together, Though faith and al other graces are together in regard of time, yet in order of nature, Faith is before them. But we are flrft I juftifiedl 3? ♦ '1^ # 4? •I' l> 4? *> ^ 1^4' * '1^ ^ 4? 4? 4? ^ 4? ^I" #* 'J* 4? *?? 4^ 4? I? 4? i' *!? 3^ TSlptgoin^ to Chrifl for Life and Salvation i juftiiied and then fanftified. Juftificacion refpedls ! and regards not any grace in us, buc looks upon t. us as guiky : For its a contradiftionyou know to grace pardon one that is innocent : or to forgive him that doth not owe a debt. He niuft be a tinner \ that is pardoned. In juftification God doth nor look upon our no nor upon fdith in any other ref pjft then as it is that motion of an humble and guilty per ion to himfelf for holinefs^and juftihcation. Ko man can bepardoned.but he that is fuppofed to be gu'l- ty.fo no man can be juflifiedjbuL he that is fuppofed at the fame time by God in that act.Sc h\ thac way of God communicating himfelf 8c giving out of him- felf jto be ungodly.lt is not the vital and effential adt offairiito bring forth good works to fanftify.to niake amanholy : That which is the very life of faith and by which it mud be defined, is to go out ofamansfelf unto Chrift for pardon and righte- oufnef s. When we do beieeve in jefus Chrift, we are to look upon him in al his offices : But how ? Formally, as he is a Prieft : for fo he juftiiies : and as executing his other offices to this end that we may" be holy. It is not our faith upon Jefus Chri/t as a King that juftities, whereby he rules al our cor- ruptions, and fubdues al the thoughts and imagina- tions of our hearts to the obedience of him : no n:ore then it is our faith upon Chrift as a Prophet that^uiiihes, v/hereby he teaclieth us and maketh us to know the things of him. So Chrift Jufi:iiies as j hefatisfiesfor us : now that he did as a Prieft by offering up himfelf as a facrifice to God for us : IJm| highPrieif in the Law was as wel a Judge in '||P Sy nedrion and Confiftory ( For they were to bring the m.atters before the prieft that were hard and difficult, and that were to be punifhed ) but the high Prieft did not make attonement for the people buc i is an exceedifiggreat Sin. buc only as he cendi-'ed up fome thing which repre- leiited J efus Chi ills death, and attonemenc there- by : So though we have benefit by a I Jefus Chrifls otfices, As a Prophet to teach us : and as a King to j y as a Prieft doth he juftify us. rule us : yet only 2. Confider this alfo. That as God doth look upon us as finnevs in the aft of juftification, and confiders not our Grace : So Sanftification or good works are not neceffary to the eflence of faith. Holi- nefs folio wes faith, and is the fruit of that atf of Fa'th, but its but a confequent^ and not the forme and being of faith. Andthereafon of that is this, becaufe Faith is living, and doth lay hold upon jeius Chrrft, not as it doth fanftify and bring forth good works in us. But as it is an aftediionate aflent Uuto the proniifes that are made unto us by Jefus Chrift. Suppofe this, that love* (as they fpeak ) did informe Faith : that Sanftiii cation did ; enter the very Definition of Faith, or that good ! v/ or ksfv/ere eiTent'al unto faith that would fave a j mans ioul, yet notwithftanding they are not efCen- j tial unto Faith as it doth juftify and fave. Althe proteftant writers are wont to exprefs it in this cafe after this manner ^ That as it belongs unto the , conftitution of a man that he fhould have a body, back, and bones, and head, but yet although that belongs to his conftitution, and Perfeft (late, yet there may be many humane afts done without thefe : which depend not upon thefc, As to know, and underftand : For when the body is in the grave, yet the foul is in Paradife with Jefus Chrift. Back Jk)ul, and Body are requifite to a man, but not to al the anions of a man. So although good works are neceffary unto the conftitution of Faith, yet not unto this Faith as it doth fave us, for we are jufti- fied by Faith in Jefus Chrift. 3. Yeti 39 Ao Not going to Lhrtjtjor Ltje and oalVatton^ 3, Yet FuLchcr confider chac k is not for the d'lgnity of any work that thou haft done, that thou arc accepted when thou comelt unto Jefus Chrift. It's nor the dignity of thy faich, for fakh is the pooueft Grace : to give oui aff-jnc,or teftimony unco a thing, or to beleevc, or to know upon a ceftimo- ny hnch lead ( as 1 have fhewed you heretofore ) of cheperfedionof ainan in it. We cruft indeed men fomcimes for this reafon, becauTe they have deak worchily with al parties they have had to do withal. We inquire if a man would be trufted by us, how he hath dealt with others that have truil^d him, how he hath behaved himfelf, and if we find that he hath kepc his day, and made good pay then we credit him. Buc that is not che way chac God v/ould go, to give us Salvation upon truft, for faich and woVks are as oppofite in thepomt of ;uftifica- cion as light and darknefs. 4. Nay, as it is not the dignity of our works for which we are received, neither of Faith, nor any thing elfe,fo neither are we received co pardon upon the condition of working. A man ought not to lay hald upon Chrift upon this ground, becaufehe wil ferve God for time to comeiChrift dothnoc receive a man uponthefe termes, chat he having beftowed his life upon him, hefhould therefore recompence that favor by after obedience to him: good workes are not the condition of our faich,nor of our accept- ance. 5. Nay lee me add one thing more. The vefy prefenceof good works is noc neceffary to mal^ faith faving or to faith as its faving. though they be neceffary to that faith which doth fave. 1 fay the Erefence of good works. And che reafon is this: ecaufe chac Sanftificacion follows Juftificacion, as an efFedi| I is an exceedinggreat Sn. aneffe^upoiuhe caule. Good works do not go before a mans being juilified;, bun follow his jufti- ficacion. And fo the Apoftle lakh expnefly. %omt 3. 31. That we do by be leaving upon Chr ill efta- I blilhcheLaw,8cbeing;ufl:ified by faith 1 6. ^any are called, although they be not chofen* And a calling, is nothing elfe but a voice crying to one, and perfwading tht?m to do fuch and fuch a thing. So far an Hypocrite may go, as to heare a voice within him upon mighty and ftrong reafonings, urgmg him that he would not take any other courfe befides Jefus Chrift to helpe him. Hence is an exceedhig great Sin. 45 Hence it comes to pafs that many would not yeild to the dodrine of Popery, although they fecmed to fet up good works, andfet up the doctrine of the , fcripture under paine of damnation, bur did alfo • fuper-adde good works as the caufe of Salvation. But as in a commandment there is a declaration of the way to fave a man by. So there is a putting forth of power to eifeft this in us : which is decla- red to be wel plealing, and which muftbe done without which a man cannot be faved. And this is properly the command of Faith. . A making us to beleeve- That this is comprehended under a com- mand, is plain, both by our common u£e of the] likefpeech. As we fay, onehathnot the command of fuch a one, that is, he wil not do what he would, but what he lifts for al him. We fay, fuch a one is under the command of a State, that is, fuch a one whom they can fet upon what work they pleafe. So it is in thephrafe of fcripture. 2 Cor. 4. 6. (jod that commanded light tojhine out ef darl^ nefiy caufed the light of the glorious Qofpel tofljine into their hearts : And he f peaks exprefly concerning beleeving.This is only unto the eled:, therefore the Apoftle faith that they are fuch as periih to whom God doth not caufe his glorious Gofpel thus to fhine. Therefore, faith is called, rhe faith of the power of God. Andthe fame power worhj it in ?^i-, fhatraifed Chrift from the deady Eph. i. 20. And in Eph. 2. 8. We arefaid not to heleenje ofourfehjes^it ts the vc>or\pfQod:,and vpeare created there unto. Now the putting forth of this power, is only to the ele^. Thispart of the command is not toaL God faith tonofoul, beleeve^ but he doth caufeiiim to lay ' hold : that v^ry '^yord doth give him a power wher» i>y he doth cleave unto and embrace Jefus Chrift. In^iath. z^. 2P» Chcift ceils them that they fhould gQg 4^ ^STot going to Chriftfor Life and Salvation^ I Goe abroad, and they fhould make men difciples, and he faith, 1 am with thee to the end of the world. That is, he would put forth his power where he pleafedupon fome as he thought good, to make them to be that, which they taught them they fhould be. Its a ;u(t tiling with God, to require rhat of us, which he doth not inable us to per- forme. As its juft for a Creditor to require his debt of a debtor, although he gives him not wherewith |al to difcharge it. ^God is not bound, becaufehe rells us v/hicfi is the path of iif^, to give us Itrength CO walk in it. He works to wil and to do of his own good plealurc. Let me add therefore unto this, as you ikal find in I JobuyS. 24,. That faith is faidtobea Cora-! mandment, ( whenhefpeaksof thofe that are al-| ready converted or tl^dctdS) T^b is is bis Command" \ weutj thacwe, (that is as you ilial fee before, we that have confidence towards God, and we that ; love not in tongue, but in deed and in truth, and! we for whom Chrifl layed down his life,and in qjerf^ 16. And we that fin not, but are borne of him. It is a Commandm.ent to us ) that we fhould belee^e, that is, go on ftil to beleeve onChrift Jefus. The jubjefts of this kind of command of God or this aft of God commanding are only the eleft, thofe that are called to grow up in beleeving in the feare of God. Now when the Gofpel comes among men, its preached indefinitely : Goddochnot fay who are eleft, or who are not. Every man ought to cake himfelf ashimto whomthe meffage is fent. And every one ought to take notice of the direftions given to eternal life through beleeving : And be- caufe chey do not, therefore cheir fin is great. And is ah exceeding great Sin. :7 And when God makes us co beleeve^we refiH: him: Al- though he overcomes us, we oppole him, & akhough he mafters us5&alchough faith is efFeftually wrought in us, yet becaufe its wrought againft our wils^ it is a very great fin. I fay though God doth fo com- mand, as that faith is wrought, yet ftil there is rea- fon why men fhould fee the greatnefs of their fm of unbelief, becaufe faith is wrought unwillingly, a- gainft oppofition. God makes men that would not come, to come. . He draws them faith the Text ^one can come to me except my father which hath fent me draw him^ John 6. 44. God may fay of a 1 whom he brings by his power to Jefus Chrift when he hath joyned them to him, as a man may fay of him I whom he hath faved out of a danger by a flrrong force: Suppofea man be carrying one over the water in his Armes, he would not go but faith he fhould die if he went : Suppofe it in the cafe of L^Jt, the Angel comes & plucks him out by force that the flames fhould not take hold of him:Suppofe theman or the Angel faying to any one in fuch a cafe. Here youarein fafety, but it had bin no great matter if you were not, for you deferved to be left in the dan- ger: Why fhould any make themfelves a toyljor put themfelves in danger for you, when as your life is not fwcet to your felves. So might God fay to a man when he believes, thou art unworthy of the blood of my Son: How unv/illingly didft thou come. Thou floppedfl thy Ear : Thou didil with- draw tliy heart and thy thoughts from the things that I fet before thee. There is a juft caufe of complaint for God againfl the unbelief of him that doth beleeve, although he be efFedually prevailed with. Therefore there is a great (in in unbelief, al though it be overcome by the power cf God^ fo that there is nothing in that objeftion neither. For unto chofe that have it declared v/hat would be pleaiing unio » aS le the Lord thy Qod, Tim k thefirfly and the great commandment* ^aih. 22. 38. And of al fms againfb the iirft table, thofe are worft which are againft the firft 8c fecond commandment. For Chrift calls the firft Commandmenc,and branch of it 5 ( Ihouflyaltlonj^theLordthyQodJ the great Commandment. Andthe reafon ojFic, why the fms againft the firft and fecond Commandment are greateft, is, becaufe the firft Commandment requi- res the acknowledgment of God as God in his ef- fential Glory. And the fecond Commandment re- quires worfiiipping of him according to his own appointment. It's a great fin to take the name of God in vaine,which is the third commandment: that is, to ufe any of the holy things of G od to any other endandpurpofe than he hath commanded. And its a great fm to break the fouith Commandment : Therefore he that did it with an high hand, was (by the Lordhimfelf ) to be put to death. But I th£ is an exceedinggreat Sin, ')9 the thiid and fourth Coirimandments are bottomed and grounded upon the firll and the fecond. For therefore youmuft not ufe Gods name in vain^ be- caufe its high above al other names, and hi the firft Commandment God requires we (hould fen him up as God, Andthereforeyoumiuft noc have any o- ther day to fet up to worihip God in, becaufe it doth belong unto God to fet the time for his people to meer him in-,becaufe God hath told us in the fe- cond Commandment that he wil be worfhipped af- ter his own wiL Althis I have ipoken to ihev/ you that you muft look unto the things command- ed, whither they belong unto the firft and fecond table. Nowunbeleife is a Sin againft both thefe great Commandments, agafnfi: the firft and the fecojid Commandments. It's faid concerning jl- brabam'm^om, 4. 20. ^eheleeqjed and gave glory to Qod* He therefore that doth not beleeve takes a- way Gods glory. He Sins agamft the firft Com- mandment. And I befeech you my beloved do but aske the reafon of your own Confciences, why you do not go to Jefus Chrift for Salvation?do but I fay aske your confciences this queilion, why you do not go to Jefus Chrift? & you Ihal find at the btotom of that(what ever be held forth) that there is fome mean 8c low elleem of (jod/om falfe appre- henlions of him,w hereby you turn him into an idoL either it is thisj^od cannot lorthis^that ^od wil noc forgive fo great Sinners as you are. You think that (jod wil not a(5t as a ^od towards you.j Not freely, and therefore you being Sinful, dare not expeft from him : Nor infinitely, and therefore you a- bounding in tranfgreffions, do think that he v/il leave and forfake you, tfiac either he is not juft to r equire fat isf a d:i on V or nor. fo faithful as to make goodhis pro.T.ife. Looktothe bottome of it, and though you pleade unworthinefs, yet'ftil chereis L 2 fome 6o Not going to Chrljlfor Life and Salvation^ 1 fome' Atheiftical thought:, fomething that is con- trary to the giory of God as God, 1 lay fomething contrary to the glory of ^od as ^od. It belongs to the glory of ^od as §od to work infinitely and freely, and to do every thing, and to be a com- municable good. Yea, you fhal find unbeleife to be againft the fecond Commandment a Ifo : becaufe it rejed:s the counlel of^od in Chrift for our Salvation: For God hath no fuch great and glorious ordinance to convey himfelf by as Jefus Chrift. He is the firft or- dinanceihe is the wel-head.God took his perfon and filled him,that he might fil us.Thofe that walk with Jefus Chrift, however they wil fpare theperfons, yet they cannot but condemn the practices of them that caft off Gofpel Ordinances, becaufe they are Gofpel appointments. But if infteadof them^they fhdl bring in as the Heathen did. Oxen, and Ima- ges, and Sheep, and Serpents, then would we judg their fm to be exceeding great. We judg of Pope- ry as dangerous : And its an exceeding great fin a- gainftGod, becaufe they worfhip God after their own inventions ; He that fhal caft. off the Ordinan* ces or Inftitutions of the worfhip of God, provokes God to his face ( for the Ordinances are called his Face) he fpits in the face of ^od if he defpifeth them, and takes to himfelf the authority of ^od, if he fets up to himfelf any means which hath not a ground from the word. Now they that leave Jefus Chrift do fo, becaufe they leave him who is the great Ordinance, if a man rejed:s Chrift by unbelief, herejeds §^ods great Ordinance for his falvation. And if he thinks to go to Heaven by any L other way than by Chrift, lee it be what way it wil be, he takes to himfelf the power of his own fal- vation *, they do either lit down^in the finfulnefs i of their fpiriCjdefpairing, Or becaufe theyufe the f waies> ^^■■•^^"•"■•■•■•■■■■VWM is an exceeding great Sin, ■ ¥ 6i _waies which are beft in their own Eyes, that they r 'think wil help theniielves. Therefore iinbel ief is a great fin, becaufe it is againfl the things which principally tends to the glory of §od. Again, Concerning the things commanded. If you would know the greatneis of a fin, you muft enquire whether the things commanded to be done, be fmal in comparifon of the things to be received by doing of them or not. If ( faid ^aaman the AiTirians fervants to him J the Prophet bad required thee to doe fome bard things WoMjh thou not have done it? How myAch more [tnce he faith y tvajh and he clean ? As if they fhould have faid, This is but a fmal thing for thee to do, to cure thee of thy le- profy, fuch a dileafe as that which all the Phyfiti- ans have failed in, and cannot help thee. In this r efpe 6t unbelief is fo great a fin. 1 pray confider it : Although the leaft degree of faith, be out of our power ( for its the gift of God and his work- manfhip. In fE]>/^. ^. 8. His gift i not only as he doth give means to us, and we improve to fuch a purpofe as beleeving is : but as he is the immediate infufer ( for he f peaks of creation, you are created Co fuch a good work ) I fay, although it be out of our power to beleeve, yet look upon faith in it felf, audit is the eafieft condition, and the leaft that can be done for the attaining of falvation. A- mong al the graces of God, there is none that hath lefs of us in it than faith hath. For we know by faith : not from the things themfelves, but from Gods teftimony. There is none of al the graces that are more eafie to execife than faith is to him that hath grace. What if God had commanded thee to live in terror, and rackings of confcience, and doubtings, and amazements5fuch as thou h^dft it may be when God broke open the door of thy heart ? What ifthouhadft heard nothing but thuu- j ' ders \ i 4 ) i 6l ISlot going to Chrijljor Life and Salvation^ ders, and hadftieeii nothing buc lightnings al the dales of thy life ? What if ths Lord had required of thee fiich things as thou nor thy fore -fathers were not able to do, as the Apoftle Ipeaks in tAcis i^. concerning all the ceremonies of the Jews ? What if fo be God had given us a ftock as he did in the firft Adaniy and put us under a Covenant a- gain, to ftand or fall by our own wils ? Ought we not to have done it ? or we fhculd not have been £aved? But when God faith beleeve, he faith no more, buc come, and I wil give you power to come: Caft off your burden : Take your eafe in me. Put your hand into your treafury. All is yours, Caft al your care upon me. Be nothing troubled. Be one with my Son, Be beloved as the fon of God is, through beleeving, Have the fame love that I bear to him. It thou canft not do this, yet thou ough- teft not to think it a hard condition, becaufe it ( I fay J compared with the falvation that comes by it, it is the leaft thing that could be fpoken of, or commanded by God. That is the fecond thing in chat particular. Unbelief is a great im, becaufe Faith is nothing ( whatever it puts us unto ) com- pared with the good that comes by it. Thus you fee the greacnefs of the fm of unbelief if you conli- der the matter, or the thing commanded by the Law of faith. 2. Ifyouwouldknowthegreatneisof afm, you muft confider the attributes of God, which are ma- nifefted in the Law chac is broken. Every com- mand of God doth come from fome attribute or other. In the creation, and fo in the command that God gave ty^rf^^w, he (hewed forth his eternal power and wifdome, as the Apoftle faith in. Tyom^ i. his power in making al things of nothing : And his wifdom, inpuccing al chings into fuch a comely and is an exceeding great Sin. ^3 and glorious frame. But now in che new creation. In the comt-nandmenc of che Gofpei, in the com- mandment of faith, ai the attributes of God, they fhine forth, and they are manifelted cleeriy. The ppwer of God, the authority of God, and the ma- nifold wifdom of God in ^ph.. 3. the mercy, the truth of God: AH forts of mercy, pardoning mer- cy, and purging mercy, preventing and following, mercies. There is not an excellency in God, but it I decks this Heaven, even as the Heaven is full of Stars, fo is the Gofpel ful of God. It is God to the life. Now then our unbelief is an exceeding great fm in this refped too. It toucheth power, becaufe it faith, How can this ever be that iuch a one as I am fhould be brought into his favor. It cafts off his authority j and therefore as faith is called obe- dience, fo unbelief is called rebellion in the Scrip- ture: The text ia.ith,This is the Commandment ofQod that yoH jhould belie^ve on him whom he hath fent^ i.Jobn^ 3. 24. and it is an aft of Prerogaxive and Authority to give life through believing. Its a- gainft the Wifdom of God, for in unbelief the theCounfelofGodis defpifed, and we walk ac- cording to the Counfel of our own hearts. And againft the truth of God, becaufe /^e^j[;<^i: heleenjs noty mak^f Qodalyar, i^John^S' io« 3. To know the greatnefs of a fin, you mufl con- fider the kind of the Law that is broken. Ther»e are two forts of Laws. There are fome fiandamentalLaws,without which the peace of a State cannot be preferved And there are fome Laws that do but fubferve andftrengthen thofe fundamentals : So there are fome commands God hath given wherein his glory is immediately and principally concerned. He cannot be glorious, if he be not obeyed in them. Now fuch is the commandment of faith j the lav/ of / 64 HP^ S^^^S ^^ ^^^^^fi f^^ ^^/^ ^^^ Salvation, \ ofFakhisa'fundamental Law in the Kingdom of I Chrift, the whol Kingdom of Chrifl move§ upon ' this one point^the v/hoiCoimcel of God arifech and is made forth and is accomplifhed by the Aft of believing. For I befech you connder it. God hath fummedup all his honor in the making of fm- ners one with himfelf by Jeius Chrift. The glory of God from the creation is nothing elfe hue the acknowledging Gods excellencies. Godwilnot be acknowledged, nor doth he account himfelf by any acknowledgment to be honored^ but only by believing upon Jefus Chrift. In John 6. 27. 29. The peoplefollowed Chrift very far to hear him: faith Chriftj Thh is the voil of Qod that ye believe on him whom he hath [ent, d^c. As if he fhould have faid. This is not that that likes God, this wil noc pleafe him that you hear me unlefs you believe on me to eternal life, which he hath fealed rac to difpenfe and to give unto you. Al Gods glory is in Chrift. He is the coiner ftone of al that fa- brick and building which he hath fet up for his own glory. He hath brought his Pov/er, Wifdoni, and Authority to work the utmoft of v/hat he is pleafed to manif eft in the faving of fouls. As for the reft of the Commandments which refpedl our fanftifi- cation, they do but only fubferve this command of faith. God wil have you to live holily that it may appear that the grace of God is pure : and that faith doth notgive way to hn. Obedience is only re- quired for the magnifying of that State which God hath brought you unto by believing. IVe are ( faith he ) a royal nation^ an holy people^ peculiar tohim^tofetforththea)ertuesof him that hath called m out ofdarh^efl into his mara;eUous light, i. Pet. 2. 9. Fourthly andLaftly, Ifyou wil know the great- nefsof a tin by the Law that is broken, you muft know is an exceeding great Sin. know the Condition of the Perfons that are under that Law i whether they be obliged by favor and kindncfs? and efpecially whether they be able to fulfil it ? for able certainly beloved we are not to belceve. We are dead in tins and trefpafles. And although we are not like Stocks and Stones, be- caufa we have a life of reafon, yet we are lik e dead men becaufe we have no fpiritual principles of go- ing unto Jefus Chrift. When we have done all that we can to the work of our Faith, we are then unprofitable fervants. There was never yet any one that could be fhewdfrom the beginnin g of zhe world that did ever foufe nature by the affiflance of God, that did thereby grow to believing, as a mangoes from one Study, and from one Book^ and from one Science to another. But although that believing be not in our power, yet there is no unbeleever that doth that which he is able to do. Mark that firft, though there be many that are un- profitable under the means of Faich, yet there are [none under the means who abide in unbelief that do jwhat they are able to do. Their not doing what they are able to do gives God advantage to leave them in unbelief: the helps that men have unto Faith ( v/hichthofe men have that perifti ) is not fufficient to produce jp, but its fufhcient to fom- thingtowardsthe work of Faith, which they refi- ftingand not doing, are left intheitate of unbelief. The ftop of the work of Faith, or the giving men up tollnl?eliefjfollows not doing that which either by nature, or by the common work of the Spirit in the means they are able to do -j which I prove from Thofe in ^Matih* 22. that were invited to the Wed- ding, and to the Feaft of fat things, they could have come: The one could have left his Wife, and the other his Farm, and the third his Oxen, M but ^5 i 66 ^^^ ?/^^^ ^^ Chrijl for Life and Salvation ^ r buc chey would noc. To explain ic co you. As Godiaich in the fecond Commandmeiic, that he wilpuuilh the fins of cheFachersupoiithe Children: That is. Though Children have enough in them by nature to deierve the wrath of God, yet God wil cake advantage at this time to punifh them, becaufe their parents were unholy or carelefs in the ufe of Ordinances. So §od takes advantage at mens not domg what they may, while they live under the means ofFaith,to keep the power of Faith from them. He doth not deal thus with all, for he over- coxes the refiftance of thofe chat are ele^ed to eternal life. Of carelefs he m.akes them induftrious : of lazy he makes them watchful. But he doth not deal thus with others, that fo their mouths may be flopped, and tixey be without excufe in the day of wrath. Men dp refufe that which is offered by .^od, which they needed not. Mark this, I fay there is no unbeleever under the means of grace .whom God rejed^eth, that doth do what he is able to do, or that doth not refufe when he needed not I CO refufe. Although the help that ^od doth give generally, benocfufficient to work faith in a 1 men. Yet I fay it is fufScient tofomthing toward the work of Faith in men. As its iufficient ( as I fhewed you before)to convince men that there is no way fo good for mans happinefs, asgoing to Jefus Chrift ior falvacion by Faith *, No way fo fure *, No way whereby we can be freed fo loon from the mifery of fm : There is means enough to fhew a man his mifery in the want of the ufe of thofe meanes : Men under the means are called upon to beleeve, but not in their own power, buc in the power which the command giveth : Now mark it. The ftop of the work of Faith, the ftop of thefe things which leads unto Faith, whence our unbelief ar if eth, & our noc going wm is an exceedinggreat ftn. Sj \ going unto Chrift,icis in fcmching, or for fome- thing which men do not do, which is in * * power. 1 would be warily underftood. 4 Firft, God doth not give to al men power, that if they wiljthey fhal believe .but he doth give unto the moft or unco al men that live under the means, po- j wer DO do fomthing which leads towards believmg, ; whichthey wil not do. The way of Gods working ; faithin the eledjis fuch asovercomes al oppolitions. i Thofethat are not eled)t,noc doing chat which they might by the means, God there ftops further wor- king, i fhal open it thus, in the iecond Command- ment.If men worfhipnoc him after his wii,he wilpu- nifh them 8c their Children.He had ordained topu- nifh theirChildren beforeibuc he cakes advancage of the Parents walking carelefly in his worfhip, to bring chat judgment that he had determined con- j cerning their Children : So God did determine from eternicy to whom he would, and would not | give faich : Yet God declares this purpofe concer- ning his not giving Faich^ chat he hath no pleaiure to bring fuch a foul to him, when as he doth not do what he might do, and hath powet co do by che | I means afforded. Lee me fay again, Ics not in che po- , wer of che Creature co overcome Gods converting grace. If che Lord commands the lighc of che Sun I tofhineinto our hearcs, alche vails that iin calls, i and all che Clouds between Jefus Chrifl and us fhal j vanifh. God doth not fo work Faich as that if n^cnwitdo whacchey can by common means, he , wir give it them, and infufe inco them che grace of I Faich: That is not che way. But this I fay. That . there is no unbeleever but hath the ftop juflly made by che Lord in the free working of Faith by the Gofpel, for che negled of fomthing in his own power. Look inco chy own heart and thou wilt M % find SS tiot going to Chrijlfor Life and Salvation, findic: And look into other mens waies, and they wil prove it. Oh laith one that lay for many years under the hopelefs fenfe of che wrath of Goa, Oh that fuch a day f even years agone^ was but now again! HadI taken that time ! But then my plea- fures and profits overcame me. What is it at the bottome that makes men put off the day of grace, but only becaufe they would ferve thir fms firft. But the principal ground that I go upon is this, thatofM^w/j. :j2. wherein they are fhut out from che Wedding who were invited, but did not come as they might have done. In this refpeft therefore unbelief is a very great ftn : becaufe that the root o£ic is not improvemcnc : or the root of our being fealedup init, isanot improvement of that which ^od cals us for to dp, and which we might do when he cals us. So much ihal fuffice for the firftmeanso But if that doth not do^ then, Ir is an execedinggreat Sin. ♦*♦♦♦ i **♦ ^ ♦***4?** #*♦ i •''*♦***** r- CHAP. VIII. The f econd Means of ConviUion that Vnbeliefhfo grat a ftriy viz. The Consideration of the evill thatVnbeliefdotbm. The chird Means^ Tix the thoughts ofthefe things upon your hearts, Ji difficult thing it is to bring our Souls to Medita- tion V andyet more difficult to bring them to ms" ditate upon our own fmsy and the greatnefi of tibem i and mofh difficult to I^ep it in our hearts, that it k agreatfm not to go to Chriji by ^aith. SEcondly, I befeech you in the fecond place. Confider the evil that unbelief doth you. Andfee , then if it be not a great fin. That is a great offender i whom City and Country cries out on juflly. The Scripture you know fets out Chrift being made fm ^ for us, by this, that al cried out of him, oiway with ihim, Away with him, Luke, 23. 18. Heaven and [Earth cries out of unbelief, ^od the Father in i *Heb. 3. 12. Tak^ heed leaji there be in any of you, faith hcyun evil heart of unbelief ^od the Son hi ^ar!^, 16. i6. hethatbeleevs not fhaU be damned. And he fpeaks it as one that hath all power in his hand. In u4#/, 7- 5 1. They are faid to have refified the ho- ly Qhoft, And the Holy ^hoft complains of them ihere by the mouth^of StephendiS thofe that waged war with hini through their unbelief. Al ^ods Attributes, Al ^ods Ordinances are wronged by it. Al the faculties of the foul are fpoiled through it. It 6p o Not cgoiwg to Chrijlfor Life and Sahajion^ Ic gives a lye unco truth. *He that beleeves not^ mak§f Qodalyar- ijohn, 5. 10. Ic preferrs the wifdom of cheflefli, torheCounlel of ^od In 2 Cor. 10. 5. '^very high thought muji be capti'vated to the obedience offaith> Where therefore the obedience of faith is not, the imaginations of the heart rule. Power is counted weaknefs. How can the Lord prepare for m a table [aid they in thewildjrnefi ? ^faL 78. ip* And fo fay we how can this thing be? this guilt be removed? Thisftainbe wafhed out and clean- fed? Unbeleife makes not only power weak, but Juffciceunjuft, becaufe it thinks that ^odwil con- demne, although Jefus Chriil hath fatisfied. Ic makes not only Jufticeuniufl;, but ic counts mercy cruelty. It turnes mercy into cruelty : for ic re- quired of Jefus Chrift the fuiFering of death, and yet wilfpare none of thofe in whofe fleadic was. Unbeleife ic makes the preaching of the word un- profitable. Heb. 4» 2. It profited not^ becaufe they heard it not voith faith. And ic makes the facraments no Sacraments, in regard of benefit. A Sacrament in regard of adminiftration^may be witnefs againft us in regard of profanation, but none in regard of benefit: In i Cor, lo. 4. It is faid that t^pey had the rod^e^ they were baptir^ed in the fea^ and they had ^arma : but faith he, with none of them (jod was wel pleafed, and aU becaufe of their unbeleife. Unbeleife, ic makes theunderftandingfottifh, and puts ouc the eyes of ic, as ^eafl) did the eyes of the people that came un- to him. For in fpiricual things we bcleeye a-nd know, as the Apoftle Johni^ith. And ic makes the wil ftubboin and rebellious. And therefore the fame word in the greek fignifies both unbeleife and rebellion of heart. The memory growes dnl In 'H^I?. 2. I. The Apoftlb exprefferh it thtrs, when he fhould fay, cake heied of unl)eliirfe,faefaich ta!f{e is an exceeding great Sin, 71 tal\e heed leajh the vcord flips, ci.t of )cu that you s ba've heard. Our Lord cals uiibelcevers. Fools, j Ob ^ools and flow of heart. And this fhews them' to be Fools indeed, becaufe they are tyed to a' ftake and to a poft with ilraws, as I may fay.t What foial grounds and realons are they that keep' men from laying hold upon, and apply ing of Jefus' Chrift to them. ^ 1 fay, what fmal things are they ? Such as have no reafon , groiuidlefs grounds. Thou wilt not go to God becaufe thou art unworthy. Thou^ haft the more reafon to go becaufe thou art unwor- thy : for in Jefus Chrift thou Ihalt be found worthy &accepted.Thou wilt not go to Jefus Chrift^becaufe thou art not humble : B y the Love of God fhed a- broad in thy heart, thou wilt be humbled, that thou wilt abhor thy f elf. Whatafoolifh thing is this, for a man to keep himfelf from the ufe of means before hand, for the want of that which comes only through the means. If chat wil not dp, go further. And Belides beloved confider how God harh puniflied it. And his judgment is alwaies according unco truth. He waited and did ftrive with the old World y but afterwards his judgments overflowed them, audthatina very little time. The people that were in the Wilderneis, he wooed and intrea» ted: but at length he fwears they Ihould never have any reft. Their Confciences fhould not be quiet : Nor fhould rhcy have glory to come, ^o^es that was his frfend, that did converfe with him face to face, yet having but a doubt rife in his heart anddifcoveringof it, ^j/wb. 20. 10,11,12. God did clap hirn faft from going ever into the Land of promdfje, and took away his Ufe. The Difciples didbbleeve, but they were flow, and dul at itj backward tathe work : Our Lord when he was in glory, and nlen from rhe dead, did chide them ______ contmiially. :1 . 1 TSlot going to Chri/ifor Life and Salvation^ continually. A word from his glorious Lips now he was rifen from the dead, did cue like a fword, and burnc like the fire of Hell, and yet thefe words came from hiai. Now lay al thcfe things together, ^vhich is the fccond Argument, and it comes to I this ^ Than which God, and Chrift, and the Spirit ! doth complain of : 1 hat which wrongs all the glo- ry of God : and which makes all the Ordinances of I Godineffcftuall: That which fpoils the faculties of the foul, and provokes God to anger that he wil not hold, That certainly is a very great fin. But lo doth unbelief. That which I principally aia:ed at was the third thing : the laying of thefe things upon your hearts. I wil Ihut up all, becauie I cannot go ' through at this time, and only fay thus much to I you. And I befeech you that I may do it with all arguments, and take in all advantages that may be, j and that you would patiently bear it. The provi- j denceof God calling me other where for a time, I know not whether I fhal ever fpeak again to , I you or not. But could I but leave your hea^NM. j groaning under this burden, and bleeding under I the fence of this fin, I fhould leave you in as good a • way of recovering, nay of life, as a foul can wiih j to be in this world. Happy is that man that hath I no other grief, but his fin : but happy is he that hath no other fm to prefs him like unto this, that he lives in himfe If when he may live in Jefus Chrift,- that he is fo poor, that when he may have enough, he hath nothing. What fin is that which you count great ? if this fin of unbelief be not ? What fm ? iNameitjDefcribeit, andfet it forth in its colors. ] Whenyoufay for amantoknow the wil of God, I and not to do it : when he may have good from the hand of God, to refufe it : when the cup offal- ' vation is an exceeding great Sin. 73 vation is put into his hand, to fee chat by and take up a cup of fornication and pleafure : When God brings him into his treafury, for him to lock it up, and to throw away the key, as it were, and co make hirafelf rich in the things of this life. This is a great fm : Like CaiU) when he fhould gee his can* fciehce cured, goes to build and increale his living. Beloved, Icr but al things be alike, and your unbe- lief is as great as all. if you fcfy there be but as muchunwillingnefs, ycudo as n.uch as all this. What do you but takeycurpleafure^andforfake the loving kiadnefs of the Lord ? What do you but leave the treafury, and embrace penury ? What can God do more for means, but fay, here is my Son, rake what is in him 8c al in him? What wil perfwade you if falvation &: communion with God wil not ? What wil tetrifie, if abfence from ^odwil not? There is no liich terror in any abfence from God as in abfence from hiui through unbelief, when he iletcheth out his hand, and you wil not come. Objed. You fay, Ifl had powers I would come. Anfvc, Never fay fo. For then thou knoweft not what an unbelieving heart thou haft. If thou wilt not ufe the power chat thou hail : If thou haft a wil to beleev, if thou haft afoot to go, it will be found in the way of Faith. Do not the beft of Chriftians find that they have but the root of Fa'th but it brings forth but now and then ? But how oft;is its branches withered ? If they find it fo much ado togotoChrift, then certainly thofe in whom all corruptions are in their power, would not if they could go to Jefus Chrift. I fay,Let thefe things lie upon your hearts which youhave heard againft the fui of unbelief. Therefore N the 74 Tlot going to Chr'iji joY Life and Sahation, the VV or d did not do them good, becauie the fowls of: Heaven came and pickc orftole it away ouc of their hccircs, ^Matth. 13. 4. ki Ja/we/, i. 25, 24. it's given as a reafon why men in a fair way to con- verlion were not yet converccd, becaufe they did be^ hold tbemfdv^f as in a Qiafi^ and vosnt awjy^ andflruit jx\iyfor(^0t Tvbat manner of oner they were. Whereas hethans come to Pvegencracion, hi loo\s into tl?e Latv of Qody and eontinues therein. InL/^/^eS. 12. you have medication hinted to be a n\eans of Faith. fhe Devil comes and tal^es tb^ Word out of their hearts, kfi they (J^)o:ildb decade andb^faved. There- fore you have chefe expre/Tions in Scripture, Think^ of the fe things, Confiderwhat I fay. Meditation or thoughtfuln^fs makes things cred ble that are not : things cliat are probable, are made thereby certain. As we fee in Melancholly perfons who by often chinkino;, andpoaring, wnd pawiing of what is in ch^ir fancy, chey co^-aeto be as certain as if they had a Divine ceftimony chac cannot be removed, nor will they beleeve the contrary. And therefore Medication helps a man to beleeve the truth, be- caufe by meditation a man comes to know the whol matter. One thought fuggefts one thing, and ano- ther another: That thing whica is iirll thought of and found out, that breeds a jealoulie in the minds of men, that there is more behind to be known. That which they lafl thought of is as a feal to the truth of what was found ouc at the iirft. Medicati- on hears all chat can befaidfrom any head of rea- fon concerning a thing, if you meditate concer- ning the evill of unbelief, nothing that m.akes it e- vill wilbehidd-ni from you or forgotten. By one parriciilar youwilbe almoftperfwaded, and when you find another particular of the evil of it, you! wilbeperfwad-d altogether of the evil of it, that ic'^s the foulefl fin. Meditation binds the n\ind and > is an exceeding great Sin. n ^ and the matrer togethert As Vanjid faith my fms are ever before we, that I cannot but thinl^continu al- ly oftbemUany and tvic^dneflof my heart in my mur" ther anduncleanneP* The mind and che matter be- ing kept together, ths foul comes to he leavened,' yea to be transformed and changed into the matter. As he that thinks of an injury and takes notice of every circumftance, at length he is fo angry that he knows not how tc bear any longer. So if you would meditate on the evil of unbelief, you would be fo perfwaded aga'nffc it, that you would not be quiet til you be rid ofic. What indignation,what ' wrath, what hatred will tiie foul ihew againft un - 5 belief then? It'^smy beloved a hard thing for us to meditate. The Scripture fpeaks of the vanity of our minds naturally m aniel could re- cover the knowledg of che dream, buc by che fpiric of che living G^>d. i wil only give you chis one de- monftranion further, chat faith is noc a racional aft, for a firmer chac is guilcy and under the wrach of God CO do. To beleeve is fuch an Aft as no wife m_an would diredrunco, according co che rules of che beft wif- dom given CO nien nacurally. Who v/ould take a lictle clay and put ic upon che eyecom.akeic fee? It's the way co put out che eye. Who v/ould go co God (being guilcy ) to find favour of him, when as he goes inco che hand of che judg from v/hom he hach no reafon co expeft: favor. The Apoflle fpea'(pt going to Chrijl for Life and Salvation, ] iChrifl: Or again, k faith thac you wil grow diffo-j \ luce and dii'obedienc to the la v/,if y ou look to have i jyour (ins forgiven by another. Or again. It's a" I I gainft jufticc thac one Ihould fin, and another be puuifhed. Or again, It's noc likely that there ihculdbe luch a way, that one may be punilhed for another : Or if th.re be, chat rhou fhoiildfl hive it before another who arc worfe then another in regard of thy fuis. Therefore the .-.poftle faich in 2 Cor, lo. 5. That the imaginations of mans thoughts rnHjl hi ca^tkuted to the cbcdioiceof fahh- And if reaion cannot adviiemen to belecve, it can never tel a nvan thac he hiich Tinned in noc beieeving. Thac is che fum of chac Argumenc. 5 Means. 5. If you would knovv^ che greacnefs of the fui of unbeleife, chen labor co beleeve. Theie are none counc incemperance ( if chey be over caken) agrea- cer f ulr chen chofe chac are indued wich Ibbi lecy, There are none mourne for words of folly more then choi'e chac are v/ife. There are none chac accompc any evil more loachiom chen chofe chac abound in che concrary virtue. And 1 b^fe.^ch you lee men but obierve ic by che way. See how God hach provoked you by al meanes co beleeve. You can • noc know che greatnefs of your fin, excepc you be- leeve. By any uieanes he v/ould gain you co Chrift, I and chen he wil give you any ching your condicion requires. Beleeve upon Chrifl. .-ind therefore fee I him before you. Think of che need of him co in* 1 courage you co go co him: and of the danger in 1 noc gong CO him. For ics juH wich chee in chis cafe'as icwas wich che people when chey were in capcivicy, when che figcrte bloffon.ed noc, and chou is an exceeding great Si?i. 8i thouniayft go to Chrift. 'And when thou faiiH > know not whither 1 may go to him or not, becaufv^ I have not yet the fenfe of myfm and flraying from * him, knov/ that nothing wil make that morecieer2 '' ^[othee, then thy communion with him. | 6. ifyou would know the greatnefs of the fin ' of unbeleife, then labor for the I'pirit : ^or be con- | vincetbthemoffm in that they heke-venot oiihim^ In John 1 6. p. He fhal fend the Comforter to con- vince, that is, that this is the greateft fm that can be done, that men beleeve not. When the holy Ghoft doth convince a man of the greatnefs of the fmofunbeleife, hedoth it cleetly, demonftrative- ly, fo as a mans contrary thoughts and reafons fals before thofe conviftions , That the w'ord (Ihiyy.^v') j tranflated to convince, figniiies. When the Holy Gholt convincechamanof the greatnefs of the fm of unbeleife he doth it as a comforter, for faith he,^ bevptlfend the Comforter, which k the Holy (jbofly andheflyalcon'vince of fm* As there islome Phy- fick which flrengthens as wel as purgech : Soothe heart of manby theconviftion of the Holy-Gholt ischearedand fupported, and not fufferedto fink under the heavy burden which it feels through un- beleife.Like a bal which when it is throwen down, riieth up again. So che foul gets fome hopes andjfome glimps.And as Jo/z^fjfaid,io the foul faith j I wil yet look towards him,l fay as Jonah faid when j he was fmking. Let me exprefs it thus, As a m.an rejoycethto heare'any evil of him whom hedoch ! jnot:love,It''s gladnefs ofheartjit is as wine to the ! tafte, andas l^feto .the heart of him toheareil of him whom he doth not love, fo when the Holy Ghofir makes a man to fee the fin of unbeleifcja man entert.ainss it gladly, and he gives affent unto k^ it re/byceth him that he knows fo much evil by it, although it grieves and burdens his heart that he is 8 2 Not^oing to Chrijljor Life and Salvation^ \ guilty of it. When the holy gholt convinceth a man of tin for not btleeving, he dot h alfo convince himof righteoufnefs to be had for him byChrift. Forthefe two go together, ^e fljal conmnce the vporld of firiy and of righteotifnefi. And therefore pray for the fpirit. ^or if you that are e'vil l{now hovpto gwegood things' to your children^ hotv much more Jhal your heanjenly father gire the ^oly Qhofi to them that asks him, Lul^e. 1 1 . 13. Objed:. tAndifyoufay^ youhanje not the fpirit of prayer^ and therefore cannot ask^ the Holy (jhofi. Foranfwer to that know^ that as faith comes by the hearmg of the eare, Firfl: wc heare like men, and thfn afterwards we heare the voice of God by faith. So the fpirit of prayer comes firftby ufmg the natural defue that is in rnan after God. God is firft known and acknowledged as the Creator, If a man hath but common convidlion of the fpirit that he is in a ftate of tin5hc ftial not fin in taking forrow to himfelf. Soif amanhath but common convicti- on of the holy ghoft that there is no way for him to be convinced of the greatnefs of fin, or to be deli- vered but by the fpiric of God he fhal not fin in ask- ing of him. Asamanlfay may aud ought to take forrow CO himfelf from common conviftion, fo he ought from this common conviftion, although ic be but natural, to cal upon God for the fpiric. Go therefore, make your fupplications to God, and fay Lord hide not my fin from me, Open my eyes that I may underftand the law of faith and ray tranfgrcffion of it. As you would go to a Phyfi- tian and pray him to tel you the worlt of your ftate how ic is with you, fogo to God and pray that he would make known to thee the defperate wicked- nefs of thy heart, that being guilty and bound to the grave and ^ods difpleafure, fay to him Lord my own fpirit can do nothing, it's fulof darknefs and cannot difcerne. It's ful of deadnefs and wil noc .r. X is an execedinggreat Sin. 83 not imprint or fee home any thing that is revealedj OhLordlet thy fpirit teach me that I may know above al things in the world how evil a thing ic is to withdraw by unbeleifc from Jefiis Chrift. , \ 7 The laft thing that I fhal mention as a meanes to get the knowledg of the grearnefs of the fm of un- beleife is rhis. Get love to God. There is a kind of love my beloved required unto faith. There muftbeapious aiFedtion unto God to beleeve the things he faith to be true when as they are not evi- dent unto reafon. And by the fame reafon a pious affection unto ^odwilfhew thee the greatnefs of thefinofunbeleif. Which I make out thus; Love makes a fmal matter of an injury it receives from the perfon loved, but it makes a great matter of the leaft offence that it doth or gives unto the thing loved^from one whom a man loves he can beare much, but a man cannot beare any thing that is done againlt that he loves. Love makes a man du- ly and cleerely to difcerne and judg of oiFences; ^ary Magdalen weeps as much out of remembr- ance of her fin, as others did out of horror for fm. And the Text gives the reafon, ^orfl)e lonjed much Lu\^ 7. 47* Shal I fay that Jofe^h counted it a great evil to yield to his Miftris? It was b^caufe his Mafter had taken him from being a prifoner, and made him governor of his houfe, he had put al things into his hand, but only his Miifris, Qen, 39. 9. Go thou then and confider of the exceeding love that God hath fhewed thee, and fee that before thy eyes if thou wouldeft be humbled for not going to JefusChrift : And what greater love is there then togive Jefus Chrift to die for us, andto take the fill value for our offences of- Jefus Chrifl, and yet notwithflanding to give us al that for nothing?what greater love ^hen tooffer Jefus Chriff upon the tcrmes of beleeving?In the matter of faith God fhe ws ! O Z himfelf 84 ^^^ cS^^^^iS ^^ Chrljlfor Life and Salvation^ himfelf as kind as he can be out of heaven: He fpeaks by hisfon,he intreacsSc befeechech 1455.^5 the Apoft le i'aich^ We btficch you m Chriflsflcad, z Cor,$. 20. He commands that you bekeve.Andhe theatens c hat be that beleenjes noifljal he damned.^dri^ 16. 16. Was there ever like love fhewedto this, chat God fhouldbegofus, v/ho (hould pray to him, that he fhouldbefeechus whoihould lay our felves as pit- tiful objefts before him, and lil heaven with cryes continually ? That he fhould command us, and make it our duty to beleevc, In whom it would be a prefumpcion naturally and great boldnefs of fpi- ric ? That he fhould make nothing damnable but only not beleeving unto men that live under the meanes ? Set this i fay before you, and refuial then wil be exceeding great auu odious in thine eyes. To refufe a command ! To flight a threaten. To be deafe to innreaties : And not to he wood by kindnefs ! To be fought unto by great- nefs and al for the things of a mans own good. To fhut up al^what wil you count a great lin, if notun- beleife ? Nothing certainly. For nothing is io great a breach of the law, nothing keeps a man in lin, nothing keeps us ffom good like to that. By what weight or ballances wil you come to find out the weight of any iniquity ? If you cannot difcerne fo great a matter to be in the fm of unbeleife, com- pare it with the Tables. Its againfl the firfl tablej The great Commandment is in that table. Com- pareit with duties. It''s the leail duty that can be injoyned,and it hath the greatefl wages and reward, for if ycubeleeve,al things are yours. Wilt thou fuiFer thy under ft anding to grow dark, and thy mind foperverfe as that every evil fhould be fmal unto thee? Ifthoudoftaccompt unbeleife a great tin, thou wilt make haft to JefusChrift for pardon^ it wil make thee to admire the grace of God which doth is an exceeeding great Sin. 8 < doth pardon thee : It wil ingage thee to Chrift that hach delivered thee from it. if fin be little in thy eyesjthy pardon wil be lie cle, free favor wil be bnt little favor : Nay my beloved if you could fee the greatnefs of your fin, you would be eafed of the lin of unbelief, If you could but account it a great mat- ter for God to pardon it, it fhould be pardoned, and that would deftroy the power of it : for in the Scripture you fhal find that proportionably to the grace and favor which we beleeve God wil do us in the pardoning of a fin, is the death and mortifica- tion oi a tin. in ^om, 6. 14. Sinjhall not ha^ue domi" nion ovsryoUy hecaufe you are under grace. If more under grace than lefs under fms dominion, as well as if altogether under grace then not at all under fms dominion. Therefore I befeech you again and again, do like (Pauly Spy out the fin of unbelief at the end of every fin. I did it ignorantly through unbelief. It was my unbelief that made me do this fin, or that made me leave this duty. Count your unbelief to be the fediment, the filth and the mud ( what fhal I cal it ) the worft of all thy fin. Wert thou never fo finful, didll thou be-^ lieve,thou fhouldfi: be wafhed and cleanfed and fre- ed from it : Hadft thou never fo good a mind to be holy,' if thou doll not beleeve, thy fin fhal ftil a- bide upon thee. Oh that fo great love of Chrift fhould be fo ill requited! that there fhould be a mind in us fo contrary to what is in him! That he fhould be contented to reckon that we wrong and negleft him more in not coming no him, than in not doing for him. Or thus. That we do mofl for him, when we come to him f or mofb ; and that we fhould count it fuch a fmal fin. Stir up thy felf O ! unbeleeving heart, and fit no longer debating the matter whether thou fhouldfi go to Chrifl or not : Sin I lay is not to be committed upon any terms. But 86 Not going to Chrijl for Life and Salvation j But if thou wouldfl puc the Cafe thus, that the lef- fer evill istobe done, but unbelief is the greater evil, therefci;^ you muft not leave go^ng to Chrift. Ring this continually in the ear of ihy foul. Oh my Soul what haft thou done in fpending thy ftren^th in loofing the opportunity of grace tor the gathe- ring of the fruit of fin? What haft thou done? what haft thou gained in al the fervice of lin.? There is nothing but blowes, and nothing but mi- leiy and danger that wil enfue. But this is theevil of al evils, a Icircurritanccs being confidered. It is w orf e that thou fit t eft dump ifhly and heavily and drowfily^and carelefly ,and negligently, 8c doft not ftand up & fet forward & run forward 8c make haft to the Lord Jcfus Chr ift,than al that thou haft done befides. Do not fay now that 1 cannot, for the Command I fay hath power in it to make thee to beleeve, Give that confent thou haft, as Virgins fomtimes do,if their Parents wil confent, that is^do thou fay that its juft,8c its'reafon,its eqnal,it$ righ- teousthat I fhould, its bcft,and I ought to beleeve if the Lord beftow his fpirit on me. If thoufindftnot the fpirit come in to help thee, yet turn again upon thy felfe and fay. This is the ftone that preffeth down, the color that makes thee deformed, the e- vill that makes thee abhorred of God that thou doft not go to Jefus Chrift. Lie beating upon thy foul continually til thou canft find' it, "and when thou canft not fmd ftrength to go to Jefus Chrift, that its worfe with thee through thy unbelief than any other fm. And fo I have done with this ufe. Chap. Though the fin 9f Unbelief be fvery great ^^c. 87 CHARX. Dod. II. Though the fm of Vnhelief he *very great, yet k is pardonable. The DoUrine ope" nedy and proved, i. Qod bath pardoned ^Unhe' lief* %* Qodvoil pardon it* I. TIM. I 15. ^ut I obtained Mercy hecaufe or [ aU though ] I did it ignorantly and in un^ belief. FRom the words as you may remember were thefetwo Points raifed. Firft, the greatnefs of the fin of unbelief, for which the Apoftle doth here make himfelf the chief of fmners, and God in pardoning of it to have exceeded and gone beyond his ordinary courfe of mercy. Yea he faith he was the firft ofthat fort that ever God fhcwed mercy unto, as you may fee in verfe 1 6. And therefore I fhewed you this, that the word 077, tranflated [[ hecaufe ] is rather to be read thus [^although. 2 For unbelief could not be a caufeof mercy ina proper fence. And the word 677 doth fignifie although in divers places of the Scripture, both in the Greek and alfo in that which anfwers to it, in the Hebrew. I have done witiv that Point. DOCT. 88 Though theftn ofUnheliefbe DOCT. II. The fecond point that I raifed froijpi the words was this^ 7hat though the Jin of Unbelief is ^ery great ^ yet it's pardonahle and forgiven by God. I obtained mercy fa.ith be although I did it fo and fo in or by unbelief . The fin I fay cf unbelief is very great, but it's chat which is pardonable. When I fpeak of the pardonablenefs of unbelief, you muft firft take unbelief alone by its f elf, in its own fin- ful nature and defert. As it gives God the lie, and ftains his glory and tempts him, andhindeis God in doing his great work of mercy. Unto which iiead I have fpoken at large heretofore. Secondly, You muft alfo take unbelief with its train and attendance with all the iffue and children of it. For fo CP^?// brings it in, and makes ir the mo cher of abominations. I waj ( faith he') a ^laf- phemer3& a ^erfccutor^ «e^ injuriom through unbelief. Unbelief was the mother of them. Unbeiif is here fpoken of in its ftength and acting to the] utmoft : i Unbelief in its own nature is a fm againft the firft i Table, and it plaies fowl pranks there with every Commandment : But herethe Apoflle fpeaks of un- J belief as overflowing the boundsjof that Table, and breaking forth into thebrea ch of the fecond Table by perfecution 8c injurioufnefs.As.a Difeafe or^Sore may be in one part of the body, but may diffufe it felf into the other parts to corrupt them. The Lungs may be rotten and the Liver hard, and that 1 may v/eaken al the reft of the body. So a hn may be yerygreatj yet it is pardonable. 8p be againft one Commandmenc formally or proper- ly, and may be in one faculcy of the Soul princi- pally, but yec work no the breach of all the Com* mandmencsandtothe corrupcing of the whol man. Now cake anunbeleever ( as he is here fee down in the Text) grown to be cmel, .favage, bloody, fcandaloils, an enemy unto al good men-, yet ftil there may be mercy obtained for that. That is the fecond thing. Then thirdly. You muft take unbelief ( when I fay it's pardonable ) when it hath brought a fin- ncr neareft Hell . Fot the Text fpeaks of unbelief | as a plague, and of perfecution^ and injurious, as the Spots which doth foretel and prefage death. ^aul here declares two things of hinifelf, and I be- feech you mark them. Firlt,That he was in fuch a cafe by his unbelief, as man never was that was faved. In ver. i6. He voof. a pattern unto them tbatjball believe^ and he -ivof the firfly there was none that he could think of to conu fort himfelf from, with hopes of pardon. Con- ceive ^aiil faying to his foul. Why dofx thou Oh hiy foul think of pardon when there is no example or prefident of it.^Ad not prefumption unto propha- nefs. Were there but one in thy cafe chat got to Heaven & found mercy ^it were noboldnefs forthee to think that thou fhould'ft be the fecond:But when there is none ! My condition is like a man at Sea that is fmking, and there is no plank neer, nor no bank neer, nor no boat tp fwini in. Thus ^aid r c- prefents himfelf one way. Secondly, He declares himfelf ( throu^^h the j corruption of his nature, and through difcourage- 1 ments and fears that his guilt brought upon him) \ : _^ . - not o Though the Sin of Unhekife be not CO be able to look up, nor able to labor for mercy and pardon. He Ipeaks of his own falvaci- onasof aloft butinefs in regard of himfelf^ it was in vain for him toltriveany more about it. I oh* taiyiedmercy. Itswel obferved by Mr. ^e^a that the wordiignifiesno fuch thing [_a$[ obtained.^ Fori obtained mercy, is as much as, I didfom- thing for mercy, that carries with it the ufe of en- deavors, and taking good means and courfcs there- unto. But the word is of thepafSve voice in the Greek, nKii'i^iiy. His meaning is, That mercy was beftowed on me,given unto me, J did nothing for it, but It fhewed it felf to me unasked for, and un- fought for : Or if I may coyn an engliih word for the purpofe I was mercified, Mercy was befto- wed unthought of, andunfought f or j though this be the cafe of a foul through unbelief, that it can find no one in all the world that hath gone fo far as it hath done, chough it be even out of hope in regard of it felf^ and counts its own falvation loft : Although thy unbelief hath laid thee deadjthat thou ftir not up in the uCe of means, nor look up through hope,although unbelief hath rotted thy converf ati- on into perfecutionSc injurioufnefs&blafphemy^yet then it's pardonable 8c God wilbeftow mercy upon fuch a one. I obtained mercy ^although I woi a ^erjecw tor i9* a ^lajbhemer ^and injuriom through unbelief JLgz me for the^ better fetting out of this poi^t make this obfervacion to that. That when once" God hath wrought Faith in the heart of a man, I fay, when God hath wrought faith, he fhal be chidden and frowned upon by God if he be backward to beleeve : So you have heard at large from Chrifts calling his Difciples fools, Oh fools and flow of heart tobeleeve^ and reproaching] them becaufe of their unbelief,in M^rJ^. i6. Let a man that hath faith fall from 4 \ i 't mmf — ■ I ^mmmrn i u.» ■. ■ ■ ■,■■^■ , , ,,,,■—■ — — very gr eat y yet it is 'Pardonable. 91 froin his confidence and lleadinefs, although k be but in fome degree and by great affliftions, and the Lord wil be itrange unto him, he wil not vouchfafe very intimate and familiar communion with him, hisioulhathnopleafurein him, if he doth with-, draw from comfortable living upon him in the midft of affliftions. So in i. Cor. 10. he was not wel pleafed with his people in the Wildernefs, be- caufe in the want of things neceffary to their Jour- ney, they murmured as if God would not Provide for them. If any man ( faith he ) do vpithdraw himfelfj my foul Jhal have no pleasure i# Imn . lE[i'b» 1 o 38. If you look into the 39. verfe of that Chapter youfhal find the Apoftle doth not fpeak of thofe who wholly withdrew themfelves from believing, for he {peaks not of fuch who withdraw unto per- ditiony but of them that hdee've to the famng of their Souls Hefpeaksof fuch men who notwithflan- dingal their withdrawing have yet fo much Faith left as wil fave them and bring them to eternal life. This withdrawing was occafioned ( if you look into the former verfes by manifold aifliftions and great calmities ) that is intimated when the Text iaLkhytheJuflfljallinjeby ^aithh which words are taken out of the Prophet ^abbal^il{^ when the peo- ple were in captivity and under opprefTions by the Babilonians, aud God required them to wait for their deliverance, when they law no means how. If amannoWjWhen the Fig-tree doth not bloflom and there is no Calf nor Ox in the flal,when there is no micans feen to free a man out of troubles that are exceeding prefling (any way left him) if a man fhal now let his faith fmk, and fear the prom'lle of God fhal not be fulfilled, faith God my foul fhal have no pleafure in him. A man that hath no pleafure in [ ones company,is ftrange to hini,Screferved,&fpeaks ': coldly^and by his carriage bids him to be pone from . P 2 h- ! Am \ 9^ Though the Sin of'Unheleife be him. So wil the the Lord carry himielf to a Belee- ver chat doth withdraw from beleevhig : when a manhath-noplcafure inhis meats it's as Iticks to him, ic^s nauleous to his ftomack and nourifheth him not : So is the perion of a beleever whenas he doth withdraw, i fay the Perfon, for the Tcxc faith, (jodpali have no pleafure in Tiim, Confider fuch a man that by Faith is a member of Jefus Chriftjandinthatrefpe^S: God loves him, for if we bclceve not yet he remains faithful. But confi- der fuch a man in himfelf and in this perfonal mil- behaviour, an4God loaths hmias the Pfalmift faith, he did abhor his own inheritance, and gives him no f enfe of his love, nor any refrefhment by his prcfence in any ordinance. The fame per- fon may in divers refpedts be both loved and loa- thed : As the father loves his child as his child, and yet is more angry with him, and can lefs abide him than a fervant, when he doth offend, and carries himfelf unworthy both of his birth and breeding, and his parents honor.. Nay,youihalfind that God wil not only be thus ftrange to a beleever, but it may be for want of feme afts of his Faith, he wil be angry with him while he lives, and not be fat iified with him cil he dies. The guilt of fatherly indignation may be upon a beleever to the laft breath. You ihal find ic concQniing ^ofe fin liumb, 20. 10,11,12. when he did but begin to call in queflion whether or not God would give water to them that were a rebelli- ous people, and he did it but once, he queftioned not God's power, but whac God would do fince they were fo rebellious, for chat one fault God takesaway his life and would not let him fee the fulfilling of the promif e ia the Land of Canaan. . Youreadof M^wy in i.Con 10.4,5. that did par- \ cake yery great ^ yetitispardo?ial?le. p^ take of Chrift ^ortheroch^foUowedthemy and that rockjvof Chrifly and yet God was f o il aff e&d with 1 them ( as I may cai it ) and fo difpleaied with | their unbeleife, that their bodies did die ' in the wildernels. And in ^eb. 3. n. He fpeaks of fomc whom he fwore in hh wrath thai they fhoM not enter into his rejL And 1 fay he fpeaks it concerning beleeveis, for it hath an allufion unto the people that went out of the land of^ ^gypt and and followed the Lord in the wildernefs. But then although God be fo foon fevere agalnft theaft of unbeleife where men have faith, that al- though he remits and pardons it as to condemna- tion yet he wil not remis and pardon it as to father- ly indignation while the man lives, although I fay he be fo fevere againfl the ad: of unbeleife where j there is faith yet he wil pardon the total want of {faith. He wil not pardon men after they beleeve, becaufe they difhonor God in not receiving accor- ding to the intereft that they have in him, they live notupon his love. He wil pardon total unbeleife that fo we may have faith and receive his love. 1 fay he v/il not pardon the one becauie he takes not in his love, and he wil pardon the other that he may have of his love through beleeving. The fum of the point therefore comes to this, That though a poore foul knows not that he hath, nay knows that he hath not fellowfhip with jefus Chrift, al- though thou haft no union with Chrift, nor relyeft upon him, yet thou mayft find mercy and pardon from God for this fin, akhough that others who have faith and uie it nor be cut oft' from fenfible en- joyment of many things that God hath made his people glad wichin this world, yet to thee rhere may be nothing elfe but kindnefs. And if you confi- der the Text you Ihal find thefe two things. Firft i 94 Though the Sin of Unbeleife be Firft that God hath pardoned thisfm of Uiibe- leife. Secondly, That God wil pardon ic. « As Chyrurgions fomcin\es fet out upon a table what lores they have cured, and what bones they have taken out, and promife the like to them that flialflandinneedofthem : fo doth the Lord here by ^aul tel you what he hath forgiven. I obtained mercy althoifgh I voaiin unbeleife' And he tells you of what he wil forgive, for he hath made him a patterne not to them that beleeve but to them which Ihal beleeve to the worlds end, as it is in verf. i6. The Apoftle ufeth that word here which lignifies that God wil to the end of the world takefuch as ^aul was, fuch great linners that he may fhew great mercy as ^///c///z^oblerv-es:^, 31. 53. He hath thefe words If fo be that Ihai^e covered my tranjgrejjlonf a^ Adam. And in ^ofeay 6. 7. You fhal find zhQ wickcdneft of the people cxpreffed thus, They ba've like Adam tranf* ^rejjedthe Covenant, that is they have done as bad as bad can be, and are as bad as you can imagine them. Never was the heart of any man further off from Jefus Chrift then Adams wasi^ becaufe he had fo great a guilt upon him, and had fo much lin in him. No mans heart could more hardly ftoop and bow unto the obedience of faith then AdamfyhQ" carufe he was made under a Covenant of works, and knew fo little of Jefus Chriit ; Nothing before he fell, butashewasthefecondperfon, and very lit- tle as mediator after he fel. But yet although Ad- ^w had thus fmncd and was inthisflate, yetnot- Q wkhftanding 1 8 m^^^mm^^rr-n rii iiiiiii ' " iiiii wiiiiM ii iir Though the fin of Unbelief be wkbftanding the fcripture tells us of him as of one thac was (avcdjfor Lub^,^, 3 8. he is fpoken of as one (chat was the propagator of finful mankind ) to be the Son of God. Which vpc^the Son c/ Adam, which was the Son ofQod,! fay he is Ipoken of as one chat is fallen, and as one chat propagates the finful genera- tion of the Sons of men. And in Qen. 3. 20. He calls his wife ^ve the Mother of al lindng^ and to this end he dorh it that he might celebrate the goodnefs of God that gave him life, when he might have thrown him into eternal death. He doth it in refer-, ence to the promife that was given him before concerning Jefus Chrift, The Seed of the Woman fhalbreahjthe Serpent fhead* Qen, 3. 15. Recalls her the mother of al the living in hope of eternal life, and in hope of thac Church thac God would gather from their two loyns to be an iffue to him. Imight inftance in^i;eandtelyou why the fcrip- turefpeaks of her converfion although fhe had feduced Adam* For when a ftrong man armed keeps the houfe, Satan and he are at peace. But as the moll pregnant inftance chat can be given in this cafe, Confider the converfion of the' Gentiles, and the Jews: of the Gentiles che Apoftle faith, Th^y were dead in fins and trefpaffes, that they wah h^d according ar the Devil did tempt them, ^ph, 2, 1.2. That they had a nature apt to nothing but what would provoke the wrath of God againft them. We are by nature children of wrath with others , and without Chrifi aliens from tht com^non wealth oflf'^ raeU verf. 12. Knowing nothing of religion j drinh^ inginfmcHa^ifhdoth water ^ committing al unclea- nej] with greedinefi, And yet notwichftanding the Apoftle tclU us in ^]>^. 2. ThatQoddidworl^^faith in them, and they were hh workrnaujhip created unto good worh^ that they might wal\ therein^ verf. 10. ^d'\i\%pm* II. Thac they were grafted in by faith ^ery great, yet it is pardonable. pp -/ ■ faich into Jefus Chr ift as into a ftock. And as con- cerning che Jews, Ics not once but conftancly re- porced by thofe in Germany among whom they live, chac if they do but heare the name of Jefus Chrifl:, they fpic three times in indignation, and cry out, let that name be blotted out and forgot- ten. The Virgin Mary they cal a dunghii, and Chriil a Baftard, and the Trinity a Phantafy, and vanity. What fhallfay ofT^iom. ii. 9, 10. Which tells you that they grow wiidj and bring forth fruit unto the flefh, they bow down and are the flaves of al iin and Corruptions, The proudefl people, the Earthyeft people, the uncleaneil peo^ pie that the earth beares, and yet you ihal find that cheApoftle faith in ^om* 11. 24.. 2$. That ahk* The mean- ing of it is this. That ^od wil do to his utmoft, andiffobethe almighty power which he hach b^ able to pardon them, and to make them to beleeve upon him, their fms fhal not hinder. Whither che whole nation of the Jews fhal be converted ( as fome doe imagine ) or whither or no that fome of them only fhal be converted ( becaufe when Jefus Chrifl fhal come, the Text faith hejl)al not find faith on the earthy Luk^ey 18. 8. ) I fhal not diipure now. But their fm ( which is the point in hand ) al rhac diflance which their apoflacy and rebellion hath made from God, fhal not make them to be unpar- donable. God here and there now plucks out a man,and afterwards wil pluck out greater numbers. Before Chrift came, Gods mercy was principally unto the Tews, his fwcet flreames did run al among them. If he did convert any, he did tranfplant them into that Church : They were an holy nati- on to him : But now God looks abroad : And how- ever before the coming of Chrifl he proceeded Le- gally ( If a man did we 1, he was accepted^ do this Q 2 and J 100 Though the fin of Unbelief be f and live) yet now in the daies of the Gofpel, he! takes chofe that arc not worthy to live, and thofe | that have not T>onejZhd.i are thegreatcft Tinners. And of thefe,T^«/ is a pattern. CHAP. XL The ^eafonr of the T)oUrine. i* Othervoife no ^lejhjhould befaved, 2. Vftbdief is not the Sin agatnft the Holy Qhoji. 3 . Qodgiver enjen to TJ?2- belee^jers affurance of SaVuation. 4. The par- don of this fm doth in a jpeciaU manner redound to the glory of Qod, Application, ^e perfiva- ded that unbelief is pardonable. ANd the Reaf ons of the Point are thefe. That I fay which may further prove as a reafon that God wii pardon unbelief is this, Elfe no Flefh can befaved, for we are all by nature fhut up in unbe- liefe. Unbelief works more or lefs in men as they have the means i but all men are by nature unbe- kevers. As you may remember that explication which I gave of 2. Thef* 3. 2. which we tranflate AU menhave not ^aithy but it is in the Greek, Not of all is Faith, And the propriety of that language is, that v/hen the negative doth go before the word that doth denote the fubjedl f ^ot ] going before [ «>4/ ] It's as much as if he fhould have faid, there is not any, none by nature have Faith. It's the gift of Qod And that not only fucha gift of God as natural life is, which God hath beftowed on men, and left men to aft according unto the things which do become it, but it's a fpecial gift of God, that which God doth infiife, there is no way in the world for any man co come unto falvation but by beleeving, there is A •^ fvery great ^ yet it is pardonable, i oi Is nothing keeps out beleeving but unbelieving ; If therefore now unbeleeving fhould not be pardo- ned, as good fhuc up the doore of life and falvation, as weldeny al the truth of the Gofpel, that there is no life nor immortality brought to light by the Gfojpel, if unbelief JhaU not be pardoned. REASON 11. But Secondly, which is a Reafon that I defire more to ftick upon. Our Lord Jefus hath made it apparent that unbelief is not the fm againft the holy Ghoft, and al fms fhal be forgiven befides that. If you look into ^atth, 12. 31, 32. when fome did not beleeveupon Jefus Chriit, Chrift tels them that their finfjhouldnot be forgiven them, but withal tels them, that it is not becaufe they had fpoken againft hm\^^Everyf$nJhaU be forgiven faith he and every tranfgreffion that is done againft the fon of man ^ but the blajphemy againfi the Holy Qhofi : Whoever fpeaks awordagainfl i^^^fonofman^ itfljall be forgiven him. Warkit,Tfay our Lord labors to cleer by thole words, that although men through unbelief had fpoken againfi him, yet that doth not make their ftate incurable, it ib not the iin that is unpar- donable; For the fm againft the Holy Ghoft lies in themanner of doing of an Aftion. It may be done with any fin againft the Gofpel;,and there may be every fm againft the Gofpel done without it. I fay it lies in the manner of doing an a£i:. There wasjOne would thinkjno more dangerous thing than to fpeak againft the Lord of life', bnt our Lord faith that is not the fm, except a man hate it revealed to him, and he being illuminated with a fufficiency of it, and be drawen by that towards him by the Ho- ly Ghoft, and then afterwards fhal malieioufly re- jeft him. The fm againft the Holy Ghoft, is a fm that 1 I02 Though the Sin of Unbelief he jthaccomc? from malice. Now cake unbelief either I as ic is incheunderflanding ( for fo there is igno- ranee which quits him from that fin)Take unbelief as it's in the Wil,and fo it's a refufal cf Jcfus Chrift offered and made known. And m ic there is 'ISTali^ ;ti<^asthe Schools fpeak, chac is a greac deal of wickedncls, bu: in chac formally chere is no ma- lice, llaychereisa greac deal of wickednefs in cherefufalof Jefus Chrift made known. Thereis a greac deal of pride for a man noc co fubmic co the righceoufnefsof GodjOr chac way of falvacion, al- though a man be ac the poinc of death and brink of the pit of Hell. Ic^s as much as if a man fhould fay i had rather perifh and be damned than co^o to Jefus Chrift and to be beholding unto him. There is noc only in unbelief a great deal of pride^ but hacredof Jefus Chrift. Search the Scripture, faich he, for they teftifte ofme^ and in them ye thinl\^ to have eternal life, hut yon voil not come unto me that you may have life. Saich he if you loved the ^Meryou would love me* There may be an hatred of Chrift and yet no maliceunco Chrift. Hacred there may be, be- caufe wc are contrary Cjo him, and becaufe he cakes away all our glory in becoming our Mediator, and makes us as men that are noc fie to plead our own caufe, or to do any thing for our own good. In every man naturally, yea in every man thac is con- verted, there is an hatred unto Chrift, becaufe Chrift is holy, and he is iinful, he is wife, and he is f oolifli : All concraries we knov/ do hace one che ocher. But unco malice there goes not only ha- tred buc invecerace hacred, and irreconcilable ha- cred, and to unbelief chere goes obftinacy. For whenever God gives a man Faich he cakes away che heart o'^ ftone. The hearc of ftonc is a ftubborn heart. Therefore I fay there is obftinacy ac che boccom of unbelief, buc thac obftinacy which is in the \ ^Oery great y yet It is pardonable 03 chefm againft the Holy Ghoft arifeth from fcorii of Chriftjarifechfromarageagainft the difpenfa- tion of God through Chrill:. It^s fo defcribed by the Apoftleasyoumayfee in Ueb. 6. 10. As a man tramples under foot the bloud of Jefus Chrift and counts it a vain thing afcer he hath found fonie fweetnefs in it, and had his converfation to the light of men fanftified by ic. That therefore is the fecond Rcafon. Every tin may be forgiven but the fin againfl: the Holy Ghoft, and unbelief is not the fm againft the Holy Ghoil, becaufe the fin againft the Holy Ghoft is a doing of thmgs againft Jefus I Chrift known and received out of inveterate Anger and Malice, and out of irreconcilablenefs of enmity unto hinu REASON III. But then Thirdly, This may be an Argument to you that God wil pardon unbelief, becaufe chat e- ven unto Unbeleevers he gives afTurance of falvaci- on. AiTurance of pardon is a higher degree of fa- vor than pardon is. To make ic known that our names are written in the Book of life is a further degree of favor than to write it there. Now to men that have ftood out againftGod^ God hath gi- ven affurance, as you may fee in the Cafe of ^aul, hecouldfay he obtained mercy at Gods hands al- though he was fo and fo. His ftate is cleer, his* condicionisevident, he can fee truth in what God hath done for him ^ and in what change God hath made in him, I was thus and thus,buc now faith he I am thus and thus becaufe 1 have obtained mercy in my mbdief. And the great reafon that he doth ic is this you have heard : But here is a reafon why God vjril pardon an Unbcleever whofe unbelief hath thus broken forth. •\ • REA- I04- Tijough the Sin of Unbelief be REASON HIT. • Bccaufe there is no fin greater (as you heard before ) And forgiveneis of unbelief doth in fpeci- all manner redound unto his Glory. He hath or- dered it fo; I fay it dorh in a fpecial manner re- dound unto his Glory. For that in verfe 14. ^aul faith that the Grace of God is exceeding aboundant where Faith is wrought, and where a man is par- doned that is in unbelief, it is exceeding aboun- dant. In verfe 17. Qod hath bh Qlory oi being a ^ng and eternall and immortally and the only wife Qod. Hefeeras toftudy which w^ay he may give God Glory, and therefore reckons up a great many of his Attributes which fhined like Scars of the greater magnitude in the pardoning of his unbelief I. Tim. I. 17. Vntothe ^ingy eternally immortally invifibky and only wife Qod be Honor and Qlory. You muft know chat he doth not fpeak this of God in the general,but of God in that work which he had done for him. His main Scope is not mainly to diftinguifh God from the God of che Heathen, but CO fhew how Gud wrought like himfelf in his con- verfion and pardon. Like a King, becaufe he did it meerly out of his prerogative, he had mercy be- caufe he would have. As one that is eternal, whofe mercy indures forever, and wil make good thac Grace which he hath beftowed at the end of the World. Immortall becaufe he is Unchangeable. If fo be that ( as I fhal fliew you by and by ) God had been any way fubjedt to change, unbeliefe would have put him upon ic, fo many denials and fo many withdrawings from the Grace thac is offered. And he calshiminvifible, not in regard of thefpiritualnefs of his being, fo much, as in re- gard of the incomprehcnfiblenefs of his goodnefs, as Very^reatj yet it is pardonable, loc asche Apoftlefpeaks in i. Cor, 2* 9. '^ye bath not feen^ nor ^ar heardy nor hath it entred into thd heart of man what Qod wit do for bis . Or as chs Apoille fpeaksin ^pb» 3.5. of the mercy of God as chac which is unfefarchable 8c had been hid from al ages, and was only revealed in thefe latter times, and upon himfelf, as his meaning is. And he cals him the only wife God, becaufe he Hath waies to bring about his own ends to himfelf, fuch as none other have. Men muft have means that are conducible untotheir ends, now God brings about his ends by means that are contrary to the fame : By theunbe'- lief of T^//ZGod comes to have exceeding Glory in the pardoning of it» I fay the intendment of Taul in thefe Attributes, ^n^j and Eternally and Immortallyis partly to diftinguifh God from, and to fee him above all the Kings and glory on the earth. You faith ^aul are Kings bur. you die like men and are not eternal, and the wormes ihall feed upon you, but he is Immortall : Your ftate and glo- ry is all in fhew, but he is Invifible : You are wife, , but not the only Wife, Projects may be laid, and Defigns may be thought upon that may cafl you out of your Thrones and lay all your Scepters in the duft, but my God is not fuch a one, He is only tvife, and therefore to Him be Qlory for ever. But it's not only to fet up God and to extoU him above all the Kings of the earth, but as I hinted before, to fhew you what thofe Attributes were which fhined in Gods pardoning TtZM^/ unbelief. As in praier, the Scripture is wont to pick out fuch Epithites and Attributes of God which are proper to excercife & ftrengthenthefaith of aman in that particular he asks. As the Qodof VeacefljoU tread down Satan under your feet fh only ^ Rom. 16. 20. becaufe God being at Peace with us and being out friend he is on R our i ib6 Though the Sin of Unheleife be our fide againft Satan and all that rife up againft us. So here the Text doth ufe the proper At- tributes which did make known themfelves in that work of pardon whereof ^uul fpeaks. In pardo- ning my unbelief faith he, hefhewedhimfelf to be a ^i^2^ above all law, to be accomptable to none, but to do even as he plcafeth. In giving me my pardon he hath fliewed forth his eternall power, becaufelfhallneverbe called to an accompc nei- ther in this world nor in the world to come. The King may give a man pardon, and another may cut oiF for that oifence, but it is not fo with me faith ^aul:, for, he that lives forever hath fealed unto me my remiffion. Men faith he are led in their afts of bounty but to fome things and they eft change, but^od hath fhewedunto me the immw tability of bis connfel^ and his mercy that fails not. The mercies that ^od hath fhewed me are fuch as areinviTible, that cannot be taken in by the Eye, nor the underftanding, for injob* i. when he fpeaks of this he faith,t^^t no man hatbfeen Qod at any time 'hut onelytbeSon. I bring it to this end, that thegreat mercies of ^od are called the in'vifihle tbings of^od m the ^ofpel, and his manifold Wifdom as he fpeaks in^pb* 3. and they are feen in my pardon, for he hath taken me that can never attribute any thing tomyfelflamfobad: and he hath taken one that fhall forever hearten thofe mens fpirits that are dejefted, for none are more unworthy nor worfe than I; he hath found out a way that I could not think of, his wifdom hath made that way to be a way of life which I thought to be a way of death : When I went to perlecute, he did convert me. And when he ftrucke me down, he raifed me up. It is only the wifdom, the fmgular wifdom, and the un- known 8c unconceivable riches of grace that is paft finding out,It is only the eternity and the unchange- ' - ablenefs very great y yet it u pardonable. 107 1 ablenefs of God as being King, and Lord, which is allfhewedin Vaulshtmg pardoned who through j unbelief had commicced fuch iins. Ic is an honor to God my beloved co forgive any iin, but the greateil honor chat can be Jto forgive unbelief. It is a liii ' chat provokes him moft, and which makes us moft unworthy, and a fin that he may execute judgment upon men for, and none complain. How ever men complain and quarrel now with God and fay if (jod fhould condemn men for unbelief;, he ihould be unjuft unlefs he gives men power co believe, y ec inchegreac day of the Lord men fhal not have a word to fay, buc as he in Wattb. Z2. 1 1. was a type of ic chac was invited to che feaft and was without hk wedding garment^ when he was asked how came you hither, he was thrown into darknefs and bound hand and foot and had nothing to fay : A man will have lefs to fay againfl: the righteous judgment of! ^od becaufe he is condemned for unbelief, than a man will have co fay againft §od becaufe he is con- demned tor bj^aking the Law. Buc I fay ic is an honour co God co forgive any fm, buc fpecially co forgive unbeleife.for chat is the provoking (in. Of che people of Ifrael God faith they did provoke him in the wildernefs. And in ^eh^ 3. ?• The Apoftle faith the fame of unbelief, and therefore bids them tal^e heed of it, Ic was thac which puc God inco anger, although fury be his ftrange v/ork, and is not in him as he fpeaks : oind in hk anger ^ it made bimfweare that they flyould not enter into bk reft. His anger is fee forth after the manner of men, as if he were fo angry that he could not fpeak fiiliy his mind. So che words are in ^eh, 3. II. Ifcheyenter inco my reft. God is noc dif- , curbedby any anger, his anger is nothing elfe buc [ his doing of thac which his judgm.enc hath difcerned j as fie CO be done. Buc as v/e are wonc co fay when I ; we are moil angry. If ever you find favour with K. z me. 1 o 8 Though the S i?i ojTJnk leife he \ me, Then. SoGodfpeaks as if he would Iiave us to conceive greater evil to come then words are able to utter. Unbcleif is the mofl provoking tin. What ever God doth do againft an unbeleever, he fhal be cleered, no mouth fhal be opened, every mouth Ihal be itopped when he is judged in it. For mark it I befcech you. There is the leafl required ( as I have fhewed you heretofore ) of us in the commandemeat of fainh that can be. He that hath no underftanding in the things themfelves, yet may be able to aflent unto the teftimony of him that doth know and underftand them. He that hath no wifdomtodive into the nature of things, may yet have weaknefs enough to beleevc. Beleeving is an ad: of weaknefs in its felf, it argues deficiency, for it argues the taking up of a thing upon the credit of another, feeing with anothers eyes and hearing with anothers eares. There is nothing required be- fore we do beleeve but only this, that we know God is true of his word, and chat he wil performe , it. And That the heavmf do declare^ and the ^irma' ment^and al his handy vpor\s. There is nothing pro- perly required of us to the adl ot faith, but only that which God gave us in Adam, and that is, that we would let God teach us and inftrud^ us, and lead us in the way of life everlafting. ^od doth not withhold and withdraw his power to make us to beleeve, until we do withhold and do not that which is in our power. If we do that which is in our power, §od is not bound. This is not the rule of (Jods proceeding, that if we do what we can and what is in us, then he wil do what is in him : But this is the rule of ^ods denyal ( when men live un- der the meanes ) That til they do that which they may, hedothdeny to do that which may help and affiftthem. So that I may truly fay as the Apoflle did in the time of prophecy in i Cor. i4« *He ^ cow [ Xdemncdofal^ and judged of aU So my beloved All ^ ^ will yerygreat^yet it is pardonable. lop wilcondemneandalwiljudg unbelief, alwil find fauk with an unbcleever, and al wil agree with ^od in what wrath he wil execute upon him, be- (_caufe when ^od requires faith, he requires of us no more then what he gave, and he doth not deny to us what we want til we refUfe to do what we may. USE. To ftirre you up to beleeve that your unbelief e is pardonable. You may fave your labor ( you wil fay it may be for that ) for its cleer and evident be- fore our eyes and we al do beleeve it. Mybelovedj it wil be found one of the hardeft things in the world to beleeve it : that is to beleeve it upon good grounds. When you look upon the mercy of ^od, from whom mercy fhould come^and when you look upon the greatnefs of your guilt, and the numbers of your 1ms that your unbelief nourifhethupinyour converfation. Many a man that laith that Jefus Chrift is (^^od and good yet when he hath come to grapple with the pangs cf death and with the terrors of the Almighty, hath faid, Oh he is not good nor kind unto me, my fin he wil not forget. It is fuch a fm as is not to be paft by. You know what the Text faith in verfe i6. that there is a beleeving unto life everlafting, and my beloved there is a beleeving that is temporary, and not unto everlafting life. That Faith which brings eternal life with it, is grounded upon the te- ftimony of (jod, that Faith is accompanied with thefenleofamansdeferts,to be Ihut out of the fa- vor of §od forever,that Faith is accompanied with \ the purifying of a mans converlation from all un- clcanefs both of Flefh and Spirit. Do but look on Vauli and into this Chapter, and you fhal find him how I lO though the Sin of Unheleife he how he loads himfelf: Saichhe, lam offmnerstbe chief', and how his fpiric is revived and quickned to i^loiify Chrift, Tobimheglory for ever and cier, as he i'peaks in verie 17. Iflo be thciefore that you did beleeve chat unbelief was paidonable, there would be fome degree of thefe found in you, fome of chefe words would come from you. \V'henas the Rebels hear that the flacewil pardon them not with- ftandhig the raurthcr and the outrages that they have committed, then they prefently fall, and lay down their weapons, and betake themfelves to the obedience of that llate. So my beloved, a man would throw away his fm, it ihould not be found in his hand, he would not work the work of the Flefhany more, if he were perfwaded of this that the Lord wil pardon all thofe works of the flefh that have been done heretofore by him. There is ' fuch a melting power in mercy, and fuch an cver- comming power in a meffage of love unco the foul, that it cannot by any means have any ftrength to go on to the works of hn after the hearing of it. Xec me fpeak to you a little who have known what it is to be under the difpleafure of ^od. Do you find it an eafie thing, can you quickly convince your felves that your flanding out againfl Chrift when he came and wooed you, that your doubting of thefaithfulnefsofChriil when Qod. hath taken an Oath and Sworn to you that he will fulfill his wordandpromife toyou.«* Do you find that your quarrelling and picking advantages againft the ^ofpel, are fuch things as will eafily be pardoned ? There is no fin fticks more with a godly man than this iin of unbelief, and there is no lin that he is more afraid of than chat, becauie through unbelief he hach defpifed mercy, ^od hath given him up (bethinks) unto the flattering and prefumptu- oufnefs of his own heart, and will remember that to yery great ^ yet it is pardonable. III to his dying day . I befeech you be perfwaded. Say what you can for your felves, Lee us hear ic, and fee if you can cleer your felves. Produce your charge againft this cruch, and lee if this wil not an- fwer it. What canft thou fay againft thyfelf ? Oh faith the foul, 1 can fay God fpared me naaiiy years, 8cl did nothing but drink in iniquity as a Fifh drinks water, and when I thought he would have made an end ofmy fin and of my hopes al at once, yet then did he come and tel me that there was grace and falvation provided for fuch a finner as I : Buc when he fpake gracioufly to me who am grace- lefs, I rebellioufly and gracele/ly faid, not now Lord but when I am old, let mc alone now till I have taken my fill in fm. But when that would not ferve the turn but that he made me to attend unto the offer of the Gofpel,! then faid it cannot be, and it will not be, I fhall but be flattred with vain hopes and deceived of my exped:ations : Then have I gone and knit all the knots that could be up- on the plain truths of the gofpel, That which o- ther men have found by experience to be for cer- tain,! have made to be but as a vain word to me^But althoughthouhaft done al this, yet fill thou haft done no more than ^aul did and yet he obtained Mercy But you wil fay, I have done thus a long while, and I am grown prophane, and I find an akmg Toothinmeagainftany that are godly, and I can- not think or fpeak of them but my thoughts are full of blafphemy againft them and the grace of ^od. And fo was ^aul^ he was ^ ^lajphemer and a ^er- fecutor and yet obtained mercy. I befeech you do but confider it. Wil ^od (think you) fave none ? Is his eleftion come to nothing > If he faves any, he faves them out of unbelief, for therein are I all 112 Though the Sin of Unbelelfe be J all men by nature. If ^od hath no bowels nor piccy towards thee. Hath he none unto his own glo- ry ? How fhal he be able to get honor to his name ? Who wil acknowledge him to be a ^{ingy and Im- mortally ^ndchQ only tVifeCjod^ but only thofe that have found his ever lafting mercies and unchangea- ble goodnefs of which there is no comprehenfion, and that his thoughts are beyond our thoughts^thac he hath mercy lain hid from eternity which now he will bring to knowledge, ^od loves his own Glory , And therefore for his own Glory and names fake will fhew mercy to fuch as you Therefore take it in, there is no danger, this are. word wil not flatter you todellruftion, it wil not glut you, and take away your appetite. Take in this word and fay, whatever I have been through unbelief, and though I and ^od and Chrift have been two all my daies, and though fm and I have been one al my daies, and all through unbelief, yet for chac there may be mercy and grace. 1 CHAP. XII. A fifth %eafon of the DoHrine : ^o rgivenefi of this fm voorl\f moft upon the Irleart, The for mer TJ/t? continued^ to perfwadethat ^nh^lief ispardona- . hie. The benefits of believing tJMs truth are ma- ny, ^aulf example hi this cafe propounded to beconfidered, Ule. 2. To glorify Qod for the pardon of Unbelief. Ufe 3. Consolation to two fortf, I. Such oi havenegleVied the offers of Qrace and notvhd've none* 2. Such at fear Qod doth not lonje them^ becaufe they are fo hardly brought to belienje on and love him* REASON V. THerefore God wil forgive this fin of unbelief, ' becaufe the forgivenefs of no fm works more i upon the heart than the forgivenefs of this finl ^ doth. No fin forgiven doth work more ftrongly j and more upon the heart than the forgivenefs of un- belief doth. That God takes a pleaiure to do that i i which a: ay make us beft and bring us into the grea- | cefl: conformity and agreement to his will. Nov/ ' [look iiKo this place and you fhall find what a change there was in ^aul, 1 was in verfe 13. faith 'he a Blafphemer and had as ilia tongue againft ' religion as any man could have : And I was a I'er- ! fecutor^dLU oppofer of the waies of God and a. falfe in it as ever any chat the earth did bear. But now he was humbled and as tender hearted towards the SainJ s. ^aul chat before could not beleeve a word of theGcfpel, now he fets his Seal to it as he faith in a following verfe. This is that which is worthy of S ^ aU \ ■ .)• 1 14 Though the fin of Unbelief be 1 all acceptation that he loves fmnerSi and me the chief *, ' Now (Pc/«Uives like anexaaipleand like a paccern '' of Gods grace and merc)^, and he keeps hirnielf un- ! fpocced, chac whenever you look upon him, you may read all long-fuffering, andche name oi^ng Sclmmortall & Inojifihle and only voife Qod. Now ^aul is ful of hravenly a.f[c(klonSyOhuntohim be honor\for ever and for ever^ To him belongs mercy. I got ic5buc he gave ic. It's enough to me chac I have mercy, I The praife honor and glory of ic be unco him chac ; gave ic. God Ihould forgive unreadincfs and un- apcnefs CO receive mercy ! ic works like che Spirit of Spirics which drops upon che hearc and raifech ic abundancly . Thus much for che cxplicacion of che Poinc. USE I Then believe chac your fm of unbelief is pardo- nable and fhallnoc fhuc you ouc from che grace of God. iCs a very hard ching beloved co beleeve ^hat God wil pardon any fin , T^avid had been accu • ftomed CO iinci pardon 8c yec in

Innot fubmittingto therighteouf- nefs which is by Chrift. 1 fay he did oppofe by not fubmicting s As you know a man is a Kebell by not giving up the Caftle or hold that is in his hands unto the fupream pov/er that doth demand it. You I have the Phrafe in ^om. 10. 3. nat mm by eftablif}}- ivg their own righteoufnefifubmit not to therighteoufnejl of ^aith- Now ^aul did eftablifh his ov/n righte- oufnefs, as you may fee in ThiL 3. He did eftablifh it, that is, he did get all the Arguments and Reafo- nings that he could to provoke himfelf to keep the Commandments, and not to truft unco another ( in ' T the \ ^' Ill Though the Sifi oj'^nbdeife be the keeping of chem ) for falvution. And in 2. Cor, 10. 5. the Apod le faith, T/7^t: e^i.er y thought ayidima- n\uatio)imu]l behroug]}t down and fubjelhd mito the obedience of Taith, Here you have unbelief com- pared to a ftronghoLd, andT^.7/ he got al he could to juake the walls of it flrong co fencj himfelf from laying down his confidence in what he did before. That was one way of ^6^/^// refifting and oppoiing rhe offer of Grace. Secondly, Taul did refift by doing what he could againft that way , as you heard it before, Ife ^oerily \ thought he ought to do many things contrary to the name ofjefi^. And what ^aul did by way of op- pofitioUj he did it heartily and fmartly. I qjerily thought faith he : I thought 1 had as good reafon to oppofe that way of falvation, as any way of pro- phanefs, I befeech you my beloved contider it : (Jonverfion doch indeed take away oppoficion and ;' refiflrance, But how .? Not that it is not, but that ; ic prevails not. There is ftill oppoficion and there cannot but be oppoficion in every on? of us unto the Law of Faith. But the Lav/ o^ Faith chan- ji^eth the nature and maketh us willingly fubjed to I ic in fome meafure in 2, Cor, 10. 5. 7bu ha^vi m:n Ifaid to be brought into Captivity. And in ^^b. 4. 8. j Chriji leads Captimty captiv: when he makes men to I beleeve ; Now Captives ( you know ) are taken I fighting, and Captives are the.n that aie taken in armies : And fo grace finds a man. When grace comes CO find a man, what (hrinking and drawing back, what debating and demurring and plucking up, and what queftioning whether a man hath done well or noc,^ and what Tufpicion of Spirit is there? I fay there is no man brought to Chrifl, but he is drawn and it is againft thenatucallbencof his Spi- Obje^ [ Very^reat^ yet it Is pardonable. Obj:U, But you will fay, ^iy unbelief bath not on- \ Jy beenTxeafonin^s againji QodandCbrijhandmy fdf^ ' ^ but it hath brol^n forth iats^rojlfms, | I i Anfvo. So did ^auVs j I w^ a ^lafph enter and a • /Perfecmor through my unbelief And ale hough chat ^ thefe iins were noc fcandalous to che Jews who thought that he did do welyet they were unco the Saints. It is true, he thought he was to be fo, but ■. that alters not the Cale. If a man thinks he doth never fo well in killing of one without any juft caufe. He is a murderer. (Paulv/SLs indeed a J^erfe* j cutor and indeed a Blafpemer, And his own good intentions and ignorance cannot excufe him from carrying that name. j ObjeU. But you will fay unto me •, It may b? that I have a great deal offpirit to oppofe the way of ^aith: ^eojcrfotvittyofijithofeobjeVtionfy and never fo inf wearied as in thofeflrivingr. Wmit i do^ I do with a fpiritintbat kjnd although I am dull in every thing 1 elfe. ^ Anfw. And fo was the Cafe of ^aul for he did oppofe mercy. As mercy was offered without j works, or confidence in works. He exalted his own j works into tile Throne together with Jefus Chrifl-., ! and he was exceeding paflfionare and full of ftrong j affeftions in this. | ^ Now then feeing God hath made CPti;/l a pattern,! J^ay thy cafe to his, mouth to mouth, and hand to hand. God will do ( my beloved ) whatever he hath given you a pattern or an example of. He can do it, becaule his hand is not {hortned. He wil do it becaufe every example of mercy is an engage- ment upon God CO fhew mercy. What would you j think of that, Ghyrurgeon that fhould hang out a rTableandtellmenin it, that he can cure men of I T 2 - deafneis 12^ r ^ 24 Though the Sin of Unbekife he deafnefs andof trhc dininefs of eye fighc, and yecj hath HOC the skil, or if he hach done it once, yet is;^ not able to do it again? Y)o not then think hardly ' of God. Doth not the thing imply that he fhouy not be thought of .that he fhould make one a pattern of thofe that fhould be pardoned, and that he will pardon no more ? Go to God therefore and lay to him : Thou didll pardon ^aul^ and thou didft it to allure others to come unto thee for par- don in this cafe 9 There v/as nothing m him to move i thee to pardon him, Ic vv^as of Grace^ Thou haft faid I Lordthat fuch Ihall beleeve, 1 am fuch a one as ^aul was, and therefore work belief in me. Work thy felf by this I fay to beleeve. But Secondly, Asycumiift look upon ^aul as a pattern of thofe that fhallbe pardoned ( although unbeleevers ) So you muft look upon ^aid as a pattern of that grace and mercy which God will j fhew to Tinners, although he never fhewed it to any. ' For the Apoftle Vdiil faith that he was the firXt. 'Obferve that Ipeech. The fir jl. And therefore a pattern in I. Tim. i. 16. Suppofe thou doft exceed Vd-A and all chat ever were in the world in the un- ruly carriage of thy unbelieving heart, yet God wil exceed al. So it is in verfe 14. The Qrace ofQodvcas exceeding abundant * If there be none fo crofs as you, there is none fo kind as he, he can do as he ne- ver did for he is not bound up unto prefident, his mercy is not limited unto patterns. In ^ph, 3. 5. He didjhetv in thefe latter times (^£^ith Fa.nl^tbat mer* cy that vpos h^pt hid from the beginning of the world. Doftthougobeyondwhat others do in having the moft peevifh froward objections againft his Grace ? Doft rhoul fay go beyond others ? He will go be- yond what he hath done unto others. If fo be thou goeft beyond what he hath pardoned, he wil go be- 1 yond, ^'^ I yerygriat^ yet it is pardonable. 125 I yond and exceed ics lelf. So chac you have you may fee c wo grounds and reafons even in the Texc| I CO make you.beleeve chac unbelief is pardonable, f 1 The firlt is chac ic was pardoned unco VanU and he I was a paccern. Secondly, if your cafe be worfcl I than TaHlfjjQt ^aitl is a paccern of Gods fhewing fuch mercy as he never did before. In me firft. Therefore in chefecond place, chac I may draw towards aconclufiou- Hall chou found God gi- ving chee any hupe and hincing co chee by any word that chy unbelief ihall be pardoned ? chen glorify him in chis behalf, excoU his goodnefs. if you look into I Tim> i. 14. yoU ihall find chac ^aul faich chac God fhewed an abimdancii of Qrace. Thac is, chat chere was fo much goodnefs and mercy in him as chat he could bear the negle Who would endure it ? If chou were" noc fairh ^aid unco jefus Chrilt immorcal thou wouldff not. Thou ^itlm.ifible-, Ihere is no end of thy Goodnefs, ic is pail fin* ding out, like a Depch or Boccom wh'ch no eye can pierce. And truly Beloved fo it is, for che under- ftanding of a Man is noc able to conceive ic, how one fhouldprcferveco himfelf the reputation of Wif- dom,8c have the honor of a kindnefs,8c yecnotvi^ich- ilanding be urging of it continually where ic is refu- fed. Thou arc the Only wifeQcd : chou haft a way of Wifdom lo thy felf, a way of working co thy felf j thy waies unCo chy ends are not fuch as men choQfi|| by chac which feems contrary co chy ends. choud^J acconiplifh chem. by pardoning che abufe of mer- cy thou do(t honor uiercy ^ by forgiving him chac ftood out againft thee, chou doft brinp him inco o- bcdience and fub; edion to chee* I befeech you my beloved. .^ yerygreat^yet it is pardonable. 127 •beloved, do afcer the manner of their fpirics cannot but be in a great deal of trouble : for God hath left by all hisMoci- ous fweec favois upon the rings of the doors of their hearts as ic were^ that will make them to run up and down and cry after him. Thouthat haft no motions now, nor sny Suters' nov/ for Heaven, andthinkeft therefore that thou {halt lie dov/n in forrow, and live and die v/iHiout Chrift, knov/ chat this thy unbelief is pardonable : And becaufe it's pardonable, therefore God will make thee offers again, and tenders again. Come thou therefore under the means, and wait up^n the Lordm.chem, liilen ro every word that is fpoken iomthing or other thou fhalt find. So long thou maiftbefure God hath not reiolved that he* will never make tender more unto thee, fc long as thou haft any delire that he would come again and make tenders unto thee. The fm againft the Holy Ghoft is fuch a defpiling of Jefus Chrift, as that a man would not have mercy rather than have it by him * he would die for ever rather than be beholding to him. Secondly : You that fear God doth not love you becaufe you have been fo hardly obtained to love him, and believe upon him : Why ? Imagine that God will remember your crofsnefs, and al- though you be married to him, yet he will ferve you as you have ferved him , he hath fpoken again i and again, and you would not hear, nor give an- fwer, and therefore you fhal pray again and again, and he wil not hear nor give you anfwer. Yet com- fort thy felf in this,that thy unbelief is pardonable, andif God forgive, he wil forget, and if hepafsby what thou haft done, it fhall be as if it had been ne- ver done. He wil not remember thy lin to con- demnation, and therefore he will not remember ic to yery great, yet it is Tardonahk. i ap to keep any thing thac is good from thee. All is done, God having fhewed thee pardon of Unbe- lief, be now free for to receive, and careful leait thou give any denial, and charge thy felf the more becaufe thou haft been fo full of Itrangenefs and denials^and defpifings through thy unbelief. ^^&&^iBs^&^2&M^^ F 1 ^ I S. V I. — <* ri ^ L Scriptures Opened in the ©ooA of Unbeliefs Or the want of ^adinefs to lay hold on the Qomjort giyen by Chriji. Chap. verf. Page Qenefify 3 TO 84 15 5 98 l3 12 48 3-5 ^9 S 37 35 5 23 10 8 Ci4 I5,i<5 8 Deuteronomy^ 6 7 94 w^^ 29 19 87 •4 21 33 5 1^5 16 57 1 Samuel) ip 13 25 2 Samuel^ 13 17 35 I %}ngs, 20 32 59, & 102 ^lehemlahy I 1 1 89 Vfalmj, 9 10 46 ^4^ II 67 32 9 89- Chap, verf. Page 41 5 8 5^ H 1 18 51 I 74 I 2 107 43 54 III 5 119 122 I 85 126 I 66 141 5 33 14 15 SiA 88 21 15 85 22 24 25 25 23 25 28 26 50 ^cclefu^ftefy 12 14 71 Ifaiaby I 2,3 21 55 I 46 8 9 ibid i6i I 115 JeremlaJj^ 29 II 46 3 17 ^7 10 II 13 15 17 18 22 ^3 25 26 28 6 16 3 22 23 24 Chap. verf. Page ^attbewy 7 15, 22 8 20. 4 '^A 23,24 41 108 20, 20J 20 107 26^27 85 20 38 3 34^95 32 58 37^39 105 16 g$ 9 28,112 18 ^arl{^y 20 9 LukSi 41 48 5 31.32 31 40 9 12 2 92 112 33,. 113} 44/ 17 82 Scriptures Opened ( Chap, verf . Page Chap, verf Page Chap. verf. 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IP I Coriwjt&i^JWi', 3 7 10 II 21 52 3 22^23 98 Bef^rett?/, A 12 5^ iS lo 22 V 61 2 I 69 * % 13 I I 12 a I 3 4 12 29 f 1$ 9 7S 13 2 ±. 9 ^ 4>5 7 « 13 2 15^ S . 5 10 33 ?7 16 24 42 2 Coriw>fci^?2/, 38 2 1 20 : 24 5 ^v 10,11 71 II 26 17 25 6o>>j 7 39 99 12 5 - 55 ' ~ -> .QaUnans^ 13 13 17 *^»4> ^. 16^ 10 James, ■ ^d ^iDi 5: 2cT 20 7, 12 I 19 So %- d7><: 109 120 21 35vSo 1 . ^ ' 3 X 50 V 2 2 __J Scriptures Openect. f / Chap. verf. Page Chap, v erf. Page Chap.verf Pa^e 2 10,11 37 2 Teter, 5 14 p8 19 II I 3 97 23 80 4 7 23,25 2 15,16 7 7/^rfe, I ^eter, \ 3 J4 71 ir 7 I 13 8I' I JoJ7n) ^e^e/^fi(?rt, 2 2 874 I 22 1 6 24, V - 22 18. 10 X I >i.l l^ili^&li^lsi^^A'^^^^^l^ ^^ Scriptures Opsnedj In the Book of 2\[ot going to Chriji for Salvatio?i an Exceeding great Sin* Chap. Verf. Page CjeneftS:, 3 15 68 20 98 39 9 83! ^umbers, [ 20 10,11512 71,92 Deuteronomy, 29 29 117 I %ingf, 14 16 118 31 33 97 13 8 II 2 2 19 9 42 IP 25 32 33 Chip. Verf. Pagef 39 5 9^7 49 2 97 78 10 70 116 II 114' Ifaiaby 50 II 3<5 ^ofeuy '^- 6 7^. 97 2- 4 8d • ^Mattbeiv^ - 3 7 •r>.o^)27 -4 74* 31,32, 101 16 -^44 5 ^^ 29 II 107 38.39 7, 13 12 20 22 Chap. Verf. Page '^58,65 2§ 52 3 1 10 21 20 16 16 16 ; - ', ' 69M Lu!{e, I 53,54 24 3 38 9« 7 47; 83 rr 12^ 74 It Ij'r' 84 14 23* 119 18 8 . 99 TI 12 23 iS^^ 69 24 25f 71 » Jobrii turefs .Cbap.Vctf. Page Chap. Vert Page I '^ 6 ?^* i% r John, 39 3^' 27 64 10 37 3S ^11 3P»4^ 10, 16 Chap. Vcrf. Page, •CI or '3^-' . ^i 10 127 20 16,57 14^ 85 3 C20, I2l| 4" 9,10 99 24>25 9^ 20- 105 Ij2 98 la,}^ 48 ' 124 8 ^ 122 17- 7^ y^ i 1 II I 2 3 7 17 22 26 28 25 1 7, 8 III I Corinthians^ 9 81 2 9 105 3 18,19 79 10 4 70 6 119 S 11 121 26 ^'-'V'!*^*^.."'''-*-'* t/43/, 16,17 2 37 117 12 19 56 51 69 2 Corinthians f $ 52] 3 119 4 9 121 5 25,26,27 I 25 10 2 Tbejfalonians, 3 2 24, ^ 100 f V 8o, 92,122 5 120 3 1:4 24 1 25 31 41 5 18,36 37 19 77. 116 20 59, (^alatians. ■^-aUS^Jl**; 2 3 14 24 119 6 Mmmm 9 14 15 16 20 23>45 7 94 io4 124 125 2,95 2,89 124 125 104 110 125 2 I 70 Scriptures Opcacd. iChap. Vcrf. Page | Chap. Vcrf. Page 3 7 107 ■ 2 I'et^r, 9 H 34 7am0f, n 93y r- r I ll tip 107 I 23>^4 74. . 12 8,69 75 ifobn, IS 34 % %Q 6 t'.' ^^^ ^^ 31^ 46 0 10 103 ^ t V^ter, a^ 46, 10 28,29 S ( J . . >i c ^3 3S pi a t,a,3 51 S 10 63, fr I III ^ 64 70 1 ' \ *>iHi«Mta ■^ •-^— -• ^. — r --•"—r: — «-»-T- -i^'tj^*^. '--^ <- .. Or ,.'»r r i _. I 0£I ibi^n -fM^I Xk. — ihtr- 01 1 -'at ■ o' : 4*^ I c ,w-AP .i\\yH'^ \ .f \ In the Treatife of Covetoufnefs is fhewed, 1 Itis the Duty of all as they would obtaine eternal Life to be ware of covetoufnefs. z The Reafons of the DoCiriney 1 Its afpiritualSin. a It over f pre adi the whole man* 3 Its oppofiteto the Nature of Godlimfi and Reli- gion. 4 Its the if'omb and feed of all Sin. 5 Its a bafe Sin. J The Dangeroufnefi ofcovetoufnefi. I It IS hardly avoided, z Its difficultly cured. 4 Toujhal have all things needful for this life if you willoo^ after Grace. 5 Tour Life lies in Grace^ not in Riches. 6 There is more to be feared than to be defired in Riches. 7 n'e (hould Mort'ifie our de fires af- ter Kiches. London: Printed by^Peter Coley Prin-ec and Book-Seller,'; ac the iign of the Tiinting-prefsy in Corn-hill^ neer the Royali Exchange, 1658. "HI IIM.IW. ^^ff«0^>* TO THE READER. IT will be needle f? for me-to f^rite any thing in the Commendation of the Author of the enJuingTrea^ tife^ both becaufe in London and Cambridge andelfwhere ( where he was conVerfant ^ he wa^ for his ^odlineJf^Learning^ and Abilities as wet approved tf as known : As alfo becau/e ( though by ^ajon of above twenty years knolt>ledg of him^ and twelve years cmjlant fitting under his Mtnifiry^ and private in^ timaey with him ^ Icouldfay much, yet ) "^hateVerl Jhould fay of him would avail but little tofuch as "^ere '^oth grangers to him, and are alfo to my /elf I ajfure ^ou^that in theje Sermons, you haVe?iothing but what I took from his own Mouth, l^hen he TreacheZ-y them : Ttfhich I did tranfcribe in the ^^uthors life time, '^ith adefirethathefnightperfeHandfitthem for the TreJS: ^hich I found him willing to^ but hin^ dredfromy by his conftant Minifierid work^and great weaknepof^ody^ Iconfej^tbat my hve of the Mat:» \tjerin the following Treatife, and theBlesfing which iheLordqfhis goodnef^ri;ouchfafedme by the fame ^ together lt?ith the leaVe l^hich the jiuthor ( tn his life Pf^^^) oft gave me to ^rint any of his works that I ^jxd taken from him in^rjting, have Jlrongly inclined 'me ( ftnce his death ) to publtp fome of. them t^ the World : !But did forbear^ becaufel knew thatSermojis ■I I 1 11*1 To the Reader, breached by themojl/ible Minijler^. ^nay yet need and deferVe hii^erufall^ Andfontt amendments before they he Printed : Jet at lajl amoyercorneto ?naf(e themfas they, are ) pHhlickj by the impori:unities of many that J^drd themJ^yCMhcd^ haVing this Qonjidence thatyou -^^i II remember that they are but Sermon^ dreaded \Mnd?iot prepared by the Author for the Vrefi: And \mtwithftandingthat^ I do belee^e^ that if you read ^kemferioufLyy ponder oufLy^ and withajpiritual heart, {\whetheryou are M'tniflers^' or private Chrijiianf^ ^JQH ml find^iQ caiife of repenting of your pains ^ hut rather ytfil be conjlrained to read them again ^ a^ain- fori eyer found his Sermons wcljludied and digeflti that the of ner 1 read them ^ the more I perceived in them^ . , Give me leave only to inform you that the Author did preach aboVe fourfcore Sermons upon that Text Eph. 13 . To the Praife and Glory of his Grace^ and upon Texts relating to and purfuing that matter of Arminianifm^ which he hath elaborate^ ly handled both DoBriyially andprafiically^ many of the which I have wrote out^ and am refolved ( as God giVes Jlrength and time ) to finifJ? the reji ^ yet Ifhal altogether omit the publtfoing of any ofthem^ unleJSI '^nderjland that thefe find good accept ayice. hi the mean time^ j4 ^lesjing ofthofe upon your hearts^ U ' •andfhal be the ear^eji Trayers of , MARK COE. at the Trintin^^prejs' hy the Exchange. yz'Theyrvhofe hearts ure pierced by 4. Want of Allurance, j. Afflidion thetVordy are earned with love a?jd 6 Temptation. 7. Difliertion. 8. Un» refpe^ to the Hmfterf of it : And ferviceablenefs. 9, EHfcouragenicncs ere bufie to enqmey andreadj to Irom the Conihion itfelf. Delivered fubmit to the mind of God. 1 in thirteen Seraions5onT*/i(z/«j342.«^'* II Slnnefi in dilirefi ofconfcienceyArel iinora'ftt t^hat theyjhotild do. I 14 ^ coftmtefimer fees a. nccefuy of coming out of his fmfui condition. ^ li There is a feeret hope wherewith the Lord fupports the hearts of con- trite finmrs. \6 Thty who are truly pierced for their Jin fi do prife and covet deli- verance f/om their fins. 17 True contrition is accompanied with co'/tfeffion of fin ^ when Gud cals thereunto. i8 Tht ^oul th at is pierced for finy is His Four Sermons concerning, 4 Sin againft the Holy GhoK. 5 Sins of Infiimitie. 6 The falfe ApoiVle cried and difco- vered 7 The good and means of Bftabilth- Bienc 8 The great things Faith can do. 9 The great things Fai:h can fuffcf- 10 The Great Gol^el Myi^ery of the- Saints Comtcrt and HoUnefSj opened: and applied from ChriSs Prieftiy Office. - 11 Satans power to Tempt, and It Sw Bw)k$ more of Mr. Hookers in two Volums in Quarto^ are printing. carriedwitbareftltfi di^ilie «^«^/i5) ChriftsL-ove to, and Care of hi*.. People under Temptation IX Tbankfulnefs required in every- Condkion. i I J Gi9£6 for Grace. 14 The Spiritual A a!ngs of Faith; through Natural ImpolfibiUiies, 15 Evangelical Repentance '^ 16 The Sfiirltual Life, &c. 17 The Womsn of Canaan. 1^ TKe faints Hiding place^&c 19 Chrifts Coining &c. lo A Vindication QfGoTpel Ordw- ntnccs ii Grace and Lcve beyond Gifts Tvftnty onefeve-fal Books of Mr. Wil- liam Brid^e^ Colle^ed^nio ti^a Columns* Viz. 1 Scripture Zight the moftfure Light: coi«parcd with, i. Revelations & Vifi- onsz.Natural & Supernacual Dreams 5 Impreffions withj and without Word 4. Light and L^w within. %. Di- vine Providence, d. Chriftian Experi- ence. 7. Kumsne Reafon. 8. Judicial Aftroiogy. Delivered in $en|ion$j on i.Tet. I. 19. a Chrifi in Travel: Wherein, 1. The Travel pf.liis Tout a* T^e Jirft and after effefts of hi^ Peath, j His Affu- ran«« of Ifue; 4» . And fUs fatis/jt^ion therein. Are opened and deered in Scr- '3/4 Lifting up for i^e C^^^ownM cafe of, I. Great C\n. i» Wealmefs of r^iKc, i; Miicarnagc of E^ties-l A hU.'Brightman oa' theRevcUtion. • CIq-ws Chyrurgsfy. Marks of Salvation . Chciftians Engagement Ibr ibfi G^t fpel, by John Goodwin. Great Church Ordinance of Baptifra. Mr. LocifjCafe, containf^g hisiki-- tUionsj Narrative, a^d Speech. I J5o(jks Printed by Peter Cole, Twelve Soo\s of Mr. Jercmhh bxit* io\xgh%Uiely fublijhed j alfothe Texts ofScriptuie upon which they are grounded. I Gofpel Rcconcili*iion,OrChri{ls Trumpet of Peace to the W«rld. Wherein is Opened Gods exceeding wlllingQcfi to be Reconciled to Man > And Gods fending his Embafladors to that End . From, i Cor.$. ?9, lo, x i . X The Rare Jewd ofchridian Con- t€mme?itiOn Phil. 4. H' Wherein is (bcwed, I What Contentment is. 1 It Is^n Holy art and Myftery. 5 The Ex ccllencics of it. 4 The Evil of the con- trary fin of Murmuring, and the Ag- gravations of it. J Golpet-iforfhipi on Levit. 10. j. Wherein is (hewed, i The right man- ner of theWorfliip of God in Gencralj And particuiarly,ln hearing the Word, Receiving the Lords fupper, & prayer, 4 Gojpel-Ccnverfation, on Phil, i 17 Wherein isfliewed, i That the Converfations of Bcleevers mufl be a- bove wbic could be by the Light of Nature.! Beyond tbofe that liTcd un* der the Law. j An«l (utable to what Truths the Gofpel holds forth. To which is added, The Mifery of tbofe Men thit bdve their Portion in tbU Life only, on P/k/. 17* '4. $ A Trcatife of E trthly-minded- w^:Wherein is ihcwed, iWhat Earth- ly-mindednefs is, 1. The great Evil thereof, on VhtL j. part of the ip.verf. Alfo to the fame Book is joyned, A Trtiiiitoi Henvenly-mindednefii end rv/i^ing with Qodyon Gen. 5 . i4. and on Pfei/.J* ao. ^ An expeftion on the fourth, fifth, fixth, and feventh Chapters of the Prophcfic of Hofid' 7 An Expofifm on the cighthfolntli) and tench Chapters of Hofa. 8 An Expofiiion on the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth Cbapiers of Hefea, being now complcat. 9 The EvilofEvilit or the excee- ding finfalncfs of (in, on Job 16. II, 10 Precious Faiih, on t Pet. i. i. 1 1 Of Hope, on i John j. J. II Of Walking by Faich, on % Cor. ^.7. Mr. B«/To«^l;f his fifty nine Seimons on Matth. n. aS, zj, jo. Ace Printed. A Godly and Fruit- ful ExpofttioHy on the firft Epiftle of Peter. By Mr* John ^^ers^ ' Minifter of the word of God at Dedham in I Ejjex. Mr ^I(ogers on T^aaman the Syrian, his Difeafe and Cure: Difcovcring the Leprofte of Sin and Self-love J with the Cure, t^»\. Self- denial and Faith. '^Mr* Rogers bis Trcatife of Marri- age. The Wonders of the Load{lon^ By iAmnel tferd odpfwicb. An Expojition on the Gofpel of the Evange- lift St. 3iatthcw. By Mr. r4r^. 4t the ^rinting^prefs by the Exchange. The Difcipline of the Church in 7{£W'^ngUnd : By the Churches and Synod there. The Wife Virgins L«mp Barning; Or> Gods fweet incomes of Love to a gracious Soul waiting for him. Pub- li&ed by ^h. Tbomof mld^ Iste of New-England, Twelve new Books in one Volttm of Nich. Culpcper, All sailed the IdcM of PrMcMl Pbjffcfc. 1 The art to prcferve Health, a The preternatural difordcr of mans body, and their Signs. 3 Of Med icaments. 4 Ofthcart of Healing. . 5 Of the general Cure of Dlfeafes. 6 Of External Difcafes. 7 OfFeavers. 8 OfHcadDlfeafes. 9 Of middle Belly D?fcafes. 10 O^ Lower belly Difeafcs. II Of VenemousDiftafes* 12 Of ChildrensDifea fes* Tbiny four Bovk^ of tikh. Culpcpcr, Gf»^ Sludent in Phyfick and yAfttoloiieyformtrly publijbed. The fi:/l Twenty four Books.Arc all calkd the PraSiice of Vhyfkkj Wherein \ is plainlyXet forth,Thc Nature-tCaufey Viftrenccsi and feveral forts of Signs > Together with the Cure of al Difeafes Jo the Bod) of Man. Being a Tranfla- ^ tioH of the Works of that Learned and Renowneil Dodor, Laytrm Kiverim^ ^ iiow livings Councellor and Phyfoian to the prefent King of Frame. At^ovc •ftftcen thoufand of the faid Books in ' i^cin have bccnr fold in a n^y few Yejrsahaving been eight times printed, though al the former Impreflions wan- ted the Nature,Caufes,$ignsjand Dif- ferences of the DifcafeS) and had only the Medicines for the cure for thems a$ plainly appears by the Authors Epifllc* ^ If. A Sure Guide to Phyfick and Chyrurgery : That is to fay. The Arts of Healing by Medicine, and Manual Operation. Being an Anatomical Dc»- fcriptron of the whol body of Man. and its parts, with their Rcfpeftive difeafes, dcmonHrated from the Fabrick and uf$ ofthefaid Parts* In Six Books of RiolanuSy tranflated) and adorned wich sn hundred eighty four Figures cut in Brafs. xSyefllngns Anatomy oftbeB0dy§f uV made of thofc- Herbs- The way of mixing the Me- dicines according to the Caafe, ?5d, Mixture of thcDifeafe, and ;he par?c of the Body ailiaed.. i ) > >Mmt^ ^obKs Trintedby Tctct Cole, i^k 19 h^'mCloryfor Midwives, or a G«i=:if for- fr(7;wc?2. Newly enlarg€cl by the Authoi' n\ every fneec, and illu- ftra[ed with divers new Plates. 50 Gdem Art ofVhyficii^ with a' large Gomment. 5 I New Method both of Rudying and pradifmg Phyiiclc. J I A-Treacifeofthc Rickets, being A DKeife cofnmoa to Children wherein is (hewei, i The Eiknce, ft TheCaufcs, 5 The Signs, 4 The Remedies of the DUcafe : Pablifhed in Latin by Dr. Gli^on, Dr. B^f i : «nd Dr. RegemortcYy tranflated into Englifc, And correaed by N- Cut- veper. 35 Med^camentsfor the Poor, Or Phyfick for the Common People i 54 Health for the Rich and Poor, by Dyet without Phyfick* The London Difpenfmry in Folio, of a large Chirader in Latine. The London DifpenfMtory in twelves, ^ \w a fmal Pocket Book in Latine Six Sermons preached by Dr. ! Hill. Viz. 1 The Beauty and Swectnefs of an Olive Branch of Peace, and Brotherly Accommodation budding. I Truth and Love happily Bcarricd in the Church of Chrift. ^ . « The Spring of ftrengtbening Grace in the Rock of Ages Chrift, Idas. ^ , o » 4 The ftrcngth of the Saints to make Icfus Chrift their ftrength. 5 The Beft and Worft of P4i*^ 6 Gods Eternal prepacacion for his Dying Saints* - A Commemoration of King Charts hU Iftwgurauon* la a Sermon, 1^ iViUUm Laud, then Bi(hop of Canter- bury. Abrahams Offf;r, Gods Offering .* Being a Sermon by Mr. Herle, before the Lord Major oi London^ Mr. Spurftows Sermon, being -a Pattern of Repentance. Ent^lands Deliverance from the ^oTihern Presblccry , compared with its Deliverance from the Roman Pa- pacy, In a Sermon on the ^ ^iNov* 1651* before the Parliament. By Peter Sterrj. The Way of God with his People in thefe Nations. Opened in a Thankfgiving Sermon, preached on the 5 of Novemb. 16^6. before the Right Honorable, the High Court of Parliament. By Teter S terry* Mr. Sympfons Sermon at ^yeflmnfier Mr. FeaJcs Sermon before the Lord Major. TheBeftandWorft Magiftrate. By ObndiahSedgwlcli, A Sermon. A Sacred Panegyrick. By Stephen Marfhal* A Sermon. The Craft and Cruelty of the Churches Adverfaries. By Mdtthew Wevpcomen' A Sermon The Magiftratcs Support and Bur- den. By Mr. John CMrdeL A Sermon. Mr. Orvens ftedfaftncfs of the Pro- mifes. A Sermon. Mr. ThiUips TreatifeofHcll. of Chrifts Genealogy The Caufc ofour Divifibns difco- vered, and the Cure propounded. King Charts his Cafe, or an Appeal to al Rational men conccfning his tryal. A Relation of the Barbadocs. ARela:ion of the Repentance and Converfion of the Indians in New- England : by Mr. Sl'm^ and Mr. ^^hS^, THE - - ' ' ''u,i^i!^:^iM' r-r:'i; at the Trinting^peJ^atihe Ex<:han^e, ,Four 2>JjiP Sooks'^ Mr. Jer. Buriroughs^ VIZ. THE FIRST BOOK j 7 Some Direaions how to get Reft Chn^s caU to nB, thofe that are ^earj_ from Chrift in Spiritual difeftioas. jind Heavy Laden to come to bimfor THE SECOND BOOK Chrill the Great teacher of %ouls that come to him. Wherein isfhewed, i WhatChriils Yoak is. i Tfatt Tieft Wherein is flicwed Flrfi. . I The Burden of Sin. z The Bur- den of the Law. j Tlie Barden of Legal perlormances with che Miferyl of thofe that are under thtm. 4 The!beleeve$ muft take Chrift Yoak oni Burden of Corruption. 5 The Bur-! them. 3 The more we are under the den of Outward Affliftion. jYoa-kot Chrift the more REST wc jhave. 4 Chrift is the great Teacbecr Secondly i Chrifi Gradoufly t^ffirs of his Church and People. 5 la tp them that come to him what manner ChriA Tcacheth, i He REIT from all thofe Burckns. is a MecJc Teacher. 2 _ An HLmblc Wherein is (hewed, 1 What Teacher. 6 ThcLcariiersof < hrift it is to come to Chrift. muft be MEEK. 7 The Learners 2 That Chrift requires nothing but of Chrift muft; be humble. 8 Chrift tocomctohim, 3 levctai Rules to, teacheih by his EXAMPLE. be Obfcrved in right coming to '^ Wherein Chtiks E X A M P L E Chrift. 4 Meanest© Draw Soules to I is to be followed. 10 Whitkind«f Chrift. 5 That incooiJng to Chrift j Pattern Chrift is, 11 We muft noc God would bsye us Have tefped to our! follow the fixampk of the World* felves. 6 That there is No REST ^ for fouls out of Chrift j And the Rea- ! We muft imitate Chrift in M £ £ K» fon$ therefore > with foxne conclusions , N £ S. 1 What Meeknefs is, i Learn o€ Chrift to be Meds towards God> And the Reafons thereof. 5 The Drcad- from it. Thirdly J There is fliewed. r The Reft Bclccvcrs have from' ful Evil of Anger and frowardncfs to= ^n. z The deliverance from the Law wards God. 4 Meeknefs towards God by Chift is. I Privatively9 z PoH- i ExempiiHed from fcripture Examples. tively^^The Reft beleevers tiave from 1 $ Meeknefs towards Men which con- the Burden of the Law by cooling to j ^s in ordering Anger, i To the righc Chift. 4 How Chtift gives ReftiObj^a. z To the right Time. 5 To frcm the Burden of the Legal perfor- the reight meafure. 4 To the li^hc mance:. 6 How Chrift gives Reft end &c. 6 The fad Eflfeds of Anger, I from the Burden of Corruption, wherein is (hewed how Sandification aMHolintfs comes from Chrift only. And encouragments to come to Chrift for holine^. S How Chrift ^ves Reft hoia outwar4 Affli^ion* > 7 The Excellency of MeeJ^ncfs* 8 Promifes made to Meekntfr. p Many Vaine Reafons and Pleaes foe Anger Anfwercd. la Exhortations to Meeknefs. 11 ;^|«aa$ to yet and keep Meeknefs, "" ' '- — - THE 'Booh Trinted by Peter Cole, cirr. II New Hooks of Mr. Jeremiah Burroughs, And NeM^ ©oo/lj of Mr. Sydracb Simpfons. i\ ( X THE THIRD BOOK Chr'tfi the Humble Teacher of ihofe that come to him. Wherein is (hewed. t Wbac Uumilicy or Lowlinefsis Nor. 1 What that Lowlinefs of Hesrt is thst Chrift would have us to Learn of him* i Arguments from the Lowlinefs of Chrift to work Low- linefs of fpiric in Us. 4 The proper- tics of an humble heart toward) God ? The Properties of an Humble and Lowly heart in refpcd of Our felves. 6 The properties of humility, inre- fped of others. 1 It is fearful of giving or taking oflfencc. a It gives due honor «o all. 3 It is tender to others. 4 lt*s not needlcsfly lingular from them. 7 The Excellencies of Humility. 8 Humility brings REST unto the Soul. ^ Means togetHu' • mility THE FOURTH BOOK The only Eafig way to tie avert. Wherein is (hewed. 1 The way to H.aven that lefus ChriftTeachetb, is an Eafic way, fix Evidences thereof x The Difference between the E A 5 E a Carnal heart hith^and the EASE a gracious Soul hath in Religioi. j The Rcafon why fomc gracious Souls complainc of difficulty in Gods waiej. 4 What it is that Makes the waies of God fo Balre. 5- Confequences from the eafinefs of Gods waies. 6 Direfti- ons how we may make the wtieiof God Ea(ie. Mr.Simpfons New Books. 1 Of Unbeliefs Or the want of readinefs to lay hold on the comfort given by Chrift. ^ Not going to Chrift for Life and Salvation is an exceeding grea: Sin, yetitis PardonabJc. THE C O N T E N T S OF THE. :Tr€atife on fohn. I. I2« C «• .- Page HAP. I.. The Scope of the Text. The ^hrafe of receivinj^ Chrifky opened* %eceinjing denotes. X- Vajp^'enep The Contents^ .^SuL I. / Page I. ^afflvenefl.Jz.A meannefi ef condition in the%e- cei*ver*3»iA taking that rvhtch b^ore he hath no ^,4** tA taking d thing with joy and gladnep of ^eart, Th e ^oUrine'y Verfons that are ^eleevers are ^ecei- qjers 9 and to belee*ve if to receive* This proved by three Arguments* 1. ^aith is the appetite of the 2^en? Creature. 2. All other aBs of ^aith are fuberdinate to tijis of ^ecei*ving. 3. iSjythingis done by ^aith until fuch time at it doth r ecei*ve, i Chap. 2» Applicacion. ^eleeue that to ^eceiwe is the principal Vfe of Vaith, 10 Chap. 3. life, 2. ^ut forth thSaB of Taith. ^e^leU not thhfor any other at^ of ^aith whatfo- e^ver. 2. Vut it upon receiving much* John, i. 16. opened, 3. Let nothing hinder this aU of ^aith* L 'J^ot your fins* IL Let nothing dtf courage you. ^either, i. Qodf delates. '^orz/ Thefmal- nejl of your receipts, ^or, ^.Thegreatne^of your vpants. ^/>r, 4. The greatnefl of your receipts* IIL ^fpecially tak^ heed ef refuftng what is offered. Chap. 4. ^y thh property of HFaithy viz.to^ecei'v^ try vohetheryour ^aitb be true er no. OhjeBions anfvffered. 27 Chap. 5. life 4. Then ^eleenjers ought to behave fhemfehes Oi^eceivers : And that in thefe Parti- culars : I. In P!?aiting continually upon ^eans and Ordinances. 2. In beinghumble whatever they do receive* 3. In being comunicative* life $.Con' folation to all that have ^aith. 3 o Chap« 6. VowTaith^eceives. 1* ^y an AH of the ^nderfianding. 2. ^y an A^, of the Will. Vaith Of it it an A?i of the Vnderftanding dothje- verall worlds. Firft, It doth the office of an Infer- mer,andthatinfeveraUVarticulars. 35 Chip. 7- AfecondlVor\{ofn^aithaf it h an A^ ofi the Vnderjiandingi viz. To perfrvade the Soul to | an ) The Gontents. .'1 r > X Page a7iaffenK to h^ep in mind the thougbts of thefe thi ngs tlms renj t^aled. ^3 Chap. 8. kA fifth worh^of ^aitb, of tth an o4Ef of the ^nderftanding ii to affure and certifie a man of the things already receifv^d- ^^ Chap. p. Aftxtp0orh^of^aitha$ it is an aU of the 'Vriderftanding'^ is a%eceivingof Jefm Chrift and his ben^efttr. .An Obje^ion anfvpcred. JlppUcati- on. 58 Chap^ lo. T/;^0b;e6t. That^eceiving of Chrift is not an aU of the Vnderflandingy for that may be in hypocrites and ^nregeneratc ^erfonSy Jinfvpered. ,62 Chap. 1 1, ^aith recei'ves Chrijtalfo at it is anaff of the Will. And here it hath a fivefold aSf, j, ^ pioji^ affMion. 2. An appronnng of the affent of the ^nderftanding to the truth of the ^romife. ' 3 . Agi^ing up itfelfto Jefm Chrift. 4. A refting itp^ on Jefus Chrift, 5. Ayi applicationto it felf of ivhat is- in Jefjfy Chrift, ' A Caution. Application. 70 Chap. 12. Ob/edit, ^aith be ing a ^^ality, and fo an Accident^ canhe but in one SubjeH, arul therfore not both in the ^nderftanding andthe WH, Anfw. I. ^aith is one Aggregation. 2. That habit which is in one faculty formally may be in divers by diffufion.. k'^^l^^^^'^on. ^y this try whe- ther you have true Vaitb or no. An Objetiion An • fvoered. .^ .^ "^!'i"^: ri-vi'; ' v/;;j-:'^^*^' 73 Oup. 13. Itfjetmp^rp^dmanthaihath ^dith Cat confidereh under the^otion of^ceindng ) dotfy dif- cover it fijf in jthefe particulars- ' I. *He is dayly purging out CO f^!uptimsy : that there may be room to\ r-eseive J^fi^ Cprift^ particularly • i» Confidence in the ^/ejfe. : %, Li^ngbj/ferife^: II* ^^ nutd> TKe Contents. Page| in Grayer- HI* Tie is notfatiffied til he obtain all vphicb the ^romife is ingaged for, L F. Helaies hold on every intimation that may give hope^ and. thereby n raided to great expeUation 86 Chap. 14. 'further Application of the Toint. Thk fheivs a necejjity of ^aith. An Obj^J^ion from 2 Tim. 2. 13. Anfwered. AnObjeliion fromthe difficulty of Relieving anfwered* incouragd your felves to 'Relieve* And to that end* i. Confider the many andgloriom things that are to be receiv2d, 2. ^e convinced that you cannot live nnthoiit thefe things vpJAch ^aith helps to* 3. Confider thefe things are to be had only by ^eleeving* 4. Lay the command ofQod upon your Souls* Several ObjeUi - ons amfwered. gz Chap. 15. Receiving denotes ^ajjlvenefi. This pro- ved as tobeleeving. L In that^aith is not of or from our felves, IL In the very aU of ^aithy vpbereunto voe are inabled by Qod, vpe aU as little aspo[jrbly can be* This appears if you confider. 1. The oppofition which is in us to ^eleeving. 2. The Mature of ^aith it felf* And that as it is an aU either of * i. The %)nderfl:anding. Or, 2. The Will* 3. TVhoare beleevers. 4. %venthe Saints arefenfible of a power making them to be- leeve* ' 106 Chap. 1 5. Though ^aith befmall. yet it makes us the Sons of Qod. 120 Chap. ly* ^aith confider ed in its lopoefi degree, I. Asinl^?e^nderfianding: axidfoitis* i. Atten- tion. 2. Inquiry. II. As in the Will : and foy I, It is accompanied vpith much fear* 2. It is carefuU and folicitons for the thing r of this Life* Chap. iS Receiving denotes a m?ann^fi and loivnell ■ of Condition in the Receiver* And in this fenfe \ \Faitijis ^^\eceimngy vpbetJjeryou confider itaciwg' The Contents. Page intheVnderftanding^ or the Will. 129 Chap. 19. liojvtheltfeof^aitbhfaidto be mean. Firil, If compared voith any other h}nd of living voel: I. ^f compared with the life of Adhich iffittinfforhim There are. J. SomethatentertatnJerusChrmonh m their Taney. Ofthefe there are twi forts!" Such ^ entertain JefusChriji only under the^etaphorsl and %eprefentattons by n>hich the Scriptures Z\ httnforth. 2. Such af entertain him only La ch& pomor'Denrinein^etigion. 11. SoJetbJemt- t^mjefus Chrtflonh m their under jiandZTa^d ^afbningf. HI. Some that do indeed entrtam him m their affeUronr, butnotfuitable tohhexcel- lency. The Conclufion. Sl£^i ^•l^--^gi.l^^ CO THE N T E M Of the Tread fe of COVETOUSMESS T S V^ P; ThelioS! ''f'" '''^^"'^' 'f '^' «"" "^ [iake heed_and Beware 3 glojfd Jp<^: . I ^ The Contents. I.: r ' •rv Page Covcteoiifjiefl coijldcred more giimrally ju ' three ^artiadavs. ^lorejiriEUy and fptciall} and fo it is a defire ofbwvwg 7nucb arijin^ from an mi- contciztediiefi jx>ith a mans prefent cohiditiony tbQugb he would not by any other then lawful mcanr mjid or better iu 211 : Chap. 2. Ttvo %eafons of the VoUrine. I, Jbe\ Qreatnep- il- T^be V anger oufnefs of tbif fin. j TheQreatmP in five things, i. A Spiritual fm. 2. O'verfpreading the rvbol man. 3. Direcily oppoftte to the common nature of Qodltnefs and * Religion. 4. T^be Womb and Seed of all fin.y the Q{ootandCaufe. A Sin may be the Caufeof fm four waies.As it is^the Caufe ofQods voitbdr awing. As one fm inclines the heart to another. As it ad- minijlers matter to another. As it is a Parent and %ider oa)er other fins. 5* The fmfuhiefi of this fm appears in the ba^eneji of it. 222 Chap. 5. Tbefecond^eafonisthedajigeroufnefiof of this fm J it being Firft, Hardly to be anjoided. Secondly, Difficultly Cured. Some things in Scripture faid to be eafic to ^ody Some things hardy Some things that are bnt pofftble unto Qod* 233 Chap. 4. Ufe i. follow your Callings, life 2., Seehjhe kingdom of Qod and his right joujnefi, and other things fi) all be added, life 3. Let all your care be for eternal life to be rich in Qod. life 4. Tou fl)aU ha've all the things of this life that are needfully if you wil loo\\after (^ race. Qodly men nearer want, but when they cannot be contentto be a Q od's difpofe. Ufe 5. Se^ your life lie in Qrace^ not in Riches. -24l Chap. 5. Ufe 6. ^elee^'e there is fomthing to he feared more than to be defired in abundance. Twa Signs i 0 to prove that men do not believe, there isfucb danger in Covetoufnep. i . H^ecaufe meif comefo ?iear "the " occafwns. zti The Contents occafwnf. Ob;edh 'May not a mantakeanofhof \ can tn the tbings oitb^ world. 2. 'BecaJ.\T place tbeirhappinf in Richer. Tvro rtn^^sZ^^ ' fe ' • Va^}'''^ "''''' fl^-y could do more f or tmvphh. ^ ^^'''^' '"''"•^ '^''^ "'^•"'''■' ""'*' '''^y Chap e! Ufc 7. mortifieyourd^ftre after ^it!, and abundance, flay it in the fir ji motion toVarZ n. Wotin^er oftP^ofortf. Tirft : Sj^ch a, are ta- ken out of the Armory of%eafon. I. Tour haplintu dves not he in any thing that does belong to tbllS' end ,1 god. II. "^ou put a greater giory a4 ex- ceUency upon thmt than does belong to thm. m (TV ches are not d^ftrahle. i . Qod hath not made them . to that ertd to make men happy. .. efi hard ^0 bed:rcoaM>redr-bm^.^ j^rnualfm and lying fo neer upon the blTrfof VaV f'fr^^','^or,ethatfermes contraryZ CovetoufneJS, andyet the w.an be Covetous. Jho^.l themdfeemcsto beagainftCovetoufnefi, amanm!. l>e Covetous in defiring. ' i>'i-"anmuy^ M The Contents. i Chap. 9. Wales for dif cover y of Covetoufnefi. In QeneraU^ ^ore Particularly, i. Tie that hath a quicksand acHteund^rlianding in the matter f of this life, but if really dull as to (pirituall things, is a Co- n)etous man* ihe %eafons of this. An ObjeHion tAnfwered, 2. Ihetriallof our ajfeUionstothefe things is vohen (jod cats us to part with all- 3 . lie is Coerf ; and to helie've is to receinjc* Thh pro- ^j^d by three Arguments : i. ^aith is theappe^ tite of the %ev)oCr mature. 2. Ail other aUs of ^aitJy are jtthordinate to this of Receiving. 3. 'l^otbhig js done by^aith until fiichtime of It dolh receive. THele Words are an Argument to prove the Eternal Qod head of efus Chrift, becaufe thc£€ that do receive him, are made the ! ,j ; Sons of ^od, and have iuch a dignity and preheminence, or prerogative thereby, as none but i - c_ §od I f w If-' I [ I Faith^ or BelU'-ving is receiving Chr'tjl . [ iGodcanbefl-ow. My intent in ths Text is only [co op^n ihz phrafe ot receiving ^luiit, as it is Syno- jnimousand n^ade all one wich belecving on hinu A? niuny as received him. As n^any as believed oa his name fcave this power, to tecome the Sons of God. Firft : In general!. Receiving notes pafTivenefs, or being chj: fubjeCt of a thing, As cloth doch re- 1 ce.ve a coloi: which is puc upon it, and is not nacu- rall or proper co it. and as the Earth receives the feed that is put into it by the hand of the Husband- man. 1 h?re may be an adl in receiving,yet Pvcceiving*' doth principally notepaflivenefs ; becaufc that ait is anoid.^r of nature, either after receiving, or clfe Pveceiving is c he complement, or that unto which c-hefame adl tends. As a graft being puc into a flock, the 'itock elofeth, with the Giaf-: by vertue fromitsfelt: So we having the Grace of l^aich in^ fufed, wealfodoadhece and cleave unto God. Or as in receiving mony, th.re is an acountincj of it, but that accounting of ^c ferves only ro takj it ''uto pof- feffion. So it is here alfo. There ^? fomthlng the foul doth in receiving, bu. t tci.d only to ths end that it may b= poffefIc.iof jefus unnit and of nis me- rits.. Secondly: A^ there is a paflivenefs in Receiving t-o be noted*, So 'n receiving there is a meann.fs and. andlown fs of cjr.dition. It was an Apotheg . e orufuillfpeech of our i^ord ( as ic feems by the Apoil le ) i o fay. It is better to ^ive than to receive Acts 20. 3^. ihat i9 better, more honorable, n>ore commendable. Ke that gives thj' lead gift, hath, more honor than he tha^ receives the greateft k nd- nefs. Andas ifhall ihew you afterward* in. rc- ^^ard of rhe profii of belee^Mng, it is very great/; but jfl.regard of the m^anner of Leleeving it is an ab^fe- RitlK And receiving Chrifty ishelie^big. ment unco man, A denial even of hi^ rcafon for che ceftia lony fake of Chrift-. But thofe arenoc the things which I hirend principally. ! Thirdly: in Receiving there is a taking to one^ felf chat v/hich bcfof e he had not. As a man receives niony which before was ou of his hands -, by being received ic coaies into his poflefrion, and is his own. And in this fcnt'e you thai rind the word [fBcxeinjt'd ]| Hied in che Scripture in "Heb, 1 1. 39. AH thefe ha- flung olytained their good report through ^aith, recei- *vedrwt thepromife^ Received it not, chat is, they faw iioe : they were not made actually partakers of the ;beaefitsof Chrift being in the fielh j Although that ' they had the advantage and prorit of his underta- king for them with the Father : They Received ic noc, chat is, they were not adtually partakers. ' Fourthly, Receiving notes the taking a thing wirh joy and gladncfs of heart. As the Text faith, in Ift'i?. 13.2. There tvaf fame that did receive A)igels , unavpaies. Ic being ( you know ) a phrafe that k ' taken from thofe men that do bid welcome their gueftsor friends. And fo Stephm prays in than language, Lord Jefus ( faith he ). receive my Spi- rit. Hcdorhby his faith apprehend Jefus Chrift landing in the door of Heaven (^^s Abraham ftoodinchedoor of the Tent ) and praies him to ' be p leafed and not pat's him.by,. but to receive him that he may lit down and eat and drink in the king- domof God. . Thefe two latter clrngs are thofc which princi- pally 1 intend to fpeak unto ill this point. And if you look into the words of my Text, you fhal find. Firft,that the perfons that are Receivers are Belce- vers. ^or at mt^^7^ (faith tiieTexc) of receinjed him, to c 2 them ■ S9> f ^ -4- 4. Faith, or ^elee^lng^ is recei'X>lng Chriji ; I Docft them beg J^njd power to become tJjs Sons of Qodjsven to <*# many as bdee For marke it, T/?ere;;^' ; no difflirence between the Jjtvand the Qentile^ for the j fame Lord over d^l is rich umo all ih it call upon him. ! ^or vcbofomierjhjl callupon the name of the LordfljaU befaved.-ii fay if you compare verfe 11. with ver. 12 and 1 5. Faith aud calling on the name of the Lord. 1 arc al one. For the Apoftle proves chat there is no [ mail that doth beleeve, but he fhal be faved, by! this ^ That there is no man that cais on tht: name of the Lord but he fhall be faved. Thofe that have attained unco the greacefi: degrees of Faich their mouths are fulled of compla ncs, & their Souls fi.1l.- leftof fighings b^caufe of their wants. Their praiers are Lord incrcafe our Faith. And not only fo, but when they have prayed, they cannot be quiec un&il ^^kr fuch time as they find it encreafcd and the fruits of I7* 5 it in them. In^/^ff.r, 26.7. it's faidchac the Pacri. ^ archs hoping to come to Heavcn^did Uiftantly ferve God: That woid cranflatiid, injiantly, is inthe Greek Ivhr^PHf, that is, they did as bne doch who flrerchesouthi L.felfco get a thng which hehach- much ado to lay hold on, buchadiachcr h >ve,than any thing that he hath in his hands. Such a kind of deiire was inrhe Patriarchs afcer Glory. Inborn. 8. 19. the '\poftle cells you of an earneft exped:a- i tion that is in the Creation for the n anifeftation of che Son-^ of ^od, that they may be freed from their 1 imperfed^on<, that is fuica* bly to our receiving of Chrift. We beleeve^ tlj>€re' forehave we fpok^y 2 Cor, 4>. I s. Now thac which is faid concerning faiths opening the mouths of the Apoftles to declare for certain the truth of thac E)oftrine which chey were experienced in: So I may fay concerning any other Duty. When as j Faith hath received the certainty of the word of } God, then ic cals upon the under/landing not to difpute. When as Faith hath received Jeius Chr ift then ic cals upon the will, and faith, foriake all o» ther things and cleave unto him, for you have e- noughinhim^ He is a Mine and a Fi^ld wherein there is a Treafurc, and you fhal need nothing while youhavehim. Andfromthis three-fold Demon- uracion, I fuppofe ic will appear thac Faith is a re- ceiving. And beloved, think not much that I ftand long upon this for ic is not rivited in our thoughts. Wclivcnocasif ic were fo. CHAP. II. Application, ^eleevethatto^ceive if the prifi" cipal Vfe of Taith. USE Eleeve Mien this is the prSicipal ufe of Faith, To Receive, to be like a Bucket to draw water of life,andfalvation out of the Well; A fpunge ( as I may exprefsit)to fuck in and draw of the ful- nefs of Jcfus Chrift.Thac Faith is beft which is moft receptive. Thac is the thing I do incend. Thac is belt iiftf'd wc-^ isuf^dco this cnd^co reqeivcThe e;Kcelency and ^ceiping Chrijl, is Belie^in^. II ofFakhdochnoclieinic felf, buc in its objeft : In whac icdochbring in : For there is more vertue in the A<^ of any Grace whacever. He chat knows a thing, doch k becaufe of the evidence of reafon. But he that beleevech, knows it not, Only he be- lievs becauCe he chinks that he chat fpeaks, fpeaks true. Faith degrades a man from the ufe of his reafon, and makes hiai although far more excel- lent in his knowledge yec t. fee in the light of God. It is fo, becaufe he faith lo. As a man that hath but little ftock, but hath goodi» coming in by his trade. Such a trade is Faith. It's a weak and a feeble Grace ( as I may call it ) of it felf, but it is that which doth receive and fetch in much from Jcfus Chrift. As the way of lome mans living is not up- on any thing he hath of his own, but he is a Pvecei- ver cofome noble and great man, and all his rents and Eftate pafTech through his hands, and £o he comes to have a feeling of it, and to b« inriched. Through the hand of Faith al the Treafury of grace and mercy conieth, Do not therefore my beloved chink it enough that you do by Faith fecure yoyr felves from the fear of Hell, and fay I do beleeve and therefore I fhall not perifh but have everlalling lif e,Do not think it enough that by Faith you order your converfacion aright*, ( for although it be true that no grace makes cleanerwork in a mans conver- fation than Faith doth, it purifies even as God is pure, of all that Niter and Soap which God hath giventowafhin, chereisnone i'ofcouringas Faith is, if I may ufe that expreflion, it will fetch out a- nyfpotandany defilemenc ) But although Faith be of excellent ufe to order a mans converlation yet do not chink you have made fufficient ufe of your Faith when you have ufed it to that end, but ufei^ to receive. As the ufe of a purfe is to put jmoney in. And theule of an Iron Cheft is to lodge i d 2 money 1 2 Faith J or Betienj'm^ is Kuei^ing Chrijl ; ^ money in. So the end of Faith i$ co receive. You are otcen cia.es checking your iclves, chat you arc noc concenred with whac you have, for you have more than you delerve, nnd chat is true, Buc ic is noc more than you ought co receive. For Faith mufl: have its perfect work, and ics perfe<^ work is this, that it doth look upon all Ordinances as bags that arc filled, out of which it's co receive accor- ding as jefusChiilt hach laid up and creafurcd up of himfelf in them. After every duty enquire ther- fore whac thy Faith hatii^gotten, how thy talent of Faith hath gained. Be noc contented that thou haft the fame confidence thac thou hadft, thou muft cither have more confidence or further of the fpirit of Chrift by that confidence. Before thou doft go to any Duty or to any Ordinance, charge thy felf as the Mafter or Merchant, doth charge his Servant that goes out to receive money Go co fuch a place and receive and return not elf e, Importune and be not fatisfied with any anfwer uncill you have received fuch a fum. As men are 19ft in the world, and areoflictleufe, they are in vain, buc ciphers, becaufe they are not put co thac worktowhichtheir Genius and difpofition tends: One man is made a Preacher chat is inuch fitter for another calling, And another goes into the world thac is fitter for another politick imploymenc. The World is out of order, becaufe men are noc put co thac ufe which God hath fitted men for. So the Grace of Faith is out of order and of little ufe, be- caufe it is not pur. to irs proper work,; viz. to re- ceive. Put your Faith co that and you will thrive, and not other wife. Tbeyprojitdd not^ becaufe they didnotmixthetx>ordtvitb ^aith, Heb. 4. 2. And what is faid of hearing the word, may be faid of Praying, or receiving the Lords Supper, Meditati- on, or any other Ordinance whacfoevcr. They profited^ and Keceivin^ Chrisi^ is Belie^in^. profited not : Thac is, they got no more becaufe ic was not mixed with Faich. Things are faid to be mixed, not when they are on^ in another in a com- j mon veffel,bun when they are beaten together that they make but one body and iublfcance. So Faith is mingled with the word, when there is not only a believing in the Grofs, and a taking for granted that that is true which is received, but when unto every word there goes an affent and a cloiing of heart unto every word. That is true faith thefoul in fuch a cafe. 1 When as it hears the heart is defperately wicked;, and that none can go to the bottom of it, And when it hears by and by that concerning fuch an hearc that there is hope, the Soul faith that is true. When every thing is mingled with Faith then ic profits. Let me I bcf cech you C my beloved ) fpeak a lit- tle to you freely. Why do you fuffer your Faith to be Idle? Why do you buhe it about works be- neath you, about chat which is not mofl excellent and profitable.? Do not think you have gotten e- I nough when by your Faith you have gotten into Chrill, and Grace from him by Faith, for you ai;e alwaies to be receiving. Many a m^an is apt to think it were well ifhe could keep what he hath gotten, if he can but hold his hold , and keep his union, and continue it under temptat ions,if he can butmaintain his praftice and hope 8c not back£lide:ButI befeech you beloved conlider that ai this is not enough, for you are to be receiving, nocwkhftanding thae which you have received. Andletmetel you this 1 too, that ifyou are not receiving you are never a- I ble to hold thac which you have. As the waters | in the ftream would fail if there were not a conci- nuall flowing from the Wei- head and Fountain, So there muft be a continual eftlux and flowing and influence from Jefus Chrift that fo the Grace you have / i. ' 1 14 Fait}?, or hekenjin^j is Q^ecei^'mg Chriji ; I have may hold. In a Trade, he cannot keep open I a Shop long that hath no comings in : And io ic is ' certainly in the matters of Religion j if you pay ^ life (ffor foyouniuft do for all the opportunities and grace you have, they rnuft be imployed ) and you have no gain, it will undo you , although you began 'vith the greateft flock of refolutions, and purpofes, and defires, and what you wilclfc. And therefore as you enquire into your felves, whether you have faith or not to prove wkethcr you iixc a j Beleever ^ So examine efpecially thy Book,andfee what thou canft get by beleeving. Imploy thy faith therefore to this end. That you feek out what is promifed, what God hath laid he will give ^ for he will give Grace and §lory, and with-hold no good thing from them that walk uprightly, ^PfaU 84* 1 1. And fend out Faith to get in all thefe Pro- mifes, and challenge God upon his word continual- ly, and lay. Lord, thou hall faid this, and that,and a third thing, I have it underchy hand, it is written, 'ThoHbafijpol{en it, and baft made me'to hekerve in thee', and fhall thy Word be as fleih that fhall fail and come to nothing ? Imbolden thy heart, and flreng- then the hand of thy Faith to receive ; enlarge thy hand, and open thy mouth to take in much : and if thy Faith brings in any thing lefs than Jefus Chriil, it britigs in nothing: For as it is in my Text, Jis many as rece'wed Him, were the Sons ofQod ; and of His fulneflwe receia;ed Qrace for Qracc. jf thou haft any thing but Chrift, thou haft nothing : And if thou haft any thing but from his heap, and foun- tain, andfulnefs, thou wilt not be enriched by it -, thou haft received but ftraws and leaves for^old and Jewels. 1 befeech you my beloved, know, That j as God hath given the eye to fee, and the ear fori \ hearing ^ fo he hath given Faith to receive ^ on! purpofe to this end. That you may be continually j taking Joh. 16. and ^ceiving Chriji^ is Believing. i ^ caking in from his fulnefs.Faich is of a Iiaving and a craving nature andunfatisfiedcil a man hath obtai- ned the fulnefs he is ordained to in Chrift; when it's filled, it is hungry: the more it hath the more ic would have. Faith doth not only ferve to keep you in a ftate of Grace ( for by Faith you ftand ) but to receive all Chrilts fulnefs which is laid up in him for you. Oh that we could beloved beleeve th,is, and live fuch a kind of life 5 Such a kind of life of Faith is indeed Heaven upon Earth, wheo as a man is alwaies telling over treafures for his own uie ind purpofe. How joyful is the Merchant when the Ship comes home, and he is unlading the rich commodities which it is come fraighted with ? How joyful! is the Husbandman when the harveit comes, and renders an hundred fold for every corn? Such is the joy of God in the heart, and would be fo if we did continually receive, CHAP. Ill- life 2. Vut forth tbkaU of Taith. i. Tie^le^ not thhfor any other aU of ^aith voh^i-ifoe^vor* 2. ^ut it upon receiving much* Jhon. j, 16. opened. 3. Let nothing hinder tbh att of ^aith> I. 5^ot your finf* I /. Let nothing difcourageyou. ^either i. Qods ddaies. 7{or 2. Thefmahiefiof yourreceitf, jP^or, 3. The greatnefiofyourwantf* ^or, 4*. Thegreatnefi of your receits. III. ^jpeciaUy tah^ heed of r«- fufingtvhat if offered. I USE II. N the fecond place. If Faith be a receiving, then put ouE this Aft. Excercife your Faith thus. 1 6 Faith ^ orBelie^ing is receinjing Chrijl j thus. As oui Lord £2ikhyJohn 16.2'?. Af\ and re* ceinje- That is, not only defire and pray, buc cake I what you defire and pray for from God : So I fay, ; Relieve and^eceive. Beieeve noc only chac Faich 1 is a receiving, buc adually receive, and be ever j getcmg. Every Grace is CO have ics perfeft work, as the Apoftlc Jarties fpeaks concerning patience. Let patience ha^e its perfcU work^ James i. 4. A Grace doch ics perfed^ work when ic ferves ail the turns for which it is given, when as ic doch all i cheats CO which ic hach power. Faich (as you | heard in che explicacioii ) hath many ocher adts j befides receiving. Receiving is an aft and work! which Faich is as good at, and as good for as any 1 ocher, che perfect and compleac work of Faich is to 1 receive Chrift. Sec ic cheref ore about ic. Secicco' reap a I che Fruic of Jefus Chrift and of che promifes. Sec ic asyour Acturney ( aslmay fofpeak)cocalin j the debts you have and the good you hope for. Make Faith to be noc only the evidence of what is promi- fedfas ^ofes did the Mountain that he flood uponco behold CanaaYi)hutma\e it the fubfiance of things ho' pedfor^Hch. 11. i. That is, poilefTeyour felvesof the things beleeved and hoped for. Therefore as ouc of che Ark the Dove was fent, and when fhe retur- ned ihe was feiic ouc again unci 11 ihe brought an O- live branch in her mouth. So fend ouc your Faith again and again, and never reft till ichach received and goccen more from Chrift than it had b .fore, yea received according to the larr/e gifts that are made through the promifes. Plainly thus. As a man is to enquire of his Faith whether it be opeacive or noCjWhatit doth, What work and fruic his Faith . hath. So he is to enquire what his Faith re. 1 ceives what receipts ic makes. It's not a good Faith which works not, and it's not a true Fa:ith which receives not. Ask what the Lord hach done for tiiy Soul } \ / I I ■ ' - -- ■ -- -- '^-- "— -'lr I' 11^ !■. ^^— .^^.^ — -— and ^ceuving Chriji is^elknjtng ij 'Soul? What piomifes are come in? What they have yeilded unco th?e ? VVhac word is a ade good? What chou hart: go.ren every day more than other? What thou haft gotten by prayer or any other du- ty. Andif thou doft find that there is no coming in, blame thy Faith, and fend it out to its work, fend it out to receive from Jefus Chrirt:. That I may a Iktlefet you on upon this, or that you may underftand what you are to do. j j J. Neglednot this for any other AGc of Faith ' 'whatfoever. As our Lord laid in another cafe, Chrift and his righteoufnefs, but ftands off, and ftands out with him : We are as well to be troubled if we receive not of his fulnefs. Thououghteft as much CO put thy faitli upon receiving, as upon adher ing unto Jelus Chrift. That thou maicft adhere and cleaveuntoChriff by faith, thoufaieft that Chrift is thy life, and thou art undone if thou reft not thy ielf uponhira : Thou art undone alfo if thou doft BOt receive of his fulnefs. Union with Jefus Chrift is done by faith at once, Pveceiv ing from Chrift is to be done daily. You will cleave unto Chrift fo •n^Uch the fafter as y ou find you have received from him. Whether fhall we go from thee, fay they, thou haft the v/ords of eternall life, John 6. 6S. When they had once found life in Jefus Chrift, they could not eel how to leave him. Like foolifh Children that play with the breaft, but fuck not. Such folly is in our hearts. We muff have promi- fesfuitable toal our conditions, but we Ice them lie by us, and we improve them not. Though we have a right in Chrilt, yet we draw not from him Grace for Grace. Like perfons that lay up Gold, but it is for fome fpeciall life. Or like Cordials that are taken only in extraordinary fits, but not con- ^ tinually 5 '—----■-■ •■-■ ■---.---^■l-^ ■■■ll.« - -^1 — - - ' — - -■ and(^cetVing Chrift^ isBetiea^ing^ tinuallyj So do we make life of faith. But as a worldly man councs there is fo much lofs as chtre IS no laying ouc of the money that lies by him, If his money lies by him anytime, he counts there is fo much lofs to him, becaufe it might have Brought him in fomthing. So count fo much lofs of your faith, as you wantufe of it in receiving from Jcfus Chrift. 2. And as you ought to put your faich thus upon the aft of receiving. So put it upon receiv ing much. The receipt of a little from Clirift, is as much as nothing to h'lmyjobn i6. 24. hitherto you have ask^ ed nothing in my name: They had asked, but he counts it nothing, becaufe it was not anfv/erable unto the interelt that Chriil had in his Father nor fuitableto what he had purchafed for them, nor unto the power that Chrift had to give. You have asked nothing in my name. In my name, rhac is, as having my right made over to you, and as having as much to do with the things you need, as 1 have chat am Lord over all. I fay, Chrift counts eveyy thing lefs than this,nothing.lf you ask lefs thanthis, you ask nothing, and if you receive lefs than this you receive nothing. Faith may have what it wil. ^atth, p. 29. ^eit to thee according to thy ^aith* If faith opens its mouth wide, it fhall be filled. As it was in the gathering of Mannah, Every one hjd as much as his basket was, although it was never fo great that he brought to gather it in. If thy faith be great, thou fhalt have great things. If thy faith be fmall thou flialt have precious things. As there ought not to be the leaft doubt or queftion in a Be* leever, becaufe God is fo able to perforin his pro- mifes, and fofaithfull and true, So there ought not to be any queftion or exceptions of any thing to be received chat is in JefusChrift, becaufe al isyours. Q 1 Obfcrve ao Faith ^ or ^eUe^vlng^ is ^ceia)lng Ckri/i ; I , Obi'erve it. Faich is indefinicly called a receiving, becaufe ic receives this and that, that which is cffenciall, and that which is conlequentiall . That which is for the inward and for the outward man, for mortification, andvivification, for faith and for holinefs. Faich is a receiving wichouc any limita- As none may fay that he is re;e and ^cei^ing Chri/i^ is ^elee that are fick, we fhut our lips againft it, and cannot take it down. Cur hearts would willingly have. ; Something from God, but as a reward, and not I meerly as agifc, fomething^for doing what he re- ■ quires, but not as an alms pi^ely.Faich even for this very reafon is difficult to the Soul of a man, becatife . chdC it makes him to live dependantly^ and to have its good and happinefs out of itsfelf.But if the pride of your hearts v/ould fufFer you to receive, yet not- withftandingGod will not ^ive to them chat are' , proud, ^or Qod refifls the proud, andgives Q-race j to the humble^ Jam. 4. 6. Ton ask, and recewe not be- \caHfdyou vpouldf^endit onyour kiflf^ upon your en- vy, in Jam* 4. 3. v/herc-as God rehl^s the proud^ but gives grace CO the humble. Secondly: And as you ought not to be hindred byiin: Sotobedifcouraged by nothing in this adl of Faith. If you look in ^^1;. 12. 12. the Apoitle hath thefe words, Lift up the hand (faith he) the hand that hangs dovpn^ and the feeble h^i^es. His m^a- ^^^g. vl. 24 F4(>^^ or Believing is ^cei^aing Chrift . II ning is thisjthac fc is the mechod 8c cunning of Satan CO hinder our faich by d tcouragi-mencs.If he cannoc j kiiSc deftroy ic d-rcc^ly iind inmicdiaceiy, then he j doch >vhac he can to c*ule the Ads of it to be weak and without ilien^th. Be not d Iccuraged in y oui' receiving by any tiling. 1 . Ko not by Gods delays and deny a Is of you. In^dth. 15. 2 3. to 28. You have corhis purpofe the example of the woman of Canaan, that although Chrift cals her a dog, and had noch'ng for her, yet fhc grows as the more humble to ask a dogs part, lb themoreearneft to ask and beg and knock. Asa party that goes to receive mony, if he cannoc find theman, hegoes aga'uand again till hefindshim. So although you have not at the firft asking, yet a-sk again. The reafon why you have ic not at firft is not becaufe you ftial not have ic, but thac you may know you have it gratis, for asking. What though you receive not prefeutly ? know thac ic is an almes, and therefora you fhould waite. And though you be importunate and God reprefents himiclf as one that is alleepe and that hath the door ihut to him, yet know that he wilarifc and open to youas hefpcaks in the ^oipel of Luk?, Though he cals you dog ( as I inftanced before ) yet liis meaning is chat he is come for you though not in che firft place, yec inchefecond, and if he gives you buc crums, yec he wil give you the chiidrcns Bread. 2. Neither be difcouraged in this aft by the fmalnefs of your receipt, Although you have gotten buc a little in the ufe of many ordinances many yeares. For mark ic,lf you get never fo lictle^you get Dy thac a cicle to al, 8c you llial have al in Gods own time. Thac licle is like the bunch of Grapes which interefts and liecei'v'mg Chrifij is BelieViu^. 5 inter efts you in al the land of promife. There was a bleffing left in the Berry, though there was but here and there one left upon the 1 ree. They that make often and quick returns, although they get but littleatatinie, yec they get muehinthewhol. Lay therefore al thy gettings together,! fay al toge- ther,&confidcr not the returns fent hi,in one praier, or one fermon, or one ejaculation or cafting your heart into Heaven, but lay al together. Beggars take any thing that is given them, they are not chu- fers, they will be contented with the fmallefl. That money which is not currant with others will pafs with them. Thefmalleil piece of filver you have, is a kindnefs to them. Such meat as is not of ufe in the family, is dainties and of ufe with them. Herein thou ihalt fhew thy felf to be a re- ceiver , in that thou art contented to be ac Gods allowance. Beloved, you are receivers, and recei- vers of free Grace. You have it not becaufe you earned it, but becaufe God doth abound and is rich in good works. Aud therefore although you have never fo little, you have caufe to rejoyce. Thou*- arc but a receiver by faith, and therefolt thou haft no caufe to murmur. Thou haft a 1 things of Grace, and chou ihak have every thing if thou fubmitteft unto God in every thing he doth as pleafing unto ) thee for him to do what he pleafeth. 3. And as you have not caufe to be difcouraged at the fmalnefs of your receipt, 60 neither are you to be difcouraged in your receiving by the greatnefs of your wants. For the promife runs thus, in ^atth* 21. 22. iAU tbin^f whcitevQr ye ash^in my nameybelee'vin^yyoH ftjaU recewe* If you want all things, yec if you fhall have whatever you fliali ask then believe that there is nothing that the greatnefs lofyour wants can amount unco, chat fhould make f you - - - - ■ — - ■ — *l ■ - ■ ■ - ■ - ■ __ - , -^._^__^ 0,6 Faith J or ^eUenji?ig is l^ecei'^ing Chrift ; you fay within your felvcs that this cannot be, nor chat cannot be given. The greater things you ask the fooner you ihall have. God gives blefTlngs like hirnfelfe. The promife is indefinite , And if you ask you fhall receive. 4. Be not difcouiaged in this aft of faith by the greatnefs of your receipts. For although you have received much, yet look for more, ^e ^ives hber ally, and upbraids not^ James i. 5. He doth not fay I have given you this, and that, and fo often, and releeved you in foinany wants, andfetyou up when you have been bankrupts, and fet you up in the Hate wherein you were, many a time. There is this realon why the gieacnefs of your receiptsfhould not difcourage y oUjbecaufe the more you have re- ceived the more there is yet beh-nd to receive. 1 fay therejsmoreyet beh'ndto receive. To whomfo- ever much is given, God looks for much from them Li^l{e I a. 48, ^e ginjes (j race for Qrace^ as you heard. John 1. 16. If he gives much Grace, he wil rjive more Grace in a like proportion. We are a- ihamed to ask of them again, whom we have recei- ved lately from. But here you need not ^ for God hath much to give, and that which you have recei- ved is not in vour own name, but in the name of him that is the Lord of all even Jefus Chrift, God gives often, that there may be a fru^on and Communion between you and him. Ke^^es you but a little at a time that you may come ofcner : and he gives you often becaufe you may know that whenever youconie,youarcv/elcometo hira. Thirdly: And as you ought not to be difcoura- Iged: Soefpcciallylbcie^chyou take heed of re- Ifuflng what is offered ro you. There is nothing: I more oppofite to receiving than refafaig. In' 1 A^f^ and ^ceiving Chrijlj is Beliea^ing. ^y Aiff 1 3« 46, 47. faith the Text there. They did reje^ i^put aivay from them thj words ^ ^they didjudgthe m- fehesuntvorthyofeiernalllife' Seeing you puc it from you, and ;udg y oui' ielves unworthy of ecernai life. That putting awa^'- is diredily oppoUte to this recei- ving. Whoever doc>i put away the gracethatGods of- fersjhc doth by tha;; a^ pafs J udgnienc uponhinifelf, as one that is worthy to have deftrudion for his portion. And they did put it av/ay by conrradiding Scblafpheming^and by queftioning without any kind of reasoning, but meeriy out of eke enmity chat was in their Spirits unto the Qodrine which the Apoltle preached concerning free juftincation. So much ihal fufficetohaveipokenofthefecond life. CHAP. IV. 'By thff property af^aith^ viz. to ^eceinje^ try tvhd' theryour 'Faith be true or no, OhjeUions an^ fwered. USE III. IF Faith be aReceivingjthen by that property try whether your Faith be true or not. Whatis the, Spirit of it ? Is it a having, and a craving,and a lon- ging appet ice and dcfire in t'hee chat can never be Satisfied and contenced I Faith will make a naan to, live upon that he hath, thae is,co take the comfort; of it: But it looks after more than it li^ich. T^j juftjhaU live by Faiths faich the Text in ^eb» li^-^feo But what is^ than Fakh> A.patienc waicing, th^c- when you . bavc done the will of God in one ctiHg, 1 you may receive the promife in another ^ And a? patient waiting upon him as one that will not tarry (long. Faith makes a man to waic for far greater ' £ z chiiigs 28 Faithy or Belieofing isKecel^ing Chriji ,• things, than ic hath already received. This is the property of faith^ (Jive it bur. one thing that is good, and you muft giveit all. As he that commits one fin, and commits it but once, gees thereby a difpofi- tion unto every iin. So he that doth excercif e true faith once upon Chrift muft alwaies have from Chrift. As perfons that long, muft have every thing they fee, elfe they are ready to die. So faith looks for all from God, and from noi>e eife. It takes all that comes from God, and looks for all that it knows God hath to give. And hence it comes to pafs that if one Beleever fees another in his party-colored coat ( asl may calit, allu- ding to chat of the old Teftamentvrhere the belo- ved child was fo cloathed ) If a Beleever fees ano- ther cloathed with Peace and Joy through belee. ving, It works doubting in him and queftionmg whether he be a child of God, becaufe he hach not received thofe gifts, or hath not received fo much from God as others have. < Objetf* It may be fome will fay unto me here, I baqje caufe to complain, for I have not received : tAnd I have reafon to complain becaufe of my jvants *, I want ^aitby and I want love^ and i want patis nee, and I want heavenly mindednefi : o$.)id it is not a little of thefe things that I waiU neither. Jlnfw. Yet know that complaining is no argu- ment that you have not received : Becaufe our hearts are lo full of injuftice that they will deny thattobepaidthembyGod^ which they have re- ceived* But it is an argument that you have recei- ved and that you have Faith, becaufe you would have more, and are unfatisfied with what you have teceivei For Faith is a receiving. ObjeS. and Keceiving ChriJi^ is Belk^ing. ip Objeft. Thk is my Condhion faith one, that I am irnqHiettUlI getaUh vchen 1 have a little^ then if 1 could get hut thU and that, Ifhould he contended , and I hovp my kj^ee before Qodfor it^ and he gives it to me ', hut when 1 have it^ 1 am vphere I vQas* Anfvo. I anfwer : Although thou fhouldft do well to ceafe murmuring when thou haft gotten any thing (for a little will go far) buc it is heft what- ever thy receipts be, that thou ihouldft look after more. The Grace and Comfort that thou haft is likely to be true, becaufe it doth enlarge thy heart, and make thee ftill to be a receiver. Learn to di- ftinguifli therefore between murmuring and covet- ing : Contet jpiritual Qiftr, faith the Apoftle in I Cor» 14. 1. Covet^thoii maift^ that is, thou maift be as covetous after a 4:hing that Godhath, as a co- vetous man is after any thing in the world* But murmur, thou maift not , for murmuring fuppofeth all to be thy due. And then whatever God fiiould give thee, thou fliouldft not receive as an Alms frofm him, and he fhouldlofe his Glory. Coveting, is a defiring much from God : andmurrruring, is are- pining to think that God fhould give to any befides thyfelf. To fhut up this life tRBrefore, examine what thy Faith fets thy Defires after. And that thou maift judg aright, Confider, , Whether it be Gifts or Grace > If it be Gifts, confider whether it be gifts meerly or not , or gifts that are fanftified ^ It it be gifts meerly, then it is no argument of grace, nay, an argument that thou (halt not recewe from God i injamer 1.4,5,6. !r^« oA cind receive not^ hecaufeyou vpouldjpend it onyour liifts : You would be counted more for thera, and more eminent Chriftians thaaothers, and to be the greater i 2 o Faith, or helee^ing, is ^ceiiving Chrift ; I greater Scars j and after your motions you would have all the reft to walk : but God refifts fuch proud men- if fo be ic be after Tifts, that is, that thou maift have power of ipeech, or utterance, and be able to reafon every Point and matter of Religi- on, andtofay fomthing to ev^^ry thing that may arife, there is niorc fufpition, i fa^ mote fulpition : But if it be after Gifts that are fandiii-d, or efpeci- ally if it be after much grace , thou haft the faith of adherence, and thou wouldft have faith of affu- rance ^ thou doft adhere fomtimes, bur thou wouldft have no diftance between thy foul and Chrilt at any time, and at no time have a hankering of foul after relief any other way but from Chrift. Ifthoulongeft after ^raee, after Love, and after more Godly Sorrow, then thou haft lefs catife to be troubled, becaufe thou feeleft thy wants -, and thy feeling of thy wants, is but only the life of thy Faith as ic is a Receiver. *. . v There is one or two Ufes more of the Point wliich I fhal make, and fo fhut up the Point. CHAP. V. life 4. T!hm ^elee%'erj o^btpo behave themfelvef Of ^ccewers : jind that in thefe Particulars : I. In voaiting continually upon ^eani and'Ordi" nance f. 2 . In beinj^ humble whate'uer they do^re^ ceive. ' ^. In being comrmmicati've* life 5. Conf&latien to aU that have Vaith^ USE IV. : IF Faichbe ^ R^^ceiving, Then Be'leevers oughc to carry thcmfelves as Receivers^ Iftialilnftancc in Three Particulars* ^ Firft, and ^ceiving Chrifi^ is Believing. 5 1 ■ ■ — ■ — I ■ Firir : Wait continually upon che Means and Ordinances. Jefus Chuift is to be found among che Doftois ( chac 1 may allude unco chac ftory of him. ) The Ordinances may be called che highway wherin TefusChrift comes, chac lb he may cure che blind and che lame. If you look inco ^ph, 4» 8. ii.youihalliind che Apoftie faich. That the ^ifts pohicb Je^us Chrifl haxh recd^vedfor meriy he gives to them by Vaftorr and Teachers, and the work^of the ^inijiry. And if you compare che ao.verle with the veifes chac follow after, che Apoftle clecrly faith, that that man doth not walk like a Sainr, noi^worchy of his calling who doch not at* tend unco the Ordinances. He doth not carry him- ieif like himfelf , 'm^ is rece'fving Chr't^ j " can they beleeve faith the Apoftle therefore in ^om* lo. 14. except they have heard.-? and how cin they hear whithoui: a preacher ? There are none n\orc greedy of Ordinances than thofe that have had their Faith by them, or that have received ( which is the phrafe here in the Text ) thefulnefs of Jefus Chrift by them. As foon as ever men have been convertcd^t hough their faith have been excee- ding weak, yet then they have put therafelves upon the ufe of the Ordinances5as I might fhew you out of John 4. and AUs 2 and divers other places. In I i and (^cejrutng Qmjl^ U helk^^oin^r~Yi chacicisa receiver, then be ccmnmni'cacive. In ^Mtab> 10. 8. freely ye have rcceii'edy there} ore fredy ^rje. Such ought to be cur comnaunication unto I men, as they are unco us from God. Let the Saints \ have the ufe of all, and be forward to ufe whatever \ they have gotten for the r good, for to this end you I have received it. He that had a Talent, you know t I received it, not to lay up, but to lay out. Jefus I Chriil hindelf hath his gifts to diftribute. j And if any n:an fhould fay, -they arcfo and fo ' and fo with whom I do converfe. ^ he Text tels you that he hath received gifts for the rebellious, aud to lead captivity captive TfaU 6b. 1 8. He overcomes the oppofition in men by the gifts v/hich he gives and beitows upon men. Why Ihouid Chriftians be fo rcferved, and keep their oylto themfelves ? why fhould they be io i backward to comfort a:nd dired: others, wirh the I fame con. forts and diredions which they have re- ceived ? For if God hath put thefe things into you, its but that you may put them into others. 1 Why hath he comn;Unicated unco you a fpirituali ^ gift, but that others may be edified by you ? £v^n { as what one raemiber of the body hath, is for the ! good of the whol and the more you ufe what you have, the more you fhall receive. T'hcre is not on- ly an eafmefs of exercTe of Grace to be i^otten hereby, but an abundance of Grace. God let^s rain fall upon ihQ Mountains, that k may run down upon the Valleys. The more thou art willing, and ufefulJ and comaunicating, the n ore ufe thou hafl of thy grace, the more grace thou (halt have from God. As the things of this life are given unto men, not for then felves, but that they may do publique fejf- ice fo fpecially is Grace given. Thou haft more faith than another. It is to this end, that thoumaieft in- I touragc another. Ihcucanft take freely of Grace < It r ( j 4 Fdth^ or Belie'Vin^ is ^cei^oin^ Chrijl j U is CO this end, rliac choumaieft incouiage another fo do as thou doll. USE V. But in the laft place. If Faith be a receiving, then there is ftrong Coniolation to all them thac have this Faith. Confolation in this. That thou haft a right to all, all things are for you, and you have a power or an hand given you to take all. You are made the great receivers of the eftace and riches of JefusGhrift. And you are not only re- ceivers in truft, but what you do receive, you have a right unto. And let this comfort you againft the weaknefs and inability that you find to do any fervice for God. You can do nothing, but know, that the great and main work is not doing, but re- ceiving. Ueb,6. 7. As the ground doth drink in the rain , and receive the feed before it can bringl forth fruit for him by whom it is dreft. 5*0 muft you firft get from Jefus Chrift, before you can bear fruit unto him. And it is a Comfort to you in this, that though y9U do lofe much, andfufFer much lofs in foauhing for the fake of Jefus Chrifl, you fhall have it again, whatever thou parteft with,that the Grace of Faith may rule in thee. I fay whatever thou parteft withalU thou haft by the Grace of Faith fomthing whereby thou maieft receive thac in a better kind and much more. As men pay money in one Coun- try, and take a bill to receive it in another with in- creafe, fo now when thou parteft with thy confi- dence, and with thy underftanding thac thou mai'ft receive from Jefus Chrift, thou do^ft it but that thou maift receive ten times more at the hand of Jefus Chrift, than what thou parcedft with, and every way as good for thee. And fo I have now done with the general! point, chat Faith is a receiving. -:.L-. CHAP.I II I I I I f ■ and ^ceinfing Chrift^ is Beleen)ing. 2 «; CHAP. VL U^n? ^aith ^ccewef. i*^y an AH of the ^«- derfianding. 2. ^y an AU of the Will, ^aith otitis an aU of the ^nderflanding doth fever aH Works* Firft, It doth the office of an Informer ^ and that in fever aU particulars* I now come particularly to open how Faith doth Receive. And for chac, Faich doth receive by the A^ of the mind or the Underftanding, or By the Adl of the Will. Thcle Two faculties, the Underilanding, and the Will, are like hands by which we receive Jefus Chriftand his fulnefs ; Or they are like feverall Veilels and Barns which are filled with his fulnefs. If you look into theScripture, youihall find that. To Receive is afcribed unto the undcrjftanding.l wil mention but one place of many, i Cor* 2. 14. TJbc naturaUman cannot receive the things of Qod:***Hs re^eivs them noty neither can he k;now tljemy becaufe tljey arejpirituaUy difcerned. When Chrift hadipo^ ken in parables unto the people, he ufeth this lan- guage, in W^tt^. 19. 12. He that can receive ity la him receive it* AndReceivingisnot only a work of the mind and underftanding, but a work alfo of die Will. Jnn\om. i4» !• Him that k vpeak^in ^ aitb n\eceive. Receive, what is that ? He fpeaks of fuc^ a recei- ving as the Apoltle in the Epiftlc to Vhilerh.ver. 12. V7rites concGrumgOnefmut,^hich. was nothing elfe J)ue a welcoming and kind entertaining of him ^withlave. The Text that I have in hand (Asma- ny at received him ) muft be underftoodof both thefe. gA Ym % ■ .J 'tr 3 6 Faith, or 'Beke-v'tng^ is ^ceif caufe ffaith Paul) Ij botx> my kjie3s unto the Qod and father of our Lord j JcfmChriji^that the eyes of your mind being enliglmiedy yee may l^r-iovp vohat is the hope of your callings &c. And ic is called a revealing, and niaking known of the My fiery, ^ph. 3. 4, 5- TVf:^ hath bekeved our repoi^ and to whom is the Arm efthe Lord repealed ? As the Apoftle quotes the words of \faiah in %pm, lO. 17. and beloved the things which faith doth reveal, cannot be known otherwife i Cor, 2. 7. ^ye hath notfeen nor ^ar heard, nor k the heart of man able to conceive what Qod hath laid up for them that love hinu \ But we have this mind of Chrift whereby we know him : we have the knowledg of the deep things of God. Ic is hidden wifdom, 8c not to be found out by \ man, in ver.p. and 14. the Natural man cannot difcem [ it. As weak eyes cannot look upon the light : Or; as fomc fmall prints cannot be read by fomc tender eyes. There is in all ordinary things which; faith believes, and receives, fomc extraordinary things. As for example : By faith a man knows the world . .was made of nothing, *Pffl7. 11. 3. But his Faith refts I not there, but he looks upon all the promifes of God as being made by God chac hath fuch power co 1 perform chem, and refts upon them accordingly. I He looks upon all as comming through the merits ' of JefusChr ill, <£;?/?. 3. 19. He looks upoH things' as paffing knowledg. I pray that Chrift may dwell I ' in your hearcs by faich, that you may comprehend •whatpaffech knowledg. I And ' - ,^. W«^ ^ctinJtng ChriJifsBelie^in^ 3P And as Faith will reveal and cell a man nothing that is ordinary, but wonders *, fo^t informs a man certainly. It brings nothing that is liable to a falfhood, or a queltion. It cannot but come to pafs which Faith reveals^becaufe Faith hath alv/aies the Word and Truth of God for its Objea:. It will fpeak nothing but what it hath from^ods own mouth i and the words of his mouth are as pure as Silver feven times tryed in the fire, in which there is no drofs at all. lin:o this end, that Faith may make the £bul to know v/hat is to be had, and to be gotten by Jefus Chrill. Ic doth particularly fet before us the benefits of Jefus Chrifti or the End of GodtkeFather in giving Chrift. He is Wifdom, Right eoufnefs , Sanguification, and Redemption. It reveals them as thofe things that are to be attai- ned unto by us. And upontliis icfpeaks unto the Soul, as the Patriarch did unto his Son when there was a Famine in the Land, There is Corn in Egypt, why do yOH not go thither? So Faith tells a man what he fiiould pray for, and look for 5 and it faith unto him. Thou art troubled bccaufe thy heart is barren, but is there not fruit^ fulnefs in Jefus Chrift > And though thy. Under- ftanding be dim, and cannot fee the bottom of things, yet is there not light fhining in him ? What- ever a Soul needs, th^re is a luppiy of in Jefus Chrift, and Faith informs a man of foniuch. It makes known both the power and love of God the Father in his perfon, and the holinefs of Chrift, and his fatisfadiion and purchafe, and the ftate to which he is r ifen. Thefe things are neceffary to be known, and without them no man can receive any thing at the hand of Chrift j he muft know Jefus Chrift to^ be ^od, I John 5. 20. , This is the true Qod^ and eter» nal Life*. And until a man doth thus know him, be hath no underftanding, as the Apoftle fpeaks thcie. ^o Faith ^ or Beliea^in^ u ^cei^ing Chrifi ; I there. We kjiovo that the Son ofQod is come^ and hath f {^ivenvs a-i rmderpa'idw^ to b;iiovo Inm ihat it trup,^ ^iiid vre are m him that U triic ^ and this is tl^e true QoA- and eternal Life, Faith upon Chri/t is rhegrentcfl: Idolatry cndSupcrlticion that ran bc^ till the Toiil be cleer in this ; and the great eft folly for a nanro commit himfelf to Chrift, if he were not Qod, Voui muft alfo k^ov/ the Satisfaction of Chrift : For this! indeed is that which troubles rh^ foulof a conver-l ted man, That there muft be mends made, and refti- tution unto God for alUiat dfhonor wh chiinhath; done him, which he cdnnoi do by all his duties and engagem.ents, nor by reformation for the future. j And not only doth it inform a man of part^cul^^rs, but of thercadincis and willingnefs that is in Jefus Chrift, and in the Father to pare with all thtfej things. A'readinefs" in Chriftj chat he is fent of the Father, and m.ade as a common Stock, out of whom he coramunirares, even as the Firft t/^^i^w commu- nicates h-s iinfulnefs to his. Therefore the Scrip- ture reveals him as a Stock and Head, as one chacjs inrrufted in the behalf of tinners, as one that hath received Commandment from the Father that he fhould call them, andhaving called them, fhould; bear them in his ArmiS untill he brings them to GTo- j ry. And'for the readineis of God the Father, h] reveals unto the Soul that he hath received a price, ' land therefore all that is to be given, is a debt : Thaci this Price did but make v/ay for the accomplffli-j n:ent of ^ods good Will from all Eternity ; and as he could not til he was fatisiied ( becaufe of the honor of his Juftice ) giveus, fo he cannot being l«tisfied (becaufe it would be a difhonor to Juftice^ butgivelis. I might be large, but the Sum of all ( is this : That there is a neceflity of the knowledge of the ^ofpel required of thofe that dobeleeve, or required unto the receiv-ng of any thing from Chrift, — ^— ^1 I -I and Keceivhtg ChrlH^ isBelieofing. 4; Chiift/' Informationofthemyftery of the Gofpel is che way whereby we come to be made partakers of all the Grace of the Gofpel. As the heat comes in with che light into the Air, So dorh alfo with the knowledg of Chrift, the things of Chriil. TJjey. that h;novo thy name, they wilt truft in thee, Pfal. p. 10* I know whom 1 have trufted* How can ye belee^ve except ye hanje hf^ard ^ faith the Apoftle in 1{om. lO. 14. While men are not in fear ^ nor fenfible of t heir danger, So long (as Solomon faith) the fool be^ Iceves every thing and will hope in any thing, and make any thing to be the foundation and ground of their truil and confidence, ^rov. 14. i $• But when Conicience comes to be troubled, and when a man comes to fee what muft be done to fatisiie the wrath of God, then a man grows wary and is afraid of trufting to any thing that is not furacient, and a- ble CO bear him up in the day of tryalL You fliall find fomtimes in the Scripture, Faith fet out by Wifdom, ^ph. i. 8. ^e hath ahoundedto- wards Tfs in all vpifdom and l^owledg. So Chrift js made unto usWifdom,Righteoufnefs,Sandtification and Redemption. Wifdom, that is, he gives Faith. becaufe it follows afterwards, rhat he is made unto us righteoufnefs, 1 Cor.u 30. Thefe Words compre- hend all we have in Chrift, both in this world and in the World to come. There is righteoufnefs and fandification when we do belecve in him : There is wifdom that we may be partakers of that righte- oufnefs and fanftification : 'And Redemption or gathering together of the body again out of the duft into which it moulders, that you may be for ever with the Lord. That Wifdom there going before righteoufnefs, mufl needs be meant concerning Faith. Faith cherfore doth make a man wife. And the reafou why it is fo called, is becaufe it makes h the Jl*- 4 2 Faith ^ or ^elienjing is ^ceirving Chrijl ; I the Soul to deal exceeding warily, aud cha;:ily, and upon good grounds. Elfe a man would take the moil ordinary Bayl ( as 1 may cal it ) the mea- ncft grounds and realbns for his hope that could be. As a wife man wil not adventure his Eftace in- to the hands of any onewhom he knows not wel but he wilhave good grounds&know whom he tiufts be- fore he trufts, he wil have fomthing to ihcw for th at well he trufts another.A wife man wil not take every ones word, but will enquire what the mans Eftatc and i^oodnefs is that promifeth to pay him. So a man becomes wife ^ Fakhmakcsa man exceeding chary and wary leaft that he fhould lay fo great a building upon a foundation or principle that will not hold out in the day of the Lord. Al the time of a mans unregeneracy, a man adventures himfelf and puts all his hope upon fuch things as in reafon ( indeed ) will give him no kind of confidence. What argument is this, that becaufe ^aman was called to the banquet of the King, therefore ic was that he might have all the honor done to him, which might be done to a fubje5;.i. Who ffaith the Text ) hathbelee^ed our reporty^ni that word there if^afc^n [fBdee^ved'] is of fuch a conjugation in the Hebrew Toi^gue, as ma- kechathingouctobecrue, It givesit a being, that is, it makes the thing as reall, as if the thing revea- led, were revealed unto fenfe, and to be taken no- tice of by the eye,or ear, or the like. And in %om, 4. :^i. ic is faid chac Abraham becaufe he had the pro- mife of God, was fully perfwaded, that what Gcd had promifed he was able to perform. He was folly per f waded* Where true faith is, there is not alwaies fuch a fill perfwafion that a man ihal be favcd : . — ■ —!■ -^m— ^ — and^cel^ing Chrijl, k BelieVi/tg. as' I faved : but where cme faich is, there is a fulnefs of I perfwatlon chac the things revealed fhall be accom- iplifhed: Bui yet not fucha fulnels as no fuither I degree can be added to it, but fuch a fulnels, as I there is no doubt nor fear of the contrary : As full ; affurance is oppofite to an opinion : v/hereas an opi- nion is nothing elfe but an auenting to a thing with fear chat it may be other vife than it feems to be. In oppofition CO an opinion^ Faich is a full perfwafion,' though it's not a ful ailuraace as it notes perfeftion. As for example. He that fees a color may be fo certain as he cannot be d-ceivedand yet he may fee ic more cleerly than he doth. So a man may have more of the Grace of the faich of affenc, yet chac furcher degree doch noc adde any further certainty of theobjeftjbut only of the degree of beleeving. And therefore in the Scripture, Faith is fomtimes called fc2mg,an(l fomtimes tafting. Taji and fee howgoodthe Lord is* And fomtimes heaxmg : My fheep hear my voice, %A.nd bear and your Souls Jhall [I've. As rcafon perf wades the underilauding in ordinary and natuarll things, and that Reafon molt which is demoaftrative. So Faith perf wades tRe Soul in things that are revealed, and though thac the things chemfe Ives do noc appear, yet becaufe God faith they are fo,ic doch as verily beleevethem, as if they f aw them with their eyes, or fekthem with their hands, or were partakers of them by any fenfe. And herein lies a very great difference be^ tween the people of God, Beleevers, and others. To others, the great things of the Gofpel feem to be as a itrange thing, yea as foolifhnefs as the Apoftle faith. And as the Apoftle doth intimate in another place when he ufeth this phrafe. Why jhpulditfeemflrange and incredible to you that Qod fhouldraifeupthedead,^ All chac the GofpeU faich till Job. 10. Ifa. 55?. 3. ' a6 Faith, or belee^ing, is ^ceia)tng Chrift ,• I till faith hath this work, is not only counted as ; fable that is the Phraie of the Apoftle when he fpeaks of them that preach Fables, fuch things as are devicesforlbme further end, and becaufe there, are fuch things but only uledas a piece of Rheco- rick to perfwademen to another thing: As there is no dif pucing againft fenfe : A man feels ic to be hot, and nothing can make him fay it is cold^ v/hen he tails the thing that is fweec, nothing can make him fay it is bitter. So nothing can make a man chac belecvesjbeleeve the things that are revealed to be o- therwife.That is the meaning of theApoftle,! Cor,2. i5.That the fpiritual man is judged of none.He may be cenfured of men for to be a fool, and by his own heart, andby Satan : What do you bcleeve that God wil part with fuch things unto fuch a one as you are ? Is it reafon that the Lord of life ihould die, 8c be made a curf e for you?But though he may be judg ed, yet he cannot be caft in his judgment^ he cannot be perfwaded to the contrary,from what he receives from the judgment of Faith in the Word of God. TUhe ^irituaU man judgeth all things and he himfelf is judged of none. There is a Judgment of cenfure, and a Judgment of con viftion. By a Judgment of cenfure a Beleever may be condemned of others, and condemned and checkc by his own carnall heart. As S^^r^ laughed when fhe heard the news I of having a child in her old age, in whom all the generations of the Worldftiould beblelTed. So a man is ready to laugh at himfelf for beleeving things which the Gofpell requires which arc fo much above reafon. I fay a man may cenfure him- felf, and be cenfured by others. Bar with the Judg- ment of Conviftion he caanot be Judged. The word aV««e/«», which the Apoftle ufeth fignifies fuch a kind of Judgment wch a man makes of a thing when he hath tri'd it in al the moft exquifite waies \ that poffibly may be ufed.Such a kind of knowledg as and ^ceiving Chrift^ is Beliea^ing. 47 as a man hath of the macccr which he hath gotten 'oucof chcconfcllion of another by torments and ^tortures. Do what you wil unto a Godly man and a JBeleevcr, yet ftill he holds that God is good, and that there are fuch things in Jefus Chrift which th^ Gofpell reveals. Do what you will , Torture him with temptations, yet when he is himfelf he holds that. Youmay feethisto be the nature of com- mon Faith* Men that have but a common hi/lori- j calfaixh,yet they beleeve fo firmly as nothing can make them denie Chrift, As we fee by experience of many among the Turks who have nothing but this Faith, yet when chcy have liberty offered them from thofe torments upon refufing to own Je- fus Chriil to be God, yet they refufe that liber- ty. Specially you fhall find thofe that have ftrong faith, they will hold the conclufion when they can- not anlwer the reafon. As Job fa id unto his friends. Job ay* $• *H€ voouldhold bis Integrity till Jje died* Let them fay what they would of Gods dealing with good men and bad men, yet he would hold his own. Thou knoweft there is no Iniquity in my hand faith he. So when a Godly man knows not what to fay, yet he faith this is the word of God, 8c that remaiues FaithfuU, and this is certainly true concerning Jefus Chrift, and cannot be queftioned Nay, take thofe that have weak Faith : As the Needle that is touched with the Load-fl:one,though it may be jiogged,yet it wil turn again to the North. So though a weak Faith fhould forget it felf, yet it will recant, and retraft, and recover it felf again to the acknowledgment of the Truth. I fhall fay no more of this, but only thus much ^ That as he thai hath drunk in an Opinion, is fo prejudiced a- gainft the contrary, that he will not h<;ar nor credit whatever is faidagainft it. So doth Faith preju- dice the Soul againfl: any ill reports or falfhoods that ' ' I. »i I ». II I -11 I — r— ^|f»— — * I II I ■! »■ I I fc t 48 Faith J or Belie^in^ is Kecei^in^ Chrijl ; chat can be raifed of JcfusChrift, or the Prorai* fes. Thirdly : As Faith doch chis as it is an adt of the Underftanding ^ So it doch peiiwadeand lay argu- ments before the Will, that it fhouldgountojefus Chrift for all thefe things which are revealed to be had in him. As Jacob in Qen. 42. i, 2. I'aich co his Children, Why ftand you here tvhm there if Corn in EgyP^ • Q^ down thither. So doth chis Faith fpeak unco the Soul of a man. Why do you fic weeping, and mourning, and lamenting your condi* cion? Whac is icyou wane ? If it be either Grace or Comfort, you may have ic in Jefus Chrift. As the Angel dia check *H<^^^r for weeping fo as Ihc didjbecaufe Ihe was athirft in the Wildernefs,when there was a Well hard by : So doch Faith check che Soul when ic lies moaning and complaining and doch noc puc ic felf upon che Lord Jefus Chriil for a fupply. Whan would you have faich Faich ? If I what; you would have Were noc co be had, noc co be had any where, or upon a race chac you could noc give, Chen you mighc fic down fadly. Buc when ic > isbucTake, andEac, when ic is bucffcrecchingforch the hand, and cake of the Word of Life : Why do you noc beleeve > As Jefus Chrift faid^ upbraiding his Difciples of cheir Unbelief, Why is ic chus wich you > You are croubled wich an heart of Unbelief, becaufeicisdull, and becaufe i: is dead, and be- caufe you are hurried wich cempcacions, and you would fain be quick, and beleeving, and be ac peace and quiet : Now go unco Jelus Chrifl. Thus Faich cals upon a man. ^faU 16. 7. faich T>amdy I blefl the Lord vcho hath ginjen *me Counfell. Now God Counfels che Soul chus by che Revelacion of his Word uncoamanchrough Faich. In John 6. 44,^ 45. Faich is called a going unco Jefus Chrift. And( as 7^iib learned che Woman how co go unco King[ T>an.'id ■'-'■- '' 1 ' -'- — — k 1^ t .. - — ^-„ ../■. —- _A _ ^n^ ^cei^in^ Qhrifi^ is believing. 49 ^amd in the behalf of ./^I'/^/otw, SoFaith iearns chs 1 heart how cogo and fpeak unto God in the behalf ofitfclf. And this the light which is in his mind cannot but do. For you muft know that the Un- derftanding doth naturally work by^ way of per- fwafionuponthcAnli.s Asc^c^^n faid he fav/ the Babiloaife g^wnicnt and cotered it with the luft of his foul, iothie light that is in the toul by faith doth itir up^a man much liiorc to get it. Th^feeing of things L>y the under (tanding, cals upon it, and provokes it to apply it to it felf. We heard tl^t^r King of Ifr^eHs a merciful King, and therefore wc^ fay to him,let thy- fervanCs live. So the foul upon the report which theunderftanding makes unto it, goes unto Jefus Clu'ift, and faith, wc have heard that •^iththee isGr^ce, and that thou wilt impute thy f right eoufncfs, and cake my fins upon thy account, andthan the f^irit fhal be fhed abroad in the heart o£ them chat come to thee, And therefore it goes unto him. Therefore faith the Text mjohn 6. 45. ^ve- ry one that hath beard andldirned of the father conies unto me. That is, there is lione but do come. There h indeed a perfwafion which the word makes, which may berefifted, but the perfwafion of true Faith cannot. There is fuch a Sicada, and Fvhetorick, and fuch an Emphafis, and fuch an apcnef s in all chat faith doth reveal unt(3 a man, that as it is faid in^/^tt^. 22. 8. it dothcompeila man to come in. Which compulfion there, is nor meant of au excer- nail violence, but of the conftrainc of the word of God to whom it comes favingly. And becaufe of this perfwafion it is, that the fin of Unbelief, of li- ving out of jefus Chriftjis fo exceeding grcac where theGolpell comes, becaufe men are wooed and in- created and preffcd by the beft and ftrongeft argu- ments. And therefore there can be nothing elfe but a pure hatred, and not defirous of the things i of t o Faith^ or Belie^w^ is ^cei^oing Chrift • ^ of JelusChrift, which keeps a .man from it. And that I may fet forth this a little more cleeiiy unto your underftanding. You fhall find in the Scripture chat faith is faid to give a kindof reafonuntoamgn.and to take from him that folly and unreafonablenefs whereby he I ftands in the way of his own good, and cannot fee what is good for himfclf. 2 Thef. 3. i. 2. ^ray ( faith he ) that the voord of the Lord may have free courfcy and that we ynay hi freed from unreafanal^le moiyfor aU mm have not ^aith* Unbelecvers are un- reafonable. And on the contraryjFaith brings a man to his rcafon. That when the word comes, an lln- belcever flops itpandfaichj thisDodlrinefliall not be preached, and this is not the way of life, and counrshinifelf as Ti/«i faith, unworthy of eternall life by conrradifting it : Now a Godly man grows wife, and faith, fjjcak this word, and whatever is hid and concealed, yet hide not this word of God. He goes and fels all as it is in ^atth, 13. thi^t he may buy this pearL And as Faith gives a reafon co a man, fo when a man is carelefs. Faith cals upon him, Ifa.sS' 3. *He^r and live. Will you lofe your fouls, and your eternal good by loftng the opportunicy? What fhould you mind but the thing you are about ? Hear what Jefus Chrift is, and what he hath done, and what he hath ? Is there any thing like unto pardon, a^id I 'ke unco Union with himfelf ? And when a man faith, It is true, thefe things are. But not for me. Faith anfwers, the things are near unto you, in rhy mouth and in thy heart, ^om. 10. 65 7, 8. Do not fay who fhall afcend, or who fhall defcend, 8cc. The meaning of it is this, That where, as the Law doth require ofamandury, andgive?. him no power to perform it. the Gofpell gives him ' H and Youareinmifcry by the corruption and depravation of your underftanding and will : But faith Faith both fhall be taken away. If that be the meaning of the place, as I conceive it is. But if it be meant of doubting as fome conceive. Who fhalefcape the pit^and therfore who fhal afcend&c. Faith tels a man. Never be difquieted becaufe of. that, for Chrift came down and is afcended. He' came down and defcended and revealed the will of | his Father to us. When the Soul is going cowards I JefusChrifl:, then this Faith perfwades it fo far', as that ic puts ic inco a refolution . I faid I vodfdd go faid the Prodigall. In z Cor, 5. 15. WetJmsjudg^ ! iaich the Apoftle. A Judgment is a Sentence paft ' after all is heardthac can be faid on both fides. A j Judgmcnc is the lafl act of che underftanding after which chere is no appeal nor. debate. Faith iaith, I will hear no more doubts, nor affont co any I doubts, fufpcions, nor fears. And when the Soul' isreadytogive]over thac work, chen che work of Faith faith. If you withdraw your fe Ives the Lord willhavenopleafureinyou^ Heh, 10, 38. VYhac though things go hard ? yet you may live by* youj: ■ Faith. And as faith reveals the things that cannot be known by nature. So as it is a Perfwader, it brings to mind fuch things! 1 — -«- .— .-^ ' ■ ■ . 5 2 Faith, or ^elee^ing^ is ^cei-ving Chrijt ^ [things which the Soul knew not before. Such thuiga which arefuicable to its cafe and its prefenc condi- tion. And that is the third thing whereby faith receives. It doth perfwade, and invite, and excite a man, that feeing there is fo much to be had in Chrift that we wouldnotfuffer it to lie /lil and to beunufcd. There is another thing that the uader- itanding doth. Fourthly: It keeps the thoughts of thcfe things thus revealed. It lets them not go out of mind, but fets them continually before a mans face. As- the under (landing doth put a man to go to Chrift and to him only: So it keeps Chrift and the things of him in mind. It'sas the Glafs toiec them alwaies before the face. As Daindizith in H^faU $i. 3. that his fui was ever before him : that is, he could be in no Ordinance, but his Confcience troubled him : And he could be in no company, but ic adminiftred caufe of fear to him. His fin was alwaies dogging him, accufing him, and oppofing him. So Faitii fct<3 Jefus Chrift in his benefits before the foul in whatever condition a man is. Therefore you fhall find in the Scripture that it is all one to beleeve, and to think upon God. 1 thought upon thee in the nightfeafoHyandlfettby loving kjndneji alvaaies be foremyfaceVid^h 119. 55. InGScc/e/. 12. i.^emem" ber thy Creator. It's not the bare having God in our memory^ but it is beleeving that will fave us from wrath to come. But belecving is called Remem- brance there. And on the contrary fide in Heb. 2* T. Unbelief is called aLetting efcape. Take heed leaft you let flip the things which you have heard* And hi^atth. 13.4. thofe that did not beleeve are !faid tohavethewordof Godpicktup out of their | {heart, As the Fowls of the Heavens do pick up the j /feedthac is fowen by the hand of the fower, and j 1 sire. f . - - " ■ and (j^ceiVmg Chrifi^ isBelicving. are not converted by the Word. And llnbeiee vets are called fuch as Iprgec God, Mark it. There are Two waids of keeping thm^s in mirid : One is by a Similitude, or Image, or Piaure of it. Now to keep Spiritual things in a mans mind thus, is either but Natural Knowledg, or Superftitious againft the Second Commandment which forbids a jnanto make any graven Image of what God hath done, thereby to keep a man in thoughts of what God hath required. There is another way of keeping things in mind, and that is by the prefence of the things themielves* Now this is the way by which Faith keeps a man and the things of Jefus Chrift, which is by way of Intuitive know4edg. Or it keeps things in a man^ knowledg by the prefence of the things themfelves. And that is the ground why that Faith doth caufe fo firm an affent, and is fo ftrong a perf wader, becaufe I fay the things themfelves are made prefent unto the foul. In ^faU i6. 7. ^y^einf (faith he) in- ftriiUj me in the nighu In the night when others deep; or in the night when I am free to conlKcr, and awaking, then thy Fromifes (faith he) they come into my mind. As Faith will not take any flight denial for anfwer, but doth convince the falfe reafonings that are in us : fo it wil flip no time nor opportunity of Winning us. It doth con- tinually beiiege the Soul, as I may fay. The fl:ron- gcft Fort may be taken in by a long Siege, when the Enemies rife not from before it, but are continual- ly battering! it. Now Faith doth (as it were) batter the Unbelief and the Reafonings of our heart with continual arguments to the contrary. Saith Faich to the Soul, You fay thus, butheark n to v/hat the Word faith : you fpeak words ot dQkih^ but j ! God fpeaks peace to his people. And you fhal find jby experience (which 1 fhal leave as the proof of il lis i 53 tA Faith, or^elienjing is 'Kecei^tng Chr'ifl ; this poinc ) thac that word which a man hath often ' times foigocten, and which he Icems to have loft, the operation whereof is ceafed, yet a year or two, yea feven years after it corr.es to work upon a man again, and works him to that very thing which all this whil he flood againrt.Efpeciaity when the time of a mans cpnverfionis come, it"*s with him as ic is with a Woman in her time of travell, that one throw comes upon the neck of another, until fhc be delivered and fees the Fruit of her womb : So there comes one argument upon another. And if one thought comes and faith, This is not for me. There comes another and bids him take heed that he puts not the loving kindnefs of God from him, and fo it leaves him not till he be conqueied. And that is the fourth thing to help a man to receive. CHAP- VIII. Jt$'jifthvpor\of^Vaith^ otitis an-A^ of the ^nr\ dtrjlanding is to a.ffure and certifie a man of the] thiyigs already recei'ved. \ Fifthly: Faith helps a man to receive of Jefus Chrift by making known to him tlie things freely given of God, by making known and affu- ring and certifying him of the thing freely be- ftowed, 'I Cor, 2. As Faith tels a man what Chrift hath, and what Chrift will do. So it informes a man what he hath received from Chrift, though that we . come to know our particular ftate by experi- • ence. We fay, we do beleeve, becaufe we find a 1 deniall of our felves, and a loathing of our righce- ioufnefs, and a prizing of Jefus Chrift, yet becaufe I this that we find in our felves doch arile from com- and ^cei^ing Chrijl is BeUea;ing 5 5 paring of our felves wich the word of Godj therefore it is afcribed unco Faith. My meaning is ; this. It is as well an aft of divine fairh for a man ^ to conclude chat he ihallbe faved, as it is an ad of divine faith for to affert that he that bekeves ihal be faved. This, That i ftial be faved, arileth as wel c]^a.tth, from that word which opens the nature of faiclv, j j,^ ^^ which I find to be in my heart, As this doth arife from the word, that there is none that beleevcs ihal perifh, but have everlafting life, i Cor* 2. i2« The Spiritof God is given us, that we may know the things freely given us. And this Spirit of God is the fpir it of faith, as the Apofllecais it in another place. The fum of the point is this. That thefpirit of God doth by this Grace, or this ad of the un- derflanding make a man to lee that he hath alrea- dy in poffeiTion, that a great deal is paid down, that he hath received before hand. There is a pledg in his bofom: The Staff and the Jewels are lefc with him which Jefus Chrift will own* It. tels h m thus much when beilands faying in himielf^ Alas faith he, Wliy fliduld'I go > Or why IhouldI,i£ I do go to Chrift thinicJfliould receive much fro.n him? \t telshimj you have received fomthing, and he will ^ive more : that which you have is but as tiie mor- ning Star, which arifeth before Sun fhines : You fhallbefureyou fhall have thefie thing?, bccaufe when you knew not, he put fuch and fuch things under your pillow, when you thought not, and fought not, yet thefe things are done. Making known to a man that he hath received, doth ilreng- thenhim to receive more. For what he hath re- ceived is given as a pawn and pledg by God on his part, and it's a Motive and ingagement on our part cogountohimfornK)re. As God will not leave his work imperfed, foweare bound to feek the 'f erfedion of it. There is a marvellous boldnefs and- t6 Faith ^ or Believing is 1(ecei Haft thou not by thefe things allured me to follow thee ? Thourequireftofme not to leave the things 1 have put my hand unto : The Lord will notdofo much more^ What is this little to thy fulnefs ? What is my little but only a pawn of more? There is agr^at ftraitnefsinche Soul till ic comes to have this aft of ^ith. The Soul doth take fparingly, like one thdt fteals, rather than One; that doth receive his own, untill it comes to have this aft of Faith. There is a kind of modefty and fparingnefs. It thinks it much to have a little. Al- though that ailurance keeps the Soul modeft and humble, becaufe God gives it all in the name of Chrift, it's not for us but for his fake that any thing is given us : Yet ailurance knows no bounds, and acknowledgeth no limits in receiving, bun binds and Keceiying Chri^^ is Belie makes him to receive. And the truth of it is^ my belovtid That this doth alter our ftate. For though we are diftingu'fhed from men unrege- neratcby beleeving, yet ourbelecving is diftingui* fhedby this working of the ipirit. And though there be phrafes in the f crip ture which fpeak of Chrifts dwelling- in our hearts by faith^ yet that •whereby Chrift comes to dwell and take poireffion , of us is his Spirit. We have more fecurity of our per£cverance and continuance in the ftate of Grace from thivhatiwe ade iaid hold on by the Spirit^and wrought thereunto as faith the Apoflle, and are apprehended, Then wehave from this, that we do apprehtnd and lay hol^uponChrift. Thy appre- henfion were nothing, were it not for this, that thou art made to do this by him that alters and changechnot. And I fpeak this to this very end, Thacthoiighthis work be never without a work of ouriioliowing.of ic^yet notwithftanding the frame andhabi^ ot the foul,the difpotitionSc temper which wears cait into by the Spirit through the word is unto a man a better ground, when he cannot a6fc faith or when he doth a^ faith, it i^ a better ground thaft any thing elfe. k is a ground whea be cannot andabetter ground than any thing eife : For Mark Thy ading doth but flow from this work. K andcaniioube made out to be good further than thisisinthee. As we fay in al other duties. The Lord looks to the heart ^ k it not the gifts, but the will with which we do any thing thaf. God cake« pleafurc in. So I fay here, It's not any thing that I have m^ntioQed concerning faithy '1^ it is k ^ that I ■T — .i ^o Faith J or Beliea/'m^ is rece'fvlng Chriji; I \ ' that fpiric of faith ( fo the Apoftlc cals k alfo ) thac frame of faith, An heart caft into that mouldy which makes al your afts to be accepted. If upon any adt of ours ("though thofe ^(ks were inabled unto by Grace J our falvation did depend, it might be hazardous. But it cannot be hazarded. There is no poflibility of falling away, becaule the Holy Ghoft, the Spirit of the Son, and of the Father doth work, and hath wrought us hereunto to belcevc up- on him, and will maintain that work. As a child ( if 1 may Xo cxprcfs it^ becaule born of fuch Pa- rents, hath a right unto the Eftate> though it cannot plead, nor fpeak to icfelf. It is flelh of his flefh, and bone of his bone. So art thou one Spirit with Tcfus Chrift, when thou art thus £hapcd,and made to piveup thy felf, when thouhafl: a tendency of fpirit toGod in all thy hopes, when thy heart and all within thee is unto Jelus Chrift, aua thou takeft all from him, as he fhallplcafe to give it chce^ USE IfFaithasitisthus in the underflanding, be a receiving, or there may be To much gotten from Jc- fus Chrift by the underftanding and knowledg of him,thenlbefeech you look unto the underftan- ding. There is a double reafon that lies in the Text, audin the Point that I have in hand. By it, you do receive as by a hand. And ih it, is laid up, as in an houfe or barn or treafure rich things from Jefus Chrift.^ It is his Cabinet, and your Honor, or it is your Trcafure-houfe. You fiavc nothing to lay up the things of Jefus Chrift in, or you will not know where to lay them up, if you have not a I mind to know him. Take heed to your undcrftan- I ding, take heed what you belecTe. Errors in the I nndcrftanding hinder you from the getting of faith, ! Wc and ^ceia^'m^ Chrijij is BelieVij^tg. 6 WcUvc in Che laft and worft Age of the world, wherein men make no Covenant with their under- ftanding. Job faid that he would do fo with his eyes chat he might not look u^^on a Maid : Yet that^ was lawful! : But there was a fnare laid in it. Men keep not their thoughts from any thing ithat inay be {^'idpro and eon againft the Gofpel of Jefus Chrifl: So full of Adultery and unchaftity arc the ^inds of mod chat there isfcarce any room for Je- fus Chrift to lodg in. Let me but tel you thus much chat fo much as you arc ftufc with the things that arc not according unco truth, fo much you keep ouc the things of the Lord Jefus. If you dp not beleevc the truth, you may be d^mned^ So the Tcxc faith in the fecond Epiftle tb-^he-Theffalonianf 2. 12. That tbey aU might be damned^ that hekefve not the truth. That word [^*AJl'] is put into fhew both how great the puniihmenc i% of thpfe that do noc beleevc : As a.nre grows hot by having much tim- ber : So the wrath of God is hot againft fuch kind of Men: It's an increafc of coles upon them. God puts in [»>4ii3 there, becaufe he would have lyen know how exceedingly he is provoked^ and that he will do nothing for them. When Princes fee whole Counties, and Cities in a mutiny^ tjicy take ouc one or twotopunifh, and not al. Andtofliew youthatif Goddonotdamnyou for receiving the truth, yet you will be damnified for not receiving the truth. That is, you will be hindred. Take heed that youmifs noc of receiving a full reward. Why what will hinder them? He reckons up the JErrors of thofe times ( which are rank now as they were then)thac men do not abide in the Dodlrine of Jefiis Chrifl.In 2 Joh.iodf any ma,n come untoyouanA^ bring notthk VoUrine^ receive him not,^er hid him j Qodfpeedyior this wilhinder your of receiving a, full , reward: And as the ApoftleXaith in the.Cch afcribe unto Hy|)ocrites and .Hien that perifh, chat they do beleeve. 2. Up- on this Principle j'z^i':^. That is only to Ije counted a 6race v/hich makes a man good, andr^oman is laid CO be good for what he .knows, bucfor^vfeac he doth. ^'., Anftv. Becavfeofchisditnculcyribme have pla- ced the differencebcweeniar^gener^teand an unre- generate man only in che Wil: th^c a regenerate ipan approves, and an unregeneraceman doi^h noc, of the lighcchacilvinesinhim. But chough that be true^ y^ the Scripture doth make a cleqr and diftinft difference becween a regenerafjc man and an unre- generate man, even in cheir very mind an i un^er- iianding. As you may fee in i Cor, ^. 14. The na- turall man « "^Oi^xreu ym^^^ He chat hath a U the rea- fonancunderftanding whichramanasaman is ca- pable of, he doth not underftand che things of God, neither can he faith che cexc : Buc we have the mind of Chrifl:. As che fenfe doth * only meddle with che chings chat are fenfible. So reaf^n ftii-d uadcrilranding in men doth meddle only with the chrUigs that are natural}, or with chings chac are fpi. ricuallinanacurallway. For asevery thiagis, fo ir works. So in i Tb^^. S- 23. You have che who! man diftribuced into fpiric, foul and body. 1 pray Godfan^ifie you throughout m fpiric, foul and body. By che fpiric he means the underftan- ding,as you may fee by the like phrafe in/2iaw. 1 2-2. where iS^ Faith ^ or Beiiea^in^ is Kecei^in^ Chriji ^ \ where he bids chcm be renewed in the fpiric of their mind. Andby Soul, he means the Will, and ^ffc' ^ions, and by Body the outward pradtice and convcrfation. And in Jc?/;/; 6. 4,4. Our Lord laies the reafon why feme come to him, and not ail, be- caufelbme were taught, and fome were not taught of ( he Father, 'Murmur not among your felves^ for no 7)ia?i can come to we, except my father which hathfent me, draw h^im, for it is written in the prophets j It'ou fhal he at taught ofCjod* ^n>ery one therefore that bath learned and been taught of the father comes unto me* And in ^ph, 4. 20. lou have not fo learned Chrift. That word ^tw^, So, Imports a different apprchcn- fion in men of the fame objedl Jcfus Cbrift, You have not So learned him, that is, foas fome other men have, whole hearts are not renewed andxhan- ged to walk according to what tl>ey kno'^ of him. If you do but obferve it in that ver^ place,the Apoftlc gives that as the reafon, why fome put oiFthc old man with itt deceitfuU lufts, and others are cloa- thedwit-h the new man in righccoufnefs and true holinefs, in verfe ai. 22. ^ecaufe that they had notfe learned Jefm Cbrift. It^s a marvellous hard thing, I confefs CO aflign the difference that is between the hiftorical faith of him that fhal be faved. and of an Hypocrire it's hard, but yet the Scripture makes a difference and diftrnftion. In the general therefore, Grace or Virtue may be confidered under a double notion. Either as it gives a power and ability to do good: AndfoGracemay befaid to bt in the un- dcrftanding. Or Secondly : As Grace doth put chat power into ufe, and inables a man toufe chat power wel. And fo it's properly in the Will. For al vertuous adis muft be voluntary, and therefore they depend upon the fanftiiicacion of the affeftions. Buc chough the ] 1 I and ^cei adl. You have it I conceive fully proved in Phillip, 3. 3. tVe aretheCircHm((t^tonvc>hichvporf\f)ipQod in the jbiriti andrejoyceinChrijhJefuij and have no CQnftdence in tbeflefly. We re;oyce faith he, and have no confi- dence in the flefh, the Apoftle is there proving chac a man cannot be faved by the works of the Law, but only by being found in Chrift, Concerning this ( faith nc ) we do rejoy ce. As if he fhould have faid, we are glad with all our hearts that we Ihafl not go to Heaven by doing, but by belceving, and not upon our own Legs, but in the Arms of Chrifl-. It doth us good to the heart that there is no duty nor fervicc that fhall be accepted, but oaly the Lord Jefus Chrifl:. It is not our f alvation alone which makes our hearts cheerfull, but it is this, that it is given by fuch a means and hand as Jefus Chrift is. We rejoy ce in Chrift Jefus, and have no confi- dence in the flefh. As by approving fm a man doth make fm his own, and contradts the guilt of it which was done by another : So by the Wils ap- proving of theaffent which the Under if anding hath given unto the truths of the Golpell, the Will be- comes a partaker together with it. Or thus Asa nian that doth approve eviil, will foon he fiill of ^11 '" m unrighteoufnefs F 74 Faith, or ^eliea)ing is ^cei^in^ Chriji ; •\ unrightcoufnefs. So the will approving what the underftanding bcleevs concerning che trmh of the promifes will bring the Soul to be Alkd with the bleftings of it. Thirdly : Faith dock make the Will to give up itfelfunto Jefus Chrift. And therefore Fa th is called a coming unto Kim : And in z Cor. 8. 5. Tljey gOfvethemfelves unta (jod^ and then unto hi» You ftiallundenlandthe meaning of it, if we fiift conti- der the meaning of the word i^e^toiv, ^ they gate ^ He that gives a thing alters the property of it, be makes him to be the Lord and maftcr of it, to whom he gives it. This is yours do with it what you plcafe,lcall it my own no more. So now they gave themfelves unto Jefuf Chrift, and rcfigned thcmfelves unto him, and would no niore meddle asbcforc they had done in working out meritori- oufly their owufalvacion. I am not my own faith the .S'oul,! am thine,Lord I have tto more to do with my felf, to fave my felf, than 1 have to do with that which is another mans to ufe at my pleafure: I bavegiveniuy felf to thee. And as you may dif- cern the meaning of it by the wora Q^io'e] So you may by that wh.ch the .^^poftle joynes to it : They gave themfelvesfirft to God and then co us.. How did they give themfelves to the Apoftles > They did give themfelves to them as their Teachers as choft:' by whom God would reveal the things of him, and che way of pradiifmg of r he Will o£ Jefus Chrifl. Upon this account you fhal find that faith: is compared to Marriage, where parties give over the right of themfelves unto another. Only let me telyou this by the way : That there is an implicite giving. As a man is laid CO give himfelf to fleep, aud to idlenefs who doth indulge his own eafe, ai\d :laieshimfelffoftly f That is aa implicice giviugj » I ' There and ^ceiving Chr'tjl, is Beliea^t?ig. 75 t* There is an cxplkice giving, and chat is by way of \cxprefs relignation : As a man that comes and deli- vers a poffeliion of goods, or a commodity which is bought iiico the hands of another : Here, take what i$ thy own. Now in al Faith th and that is this. USE If Faith be a Receiving (as you have heard) Thentheftnof Unbelief is exceeding great and ve- ry provoking. J\s our mifery is great that we have not only no a^ive power to do good, but we want ' t paflTive power to receive good. We arc no apter nor fitter co any good work than the ftone is fit for a building which can be l^aid in no place till the hand of the Workman cpmcs upon it and fquares it. So the fin of Unbelitf IS great in this, that it is a denying to receive, or a:^ hardening of the Soul, and making it uncapablcas^ much as in it lies of the things of lefus Chrift. What ai> abominable proud thing is it for a Beggar that he will not take aft alms for himfelf that hath nothing to live upon, that' he wil not receive a favor > Yet fuch is the fm of Un- belief, for Faith is a Receiving. Thou doft as muchasfay inthy ownfelf. Thy ads of unbelief, have this voyce. Lord I will hav^ none of that which thou offered; Keep it to thy felf j I had ra- ther be without falvacion than have it upon fuch terms, by way of an alms or ^eceivmg •, I wil work for it, and purchase it, and biiy it, and not take it as ameer gift. What Prince is able to endure that the condemned perfon fhould rejeft his pardon, and not take it : that he fhould accept the halter and the b lock rather than the Grace and faVor ten- dredtohi'i. Wethinkic raodtfty and humility not to receive the things of the Golpeli chat arefo glorious. 7 3 Faith, or belee^'mg, is ^ceia^ing Chrift ; ; rious: No: But becaule chac faith is a receivings tliou dolt throw all chcfechings like duft into the wind, and water upon a ftone, : Ihcuwik not af- ford God fo much as a Yeffell to cake in what fal$ fromHeaven into the Souls of men. It is not thy modefty, but thy pride. If thou haft never lo much, Canft thou not receive a kindnefs ? Ifchou be never fo well, yet canft thou not be better ? Haft thoufo great an abundance, that nothing can be added to cher > Say all this if thoudaifft, and own it before the Lord : Thou nmft lay it, if thou takcft the part ofunbelief,becaufe faith is a receiving, and unbe- lief i% a rejediing. CHAP. XII. Objeft, n^ai^^heinga ^mlityy and fa an Acci* dent y can be but in one Subje^^ and therefore not both in the Vnderfianding and thr WiU, Aiifw. I . ^aith fs one by Aggregation, z. That habit * which if in one faculty formally may be in dinger j by diffufson* Application, ^y thhtry xvhether y ou have true ^aithorno^ An Ohje^ion An^ fwered* OBJECT, - BUt it may be ob;c In plaij* tearmS;, Is thy Underflanding greedy of knowing ? Art thou willing to give up thy reafon to the teflimony that God g4ves of his Sou ? Art thou loth to lee the thoughts of Chrifl pafs from thee ? Is thy W'll in-' cliningandt€nding to them> n Now' 8 2 Faith ^ or ^elee^ing^ is ^cei^ing Cbrifi ; Now for the making out of this, ( and I befeech you mark ic ) of forae the Scripture faies barely! thus much. That they received not Chriji^ They are, fliuc up under that ( As in J^jb/i i. ii. thcverfcbe-| fore my text ) ^e came to his otvn^ and they recewed him not* And, The na.uraU man receives not the things of (jod* i Cor, 2. 14. Some beleevc not, and receive not buc they are very neer it. The fruit is neer their mouths, the word (as 1 may ufe it ) is not far from them. Plainly thus : | There are fome that are negative not privative Unbeleevers : That is, they are not Unbelcevcrs by way of oppofition, but by way of omiffioa. They have not denied and faid they will not go out to Jefus Chrifl, buc, they are about the matter, and about the matter, till the things of their peace bej hidden from their Eyes. Some Perfons are neither free, nor are they promiied in marriage, but arc in treaty fo as they cannot admit of another to come to them : So there are fome that hold Jefus Chrift ; in hand, cannot endure to think that Jefus Chrift, fliould leave them, and yet chey come not adually oft' to the clohng with him and receiving him in. to their hearts. As there is a negative holinefs, the man can fay lamnot as thisraan : So there is a negative unbe- lief, when as it may be faid of men they do not lay hold or receive, bu: it cannot be faid of them that they do reject or refufe. Sometimes this doth arife from unfenfiblenefs of ^ the want of Jefus Chrift :Becaufe we are not fenfible of our need of Jefus Chrift. Andthat (Itakcit) was the cafe of the hearers who are compared to the high w^y upon whom the feed fell to whom the] word o^^od came and they minded it not j chey gave ic the hearing but they forgat it prefently. Andfomcimcs ic comes from being taken up with ^ lawful! and ^cei'Vtng Qhrtfi^ is believing. ^ 5 lawful! things as they in W<^tt^. 22. would firft of all go and do the works they had before them, and they would then come to the Feaft. They did not fay they would not come, buc they could not come then. Or, 'fpecially it comes from an unadivenefs and flothfulnefs and iiftlefsnefs of heart. There is a kind of Condition of Soul that a man is like the Sea in a calme, chat you know not which way it goes ; A ftillnefs there is or fcarce any mo- tion to that which is good. Think on ir. Be ic from what caufe ic will though ic arife not from aiiy diflike or oppoficion to the things of Jefus Chrift, yet ic is a dangerous Condicion. A ftill livelefs fpiric is as well a fpiric in a dangerous condicion as that which is hurried and carried violencly wich ftrongtemptacions co Im. In ^attb. 21. 30. 31. One faies he wil go into the Vineyard , he granced ic to be his duty, out he went not. The Lord gives us thereby to underftand that there are fome who perifh through not doing that which they have a purpofe to do, and that which they are convinced is beft to be done by them. He that faid he would*go, and did not s You are not to conceive him. co be one that plaid the Hypocrite, in promifing to go and yet did not intend ic ; but in chis, chac he did not ftiifill that which had gone out of his mouch. There ishypocrifie when a man is convinced, and does profefs CO do the good he does not , Upon chat ac- count therefore you fee there is a reafon you ihould examine your fe Ives. Butbefidesj TheScripcure does fpeak of fome chat contradid the Go£pell and word of Faith. In c^^.i 3.45. the Apoftle exhorts them to receive wich meeknefs the word ingrafted chat ihould fave' rheir Souls. That does imply thac chere is an apcnefs in men to be provoked at hearing the Gofpell, How ^ n 2 V § ^ Faith, or BelienDtng is ^cei^oin^ Chrifi . many are chcre arc wife to evade and exclude them- feives from the compafs of the promifes ? that if any thing come ncer them to comfort them,by & by fome objcftionor other is made, that fo they may be ft 1 in their doubts and ftil in their fears ? In AU* 1 3.46. It is faid they put away from chera the Word of eternall life ; cvcu as a Tick man puts away the meat andfaies he is not able co endure it i So they fay, this is not for fuch as they are, it is too holy for j fuch dogs. And as it was with Ammon when he had defiled his fifler Tbamar, he thruft her out of doors and bolted the door againft her. So do men do with the things of Chrift : put them from them and bole and bar their hearts againft them with a refolution never to beleeve this while the World Hands. God opened the heart of Li^w, AUsi6, 14.. (he would not open it, but he broke it open by his Spirit. Yea laftly ( my Beloved ) There are that do trample under foot the things of Jefus Chrift, and mftcad of receiving of them, count them vile and not worthy eftimation. ^Heb. 10. 29. which by fnany is under ft ood concerning the indifpofition of heart that oft times does befall one that is faved ajfccrward. Now then *, feeing there arc fome that 4c» not {receive ^ and fome that do contradi^ and wil not receive but flight the things of Jefus Ckrift^ then try whether you have Faith or not, by your receiviwg. OBJECT. * ^ut you have ranh^d me in my place ; ' Yen have fet me in the place of theft that have not ^aitb ', for Ipft^ ai»ay m^rcy from mt. Anpv. To that I anfwer. A Godly map does oft and^cei^ing ChriJiisBeUerving 85 ofc times fay nay to God when he wooes him to be laved, and yet afterwards takes it : Puts away the mercy which he is glad on with al his Soul even as a hungry man is of that food which when he was fill he laid by and would not meddle with. When a godly man comes to fee what he hath done in re- futing and reje^ing and difputing againll the Grace of God, then his heart breaks, and then he does clefe with that which he hath rejected. A Godly man dotk eat up that which he hath formerly refu- fcd. Thou fhalt not walk niy feet faies (Peter to Chrifl: As if he fhould have faid. It is not fit that the Lord of Heaven and Earth fhould do any fuch thing for fo poor and vile a Creature as I am : But when Chrift tels him, ^efer, It is not the fign but the thing fignified that I fpeak to, and if I wa& thee not thouhaftnopart inmej then he cries, ^otordy my Veet but my bandf ^c. He is now content that Chrifl fliould do that in a great degree which be- fore he could not abide to hear of in the leaft de« CHAP. g 6 Faith ^ or Beliea^ing is ^cei. 4. 19. That he beUevedy and did not fo nmch at confi- d&^ the barrennefi of Sarahs Womhj 6*c. The realbn is this (my Beloved ) Becaufe there is nothing can judgworfe of the things of God than fences and nothing hinders more. When a man looks a little upon fence and reafon, he is like a man that hath been in a dark room, that when he comes out, the light of noon day is a trouble to him, and he can not difcern the things that are before him. Secondly : He that hath this Receiving Faith, he is a man that is much in prayer : Prayer demands and fues for what the Pro.ciie obliges and makes due to a man. In ^faU lop. 4. Uavid faies thus ; I ^ray , or, I ^i've my felf unto Trayer, As we ufe to fay, a man is of this or that Trade which he fol- lows for the moil part *, and other things are but by the by which he does : So Damd was fo n uch in Prayer, that he faies he was Prayer. And fo Taal^ A^fy 9« as foon as ever he began to beleevc, he be- gan to pray. And as a Believer does pray, fo he praies upon the fame tearms of Grace that he is a Pveceiver*, that is thus^ He is a Ileceivei for another , he receives nothing as his own prima- rily, and originally, but as it is a gift and truft put into his hands by Jefus Chrirf to ufe for the fervices to which he hath appointed him. He goes therefore to God, not as one that is the principal, but as one that is a Pveceiver for another: He go-s with a Spirit that fpeaks after this manner to the Lord j It isnot fo? my felf ^lone, I am but the Meilenger of Jefus Chrift, he lent me j Jefus Chrill hath undertaken for me, and will fee it made good ro me, and I fhal have it. Thirdly : He that hath this Faith as it is a Re- o ceivincf. iii II! po Faith^ or SelienjiHg is ^yeczia)ing Chri/i • ceiving, is unfacisfied with whatever he~gecs aFany one cime till he hath cometo get all which the Pro- niife is engaged for and to tiim : And the reaibn of ic is this : Therefore he is unfatisfied.becaufe he hath much to receive, and chat which he hath receiv.?d does but enlarge his capacity for more, and encou- rages him that he ihal have it^ as it is due : Even as meacgetsafto.iiach to meat, fo receiving gets an appetite to receiving. As prefuaiptuous pcrfons wil find fomthing or other to. encourage chemfelves by, fo. Faith (upon one refped or other ) will ever be looking for, and after fomching from Jefus Chrift y upon one account or other ic wil be ftil de- manding. Art thou therefore applying to thy felf the things that are promifed ? Art thou challenging from God more than thou haft? ui'ging him upon his Word that thou haft not fo much as thou doft hope in him for > Is wha: thou haft received as a taft that makes thy aiFed^ions run out after more > Then know, that thy Faith is indeed a receiving Faith, aFaithof ch^Sonof God. Fourthly: This Faich as ic is Receiving, will takehold of every inlinuation and intimation, lay upevery word that does give hope i and works up it felf by fmal grounds (as one would think) to great expeftations from Jcfus Chrift. As a man that is trading takes notice of every th?ngfthat is faidorfpoken hopefully of getting more than he hath. As there are fomefpir Its that aieever gro. wing upon one 9 give them once and chey wil come again. Or, as fome Children, that when they have received iomth'ing from their Parents, they have their Eyes continually iipon them looking for more. Such is the frame of the Spirit of one that beleeves, as it 15 a receiving i r aith makes a man to do fo. And therefore you fhal find by experience,, I that words fpokcn by the by, often times in a Ser- mon ^1 and ^ceiving Chrift^ is ^elie^uing. p i mon, yec are the great encourageraents, and hearte- ners, and fupporters of the hearts of Godly People. Faith is of that having, craving, growing nature, thatif it canbutget a word, it will make a great natter of it, lin makes us greedy of occaiions to it 9 As aword or a lillablc hach great provocation in ic unco fin, fo hath a word that is fpoken but by the by, a great efficacy upon the hearts of them that belceve : Thou complaineft: thou halt not what thou didft look for, becaufe thou dofl complain ic is a fign of thy Faith. Thou wouldc/l have that which thoii haft nor j and Faith is a receiving. Then feeing both llnderllanding and Wil,ilretch forth their hands to receive the things of Jefus Chriftj Beleevers they have a rich, aud plentiful! Condition. Their hands it'*s true are full of work they iiave much tb do ; but they haver n uch to get in too. What they have a mind to, they ihal have; and what chey know or^is revealed to be in the hand of God to do, fhall be done for them. Their Underftandings and Wills q lee them be extended and enlarged ) they fhall both of them be iilled full. ^faU 14*5. ii>. *He voiU fulfill the defires of them that truft in hhiu •««s> o a C HA P. % \ "'*~~~~"'*^' '" I >'■ Til — \ n 2 Faith ^ or Belieofin^ is receiving Chrijl; \ 4?***4?******'t?****-*****'l?*****4?* CHAP. XIIIL c \ further Application of the ^oint. This fhevos a necejjity of^aitb* Jin OhpUion from 2 Tini. 2- 1 3 . Anfwered- tAn ObjeUion from the difficid- ty of^decving anftvered. Incourageyour fdves to^deeve, Zind to that end. i. Confider tbs many andgloriom things that arc to he Received. 2, ^e convinced that you cannot li^e vpithout tbefe things which ^a'ltb helps to, 3. Confider tbefe things are to he had only hy l^eleeving. 4, Laythe command of ^od upon your Souls. Se - werall ObjeUions anjwered. USE Now I go2 to another life. If Faich be a Reeei- vingjthen if you would hav^ Chrift o: any thtnj^of his,youniuftbeleeve. If you would have Chrift or any thing of his, I fay, you muftbeleeve. The life lies upon this, chat Faich is not only a 1 Receiver, but the only Receiver which God hath 1 appointed and fubfticuted. There are other Graces I which God gives befides Faith, but he gives this vertue (xonone) of laying hold and Receiving, but only unto Faich. Love chac doth joyn the SouUoChrift and unices it, but Faith receives and takes of the fulaefs chac is in Jefus Chrift. In Jam. ' 1. 7. faich JameSy Let notfucb a man tbin\ C chac is, fuch a one who asks not in faith, but wavers ) that he [hall receive any thing at the hand of the Lord. This wavering che Apoftle doth oppofe unto Faith. And yec he chac hach this true Faich may have this \ wavering in fome particular afts, though not in che ^ frame and ^cei'ving Chr'tft^ is Believing. g ^ fi-ame of his fpkic. As in ^attb. 14. 31. Chrift fpeaks unto (PdJdr, and eels him he was one of liccle Faich, and asks him why he doubted ? And the word that he doth ufc there H^HidiffTvazt^y fignifies a be^g between two opmions, a halting as it were, or an uncertainty of mind not knowing what to do, whetheif to receive Chrid, or not to receive him, or whether no: to receive Chrift, or to receive him. Inparticular ads there may be (Ifay) wavering in a man that hath true Faith : But while he is fo, lechiranot think chat he fhal receive any thing at the hands of God. We arc wont to fet other things bcQdes Faith to be our Receiver. As the Papifts, fo do we put good works unto the work of Faith ; They think, by good words we do apply JefusChriil and his bensiics. Mark it. Though there be much due unto thee from the Promife, though thou haft God ingaged to thee deeply, yec wil not God give thee any thing by the hand of any other Grace but only Faith. God wil pay what he ows, but he wil pay it through beleeving. Therefore the Text runs expre/ly, Ifc? tbat-beleevef notfljaU be dafHned,M.^r:k 16. 16. that is aU he muft look for at the hand of God^ He could not do any great vpor\ (Taith the Tt'&i^among tbemybeeaufe of their imbdief^ Math. 1 3. 5S. No great works. The meaning of the place is this, that God doth do unto men according to their Faith. Accodiyigto tby ^aitb, belt unto ito^e, Math. 9.29. As mens Faith is, fo fhall their receiving be. If their Faith be mingled with unbe- lief, their receipt fhall be but fir.all. Where there is a totall unbelief, their receipt fhall be nothing from God. OBJECT. But you wil fay unto me, as it is fa id in 2 Tim. 2. 13. Ifwehelee'venot^yethe remdins faithful^ and be cannot deny himfelf. Jlnfvc* ^~l ! ■•«•- p^ Faith J or belee^ing^ is ^ceiruing Chrlft ; I -Anfvfi^ 1*0 that 1 anfwer. If we beleeve not, thac is,if webelceve;noc forae particular Promife, and at lome particular time, God will abide faithfull : for if youobferve the place, it fpeaks concerning fufFering times, and this Promife, viz That tfi we fuffer vpith him :,vpefljallal\oraign with him. A man may cometotheftake, and to his Grave, and yet nocwithftaiiding want a piaCwafion of this. A man may dy by his aft of affiance, and yet have no per- fwafion of what affiftance be (hall have in his fuf- ferings : But if a man beleeve not, that is, not at al, then nothing is due unto him. Mark che Text again. God faith he is faithfuU. Therefore his faithfulnefsfuppofeth his Promife. And his Pro- mife fuppofeth our Faith : for he is ingaged to none but to them that beieevc. Therefore though God abides faithful!, yet the meaning is, though we queftion this and that at this and that time, yet if out hearts remain faithfuU to God and his name, we Ihall receive the things thac are promifed. Therefore let raefpeak unto you, and unto you e- fpccially that can fettle upon any work, but the work of beleeving, thac are eafily perfwaded that the Pfomifes belong not to yoUj|^nor the mercies which are faving, with a fmall hint and infinuacion you are difcouraged and difheartned: Let me fpeak unto you that are ready lo deprive your felves of every fweet morfell which the hand of the Lord reaches out to you, who fay within your felves, when I am thus, and can do thus, then I will beleeve and go unco jefus Chrift. You muft come unto this ("if you wil have any thing from tke hand of Jefus Chrift) to beleeve.' Youmuf^lay down your reaf on and your fenfe, and you mufl: put your felvcsto this queftion. Ask thi^ own heart whether thou wouldeft have Jefiis Cki'Jta: or nor ? If it would have him and the chines^ ■ -BH ^H I ■ ■ ■ I J ITI ■! ■ ^B- ^ I I I irtl II l'^- ^^11 II II I ir I IIM ■ ■ ^-m-T ■ !-■■ *^ and^ceiving Chrift^ is Believing. p^ thingt ihac are his, then tell it, that it muft bcleeve, for there is no way to receive, but by beleeving. Therefore lee me give this counfell to thee. Spend that time in drawing and urging thy Soul to go to JeliiS Chrift, which thou doft in difputing thy right an3 title, and in anfwering objections and doubts. In ftead of making out a refled: adt of Faith or affu- rance, go direftly unto the Lord Jefus Chrifl. And mark the reaf on of it. Faith ic gives a title and thepoffeifion of the inheritance. It*s a receiving. Now mark. Be fure thar thou haft a r fght : if thou haft a Faith that is alwaics having and cravmg and longing and hankering afcer the things of Jefus Xihrift,' k is right. And again. Though that every Commandment of God be to be obeyed, and^none ought to be more careful! of holinefs than he that is ;uftified by the righteoufnefsofanocher andby the Faith of Jefus, I lay none ought to be more careful! of a holy life thanaBeleever,yetfpendthy time (mark what I fay^ andthyfpirits iirft in receiving and getting Jefus Chf ift. Go not this way to work, wheti tifou findeft thyfelf tobefoandfo, then thou wilt be- leeve j becauie thou art holy, therefore thou goeft to T<^fus Chrift, But go to Jefus Chrift that thou maieft receive holinefs from him, for Faith is a re- ceiving. As eating a mans meat, takes up a great deal of time, yet there is no time loft, becaufe ic firs a man for his work afterwards. So the fitter thou wilt be to all the v^ or ks of fanftification, the more rime thou fpend^ft in receiving and eating of the things of Jefus Chrift. It is wifdom firft for a man to get in a fulnefs, & afterwards to live anfwc- I rable unto it* Why doft thou think of thy ianftiii- cation when thou haft not received liim that muft make thee holy ? Affure thy fclf, it cannot be but a! the things thou goeft about will grow dead becaufe j ' thou) I 6 Faith, or Beliea^ing is Kecel^ing Chrlfl 5 \ thou haft not wherewith to maintain rhem. Al thy mocions are but like a Wheel, which is hurried by a violent niotion, but having no Ipring in its felf, in a little while ic wilgrow dead. And allure thy ielf chat chou fhalt not lay a ground of Faith by doings. J)o- ings may lay aground of affurance, but not a ground of receiving, or going untojefus Chrift. It is true. Many Ehings are co be done, as well as belecving when a man would receive. A manmufi: ask, that he may receive, John 16. 24. And a man uiuft be mortified that he may receive. 7'e ash^ and receive noty hecau^eyoH ask^ tojpmiduponyeur /wj^j*. Jam. 4. 3. Andamanmuftbe humble, Jam* 4. 6. (jod giveth Qraccto the bumble. And the Ordinances nuH be attended, even every of them, for it oft times fals out, that that Ordinance which is neglcd:ed, is that by which God will convey himfelf. But the Or- dinances a;:c but the Vellels in the hand of Faith, they are but Buckets which Fa'th doth lee down, or but Breafts which Faith doth fuck. The Recei- ving, is ftill by Faith, ^eb. 4. 2. And therefore the word profited not, beciufe it was not mixed with Faith, And the Text faith, if they praied and beleenj dy theyjhoidd then recewe. it's true,therc are a great many Graces that muft be in the man that receives anyj:liing from Gods hands, buc they are all but the attendants of Faith : They are ne- ceflary unto Faith, Not for reception, buc by way ofprcfence: As the Eye alone fees, though ic can- not iee unlefs it be joyned to the other members of the body. So Faith receives, though it never re- ceives, buc when it is joyned with other Graces. Whatcvcs Graces are required unto Faich, Faith will help us unto. To pray acceptably. If we are to pray with humility and fubmiflion., Faith will help us to ic. Whcte'once Faith is infufed it doth difpofc iN I '{... and ^cei^in^ O^^^fiy ^ belief in^. 97 difpofe and iuable the heart Co every thing that God requires. Befides you know how a man that is couched v/ich covecouinefs and the love of the world wii bow dov/n himfelf and deny himfelf much, and be- came bafe chat he may heap up riches together. So wilamanwhen he hath once gotten Faith. He wilpray earneftiy, and go from ordinance to or- dinance, andfubmittoany condition that the or- dinances of Jefus Chrift require at his hands that he may ferve Gud and be faved. And therefore a- gain and again I fay. If youwil receive any thing you muft beleeve, elfe there is no way for ic. If youwilftand reafoning and difputing and deba- ting, and if youwil have things cleare to you thac you are a child of God, before you beleeve^ you wil have the matter put to fuch an iffue as God brings a man never into. God never gives his love to a man, but by bcleeving, becaufc beieeving is a receiving. OBJECT. Tou wil fay unto me, This is hard quarter ^ and hard termes-, that we can have nothing but only upon trufl and upon beieeving* To this I anfwer the comm.andmenc of faith is no- thing fo hard as the commandements of (in are. They that fow to the pejh, fljal ffaith the Apoftle ) in Qal, 6. 8. of the flejh reape Corruption* They Ihal never have any thing in hand or to receive af- ter this life, bun tribulation, forrow, and an- ^ guiih. Thy faith allures thee^ Or thou mayeft be affured chat faith wil give chee a good title, & fom- thing while thou liveft, and be lure to give thee ho- nor andglory and immortality hereafter. Thou •- — P art r^S Faith J or BelieTW^ is ^cei^ahig Chrlft j arcfavedby faith, faith he. It is the gift of God. This is true indeed, It is a hard matter co bcleeve. But the hardnets doth not arife from it felf^ but from us. As ii is hard for a lick man to get down either meat or medicine. But it is not becaufe thc^e is neither a pafTage open and free, or not becaufe the meat is not good, but becaufe he is lick. So thou Ihalt find the reafon of all this difficulty to be in thy pride : Thou advancefl thy reafon and fence \ againft the commandmenE and law of the Gof-I pel. And therefore it is hard unto thee. Ic is hard, but it is but fo in the beginning, Like meat, when it is firft eaten^doth bring a kind of duUnefs,8c heavinefs but afterwards breeds fpirits and flrength. Ic is certain my beloved it is the fmallell thing that can be required for the receiving any thing at the hand of God : for you are paflive in it, you are made to receive. As a bal that is thrown againfl the ground is made to rebound upwards. There cannot be Icfs required then faith co the receiving of any thing. For, Take it as ic is in the under flan ding : The recei- ving a teftimony doth noefo much require the ufe of reafon, as a goodreporc and clleem of himchac fpeaks. I fay, che receiving a ceftimony is an ar- tificial argumenc, and requires not fo much che knowledg of checkings, as of the perfon fpeaking. And Take ic as ic is in che Wil : and ic is a leaning : and thac rather imports weaknefs, chen Itrengch, racher debility, chen abilicy. And laftly,Whereas chou complainelt ic is hard ra beleeve, yec if faith be a hard thing, yec ic is a re- ceiving. Though ic be a coyl and a difficulcy, Ic is buc in caking of things thac are precious and good which .J.it>i. and ^cein)thg Chrifly is ^eieea>in^, pp which v/il inrich chee. What man ever complain- ed of the hardnefs of telling Gold, and receiving jewels and things of worth which were given him out of the treafureof him that is rich. Men take great toy 1, and run great hazards into far countrys tc^receive. Thy receiving is better and more cer- taine. Thou {halt receive ftrengch by the recei- ving of Chrifl, to receive more. Faith doch not only give a man the things proni'fed, But as walk- ing makes a man able to walk, fobeleeving makes a man more able to beleeve. Having once received fomthing from the hand of God, thou haft thereby fecurity given to thee that thou hail nothing behind but what ihal be accomplilhed. As he that hath] received but part of a Sum, hath an evidence there by that the reft is due. And therefore I befecch thee, becaufe that faith is a receiving, incoiirage thy lelf unto beleeving : Incourage your felves unro ic. Andthat youmay dofo, I. Lay open and keep before the eye of your Soul the many and glorious things which arc to be recei- ved.Mcditate upon the excellencyes of Chrift 8i the portion that he brings : His portion: Both in re- j gardof relation5yefhal bethefons of God: And his | portion in regard of eftate or inheritance, for al things are yours. The prefence ( you know ) of an objed: doth (tirr up the faculty and the power in ic, which lay (as it were ) before dead and ft irred not. Jojhita. 7. 21. IJaw (^faid Acha.n ) the ^ahilonifl) garment^ and I lu fled after it^ and tooh^it. As Sin prevails by its prefence : So the way for Jefus Chrift to prevaile, is to ftand continually before thee. When thou haft therefore looked unto the promifes, and looked into the ftory of what is faid concerning Jefus Chrift, and what he wil do for thofe that are united to him. Then come and aske thy own foul^ whether it wil have none of theie p 2 Then 1 "N i CO Faith, or ^elee^ing^ is ^cei^in^ Cbrijl ^ Then come and eel ic chac al thefe are to be had, andic may cake of them freely, though ic can do nothing for them, nor retume fuicably to them. TheApoftle ( co gee men unco faith ) fpreads a- broadche Gofpel and the things of Jefus Chrilt, Thou mufl: preach unro thy felf^ the felf fame doci- rine if ever thou wile belepve. Thy lins be before r.hee, and death is before thee, and helis before thee : And thou feeft by experience thac thac cakes up thy choughcs and chou canft do nothing elfe buc only lamenc and bemone thy condition. It choufet'ftjefusChrift before thee alfo, thou v/ilc be as much taken with him. For certainly there is more Taking in his excellencies, then there is caufc ofcerrourin the other. 2. And again, Sinc3 faith is a receiving, con- vince thy foul thac it cannot live, nor be, unlels ic hath chefe things which faith helps unto. Pardon muftbehad. jufticewil nor be facisfyed though thou fhouldeft fulfil al the xrommandments of God to the ucmoft, and never breakefl them in the leaft. Al ehac is due for the prefenc, and there ftilremams an oldfcore for the time paft thac God wil reckon with thee for. Thou arc noc able ca make God amends of thy felf. Live of thy felf, chou canft noc, therefore chou muft receive. c/^Ef/, 4. 12. There is no other name ^iven under heaven whereby a man can befanjedj hut only the name of Jc fjfs Chrift. And if a man ( peradvencure ) wil be loch CO take of others as long as he hath wherewith in his own hands, or his friends hands, Buc when he fees he muft eicher cake of alms, or ftarve •, and go on begging, or die. Then he wil go. Thac is cny cafe. Thou muft receive from Jefus Chnft, or Scarve. And chou canft noc receive che chings of efus Ghrift buc by beleeving. As a Parent faith co a Child 1 iJ and (I(eceivmg Chrijl^ is^elie^ing. lo i a Child chat is peeviih, and untoward, and chat will noteachismeac^ Faft, faith he. So there is no- thing to be looked for from Jefus Chrift if thou be* leeveft not, but ffery Indignation. And if thy heart would go to take contentment in the things in the Wtrld, Say to it. Now take Jefus Chrift, or no- j thing. What good will they do thee unlefs thou takeft Jefus Chrift ? For they will not abide in the latter end, bur then thou wilt have forrow. Thirdly, Confider that nothing is required of you, but raeerly beleeving. I reafon thus ; If Faith receives al,then you muft not look to have Grace without Faith : but to have Grace, by Faith. In order of nature. Faith is before them, and your eye muft be moft upon that, and your care of chat. As the Text faith in ^ath* 6. 3 3. that if a man feeks the Kingdom of God all other things fhall be added together with it. SoIfay,.if you look after Faith, your heart will be humble, and ftooptothe con- dition which Faith reveals to you, and you will part from all fins which have fo great a place and intereft in your affediions. And Laftly : Lay the Commandment of Godup- onthyfelf. This is the Commandment of God that you beleeve, i John 3.23. This is the charge of God that you take and receive, and drink of the Water of life freely. Be thou what thou wilt be : Tbou art under his Commandment. If thcu art not,what needeft thou fear his threatnings > He wil do nothing unjuftly. He will punifh none but his Subjefts. If thou art his Subjeft^ then thou arc bound to obey. . Qh)ca 102 Faith, or Believing is Kecei^.j-~ and ^ceinuing Chrijl is ^dkuing i o 3 CO, you have leave to take; forbear it noc : So the | Lord commands you to take and eat. This is your i Condition. A man encourageth himfelf in the World with this. That though he fpends many hours, and much time, yet he fhallget that with which he fliall do good at laft. Many a man is drawn by this, That when he hath gotten this, then , he may attend, and do good. Let the fame argu*| menc perfwade you to beleeve : That if you be- leeve, you fhall receive. Obje^f, But'you will fay unto me, I baaje helee- 1 i, and yet not received y but L am barren and empty. When didft thou ever truft in him | for any thing, and that he did not make it good ? Did he ever difappoint thee ? But Secondly, There are divers waies of Receiving. A man may receive an Eftate by receiving Security of that Eftate, when he hath good Bond, and Per- fons bound unto him for it. Harh not God given ! _^ thee) 1 04. Faith ^ or Belie'ving is Q^eceifving Chrijl I thee his Son ? And hath noc God fpokcn unro rhee , through a promife, and pad his word that thy' Heart hath been inlighrned, inlivened, and cheered; in th'- Meditations ot'ic ? j A man may receive you know by way of equiva- lency. As for example, if a man doth not receive' io much in fpecies, in money, yer he may in worth, j in Jewels or other things that wil amount there unto. Do but. look over all thy fmal Sums, all the many mercies wnich thou haft received. And fee if they amount not to what thou hopedfl for ? It jnay be thou halt asked comfort, and God hath given thee Grace. This was bur. a bill of exchange. Thou haft asked that God will fill thee with joy, and God fills thee with humblenefs. Here is but an Exchange. Thou haft received all this while. It may be thou wouldft fain have Gloried in him, and j it may be God gloried concerning thee. As God faid concerning Job. There is not fuch a man in the whole Earth. God may fay of fuch a one, though he hath nothing but Tears to Eat, and nothing but Bittcrnefs and Anguifh and Sorrows, Tet be loi>ef my voaies. Here is a receiving. Know that Faith is fuch a receiving, as a man that receives an infeftion, which he doth not feel for the prefcnta but it may be he feels afterwards. And the Pvcafon is this. Becaufe that Faith principally receives as it is an aft of the will. And if it did Veceive principally as ic is an aft of the underftan- ding, then a nan could not have any thing, but he ihould know it, or be near the knowledg of it. But fuice that receiving is by the will, he muft have the fpirit of God to make known to him the things that are freely given him of God. As the Apoftle fpeaks in, i Cor, 2. 12. \ Now having anfwered this, Ibcfeech you. Lay \ both hands ( underftanding and will ) upon the ^1 Lord U-« — .. and ^cei vin^ Chrtjlj^ is Belie^m^. i o 5 Lord Jcfuj Chrift . Garher in with both faculties. Reft HOC cil your underftanding be filled, and your will be fatistied. What ever it is which you want, Chrift hath. What ever you would have from him, you rauft either have from hira upon price or mftric , And you have none : Oryoumuft have it upon gift. Either you muft receive it as an almes, or as a debt. A debt it is not to you, but only as youbeleeve. When you do receive it as analmes by Faith, it is fweeteft, and you fhal receive moft. The cafe itands thus. Either you muft yield to God, or God to you. It is fit you fhould yield co him. Why fhould not the Ciftern receive from the Fountain ? The Creature from the Creator ? It can- not ftand with his honor to yield to you, that is, upon any other tearms to giyeyou anything, but barely as an almes. If you will not part with your honor, fas you muft, if you do bcleeve) know, God will not part with his honor, as he muft, if he gives any other way then by beleevmg, for Faith is a receiving. And itis^ fit he fhould uphold his glory as the Fountain of atU th%K^OG4,w;hich^the ^Creature hoB^sfpr, ' ' ' ^ CHAP. I i-j''*""" ''-^ rr ■-.^ ) 1 o6 Faith ^ or ^elk'ving is receiving Chrijl ; \ CHAP. XV. ^ ^eceiiin^ denotes ^ajfinjenefi, *lbif pronjddasto belee'ving* i. In that ^aitb is not of or from our fehves* 1 /. In the njery aU ofT^aith^ rvhere- unto voe are inabled by Qod, tve aU at little at pofftbly can be, Thit appears if you confider. 1. Thi oppofition mbich h in j^ to bekeving. 2. The 'Hature of Taith itfelf. And that a$ it is an al\ either of, i. The underftandmg. Or^ 2* The Will. 3. IVho are belee^ers. 4. ^ven the Saints are^cnfible of a power mahjng them to belee^e, I Have already as you may remember fpokcnof Faith, as Receivmg doth imporc and imply a getting an adual poffeffion of that which God pro- mifed and gave unto us in the purpofe of his Grace through Jefus Chrift. Eleftion gives all. The promifes declare what is given, and ingage God co make it good : And Faith receives all. In Eledion God refolves what to do for us : The promife gives it under his hand : And Faith puts ic into our hands. Of this I fay I have largely fpoken, and fhal repeate nothing, but go on to what remains. As Receiving implies and imports a getting into poffeffion what was out of poffeffion before. So it denotes paffiveneis rather then adion : That is, A powerful virtue in him that gives, rather then any fuch thing in the receiver. Such a paf- fiveneis Receiving hath in our ordinary fpeech. As \ when we fay aa Army i>:ceived chc charge. We mean and Keceiving CkriB^ is heltea^'m^. i oy mean they ftood ouc and bore the force and ftrength of their adverfary, they did defend them- lelves. So in the Scripture, Jam^Sy 1.7. Lettiot fnchaman think bd jhall recdyeany thing from the LL%'d. In I ^et, '1. 9. %ecei'ving ihc md gf your ^aith, the Salivation of your SoitU. In 'Hti. 6. 7, I The ground receivech bkffing from God- In all j rhefe places Pvcceiving is of pafTive ligniiicacion, j noting fomihing of aftion and excellency in the be- half oV the giver but little of the iubjedt at the tiL^ hand. In all the paflivenefs of underffcanding be- ingSj there is fonie kind of aftion. For ch^ toul is not paffive in the fame manni^r, than a tree is unto ) the Ax char hsws it:- cr as a Hone is uarorhein- / flrumenc and hand that cues and carves it. Cur Lord Jefus Chrift is faid to have fuifered, ycc even in that fuffering, Ud laid dot^nbis Life (you kncv/ the Text fpeaks) and he was obedient. A rnFui. is not converted unco God as a ilock, or as a flone^, but affoon as any Grace is given and infufed into him, immed acely at rhe very next apprehenilon^ or upon his receiving the Grace, you muft fupp'ofe the Soul adingy and moving, and ftirring toward God. So it is in beleeving. Affoon as Faith is infufed, fo foon doth the Soul move toward God in Jefus Chrift. So that when I fpeak of the paf- five nefs of the Soul, you are not to underhand ic as altogether without adion. But the Soul is laid to be paffive, becaufe it is firflr wrought upon, be- fore it can work any thing that islCupernacural. The ad of the Soul is not of it felf, but from ano- ther. And there is more for degree of the verrue of him that works upon the SouL then there is of any inward form and principle or habit in the Soul. But I ^uppofe the diflinftion of adive and pa/live 1 obedience is not fpecifical, but gradual. That is, I that could not be called obedience wherein there I q^ ^hil, 2. i 8. I John^xi j 15- Ji Vv'as i ■* ' ■ " ' ■ ■ ' ~ ■ ■ ■ , . ■ . ^^ 08 Faithy or !Belie^ing is ^cei^in^ Chrift ,» was not Come, chough not lo miich willingnefs~and iubjedivenels, as there is bearing, Chrift is faid to luffer, not becauie he was not adive^ but becaufe that the hand of the Lord was heavy upon him. And at that time there was more difpleafure fhf w- ed by the Father againft Chrift, then there was put forth of the vertues of our Lord fefus Chrift : For chat was the vail borh of the God-head, andof rhe Man-hood. Now according unto this fence, be- leeving is a receiving, and notes paffivenefs. The Soul doth go umo God through Chrift, butth^ coing is more from the power of God then i^ is from the habit of Faith. It is more frOiU that fpir- it of our Lord Jefus Chrift, then it is from that created quality, which we call Beleeving. We do beleeve, but we are made tobeleeve. 2 Cor* 5. 5. He that hath wrought us hereunto is God. Wrought us hereunto. Even as the Clay is wrought by the Hand of the Potter into this or that form, as ispleafmgto him. So in Vhilip. 3. The Apoftle expreffed his pafTivenefs. If by any means 1 rnay attain unto the %efurreBion of the T)eady And appre- hend that for which I am apprehended- But more efpec'viUy in <^^k. 4. 9. The Apoftle dothcorre^ himfelf for faying fo much as this. That they knew God. After that they knew God; or rather were known of God. By knowing of God, he means beleeving. By his knowledg ihal my righteous Servant juftifie many, faith the Prophet Jja. 53.11. And yer we are juftilied by Faith. Whjn the Apoftle had faidj, they knew God fas Faith indeed doth give a mananapprehenlion of him) becaufe this apprehenlion or knowledg of himisinthe light of God ( God makes known himfelf, and gives chat whereby he is made known) he correfts hiiiTeif therefore, andfaich> I fhould not havefa'd thari know God;, but rather ihat I am known of God. Jobyij ] _ I - 11-^ -— I _ _- 4w5 (^ceivtng Chrift^ is Belieofing. i cp John, 3. 21. It is given in as rhe note and rryal of the Hypocritical work of the^diftinSion between true Grace, and that which is not true Grace but counterfeit, that that which is true and good is! wxought, and wrought in God. That is, it is wrought by God. As the Prepofition iv^ in, is nfed in the Scripture. So that is laid to be wrought in God, the power and vertue whereof comes from God. All anions confift of their caufe, and ob- JQdiSy «nd ends. Now as God is to be the objed: and the end fo alfo to be the caufe and rhe worker of all our anions. Wrought in God. You all know that Faith, it is a fpiritual Life. In Qala, 2. 20. I live by the Faith of the Son of God. You know that by Faith you convert and tuin to God. For it is our anfwer in our calling. Now both our life and oiir motion to God,is from God: But moft plain- ly in 2 Cor. 4*. 13. The Apoftlc fpeaks to this pur- pofe, Having ( faith he ) t^je fame Spirit of ^attby according at its written, I bekiyved tbdrefore banje 1 fpoJ^en, we alfo beleeve, and therefore fpeah^ As rhe Apoftle faith in i 1. Isft, Qip ^Prophecy came inil^e old time hy ihe ivill of man i hut holy men II ftji 3 ^pb:2 »8? 1 4 faxth^ or ^eleea;ing^ is ^cel^ing Cbrtfl j ofQodJpah^atthey were mevid by the holy Qho[i : The famewordwhichche Apoftle Let him ftay bimfelfl upon hfs Qody and upon the Lord, Efa. 50. 10, ii.l And what doth it but only put out the Iparks of his f j own kindling > A man n.uft be hi the dark before' ; he can do any of thefe adls. Who nit that f^ars^the. I Lord, and obeys thenjoyce oj'bts Servant, that is in] I darkjiefi, and bath no light ? let him trufi in the ^ame \ \ of the Lord, and STA7 bimfelf upon his Qod. \^Hthethat handles A fire, arid compajfeth himfelf a- bout with thejparkj of it, fljall lie dovcn iji forrovc. The Will hath divers ads and motions, but faith' ceafethall, andputtcth anend to all the motions of the Soul, and all the courfes which the Soul did I take for its good naturally j it ceafeth from v/hac 1 ic did naturally for its own good, and gives them | a Hinetus efly and difchargcch them from all their i labor, and only leaves the Soul with God in Chrift, ' and lets God do all. And hence it is beloved that there is fo great a venture in Faith : Like the Le- pers chat knew not what would become of chera, only they knew chac death would be,if they ftayed in the City -, anditmight be, if they went down in- to the Camp, they might have fome relief: but' they could find but death. Or as ic is faid of Ahrahaniy That he obeyed the Lord, not knowing whither he went : So doch a man in beleeving. Or as it js faid in Joel ; %epent, for none kjwvfis hut the Lord may retun^y and kanje a hlefCtng behind him. So, ! becaufe God commands, therefore the Soul goes upon thefe terms, though it knows no certainty. Yea, therefore hath Faith little of us, became a Belcever knows not the time of his firft converfion. He doth beleeve, and knows not chat he doth be- 1 eeve. "Were there much of us in that aft, it could j \ not be bui we fhould know when we do ic. As .we | M know when we eat and drink, becauic they are na- [ ») tural and^ceiving Chrift^ isBelie^ing. up tural afts. But we beleeve, and know not that we do beleeve. Yea, often times becaufe we do fo liccle, we are afraid we have no Faith ; Becaufe we take Faith at the leaft-wifc to be fuch an imploy- n ent & aftion of ours,as ihould make us to be abun- dant, and forward, and Angular in whatever we do. But that is a Second Demonftration, That God doth by Faith take as little hold of us as may be, and u^ fcth our Underftanding and Will as little as may be. Thirdly : Let me add a Third, and that is that of the Apoftle in i Cor. i. 26. ^ot many mighty^ and not many wife, norcbofen. You would fome- times wonder to fee what poor and weak parted men Beleevers are. Faith requires no great parts : The things that arenoty as the Apoftle faith in the iameChapter, verfc28.) thofe are the things that God hath chofen. Somtimes I have feenamanof no great imploymcnt in the World, and yet deep- ly infightcd into the things of Chr ift. Fourthly : As the laft Demonftration of it. You ihal find that the Saints arefenfible of a power working in them, and conftraining them to go to JcfusChrift. That even as a man that is under the power of Satan, though that reafon be againft his Lufls, yet ftill he is put on, and egged to the com- mittir^ of them. It's a fign there is fom what m. ore than Natural corruption in him ; becaufe according unto the Motion ofNaturej thefe contrary reafons would allay his defue, and hinder his afts. There is a fpirit of the Devil that blows up that luft,&puts on to that courfe again. And Beloved, Becaufe we findthivt when we would not beleeve, and (it down ref olutcly in our fclves, and fay we wil not beleeve, and it is not for us to look for any thing but for-- rowg f. I20 Faith^ or Beliea^ing is Keceinjtng Chr'tfi . xow, and that is allvvefhall have ac Gods hand:, y ec nocwithftanding chat, we find f omching wichin • us bids us look cowards the Lord, and to go unco j him, and not to take our own words, and not co think it fhall be v/ich us as we think. Whence can i this come, but from the Spirit of Faith ? It is aoc from Grace only, but from that hand that afts it. That fhall fufhce for the Second thing : That Faith is not that which we have of our felves ^ fc when God enables us co beleevc, he cakes as little con- currence with that Grace of his as poffibly may be. CHAP. XVI. Though ^aith befinaUy yet it maliex us the Sons of Qod, III. T Aftly tThough we beleeve never fo lictle,yec X^ ifwe beleeve, we fhall receive this Dignity! to Ijecomeche Sons of God. There is a receiving in the leaft degree of Faith. That is that which the Text holds. This term Q to ^ecewe ~\ notes as little action ( as I f aid in the beginning ) as can be. Only it notes as being in fubjeftion, a being conci- [nenc, or a velTel to put fomching into it. As Gold and Jewels may be wrapt up, and pur into a filthy clout or rag : So may this Grace of Faith into an heart that is exceedingly corrupted and defiled. Again, you know youufeto fay. That theRecei- ; ver of ftoln goods, is not the principal offender -, he is only one that doth conceal and preferve that which the other hath gotten. Such a kind of thing is Faith; he that doth receive is not the principal Agent. As the Wax doth receive theimpreffion of the w^^^i»m n I *^ ^.-^^^ and ^ceiVing Chrlfi^ is ^elU^ing. 121 the Seal, and yec the Wax doth no more thanei- Cher Clay, or Earth, oranybafe Metcal fas Lead would do ) only a compliance there is with ths Seal. %Andlec meadfiirther. As Receiving notes lit- tle aftioii in that refpeft: So a narro^v mouthed Bottle takes in but ty little and little* As the done upon which the Pvain falls is hard, and but a little wrought upon and filled by it: things that arc hard, are fofcened by little and little. As the hard and ftony Earth is iof teued by the lictleRain that falls long upon it. So now foppofc a li«ie Faith, and this gotten the hardlieft, and come the floweft by, that poflibly can be 9 to be as weak as 1 can be in your fpirits, and to be as dull as is iniagi- {nable : yet nocwithftanding this fhall receive a blcfling from God : even thofe great blefiings in rhe Text, not only to be a Son of Gcd^ but to have fuch dealings from God as becomes a Child i and God deals in this like unco himfelf, according to the courfe which h-e cook in charging us with, the I guile of the ^z^oddam. For as we are conceived I in (in , that is, as foon as ever we are conceived, as iyabfaith, but curdled, and a fpan long, we are ac- ^curfed, fo foon is the guilt of ^^(Jaw/ lin imputed. I So the very embrie, and the lealt thing of Faith, is that which God will blefs. The firft conceptions of Faith are bleffcd, as the fiift conceptions of a man are accuifed becaufe of the Fall. So foon as ever we receive Chrift, fo foon is the Righceoufnefs ofChrift the Second Adam imputed andpaffedo- ver untous. He will not quencJj tf>e fmoakjng'FLix, nor breakjbe hnnfed^eedy Matth. 12. 20. There is great difference between flax and v/ood. Flax is jbut a blaze when it is light, and lafts not long. And fo it notes fuch a kind of Faith that 13 foon up, and foon down, exceeding tender and delicate, foon f difcouraged 1 I; 21. Faith^ or Beheading is recei'^ing Chrijl^ > dif c our aged and difmayed. A Faich that is wor- ' king by liEs only, and not fuch a Faich as is of a ! J conftanc motion. The fnioaking of flax is lels I I than che burnmg of ir. The fmoak may be con^pi- 1 ved to be fuch as either is offenlive unco the eye : Andfo thereisakindof beleeving, or I may ratiicr call iCjOf unbeleeving, which is excreanily offen- five unro God, as fmoak is unto che eye : When we are alwa.es unfacisfied •, when doubts beget doubts : when God answers one objeftion, and we cake it up again : and we over and over again with things chac have no reafoii in chcii., nor are fie to be fpoken. But fuppofc ic CO be fmoaking flax. Or, Inregardof ics weaknefs, which fhall come into a flame afterwards, which is capable of fur- ther encreafe, as che fmoak goes before che flame : yet the Lord will not quench it. What is chac ? ne will cherifh and nouriih ic : For che Negative includes che Affirmative. In John 6. 37. ^e that com?s to m?j 1 vpill in no tvife caft out *, thac is, I will en/ertain him. j And as he will not quench the fmoaking Flax, £0 he will not break the bruifedReed. Though P'aich be as a Reed, a very weak thing of ic felf ♦, chough ic be bruifed, and when ic is bruifed ic will run into a mans hand, as you know the Scripture ufeth chac limilitude concerning ^haroah. Many waies do we I pierce che hearc of che Lord, and grieve him wMth our Unbelief. We beleeve afcer fuch a way, as ic troubles him co fee us. Though we be .,s a broken Reed that cannot fupport, or be leaned upon. So though thy Faith be fuch as is neither picaiing to thy felf, nor unro God , and cannot carry thee through any Duty in Praying or Hearing, or other Ordinance j but as a man thac leans upon a brokcH flafF,dochfall: So in every Duty, Thou prayeil thy felf into anguiih of fpiric j and heareft thy felf into and KeceiVin^ ChriH^ is Belie<^i}tg. 123 ) inro troubles. Kow although thou haft fuch a Faith as ch s, yec God will not forfake ic, but che- rifhit, ana not break ic, but bind ic, and iic ic for Sp'ricualufe. Suppofe a man doth by his doubts aifd cavils againft God, offend him, as a P^eed dorh that runs into the hand ^ yec faich the Text, he will noc break ic, thac is, he will ftrengthen ic. For thac is an ufual figure in che Scripture, when the Texcfakh, He will noc do a thing, to mean thac he will do the contrary unto ic. As, thofe thac come unco me, I will in no wife caft out , buc 1 will cncercain, andfup wichchem, and make them glad v/ith my prefence. In James 2. 26. the Apoftle telsyou, That thac Fairh thac will fave a man, xs: fuch a Fakh ashach a fpiric with k: GEa^e;?.^ the, ^ody without the Spirit is dead, fois^aith vpithout: Workj". Thac which I brmg fc for is chis ; Thac if there be buc the leaft Spiric or breaching in Fakhj^ it is chac which will fave : I fay, if there be buc chp, leaft breaching in Faich, ic will fave. A? men cha|^, are exceeding cender and careful of che lives of thofe chat are fick, when chey feem to be as if they ^eregone and dead*, chey will lay a glafs to their mouths , and if there be buc the leaft breach or fmoak come upon che Glafs, chey will apply all manner of chings thac may recover them ouc of che fwoun wherin the/ are. So is ic wich God. When thou chinkeft thy felf cobegone, 'and thofe about thee think chouarr. gone, and chou ch.nkeftthou canft never recover thy felf co any caniidence of hope aga'n yec God wil hold a glafs co thy mouch, and if there be buc che leaft breaching cowards Jefus Clrrift, ^cfhallpafs wich him as well as che noble F^aith of Abraham did when he could pare with his Child a: the command of the Lord, which is the meaning of che Apoftle in thac place. ' i % Here \ \ I v i. If I. % c it \ I I Q 4 Faith, or belee^ing, is ^cei^'mg Chrijl; Here is refrefting and ilrengchiiing unto thac 1 poor Soul that cannot go to jclus Chrift, but crawl as I may io fpeak : That liverh like a man in the Sea, and fees the Banks, and faith. Oh that 1 were there, but knows not how to llrike a ftroak to fwim thither : or if he doth, hifftroak is too weak to withfland the Current, and the ftrong ftrcani of Temptation, and Doubts, and Fears that he meets withal. Thou thinkeft thou flialr have nothing be- caufe thou canft do nothing : Thou canft not be^ lecve firmly, thou canft not lay on any hand but that which is trembling on the Loidjefus Chrift. Thou canft not look with any eye, but that which i$ weak and feeble. Now know, that God looks not formuch from thee, but he intends much unto thee He hath given thee this Grace of Faith, not becaufe It ftiould do great matters in thee, but for thee. It is only to take thee by the hand, and ifit can bring thee and Jefus Chrift together, it hath done enough for thee, and as much as can be defired, and ascitis appointed unto. All the reft of its ads arefor thv comfort : but this is for thy Salvation. '» ■!• CHAP. I I' i» and ^cei ving Chr'tft, is ^el'teaxng. 1 2 ^ CHAR XVII. Vailh conlidered in its lowefh degree. I. Af in tbe^nddrflanding : ^nd fo it ;/, i Attention. 2 Inquiry. II. As in theWiU: and fo, 1 It is accompanied tvitb much fear. 2 It is careful andfoUicitoM for the things of this Life. IT will not be amifs a little to confider, or at leaftwife f o f et down, how little Faith a man j may have, or how little Faith God beflows upon men, when yet he beftowsChrift upon men with- al. r. Take Faith as it is a Habit and Difpofitionj fo the lowefl degree of Faith is in an incliHarion, a yielding, a laying afide the iloutnefs of the heart in fome meafure which he exercifed before againft God. In fome meafure. As the weatiier we fay, begins to change when there is fome melting of the Snow, and fome yielding of the Ice, though it be ve- ry hard ftilL And as we fay, a man is inclined to peace, when he will treat and hear arguments for it, and doth not ftand out in defiance. The leaft Degree of an Habit is an inclination. And you flial find in 2 Chron. 30. 8. That Faith is fo defer i- bed> tobenomorc a ftiff-neckednefs, but a yiel- ding themfelves unto the Lord. As fuppofe a man rhat would not pay Taxes or Rates, but wil let another come and take it quietly : He will not give fuch a thing, but if another will take it, he wil notoppofe. In AUf 26. it is faid of Ly^f^j that her heart was opened to attend y that is, that whereas before flie looked upon what was faid by VauU as not worth the hearing, and as that which did * 26 Faith, or Belie^'m^ is Kecei^in^ Chrifi ; did HOC concern her, and which was not for her good and falvacion, her hcarcwas iec and preju- diced againft it \ yec now fhe begins co have other rhoLighcs. it is as mean an adt as poflibly can be, for one co give God the hearing:, co liftcn to tke things that are fpoken, yec this the Scripcure counts as a Work of God, and as the Fruit of her Faith. She attended to the things that were fpoken. That is one low degree of Faith, for a man to be relen- ting and yielding €i l:f tie towards jefus Chrift : lo come, and mind, and obferve the things that are faidofhim, as things chat are of concernment and moii cnc, Again Secondly, It is a low degree of Faich co ask afcer,and enquire abouc the things which do be- long unto Salvation. And this you ihal find in the Scripture, that tiiac enquiry, when it is truly and duly n:ade is faving coo. i <^et, 3. 21. Baptifm faves : and the waihing of the filth of theileih: Buc iTTifdrvficL. thac word fignifies noc only an Au- Iwer, but a Que ft ion. The queftioning of a good Corifcience, how by the Pvighc of Chrifts Refurre- (kioii it iiiighr conie unco Saivacion ? It's one of the fmalleft ads of che llnderftanding co enquire and fea,ch after the knowledg of t-hings. That fa; e ^{i of the Undei'ftanding exercifed abouc the things of God by Jefus Chrift, thac is, fuchasfhall be accompanied with Salvation. Baptiime faves, che quelioning of. a good Confcience. If indeed the Queftlon that men ask, comes out of curiofity and noc out of Confcience : If it comes only out of a Confcience that is good thus far , Becaufe it is a- wakened ; but not good :hus far, that ic is willing tofubi^it to, and take the courfe which the Gofpel enjoyns, then ic is no fign. Buc if the Soul doth buc lie before the Lord, as the Refurreftion of Chrifi: is appointed as the way of Salvac on, fo it faich. 1 ( faith, Lord how fhal I cake that way? which way i may I come co he parcaker of chc power of ic ? This alfo fhal be accepted. •Look upon faith now as ic'is in the wil, or as k afts there ( for i cold y on thatfaith afts both ^n the underilanding and wil ) ydti i'oeteciw ic ads the un- derftanding in attenc-ion; 'aixdiiiijuiry. See how ic aa:sche wil. ' ^'"^ r^ Ir. adits the wil moft weakly when the heart is fil- led with feare. Fear doth diftrad the Soul, and makes ic to do a 1 thuigs dully and very iraperfedly Why are yee afraid, therefcore iaith. Chrift ( in ^latth, 8. and 14- Chapters> 0/^ ye of little juttb. A man through feare doch in beleeving, as a man dochin going. He cakes a ftep, and chen wicli- drawshisfooc : He goes another, and chen goes back again. So a man with one thought is for Chrift, and in another thought, there is no hope for him in Chrift : wich one chought he gives up him- felf to him, and with another, ic is but to give up a little ftraw to the flame when thy heart is thus divi- ded(8c it*s as difplealmg as ran be pofiibly) yet this thought and this fakh is not puc out by che Lord j Though ic be diftrafted yet chac faith ihal favc. Again Secondly, That faith is exceeding weak,. i which is careful and folic'tous for the things of this 1 life. What an abfurd and weak thing is it for a. [man when he is dying co take care for cloaclies? And when his life is going from him to think of purchafiiig an inheritance? For a man when he is fu 1 of dolor and pain, to chink of increafing his riches and eftate ? So is ic a great weaknefs for a man to be careful for his body and the things of this life, in ^itb. 6. 30; Chri]}^ faith voben they as\vphax they. \ flyould eat and drinkjmdput on. He calls chcra peo- i :_ pic pie of little faith. Yet even that faith alfo the Lord wil acknowledg. I might go through divers other particulars. As for example. Our relying upon Chrifl which is the weakcft and lowed degree. Thar a man rather defires to be faved by Chrift than any other, but he.finds a hankering after others ^ but I fay be had rather have Jefqs Chrift than any other : He is t-roubiejivKhqn he hath hopes not by Chnit bcftowedon him in the ufe of Ordinances. When you know a man relies upon another, the wcakeft confidence and reliance that he can put is this. To expedJl: rather that he fhould ftandhim in ftead, than any other. Jhis is chat which the Scrip* ture faith he will accept, and take from our hands. Go through all the feverala Thou art lefs and lefsconliderablein thy own eyes every day ^ When thou lookefl upon what thou haft received thou wondercft wherefore God fliould do it. That upon fuch a one as thou arc his hand fhculd be ftretched forth, and unto fuch a one as thou art he fhould give lo much ? Art thou when thou getteft any refrefhing from Chrift, arc more afhamed of thy lelf } doft thou magnify Chrift more^ and vilify rhy felf more. Thou may ft then think ic to be true becaufe faich is a re- ceiving. So that the Sum of the point is this : The life of faith is meane, not in regard of the things recei- ved by faith : ( For we receive htm faith the text, that is Jefus Chrift. and fuch thingf voithhim vphich eye hath not feen, nor eareheardy nor hath entred in- to the heart of man y as the Apoftle ipeaks in i Cor. 2, 9. ) nor is the hfe of faith meanem regard of him from whom we receive,for in that refpe^ it is a liv- ing at the wel head, it is the ferviceof a King. I kjiova faith Paul vphom I have trufted^ 2. Tim. 1.12 One that is able. Nor thirdly is the life of faith in its felf, fimply confidered meane. For the hap- pinefs of a creature doth lie in its dependance upon God, even as the being of the ftreame lyes in the flowingof the water from the fountam. CHAP.' JtiMi -iT..f>iE^-S and (I(e€eiving Chrifiy is Belie^ving. 155 CHAP. XIX. ^orxf the life of^aitbiffaid to he mean. Firft. If compared with any other k}nd of living wel: 1 as * Comparedwith the life (jf Adam in innoeency. 2. Compared with the lifeof Qlory* Secondly^ If compared with any otb^r ^nd of living by ^aitlM An Obje^ion anfjvered* But compare the life of faith with any other kind of living wel. Or compare it. 2 With any other kind of living by faith then this^ and fo it IS exceeding meane. 1 ihal open thefe alittle to you. Firft, It is meane compared with any other kind of living wel. I As compare with it the life of Adam in inno- cency, andfois the life of faith meane. Becaufe al that Adam did receive, he received it by way of Juftice : Here what you do receive is by way of al- raes. Adam (hould have received for his W9rk : and here we receive meerly for good wil, 2. Compare this life of faith with the life of Glory, which the Saints live in heaven, and which the Saints Ihal : and fo the Apoftle faith in i. Cor. 13. 13. That faith pal ceafe ai an imperfeUion. Secondly, Yea compare this life of faith with a- ny other kind oi living by faith, and it is the mea- neftofal. firft There is a living upon God by iB,ithforpreiervation.and Secondly a living upon Go^^by faith for Juftiiication and pardon. For perferva^ion. The moft perfeft of the creatures do live upon God. It implies a contra- diditiori that they fhould be without their depen- dence upon him. For in him we live and move and '^ave our being, ; But Faith, or Belie^in^ is fs.ccei 3 In an ach^ovokdgment of all that is in a man to he from Qod> 4 In making a man wary and faith- ' ful in the ufe ofvpbat he hath received, USE ALL that I ihall fay by way of life ( and fo pafs on unto the next) is this: Firlt, You may from hence fee the Reafon why, Beleevers are fo much tempted unto Pride : unto Pride in thinking of chemfclves otherwifc than is meet, as the Apoftlefpeaks : unto Pride in negle- ^«a and Keceiving ChriB^ U Believing. i ^ p 1 ding good works, as neceffary unco chc attaining and perfeft^ing of Eternal Life. As fome that are well born and dcifcended, cannot endure to fal unto mean imployment. Sp doch the Devil labor to pu{ it into the hearts of Beleevers, that they need not be fo carefuUn Duty, norfoftric^ andexadin the performance of the Law, for they are the Sons of God, aadbornruncoEternalLife as their Inhe-' r icance. - Now the Reafon why the Devil doth la- bor to (lir the Saints to this, is, Becaufe that Pride is the molt contrary unco the Life of Faith,, and the condition we are put into through beleeving. For to fee ( as 1 faid now ) a Beggar Proud, or a Servant Reign ; toleean ilms man (whoiscloa- thed of meer Mercy) to jet and ftrut as if he were ^loathed in Gold of his own, is the moftuncomly Oghtin the World. And fo uncomly do we be- have our felvcs in the ligh* of God> when (becaufe of th^ ftarc we are in J we grow proud. For what have you ro be proud of ? i- or chere is nothing that you have, but what you have received. And again. Hence ir dorh app' ar thac where ever there is true Faith, there wil be humblenels of Spirit , For the Spiric is fuiced to the condition and life which Fairh brings in from Chrift. but it emp- ties the Soul of it felf, according as ic doth bring in. So much a meaner opinion a mart grows into of himfelf, as he grows more inro the enjoyment of Chri/t. There is this temper of heart in a Beleever, that as he rejoyceth in this> that he hath n uch in Gods hands to receive, fo alfo he doch walk hum- bly. As the Apoftle fpeaks in ^hiU 2. i2i igi He vporkj out his Salvation with fear and trembling : Why > becaufe it is Qod that r Doth the manifeftation or com*- municacion of Grace from Chrift, make thee to ab- hor and loath thy felf ? But I fhall fpeaka little more to this particular by fh^wing y t)uy ' ^^ • ^^.I hat where evec indeed there is^ true Faith, there is humble nefs of lilpirit manifefted in thefe four Particulars. Yhsre- are four farticulars I fay, wjier<:iahumblenefs of Spirit doch aiv^aies fhe\v ic felf >n a.B?leever. ' i a ^ " '^•' '-^'^^ ^ ■• ^^ '^'^'^ -*' ■*^'' - Firft. ...In !Yi.'>acftyi:Kbr ^trri^tyi ' ^Kot "kfluming unco ks felf the doing 61 any ching.-cr Leing'the mo- tive unro ' rod, cr the ^.*?afon why C;!od fhoiild do any th'r.gLO him^ I'lpt Unto Jis-^ 0 Lord, iifst itnto Tys y hnt to >tljy -^xiams bi the praipy' b the ^voyde of Faith according, rothat cf th;:;Pfaiinift, Tfalu^^j, I livs: C faidi 'yaul ) ^ yet ricn 1, but Chriji that'lwetfj inme^ Gal. 2 20, I have done more than they aUy yet not -y bratbeQraa ofCjodinmey i Cor. 15. 10. Andasthe Pfalmiftfaichin another cafe. We got not the ViUory by our own firength andfword, but it vpof thy hand and power that gcfce m the ViBo- ry, T//x/. 44. 3. So the Soul faith. That it is not its praying or hearing, or any thing whereby it doth attain unto any favor with God, or any de- gree of -Grace, but only becaufe the Lord fo plea- feth.; As there can be no reafon given why the Rain fhould faU upon one ground, and not upon anorher, but only becaufe the Lord Reigns and Rules in Heaven. So there can be no reafon given (faith the Soul) why I that am a barren defert, fhould iaalvc any life rained on me, but only becaufe it fecms good unto him. That is the firft thing. Secondly, and ^cei ping Chriji, is Beliem^ing. i^ i I Secondly, The humblenefs of Faith fhews it felf in a fenfe and apprehenfion of that condition which a naan was in, before he did receive Grace, As a man unto whom aprofperous eftace is fandti- tted, he remembers his poor eft ate and low condi- tion. So doth a man now ('that hath received by Faith from Chrift ) remember what Hate he was in when Chrift firft came and gave him fomwhat, and beftowed himfelf upon him. Here the Apoftle CP^^/Zfpeakingofit> in i Tinu i. 19. I pposa^laf- phemer^ and mjurtom,anda ^erfecutory and the chief ofallfmners. And ^pb. 2. 3. JVe were by ISlature ^thatis, we that are now quickned, and who are now raifcd up together with Jefus Chriit ) Chil- dren of Wrath as vpell as others ^ and under the Prince of the Airy even the Devil, who Pvuleth in the hearts of fuch Children of dif obedience as we were. And therefore upon all occafions you know he is up with his converfion, telling what an ill courfe he was in -, and what wickednefs he was praftifmg when the Lord lighted on him^ as you may fee in divers places in the ABs. It is true indeed;^ that there is a paflionate fenfe of a mans mifery, which doth ceafe wlien a man hath received mercy ; that is, a man cannot fo mourn:, nor a man cannot fo weep and lament as he did do •, yer there is an un- derftanding fenfe. A fenfe that lies upon the heart as fure, though it works not after the famewa^^-, and as cleer, though it harh not the felf fame pafli- ons that were before. Though the wound be hea- led, yet there is a fear that puts in mind. And though the Lord hath been pleafed to rake away the danger, yertheSoul cannot but ftand and won- der at that condition wherein it was when the Lord delivered it. That is the Second. Thirdly, The humblenefs which Faith works in the heart of a man, is this ^ The acknowledgment and A 2 Faith y or Belien^ing is ^icewing Chrift ; \ and owning ofalthatisin a man unco God. As we I are wont co vrrice in the Books chat are civcn us. The Qift offuch a ^riendy or fucb a friend. Or as Jacob i^vd^ he came over chat Brook wich a ftaff ia hishand, andnow hch^dfo n any bands, But the Lord hach given rhera co him. Behold 1 and che Children which the Lord hach given me. Or as Jacob faid ac another time when his facher asked him how he came by Venifonfo foon, faid he. The Lord broughc ic co hand. So che Soul ac- knowledgeth whatever he harh received to be of meerGiace. 2 Cor. 5. 5. He thathathwrou^tus hereunto is Qody p^ho hatfy alfo gi^'cn unto us d?e Spi^ rit. Mark the word : We arc wroughc hcreunco. That is, as if he ihould have f.ad, it there had noc been more done by another than was by our felves, if we had been lefc co do for our ielves, we had ne- ver come CO chis ftate of Grace wherein we are : We v/ere but like Clay, and He faihioned us inco this Mould. He, Who is that? Even God. He thac hath wroughc us hereunto is God^ thac is, Infinice Power, and Wifdom wasimployed in chofechings, and no lefs would have done che thing. And fo the Apoftlc fairh, i Cor, 2. 1 2. it is given to us, to know the things that are freely given us of God. Ask a Beleever how it came co pafs when he and others face under che fame minirfry, and in che fame fcac, and it may be had che fame conviiSions, chac one turned his back upon God, and che other came in •, chat one held up weapons of rebellion againft God, and the other laid them down. Or thus j Thac che one is more wrought upon, and che other is lefs ; that the one hath perfect Peace, and the other ftand dilputine:, being hlled with fears, and jealoufies, and fufpitions. The Soul will anfwer that ic was not for any thing that 1 did more than any other, it was not becaufe I was better than another, but be- / caufe and ^cei^ing Chrijl, is Relieving. 145 caufe the Lord put forth his Power upon me, and hath more eiFeaually called and wrought in me, than he hath been plcafed to do upon others. That is the Third Thing. •Fourthly, The Humblenefs which Faith works in the Soul, is this, that it makes a man to be mar- Veloufly wary and faithful in the ufe of all that which he hath received by beleeving. If he hath gotten peace, he keeps it warily and charily. If he hath gotten Grace, he maintains it watchfully : and he is faithful, not becaufc he doth not look upon himfelf as a Lord over it, but he looks upon ic as a Gift meerly given him. If a man (you know) hath any gift given him by a Friend, though ic be very ufcful, yet he is very chary of the ufe of it, and will not ufe it but upon great occaftons. There is you know, a great deal of difference between a mans re- ceiving his life by Grace, and pardon from the Prince ; and a mans receiving his life upon rearms of Juftice: He that hath his life upon Pardon, is afraidif he ever comes again within the breach of the Law any more ; Whereas he that hath hi» life iipon Juftice, thinks not of any fuch danger, nor of any fuch evil that he needs to beware of. So much carefulnef s,fo much Wifdora and Warinefs as there is in the Soul to ufe what it hath received, fo muck doth it argue Faith in a man. CHAP. 44 P^ith, or ^elk anftvered^ Faich is called receiving,becaufe the fpul that doth bekeve^doth bcleeve willingly and cheerefully. Receiving in the fcripcure is ufedfor fuch enter- tainment as freinds give one unco another. Or guefts or ilrangers have of their freinds ,As in ^atb. lo. 14. And Luk^iZo, 10. Chrift fends his difciples abroad without any thing to live upoHjand faith // they vptlrecewe them, that is^if they wil be glad of the Gofpel at fuch a charge, and at rhe coft they nauftbeat. In Hcb. 13. 2. ^enot forgetful to en- tertain ftrangerSyf or in jb de>iw^ f faith he ^fomehave recei'ved Angels. As it is in that place of theGof- pely ^atb. 10. 41, *He that recnwes a Prophet in the name of a Vrrphety that is, that makes him wel- come as the Meffenger of God. In the third Epift. of John and verf. 9. Diotrephcs that lo^es ihe prebeminency recewed us not nor would ha^e fuffered the Saints to receive us. As the Text tells us in the Book of Genefis, thit Abraham ftoodac the door of the Tent that he might entenain ftrau- gcrs thatpaffcd by. And Stephen faw Chrift in Heaven5and therefore ufed the word of the Text, Lord Jefuf Receive my fpirit. AHs^ 7. 59. My meaning is this, Though 1 cannot look upon Hea- ven, as my own houfe and home j Though I be a ftrangerand cannot demand the glory thereof as due unto me, yet receive me kindly, Bid me be of/ good cheer, and give me what is laid up in ftorel \ there J and ^cel^'mgChriJly is ^eleerutng. |^ - there* Alchis Ihavefpokencoftiewthacchis word ( Pvcceivirig ) is proper to a kindly enCerrainmenc. Now faith is fuch a kind of receiving and entcrcam- ing Jefus Chrift in f on\e nieafure.Ifay in fome mea« fmie. As Jefus ChrifJ: doch receive the foul into Hea- ven fo doth the foul receive JefusChtift into it* by beleeving. That felf fame love which Chrift (hews, that kindnefs which he exprell'cch to the foul in tn- certaining ic intoGloryithac in fome meafure doth the foul exprefs in its laying hold upon Jelus chrift. It isfaidinl^j^c?,iy.5. (S.lfKacChrift.badhiniftlf to Zacbeifs his houfc to dinner : ^acheus come dovon, and maf{e baflyfor this day 1 mu^ abide at thyhoufe : tApd Zachcus came downi ^ made haft & received him joy fully. Thus is icin effectual calling^in convcrfion. Chrift comes unto a foul and faith, Turneunto me ^ live:^eleenje i9*youfl)al he faiedyxvhy vpilyou dye in tbevpay vphereinyou arei^ Though there be norhing belong unto you but fhtme and confufion of face for ever, yet by, asd in me you fhal find happinefs. As Chrift doch iirft offer unto the foulhimfelf, So doth the foul receive this offer of Jefus Chrift. 'In AHSy 8. 37. Though that the Eunuch was but a young convert yet notwithftanding of hira, as of a young convert, Philip requires he ihould beleeve with al his heart. If thou beleenjefl with at thy heart. Al the heart, is not there taken extenfively or gra- dually, that is alone with perfeftion. As it is in the Conamandement, Thou fijalt love the Lordivjty al thy hearty chat is love him, and love nothing elfe. But al the heart thcre^ is oppofed unto a divided, heart,, andunto an unwilling fpir it. If thoubelie-i veA withal thy heart, that is, if thou be glaM'pf ; Jefus Chrift to undertake for thee: If thou dbft wil- lingly give up thy felf unto hin\ for falvation. I fay there is a great deal of difference between a mans doing of a thing willingly, and doing a thing eledit- >ely and out of choice, X A thing ii' • *- , - ■ Ml ■ I ■ -"■■ _i I ■ ■ - - r — 1- - n - ri ■ I ■ _ j 46 F^ir/?, or ^elee^ing^ is ^cei^v'tng Cbrijt ^ A thing is faid to be done Willingly, when it is done out of a principle fuitable to it, though that in the doing of ic there be no thought of taking con- tentment or plcafure in it. As a man fins willing- ly, when the corruption that is in his heart doth break into aft. As for example, Amanthat hatha prophane and wicked fpirit, he fwearcs willingly, though he doth not think of fwearing when he doth it. So al aftual corruptions arc voluncary5though that we do not contider^>^hat we do. As the wile n\an fpeaks, that they know not that they do evil, becaui'e it comes from a cor- rupt heart within. To do a thing voluntarily and willingly, it is enough that a man doth ft of him- felf, moved thereunto of his own difPQGtipnand quality of mind. A thing is faid to be done eledively ot by choi(;c when a man ( having weighed arguments on boch Odes ) doth choofe one rather then another : He puts a difference between the reafons that are ur- ged on cither p^rt, and choofeth to follow one be- fore the other. InHeb* 11. 25. 26. Mofes if faid. t0 choofe affli^ions voith the people of (jod^ becaufe be \ judged or ejieemed^ faith the Text. Doing things out of choice is a manner of doing things willingly, and the higheftfort of fo doing. And So there is a difference between a mans beleeving willingly and cheercfuUy, and a n ans bcleeving eledfively, and out of choice. Amanbeleeves willingly when he is carr-ed unto Tefus 'whrift by the fpirit of faith ina fenfe.of his own hothlngnefs, and a knowledg of the tendernefs and fuf&ciency that is in Jefus thrift to fave him, A man bcleevcs out of choice, whenhe choofcch rather to adventure his foul wi that way of beleeving upon Chrifi, then in any o- thcr courfe. As.for example. Conceive you a man like him that came to our Lord 'cfus 'thrift willingto do any thing to obtain eternall life: 1 ) Attd ■ / .1 — — — ■* — — -* ■ — ■■■ ■■ ' ' ■ — «» = — — and Qlecei'ving Qhrtfiy ^ helk^ing. 1 47 And as a meanes thereunto, there is advice given him to repent of what he hath done, and to mor- tify his lulls, that heihouldtakeupthepraftife of aldutyes and ordinances, heare much, and pray often, and deny hinifelf opportunities of fin, and give that which he hach unto c he poor ^ And al this advice is urged upon him witkaithat can be faid from the fcripture and reafon, that if he doth thus helhalbefaved: Butheisalfo advifed to beleeve upon Jefus Chrift who Juitifies the ungodly, who cures a nian for nothing, who faves them that ard not able to returnc him any thing agam fuitable to what they receive from him, And he choofeth this way of faith rather then that other way. This npW is a beleeving out of choice : when. I fay al other wayes are laid before a man for falvation lix their grcacefl" probability, and yet a man can fee faith to be the beit wayjand can anfwer fhc reafons that are brought to the contrary. Unto this elcftion faith wil grow in time and hy experience. So that it can fay. Whom ba^oel in heaven but tbee, and 1 have none on earth in compa- rifonof thee. VfaU 73. 25. Therefore it is com- pared to a Marriage,which cannot be without union 10 Chrift, and wiilingnelsl to be- fo. A woman after Marriage comes to fay iffhe were uhmarticd again, fhe would have none but him, for when the foul hath hadfome experiences of God, if fo be that al the delights and pleafures that are in fin, nay that arc in holinefs, were fet before ic,it woltild choofe rather to live upon Jefus Chrift then that "Vvay, As* thegoodmanfaidwhen he faw ^^-pi/i come hoine let him take al, now the Lord my King is fafe. So the foul can fay,I have enough in hira,though I have nothing elfe, and let al other things be what they wil, yet through him I fhal ftand. But at the firft, the Aa:offaith is only willing, i X 2 fuppofe ( 1 ^8 Fatthy or Belte^jm^ is ^cei^oin^ Chriji • luppofe. And c here fore you fhal find belcevers to be alwayes defcribed thac way. Johriy 8. 56. Abrahani/iuiv my day afarre of* He law it by faith. 1 hac is the fpirkual opcick, wiiich makes things far re of, to be neere. lia^aiv my day afarre offaSid vQOfglad. As a man that fees the ftioare many Lea- gues offat Sea, where the fhoare looks like a cloud une would have thought it would have made the heart of i/4tr^^^<^m fad, that the day of Chrift was fo farr off.For hope that is deferred, is the breaking of the heart faith Solomon. What joy ( do you think ) would the day of Chrift have been, had it come upon Abrabamy who when he faw the break- ing of it fo many thoufand ycares oif, wasjfiUed with Joy. But where ever there is a fight of Chrift there is joy and gladnefs. That I bring it for. Though it be at never fo great a diftance, and ne- ver fo weak a fight. When the power of the Lord jefus Chrift doth prevaile, it makes his people wil- ling. As it is in VfaU 1 10. 3. Therefore the A- poftle faith, that with the mouth a man doth con- f efs,. hut tx>ith the heart a man doth beleea^e uyite Sal' njation* ^om. 10. 10, With th« heart. A? we ufe to fay, I am glad of it with al my heart. Or you have my heart. So now doth the foul fay un^j to Jefus Chrift in beleeving. He is taken with the ; obje^ of faith, and is rejoyced. So it is in ^hiL 3. 3. WearetheCir^umcifwriywho rejoyce iti Chrifi Jef^Sy andhanjuno confidence in the fleJhM^ik it. The Minifters by whom the Gofpel is brought unto men are bcaijtiftil unto beleevers, %om. lO, 1$. ^ow beautiful are the feet of them that bring glad tidings. His meaning is,As beauty wins & takes affeftions,fo arc our a ffcftion? carried ftrongly unto thofewho are the meffengers of good things by Jefus Chrift.If you have judged me faithful (faid Lydiaythen come 'into my houfe.Andif you be worthy (faid our Lord \ though j and ^cei^ing Chriji is Belienjing 1 49 . though you have no cloaths on your back, nor pen- ' ny in your purfe, yet you wil be welcome to chem. • And the word of Faith which is the mflrument of ! Faith, that is now received alfo by a Beleever, j ^atth. 1 5. 44) fS J 4<5. The kingdom of Godis like ia^ianthat found a Treafure in the field, and he ; went and fold all that he might be partaker of it. I'Every aft of Faith, it is done with joy and delight. i Therefore Faith (in the general!) is faid to work- I by love, and to be unfeigned, i Tim* 1.5. Out of agoodConfcience, and ^aith unfeigned. Why, be- caufe it is hearty,there is an afFeftion,and an affefti- on that is real where there is true Faith, i Thef. i. $. Itou received the word of Qod in much afflrUi- on vpitbjoy of the 'Uoly Qhoji, And therefore you. are elefted of God. It is therefore by cheerfulnefs and rcadinefs in believing, that true Faith is diftinguifhed m\ABf 2. 41- *A nn any Of gladly receia^ed the word were bapn- '{ed, ihey gladly received, is a note of diftinftion from the refl of the Auditory who received it, butj I not with ;oy and gladnefs : By it 1 fay true Faith is I diftinguifhed and diftinguiAed from the Faith ihatj lis in the Devils , and in wicked men, who are the! • Children of him, and from that which doth ax if c I from, coiiviftioh. A man may beleeve through |conviftion, as the Devils do: who finding fome-' I thing CO be true v/hich God harh fpoken; their ] own experience being a wirnefs to them that Goii' hath not failed of his word, they do therfore col- 1 left that what he hath faid befides, fhal be brought to pafs: But that which they do beleeve, they would not beleeve. There is the like Faithinthel Children of Satan. For as there is the fame Grace, f HI the head^ Chrift, and in his members, fo there is ' ^he fame finfulnefs and evil 1 that is in Sataa frhe head and Prince of wicked men J in wicked n^ea l theiTileivesoJ . ^ X ijo Faith^ orBeliea;ing is ^cei^ing Chrijl \ themfelves. While wicked men live under the ( preaching of the word of God, they come to be,- convinced that there is no way of falvacion but byj Chrift, norany courfetbgcc ecernall life, but by goinp unto Him : But this they likfe' not, but iecret- lywifh that there were fome ochei^ way, which is evident and apparent, becaufe their hearts do with- draw through unbeliefe, and depirt from the living God, As the Apoftle fpeaks in Heh. 3.12. There is agoing unto Chrlft by men, as a man goes unco an enemy, and fues for iome favor that is in his hand to do him, which he can deceive no where elfe j but yet it troubles him. So now chey gouncoChrift, but they had rather be in hard and coftly working. Iffafting and prayer, and giving all their goods to the poor would help them, chey would rather do it than go to Jefus Chrift. As wicked men do pray in afllidions, but it is beCaUfe they are driven to it : fo do they beleev6 in J^fus Chriit, becaufe they know no way elfe to go, or to find relief unto themfelves. Hethltis 1 Be lee- ver doth choofe Jefus Chrift as his way: He doth choofehim (I fay) as his way or ratner thus, he doth like that way and approve that way. ObjeU. But you wil fay, tfjis can he no fi^n, be" caufe tbofe that vpere hut temporary and fell away^ did recewe we word of Qod with joy , in ^ath* 1 3. 20. tAnJpp* I. But you muft know that their recei- ving was not of al,but of fome truths of the Gofpel. And Secondly : It was not lincere. They received not the truth for the love of it ( for then they Ihould have been faved 2 nef^ 2. lO. ) but they re- \ ceived it out of love of their lufts. So far they did I f cuive the Gofpcll as it might free them from Hel, » .but and (l(eceivmg Chrift^ is ^elie^ing. i^ i buc not as ic raighc fanftifie or cakeaviray from rhem chc love ofthisprefent World: for when pcrfecu- cion came, they were by and by offended. CHAP. XX 11. ^aiih accompanied with joy and delight : and thai I. Jiran Ati of the Vnderftandin^. % • \As an A^ oftheJViU. Bllcnowl fhall come to fpeak of Faith in xliis jpoint more particularly, As it is a willing re- ceiving of jefusChrift : a Receiving of him kindly and gratefully. And chac I may fpeak of it di- ftinftly toyou. .^TJicreis ( you muft know) a love that is ever joyned with Faith. Fai^h works by love : And chat love is fee upon Tcfus Chrift iingly and a- lone for his fake. The heart doch approve and like of its felf in bcliev ng on or going ^to Jelus Chrift: That if a Believer Could immediately re- ileft upon what he.hath done , when he hach clofed ^vith Jefus Chrift, if he had (I fay) areciprocall knowledg of his aftion, that he couldfayIJi,ave now given up my felf to him, and this giving up my felf to;himis forever ,ncver to be my own any more: If he could thus refle^it upon himfelf, lie would blefs t he. Lf?rdjf or helping him fo to do. Buc: be- ^fidesthis, ' — -' Thereis a love which goes alon^ with Faith : A love untoJefusChrift alone,beiides the approbation of the; Soul in believing : As the Eye delights in .feeiiiiJ, and the Ear is taken with found : So there lis a contentment and pleaiure thac the SouUakes in jFaith. ( As it is in ^rov. 21. 15.^ ) fa id concerning ^ righteoufnefs ^5 Faith, or^elieVtng is Kecei^ingChriJi • righccoufnefsinchegenerall, Thac ic is a joy to a' , juft man co do juflice : So ic is a joy to a good n an -' cobekeve: which I fhall lay open in divers parti- culars. I. Take Faith firft (as we handled it hereto- fore) cobean Aftof cheUnderftanding, anaffen-*-! ting unto the truth which God fi^caks, chough che, things be not only obfcure, but comrary to Pveafon, it is a pleafure now unto a Beleever to do fo. To'' give up his judgment to God: To have his know-i* ledgfrom the report which God gives of things, and not from himfelf, or his own apprchenfion. j Therefore you fhall find him to pray God co lead himby hiscounfell, till he brought him to Glory,! T/aZ. 73. 24. AndTaul m QaU 3. when he was. Icalled, he would not confult with flefh and blood Itohear what they could fay, but becaufe of the 1 divine teftimony which he had received, he gires up himfelf unco Jefus Chrift, and unto the work of thcMiniftry. Hence it comes to pafs, thac though youmay filcnceaSainc, yet you cannot convince him that he is in an error, i Cor. 2. 15. The Jpiri- tuall man judgetb all thing f : ^ut he himfelf is judged of none. As ^athfheba took all the waies fhe could to make her Son Solomon co raign, in i l{ings i. 17.-* T^idji thou not fay that my Son fhould raign. And why is it notfo ? She ftuck unto his word, and took no other way. So dorh Faith take that way : Thou haft faid. Thou haft faid. Thou haft faid. And as a proof of that, that Faith delights co take Gods word by way of evidence, rather than any other, In*Heb. 11. 3. it''s faid, ^y ^aith vp e widerjiand that the world was mide of nothing. We know it by reafon, thac the world was made of nothing : But that doth not content a Beleever, But by Faith we know it : Becaufe we rather judg by the light chat comes from God, than by the lighc chat is in che • _il^&i 1 tAi^ and KecelVrng Chr'tH^ is Believing. 1^5 things chemfelves. I befeech you my beloSred markic. Inhumane affairs and m things that be- long unto men, It is as great a weaknefs as can he to depend upon others, to lee with other mens eyes, and not with a mans own. To fay as other men fay, anS to fpeak after them. We count it no learning i ac all C neither is it ) for a man to quote Authors, and CO fay fuch a maa is of this mind, and fuch a man is of that mind. A man may be as ignorant as the Books themfelves are wherein thefe things ar^ recorded, and yet may have this kind of know- ledg. But though in humane affairs it be weaknefs and folly for a man to give up his judgment, and to captivate his underftanding to v/hac another faith, yet it is the excellency of Faith. And therefore it is faid in John 6. 45. that they are learned men who do hear and learn of the Father j ^very one that bears andlearnr of the father comes unto me. He is a learned man(in the judgment of God) that goes by hear- fay. That Faith is more to be efleemed that is grounded upon the Scripture, than that Faith which is affifted by difcourfeand by reafon. 4nd thereafonofit is this, becaufe that Faith is only dependant upon the teftimony of God. Among SchoUars and Minifters you fliall many times find a great deal more of knowledg than in others in the matter of divinity, but lefs Faith, Becaufe the Hearers go only by the Scripture, and the Teachers go by parts and Books : They go by the authority of God in the Scripture. Reafon may be alfiftant unto Faith: But ic deftroys Faith as it is a princi- ple, in I Cor. 2. 16. We have the mind of Chrifi, faith the Apoftle : We havig the better of it, be- caufe we have the mind of Chrift : And if you have all the fubtilty and curiofity, and he*'^rh, and d'epthwhichnacurallundetftanding can reach un- y to. P»^ •X.—.-t.iJijimtr ^ let A Faith, or helee^ing, is ^cel^tng Chrijl; I CO, yec know thac we are conccnred with this, that 1 we cake things barely as chey are reporced unco us I by JcfusChrifl Now chis is that which Belcevers do cheerfully. He is willing ro be a Fool, willing ro have hi^ un- derilanding denied^ rhac he may receive the tefti- mony or report of God, either concerning his per- fon, or concerning Gods good will concerning him, or his duty. And io take che ocher pare of Faich as ie is m the will, Arefting and quieting of the Soul in Jefus Chrift. And fo a Beleever is willing thereunto. Ic is a great matter to be fo, as I have Ihewed here- tofore : it is a mean thing in its felf for a man to live dependantly , & to have nothing but from hand to mouth. All a mans Glory, and confidence, and boafting is excluded thereby. But though a man benothing, and though a man be rendred vile and mean in the Eyes of God and all good men, yet Faith makes a man willing thereunto. A Soul thac is converted had rather have its Good in Chrifts hands, than in its own*, rather have its comforts in Chnfts giving and difpohng, than in its own j that he fhould keep cheBottle, and give ic as he thinks good: It would not be its own Carver, if ic might. Obferveit, Sofar as there is Faich unfeigned in a man, he hadrather beat Gods carving, and Gods allowancefor Grace, and comfort, and afliflance, andfupply, than at its own. Therefore fee how cheerfully ^aid fpeaks concerning this cafe, in 2 TiW. I. 12. / kjiow rvhom 1 banje belee^ed : As if he ihould have faid, though thac it be not in my own hand, y€^c ic is in his hand thac is able. Though I have not thac which maKCs me co abound,and to be as if I were in Heaven, yec I know whom I have tru- fted, ahi chat he will keep ic for me. CHAP. I and (^ceiVmi Chriji^ i5Beliea;ing. 155 | CHAP. XXIII. ^The l<[jzture of true ^aith in a wiUin^nefito bdieTe, appears in tbefe particulars, i. In lo-ving to hear the Dotirine of ^aith, 2. In a dafire and longing after Chrifi. 3* In a high efteem of Jefus Chrifl. 4- In fuffering it felf to be wrought up by Qod to Jefm Chrifl, 5. in glad- ly parting vpith its confidence in any thing but Jefus thrift. 6. In that its joy fs full^ when it comes to "k^ow that it hath by ^aitb received Je- fm Chrift. FOr the further difcovery therefore of this joy and Faith wherein this willingnefs to beleeve, and love of Chrifl appears, I fhall name thefe fix particulars. Firft : Wherever there is true Faith in any niea- fure, the Soul doth love to hear the Dofeine of fairhScof JefusChrifl.Of altrmhsjthat ismoft plea- Ting : And mofl pleafing, not only becaufe it's moft profitable but becaufe it^s moft felf-denying. If fo be the Soul would make its choice, or call for any thing out of the Book of God before another, it iliould be for fomthing that laies open Chrifl, and prefTeth beleeving on him. How beautifull are the ^eet of them that bring glad tidings^ Rom. 10. 15. How beautifull ? that is. they are as lovely as can be , Nay fo lovely as no words are able to ex- prefs: How beautifull? The Apoille Taut did defire to know nothing among the Corinthians, but Jefus Chrifl and him crucified J i Cor. 2. 2. that is, he defired to make nothing elfe known. And look (what it was in him preaching, fo in every Belee- \ y 2 ver. • r 1 6 Faith ^ or Believing is recetnjmg Chrifi^ ver. Jn ^biU 3. 10. That I may kjiow him:, and the \ power of his Death) and the njertue of his QiefurreHi- j OH' Thefe things a man loves, and he loves to hear j fpoken of, and difcouried of. Evil men therefore do love corrupt words and unfavory language, ^e- leevers they love to hear of Jefus Chriit , His name is fweet and precious : Not only to hear of him as a (lory, bur as a perfon whereof there is need, and of whom there is uie, and abfolute neceffity unto falvation. Firft 1 fay the heart loves to hear of Jefus Chriit. AHs 1 3. 42. When the Apoltle had preached ill the nameofChrift, all that were good cametoh-'m, and prayed him to preach that over, the next Sabbath day, or as it is in i'ome tranflations I between this^and the next Sabbath day,as the word ! may well be rendred. And he did as you may read there. As in John 6. they cryed out ever more give us this bread:, fo the poor Soul defires to hear; of that again and again. When Lidia heard ^aul \ preach [efu5 Clirift;, fhe attended as one chat would ' not lofe a fiUable, nor a word of what was fpoken 1 concerning !efus Chrifl, c^^Jj* 16. 14. How beau-] tifuU ( as X faid before ) are the feet of them that, bring glad tidings of peace. It is good to love the Law of God which teacheth a man his duty, like one that is carefiiU to do his mafters will, ^faU i. 2. He meditates therein day and night : But it's a better iign for a man to love the Golpel of Jefus i Chrift,&: the glad tidings of him: As I fhal fhew you ' if i come to it> that there is not only as great honor j given unto God thereby, but thereby a man if more j humbled and abafed in himfelf and made nothing, than by all that obedience which the Law requires, or by all that fenfe of milery that the Law works in us becuufe we have not done our duty. A man hath meaner thoughts of himfelf when he thinks he muft beleeve or he cannot be faved, than he hath when and ^cei^ing Chr'tft^ is BelieVmg. j £- ^ when he thinks if he be called to an account he mud needs perilh becaufe he hach traiifgreffed Gods Law. The foul loves rhac law, which fhews its own tace in a glafs with al its fpocs upon k : But ic^loves chat glafs better, in which ic beholds rhe face of God, For thereby ic is cranfformed from Glory CO Glory, a Cor. 3. laft. Out of a fpiric of indignation and wrath againft a mans felfe and j fm, a man is glad to heare any thing that can be a- [gainfl himfelf and his fm:Bucouc of a loveof Chrifl, land out of the love of greater excellencies in Chrifl 'then is in a mans felf, a man is glad co heare rather of Chrift, then of himfelf, Im name is as ointment povfiredfortb.Cant*i*3y There is nothing in thefcrip- | curebuc what is fweet5and as honyjBut the Gofpel is as the hony-comb. The whole fcripture is as a fu- garedcup. But the Gofpel of Jefus Chrift is as tlic bocroni of that cup. \ Secondly, Where ever there is true faith, there is a dfefire and longing after Faith and Jcfus Chrift. As new borne babeSy as the Text faith in i. ^eu 2. 3. A defire formally. O Lord faid the Difciples j.into Jefus Chrift, incteafe our faith. O Lord that we may receive our fight. For its faith alone that makes us fee the things freely given us of Gt)d5 and to know the treafury of grace and mercy which doth and hath lain hid from eternity. And fo there is alfo avertualdelireafcer Chrift in al beleevers. They long after the meanes whereby faith is wrought. If you have tafted how good the Lord is, jif nevo borne babes,you vail defire the fmcere mil^ of the vpordthat you mxy grow thereby. Though that a Child cannot diflinguiih rationally between the Milk of the bteaft, and that which is fugared, It cannot telthat this is th^ one and this is the other. But it hatha tafl: bjr* which ic can, and nothing plea- fethbuc the mothers bieaft. The Child cannot ask 5 8 Faith^ or ^elie^'m^ is ^ceia)ing Chri/i ; ask for it, nor defaibe ic, but: you may know it loves It becaufe ic is Hilled with it, and quieted with it. So may be the cafe of many a Chriltian : He may not be able by reafon, or by difcourfe, or argument to make out the defirablenefs of Jefus Chrift above al other things, the excellencies Sf Jefus Chrift above al other waies : There may be Rhetorick put upon al other things, beyond al that which he can fee through, cr put upon the things of Jefus ChriftjBut you wil find his heart quieted with nothing but Jefus Chrift. Let him pray with never f o much iulargednefs and aiFediions, & let him hear with never lo much underftanding, and live with never fo much unblameablenefs in the world,yec al this is nothing, his heart is unquiet, becaufe it is not according to what the law requires : And if he fees no fault in it, yet there is fault which the pure eyes of God behold when he comes to look ic through and through : And he hath no peace but when he comes to beleeve in Jefus Chrift, and re- ceive peace from him. What is there in al the raea- nes of falvation which thou longeft after? What is it which thou wouldeft carry home with thee ? Is ic fomthing that may draw Jefus Chrift nearer to thee and make him more lovely to thee ? So much thou may eft conceive of hope of thy ftate of Salvation. TheLoveof Jefus Chrft is defcribed by this, that nothing gives the heart io much quiet, and in no- thing is the heart fo much taken up and contented, as it is with this, that Jefus Chrift is the Mediator, and undertaker, and is the furety, and doth al with the father : And that It doth do alwith the father by him. The heart being pleafed and con- tented, argues the defire to be after him. Thirdly, Where ever there is faith there is love even a high efteeme of Jefus Chrift, and God the father in him, and a high valuation of him as one that ■ -' Mi .,11- and ^cehing Chr'tjl^ is Beliea^m^. i c;p chac is good, and true, and able, and liberal. Noc only an acknowledgmenr of thefe vertues to be in I him, butaneftimationofhim for them. And the reafon is this. There is no one (you know ) can beleeve or truft another, whom ( though he doth know robeabletodifchargehis promiie, yet) he doth not efteeni of. No wife man ( you know ) wil truft him whom he judges to be vain and care- lefsofhis word, that wil fpeak any thing. If fo be any one makes a promife^ and be not known to be rich, and befides chat to be powerful, fo as none can hinder him from the fuliillmg of ic : if he be noc efteemed good, and liberal, that wil not think much of what he parts wirhal. We wil not truft him. In faith therefore there is a Ipve of rhe Glory of God. And fo you have it defcribed in %om, 4. 21. That Abraham did heleenje, and^h^e Qlory unto Qod. While he was medicating on the promife, and the difficuky of receiving, and ic came into his mind,yec he faid again, chough that I be weak^ ycc he is able, 8c chough chat I be dead yec he lives for ever;8t though that unto me, there belongs no fuch mercy ,yet he is Hberal.Such indeed our faith in God is, as our efteern is of God. As our efteem is of God, fuch is our love. Where we fee little of excellency, there is little love : 5c where we lee much, there is much love» It is a peece of love, A dury & an ad of love well the foul fiiews unto God char ic wil fliffcr no blame to light upon him^that ic wil have nothing, I fay nothing imputed or charged upon his account, but he miift ft and fair and cleer^and wirhout bleni- ifh and fpot in al that ever he faith and doth, what ever becomes of the foul. Nay faith a beleever in this cafe. The fault is noc in God but in me^the rear- fon lyes nor in any want of love in him, but in the folly andcarelelsnefs of my ov/n fpirit. The rea- fon why I want any rhingisnot becaufe I defire any j thing of God which he is not ready prepared to the I . ^Q^^g i'';a I' \ .-^..^..,_, . 60 Faith ^ or Beliea^in^ is Kecei^in^ Chrijl * \ doing of, buc ic is only bccaufe I hare a withdiaw- m^ heart. That is the third thing. Fourthly : The Soul that doth willingly be- leeve, dorhevenfuffer it felf to be wrought upon by Godifhe plcafeunto Jelus Chrift, It leaves^it felf inthehand ofCiod to be wrought upon even as he pleafeth. That whereas before it was wont to murmur;, andrepine;, and think much ^ and hard- ly that God would take nothing but fatisfadion, and be pacified by no means but by the blood of his Son: Now it faith, Let xhe Lord do with me even what he pleafeth^ fo he will but unite me to, and make me one with Jcfus Chrift. He puts him- felf like Clay into the hands of him, that He may frame and fafhion the Spirit according to his own mind. You have the expreffion concerning John Baptift, in'Matb. 3. When Chri/l came to him to be baptized, faid John, Do you come imto me <* Suf- fer it to befo^ iaith Chrift, forfo it becomes m to fulfill all rigbteoufnefiy and then he fujfered him. So the Soul is brought by God unto this, to let, or fufFer God to confute what reafoning he pleafeth in him, to fuggeft fuch apprehenfions as are contrary to his own fenfe and imagination. lnJohn6. '^^. Chrifl told them that if they did not eat his Flefh, and drink his blood, they had no {hare in him : and the Text faith that many did murmur at the Do- ^rine. And fuch is the temper of the heart of man when Chrift comes to deal with him about fal- vation:, that he is offended ac him, at the Call he gives ; and is offended that he will not allow him any confidence, or comfort in any thing or for any thing that he hath done. Mull there be fo much fu- pernaturallvertue required to obtain eternall life, or it mufl not be had ^ As a Patient is told by the Phyfitian fomtimes, You muft fo many daies take this courfe, forbear this diet, and take chefe bitter ( / Pils : « ■ I I 1 II fels mS^^ctinjing Chriji^ is ^eleenjin^^ 1 5 1 1 ^^-^ 7 ■ \ EBs : He begins co think he is iajurioufly deal^ withall : But the Phyfician tels him, if you will not take this courfc, you wiU die. Then he lers him do whit he will. So the Soul faich unco Jefus Chrift, Lord take any courfe in the world with me: Iffhouwikhavemetoliedowninforrow, If thou wilt have me be wichcuc thofe means and refre- fhings that I have had heretofore : If k be thy pleaiure that I fhall lie upon thorns, in compari- son of what I have done before, do what thou wilt. Only faveme in the day of the Lord Jefus Chrift. As a man faith to a Phyfitian whom he hath a long time refufed to be direfted by the Counfel of, faith. he,I do even fubmit my felf to you, prcfcribe what you pleafe, ufe your own method, take what courfc your wifdom thinks good. Let the things you give be bitter, and let the things you with-hold from me be never f o good, as Air, or food : So the Soullcavesitfelf to Jefus Chrift, and lets him do with it what he will, which was the cafe oi do thou have care of me, for I have none of my felf, I give up my felf to thee. Fifthly : Tfee Soul is exceediug^ glad and refre- flied when it can do any thiiig to takeaway its con- fidence, and its fupport that it hath any \vhere, but only in Jefus Chrift. I fay the Soul is glad that it hath nothing to help it, but Faith, and that Faith hath nothing to lean upon, but only Jefus Chriii. When one ftone is not left upon another of all rhat which a man hath built to reft himfclf in : When as the pillows are pluckt from under the head, and a man is left(as it wercjdying, and from under the elbow,that a man hath nothing to fupport him, yet then the Soul takes pleafure 8c contentment. There is a pleaiure 8c contentment to have all fweec mor- _( 6 2 Faith, or ^eke^ving^ U ^ct'i^ing Cbrtjl j ^bil Tels taken from a man thac v. may feed alone upon the Lord Jefus Chrift, when it can convince its Iclf , Ehat in i'uch a courie there wil be no lafety nor faU vac ion found, it rejoyccth exceedingly IVebaveiio confidence in theflefl), but rejoyce in Chnji Jcfuu Re- joy ce when we have no coniidence in the flelh. Ic^is faid concerning the Saints, thac they wafh their feet in the bloud of the ungodly, and when the! vengeance overtakes them, they fay. This is the, man that made not God his refnge, but trufted in hisiiches. As it is in ^]^/. 52. 6,7. faid of Df?^^. j So doch the Soul Glory and infult over, all its vain ! conhdences when they are taken from him: You are j wel enough ferved,and this is you thac would iruft | to praying^and to hearing,and that would put your J coniidence in cxternall performances j Sec what! they come unto, and what they wil do: All arc no-j thing, Buc oaken leaves thac feemes co be l"ilver,[ they are buc appearances, and give no reail farif- fad^ion. You are well enough ferved (faith rhe Soul unco ft felf) and it is buc juft ice thac is done you, and I am glad ic is fo, and take your port ion- j and fhare. Whereas men arc wont co complaiaj in the world, thac fuch a Minifter hath undone fuch ! aperfon, he hath call him into the extreanieft: an-j guifh of heart thac can be.They were com. for ted, buc ROW they cry out they areundone,& undone : They cry out of nothing buc this, chac they have crufted to this & that Scanother ching.And in this a Belcever would re;oy ce. BlclTed be God,thac I ufe al means, buric is as if lufed chemnoc, Iwillcruft to none: Bleffed beGodthat 1 have got my heart to fee that whatfoever ic is which f^ems ro be a glorious fup- porc, yet I fee ic will fail me; Buc in Jefus Chrift there is ftrengch. Whac a pleafure is ic co a godly man to think now God hath puifued his Soul, and firiced him and made him co run from al the (belters ( wherein and ^cei'ving Qhr'tfi^ is belitfving. 1 6 3 wherein he would hidehimfelf.When a man comes CO make his relation before God in prayer and faith, I would have run into this houfe, and have refted in this Company, and fctled upon this per- formance, and yet the Lord followed me again aftdagaiii : This is arefrefhment to^him, and giads him. When another faith it would make a man caft ofFali care of goodnefs for to tell him, that when he hath done all things, there is not a penny paid, nor one nick cut off from the ralley of the .Lord, when they fay this is rhe way to make a 'man caft the Commandmej cs of Gcd behind his back, He faith, blefled be God that would not let 'me take common Bail,wh"ch would not have ftood my Soulin ftead. In i Tim. i. 13. ^aul ipeaks home CO thispurpofe. I tr^*/ a ^la^bemer and a Verfscutori and injurious ^ but Qodvoud^fafed mer- cy to me. And how was that > youknowiut/^^/p. andu4^s22. God beats him down ofF his Horfe, and a light from Heaven did ih:ne about him, and be was caft upon the ground, and told that he had nothing to do with the Jews that pcrfecuted Chrift. But chou perfecuteft me ^oiehThQ more you ftrive, the more you wound and deilroy your own Soul, Now mark what l^^^z// faith, in I Tim. 1, 17. 'l^otv unto thel{}ngimmortaU, and invifible, and only tvifi Qod, be Glory for ever Amen. As if he fhould have faid, Bleffedbe Godthat knockc me down, and bleffed be God that fpake thofe words, and for ever praifed be his name that he would make me to lie with my mourhin the duft, and to have no hope in the earth: Ashefpeaks in Colof, i. 12. (ji j ( faid ^It'i^aheth ) that the Mother of my Lord j fhould come unto me > Much mere doth the Soul I fay. What is this that Jefus Chrift ibould come to ] be in my Cottage, in my underftanding, fo poor and I mean, a one as mine is? your faith is not faving. For faith is an applying of Jcfus Gfcrift to a mans felf. ) There is a double application of Jefus Chriilco a mans felf. . The one is in difcourfe,when a man can conclude himfelfcobeone ofChrifts. And that is faith of alTurance. And the other, is not by difcourfe, but by aime and intention. When a man doth go unco Jeius Chrift for good unto himfelf. Now mark whac I .fay. Al the credic that you give unco the word, Al I the fence that you fubfcribc unco, che promifes of chc Gofpcl, Thcfe do noc apply Chrift to you. No more ( you know ) then for a man co medicate on che treauires of the King of fpain,do make his trca- fuie his, or do give him an imercft in ic. Wken a man loves faich, and loves Chrift, then he gives up himfelf CO Chrift chat he may be his. A man looks not from Chriflt for any thing co himfelf uncil he doch and KeceiVmg ChriU^ is Believing. i ^p doth by an aft of the Wil reft upon the Lord Jefus j Chrilt. Fourthly and Laftly : There muft be this afFe- dion of love in beleeving, becaufe c.he Soul mull acauiefce and reft So in Chrift, as to feek help no wnere elfe. Now that he muft So acquiefce is evident by this, becaufe to go to Jefus Ghrift, or to receive Ghrift and not as the only Savior,, is ro diflionor him. A man cannot reft in him as the on- ly Savior, unicfs chat he doth approve, and like of, ^nd take pleafure in, that which the Gofpel hath revealed concerning him. Or more plainly thus. That way which a man doth not approve, a man wil not ftick unto for the falvation of his Soul. That a man may therefore ftick unto Ghrift^, and never depart from him, he muft have a good will or liking or approbation of him. And fo much Ihal now fuffice for the Doftrinal part of this Point. CHAP. XXV. Application. Then there are but fetxf ^ecewerf of Jefus Chrifl. This Vfe concerns three forts of ^erfons. i. Such ci4 do not receive Jefits Chrift Of he if » USE IS Faith fuch a kind of Receiving ? then truly it will caft even all tbe^orld almoft. There are but few Receivers ofjefus Ghrift. Many to whom he is offered;, but few that give him entertainment by Faith. And thofe that have given him enter- tainments have not done according to the Law of , a a that JO Faith jOr heleeelie^ing is receinjtng Cbrijl; j therefore they rejefted him. So Chriftians arc' ape CO a greac miftake about Jefus Chrift preached i and born in the Gofpell, ( as I may fay ) as the | Jews were about him when that he came in the ■ Fleih. 1 fhall inftance only in one. ^ They do not love beleeving, nor receive Jefus Chrift with love : who beleeve him not to be fuch a one as he is: who receive him not according to the greatnefs aad glory with which he is inverted, and which belonges unto him. Suppofe a Noble man fhould come unto a mans houfe, and be regar- ded but as an ordinary man : Let his entertainment be otherwife what it wil be, he is not ufed kindly, but you do degrade him, and level him to an ordi- nary mans condition, when as he is a perl on of Ho- ! nor. Kindufage of one lyes in the fhewing hini that refpeft and efteem which belong? unto him. He is an unkind man to his wife, \vho refpefts her but as his Father and Mother, when as he mull: leave Father and Mother in his affedionsin comparifon of Ijer. So now, he ufeth Chr ift unkindly, and he doth not fhew his love by beleeving on him, who doth not by faith receive him as he is God and Man, | One in whofe hands al power is, & may do what he pleafethjviz. ( Give the fpirit from the father) And i one who is holy, andharmlefs, and feparatc from I finners : I fay, unlefs you beleeve upon him as fuch ' a one, and receive him as fuch a one, and love himl as fuch a one, then you do not beleeve, In i ^om. \ 21* They Qlorifyed him not at Qod, and therefore] Qodgave them up to ruik affeHions* They Glor ified God, he confcffcth. But not as God, and therefore they were puniihed. Wherein lay chat, that they glorified him not as God 5 k lay in this, God had put forth his power and wifdom in the things that hehadmade, and chey fee up things which -chey : made and ^cei^ing Chrifi^ is Believing. j ^ ^ made in the memorial of chat Goi but they prai- fed him not as a God of infinire power : J hey look- ed after no more then was m the creation and there- j fore not giving infinite power to him, they Glori- fied him not as God. So I fay here. They do not love Jefus Chrift as Chrifl, who do not acknow- ledg him to be what indeed he is, and to be fuch a j one as he is revealed. I ihall fpeak more plainly ; thus. The Jews did ftumble at the meanefs of jChrifts out- fide, becaufe they looked by him to Ihave a temporall kingdome. There are as falfe^ , as erronious apprehenfions of Chrift in the minds i of men now. The dealings of Chrift with the Souls of men, are as contrary and as unanfwerable unco mens expectations and prefumptions, as the mean coming of Jefus Chrift into the world was cotirrary unto the expcdation of the Jews. Mark it. Chrifts dealings with the Spirits of men, are as unanfwera- ble, as his coming in the Fle^ was unanfwerable to what the Jews expedited. When ever Jefus Chrift comes, he comes as a King, he will be Lord, or nothing. As Kings when they come into private mens houfes, command all their fervants as fheir I own, and ufe every roome as if they that owed 1 them had nothing to do with them : They take all jpower out of their hands for the prefent, and ufe | i nothing but what they bring with them, and that which i<; of their own providing. So when Jefus Chrift is come into the St>ul, he will have every thought after his mind, and not give a man leave fo much as to look after any other thing than him- felf. Men look not for fuch a kind of thing as this is by Chrift, and therefore they are not able to endure it. Men look for eafe, and not to be kept to their duty, and they look for peace, and not for | to be under the reproof and corre^ions and inftru- dtioiisof theLord. And men look to have iheir m.^^tm'.AiJes 1 74 Faith^ or ^elienjm^ is ^ceinjin? Chri/l • good will accepted, and chac Jefus Chrift wilfbe £ei'ved with noching of what is ours, buc of what he gives. Or rather thus, when Jefus Chri/l comes unto men, he brings trouble, heboid a Sword : He changcth men from what they were, and takes them off from the pradlifes wherein they walkeU, which they thought were POod. As when Jefus Chrift came, he nulled all the fer vices of the Jews, which they thought were exceeding Glorious. Now Jefus Chrift comes and fets the ax at the root of the Tree, and faith, If wc will not bring forth Fruit, we fhall be cut down. Now the Soul looks not for any fuch thing as this. What are the ex- pedlations of men by Jefus Chrift, but only that Jefus Chrift ihould be a Chariot, that Jefus Chrift ifhould give him his hand to fit by him in Heaven ? Men look that Jefus Chrift Ihould come with his Arms ready to receive them, and his Bofom to lay them in : They look for nothing but what may make their lives more free, and their Spirits more quiet than they were before. Ycu will be mifta- ken in receiving Chrift : If you have peace with hirayyou fhall have trouble. You fhall be a King and reign, but he will be a King and reign over you. He willbefervedby you, bur you fhall take all from his Treafure, that you may fay only as 'Va- q^id did. Of thy own do 1 feroje tbee» Now this being [contrary to mens apprehenfions, they are not wil- ling to it, and being not willing to it, they are not believing. If Jefus Chrift be not received according to that Glory which he hath, and which doth belong to him, ( Make as much of him as you will ) yet ftill it will not be falvation to you. We fatv bis Qlory ( faith the Apoftle, ("when he preached ) at tbe Qlory of tbe only hegotteyi Soyi of Qodj John i. i4<. ^w/^/] that is, ic was no other Glory, and can be counted and ^cei vin^ Chrijt^ is Believing. 175 counted no other Glory but what belongs unto God himfelf. Now as Jefus Chrill: is preached and known, fo he muft be received by the hearers. There is nothing that is worfhip and honor un- co God, nothing that will make us happy, but what is clone unto God and Chrili, as fuch. The Apo- ftle makes this in i Thef 2. 1 3. to be a fign of the effeduall calling and converfion of the Theffaloni- ans, Thatthey received the word, not as thewor(J of man, but a s it was indeed the word of God. As the word mull be received as Gods word indeed, fo niuft Jefus Chrift be received as he is indeed. Look therefore what Jefus Chrifl mull be that he may be the Author of falvation, you mutl receive himasfuch, if your Faith be laving. It was ne- ceffary if he would fave us, that he Ihould be God and Man : that he fhould be the head of al things : rhachelhouldbe holy and feparate from fmners. Do you now receive him by Faith as fuch a one? Doth your Faith clofe with him gladly under thefe refpefts ? It is not enough to favmg Faith that you do not deny him to be thus, but he mull be owned by you to be thus, I fay he nmH be owned by you. A man may under one confideration be wonderfiill kind and refpeftfuU to a Perfon, when under ano- ther confideration he will fhew no refpedl to him. As for example.They faid unto Lot that he came in among them to fojourn, and would have Lorded it over them. That is, ( as if they fhould have faid) If Lot will live among us, and take his being with us as an ordinary Perfon, he may : But if he thinks allthingsmuflbeashewil. If he will trouble him- felf with our matters, and order al things according to his Will, and be our Governor, we wil have no- thing ro do with him. Therefore the Apollle faith of fome men,that they love him not asa Lord,i Cor* 16. 2Z. If a man loa)'s net the Lord Jefus Chrift^ let I _^^ _^ ^^ ^him 7 6 Faith, or Beliea;in^ is Ke ceiling Chrijt ; / \ bimbeaccurfed. They love him as Chriit^ for fo he is anointed ; and as Jelus for fo he is a Savior : Biic this [ Lord"^ being added, makes cheir hearts to rife againft hjm, and againft the precious oin- menL i^ndGraces that areiuhini. And fo you fhal find in 7//de 4. He faith, there are fome that do dkty tbeLQrd. The word A^-tts?*;;, ufed for a {^Lord"} isaMafter ofafamily: Ifjefus ChriH will corns, and he wil have all our time, and flrengch^ and not only char, but rhe things than are done muft be afrer his order, and according to his mind : Our wif- dome andreafon mm\ not direftu^ in the things that wc do, though they be materially good: If fo, the Text faith, They deiiy him : that is, They profefs they will not have iuch a one to rule over them. And thus if you compare ic carefully in Lul{e 20. from 9. to 17. vcrfe, with '•Math, 21 . where the fame parable is repeated, though thofe that had the Vineyards let out to them were angry with the fcrvants , yet they ufed them not fo il, as they ufed the Son : And why did they ufe himfo ill ? It was only becaufe he was the heir, and would have ru- led over them. TVe will not (fay they ^ have this man rule over us* And therefore as Ferfons are wont to enquire what the quality and difpofition of thofe are, with whom they delire to marry, be- fore they make any treaty or Covenant with them. A wife Man or Woman firft fits down and conlider whether they can like a Man or Woman of fucha Spirit and behavior : Suppofe him to be dull, and harlh, and con- trary to her defire. So firft get the knowledg of JefusChriftas heisonethat faves, and then exa- mine your felves how you can fubmit unto him, that you may judg whether your Faith be true or not. Can you fuu^pit unto Chrift as God, having \ all things of himfclf, and having an abfoluce de* ( pendance and Q^ceiation if come unto thy heufe: But Je- fus Chrift is the great and chief Gueft. Faith ( I fay) bids welcome unto Chrift and his benefits, jfeut moft of all unto himfelf. And fo much bb now .\ -v^-^^^**- -^ ^n <■»■>,, ^ „ I 78 Paith, or IB skewing^ is ^c€'iifi^. 17^ \ led andfavedby him. The Lord having io great 1 a reafon for his patience with the world, therefore he is not to be counted flack, though he lets things go diforderly and without punifhment for many yp ars together, for what we can think. I may fay now in the like cafe alfo, that a man doth not de- lay to beleeve alwaies, becaufc he doth not be- Iceve ? For there may be fome reafon for it. There is no reafon can exempt a man from the ob- ligation unto Faith. Its no reafon at all for a man to fay that becaufe he is poor and miferable and under Gods difplcafure, or in his fins, therefore heihouldnot beleeve. But though there be no- thing to exempt a man from the obligation of the Commandment of Faith, yet there is fomthing to be done before the Ad: of Faith. That is, the heart mufi: be humbled, and have the fenfe of fin, The feiii'e of fin and of a mans need of Jefus Chri/l, doth in order of nature precede & go before this Adl:^ of rcfting on him. Heshat bath no fenfe of rm,ought to fay that it is my duty to beleeve : But he ought to fay as well , That J may beleeve, I ought to "fee my 1ms. Becaufe therefore there may be a reafon, therefore every forbearance of believing is not a denial!. Nor doth every forbearance argue unwillingnefs. Every forbearance of a duty is not a fign that a man isunwillirigtoa duty. As for example. A man makes his friend to flay at the door,or in fome out- houfe for a while befof e he goes out to h'm. Be- caufe the room wherein he would entertain him is not righted and made hanfome for him : i^nd yet he may be as glad of his coming, as of any thing in the world. And yet make him ftay till things be- ready for his entertainment. So the Soul may be defierous ofChrift, and yet noc chink himfelf fit to bb 2 receive i.. — ■ ■ ' g o Faith, or Belieiun^ is ^cei^voig Chrift j J receive him as yet ; A fault tbere mcly be in thee, and often times there is, Becaufe Jefus Chrift pro- vides for his own entertainment. As foon as ^^er the door is open, chat is, riiat the heart be fenfible of fin^ JefusL-hriftdoch come in with all his fmiii- tvire, makes it an habiration for himfelf. if a man will itay from jefus Chiift for want of one degree of Grace more than he hath, there is the fame reafon he fhould flay for all degrees of Grace : for all de-'| grecs of Grace are little enough to coriipafs him with, or to give him entertainment. But though that forbearance argues not unwilh'ng- nefs in all cafes, yet in lundry cafes it doch. as for example. When we are not fenhble, and take ^ not notice of what is done by God and Chrift tO| egj^e and draw out the Soul by Faith unto him :[ When nofpurring will make us go on: ThoughJ we beexhorred, perfwadcd, commanded, intrea-j ted, threatned, yet ftill we ftand where we were. Amazed at our mifery, but give not up our felves unto this Grace of Chrift. Or if a man be moved' and noi: proportionably unto the means that ar But Know that thy tins are the greater by delaies. As the debt grows more by non-payment : life, and life upon life. And che wound gtows the worfebynot laying on the thing that may heal. Is not the reafon then in tliee ? Nor in thy fins, nor in thy Guilt: Bucinjefus ChriH > That it cannot be. ^or the ^rida faith come, and tah^ of the tvaters of life freely ^Kq\cL 22. 17. And what can be more faid, or be mere defired? Jefus Chrill: is glad when Tinners come to him : more glad than a godly man is of the converfion of another. As in Liih^ 16. 22. 28. The Father was exceedingly vejoy- ced when chcProdigall came hoii e, when che elder Brother was troubkdat k^ T\pnu 10. S.T/a' word is uj^h thee e^'en in ihy mouth. It is nigii unto chee: that and ^ceiVmg Chrifi ^ isHelienuing. 183 _ n I I that is, Ic is throughly known. As we throughly I know the things chat arc fpoken in our Ears, the found that is not far off, butni^ar. ^ Now che word is nigh unco thee, even in thy jnouch. As a thing. that is confeffed by al, we phrafe it thus, i;i^, chat I ic h in every mans mouth. Now ic is in every mans ; mouth, and Jefus Chriflr hath made ic evident in his i word, chac whofoever believs fhall be faved. I The word is nigh chee, and in thy mouch, that if thou beleeveftchou (halt be (aved. If chere be a- ny reiifon therefore chac chougoeft noc unco Jefus Chrift, ic muft be tliy own apprehenfion and rhoughcs. For there is none in the Objeft Jefus Chrifl : nor any fuch reafon in thy felf. 1 fay all the reafonxnuft be in thy own apprehenfion. And jcherefore thy apprehenfion is fuch, becaufe indeed ; thy iiearc is unwilling to receive Jefus Chrift. Un- willingnefs formes and fhapes and frames ftrange apprehenfions in the Und^jrllanding. As where a man doth not love he wil find occations to be an* l^c^ry, andArgUi-Hencsasofcenas he chinks good to ingage andfeparatehis affed^ions from that ching or Perfon. . Efpecially Beloved where chere is a feigned rea- fon. Mark what I fay. Where there is a feigned reafon chere isunwllingnefs co receive Jefus Chrifl-; ALyon, ALyoafaichcheSluggardis inche itreec. Men fay chac they-fhallbe refufed if rhey go unco God by jefus Chrirt for Faich. Y-ou do but ima-* gine this: It's but a feigned reafOn for your un wil- lingnefs, for none ever went co him chac received a > ncgledful Anfwer. In J dm 6.37.- Thofe that come unio me J I vpiU in no wife caft out. • Men think, if chiiy fhould lay hold upon Jefus Chriftitheyfti'ouldbuc flatter rhemfelvespr^f ump- tuoufly, and their hearts would be hardned more. It. m (A I 8a Faith^ or Belienj'tng is Keceinj'm^ Chrtji j It is buc a feigned reaf on. For as fire fofcens wax, } fo would the love of God fofccn thee. The appie- henfion of the wrath of God hardens, and the ap- prehenfion of rhe love of God fofcens. As men go up and down Markets and Faires and andchink todo betcer til chty have loft their o|.- porcunicy j So do men put off, and put oft to be- leeve till the day of Grace be paft. There is as- great a hazard in delay, as in oppoUcion or refufal ; and though it feems not unto the Conicjence CQ^ bcj fo great a fin, ( but it is colored with modeft^-hu-. Imilicy, andfear ) yet notwithftanding it is as dan-j •gerous. The Lord he reads the principle from whence it comes, and he judgcth of the Act acccor->j j ding unto it. The meani* continuing and rhe heartji ; being ftirred, yet men find out lome rub or other in] 1 the way, fomthing or other to ftop and delay tlicir . jcourfe of going unro, and clohng with Jefus Chrift. j jitmay be their ruine. It is as much as if they fhould; ifay, They would have none of Jcfus Chrilt, nor of I his ialvation. I here are fome men fo foolifh that! they wil not fend for the Fhyfitian, nor take advice! til the Difeafe harh gotten them down and they are' 'overcomeby it and weakned and brought unto the' Grave. So it is a folly of Spirit that til we fee. all means perishing, we wil not come unto a period, andputanenduntothedifpute and debate of our Spirits whether we fliouldbeleeve or not. That is theXeCond thing, that Delaies do argue unwilling- •nefs in the cafes that you have heard CHAP. -■-■'' ' • - -I " I . _ and ^ceia^ing O^^^fly ^ heliefving. 185 CHAP. XXVII. A Third fort of Verfonf not ^eceiverf of Jefm Cbrifly viz. Such as do not^inje Jefm Chrift that place in their heart v&hich is fitting for him. There are* I. Some that entertain Jefm Chrifi only in their ^ancy. Of thefe there are two forts. I. Such as entertain Jefm Chrifl only under the Metaphors and ^eprefentations by which the Scriptures fet him forth. 2. Such 04 entertain him only at a chief point or T>oUrine in Religion. I I. Some that entertain Jefm Chriji only in their ^nderfiandings and ^eafonings. 111. Some that do indeed entertain him in their affeUionr^ but not fuitahle to his excellency. The Conclu- fwn. THirdly : Letmefpeakcoathird, thac do re- [ ceive.andbcleeve prefently- They have*no- f \ultin rheir apprefieHfion of Chrift, nor any fault :,i their pncs offand delates, buc they do not^ive Je^ fus Chrift that place in their hearts that is fitting for hini. I fay they give not Jefus Chrift chat place in their hearts that is fitting for him. What grea- ter unwillingnefsalmoft can one fhevr to entertain one, than to lodg him in fome mean room, or in fomc out-houfe, or with fome bafe and vile com- pany, which he knows his Soul abhors ? To lay a noble man among the Swine ? Or to lay a man than ^ is of tender fenie where there are moft noifome fmels > What greater proof of unwillingnefs caa there be to take one into an houfe, than fuch an entertainment > 2 Cor. i. 6. Wc befeech you re- ec • ceinje ^s\ I 8(5 Faith ^ (irBeitenjin^isreceia^in^ChriJl; j cei'venottbeQraceof Qod in nmn. He intimates! thereby chat there is a vain, that is a flight and neg- I le(^fbil receiving and entertaining of the Grace of/ God by Chnft. When Chiift was born, there was i no room for him in the Inne, but in the Stable, and ' he was cradled in a Manger. And fo now do men deal with Jefus Chrilt in receiving him by belee- ving. There is a kini of beleeving which is a re- ceiving after thit fort. As for example. He is only taken into feme mens mouths : Men fpeakmuch of him, but their hearts are far from him, though they draw near to him with their lips. Some men have Jefus Chrifl only in their Fancies andfpeculations, only in their outward room and Fancy. TheFancy isunto the Soul as the Porch or outward Court is unto the Houfe : Or it is as a Shop or a Ware-houfe wherein Conimodities are fee forth, that fo chat thofe that pafs by may be taken and allured by them. This is the nature of the Fancy of a man : Now lefus Chrift is admitted no further with many men. That is. The Know- ledg which they have by Chrift is only by the Meta- I phors and borrowed fpeeches which the Scripcure ufeth,andby whichhe is refembled and fet forth in the Scripture. Their knowledg of him, is not proper bat Metaphor icall and figurative. For rhe better helping you in this, you muft know chat there are two forts of fanciful Faiths ( if I may ufe that cxpreffion ) two forts of people that re- ceive lefus Chrift only fo far. i. Such as hearing or reading in the Scripture that lefus Chrift is Compa- red to a Rock, and Bread, and Water of life, and unto a Tree of life, and fet out as one that ftands at the door or Gate of Heaven taking and enter- ..taift'mg thofe xhat are received unto Glory. ^1 The ': ' and Keceivin^ ChriU^ is Belie^ving. i g 7 The Scripture fetcing ouc Heaven as a City : and feilowfhip vrich God as a Feaft where lefus Chrift comes as the Mailer of if, to fee his Guefls chat they be welcome, and want nothing but every way entertained according co ch:^ State and Fulnels and Pviches of his Houfe : Suchreadingthat the Scrip- ture fees out Heaven as a Houfe, and as a Paradice for pleafute, and asa Kingdonie, that hath al kind of conc-entment in it and lives indepently : they hereupon begin to chink of the flare of beleeving^as a participation of fuch kind of things, and their af- fections are taken n uch with them. And now mens apprehenfion of a flate of Grace and happinefs, it is formedupof thefe : They contemplateof happi- nefs under thefe refemblances. This is that which the Scripture cals the form of Knowledg. The form ofKnowledg. As in a Map or Globe ai che king- doms and places of che World are puc, that in one view they may be beheld. So men have in their minds, and head and thoughts what the Scripture hath thus fee forth Heaven and Chrifl by, aud fur- ther then chac their underllanding goes not. ^ Of this fort of fanciful kind of Faith, are R.apcures wherein men have vifions, and think they fee glo- rious fights both walking and fleeping, and thac they hear voices fpeaking unco chem, and comfor- ting, and calling them co chac Glory and Ho- nor which chey imagine che flare of Grace makes chem Sharers injimagining chemfelves co be as upon thrones, and m Gardens, and in che midft of pleafures and creafures. Thefe are che meaneft and lowell fore of this kind, for thofe thac have buc liccle or no underftanding and infighc inco the things of God, have thefe vifions and receptions in their minds and apprehenfions moft frequently. Ignoranc Perfons they know not che mind of God. cc ^ And i I 188 Faith, or ^eke/e/, or Joflma^ or any other worthy that have done fome noble Adits: Thac is, as he who is the fubjed: about whom all thac is conver fane. And the Perfon by whom al thofe great things have bin done. And this knowledg of Jefus Chrift is that which the Apofte calleth a foundnefs in the Faith, TitW5 2. 2. when as men err noc from, and make noc fliip-wrack,of Faith and a good Con- fcience,orFaichefpecially. i Tim. i. ip. From this knowledg a man may befo eftabli/hed in the profeflion of Jefus Chrifl: as that he may be able to inflruft others, toanfwerall arguments that Hall be brought againil this profeflion, and to endure much even as the Heathen Philofophers thatwould rather die the cruelleft death, than leave any one principle of their learning and profeffion which they had received. So a man may fee fo great a reafonfor the things of Jefus Chrifl:, thac a man fhal not dare CO part with the leafl: beam of it for the greatefl: afEid^ions in the world, or to avoid the \ greatefl: m.ifery. But yet notwithftanding all this a man may be without faving Faith. It may be 1 thus received into a mans mind and judgment, and yccj mll^cei^ing Chrifly is ^elefving. j p ^ yet not be a faith thacwil bring him life and Saiva cion atthelaft. Forlbefecch youconfidcric. A man may thus receive Jefus Chrift by a common gift of che fpirit, though he harh no Grace. In ^om. 2. 20. The Apoftle faith of thofe that were not Jews in theCircumcifion of the heart, that they had a forme of knowlcdg and did delight chem- felves in the Law, compared wichche laft verfe. And if you look into <2\om. 6. 17. Youihal find that betides the forme of Doftrine, unco a mams Salvation there is required his being delivered up unto itc But ( faith he )you have obeyed from the heart the forme of Dodirine, whereunto you were delivered. DELIVERED, that is, caft in the ihape, and conformed unto it, io as that what you know, hath authority and power over you. As we fay a man is delivered into fach a ones hand, when he is made fure of, fo as he cannot efcape, A man mult through obedience come under the power of thac which he knows, or his knowledg is not f aving. Yea notwithftanding al this kind of knowkdg,and this Judgment, and underftanding of Jefus Chrift, a man may have no affedtion nor loveUQto him at al. In John 2. 2$. Itisfaidtbat many beleeved upon Chrift, but yet he faith, they were fuch as he did not dare to truft himfelf with al. That is^ they would have betrayed him, and for their own ad- vantage would have put him into the hands of his enemies. 2 Tim* 3. 5. TheybaweaformofQod' linefiy hut deny the power thereof in their li'ves* That , is, a man may know much, andknow itexaftly, and yet the things known have no power to order, their affeftionor to fubdue their corruption. Or as fome do underftand the [Power ] in opp t That even as the Devils they do beleevc ( the Text faith in y^m. 2. 19. ) but they do it, becaufe rhey have experience that the things which God hath fpoken come to pafs ( as I have fhewcd here- tofore ) They are convinced by what they have feen and found, that what they yet fee not accom- plifhed, fhal be in Gods own time. And fo there is a Faith alfo among men, even concerning the things of the Gofpel, which is contrary unto their lufts : But yet its not grounded upon any thing, but meerly upon demonftration, upon deraonflration ( I fay ) or experience, and therefore it doth aot fave. There are fome therfore that receive Jefus Chrift only into their reafon. Into their reafon only. If have made thefe feverall fteps in the laying open of this truth, becaufe that the Devil doth with the Souls of men, even as Warriers do when chey have a place to hold out againft an enemy. If fo be that they cannot keep one Wal, or one part of the j Fort, they get to another, and there ftrengthen' themfelves : They would keep them out of al. if the Devil can keep Chiift out of the fancies of men,! he wil. If he cannot ftay him there, by reafon of) the means that they live under, then be ftaies him in Reafon, and labors to fet him up there: You fhal know what I mean by it by and by. I A man may receive Jefus Chrift into his rea- fon, and yec have no good wil to him. ( which is I the Poiuc that I have in hand ) For as the Eye be- \ H\ and (I^ceia;ing Chrijt is Belicrving 197 ine openedTTannotbuc feTche^light, fo nckher can Che ifnderftandingbut cake nocice of che cruth char is propounded unco k. The Will hach a power when che Ob>ei^ is before ic co rcfufe ic, Buc the uH- djrftanding hach no fuch pcwer.But when as a thing is propounded, ic cannot buc obferve ic. A man may noc like, nor own whac i? propounded, buc he can- | noc buc take notice ofir. And therefore ("by che | way ) when we fay chac men will noc know, or men are wilfully ignorant. The meaning is this. They wil noc be known to kaow> or do wilfully keep chemfelves from refleding upon the confide- racionof what chey do know : for when che light comes, Ic cannot (1 fay ) buc be received. Ther- fore for the better opening of a mans receiving Je- fus Chrill into his reafon. Know, that there is a difference between Reafon, and Reafoning. In che Lacine tongue, they have two words that do aptly cxprefs ic. ^atio and ^atioriH operatto. Ic is chac reafoning which God hach given unco men, co joyn truths together, which are of one fort, and belongs unco one fubjeft. And CO colled: and gather the confequences which'fol- jlow thereon. This is reafoning. And by this many men come to be great difpucers, and conten- ders (as you fhal hear by and by) for rhac Faith of Chrift which they have noc dwelling in their hearts. As in the time of che Law, The Jews had fome who kept their Genealogies, who retained the knowledg of every Tribe, the heads of che fa-[ milies, and che kindred, and che alliances which I I every one had CO anorher by macches and mariia-^ j ges. So God hach given j^ Reafoning] in the foul I this office. To keep che foundation, or principall iheadsof rruchs and co keep alfo in memory che ■confequences, which are as it were the kindrt^d of 1 . thofc ■m if i: ^8 ^^ith^^r^elieryinx is ^cei^v^n^O^ftT^ thofefoundaJ^ion truths" rhe marrl^^^^TwhiciT^ common head hath with another, the influences which one point hath into another. This .Reafo- ning ads nothing unro truth, bur doth arife from the nature of truth it felf, and is in the thing, in the truth, whether or no that it be reached by us or not As for example. We reafon thus. If God made the World then the World was not ecernail. Whether wei colled: this or not, yet in this faying, tzc^. That God made the World. This, i^ic^. that it is not eternal is comprifed* And this kind of Reafoning, the I Scripture makes ule of in the matters of Faith. \%pm, 3. 28. Therefore we conclude chat a man is not jufliiied by the works of the Law, but by Fa'thin JefusChrift. Andin ^latth. 22. 32. Up- on this Jefus Chrift proves the refurreftion of the bodies of men, i;i«^, God hath faid j That he wiU be the Qod of AbrsihcLmyUai3.C3 and Jacob, and of thofe that beleeve upon him* If he hathfaid^C^^kh Chr irt: j j that he will be their Qad^ then by confequence. They |do liyeunto him, and their bodies alio ftall live together with their Spirits. And becaufe the Scrip- ture niaketh fuch ule of thefe confequence?, or this kind of reafonmg, therefore we are commanded to attend unro reading, becaufe the words of fcrip- ture are means whereby things comes thus into our Underilanding. And we are required to Search the Scriptures, y^^w 9. 19. which is a Metaphor taken from Hunters, whether they be Beafls, or Men : They look after the foot fteps of their Game. As, by inflindtcheDogtaketh thefent here and there, and follows the Game, as if it were following the conclufion. So the mind of a man puts things to-/ gcther, and muft put the things together that are in the Scripture, and conclude from them. ' But and ^ceiving thrifts is Beliea;tng. i pp Butbeddes chisReafoning, There is alfo Rea- fon. which is the principles and notions of things that are in us by nature. And thefe are of two forts. Some are common and univerfally true. True ia every Matter or Science. As for example. That the rule is before, and more known, than that whichisruledby it. That the Caufe is more ex- cellent than the Effe^. That the means ( fo far as in is a means ) is lefs excellent than the end. Thefe and divers others are true, not only in humane Sci- ences, but in matters of Faith. As for example. It is as true, that the fcripture, becaufe it is a rule, is before mens Faith, and before the Church, and of greater authority and efficacy. Even as it is true, that the Laws of men arc in order of nature before any thing can be done lawfully, or to have a re- ward or acceptation. And fo again. The Body of Chrift, though it be in Heaven and ful of Glory, yet notwithltanding is as well contained there, and not every where> as it was ia one place, and iiot in another when it was upon the earth. Now be^des thofe generailanduniverfal prmci- j pies of reafcn, there are in us by nature particular principles or notions which do belong unco parti- cular fubjefts. As, Unto the nature of God : and unco Righteoufnefs, and unto juftice : Whether that righteoufnefs be perfonall, and morail, or whether it be political, or that which a man is to cxercifeas a ludg towards others. There are no- tions which are proper unco the beings and kinds of i Creatures. Now to draw unto the thing that I would fpeak unto in divers cafes. BothReafon Screafoningmay argue an unwilling- nefs to receive Icfus Chrift, andfo a wanc^f true Faith* 1 i6 aoo Faith y or mlte^mg ts Recet^vm^ Lf^rtjt j \ faith. The receiving Jefus Chrift may be fuch both into reafon, and into reafoning as argues a man not i CO beleeve upon Chrift unto the Salvation of his | foul. Give me but leave to inftance but in fome of chefe as brcifly as I can. As I r ' I. Whennomoreis beleeved concerning God and Jefus Chrift, ( Mark it) when we beleeve no more of God and Jefus Chrift then can be deduced out of the principles of the knowledgof God,which are in us by nature. Take the principles of ^he knowledgof God which are inusby nature, and that not only in nature fallen and corrupted, but in perfed: and innocent nature. The reftimony which God gives us of himfelf through Jefus Chrift ( I fay that which God hath revealed Chrift muft do for us or elfe we cannot be faved ) cannot be deduced from rhofe principles and from that reafon, hy any underftanding whatfoever. Mark it. What God doth do in and by Jefus Chrift may be reduced unto that which God hath made known of himfelf, and is his nature : There is no inconfiftenq?' between them. Yea, the nature of God becomes a pawn and lecurity for the making of that good. But out of the nature of God, thefe things cannot be dedu- ced- As for example. There i« no inconfiftency between Gods holinefs, and his giving his Son for us. There is no inconfi- ftency between his Juftice to puaifh fin, and his pardoning of fm, as he doth it : They may wel ftand together. But the moft perfeft and abfolutc underftanding of the Juftice, or of the holinefs of God, or of the mercy of God, cannot teach a man that God wil pardon, or that God wil give Jefus Chrift for him : But that a m.an muft have know- ledg of from another relation. And that which ^^^^ C I ] and Keceiying ChriH^ is Beliea^ing. 2 o 1 CI fuppofe ) doth make this as clecre as can be, is this j That the things which do belong unto our Sal- vation by Jefus Chrift, area(^s of Gods meer wil and pleafure : Such unto which his nature of it fe^f, ads not, but becauie he of his ov/n plea- fure wil fo do. And therefore you fhal find that, the G of pel is fa id to be hid from the Angels, even the Angels that are in heaven, til it be revealed though that they have as perfed: knowledg of God f as Creatures can have. Xhey fee the face of my| father continually, faith our Lord Jefus ChriiK The Angels that are in heaven, know the love of God, and they know the mercy of God, and they j know the power ofGod : Thefe arc the fubjeds of | their meditation : They are indued with fuch un- | derftandings, chacthey cangoas far, and pierce as | deeply into them, as can be by creatures ; And yec notwichftanding, that God fhould pardon and for- give a fmner by jcfus Chrift, chat they coirld not find out. And therefore the Apoflle faith in i Tet. I. 12. 15. That the Angels did Hoop down : As a man lays his eare where he can hardly heare. ,So the Angels did floop down. It was as much as rhey could do when God did reveal the Gofpel to ap- prehend or take notice of it. So you know that the fcripture faith, that the things of Jefus Chrift) they are( in^^^t/^ 16. 17. ') Hot revealed hyflejh and bloody hut by my father which is in H^aveUi faith Chrift. Were the matters of our Salvation the ne- ceffary efFeds of ^ods attributes, and his nature, then the things of our Sahrarion might be found cue by thofe that know and ftudy that nature and thofe Attributes. But that you fee they cannot. The Prophets in i fPet. i. i<2. That prophefied con- cerning Chrifl by an immediate revelation: yet were faint to have another revelation to know the cir- cuiiiflance of the time when the things whereof ! ee they I 11 I I i (they fpake fhould be fulfilled and come to pafs. Take the divine nature of Chrift as he is the fccond perlon, of the fame fubltance with the father. And though you fhould know that fully, though you had a perfeft underflanding of it, yec cou(d you not know by it, what the heart of Chrifl: is to- wards you as a Mediator. And the reafon is,becaufe as what the father doth, he doth do voluntarily, and not from a neceffity of nature : So what Jefus Chrift the fon doth;, he doth out of a voluntary compad: and covenant made with the Father. And therefore he faith, becomes to do his wil. Heb. 10. p. And QaL i. 4. ^e gave bimfelf accor- ding unto the wil ofC^od and hit father, N ow mark it. Iffo be that perfed: nature, Man in innocency cannot underftand by the nature of God what are the things which do belong unto Salvation by Jefus Chrift ; Jf fo be that a man muft beleeve more un- to Salvation, then a perfed: underftandmg ( which the Angels have, if it were in man ) can reveal unto him. Then muft he beleeve more then thQ corrupt and depraved mind of man can teach him. Beloved^let me draw it down to a little more nar- row compafs that may fit your praftife. The things which God hath revealed are not ex- amined and judged by what is effential unto the na- ture of God.It is lawful to examin what is the effen- tial nature of ^od. Itis lawtulto look into what Qod wil do, that we may fee his attributes ihining forth in rhem: But to examin the truth of what he hath promifed, by that which is effentialandnatu- r;ilunto(jod,isfor a man to go out of the way that is faving, 1 wil make it plain to ycu. You fhalfee many a poor foul, when he hearci | 1 in -.-js,"- ; r -J^-^ — — M — ,, ,J^^ and ^cei^vlng Qhrijl^ is believing. 203 in the Miniftry of the word cleerly affsrced chat God wil forgive and pardon fin: Ihe promifes of life and Salvation are wich fuch evidence and lighc held forth, as that there is no exception canbe giadeagainftthem, Yec nocwirhftanding youfhal find a poor foul keeping off from refting by faith in thenijbecaufe he faith God is Juft and of a holy na- ture. And what communion can there be between fuch a one as he is, and God ? Mark it. Becaufe chat the nature of God doth not of it fe If give forth or promifefomuch as the Gofpel doth;,^therefore the Gofpel is called in queftion by them. Who e- ver thou art when thou heareft the promife of God in Chrift and by Chrift, that ob;edteth that God is juft, and the avenger of fuch a one as I am, Unlefs this be thy end, viz. To learne how the Juftice of God is preferved entire notwichftanding he palTerh thee by, unlefs it be I fay to this end, Thou dofl lay aftumbling block before thy felf in the way of faith and beleeving : Yea thou dofl difcover an un- willingnefs to beleeve upon Jefus Chrift. Thou thinkeftGcd is unwilling to fhew thee grace and mercy, becaufe thou thinkeft he wil do no more then he muft needs do by the necefTity of his own , nature. We count that man to be exceeding hard, who wil give no more then he is; conftrainedto do by law. So thou doft with God. Thou counteft him to do no more then by law, if thou counteft that he wil do nothing but what his nature doth hold forth : if thou makeft his nature to be the rule^ and not his promife. His nature doth give fecuriry that i hat which he hath promifed fhal be performed, and that he wil do what he hath promifed. How hard is that man to beleeve, that wil beleeve no more then he is for- ced unto?that wil beleeve no report unlefs he heares ee 2 ir I i 2^^rFaith^^ ^ receiry'tng Cbrifi; j ic with his own eares, and fees ic with his own eyes: ^ Andfodoft chou, when thou wile not reft in che promife of God. Ic is true indeed. That men may be brought to belpeve, we tea an upper room, the beft of your Underftanding and \ Will : He wil not be thruft into a room with Satan and with your lufts, and with dirr : he will not be corrival with them in one houfe. in a word beloved. If there be any Perfon that you have a refpe^t unto, if there beany good thing chat you have a refped: unto, andlubjed:it not vinto him : If there be any evill that you have refpeft unto, he wil not have refpeftunto you. That is certain. That Faich ftial go for nothing chat c.n lay hold upon Jefus Chrift^andyet fcrable after the world,andthis and that luft, as if there were good and happinefs to be found in it. This particular point rhac i am upon, To bcleeve upon convid:ion, hath fome difficulty in ic, and I would fain make it plain to you, it is nocyour conviction chat is che reafon that your Faith is good ( Mark ic > But ic is a lign your Faich is not good, when you wil beleeve nothing but v/hacyouhave conviftions of,fromche things [hem- ic Ives. For the Spirit of God working in an unrc- ] gen&rate man, he doth but improve things that are ! common : His nature is not changed, and therefore ; uferhbuc ordinary and humane abiilciesco che beft | I improvement of them. but > andKeceiyingChriH^uBelie^xung. qqq But all chat I aim at in all chat I have iWd^ is on* i ly but this . That in this great matter of your I Faith, you would look warily to your felves that! you be n®t deceived. Take heed leafl when you chpk you have received Chri^ into your hearer, you have indeed carried him only into the outward room thereof5and not given him the chief place. xMa- ny men can difputefor Chrift, and many men rhcy are flout, andof courage in the Doftrine ofChriit, andyet notwithftanding for all this chey have not the faving Faith of him. Many men there are chat that becaufe they think to compound all different ces, and to make a way eafie to their beleevixig by proceeding in the matters of Faith by the wiidome ofme», they lote their own Souls. Hqw many men are there that judg themselves, that becaule they camiot fo mourn for fiji, as they mourn for Children, and they cannot be lo carried after Chrift, as they are after the things they love here : Be it Husband, or Wife, or che like, therefore they think they have no love at all. This is only to make the things of the Gofpel fubjedt to the La.ws and principles of reafon. It's true indeed, there is greater reafon why you fhould love God mcxe than Children, And the leaft difcovery of him, more than comfort : That is, rher^iii^ground why you fhould do fo : Yet know that your love is not judged by what you do to chcfe things which are altogether in your power, But by what carriage and afliedion you bear unco God, who iscontrary unto you by nature, buc yet brought near by Jelizs Chrift. And it is i greace.r rnactSer to a poor Soul ( though it cannot do what*it ihould do) to love God a little, when ic hath fo much coLrupcion co plead with him for to get his heart from God, than It is for a man to love a Child [o affedtionacely, *wlfcn' there is nothing in his heart to draw him from *'^ ' ff ir. iili, i i I 'tm vm :"P| -« -I .;■. 1 aio Faith, orBelie^in^isKecei^ingChri/i^ifrc. \ 7]^, CEfa- 55. Sairh God. ^ly thoughts are not ail your thoughts^ nor my vpaies of your voam, Thef waiesofnitnare, that if chey do good,, they fhall receive good: But Gods way is, to juftiiic the un-: godly, andto do goodaga^nfteviU. You think iairhhe, that if you buy you muil have money, or moneys worth, But know (faith God ) that my bargains are not driven on as yours are. For know. If you have no niony, you fhall buy, that is:> have asgoodatitle:> as if you had money. or monies worth. This is a riddle, That a man; may buy without money, or monies worth, where-^ as all kind of bargauiings are by one of them. Buc> Gods waies are not as your waies. It is enough for you that you have the word of God : He knows what is beft for his own Glory, Therefore take his word. And do nor. judg of things according to what thy reaf on doth fuggeft, and fquare not thy hopes according to thy lenfe, and as thy wifdome 1 direfts, for he knows what is the beft way to cx- Iprefs his mercy by. F I K I S, i 1 m ^hta^m 1. * rv^ A Short and Excellent E u. xet— ^ COVETOUSNESS, WJj i-r:i; Luke, 12. 15. jindhefaiiuntothitn, Take heed andbe^ mare of Coyetoufnefs. TT TTT CHAP. I. The occafion andfcope oftbd words. The 1} purine. The tvords in the Text [Take heed and Be- ware] ^loffed upon* Cavetoufnep confidered morej^enerally in three Particular f, Wore flri- ttlyandfpecially andfo it is a desire of having much arifingfromanuncontentedneff ppitb a mansprefentconditieny though he voould not by any other then lawful meanes mend or better it. *♦•♦♦♦ N the 13. verfeof this Chapter;, One that ♦ T * was with Chrift defired him to appeare 41. * 4, an Arbitrator in a difference between ♦♦:*#* Wm and his Brother. Rafter fpeah^ to I my brother that he dinjide the Inheritance with me. Chrift anfivers him with Indignarionac f fi ^, the ^l£ \ i '.W 1 / / •*•(*- QI2 jtjhort and excellent , the 14. verf. ^lan voho made ?/;e a Judg^ or a di- \ ^ n)idir over yoH, As if he fhould have faid, I have ! no corivmffion : Its not my errand or end in conung into the world to take up differences between men and men, but between men and God : Nor anj I ro help men to their right and inheritances here but unco an inheritance among the Saints. And iecondly his advice to them is rather to take care for death and another world, Then for an inheri- tance. Tah^heeddndbeixfardofCovetaufnpff* For: yourlifdy that is, the end of the life and the com- fort of your life confifts not in having much *, And to that end he tells them a parable of a rich man that laid up much, and made accompt to live qui- J ! etly and comfortably upon what he had got, buc j hediedfuddenly : he died like a fool, and peri-. ftied from the prefence of che Lord. For in verf. j 21. Its faid That he vpoi not rich toward f Qod. What need you ( faith our Lord ) take care tor much, when you have not much time to live? Take care for death, and for eternity, elfe after al your la- bor^, you Aial meet with nothing but eternal mifery. 1 fay the words of the Text are an anfwer to a harmlefs motion C ^s one would think ) made by one that was a follower of him. His motion was that Chrift would do him right, and arbitrate the buliners of difference between him and his brother about that eflate which belonged to him by Inheri- taiicc. As Chr ill refuCeth the office in the 14. verf. for he came into the world to help mens Souls,and I not to be a Judg^ fo he therefore warns him of co- vetoufneis which would bring forth bitternefs in the latter end, which would make him die like a fool, and hinder him from being rich towards 1' God. Al a mans riches cannot preferve his life one day, and ifhe be not rich in God, he fiial die like a fool for eves andperifii* The 7reatife ef CoVetoufnef. QI u The Point chat I Ihall infifl upon is this^ Do6l. That it's the Duty of all men as ,^ they wBuld attain to eternal life, to tike heed and beware of Qoyetoufnef?. Its the duty of alii for upon one mans fpea- kingunto Ghrift about his inheritance, he turns his jfpecchuntoalU ^e fatd unto tbem. That ij, to al the Company at the thirteenth verfe. And it is a duty as they would attain to eternal life: for to that end Jefus Chrifl bids them to beware of Cove- toulnefs that they might not die as a Fool doth, as you have ic in verfe, ao. Mens inordinate defires after the lawful things of thislife,do as well hinder them from Heaven, asifchey were finfuU things, or grol^ prophanefs, for in the following verfes of this Chapter, you have the Anatomizing of a man that was dead and gone to Hell, for he died like a Fool : And ic ikeweth the Difeafe and Caufe of the mifery,he was found not co live in any grofs fip,buc only in chis, chac h6 was Covecous. And becaufe \ che HEED, cannot be coo greac, chercfore he ufech j two words, Tal^ebeed, and bevparey a double Cau- ftion, becaufe there is a great and double dan- ger, orasicisin the Greek, See, or watch co it, and guafdyour felves againffc It. A limilicud^-ekiier taken ( as fome do conceive ) from mens going into -the fields to gather wholfoivje Herbs, who are very careful! leaft they fhou Id gather any thing coat is i poyfonous: And when they have made a conf^^dion they fet ic up carefully leaft any poyfon fhould too^e into it/ The poyfon of al a mans Spirit 8c Da- tie$, is Covccoufnefs, And therefore iie bids them to beware of it. Orelfeits taken from Souldiers (for (^ for one of the words (pv\oif thing that may begotten by ic. There- fore the Apoftle faith, in i Tim, 6. 8. ^.a^omg ^ood and payment thcyflyould hj then voith contented As if he fhouldhavefaid,Covetoufnefs lyes ^s n,uch in the defire of Cloathes, and meat, as ofmony. I call it a defire. For fo the Scripture doth ia I John 2, i6. When it fpeaks of the lull of thl-vj eye . But every luft or dciire after riches is not | unlawful, or Covet oufnefs (becaufe riches is made i by Godro be ofufe, andtobemftruments to many i good and pious ufes ) but only that luft or dehre ! which arifech from difcontent or from unconren tednefs rather. Therefore iris that the fcripture i when ever it ipeaks of Coveroufnefs doth joy n dif- contencednefs with it. And that unconrenteda.-ii may be difcoverSd as wel by a mans a(!tion53as any thing clfe. For as when a man goes abouu.todp thofe things which cannot be done by any ordinary g g 2^ power I &i rm 'I no jJJjort djid excellent ^ov/er^ he tempts God, and cals in Satan to come to his allillance : So when a man doth thofc things which are incompatible with his ftate^ he doth in that detire more than God hath given hira at the piefenr. There is as well a prayer in actions^ as (n defircs or any other way. A man may be faid to have a defire after much or abundance two wsies. Either whenas he delires to have than which he hach not, and in that refpe<^ ic may be a poor mans ; iin^ as well as die rich. | Or elfe when a man is content with that which ; he hath, but is not willing to lay it forth as God af- figns him : when he would have that whereof he is polleffed, and not pare with it, or lay ic out to fuch ules wliichGod afligns him. Mark it: Though a man counts he hach enough and defires no more, yec if he be not willing to part with that which he hach, when God commands him, he is Covetous. In ^cclef* 6. 2. faith he, Iba^efeenibir evill under the Sun that Qodbath given to a man riches jtb at he wants nothing, and yet Qodgives himnotpotver to eat there- of. This is an evil Difeafe. You may be covetous be-| caufe you wil not give forth of chat which you have, i In I Ti/«.6. 175T 8. The Apoftle oppofech unto Cove- toufnefs Diftribmion unco thole chat are in neceffi- ty : He exhorts rich men that they would(as a fruit of their trufting in the Lord) ^i ready to difhri- hute. When men are not ready, they are then the Servants of the World, becaufe they have not a heart to difpofe of the world, but are difpofed and ordered by it. And kc me cake in chat which I faid in the gene- ral explication of it, and that is this, That it is a de- fire arifmg frqmuncontenc, or difconceac, though that a man may by Lawful means get more. That a man may be covetous in the ufe of lawful means to iBcrcafc increafe his Eilace , or chough he do buc defire by- lawful means to have his Eftace increafed : A man may be covetous in the ufe of a lawful! Calling, It i is true indeed that Covecoufnefs is in the- Scripture Uec forth by the unlawful! waies that men take to ,£ec riches : So the Apoftle faith concerning the /Miniftersim Tit. i. it. that did preach ftrange [ things for filthy lucre'^s fake. And as it's faid, they Ido make haft to be rick, and they do opprefs their j Brethren, and defraud: Buc prelching flrange things and oppreffton, and defrauding are rather efFeas, than formal Afts of Covetoufnefs. Cove- coufnefs may bring forae men to thofe Afts, but a man may be covetous that ufeth none of them *, And theRealonis apparent, becaufc Covetoufnefs lies in a difcontentednefs, dif-fatisfa^ion, or unconien- tedncfs of mind with Gods portion, or taking care for a man. I wil not hold you longer here, becaufe I ihallfpcakin the ufe of cryal and Examination of the nature of Covetoufnefs, 2ia Af^ort and excellent } *'|?«4?'i^'$'#«>'«S?i^li^')^'3??4r*'J4?'l'****4? CHAP. II. if I Two ^eafonr of the DcUrine* I. The Qreatnefl, 11. TheT)angeroufnefiofthis[iyu TbeQreatnefi in fi^ve things* i. Jl j^irituall fin. 2. O'ver- jpreading the what man, 3. DireBly oppofite to the common nature of Qodlhiefi and n\eligion, 4. The Womb cuid Seed of all fin, the ^oot and Caufe^ 1/4 Sin may he the Caufe of Sin four ppaies. cAs it h the Caufe ofQodf tvithdrawing. \As omfin inclines the heart to another. Jlr it adminifiers matter to another, ^s his a Parent and %uler o'ver other fins. 5« The finfuineji of this fin appears in the ba^enefi of it. SEcondly : And therefore in the fecond place, Contider the Reaions why you ought to take heed and beware of Covet oufnefs. In ^phef. 5. 3. faith.chc Apoftle Let not Co'vetoufnefi be once named among you as becometh Saints.Let it not be once named. That IS, Let it be unknown, unpraftifed, as thofe things we are mofl ignorant of;, which we know not the name of. Let it be abominable to you, for you know chey would not have the name of thofe things in their mouths, which were an abomination, in*?/^Li6. ver. 4. And unlets it be thus, faith he, you carry not your lelves as becomes Religion. In HeK 13.5. faith he. Let your Converfati on be with- out Co^-etou^neli. [ Covetoufnefi'] your whol courfe of life, in every turning and winding of it, whether you be young or old., whether you be fingle ob mar- ried perfons: In whatever cafe you be, faith he, yet be not covetous. They were in troubles, yet [ it' ML Treati/e of CoVetoufmfs . 22 3 m kwasagreac dealworfe for chem to be in Cove- roufnefs, chanro be in wants. They v/anted all things, for they were fcarceredup and down like Chaff before the Wind, but yet then God would noc allow them to be difcontented with their Eftate a?id Condition, but to count that bcft wherein they were. The word is well tranflated, ^e without Co^etoufnej^. Butit fignifies:, be without the love of Money or Silver. And I fay it's well tranOa- ted, be without Co'vetoufneJJ, beciufe as money doth anfwcrunto all things, fo in the forbidding of a man to defire Money, he forbids him to defirea- ny thing which God hath not yet given him: But be content with that which you have. They might fay that that which they have is lefs than nothing, it's wotfe than nothing, yet be contented : We live among a People whofe Language we know not; we have loft the Eftate to which we are born j yet be contented : We know noc when it wil be other- wife, yet be contented : That which is your prefenc ftate you muft make the bcft of, but be not unfatif- fied. And there is a great deal of reafon for this, if you coniider thefe Reafons. I. The greatnefs of chefm, IT. Or the danger of the fm, or the hardnefs to avoid it, and to be cured of ir. I. Ifyouconfider the greatnefsof thQ iin of Co- vetoufnefs. 1 fhal inftance in five things. PvEASON I. Firft: Itisafpirituallfin. Afpirituall fin (as ithe Schools exprelleit) isfuchas may be com- Imittcd, though. there be no external or outward ^ ^ ' • • Aft: i 1 ■i.):i ill!' 224- jifhort and excellent Aft done. It's fuch a fin as a man may commie, chough he breaks not forth into any excernall A<^, I or kdi of iiijuftice. It's a heart liii, thac is bred and ^ born there. In ^ath, 15. 19. ^rom the heart comef Covetoufnefi. It's a iinchac is purely fpiricuall, a^s ; Unbelief is, fork liei in an inordinaLenefs of affe-i dion or Luft. As the tins of the Devils are Spiri- tuall Wicl^dnefi, They arc fet forth by this in ^fk 6. 1%. That they are fpirituall wickednsfs, becaufe they do.aot only ariie from Malice againft God, from an inward oppoiicion to his Holincfs and Glo- ry, but becaufe they are £0 done by th^mfelves, as the Afts only of the under/landing and the Wil are , in us. There niay be an AGc of the Underftanding^' and au Adt of the Will (fuppofeit be an abhor- j 1 rence or hatred of God ) and yet there not be au '.ill word fpoken, or a grofs outward fin committed : ; So fuch a tin is Covetouinefs ^ This fets forth the fmfulnefs of Covet oufnefs, that it's a fpiricuall wickednefs, It's bred in the Heart, it comes from thence, and it lives there. The raor^ there is of the heart in a fm, the greater the fm is : I fay the more fmfulnefs there is in any fm,the more there is of the heart in it. Therefore Originall Corruption is greater than aftuall fins : Now Covetoufncfs doth ' take up the heart. As I fhall fliew you more by and by. '^ I REASON II. Secondly! The greatnefs of this fin appears in this, that it is a fin that doth over-fpreadthe whol man : It refls not in any one part or faculty of the j Soul, but it doth over-fpread the whole, and that not only by infufion, but by formall in- dwelling, i That is, Not only doth it work upon the Soul, but t ( the whol Soul is thcfeacof it. And therefore you » ■ • fhali Treatife of CoVetoufneJf, 22^ f fhallfomcimesfiiidthacirisdercribedby the mind, thac ic over-fpreads chs underilanding. And c here- fore in (Phillip' 3. 19. nhey ape faid co mind Earth- ly things. And ionicimes by the V/il, that ic over- fpreads the v/iljin I y^/;.^.i5.Menareiaidfoco love cHe World, as that they cannot love God himlelf. If any man low ,^. li<[7-\m^^ifdman ' . * h h '' loqjes^ 4 Wk'uAmf'i 1^ 2i6 jfjhortand excellent \ loQjei the World, the lonje of t be father is not in him. ' IcmigUc have been truly laid, rhacifaman love a- ny Tin, he loves not God, but God v^^ill rather puc chat note upon the love of rhe World;, rather than ' upon any thing. The Character is put upon Cov^- cout'nefs, becaufe its the mofl dianietrically oppo- lite unto Grace of any fin. To open this a little. Thofe things difF<^H' moft, which differ in kind. As there is therefore an inlinice and unconceivable dif- ferenc:: ( and one that cannot be made up ) be- tween God and us^ becaufe he is of hiniielf^ and we are Creatures. 11"*$ impofTibie rhad ever we Ihould come to be Gods^ or God to become what we are, becaufe God and we arc not of the fame kind : He is of himfelf, and we are of him. More plainly: There is a greater difference you know between Gold and the Heavens, than there is be- tween Gold and the Earth, Lecaufe Gold is but a refined part of the Earth;, but the Heavens are of another kind of Being and Creation. Thnigs which differ in their kind, differ mofl. But now the very kind of Fveligion and Covet oufnefs differs. For'what is Kehgion but a Heavenly and fuperna- turall thing ? And what is Grace but a fpiritual blef- fnig that comes down from above,but Covetoufncfs faftens a mans Soul to earthly and bafe things, l And upon this ground it is called Idolatry in CoLl 3.5. Ccvetoufnefi which is Idolatry, it's called fo upon this ground, becaule as the fear and love and honor of God is the Ground of all obedience, fo' the taking of the things of this life into our choice,! efleem, and care, is the putting out, and the extin-' guilhing,and eradicating of all fervice unto God : That a man dot h take for his God, which he choo- feth before all other things. When therefore a I mans heart is fo fet that he muft hav€ riches and 1 the things of this life, he fees up that for his God, and ; Treatife of (^aVetoufneJ?. 217 and denies obedience inv/hol cochc true God. i fay Covecoufnefs is oppofir^ to all Religion. REASON ly. ,Fourchly : The frnfulnefs of ic appears in this : Thac ic is the Womb and Seed of all lin. There- fore in I John* 2. i6.you have ic as one of the Gene- rals, or Commanders of all chQ iins in rhe world., AUfms arefunmiedup either into ThcL:{jhof the] ^lefhy rhar is. Luxury and pleafure, T/;>.- Lujli of] the ^ye, chat is, Worldlinefs or Riches j Gr tbA ^rideoflifcy thac is, Honor. In i Tim, 6. lO. The love of ^oney is the root of at ^viU. Th^ root, pa rely , becaufc che Devil doch ingraft every tin upon chat as the Hock of ic, and partly becauleic dorh vertually conrainai fm in ic.From chence Cain murders, J// (^[^^ ' becraies Chrift, Acban fteals ^he Babilonifh Gar-* menc, ^emof Apoflacizeth from Religion : T>jmas Q f aich the Apoftle ) hathforfa^en ui^and clt'u^ves unto this prefent World* in 2 Tim. 4. 10. Therefore you fkal find what che Companions of Covecoufnefs are in ^om. I. 2p. ^emg filled vpithallVdrighteoitfneJi, l^ornicatioHy Wicl^edncih Coeiv doch repeat thofe words, he leaves out Cove- roiiineis : But when ^lark^ came to add unro that which '^attheiv wrote ( which was the manner of the Evangelifts to add unto others ) he puts in Co- vecoufneis : Becaufe v/hoever is Covetous hath the root of all thefe in him, and not becaufe whoever is Covetous doth all thefe things. You fhall find therefore in the Scripture chat the way wliich Satan takes todeflroy men isexprefly fee out by this of Covetoufnefs. In 2 Cor, 2. 1 1. The Apoftle fpcaks of the Devices of Satan ^ And he fets forth i he cun- ning ofSataninrhebeginmngof the verfe, that he makes advantage of 7^ * Now that word in the Greek is TiKioviy^r.^civjiv, he will do with u?, as one that is I Covetous. The meaning is this. Look as a Covetous man doth de fire to be poffelTedof that which he hath not, fo doth the Devil lie at the Catch chat he may feiz upon any fpirit. That which I bring it for is thi^j That the Holy Ghoil fets out al the devices andevill waies of Satan, by this name of Coveting. \ I Becaufe a man is as apt to fin, as the Devill is to tempt : And a man is made as covetous by finning, \ as the Devil is in his unfatisfied fpirit. So the great- nefs of the fin appears in this that it is the root of ail fm, and becaufe of that, it is the Caufe of all fin, It's a fin that never goes alone but ingenders n any others. In whatever perf on it is, it doth fo. If Covetoufnefs fals upon Soldiers, then in Lul^ 3. 14. WJjen they are not content with their voageSy they dc. 23 o ^port and excellent \ this } foL* the Iniquity of his Covecoufnefs I hid my felf from him. Gods hiding, did go before cheir doing what chey would : And Gods hiding was cau- led by their Covetouinefs. i 2. One fm may be the caufe of another, becaufe 1 ic inclines the heart to another lin. i-ind in this re*^ fpcft Covecoutnets is the root- of ai fm, becaule the Divel doth graft upon fuch a hearc what temptati- ons he pleafeth. He obferved Cain was covetou s ^nd that he had a mind to be building. He therefore makes him negleft the means of reconciling himielf unto God for his fmagainft his Brother. Judof j was covetous, and he lugge(ts to him to betray his mafter. V^mas was e- TW^that Aoodout onebrunn^Yet when Taulcom^s to a fccond, he forfakes him : And what is the r eaf ouj Tie cleaves unto this prefent world, in 2 . Tim, 4. 10. Sothatthebeft of regenerate and unregene- ! rate men find it hard work to efcape the power of • this fin, Oneisfoyled, and the other Ipoyledbyl it. This fm doth prevail in formal profeffors of | 'T^.eligion, in, 2. Tim* 3- 5- They hanje a forme of Gedlinefii Why ? Among other fmshe faith they are covetous: ^lenfhalbe lovers of tbemfelveSy and Covetous* Do but coniider how this 1 in doth ii^ take , ' m. i ■i ,il5. , , II I -i-r -— - - - -. ^^ ^^_^ ^ 116 Af^ort ariAexcelkn \ take men, and you wil ice it is very hard to tc^G- voided. Youihalfind whac che iipoftle iu:tnof the vvhol body of iin. ^wB^b. 4». 22. ihac.r^orh corrupt men by deceit. ^m off the old man Wat h corrupt according to the dut'itfid Lufis, Look wha: Vaul fauh there concerLiing al iin, that the fcrlpture iaith concerning this one Im of Covctoufnels. fn '^atb, 13. 22. Ibcdsceitfulnefl of riches. Covc- toufnels wil plead Conicience of a Hi^iis calling: Care of Gods command to provide for a mans fami- ly : Yea the Glory of God. I wcuid have more faith a man that fo I may do laore fervice, and good. Sauldid^ fave the Catcel, ^ut its faid, Ic was for facriiice. Covetouinef; wil puc a man up ' on al duties of morality, and civuicy. The co- vetous man whom God abhors faith the Pfalmift IwVfal 10. 10. He doth crouch and humble him- felf, that is, heisasfwcec^ and loving, and affa- ble, and courteous, and as feemingly ready to do any office and fervice for oncjas any can be. Nay it wil put upon any fpiritual duties, Artaxerxef was a great friend to the reformation of the Ckurch of the Jews, But it was out of Covet oufnefs h\ 2. %ingSy 6. 10. And ^%ra. 7. 23. That fo they may pray for the life of the King and of his chil- dren, and that no v/rath may come upon him, norj his Realme. Hewould give a toleration to thole ; poorebanifhed onesjthat they might go to rheir own Country and fee up the religion of their Fa- thers. It wil make a man keep a goodMinifter in his houfe. In Judges^ 17, 13. Ihave agood Le- vitefaitk^zc«^za/;>, and now I know that God wil blefs me faith he.Ic wil make a man not fail to hearc the bell fcrmons: Injohn^ 6* 26. 7'e follotv me not for tbe ^MiracleSy ( that is, not for the difcovery of God by me in working of Miracles, and that you may fee in me more then a bare man^ as my Mira- cles, Treatife of Qoyetoufnefs. 237 / 1 cles do difcover me to be ) but ye follow me for the Loaves. That people did go afcer Chriit ( the_ beft of preachers J a greac many miles, and did run the reproach of the people of chofe times. Whan \ made chem to be the firit atChurch,but becaufc they * tfiought God would the better provide for them, ia 2 Tim, 3. 2. 5. Thoferhat are covetous at the fecond ] verfe, have a form ofGodlincfs. AformofGod- linefs is nothing but the pidure of a thing to the life : when a thing is £0 like another by Art as chat it can icarce be known, then in is laid to be a form.. JefusChrifl isfaidto be in the form of Qod, be«-' caufehe was as like God, as could be : And in the form of a Servant, becaufe you would rather have thought him to be born to mifery than to be Lord of life. Covetoufnefs wil have a form of Godli- nefs : He will do the fame duties that any Godly man in the world doth. Fafting and praier is an extraordinary duty •, a great aiEi(!iion of the flefh, it's a duty of the grcateft feeming holinefs that can be, yet in Ifaiah 57. 17. the Reafon why they fa- ftedffo often was but for Covetoufnefs, that they might put a greater face and a fairer fhew upon their perfecuting the Brethren who did differ from them. When they had a mind to fall upon their Brethren for that which they fhould have born with them in, then tliey call for a faft, like the Cro- codiles cry, that is only to get a prey. So like as a man may be to a Godly man, £0 like v/ill Co- vetoufnefs raakea man be to him. If a Godly man praies,£o willhe : And if a Godly man forbears oUitwardadsofgrofs (ins5fo will he : If a Godly man fuffers, fo will h?. When God commends y^b that there was nox a man like him, faith the Devill, it is nothing for a man to do as he, when he ftath fo good wages for ftis work. Have you not given him much Riches, and Honor, and many Children 238 JJJ?ort and excellent I Children in the world > And as ic doth thus deceit- I fully cheat a man, and is hardly to be avoided be- ' caulc it feizeth upon all if they look not to ic. So tuat you may fee, Secondly : That it is hard to be Cured. And therefore in the Scripture you fiial find (ifyouob- ferve it ) as many Arguments, nay more Arguments againit Covetoulnefs, than againft any tin, except ic be Unbelief. In ^attb. 6. Jefus Chrift fpends a whol Sermon almoft againft ic. He doth fo in ^attb, 1 5. He doth fo when he comes to fpcak to his Difciples of the ruine ofjerufalem. He doth fo when he f peaks of the Hearers . Look through the Gofpeland the Epiftles^, and you Aall fiitd that there are more Arguments againft Covecoufnefs than any thing, but Unbelief : And wherefore, but becaufe it'^s a hard thing to cure ic ? And that you may further fee that it's hard to be cured, con- lider how it deals with a man : The Scripture ufeth divers words to this purpofe, foratimes ic faich ic doch divide a man : So the word ufually is which in the Scripture is tranflated [^Care'] The word (tse/fxra. Care, fignifies divifion of fpirit : Ic fepa- rates a mans heart from God : Ic makes a man a Bcaft : To have a heart and a heart, and not co walk perfeftly with him : It makes a man take Re- ligion by the very throat m 'l\lattfj, 13. 22. for ic did choak the word : And in Luk^e 12.29- faith the Text, 'Be not of a douhtfuU rnind. The word in the Greek is, Be not like unto Meteors. As Meteors and exhalations that are drawn from the Earth that hangs between the Earth and the ftars j fo wil Covecoufnefs make a man that he fhall not be co- tally profane, nor throughly holy, neither in che upper region, nor in the lower region upon the duft. He hach a fpirit chat is mingled, and there-. fore "Treatije ofCoyetoufnefs, 139 fore is on all fides, but hearcy for nothing chac is goodj or for falvacion. Nay it goes further in Lz/^2i. 34. Take heed leaft your heart be overchar- ged with gluttony ^ and Vrunkennefi, and the Cares of , I thk life* Chrilt doth joyn Covetoufncis with Glut- j i Dony and Drunkcnneis, becaufe it hath the like ef- ! jfeftsupontheSoul ofaman, that they have upon I the body of a man. When a man hath drunk extra- I ordinarily, his underftanding is fenflefs^ andfo u , a man made by the Cares of this world, ^e not o- I overcharged* The word fignifies. Made heavy. His fpirit is like lead, he hath no fpirit in any thing that 'he doth for God, further than he is a^ed by the' world. Of a meer fpirituall duty, he hath no more feeling, than a ftone hath. If there be not Rheto- rick in praier, and Invention in Sermons, it's not food to hira. Nothing that is fpirituall afFei^rs him, but his heart is like a flone. It's a flrange fpeechinLwfce 18. 27. to this purpofe, whenChrift faid. It vpof iM hard for a rich man to be faved, at for aCameUto go through the eye of a needle^ And they faid then none of them can befavedy faith Chriff , The thingf vphich are impojjible with mm, are pofjlble with Qod. Are poffible with God : That word, I v/ould inftft upon a little. There are fome things that the Scripture faith are eafie unto God. T>o bntjpeahjhe word ( faith he ) and my fervant fhall be healed. And there are fome things that the Scripture faith are Hard to God, there is more of God required to do them, than other things : And fome things that arebutpoifible unto God. As if he fKould have faid: It's all that God can do ; If there were but a whitof lefs flrength in him, he were not able to make a man that is covetous to beleeve. Give me leave to fpeak with reverence according to the ex- preffion ; His flrength is matched.Ic's as much as he can do. It is but poflible to him, to make a rich man { ^^ that ) 240 jijhort and excellen that is in love with this prefenc evil world to come to Heaven. And as if theApoftlel^^wlcoiflpnot lay enough to fhewthehardnefs of being cured of this fm you fhall find him heaping up words in I Tim. 6. 9. There are Temptations, and there are Snares, and there are Sorrows : The word propct- ly fignifies the pains of a Woman in Travel, which can neither be avoided, nor prevented, and are im- pofTible to be born long : And iie faith they are' drowned in perdition and dcftruttion, having refc-j renceuntothe 18. Chapter of ^attheva at the 66,] vcrfe. It was a kind of death to the AiTyrrans, to^ tie a Mill Stone about a mans neck, and to throw' him into a deep water. Look how there is no I hope of laving luch a man, fo little hope there is ^ of a covetous man. Obferve it, he fpeaks rather of fuch a man that was covetous, who had made profeffion of Rehgion, and known the truth rather than any other, and he faith of thera. That they fierce themfdves throuefj. The word fignifies, they do, as its faid 01 Julius Ca- Uar, that they came about him £0 with Bodkins and. fSwords, that his Body was as a Butt, or Pin-cufhi-| on, there was not a whole place in him, he was ; wounded in Back and Belly, in Armes and Legs, and i in every part there was a wound. So faith the A- ! poftlci You wilbe by the Cares of this world,you! will be run through and through and through with Cares and Sorrows : And what hope is there of a man when he lives thus j when iin hath fuch advan- tage of him,how hard a matter is it to be cured. I 1 have bin the longer in the explication becaufe it is the fm of the times, and the fm of Frofeffors. CHAP. Treatife of (^oVetoufneJ?. Mibw^t— ^lii ■ > ■ "rf I H CHAP. IV. Ufe I. ^oUoiv your Calling f. life 2. Seek^the %}ngdom of Qod and Im n^htcoufmP, ando- therthingf fi) all be added, life 3. Let all your care be for eternal life to hj rich in Q od. life 4. Toiifl)allbave all the things of this life that are needfully if youvpilloo\after Qrace.Qodly men nea)er vpantt but vchen they cannot be content tobd at Qod'*s difpofe* life 5, See your lif^ lie in (jraccy not in Riches. U S E I. Follow your Callings. For the living in a particular calling is as neccffary co pluck down the rankntfs of a mans fpirir, and co make him fie cofcrveGod, I fay ic is as neceffary in its kindj as the word is in its kind. There are fome fins tliac arife from the body, and diligence in a particular calling, mortifies them. Follow your Callings. Take what providence calls upon you in chem : but be not follicitous Beloved. Do not care how ic may be with yoU;, fo you may but provide for eternity : Be conceqc with a little fo you may bur have Grace : If you have Food and Raiment ht quiet. As upon a day of fafl a man may eat fo much as may fit him to the work : fomy Beloved care for no more all the time of your life chan what may keep you from temptations, and inableyouco the work of your Calling. And that work of your calling, you may certainly do for God^ whatever your condicion be, Turn all your care unco this, that you may crea- k k lure / ■ 242^ Afioort and Excellent I ;fure up liches in Heaven. What matter ic if you I be poor, or have, or not have, as long as you do en- 1 joy Chri/t. This is the great exhortation of our Lord Jefus Chrift in this place. That rime that men ipend in forecafting how they fhould do in «iil j times ( that time is all loft ) and fhould be fpenc only in this. How they may provide for a world to come. 1 fay ic is all loft ; becaufe you are not able to ftciire thole things : And ic'*s worfe than loft, becaufe it is a fm to care for to morrow. Pru- dently difpofe of: what God hath given you, but be not troubled though you cannot fo difpofe of things as to fave you from evill. Be not afraid of any evill that can befall you : fear nothing but fui and Gods wrath. It is your wiidom to dofo. A wife man ona Journey cares not if his lodging bs hard, and diet courfe, becaufe he is upon his way, and thiuks to have better at home, f he love of his bu- fmefs makes him not think of thefe things. Whac is your bufmefs but to provide for Heaven ? What is your home, but to dwell with Jelus Chrift, and to have Communion with him? Therefore mind not'other things, never be troubled whac you are in other ref'psfts. USE IT And let me add this in the fecond place. Thac the more care you take for fpiricuall things^ the more care God v/ill take for your earthly eftace. Seekjhe%ir?gdomofQodandbisrighteoufnefi and all thefe things ftjal he added toyeu^m ^atb*6» 33. T'or al tbefe things your heavenly father cares for ^ chat is^if you care not. InHeb* 1 3« 5, 6. Let your Con'verfation be without Covetoufnefi, for he bath faid he ivil never j I leave you norforfa^^you* God enters into Bond to fave thac man harnalefs from all loffes and evils in the — ^ - ■ - ■■' — »— ^ . Treati/e of CoVetoufmJ^* 43 chcv/orld, chat does but mind che things of him. He were anunjuft mailer to fecusa work, and to leave us to cue own finding. Is ic not better a great deal to be at Gods hand than ac your own ? That h^ fhould find you, than your felves ? Therefore fpeak to your hearts after this manner. I cannot by my care add one Cubit to my ftature, and make one bufinefs go well, and get in one debt, and take: one penny the morCjand get one new Cuftomer, Lee me fpeak to you in your owi>language. If fo be that I do what I cdfljit wil be no advantage to me in theie things. But if I becarefultomakemy peace with God, to get my pardon Sealed, to get my waies San- I ftified, God wil give me fo much of theie as I need, he hath enough,and he wil give me liberallyjfo thac I fhall have no caufe to complain. If I have not fo much as another, yet notwithftanding I fhall have a blefling with what I have, and that will be more than anothers much. If men did put themfelves upon this, that ic is to be their care to look to their Souls, and when they have ufed meanes for their eflates and bodies, to leave all to God's difpoling, and did bcleeve that then God would blefs t4iem. How many then v/ould give that precious time, itrength and Spirit which now runs out to the world, unto the fervice of God. U S E III. If everyone thac would attain to eternall life mufir take heed of Covetoufnefs. Then lee all your care be for eternall life, to be rich in God, as Chriftfaith inverfeai. ^ rich in Qod, that is^ in thethings of God, and in the things chat are for Gods Glory. God do:h not call you from the I world CO put you upon a lols, but to turn your af- ifedions upon the right Objed. It^s not co undo I kk z you t i - 1 1 C144 j{j}7ortand excellent 4. 9. you, but to make you in berter things. As Parents when they would wean the Child from th e Nurfe unto chemfelves, they make the. nurfes brcaft black, andtheyfear the Child. So faith Chrilt, takeheedj and look toy our felves, when he h^jch no other end in it^buc that he may have your love^and you have his at length, ^any will fay iiiiKhDaroid in ^faU 4. 7. 8. Who voillflyew m any good ^ but faith he. Thou baji p Mt more ^laAnefi into my heart, than] when Corn and Wine increase. As if he fhould have faid, when the Devillfees men inquiring after hap- pinefs and falvation, he does fhew cheni good : hs prefencly meets them as Abraham did the Gibeo- I nites wih Corn and Wine, the things of this life, ; and takes off their hearts from happinefs. And it j is io prevailing a means, that he betook himfelf to \ that alone when he tempted Chrifl. All this will I j ^X'?;j thee. When he had fhe wed him all the Glory 1 of che world, that is, when he had made the world j as glorious as poffible it could be to the mind of Chrift. He did not do unto Chrift:, as unto us, deceive our fancies, but he put the greatefl Glory up on Riches that could be, and then he thought that JcfusChrift would bow down to hmi. If the Devil cannot make a man as prophane and as loofe as he defires, then he will make a man Religious, but mingle Covecoufnefs with it. He will flir up, a manias it is reported by one chat writes of the; walkings and apparifions of the Devill, The Devil' came to many a man in Luthers time, and provo- ked chem to ftand for Judication and lay afide po- pifh Religion, but he told them alfo they Ihould get fo much by the bargain : And when he mingled this Poyfon with that Wine, he did bring them co as much formality as they were in before in their ignorance : They were as bad as before, bccaufe of only their Covecoufnefs. When he hath once got a \ man Irut'tfe of Co^etoufneJ^. 24y man under his power, he wil make him to grind at this mil, as chey did Sampf on. Therefore the Loveof the world is called in. i, Jim. 6, p. The Devils fnare and bond, And it is chefin of the Jews by which chey were and are kcpc from embra- cing Ghrift, They did look after an earthly King- dom. Benochindiedof true happinefs by thole I things. Barter not away your fouls for an abun- ' dance of the things of this life; Let not your minds ! j run out after what you fee, or what is to be had, i belides grace and holincls and communion with! JGod. Our Lord Jefus Chrift is moved to fee j ' one got into good Company here in this Chapter I at the 1 3. verfc.fecming to have an iuhericance here ! toneglc^ to gee SalvatioQ and Grace. Grace and I the favor of God are true riches^andal other things f are not fo. They are but ffeadows of riches, and therefore called a fancy. *Agrippahis pomp and Glory, is but ^avtwctt'cc, 2$. JlUsy 23. Though a man feem to be bleffed of God when he hath this world,yet it is but feemingly fo:And therefore the fcripture calls it a falhion. i. Cor.y.si. ^om* 12.2. Thefapion of tbif world. But there is no true good- nefs in riches. In LHl{e^'i2. 21. Saith Chrilt, a man that treafures up for himfelf,is not rich in God That treafures up for himfclf.Thacis, Riches are but a particular good thacmay lerve a mans fqlf^ but that is all it can do : It makes a. man leave God who is auniverfalgood. That only is trueRiches which doth procure to a man all good: and that, nothing can do, but what comes from God which is Grace. USE, IV. i ! Youffialhaveal the things of this life, if you wil look after Grace, Al that is needful, (^odli- , ri£P, i te t^6 ^Jhort and excdknt 4 nefihath the promt fe of this life. It givnf content, i • T/77J. 6. 6. That is as much as a nian doth cirher 1 need or detire^if his defwres be rational and Ipiricual ! Ic gives conrent. The word that the Apoftieuferh ^ for content, is a v/ord that is ufcd among Commorj. wealths, that have al things in themfelveSjand need not other Countries. Religion needs not be behol- den to any ePcare^ and condition, or any thing in this v/or Id for any thing that belongs to this life. Godly men do never want, but when they cannon be content robe at Gods difpofe. He wants nocl chat is concent : He hath concenc,whofe wil is con- formable unco God. There are ac the leaft twenty fevefai fences of chac in Pf^/. 57. 25. I nenjer fuw the righteous forfah^riy nor hk feed Pegging bread : Bun chat which is mofl probable from the Context and f cope of che Pfalme is, I nenjerfavo A righteous Tnauj That is, arighceous manchac doth noc free ac the profperity of v/icked men. ( ^ot heggtng bread: ") chat is in want. Let any be of a liberal Ipirit, willing to pare wich whac God gives him, when God dorh cal, and chac man never wanes. Men that have dogs appecices are never fatisfied : When m.eac feeds humors, then parencs deny their children meat: So doch God, when he fees whac he give^, doch noc work conforraicy ro his wil. Do you mind your work, and God wil care for your maincenance. -Andyou Ihal have fpiricual chings ac a beccer rate, and on eafier terms then you have earthly chings. The paines you cake for hea- ven ihal bring you in communion wich God, which cannot be goc by your indeavors, God wil noc put ) ou to more, nor fo much in working for ^ him, as I you puc your fe Ives to in getting che world.' Wicked imen^have been ac death convinced of chis. Had I I ( faith one ) been as good a fervanc to God, as to / the King, I had j?ecn happy. Yea thofc that know , > beccer Treati/e of QoyetoufmJS. H7 better what it is to prepare for Heaven than others, do complain that they are not lo carefull for fpiri- tuall things, as they are for the things of this life. When they go about Riches, or the things that con- cerns Riches, they are buried in the buiinefs, and *there their thoughts are intent, but at prayer and Hearing their Thoughts arc divided, and their Hearts are wandering : and yet ftill chey grow in Grace. VfaUizy.i. Ifsin^vamto go to bed late, or rife Zip early : fo he gives his ^elon,>ed jleep : that is without this carking care, he gives them ileep ; that fleep, is a Lying in the Lap of CJod and being put into his Bofome,' as well as having enough of this world. Labor not for tbt meat that periflyeth^ hut for thj meat that endureth to everlafiinglife. And becaufe men fhould not be difcouraged in Chrifts putting them to labor. He tels th^m they fhall have ir upon g^fc C^hich theSon ^ ^an flmll give ) As if he thou Id have fa id. Though I will not give it for labor, yet when you have done al, you ihal fee^ I will give it upon mecr gifc, and not as a rccom- pence of your work. ■ • USE V. Sec your life lie in Grace, and not in Riches. The coaifort of your life and eternal being, lies in Grace. Qal 2. 20. I livd ( faith the Apoftle ) hy ^aitb. I Tim. ^.6. ^Me/z that live in pleaffires^ are dead while they live. They do not truft in the living Godj they have no life from him : When you come to die call for all your marks and evidences, fum upallyour eftatcand fee what they will advan- tage you. It's reported of a Noble man when he had divided all his Eftate, he £aw a Toad in the room, and he cries out. Oh that I were as that Toad to eternity. Call co this and that Eftatc and inheritance Job. 27- 6. ' 24S ~1 ^Jhort and excellent inheritance at death, And they will anfwer it is not in me, I am not able to do any thint^ for you : When a man comes to die (who hatblived upon God in the world ) he can fpeak comfortably thus, That he Ihall change only his place, and not hisr company, for he hath parted with tkefe things be fore. Whcnyouappear before God, youfhalnotj appear as rich, but according to what you have done \ for him, and what you have done through Grace: Therefore naked came I into the world and muft go fo out. Men do not fland before God as Kings and Knights : But thofe that have done for God, fhall be honored in that day, but that which enters a man into Gods Glory is Grace. Confider what a folly it is to ftrive for ftiadows, ro undo your felves, to tire your fclves in following after Butter- flies ? What amadnefs it is to give thousands for that which is worth nothing ? To fpend your time impertinently for things in which your hfe is not ? Therefore when you have wearied your felves in ca- fling^Sc plotting,and defigning of waies for to gee an j abundance for your felves, ye cover your felves and fay. Had this day been fpenc otherwife, or had I laid out my felfe as much for God, as for rhefe things, it had been well. All this time is loft: If I had been in fpirituall duties and fervices, as long asl have been for the body> it had been well. Whsn you have gotten the world, and have not caft up your accompt what you have dont, when you have cared for the Body and not for the Soul, when you have gotten all, you have gotten but a common ftone, and loft the Diamond. Therefore when you hear Jefus Chrift calhng upon you to take heed, his meaning is nor to deprive you of any good that the v/crld can give you, but to make you Cure of eternity. Therefore turn your thoughts . this way. He cafeth men of taking care of this I -world. Treatife ofCoyetouJnefs. 2 49 il I': world, thacfo they may attend CO eccrnicy. It f-s , uot becaufc Jefus Chrift would not have the pronii- l fesof this life fulfilled, that he bids them to take heed, but becaufe he would have you to have 3,hxLn- dance of the things which are indeed tiue Riche?. •$• 4? i'* 4' 4? •I' 4' ^ ^ 4'"i* 4' 4' # ■ #• • I? «$ 'I' # # 'I? 'k '%' # 4' 'i i' ^ CKAP. V. life 6. ^eleevetbereh fmtthinp to ho miflakes upon which men ground their dc fires of abundoitcey fuppofmg* ^' If they bad more, thjy could do more for Qod, 2, Jlnd efcape many enjils vchich now they m^et with '•J USE VI. BEleeve andfet this upon your heart, That there is fomthing to be feared more than to be dj(i- red in abundance : Thar under that Bait there lies a Snare and hook ^ our Lord jeiusChrill would not w^rn you;cHe. Becaule men will not beleeve this, therefore it is that men go on, and arc undone bv lawfull things, by Riches;. Let this v/ord of Chrift be continually i'n your Ears, as if you tvcard ^ him calling from Heaveiir Take heed and bev/nrt^ oj^ ' Riches. As when a man is'going on in a Uan:;?! 4«i* j way/Fhofe that know hinijdo Cdi after hra \[\d bidil 11 hin^/l 2<0 Ajhort and excellent I \ !_i him take heed, there are holes, and pics, and whirl- I poles in the water chat he is riding through. So Je- l lus Chrift tehmen, there are fnares and pics in Ri- ! ches : yet n en wil not be perfwadcd. 1 Ihall give you but twaligns to prove that men do not bciicvj cherc is fuch danger in Covecouihels. Firfl : Men will not come near that wherein they chink there is danger. When T)j.vid faw the An- gel of the .Lord ftanding over Qidevn with the iword :n the time of the plague, He would not come near that place to offer Sacrifice : Jhcic was danger cherc, and in that cafe, God would have mercy rather than Sacrifice, ^ofea6. 6. We will not come near the Perfons that have che plague : we keep out of the way where Theeres he, chough we go nircher about, becaufe there is danger. But men come near occafions of Covecoufnefs by taking all opportunities and advantages of getting;, or im- ploy ing themlelves, by contemplating ani medica- ting of their own wants, andof others Riches. As *D^a»fi did confefs in 5^^.73. that he looked up- on w.hat he found every day, and how the eyes of wicked men ( that knew not God ) were ready to flare out of their Heads, becaufe of their facncfs, therefore he complains : Whereas he faich, he fhould hare gone into the Sandhiary, and have con- 'fidercdthe end of thofe men, how they ftand ia flipper y places. The confideration of a mans owa wants, and the thinking much of other mens abun- dance, is that which gives an occafion unco Cove- coufnefs. Whenever a man comes to rh nk of che world ( as men cake a Prelervacive when chey go intoinfeditious Air ) fo men ffaouM think of che dan- ger and mifery of rich and covetous men. So 0^« vid fitould have done. ObjeU^ Treatife of Copetoufnefs. ^51 OhjeU. It may be faid by the way. ^ay not a / man takg ali opportunities of getting and enriching ] himfeif ^ If that to pUy voith a ^art of Covetouf- nejL tAnfw* lanfweryes. You may dot do all you can or may do in the world. In Lnh^ 2 1. 34. Chrift bids them that they ftiould as well take heed of Covet oufnefs and the Cares of this life, in verfe 24. as they ihouid take heed of Surfeiting and Drun- kenneis. Tak^ heedleafl at any time your hearts be ovs^harged vpith 'Urunl^ennefi and Surf eiting^ of wel Oi the Cares of this life. Chrift joyns Surfeiting and Drunkennefs with Covetoufnefs. Therefore as a man may not drink all he can bear, nor eat all | his jftomack requires, but rife with an appetite : Ko more mufi: a man in the things of the world do all he can. This is gathered from the Conjundioti. ofrhofe two together, Covetoufnefs and Drunken- nefs. In things that are not good in therafelvej, but profitable only in fome way to an end, there muft be a mealurc in theufe of them. As a Builder doth not lay all the ftones he can in the Houfi^, but fo many as the foundation will bear, leaft he over laics it. The end of a mans Calling is only this, that he may cxercife himfelf the more freely in the waics of God. As 1 have often faid. It is the lay- ing of the foyl ground fallow, tliar the ranknefs 1 andfournefsofitnay be removed, obftacles that areintheflcftiuncOthe holy duties may'tic taken away. The end of Kiches is only that a man may do the work that God fets him and cals him to do, and therefore beyond that he ought not to ingagc himfelf in the world, nor to defire riches. Buctliis is by the way, forlrefcrve other Cafes to another place. Tbat ihews that men beleeve there is no 11 2 ^nare i 2$ A pport and excellent • X I i: Snare in riches, becaufethey put themfelves upon che occalions and reinpracions of Covetoufnefs. Secondly : There is another fign, which is this, Becaufe men place cheir happiucfs in riches, whitl? appear by th s. Mens defires are rnore caiily ftirred, more yehemencly fer on^and hardlier taken off from che things of che world, of this life, than from any thing. To duties, men are drawn hardly, are foon v/eaiy, are eafily difcouraged ^ but are not fo in fee- king after the things of this life. When raen have gotten riches then they count themfelves happy; Therefore it is, that when they lofe or wane them, they count themfelves to be in a mofl: deplorable & , fad condition. No man counts faimfclf to beunhap^ py in the want of that which would not 'Mah^ fer™, in his own opinion. Therefore when men think al is gone, when the world is gone^ frowns upon you, Ic^s a fign chcy make the world their God, and do not think it a Snare. To perfwade you thercfare to the believing of this, chit k'*s a fnare, or chac there is a fnare in it, I fhall only remove ( in a word* or two) che ground of chac perfwafion. 1. Kkntlunkif they had more of che world, they could do more for God, more good than chcy do. As Ahfalorn faid if he were King he would do Ju- iiice. and relieve che opprefled, break the bonds, fiee men from taxes that his Father laid upon them: So men cTiink that if chey were but as rich as another man,they would diftribuce rotheSaincs,Cloach che naked, feed the hungry, their houfes fhould be like the houfe of Caius, an Inn for them : They would Ifcrve God more freely. This now doch fuppofe that there is an help in abundance, and not a hook. Ibefecch you my Beloved confider it, when raen have had abundance, though they have been plit in mind. Treati/e of Coyetoufnefs. *53 i mind, and caucioRated coixcinually, that therefore i Xhey have it that they may ferve God in the abun- (dance of all things, they have found their heart's jilraigter:, and their hands weaker, than when they |}vere in poverty, or in a mean condition. Tah^ \ljeed ( faith God unto the people of IfraeU and he I reads them that lefTon every morning that they. Irooka journey into the land Canaan), leaft ^ hem \you come into the land of Canaan, that you-, do forget the Lord your Qody and not h^ep his Statutes and Judgments io do them* Yet not witiiftanding for all this, when as they were come into the landj as it'*s faid in the Book oi'peuterpnomy^ they did not ferve the Lord cheir God in the abundance of ail things, but chcy ferved •.hemielves and their own lufts. Hadyoubeenby the felf fame people when they were in the caprivity o^ ^ahylon^ you might have heard them groaning and fighing out for delive- rance. Thus ; Deliver us and we will ferve thee i our-flrange Godsihall be put away from u&, wewil I build T/;y ./4/^^r, andrioneelfe^ we will offer untd thee the fat of the Calf & of theSteer,but when they came into the land as we have fhev/ed out of IS^ehe- miah^nd^'^ra:, they did delight themfelves in the fatncis of the land^ and forgat the Commandments of the Lord. I befeech you my Beloved confider it. A man is to content himfelf with the doing of that good ( though it be never fo little ) which God cals him to do. That Servant honors his Mafter as weirhat continually waits upon him, and goes whither ^e goes, as he that doth in the houfe the greaceft drudgery. Go'd doth not call a man to all that he Uhinks he could do, or it may be that he hath abi- , }lities to da. A manis called to no more than God jpufs him upon, and puts himfelf forxh^unro. [As for example. A man may have able gifts, but ^ ^ that: h 154 jfjhort and excellent that is not enough ro make him aMiniftcr nor aMa- gifVrate. A man may do the work of other cal- lings, but that is not enough to make hira put him- fclfintochera, til God faith. Do this. He muft do that which God puts into his hand, let it be whac it wil be. We are often times ready to think that we fliould do God more Icrvice in any cond t on, than in that whereui we are. LiJke fooiifh ch Idrcn at School that think they fliall gain more by go'ng into a new Book, than by going on in the old, though the Mafter knows the be/l \vay to n;ake themunderftand, i> to keep them where they are. It fhews our difcontent through Pride, and cur hil- Icfnefstodothe workof God, that makes us fay. If I had this, 1 would do thus, and if I had that, I would do fo. Do that which is in thy hand. 1 her- forethat is no ground at all for a man to ddire more, becaufc he thinks he fhould do more. 2. Another Reafon that perfwades men to look after the things of this life, is, bccaufe they think that if they had abundance of the things of this l',fe,ichey fhould efcape many evils which now they j meet wichall. But now 1 fhall aiifwer nothing, more than the words that follows my lext, ^, mans life conftfls not in the abundance of the ihin^r ivbichhepoffeff^h. You ihall live never a whit the better, nor have any thing the more to live upoa ! for abundance, lour life^ that is, the fafety of iX that lies not n abundance : for riches are an allure- ment unto thofe chat are the fons of violence. The Comfort of your life- lies not in abundance ; for abundance brings forth care and forrow: The more you have, the more your heart will be divi- ded into folicitoufnels about theai, \£ abundance \ 1 is not able to continue your life ( for as Chrift i [ fhc wcth, that your life depends upon ^e vpori ofQod Treatife of QflfetOHfnefs, »55 Thh night thy Soul l^jalt depart from thee ") much lefs can you help your felves co eternal life by abun* dance, You cannot purchafe it. ^fuU 49« 7» f hat is a Purchafe chat muft be let alone. No man is able to give the choufand part of the purchafe of ic, if Ht had all the world to give. No you are not able CO purchafe ic. Covccoufnefs breeds liftiefnefs of ipirit and a fenflefnefs of the things chat are eternal. As while a aian looks upon the Sun, he cannot we 11 fee other things, Sowhilea man is in the Earth and darkneft, he cannot well bear che light of the Sun, ioaman whofe fpint is accafto- med CO the care of this cannot well get his heart in- to eonverfe with God. Therefore fee this down with your felves, that abundance is rather to be feared than defired. Rxhes arc rather Pjcicks, than Thrones, rather Rocks wh?reon you dafh your felves, thanany thing that will do you good; to help you CO the 2nd whereunco you are defigned, and born wichall for by God. That ftial fuiSce for thijufe. mlamm^m^B CHAP. 256 jp?ort and excellent A CHAP. VI. life 7. ^ort'jfie your elcfire after ^yiches and ahandcince^ jlay it in thefirji inct ion towards it. ^Mo tiq; es of two fo rts, ^irji : S/t ch as a re tah^n out oftVc Armory ofT\eafo;i, I. Tour bappinejl does not li^ in any thing tloat does belong to this life, Thefe things are for you ^ you are their end^ and your end is Qpd, 11. Tou put a greater Qlory and excellency upon them than does belong to them. III. Riches are not dt fir able. i. Qodhath iwt made them to that end to w,ah^ man happy* 2. T>t'- fires after them ft the way to hinder the getting of them. 3. Thetvayof Qods Riches is rather cafuall, than ca ananfwerto^raier* 4. They W2 II yibtfatisfie. 5 '. There is no pleafure in tln'Jn v^he'dTveha'vethem* U S E V II. Orcifie therefore your defues afccr Riches and «. , ^-. abundance. Diet your felves in chcle rhings, as you would run the Race, and have the Crown. InCoiof.^.j. Woriifie (faith the Apoftle ) your .this. That the Apoflledorh pun a greac n^any fins \ roi^e-thee, as chofo which are to be (lain, and air.ong UhefTi5L.overoufn5fs is one. He joyns k with lln- /cleannefs. Becaufeasycuare to be afraid of the ;| firH tickling to thaCfm, fo you ought to be of the /j firfl morion unco the love of the world: The firiT {! raocicvii'-.of difconcenc with a n.ans prefenc ftare, • ftiould i Treatife of QoVetoufneJo. 257 fkould be mortified^ as well as the firfl motion to Adultery. As a fevere and criiell Conqueror fol- lows his Souldiers, and bids them kil and flay, and not give quarter unco any, but efpecially he names fomc perions which he would have them be fevere again ft : So doth the Apoftle bidtbem to mortifie all fins, but efpecially he names Covetouf- nefs. Ceafe not my Beloved therefore to purfue it, til you have llain it : And know that you have not flain and killed ic, until you can delight your fclves and rejoyce in your prefent Condition^though you have but a fmal portion of the things of this life. Then I fay Covet oufnefs is mortified, whe-n as a man doth delight and rejoyce himfelf , though that he hath but a very fmal portion of the things ofchiislife. In^fal 37* 4* faith Vaqjidy Veli^ht thy felfin the Lovd, his meaning is thisj, Be as cheer - fully 5pleafantly, contented,if you have but God.as if you had together with himal the world : In the outward portion that God gives you, delight in God; for in the verfes before he had fpokeu of wicked men as thofe that flourlfhed like a Trpe in the fpring, andprofpered andincreafedin al things, fiut faith he unto the Godly, delight thy felfin r"he Lordjthac is^though you be not f o,though you pro* fpernoc, though you be like a Tree that is withe- red. A mans happinefs is not in abundance, for a man is not one Inch nearer Heaven for al the Moun- tains of Gold that he harh. I fliall therefore now unto the putting you upon this Duty, give you fome motives : And when I have done that, fome tryals. The motives are of two forts, they are either fuch as are taken out of the Armory of Keafon, fuch as the Common light which even the Heathen liad from God do afford. Or elfe they are fuch as are taken oiit of the m ni hctiprure JJhort and Excellent from lupernacurall and Gracious re* 1^ Scripture fpeds. Firfl: : Be contented with what you have, for your happinefs doch not lie in abundance, nor in any thing chat doth belong to this life. Were yo6r happinefs in riches, then your defires ought to be innnice and bouRdlcfs,co be fee upon them for thenw felves. But if fo be thac y ou have riches, you are not the better^and if you want them,you are not the worfe : Al the things of this life are for you. You are their end^Sc your end is God» Thcfe ao not com- mend y ou unto him. The Poor receive the GofpeL With him it's all one whether you be bond ot free, io you be in JefusChr iil, and but a new Creature. Take al the riches in the world together, and they are not able to take away the pains and miferics of your bodies. A Crown of Gold upon the headwil *»not keep it from aching. A Scepter in the hand wil not cure the Palfie. ^erods Riches and Glory could not kil a Worm. Much lefs then are they able to facisfie your Confciences, oi to get you fa- vor with God. Nay my Beloved lee me add this, that if you wil not be contented with chat portion God gives you, you are further ofFfrom Gods favor by them, when the Apoftle in Colof, 3. $. had named Covet oufnefs I in vcrfe 6* he faith, T'orfuch things cometb the wrath ofQodupon the Children of difohidience. Mark it. He doth not put llncleannefs or Fornication laft, that fo he might faften the danger, and the emi- nency of the wrath of God againft it, but he names Covecoufnefs laft, and be faith, ^or that the vorath Qod ^c.the word properly figni&c5,a vindiftive de- fire: A haBging after ones ruinc ; A being unfatisfied until fuchtimeas he hath deftroyed : As far as fuch a kind of affedion can be attributed unto God ;uftly ,f o far you arc to apprehend it in him againft tkofel I Treatife ofCoVetoufnep. $9 thofe that are Covecous. And that not fome rimes buc alwayes, for faich he,^ihe wrath ofQodkcomsy or for fuch things the wrath of God comes. He doth not fay, Itfhalcomej buc helaith itis come. I,fay the wrath of God is a defire of revenge : and he faith not that it fhal come, buc that it is come. The fin of Covetoufnefs is a punifhmenc to it felf, & brings punifhments every day one on the neck of the other, for fiich he, for this the wrach of God comes. So that a mans happinefs is not in riches, for the defirc of riches keeps a man from happinefs. Secondly, Your defire after Puches purs a gl o- ry and excellency upon them which is not nacive.or which belongs not to them of therafelves.For what a man doth fo defirc as that he'cannot be content to be without it. In that very aft of defire he makes it better then alhe hath, and ne cellar y for what he wants and fuSicient if he had it to do him good. He that defires them placeth a happinefs in them, and a befl part oi his happinefs in the things of this life. Happinefs confifts of a good that is excel- lent, and moft defireable and pleafurable/thac gives a man delight, But efpccially it confifts of a good that is fufficient. And therefore when as Gad telk ^ofes that he would Ihew him Glory, he woul d fhcw him that which would do him al good. This then being the principal thing in happinefs, as a voluptuous man gives the plcafure that is in hap« pinefs unto his lull, And the Ambitious man gives the excellency that is in happiHefs unco honor, fo now the Covetous man placeth fufiicicncy in his riches. Ifay he placeth fufficiency in his riches. And that is tne reafon char you find in i Jobriy?.. i6. That al chat is in the world is either the lufts of eye, the lufts of the fleft, or the pride of life, and that the love of God cannot be in thofe that love ram 2 them a6o jfjhortand excellent their. They that feck them cannot be made happy by chem. Th- fume of the motive is this. That as fhePiophecfaidjthe Idolater did take a peecc of Tymber, andhewcdit, and made an Image of ic and then fel down and worfhippcd it : So men d6 jmag n a fufhciency in richesj and then their defires . are carried after them. Now what a fin is it for a \ man to place happinefs in the Creature, nay the \forrt of Creatures, that which Gad fv/ho judgeth righteoufly )reckons to be nothing but earth and thick clay ? What a folly and madnefs is it for a man to be a fervant to that which he hath made great ? As it is folly and frenfy for a man to im.agin himfelf ro be a King, and then to fwcl with his own imaginationjand to ftand bowing unto his own fha- dow. That is the fecond motive, you put honour andglory upon the things of this life, if you are not contented with the portion which God hath gi- ven you of thcnu Thirdly, Riches are not defirable. There is nor in them that which ihould draw the heart afcerthem. !• God hath not made the things of this life the firft object of defires, for God hath not made them for that end to make men happy. 2. That you know is not defirable which can- not be had: And riches cannot be had if they be- defired. Defires after them is the way to hinder] the getting of them : For cither thou arc goodjandj then God as a father wil correft thee if thou arc' difcontented with his allowance, God wil correftl that difpofition and not humor it. Or thou art bad and then in l^rcyv. 28. ao. 21. TJe that mah^s haft to herichP)alnot be innocent ^ faith the Text : Andj that Innoccncy is put in oppofition ro abundance in the former part of the verf. Jl faithful man fhal a- \ bowid 7reatife of Coyetoufnefi. hound with Ue^tngSyhut he that mah^f haft to he rich Jhalnot he innocent. I iciy^ co be innoGeiic, is put in oppolkion: to abundance^ to abounding with blcffings : The meaning is chat he fhal not abound v^irh befllngs, chat fuch a man (fas a Guilty perfon ) fhal be cut offhand oever fee the day of preat things which he longs after. In ^eb>i i- 1 6. God is afhamed ; CO be called the God of wicked men, becaufe of i : their Covetoufnefs. j 3. Deiires wil not help a man to riches, becaufe when a man makes them the matter of his prayer, I he provokes God. The way of God giving riches, J is rather cafual^, then as an anfwcr of prayer. God wil not have riches come in by prayer, chat men may not iettcK) great a price upon them. There- I fore its obfervable when Chrift taught us to pray> There are five requefts for the things of another life but for this life, there is but one petition, viz. Qive us this day our doyly hread. That is, fo much bread as wil ferve for the day, the mcaneil: kind of food chat a man ean live upon, for if a man have food and raymeintyhe ought therevpitb to he contented* God hath appointed you to pray for dayly bread, andfor a bleffingupon^the ufe of meanes, but he hath not given a fpiric of prayer for thefe things chiefly. ^Thac is not the fruirfulleft ground that is fulleft of Gold and Silver. They are not the bcfl perfons that have mofl Gold, for God gives riches careleily as it were. Fourthly, Riches are not defirable becaufe they wil not fatisfy \ natural defires are robe after fuch things, which being had will fatisfy." As a iiungry man defues meat that wil take away his hunger. But as Riches increafe, fo alfo do mens defires. Men do but feed upon the wind, when they have, eheni, they have a lye in their right hand : A man finding k J. I' ii ■> ^Jhort and, excellent ( finding himfelf to be ac a lofs, when he Hill labours afccr mof e, and he chinks to have that bring him in conteHtmenc, which wil not. If any man fliould have conccncment in the world, ic fliould have beenthofe who have been conquerers of ic> incq whofe purfcs what ever che habicable earth yielded was broughc, whe were co command over them, as men over beafts, who had gifts as the ftones of the ftreecs, yet thefd men have not been fatisfyed. Ahah was a king and yet was more troubled be- caufe he wanted a plott of ground v/hich lay ncare his, then he was contented with al his 'Revenues. Alexander when he had as much as he could con* quer, then he began to be troubled that there was not another world to be conquered. Yea there isa great deal of dif-fatisfaftion in al riches,& therfore becaufe a man hath his foul inlarged through a fpi- ritual Judgment, though his conicicnce is convin* ced that there is nothing in them but vanity. . Fiftly, Again, that is not dcfirable which there is no plealure in when a man hath ir. The more a man hath of riches, the mere he hath of forrow. As che Apoftle faith in. i Tim. 6. 10. They thai vpil he rich pierce themfel'ves through vpitb many for- rows* But bcfidcs al thcfc things. CHAP. 7- Treati/e of QoVetoufneJ?. 263 C HAP- VII. Tbefeeondfortofmotwesarefucb as are taken out efthefcripture'^ That Cats Conjetoufnefs Idolatry Adultery. ^Enmity againfi God,i9*Cnlfs a difpleaf- ednefippitb Gods allovpance and difpofal of things* *A particular re-inf or cement of the exhortation^ upon tfce %ichi the Voor^pon the Qod ly^ upon. alL COafidcr what the fcripture faith concerning Covctoufncfs. Ir Colof |. 5. He calls it Idolatry^tiot becaufe a man makes his mony his God formally, or afcribes a Deity to it;, but becaufe it is before God as odious as Idolatry is. For this is the cuftomof the Hebrew and Greek tongue, when ic ufeth the manner of Speech of the Hebrews,when it would fet forth a thing to the ful, To name it by fuch a fm as is confefTed of al hands to be hamous. I fay, the name of a thing that is conf&ffed of al hands to be hainous, is given unto thofe things which the Holy Ghoft would fee forth to the ful. As for example. Ini Sam. 15. 23. The fm of Saul is called witchcraft. Rebellion if as tviicbcraft. SauVs fm was not wichcraft :Buc only witchcraft v/as a confeiled known fm. To fet out SauVs fm, SamuelcdiW^ it fo. So chat the greatnefs of the fm of Coveroufnefs may appeare, the text calls it Idolatry. As if it fliould have been faid. The I worfhip of another God provokes not God more to Jealoufy, then the love of the world doth. And mark what he faith afterwards in verl. 1 6.^or thefe Cometh the wrath of Qodupon the Children of difohe- dience^ The word is il cranflated f difobedience ) for I 264 jip^ort and excellent I \ for the wrath of God comes not upon al thac difo- bey him, but the word hgnifies, upon all that are I intra da ble, upon all that wil not be perfwaded, 1 and drawn from their tinning againft God. Why- doth not the Apoftle fay, the wrath of God wiM come upon the unclean Perfon, but upon the Chil- dren that are not to be perf waded, that are ftub- born heareed ? The R.eaIon is this, becaufe Covc- toufnefs is one of thofe fins which makes a man to be incapacious, ft out-hearted, obftinate, irrational, and not ro be fubdued by any of the ordinary means by which God brings mens thoughts into fub;ed:ion tohimfelf. As the wife man faith concerning the. Whore, that fhe is a deep pic, and there is no per-! fwading men from her, though fhe lead a man like anOxunco thefhambles : Sothc Holy Ghofl: faith there is no making a Covetous man leave his courfe, tilche wrath of God meets with him. And its noc only in chat place called Idolatry, but you have as ill names given it elfe where. James 4^* 4. Tou Adul- terers and tAdidterejfes, kjiow you not that the lonje of the t^orld is enmity unto Qod. It is called Adultery. And as Adultery doth break the bonds ber ween the Husband and the Wife,And as Adultery is a fm that j is committed when there is no need, becaufe the party hath a remedy which God in the flare of mar- riage hath given : So the love of the world flrrikes at th£ knot, at the uniting Graces, Faith and Love, It puts a man into a Condition wherein ( if in any ) heis capable of a divorce from God. If 1 would fay there was a poflibility of a mans falling from Grace,I would fay fo of Covetoufnefs and Idolatry, becaufe both chefe are called Adultery, which doth diffolve the bond. What need you cake care, when j God doth? What reafon have you, when God! makes it his work to provide for you, as he doth I for the LiUies of the Fields, than which you are( rauc/; — ' - .•■• ~ ' - 'f';"* • >' j^ji -- Treatife ofCciVeWufneJs^ much better ? Whac reafon is there then that ydti fhould fee your felves to that buiinefs ? Is it noc enough that you have God ? And that God vvil be fure to find you all the ftock that he wil have you r^o work withal for him > Ic is Adultery c And mark what follows. The friendfloip of the world ii enmity a^ainftQod, That is, A Covetous man doch (as icwere) fend an Herald of Armes and bids defi- ance againft God himfelf. In 1 Johi 2. 15. If a man lovef the world, the lonje of the father h not in ^im, Mark it. As it is an uannatural thing for the Child not to love the father that begat him^fo it''s an unnatural thing for a man not to love God, And yet Covecoufaefs will make a man to be fo unnatural. Sometimes you fhal find in the fpirits of good peo- ple a carelefnefs of God : The indearedncfs that they had to him at another time, is not to be found upon them. They are not tender of liis difpieafure , They are not detirous to live in his favor : What is the Reafon > What is it that makes a Soul fo unna- tural? Itisbecaufe his Soul is So taken up with the things of this world. And that you may yet fee further the evill of this fin, know, that it keeps Gods love from a man. For if the love of God be not in a man that loves the world, then the love of God is not fhed abroad in the heart of that man that loves the world. For whom God loves they fhall certainly love him again. Bm above all, that which is the great Mo- tive, aad with which I would perfwade you, Is this. You ought to be conformable to the wil of God. Either his will or yours muft rule. Either he or you rauffc be acknowledged to be the wife,and right Difpofer of things. If there be wifdom with hm, and that all things are under him, and his power. Why are you not then contented with chat which nn is i 266 Af^ort artd excellent is his allowance to you? Ig is fit the Phyfitian i [hould prefcribe the Dyet, and not the iick perfon. iCs fit the Maft>^r fhouidlct down how he wii keep, and not the Servant how he wil be kept, by ihe Ma- iler.Conformity CO che wil of God doth extend no{ only to fpiricual things, fo chat a man may not im a- gainftany moral prccept,buc unto lawful things, fo chat a man fhould think it beft wich him^ according CO Gods way of difpenfing to him. And there is no rcafon in the world why a man fhould think chat' he is dealt hardly with, if his portion be but fmai,4 for was not the ftate of Jefus Chrifl very low ? He 1 became poor, he had not whereon to lay his head, j Were not thofc Princes fas I may cal them ) that • faie upon the Throne, Judging the twelve Tribes of i Ifraely 1 mean the Apoftles and the primitive Saints, WerenoL they in hunger andnakedncfs,andin want | of all things, cloathed in Goats and Sheep Skins > i of whomthe world was not worthy? WilUtnoc content you chat you are kept in the fame manner) chat God kept his Son, while he was in the world ? Ohj,^U. You will fay. Therefore Jefu^ Chriji vcoi poor 3 hecaufe by the voant of all things he VQC4 to fatis^i Jlnfw. But for whom was it, that he was to fa- tisfie? was it not for you? If it was for youy Is there not reafon that you fhould be contented to be poor if he pleafe I Shal the Creditor be willing, that the Surety ihould pay his debt:, and fhal not the Principal or he that is the Debtor be willing him- felftopart with chat which he hath? Jefus Chrift, It is true did merit by the want of th^fe things, But what did he merit ? He merits this among other tilings, that you fhould be an Example that he had taken the Iting and mlfery out of poverty and the want Treatife of Contoufnefs. 167 want of all things. As we are therefore tempted that God may ihew that JefusChrift conquered Sa- tan, fo we are therefore poor> that though our iins haverobbedus, yet there is no curfe in oui poor Eilace. Let me therefore for a conftufion of a i at this time, ttiryouup, that you would not delire after much. Let nxe (peak to you that are rich. Be unto all you have, as a man is unto his meat who is lick, ha- ving no defire at all so it. Have fuch a flomach to riGhes,as amanof afulflomack hath to his meat. Let it be alone to you whether you have or have not. Though you have Ellrates, let nor your Eftates have your aiFedions. You that are in the waics of gaining and getting, chat are in the fpr'ng of the world, that have tul trades, and great advan- tages. Take what God gives you, but take ir as that which is ro be laid by you, not as your own, bur as that which you muft lay up, and layout for God for theufehecalsfor, and not as that which is gi- ven to make you great, life Riches as God ap- points. You that arc poor, be content, andmuru ui; not : for riches arc rather things to be feared than delired. Beware of Covet oufnefs. Feed upon God andChriif, and the hopes of another world, If you have not enough to fatisfie the outward man. And that is no hardCounfel : for if a covetous man can fatisfie himlelf with a little, by feeding upon the hopes of what he fhal heap together, either for an after day, or for his poilcrity, there is then a nourifhmenc,and a fuccor J and a food much more in the feeding upon and thinking of Honor, and Glory, and Imm.or- tality, and eternal life. Ifyoube content to v/anr, Godwin let youliave: Jfyou becon euted, God will provide for you. In ^eh, 13.5 Let your Con- verfation be without Covetoufnefiy and he contQHt ppitb n n 2 tJ)at — ,1-*- 68 jp)ort and excellent that you have, for he hatbfaid) he vcnll nenjer leave nor forfi:^\ Feed upon God and Chrift and the hopes of anocher world, and the more you do fo, the icfs wil your condjpon be difconcentfui to you. Yea my Beloved^ Letmefpeakco you that are Godly. How uncomely a thing is it for you to mind earthly things ? Is your God your Belly ? Are your hojpes and your treafures here ? The more Goipel Lhrifkians you are, the more contented you will be with a little of the world. For when God in the old Teflaracnt gave but little Grace, then he gave much riches : The Land of Canaan and their great and large inheritances, were all of them but io many Ceremonies, and fhadows and Types of the large portion which the Saints are to have in fpiri- tual things by Jefus Chrifl. As the Apoflle therfore faid unto the Galatians when they were returning unco theCircumcifion:, Have you begun in the Spi- rit^ and will you make an end in the Flefli ? So I fay unto you, you go back again unto Types and Ihadows. You do lo when God hath brought you to the land of true good, if you return unto the de- fire after riches. Cloaths that are too big for a man have neither warmth nor comlinels in them. If you delire more than God gives, you have loii the comlinefs and the profit and health that may be by thebleffingof GodinRiches to you. Awordletraefpeak to you all. Covet oufnefs is the fm that now doth begin to fprout and bud. And there is nothing that is a fadder prefage of the wrathof God againfl us, than the flraighcnefs of mens hearts. It is reported there was a great deal of wealth in C onflantinople \fhQn the Turk took it, but he took all and brought them into flavery, be- caufc they would not lay it forth to maintain a jaft war againft him. Of aaothcr place it is reported^ chat Treat i/e ofCoVetoufnefs. i6p that it w.as loft, not fo much by the force of the ad- verfa.yjas by theCovetoufnefs of thofe that fhould have pi >vided oppoficion againft the enemy. If you do but lend y ou eares a little to men^, y ou fhal find them murmuring at their Taxes^ you fhal find them complaining at their not getting as they have done. That they are willing to be any thing, rather thea further to be at charges : To loofe what they have taken in hunting, rather then to be at the charge to drefs and roftit. As I may ute that ex- preffion of the fcripture. In the beginning of thcfe late troubles, Iwifhit be not laid to our charge, the charge of thofe who were fo forward and free to lend in an animofity, when that which they fought for 13 now brought to their doores, is fcarce worth acceptance. AfoUyi Like unto thofe who travel to the Eaft-Indies to fetch home things that are not of a price and efteem. Some indeed have beeft overcharged and burdened : But it is better a great d^al that a man fhould lay out much for God then alittle. God wil make good al that faith that you haveJ^d in him for the publique good : If you fliould lome what men have promifed yoij^ yet I £o far as it was for his name fake, God wil become a debtor toyou, and pay you wel. And I look upon the times when I heare men complain, Truly I cannot tel how better to compare it. Then as if an heire fhould grievoufly complaine that he is put to charges to take up the poiTeffion of his great in- heritance,Or as if a man fhould complain that hath laid out al the mony in his purle, when he hath good commodities in the roome of it. God hath be- gun to give you what you have fought and prayed for. And let me fay thus much, that though fome men cry out Perfecution, Perfecution ; Yet is lit any perfecution for the fervants to take their v/a- Iges I Is it any perfecution to calupon you for that i which.' !i 170 ^P^ort and excellent which may preveiic c hem chac would bring about a warr, and to keep thofe beafts chac would dc- voure from being able co break in upon you ? Is ic perfccuc'onformen co fie under chcir own vines, andeace chefruic of cheir own fig crces. In cheir houfcs, and be quiet, and none to make afraid ? I^ this peifecucion ? for men to be free from opprcf- fion, and co be called upon for nothing, buc chac which is for publiqueufe and charge? is thspcr- fecution ? When men have no enemics:, but bccaufc chemfclves would be great, and over al, and are not facisfied ? Is this perfecucion? Conferre wich the primitive times, and tel them you are under perfecucion. Such as they never felt : for you dwel ar peace, and none molefi: you j you are ac abet- ter allowance and maintenance then many have heretofore had for more work. What rate would > men have given fome yeares agone for that which they now do injoy. It is noc therefore any juft realon that men have to complain chus^ buc only through chewrecchednefs of mens hearcs, who are alfo uniacisfyed becaufechey know not wel what they^ would have, therefore ic is,chac chWe are fuch complaining in che flreecs. Ic is noc from perfe- cucion, buc from Covecoufnefs, becaufe men have noc alchey would have. Thcgreac finofalisCo- Ivecoufnefs, becaufe men are drawn nearer co chc! world and CO chemfelves. Men think a 1 diffwafi- onsfrom che world, cobe buc an arc co keep men from their good. When Miniftcrs dehorc from loving che world, Men chink ic is chac al may com« CO chcm. Ic is noc unlawful co cake for chac which a man lends for che prefervacion of che publique, no more then it is for a Labourer to cake mony for 1 making a fort ro preferve ic. Buc Covecoufnefs I in fome men makes chem cake mony of others who / had ic for cheir ovv^n prefervacion. Ibefeech you my .A-i' i*?*' (^ myijeleved, Cure but your hearts of this diftemper of CoveroufiidTs and felf feeking: Seek not grcac. things, buc juft and righteous ones for yoHr felves: fet a price upon there. And then you wil find that; there is neither too much fpent, to far as hath been' laid out and imployed that way. Nor is there any hard dealing with you to cal for more, that that which is got may be prefcrved. I thought to fpeak of this by the way, becaufe that Covetoufnefs is thegre^t underminer of States, Efpeciallyin the change of things: It is that which doth give away, what God hath purchaled for a man at a deare rate,' rather then he wil be at the charge to keep it. The Times have brought forth this Man-child viz free- dome from thole that did labour to deftroy and ruine you : Now ray beloved let there be nothing ! wanting. When Ireland calls upon youj chat you would help them,diflribure freely : whenas thene-j i ceflity of this nation calls upon you to releive ir^ Give it as freely : Why ? becaufe you muft beware of Covetoufnefs, And it is Covetoufnefs for a man I not to lay out what ever he hath for God, to the ufes which God calls it iot\.,„ a. Ob jed^. \s a man to refirve nothing for bimfelf. " That I wil anfwer afterwards when I come to the Cafes of this point. This is certaine, That a publique good is fo be preferved before a private : And your happinefs is more in doing good to a Kingdom then in providing for your own Families. You get more your felves. For if there be a do- ing of much good, there fhal bean offering up on your behalf many prayers-and thofe God wil ireare - A mail had better be rich in prayers^, then rich in ) Jewels. He doth more for a man that prays to God to take care for him, then he doth for himfelf ^ that 2/2 JJJ?ort and excellent \ that keeps choufands. Take heed and beware of Covecoufnefs. When God hach faved you fo mi- raculoufly, fufFer noc your felves to be deftroyed by a bafe luft. When you have given fo freely before for liberty and freedom, do noc loofe c^ for a penny more. He is a fool that comes to buy a Commodity, chat wil nor give a penny more for it, if he need ic. You may as wet be deftroyers of the nation, by not giving your help at the laft, as you would have been, if you had held your hands in your bofomes, and not have given at the firft. There is a great fpeech of Malignity in chc world, But this is the greateft, for to loofe that which you may eafily have, noc to fight for that which was fo hard to get:I may fay of Covetoufncfs when I come to the fmews of ic, thac it wil lay a taxe and charge upon al the world. Few men wil be free. Goto the State, and ATmy, to Godly men, and Trades men, ofal forts and condicions, ftilyou wil find this fin lie grubbing,and like a Pyo- neer digging at che root in mens fpu-its, tharit may firft orlaftroba man of theIn;oyment ofGodac theleaft, ific doch noc do him an il cumeacche prefentinchis life. 1 CHAP, • \ i^v«MMV^^i«^ ■^^iw^>^«a^ Treatife 9fCoVetoufne/?, 273 CHAP- VIIL • ^ Covetoufne^bard to be difcoveredy beinq a jpiritual fm and lying fo neer upon the boj^ddrs of T>tity j ^n aB may be done thatfeaner contrary to Cot>S" toufneji,andyettJ?e manbs Covetous, Thoi4gh. the end fe ernes to be againfi Co'vetoufnefly a man maybe Co'vet OUT in defiring^ 6 Queft. VT hotv may this Covetoufnefl be discerned ? tAn[w. Its hard CO be difcovered, Ic grows be- tween the Stones of chs Templeibec ween the Sa^ncs themfelves, its a lin char, blinds the Judgmenc, As gifcs blind the eyes of the wife. Icis a more then ordinary crafcy and deceicful , lin. Therefore they arc called deceitful riches, In^McZr^. 4. 19. And icis uCedin the Similitude of care, and provi- dence, and faichfulnefs to che opporcunicies God puts into a mans hands. Icis afpiritualtin, born in the heart, And may live there without breaking forth into any external evil Adls. As hypocrify is hard to be dilcovcrcd5becaufe it is between God and a mans own foul : So is Coyetoufnefs, becajfe ic may be, and yet no external evil ^di done : For ic lyes in an inordinate defirc. A man may do al char is good, he may negleft no duty of P\elig on, nor tranfgrefs any Lawof Juftice in his cailine, and yetnotwiftanding be Covetous. Therefore in r. £or. 5.1 1 -He diftinguifheth Cbveroulnefs from ex- tortion, orunjuflgaine. It is a fin chit lyes fo near the borders of Duc/j that as rwo. colours alike, or \^ 00 two 1 ^74 jtjhortand excellent \ • two perfons are hard to be known, Soksa hard} ' thing for a man to diftinguifh between Care,Provi- \ dence, Faichf ulnefs and Covecoufnefs. It is a fin • which iyes in the meafure of the aft^and not in the ad it f elf. It is lawful to dcfire riches, but for<^ defire Lhem, as not to befatisfied with what God gives, make it a fin. To ihcw how hard it is to be d ifcerned. Confider, k man may do an ad^ that may feera to be con- trary to Coveroufnefs, and yet be Covetous There are two a6ls of Covet oufnefs. One isj defiring more then a man hath. The other is, Kerayning that which a man hath and not laying it out to the ufcs which God-^ afTigns j them. Now a man may be free from Covet oufnefs \ in the one, and yet not in the other. A man may not keep that which he hath, and yet be covetous in defiring tohave that which he hath not. For a man to delire fuch a ftock to the ead that he may do good unto orhers, is Covetoufnefs : Acid yet that end fcems to be againfl Covetoufnefs. Cove- toufnefs wil put a neceilicy upon earthly things for fpiritualends. Earthly things cannot be neceffa- ry ends. Pxiches are profitable and ncceffary only in a degree>in regard of external circumflance. A^ if a man think he cannot carry himfelf as a member ofChrift;, nor do as religion requires of him, with-' out fuch an cftace ; He is guilty before God. Chil-' dren are good, Bucifyoumu^t have them or elfe you die, you over love them. Soif yourhink you muft have riches or elfe you cannot walk with God as youfhoulddo, you fal into Covet oufnefs; which is a great fin. for it makes the fervice of God de- pend upon things which are of common diftributi- on. Yet Covetoufnefs may be found out, as ap- pears by I Cor. 5. 1 1. Where he advifech that the Covetous ( / Treatiji of QoyttoufneJS. I I Covetous man as ttie unclean per fon fiiould be ex- comnmnicaced, ^or vritb fucha one, vdt not* A Covetous man is as difhonorable to God, as an un- clean Perfon, therefore eat not v/icli him :. The Confequent b^ing put for the Antecedent : It is caft him forth: for that dorli injoyn n.en not to «iit with Ferfons excommunicated^ unlefs it be in cafes of necefficy. As the Wife with the Husband, But not to i/? vite rhera. Therefore the ixpoftle cals it a Judging of them. CHAP. IX. Wales for difeovery of Covetoufnefi. In Qensralt, ^ore Particularly, i. He that hath a qiiic^ and acute under fhanding in the matters of this life, but is reaUy duU aa to fpirituall things, is a Covetomman, The ^eafoni af this* An Ob- jeUien^Arifvpered* 2. Thetriallof our c^efii- onstofhdfe things is x»l>en (jod cats m to part vpith all* 3. ^e is Colstons vpho tah^s allop- pertunitits of gettingy and voho is having and craving in his Spirit* ^An Objettton Anfwe- red* Que ft. FT 0 IVJhaU tve h^ovo that we are Covetous P Anfvp. Take General and Particular waies. Confider by the way that Covctoufnefs is not only | a particular fm, but it is the univerfal diitemper oi \ all mens hearts that are unrcgenerate. When the | Ground is free from Weetis it^is fit for the Seed of ; God. 002 lirft 275 i. • 4 27 AJhort and Excellent Firft : In General. When that time is counted long which is not fpent in a mans calling and waies of getting. Amos* 8. 5. IVben tvil ths Sabbath begone that tvcmay buy and fell ? Again : When a man doth Duties of Relig'on tp get places of gain or Loaves, or bleflings from GocL ^•^^v 5 5- 3i* They €ome before me and fcem to be of my people^ but their hearts run after their Coqjetoiifneji* There IS difference between a wordly thought in a 'mans mind in Duty and making the world his end. He that makes the world his end, is Covetous. Though he makes irnothis laft end, yet if he fets it in an higher place than thofe that are fubordinatc CO God himfelf. God wil allow a man to look to himfelf., but after God: But the laft thing that a- man is to take care for,is for the things of this life. Again : Covetoufnefs is not mortified when other Lufts are not. All Lufts do live and die together. In Colof, 3. 5. where he bids them to mortijSc Co- veroufnel^, he bids them to mortifie inordinate afFeftionsand evil concupiicencc^&c. Inordinate affections belong unro the Irafcible pafDons or fa- culties, by which we cppofe evil. And evil Con- cupiicence belongs to the other facultiesjwhich be- longs to the things of a mans good. Now thefe take up a m.ans whole Soul : But if thefe two be not in order^Covctoulnefsis not mortified. The Luft of the eye is the Steward which provides for the luft of che Fleih, and t he pride of life, if you wil pluck up Covetoufuefs, youmuft dig up the whole heart, mortifie all Coiruprions. If any be left, this will grow with ic But in Particular. When a man hath a quick and a large underftanding, apprehenfion, and Judg- ment in the natters of this life, but to the difeer-j ning of fpiritual things is dul.. When a man is a-| cute Treat i/e of QoVetoufnef. 2y7 cute and ftiarp in undejflanding the things of this life, buc is really dul unco i'pirifual chings, A man is then Covetous. And the reaion is this. Becaufe the ground why a mans knowledg is more excellent ip one thing than in another, and why he is more attentive to know one thing more than another, is, becaufe his aifedtions are to one thing more than j anoL her. Therefore if a man be quick in the things of this life, anddul in the thingsof God, he is co- vetous. The worldly man is defcribcd by the Cares ofthis life which choak the word. When a man is truly dul ; 1 fay not when he is io in his own Judgment. As the wifefl men think they err in wifdora, As a Sea-man thinks no horles goe faflr, becaufe ^hey go not fo faft as a Ship : So a wife man ia fpiritUal things thinks himfelf a Fool. In ^rov* 30. 2. He faith He bad not the underjianding of a man* Hefpakeof things beyond a mans under- ftanding, and. yet he faith of himfelf. A man may be dul in his own apprehenfion, and yet not fo re- ally. Again : The time mufl be conlidered, and the means which we have had to make them unde^rfland the matters of Godlincfs. If a man have lived un- der a rational andfcripture teaching Miniftry, and have had a long time of ir, and yet is dul in the 'things of God, and is grown wife in the things of ;the world: It is a great lign chat a mans care is ■ for the things of this life,, and not for the things of God. Oh)tdc. i/4 7nan may h awe larger parts than Qrace, i therefore a man may be wifer in thd things of this world, than in the things of Qod, i c/57z(t^. That is without controverfie.. Yet Grace j fets a mans mind fo upon fpiri ual things that a ! mans; > a;^ j{Jhort and excellent \ mans Dares are fee upon the things of God, and they die unto che things of the world. Diligence will make up and repair a mans parts : And Grace makes a man diligent. I fpeak of real dulncls. When a man is not dul in onepainc of Religion, but in aU not only dul under one Mmiflry, but under all. I HOC when a man is heard co come ;:o knowledg : For men that come hardlieft by knowledg, when they have ir, do keep ic longeft. And do you Judg of this Particular. If your flrengch lies in the cbingsof this world, that you arc exquifiee there, "that you can go through all the turnings of this life, and do any thing in the bufmefs of (his life, i but m the things of God you ipeak notionally, 1 and not fpiritually, as one that heard the flory, j and not as one that knows che things, then you are Covetous. Again : See how ic is with you when God cals you CO part with all. Men are fuch as they are, 1 when thcy are rryed. Nothing tries mens aiFedi- ; ons CO a thing fo much, as parting with it. When 'j things do coae in competition, and a man cannoc iliaveboth, hewilchen cake that which he loves'. Therefore Solomon commands the Child to be cut in pieces, becaufe motherly affections would appear. Somcimes God threatens to cake al : Andfomcfmes God takes all. And fomtimej a man is in ki^fpirie as if he fiiould lofe all. What are your hearts then? In2 T7m. 1O3 II. it is faid when ^aul was ready to' be offered up, that Demof did forfake him, and did cleave unto this prefent world. His kearc was in the world, becaufe he did for thefa- ving of his cftate, forfake and leave ^auU To open that place. Cbjeft. ItmayhefaidtbatDem^idid fuffer Ter- fecktioUy forbc tvof voitb Paul in bh irHprifonment^ and Ireatife of CoyetotifneJJ, ''79 and Paul recommended him unto Phtlemon, and unto the Ghurcb f}/Coloffe. ^very. one of the grounds by which the fi'ver all forts of hearers are to be under- fiood do go heyon4 one another. The High rvay ground j diithginje the word the bearing', but repeats it not) ^meditates not of it, remembers it not, but the ftony \ ground went further-, and they didfo, but they thought \ the word of (jodftot worthy enduring thetroules that ! it broughty but the thorny ground y the Covctomgroud \ that came under Persecution : 'J^ow how can it be a ]fignofCoveto:4fnefiifthey endure Torfecat^on .^ Thh ! ii the ObjeUion. tAnfw. Fiift the meaning is noc, thac they will endure any kind of Perfecution, but fuch Pii^rleeucion as is againft the plain and] deer points of Religion. For that which th^ High-way ground regards not, the Principles of Godlinefs, thac the other grounds fuiFered for, and ftood to. But thofe were the Principles of Religi- on, converting points, for the Text in ^attb, 13.^ fpeaks of converting points of Religion, Such points which diftiiiguifh regeneracy and unregene- racy. One fort of people minded not thefe things ; The other rather faffered for them, than that rhey would part Mth them. Rather than Demat would lay the Gofpel v/as a lie, and that Jefus Chrift was not God, he would die prcfenrly : That was fo rooted in his Confcience that he would havq thought himf^lf unhappy to have given any check to it. They did noE come down right upon him, bur by cunning waies, the Devill takes men by crafn 7 and not by fair ftrength. However Deynat did not love his life in this Ce- nuj^\i\% heart was chui fv/allowed up in the things of this life. Andtherefore though he could have loft his life at the firft rather than co have denied the Principles of Pveligion, yet he would racher have loft his life chan endured want. If when God cals for all, you would fpare fome, you are Cove- cojs. Andiay not that great degrees of Grace is required unto this, for when che wil of God is fhew- ed, and decerminacely known, a Saint fits down under it and quels al morions againft it. When a Godly man fees God wil have at, he faith. Thy wil be don?. Eipecially is a Godly man ready in che things of this life, becaufe at Couverfion there is a mean efteem in him of the things of thi? life : he looks noc for things that are temporal, but for what is eternal. It is in the nature of a Beaft to look after grafs, and the fields, to live in the Air: So for a Chriftian to have a mean efteem of this world, ci- ther for his end, or means: He flights it for means, janddefpifeth it for his ends. Look what you are t when God takes away the things of this world? Arc your hearts in a quietnefs and compofednefs ? Again : A man is then Covetous when he takea al opportunities of getting. ^ ^ Again: ' __ , , 11 - - - - ■ — ■ I ■ ■ m _, - Treatife of CoVetoufneJ?. 2% I Again : When a man is having and craving in his^ fpidc, when his praiers favors of the world, like a vapor ouc of a Dungeon, when his afFc^ions are ilrong in the matters of this life. A mans Cove- tpufncfs is not cured, when his defircs are hot. Objed:. If it noHavofuU for a man to deftre more thanhsbatby orfo much of riiay AB a'li his parts and ahilitief in him f Whether a mans obfervin^ what abilitiefbebathforpuhliquefdrvice^ may not defirc fiich aportionoftimlife^ at may AU him therein^ Anfw. Oftentimes it i« not fo much the love of a mans work as the love of a mans waies.A man thinks he defires to love God when he loves the world. The world is not worth the having. You arc in the world for Heaven. When your thoughts are bowed down, be afraid of that : Trade not with thofe thoughts. Remember Chrifts words. Take heed and beware of Covetoulnefs : Arife ye dead and come to Judgment. There is a Snare in your Calling> you may be Covetous in dciiring nothing but your due. As this young man in my Text* i^ I^J 5" %i ^, *- pp — -^i^ Scriptures Opened in the !Book 0/ John, i,^ 12- And Luke^ 12. 15. Chap.Verf.Pa^e 4 14 219 4^ i>2 48 Jajhua^ 3 21 lOp 7 ^i p8 Judges^ ^ 17 13 23^ J Sarmely 15 ' 23 2^3 I TCiw^/, I 17 152 2 Chronicles^ 30 8 125 7 ^3 236 Chap. Verf. PagelChap.Verjf. Page ^ I * 27 24 35 46 164 I 4 S 9 10 15 16 19 36 37 44 ^9 51 55 73 84 109 no 119 127 145 13 14 21 28 30 2 156 7j8 244 2 171 10 37>^i 3 236 1 140 4 222 7 48553, 71 I no 18 33 1 75.2.15 4 257 25 246 3 140 7 ^55 3 52 6,7 162 15 147I53 24 152 11 14 4 ^9 3 14S 55 5^ 2 247 19 91 Vronjerhs^ 15 15 ii7> 132 165 41 151 20,2; 260 ^clefiaflesy 12 I 52 Solomons Song, I 3 157 8 50 55 57 Ifaiaby 21 215 10 75> 118 I 44 " 37> 103 » 5 a 45,50, 237 • - Scrip turcs Opened Chap .V erf. Page, Chajp ►.VerfPage Chap.Verf.Page 44 to 46 21 212 \ JeremMf I4P, 2p 23S 3^ 40 167 163 48 26 58 93 14 18 176 [ I > ^^e^ie/> 14 31 93j I^ 22,28 3; 31 276 116 IB2 ■ 3<5 31 22 15 19 224 17 5 7,110 23f IZ 13 2ll 6 26 236 1 236 14 212 -t>-2f7 247 238 20 213 '^-37 I22»l 1 I N. - ' - * _.. PP ?l_ i8>j ^-, .. — — — — ^ — * Scri iptu res Open( ^a. .Verf.Page Cha] V 1* ^^ J 1 1 Chap .V erf. Page ( Chap p.Vcrf.Pagq ' * iS3 25 25 24S 44>45 3^ 26 7 7 I Corinthians^ 4B>49 64.115 %pma,-ns^ I 16 119 143 28 ii^j ' S3 5;l60 ^ 16 31 30 41 t 68 i8 21 17^, 2. ^ I SS i 8>44« 56 i48 23i 7 38 167 2P III> C 38, 10 3 4S 217 )5S,. 38 36 233 pr^ I4<^i04 ij[ 15 ^07,2 20 193 /I34 IS I 76 3 27 132 ^142 i6 21 i<5 28. 198 14 6>35, 24 19)9^ 16 I3P 6j,8i, 17 r 1 1, II 204 4^ 19 89 20 71 82, 87 15 46y 1 .43/^ 21 44i 152- I • 159 16 I53j I 1 4 102 6 17 193 190 I ^ 17 189 8 19 7:4. 7 32, 1 41 149 10 3 X31 129 4 10 133 10 6,7 SO -13 I09> 11 100 8 SO^iSzlS^ 7 88 [7 $9 3^144 ■ 10 14S 1 1. 274 8 37 145 Il>12,15 . 273 . o 6 161 7>I03 : 227 1 •^- \ II, € ► 14 32,41 1<5 9,10 227 i 1.3 42 I5<5 > IS 1487 3 1 245. ■^ 45': S3 '^|i'^ 13 135 46,47 27/ 17 3Ij3S,I4 I 29 , 1 84 12 2 63,65115 10 133 IS 9 9^S7 24S! 140 1(5 14? 84, 112 14 M25.T36 > 35 ? 16 22 175 4 * ao 1 35 i^i^9 ■ 2CoriTh Scriptures Opened Chap. Vcrf. Page % Cermbian/y Chap. Verf. Page I 2 6 7 i8 uh I 5 5 5 1S5 228 65 157 10 89 I08,| 74 216 117 132 167I la 19 3 8 17 19 S.ii 19 38 6s 113 i4r no, 113 38 Chap. Vcr/; Page 12 no ^226,227/ 3 5^256,258 263,276 6 263 I Tbeffal(mia7t€y 8ii 38 '2 31 215 20^21,22. I 4 5 5 6,7 23 149 216 63 3 12 64, 236 s 224 z Tbeffdloniatif, 10 12 132 150 61 50 Qaldtiansy VhilippianSy 1 2 4 20 6> o i< 7 9 6 S QSpfceji 202 9^75 109 132 247 Si lot 6 97i 12 13 10 II 19 107. 139 If 3. 139 73>i4S 162 156 108 2I4j ^ -25 I TimoAy, 5 6 tanr. Colojpans, \ 41 I 2 12 6 163 6jio s 149 13 ■ r4i^ 163 17^ 163 19 192 6. 247 3 192 5 229. 6 246 8 219 9 240, 245 10 219, 227 - 262. i7j ) Scriptures Opened. .Chap. Vcrf. Page j Chap. Vert Page, Chap. Vcrf. Page 1 I7>i8 230 29 84 220 38 22,27 51 II I 16 I VttfSP, 1 I 8 ' 16S. 2 Ttmo^y, 3 36,3811 9 4 152 9tfli3 21, I 12 i34j 16 261 20I IS4 2 $,29 146 IZ 109 15 191 39 3 23^ 31 2 13 93' 12 12 23 2 2 103 ^ 2 237 I J 2 3jI44 3 157 5 1P3>23S S 215 6 10^ 237 217 12 21 4 10 227 235 222 243 3 21 126 lo 11 278 267 2rnor chofcnr. arechofen, p. laU. 26 /or eo-.brier. embryo, p. IJ4/. 17/dr fromCbritt ire more r. from Chriil more aihsfned, p. 167 /.//t/^/J^J^thenitftopiitscarr. then ic flopj its ear, p. 168 /. 16 /or ufttil yoH will be )•. until your wi(|]be, p. 186/. 18/or that foifaitthofc tk« pafs r. that fo thofc thatpafs, p. 18;!^. 9. /or indepcntly r. independantly, p. 107 /. 1 for doth affcd the Will r.affea the Will, p. 207/. 6 for though it be applied r though it be ill applied, p. 209 1. » »/or ikre arc that r. there are •«»■ In the ^ook of Coyetoufne/s'. P/4ge 2i7^«?35/ ix for ye cover your fclvejr. recover your felre;, p 2$ W. 27 /or foyl ground r. foyl and ground, p. 2 J5 /. 15 /